annotate org/science.org @ 2:b4de894a1e2e

initial import
author Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu>
date Fri, 28 Oct 2011 00:03:05 -0700
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children 3ff40c869d1a
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rlm@2 1 #+title: Science Minus Science
rlm@2 2 #+author: Dylan Holmes
rlm@2 3 #+email: ocsenave@gmail.com
rlm@2 4 #+description: What's wrong with our current Science Education?
rlm@2 5 #+SETUPFILE: ../../aurellem/org/setup.org
rlm@2 6 #+INCLUDE: ../../aurellem/org/level-0.org
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rlm@2 9 From what I've seen, today's science classrooms are remarkably
rlm@2 10 unscientific. Someone has decided that it is less important to teach
rlm@2 11 the empirical mindset than to impart our accumulated scientific
rlm@2 12 knowledge. Thus, because the field is so vast nowadays, teachers are
rlm@2 13 obliged to be frugal with the facts: they must prune tangential
rlm@2 14 subjects and pare whatever's left, watering down complicated results
rlm@2 15 into simplified half-truths. Needs must when the devil drives, of
rlm@2 16 course--but what is the end result?
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rlm@2 18 In modern science classrooms, we force-feed students a deluge of
rlm@2 19 unfamiliar scientific dogma which they must swallow in time to
rlm@2 20 regurgitate onto an exam. To accomplish this daunting task, they
rlm@2 21 cannot possibly stop to consider various alternatives which scientists
rlm@2 22 have methodically eliminated over the course of centuries; instead,
rlm@2 23 they must simply trust that science has done what it purports to have
rlm@2 24 done--or, faster, simply stamp out their conjectural, critical
rlm@2 25 instincts.
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rlm@2 27 By the end of such a course, students might be able to recite the
rlm@2 28 tenets of our current scientific creed and might employ those tenets
rlm@2 29 when answering carefully formulated questions. But even if, by chance,
rlm@2 30 our students get their facts straight, they will have acquired at most
rlm@2 31 only our pre-processed truths, and nothing of the empirical machinery
rlm@2 32 that produced them. In my opinion, such a lackluster result demands
rlm@2 33 that we re-evaluate our priorities. Surely the shibboleth of the
rlm@2 34 scientist is not his ability to recount the bleeding-edge depiction of
rlm@2 35 reality--after all, theories are transient and revolutions expected--but
rlm@2 36 rather his pervasive inquiries about the world and his methodical,
rlm@2 37 empirical approach to answering them? Indeed, don't we recognize the
rlm@2 38 scientist by his lack of allegiance to the status quo, by the way he
rlm@2 39 scrutinizes even his own theories with utmost irreverence?
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rlm@2 41 In valuing data absorption over methodical reason, we give our
rlm@2 42 students a fragmentary and moreover inexplicable impression of
rlm@2 43 reality. We must ask ourselves: how much of science is left in that?
rlm@2 44