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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper examines the validity of the scientific method. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA850sci.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
is just a television show, but in real life, things can be solved with the use of proper scientific methodology. At least, that is how things appear on the surface.
Yet, scientific method is proven wrong on occasion. One can say that things discovered through the use of scientific method are thought to be true, but down the road, a
new study or experiment can disprove what was ordinary thought. For example, margarine was marketed as a healthy alternative to butter but today, everyone knows that margarine is not good
for the heart. Still, despite some inconsistencies, scientific methodology is something that is useful. Ravetz writes that scientific work would be impossible without appropriate methodology (147). Yet, he rejects the
idea that there is a single solitary method and rather, contends that science is a creative discipline (Ravetz 147). Thus, any system aligned with scientific inquiry must be incomplete (Ravetz
148). The author writes: "The individual scientist can achieve no more than an adequate solution to his problems; and the criteria of his scientific community, not by Nature itself. To
be sure, in a healthy and matured field these criteria, as those of value, will be set in the light of successful experience of penetrating into the natural world; but
there is no objective, certain or scientific method for setting or testing them " (Ravetz 149). Is the scientific method not real? A student writes that
during the Renaissance, the scientific method had been used by great thinkers such as Galileo and Copernicus and this would bring about new ways of comprehending the universe. Indeed, Copernicus
in the sixteenth century would address issues related to the skies; he would discover uniform circular motion (Krupp 337). He realized that this motion "represented the planets orbits as circles
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