Science
(from Latin: scientia meaning "knowledge") is a company that
systematically build and organize knowledge in the form tested
explanations and predictions about the universe. An
older meaning is closely related and still in use today is that of
Aristotle, for whom scientific knowledge is a reliable body of knowledge
that can be logically and rationally explained (see "History and
etymology" section below).
Since the days of classical science as a kind of knowledge is closely related to philosophy. In the modern era of the early two-word, "science" and "philosophy", sometimes used interchangeably in English. In
the 17th century, "natural philosophy" (which is today called "natural
science") began to be regarded separately from the "philosophy" in
general. However,
"science" continues to be used in a broad sense that shows that
reliable knowledge about a topic, in the same way it is still used in
modern terms such as library science or political science.
In
modern usage, the science is "often treated as synonymous with 'natural
and physical sciences', and thus limited to the branches of study
concerned with the phenomena of the material universe and their laws,
sometimes with implied exclusion of pure mathematics. This is
now the dominant sense in ordinary use. "narrow sense" science
"developed as part of the science into a different company to define"
natural law ", based on early examples such as Kepler's laws, the laws
of Galileo, and Newton's laws of motion . In this period became more common to refer to natural philosophy as the "natural sciences". During
the 19th century, the word "science" became increasingly associated
with the study of natural disciplines including physics, chemistry,
geology and biology. This
sometimes left the study of human thought and society in a linguistic
limbo, which was completed by grouping the areas of academic study as
the social sciences. Similarly,
some of the key areas of discipline and knowledge of other studies are
currently under the general rubric of "science", such as formal science
and applied science.
History and etymology about science
While descriptions of disciplined empirical investigations of the natural world exist from times
at least as early as classical antiquity (for
example, by Aristotle and Pliny the Elder), and scientific methods have been employed since the Middle Ages (for example, by Alhazen and Roger Bacon), the dawn of modern science
is generally traced back to the early modern period during
what is known as the Scientific Revolution of
the 16th and 17th centuries. This period was marked by a new way of studying the
natural world, by methodical experimentation aimed at defining "laws of
nature" while avoiding concerns with metaphysical concerns such as
Aristotle's theory of causation.
Rapid accumulation of knowledge, which has
characterized the development of science since the 17th century, had never
occurred before that time. The new kind of scientific activity emerged only in
a few countries of Western Europe, and it was restricted to that small area for
about two hundred years. (Since the 19th century, scientific knowledge has been
assimilated by the rest of the world).
—Joseph
Ben-David, 1971.
This modern science developed from an older and
broader enterprise. The word "science" is from Old French, and in turn from Latin
scientia
which was one of several words for "knowledge" in that language. In
philosophical contexts, scientia and "science" were used to
translate the Greek word epistemē, which had acquired a specific
definition in Greek philosophy, especially Aristotle, as a type of reliable knowledge which is built up
logically from strong premises, and can be communicated and taught. In contrast
to modern science, Aristotle's influential emphasis was upon the
"theoretical" steps of deducing universal rules
from raw data, and did not treat the gathering of experience and raw data as
part of science itself.
From the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment, science or scientia
continued to be used in this broad sense, which was still common until the 20th
century. "Science"
therefore had the same sort of very broad meaning that philosophy had at that time. In other Latin influenced
languages, including French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian, the word corresponding to science also carried
this meaning.
Prior to the 18th century, the preferred term for the
study of nature among English speakers was "natural philosophy",
while other philosophical disciplines (e.g., logic,
metaphysics, epistemology, ethics and aesthetics) were typically referred to as "moral
philosophy". (Today, "moral philosophy" is more-or-less
synonymous with "ethics".) Science only became more strongly
associated with natural philosophy than
other sciences gradually with the strong promotion of the importance of
experimental scientific method, by
people such as Francis Bacon. With Bacon, begins a more
widespread and open criticism of Aristotle's influence which had emphasized
theorizing and did not treat raw data collection as part of science itself. An
opposed position became common: that what is critical to science at its best is
methodical collecting of clear and useful raw data, something which is easier
to do in some fields than others.
The word "science" in English was still
however used in the 17th century to refer to the Aristotelian concept of knowledge which was secure enough to
be used as a prescription for exactly how to accomplish a specific task. With
respect to the transitional usage of the term "natural philosophy" in
this period, the philosopher John Locke wrote in 1690 that
"natural philosophy is not capable of being made a science".[
However, it may be that Locke was not using the word 'science' in the modern
sense, but suggesting that 'natural philosophy' could not be deduced in the
same way as mathematics and logic.
Locke's assertion notwithstanding, by the early 19th
century natural philosophy had begun to separate from philosophy, though it
often retained a very broad meaning. In many cases, science continued to
stand for reliable knowledge about any topic, in the same way it is still used
today in the broad sense (see the introduction to this article) in modern terms
such as library science, political science, and computer science. In the more narrow sense of science,
as natural philosophy became linked to an expanding set of well-defined laws
(beginning with Galileo's laws, Kepler's laws, and Newton's laws for motion), it became more popular to refer to
natural philosophy as natural science. Over the course of the 19th century,
moreover, there was an increased tendency to associate science with study of
the natural world (that is, the non-human world). This move sometimes left the
study of human thought and society (what would come to be called social science) in a linguistic limbo by the end of the
century and into the next.
Through the 19th century, many English speakers were
increasingly differentiating science (i.e., the natural sciences) from all
other forms of knowledge in a variety of ways. The now-familiar expression “scientific method,” which refers to the prescriptive
part of how to make discoveries in natural philosophy, was almost unused until
then, but became widespread after the 1870s, though there was rarely total
agreement about just what it entailed.The word "scientist," meant to
refer to a systematically working natural philosopher, (as opposed to an
intuitive or empirically minded one) was coined in 1833 by William Whewell.Discussion of scientists as a special group of people, who did science, even
if their attributes were up for debate, grew in the last half of the 19th
century. Whatever people
actually meant by these terms at first, they ultimately depicted science, in
the narrow sense of the habitual use of the scientific method and the knowledge
derived from it, as something deeply distinguished from all other realms of
human endeavor.
By the 20th century, the modern notion of science as a
special kind of knowledge about the world, practiced by a distinct group and
pursued through a unique method was essentially in place. It was used to give
legitimacy to a variety of fields through such titles as "scientific"
medicine, engineering, advertising, or motherhood. Over the 20th century, links
between science and technology also grew increasingly strong.
As Martin Rees explains, progress in scientific understanding and
technology have been synergistic and vital to one another.[
Richard Feynman described
science, to his students, as: "The principle of science, the definition,
almost, is the following: The test of all knowledge is experiment.
Experiment is the sole judge of scientific 'truth'. But what is the
source of knowledge? Where do the laws that are to be tested come from?
Experiment, itself, helps to produce these laws, in the sense that it gives us
hints. But also needed is imagination to create from these hints the great
generalizations — to guess at the wonderful, simple, but very strange
patterns beneath them all, and then to experiment to check again whether we
have made the right guess." Feynman also observed, "...there is an
expanding frontier of ignorance...things must be learned only to be unlearned
again or, more likely, to be corrected."
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