Science, asked by missme1884, 11 months ago

150 words in point by point in uses of science

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Answered by bharadwajasahana
0

Answer:

cience, by definition, is:

Processes for creating reliable models for the prediction and control of the natural world;

Models that result from those processes; and

Application of those models.

Activities that result in the reliable prediction and control of the natural world are science. Thus, there are two ways to view science:

As an act of intent. For example, alchemy was an effort to transmute elements that failed, but alchemists were acting with the intent to provide reliable models. Alchemy, as an act of intent, was science.

In terms of its products. In view of its results, alchemy, as a means to transmute elements, is pseudoscience.

The division between science and non-science can get fuzzy, since the intent to provide reliable prediction and control can make activities look scientific. For example, economics and psychology are quasi-scientific, not because of a lack of intent, but because of the lack of reliability in resulting models (100 psychology experiments repeated, less than half successful).

Falsifiability is not a particularly useful criterion or tool in science; note that it is almost never referenced in scientific publications. Falsifiability is more fundamentally an attribute of a practitioner, rather than an intrinsic attribute of a proposition.

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Answered by 005532
0

Answer:

Explanation:

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