Lecture #2 Thus 24 Jan 2008 A Brief History of Science
A whirlwind tour of the development of science
The epochs:
The Players:
Ancient Greeks Pythagoras, Plato. Aristotle
Rise of Christianity as The Scholastics
State Religion
Beginning of modern science Francis Bacon, Galileo, Isaac Newton
Ancient Greek
philosophers
Pythagoras (569-475 BC) “father of numbers”
discovered pleasing musical notes in small number ratios
believed everything related to mathematics
argued orbits of planets must be circles (most perfect geometric figure)
Plato (427-347 BC)
“dualism:” perfect, ideal (but imperceptible) “forms”
vs. accessible but imperfect “shadows”
believed knowledge of external world is innate
(hence only have to look inward, through reflection or logic)
Aristotle (384-322 BC) Plato’s student very influential
- straddled both argument and empirical observation
- made endless observations about the natural world and human
institutions. Some observations very keen, others sloppy.
- also made many statements about the world not grounded in observation.
- wrote influential treatises on rhetoric (methods of arguing) and logic,
most famously the Organon (“Instrument”). Most famous method is deductive logic using syllogism (“All humans are mortal + Socrates is human, thus Socrates is mortal”).
Rise of Christianity
In 2nd-6th centuries A.D., Christianity became an ideological religion:
what you thought mattered. Different factions argued fiercely over different theological beliefs (nature of Christ, grace, etc.). The winning side declared the other heretics.
This imported philosophy and rhetoric into Christianity. Around the same
time Christianity became state religion of
Scholastics 1100-1500 AD. A school of philosophy in the late middle ages.
Scholasticism was a mode of argumentation, based in part upon Aristotle.
Used to: discern correct beliefs from false+ used to resolve apparent contradictions
e.g. between different statements in Bible, or between Bible and Aristotle.
Used deductive logic and syllogisms borrowed from Aristotle.
Rise of Modern Science
During Renaissance and Enlightenment we have (1) a culture intensely engaged in ideas as seen in the Scholastics, who in particular emphasized ideas of Greek philosophers such as Aristotle and also Ptolemy; + (2) an intensely materialistic culture due to expansion of trade, exploration, and so on.
-- The knowledge of the ancient Greeks is found to be flawed.
1492:
1572: Tycho Brahe discovers a New Star (nova) which contradicts Aristotle’s statement that the celestial sphere is perfect and unchanging.
Galileo (1564-1642): Made methodical, deliberate investigations into mechanics and astronomy. Was able to show through such investigations
-- Aristotle was wrong about mechanics and gravity (more later)
-- Ptolemy was wrong about astronomy
His main contribution was deliberate and exhaustive experimentation. He also began to make quantitative measurements.
Finally, Isaac Newton (1643-1727): Invented calculus, made full combination of mathematics with physics. Also did experimental observations into optics. Importantly, suggested universal laws of nature (which differs from Aristotle).
On the way to modern science
The search for “truth” is difficult in particular it is difficult to get people to agree on any “truth.” Logic and argument (beloved of the Greek philosophers, adopted by the medieval Scholastics) are useful but they are not enough
Over history natural philosophy (which became modern science) evolved in two important ways: Science narrowed its scope of inquiry from all truth to investigations of reproducible phenomena and the external, material world; and logic and argument were supplanted by empirical and reproducible observation and experiment.
A description (not a definition):
“Modern science is an efficient method to discover reproducible and reliable causal relations in the natural, external world.”
Key elements:
(1) Natural, external world: an focus on thing and events that affect our material life (food, health, transportation, physical defense, etc.).
(2) Causal relations: when I know if...then, I can control the material life.
(3) Reproducible and reliable. If it is not reliable, it’s not very useful
(4) Efficient. We have stripped away everything not necessary to affect everything else.
What is science?
Science is not the search for truth. Science is a search for “truths” which are overwhelmingly convincing. How does science accomplish this?
Two kinds of knowledge or discourse
“Irreproducible” knowledge: revelation or authority; looks to the past
“Reproducible” knowledge: recipes; looks to future.
The trouble with science: science is hard! Science is often treated as if it were
irreproducible (e.g. from authority figure).
The culture of science: An economy of novelty. The combination of novelty, convincing,
and reproducible recipes means scientists often
cultivate skepticism
Outward directed skepticism: Skepticism towards authority and peers. Scientists are rewarded if they can convincingly overturn old theories or facts or find new theories/facts
Inward directed skepticism: To ensure convincing peers, scientists need to be self-policing.