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    A Web quest for 7th grade Design by Ian Dwight H. Sabellina idsabellina@gmail.com INTRODUCTION To collect information about the biological world‚ we use two mechanisms: our sensory perception and our ability to reason. We can count the types of trees in a forest with our eyes‚ we can identify birds in the rainforest canopy with our ears‚ and we can identify the presence of a sampaguita flower with our nose. However‚ our reason permits us to make predictions about the natural world. Scientists

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    and Continuity Over Time- Scientific Revolution In the time from the 1300s to the 1800s‚ ideology‚ scientific knowledge‚ and religious understanding changed from superstitious ideas to rational and factually supported theories while views of religion stayed the same. Throughout scientific history‚ religion has played an integral role. During ancient times‚ changes in weather and sicknesses were thought to be caused by the moods of the gods. In the 1300s the scientific revolution began in Europe

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    There are three factors which led to the scientific revolution‚ technology‚ mathematics and the renaissance. During the renaissance‚ Europeans were fascinated with technological invention. The architects‚ navigators‚ engineers‚ and weapons experts of the Renaissance were important pioneers of a new reliance on measurement and observation that affected many things‚ including how problems in physics were addressed. Interest in experimentation was also growing among anatomists. Thus‚ during the

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    Historical and Scientific Perspectives on HomosexualityRunning head: PERSPECTIVES ON HOMOSEXUALITY Assignment: Historical and Scientific Perspectives on Homosexuality 1 YOUR NAME PSY/265 DATE NAME OF PROFESSOR Historical and Scientific Perspectives on Homosexuality According to the text‚ homosexuals are considered to be individuals who are romantically and sexually attracted to members of the same sex (Nevid‚ Rathus & Fichner-Rathus‚ 2005). Historically‚ there have been numerous

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    1. What is a scientific theory? Please cite a definition you like. As Watson stated in "The Value of Theories"‚ a scientific theory is a systematic explanation that unifies various observed phenomena and facts. Based on observations we make‚ science operates under theories which are constantly revised and checked by experiment. A scientific theory also possesses many vital qualities for true understanding. 2. What is the difference between a scientific theory and common sense ideas about the same

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    The slope will be 10 dollars ($) per hour. 4. The scientific method is the way to understand the world around us. Scientific method starts with questioning the world around us. Then creating a hypothesis to explain why that is happening. Then preforming an experiment based on that hypothesis. Once completing the experiment seeing if the hypothesis was accurate or inaccurate. If inaccurate creating another experiment. Overall‚ the scientific method is an ongoing process by lots of different people

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    The Importance of stupidity in Scientific Research This essay talk about how two students from graduate school reunited with each other after many years for the first time. They were both Ph. D students at the same time and they were also studying science. One of the friends later dropped out of graduate school. The reason why she dropped out of the school was because she felted stupid in the program. After feeling stupid for a couple of year she decided that it was time for a change. After

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    1) The "Examples of Tasks" I selected for the Scientific Method Step: "Observe"‚ is accurate because: The scientist gathers the information he/she observed using all senses‚ while conducting an experiment‚ by analyzing the industrial pond to ponds located farther away. Therefore‚ in order to present evidence of a study‚ a visual and tested observation is required for factual documentation from the person/s in any field of study‚ presenting evidence to support an experiment/test. 2) The "Examples

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    psychology was not considered a science however Karl Popper thought otherwise and believed that it should become more like a science so that theories could be tested and proved right or wrong to make it more valid. One advantage of using the scientific method in psychology is that it can be falsified. This means that it can be proven wrong. The aim of the scientific method is to test a hypothesis by falsifying it i.e. rejecting the null hypothesis. This is an advantage because it is not possible

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    Through the duration of the 16th and 17th century‚ the scientific method was the shift in the perspective of one’s way of seeing the world. This newfounded process urged philosophers to question tradition and build on rational‚ logical thought to draw conclusions. The scientific revolution brought light to new theories‚ such as the heliocentric system‚ which became a growing foundation for scientist to continue to research off of‚ and these theories being proven challenged the church by going against

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