501 Critical Reading Questions


Critical Reading Questions


Download 1.11 Mb.
Pdf ko'rish
bet198/264
Sana22.02.2023
Hajmi1.11 Mb.
#1222431
1   ...   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   ...   264
Bog'liq
501 critical reading questions

Critical Reading Questions
(1)
(5)
(10)
(15)
(20)
(25)
(30)
www.IELTS4U.blogfa.com


2 0 3
study. Deductive reasoning is the way in which predictions are used
to test a hypothesis.
Testing
In the twentieth century, philosopher Karl Popper introduced the idea
that a hypothesis must be falsifiable; that is, it must be capable of being
demonstrated wrong. A hypothesis must make specific predictions;
these predictions can be tested with concrete measurements to support
or refute the hypothesis. For instance, Albert Einstein’s theory of gen-
eral relativity makes a few specific predictions about the structure of
space and flow of time, such as the prediction that light bends in a
strong gravitational field, and the amount of bending depends in a pre-
cise way on the strength of the gravitational field. Observations made
of a 1919 solar eclipse supported this hypothesis against other possi-
ble hypotheses, such as Sir Isaac Newton’s theory of gravity, which did
not make such a prediction. British astronomers used the eclipse to
prove Einstein’s theory and therefore, eventually replaced Newton’s
theory.
Verification
Probably the most important aspect of scientific reasoning is verifi-
cation. Verification is the process of determining whether the
hypothesis is in accord with empirical evidence, and whether it will
continue to be in accord with a more generally expanded body of evi-
dence. Ideally, the experiments performed should be fully described
so that anyone can reproduce them, and many scientists should inde-
pendently verify every hypothesis. Results that can be obtained from
experiments performed by many are termed reproducible and are
given much greater weight in evaluating hypotheses than non-repro-
ducible results.
Evaluation
Falsificationism argues that any hypothesis, no matter how respected
or time-honored, must be discarded once it is contradicted by new reli-
able evidence. This is, of course, an oversimplification, since individ-
ual scientists inevitably hold on to their pet theory long after contrary
evidence has been found. This is not always a bad thing. Any theory
can be made to correspond to the facts, simply by making a few adjust-
ments—called “auxiliary hypothesis”—so as to bring it into corre-
spondence with the accepted observations. The choice of when to
reject one theory and accept another is inevitably up to the individual
scientist, rather than some methodical law.
501

Download 1.11 Mb.

Do'stlaringiz bilan baham:
1   ...   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   ...   264




Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling