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Title: Problems in Scientific Thinking


1
Problems in Scientific Thinking
  • Theory Influences Observations
  • The Observer Changes the Observed
  • Equipment Constructs Results

2
Theory Influences Observations
  • The theory in part constructs the reality.
  • Reality exists independent of the observer, of
    course, but our perceptions of reality are
    influenced by the theories framing our
    examination of it.
  • Thus, philosophers call science theory laden.

3
Theory Influences Observations
  • Albert Michelson, like many physicists of the
    day, believed that light was a wave, propagating
    through the Luminferous Ether
  • He constructed instruments designed to show
    shifts in the interference patterns of
    intersecting beams of light, to show how fast the
    Earth was moving through the Ether
  • Despite increasingly sensitive instruments, no
    shifts were ever detected
  • Micheleson never quite believed that there was no
    Ether to be found.

4
Equipment Constructs Results
  • Equipment can only detect that which it was
    designed to detect - based on the assumptions on
    how it ought to detect events
  • Any change in equipment would not necessarily be
    detectible, since that is not what the equipment
    is designed to detect
  • Fitzgerald and Lorentz contended that Michelsons
    not finding an interference pattern shift was
    because the device was changed by its movement
    through the Ether
  • Michelson didnt like that explanation, either.

5
Equipment Constructs Results
  • The equipment used in an experiment often
    determines the results.

6
The Observer Changes the Observed
  • In other words, the act of studying an event can
    change it.

7
The Observer Changes the Observed
  • Shining a light on a leaf in order to study the
    cells causes the cells to change in response to
    the light
  • Exposing a soil sample to air loses water very
    quickly, causing clay mineral structures to
    change

8
Problems in Pseudoscientific Thinking
  • Anecdotes Do Not Make a Science
  • Scientific Language Does Not Make a Science
  • Bold Statements Do Not Make Claims True
  • Heresy Does Not Equal Correctness
  • Burden of Proof

9
Problems in Pseudoscientific Thinking
  • Rumors Do Not Equal Reality
  • Unexplained Is Not Inexplicable
  • Failures Are Rationalized
  • After-the-Fact Reasoning
  • Coincidence
  • Representativeness.

10
Anecdotes Do Not Make a Science
  • Without corroborative evidence from other
    sources, or physical proof of some sort, ten
    anecdotes are no better than one, and a hundred
    anecdotes are no better than ten.

11
Anecdotes Do Not Make a Science
  • Lorenzo Odone, a sufferer of adrenoleukodystrophy
    or ALD, was treated with a derivative of olive
    oil and rapeseed oil by his parents
  • Dr. Hugo Moser, vilified in the movie, Lorenzos
    Oil, discovered that the oil could prevent ALD,
    but only before symptoms appeared
  • Despite calls for wide distribution of the oil,
    largely from anecdotal evidence, Dr. Moser
    remained true to his scientific path, and showed
    that the oil was not a cure, but a preventative
    treatment
  • He went on to identify a test for the genetic
    markers that would maximize the value of the oil.

12
Scientific Language Does Not Make a Science
  • Dressing up a belief system in the trappings of
    science by using scientific language and jargon
    means nothing without evidence, experimental
    testing, and corroboration.

13
Scientific Language Does Not Make a Science
  • This planet has been slumbering for eons and
    with the inception of higher energy frequencies
    is about to awaken in terms of consciousness and
    spirituality. Masters of limitation and masters
    of divination use the same creative force to
    manifest their realities, however, one moves in a
    downward spiral and the latter moves in an upward
    spiral, each increasing the resonant vibration
    inherent in them.

14
Bold Statements Do Not Make Claims True
  • Something is probably pseudoscientific if
    enormous claims are made for its power and
    veracity but supportive evidence is scarce as
    hens teeth.
  • The more extraordinary the claim, the more
    extraordinarily well-tested the evidence must be.

15
Bold Statements Do Not Make Claims True
  • In 1989, Pons and Fleischmann, two chemists at
    the University of Utah, announced that they had
    initiated nuclear fusion reactions at room
    temperatures, using electrochemical techniques
  • This flew in the face of conventional fusion
    research, which relies on very high pressures and
    temperatures
  • No other laboratory has been able to replicate
    the findings of Pons and Fleischmann.

16
Heresy Does Not Equal Correctness
  • Being laughed at does not mean you are right.
    Lots of true ideas are accepted without ridicule
    or opposition, violent or otherwise.
  • The scientific community cannot be expected to
    test every fantastic claim that comes along,
    especially when so many are logically
    inconsistent.

17
Heresy Does Not Equal Correctness
  • Nicola Tesla designed and invented much of the
    basic equipment for electrical power grid as we
    know it today, including AC generators,
    transformers, and transmission lines
  • He is also known for his announcements about
    death rays, earthquake machines, and other
    fanciful means of harnessing electricity
  • Most of these designs have since been shown as
    unworkable.

18
Burden of Proof
  • The person making the extraordinary claim has the
    burden of proving to the experts and to the
    community at large that his or her belief has
    more validity than the one almost everyone else
    accepts.
  • In other words, it is not enough to have
    evidence. You must convince others of the
    validity of your evidence. And when you are an
    outsider this is the price you pay, regardless of
    whether you are right or wrong.

19
Burden of Proof
  • Wegener, considered by many an outsider (and a
    German, no less!) had the burden of proof upon
    him. Many of his arguments were regarded as
    invalid and thus were not convincing.
  • Holocaust Deniers claim that the Holocaust never
    occurred, or that it was blown out of proportion
    and that there was no systematic plans to
    eliminate the Jews and other undesireables. No
    proof has been offered that contradicts that the
    Holocaust did in fact occur.

20
Rumors Do Not Equal Reality
  • Rumors begin with I read somewhere that. or I
    heard from someone that.. Before long the
    rumor becomes reality, as I know that. passes
    from person to person. Rumors may be true, of
    course, but usually they are not.

21
Rumors Do Not Equal Reality
  • An entire television genre is built around this -
    watch any episode of Mythbusters
  • The Darwin Awards also categorizes events as
    confirmed by primary sources or as an urban
    legend.

22
Unexplained Is Not Inexplicable
  • Many people are overconfident enough to think
    that if they cannot explain something, it must be
    inexplicable and therefore a true mystery of the
    paranormal
  • Even those who are more reasonable at least think
    that if the experts cannot explain something, it
    must be inexplicable
  • The problem is that most of us find it more
    comforting to have certainty, even it if is
    premature, than to live with unsolved or
    unexplained mysteries.

23
Unexplained Is Not Inexplicable
  • How does one walk on hot coals? Amazing control
    of pain? And yet, no burns result
  • Uri Gellar built an entire career on his mental
    powers, including spoon bending. But weakening
    the neck of the spoon to just beyond the failure
    point can have the same effect.

24
Failures Are Rationalized
  • In science, the value of negative
    findings-failures-cannot be overemphasized.
    Usually they are not wanted, and often they are
    not published.
  • But most of the time failures are how we get
    closer to truth. Honest scientists will readily
    admit their errors, but all scientists are kept
    in line by the fact that their fellow scientists
    will publicize any attempt to fudge.

25
Failures Are Rationalized
  • After the fall of the Soviet Union, many clinics
    opened and thrived, claiming to cure all sorts of
    illness with special herbal teas and
    psychically-energized water
  • When the psychics cannot distinguish normal water
    from the energized water, the claim is that other
    water absorbed the energy
  • When such cures do not work, blame is shifted
    to the user for having done something that
    interferes with the cure working.

26
After-the-Fact Reasoning
  • Also known as post hoc, propter hoc, literally
    after this, therefore because of this.
  • As Hume taught us, the fact that two events
    follow each other in sequence does not mean they
    are connected casually. Correlation does not
    mean causation.

27
After-the-Fact Reasoning
  • Since children with autism often display little
    emotion, it was assumed that their mothers were
    cold to them
  • Since the parents of many high-ability students
    listen to Mozart, it is assumed that mothers
    playing Mozart to their children in vitro will
    increase their intelligence.

28
Coincidence
  • Coincidences are often seen as deeply
    significant. When the connection is made in a
    manner that seems impossible according to our
    intuition of the laws of probability, we have a
    tendency to think something mysterious is at work.

29
Coincidence
  • Slot machines are designed to pay out just enough
    to convince players that a bigger payout is just
    around the corner
  • Individual electronic slot machines are required
    to pay out everything put in them over the life
    of the machine - a designed 30 million arm pulls
  • Slot machines remain the largest profit center in
    most casinos.

30
Representativeness
  • As Aristotle said, The sum of the coincidences
    equals certainty. We forget most of the
    insignificant coincidence and remember the
    meaningful ones.
  • Our tendency to remember hits and ignore misses
    is the bread and butter of our thinking
  • We must always remember the larger context in
    which a seemingly unusual event occurs, and we
    must always analyze unusual events for their
    representativeness of their class of phenomena.

31
Representativeness
  • The Bermuda Triangle is supposedly the site of
    many unexplained and mysterious disappearances of
    planes and ships
  • The channel marks the convergence of multiple
    shipping and air routes
  • The relative proportion of unaccounted for
    disappearances in this area is actually lower
    than the rest of the world
  • Should it be called the Bermuda Un-Triangle?

32
Logical Problems in Thinking
  • Emotive Words and False Analogies
  • Ad Ignoraniam
  • Ad Hominem and Tu Quoque
  • Hasty Generalizations

33
Logical Problems in Thinking
  • Overreliance on Authorities
  • Either-Or
  • Circular Reasoning
  • Reductio ad Absurdum and the Slippery Slope

34
Emotive Words and False Analogies
  • Emotive words are used to provoke emotion and
    sometimes to obscure rationality.
  • Like anecdotes, analogies and metaphors do not
    constitute proof. They are merely tools of
    rhetoric.

35
Emotive Words and False Analogies
  • Recent advertising (and other) campaigns that
    represent this typology
  • If you are not with us, you are with the
    terrorists
  • Look at virtually any propaganda poster

36
Ad Ignoraniam
  • This is an appeal to ignorance or lack of
    knowledge and is related to the burden of proof
    and unexplained is not inexplicable fallacies,
    where someone argues that if you cannot disprove
    a claim it must be true.
  • In science, belief should come from positive
    evidence in support of a claim, not lack of
    evidence for or against a claim.

37
Ad Ignoraniam
  • If you cannot prove that psychic powers do not
    exist, then they must exist?
  • BATFE claims that, despite the lack of a clear
    definition of what an explosive is, Ammonium
    Perchlorate Composite Propellant (APCP) is an
    explosive because (a) they say so, and (b) no one
    can prove to their satisfaction that it is not an
    explosive.

38
Ad Hominem and Tu Quoque
  • Literally to the man and you also, these
    fallacies redirect the focus from thinking about
    the idea to thinking about the person holding the
    idea.
  • The goal of an ad hominem attack is to discredit
    the claimant in hopes that it will discredit the
    claim.

39
Ad Hominem and Tu Quoque
  • Thank You For Smoking How does your mom know
    cigarettes cause cancer? Is she a doctor?
  • Answers in Genesis How do you know it took
    millions of years? Were you there?
  • Al Gore is a politician and not a climate
    scientist. Why should we believe him?

40
Hasty Generalizations
  • In logic, the hasty generalization is a form of
    improper induction.
  • In life, it is called prejudice.
  • In either case, conclusions are drawn before the
    facts warrant it.

41
Hasty Generalizations
  • Just because a blonde in a red convertible cut
    you off on the road, that does not mean that all
    blondes in red convertibles are poor drivers
  • One cornfield of crows does not make all crows
    black.

42
Overreliance on Authorities
  • We tend to rely heavily on authorities in our
    culture, especially if the authority is
    considered to be highly intelligent.
  • Authorities, by virtue of their expertise in a
    field, may have a better chance of being right in
    that field, but correctness is certainly not
    guaranteed, and their expertise does not
    necessarily quality them to draw conclusions in
    other areas.

43
Overreliance on Authorities
  • While expertise is useful for separating the
    wheat from the chaff, it is dangerous in that we
    might either (1) accept a wrong idea just because
    it was supported by someone we respect (false
    positive) or (2) reject a right idea just because
    it was supported by someone we disrespect (false
    negative).
  • How do you avoid such errors? Examine the
    evidence.

44
Overreliance on Authorities
  • Despite evidence from biologists and geologists
    to the contrary, Lord Kelvins claim that the
    Earth was no more than 25-75 million years old
    was the accepted truth until just before his
    death
  • Carl Wieman, Nobel Laureate in Physics for making
    and describing the Bose-Einstein Condensate,
    claims that wide use of clickers or interactive
    response devices will be the salvation of science
    education.

45
Either-Or
  • Also known as the fallacy of negation or the
    false dilemma, this is the tendency to
    dichotomize the world so that if you discredit
    one position, the observer is forced to accept
    the other.
  • But it is not enough to point out weaknesses in a
    theory. If your theory is indeed superior, it
    must explain both the normal data explained by
    the old theory and the anomalous data not
    explained by the old theory.
  • A new theory needs evidence in favor of it, not
    just against the opposition.

46
Either-Or
  • Even after Wegener and Du Toit had made
    compelling arguments for the past proximity of
    South America and Africa, based on
    paleontological, stratigraphic, and glacial
    evidence, the broader geologic community would
    still not accept drift theory.
  • Charles Schuchert and other American geologists
    contended that the same evidence could be
    accounted for by land bridges, which subsquently
    sunk beneath the oceans.

47
Circular Reasoning
  • Also known as the fallacy of redundancy, begging
    the question, or tautology, this occurs when the
    conclusion or claim is merely a restatement of
    one of the premises.
  • Obviously, a tautological operational definition
    can still be useful. Yet, difficult as it is, we
    must try to construct operational definitions
    that can be tested, falsified, and refuted.

48
Circular Reasoning
  • We have a Space Shuttle program because we need
    to build the International Space Station
  • We need the International Space Station so that
    we have someplace for the Space Shuttle to go to.

49
Reductio ad Absurdum and the Slippery Slope
  • Reductio ad absurdum is the refutation of an
    argument by carrying the argument to its logical
    end and so reducing it to an absurd conclusion.
  • Surely, if an arguments consequences are absurd,
    it must be false. This is not necessarily so,
    though sometimes pushing an argument to its
    limits is a useful exercise in critical thinking
  • Often this is a way to discover whether a claim
    has validity, especially if an experiment testing
    the actual reduction can be run.

50
Reductio ad Absurdum and the Slippery Slope
  • God is Love
  • Love is Blind
  • Ray Charles is Blind
  • Ray Charles is God
  • God is a Jazz Singer

51
Psychological Problems in Thinking
  • Effort Inadequacies and the Need for Certainty,
    Control, and Simplicity
  • Problem Solving Inadequacies
  • Ideological Immunity, or the Planck Problem

52
Effort Inadequacies and the Need for Certainty,
Control, and Simplicity
  • Most of us, most of the time, want certainty,
    want to control our environment, and want nice,
    neat, simple explanations.
  • All this may have some evolutionary basis, but in
    a multifarious society with complex problems,
    these characteristics can radically oversimplify
    reality and interfere with critical thinking and
    problem solving.

53
Effort Inadequacies and the Need for Certainty,
Control, and Simplicity
  • Cutting Greenhouse Gas emissions will heal the
    Ozone Layer Automobiles are the biggest source
    of Greenhouse Gasses, so we should all just walk
  • Gasoline prices are so high right now because the
    tree-hugging Liberals wont let us drill more oil
    wells

54
Problem Solving Inadequacies
  • All critical and scientific thinking is, in a
    fashion, problem solving
  • There are numerous psychological disruptions that
    cause inadequacies in problem solving
  • Scale, complexity, distorted priorities, etc.,
    fall in to this category.

55
Problem Solving Inadequacies
  • Global warming is happening, but
  • It is too big for us to do anything about it
  • There are too many variables to deal with
  • Any changes that I make may take centuries to
    have any impact
  • I have a big meeting with an important client, so
    I need a big car.

56
Ideological Immunity, or the Planck Problem
  • In day-to-day life, as in science, we all resist
    fundamental paradigm change. Social scientist
    Jay Stuart Snelson calls this resistance an
    ideological immune system educated,
    intelligent, successful adults rarely change
    their most fundamental presuppositions. We
    build up an immunity against new ideas that do
    not corroborate previous ones.

57
Ideological Immunity, or the Planck Problem
  • Historians of science call this the Planck
    Problem, after physicist Max Planck, who made
    this observation on what must happen for
    innovation to occur in science
  • An important scientific innovation rarely makes
    its way by gradually winning over and converting
    its opponents it rarely happens that Saul
    becomes Paul. What does happen is that its
    opponents gradually die out and that the growing
    generation is familiarized with the idea from the
    beginning.

58
Ideological Immunity, or the Planck Problem
  • Contrary to most textbooks, there was no hiatus
    in thought between Wegeners work and the Plate
    Tectonics revolution in the late 1960s
  • Hess, Holmes, Wilson, Vine, Matthews (among
    others!) all provided input beyond their strictly
    published work
  • Much of the published work was couched in
    carefully defined terms or circumspect rhetoric
  • Many elder statesmen in geology needed to
    retire from active work for a complete version of
    Plate Tectonics to take the headlines.
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