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Song, Jinwoong; Chun, Jieun; Na, Jiyeon – Science & Education, 2021
In modern society, people are expected to make scientific decisions and rational actions over a range of personal and social problems. There have been a number of studies on students' and adults' decision-making over socio-scientific issues under the name of scientific literacy. In this study, we investigated the social and cultural backgrounds of…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science and Society, Foreign Countries, Socioeconomic Background
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Earley, Joseph E., Sr. – Science & Education, 2013
"The idea of nature" (general model of how things work) that is accepted in a society strongly influences that group's social and technological progress. Currently, science education concentrates on "analysis" of stable pre-existing items to minimum constituents. This emphasis is consistent with an outlook that has been…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science and Society, Chemistry, World Views
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Hadzigeorgiou, Yannis; Schulz, Roland – Science & Education, 2014
The unique contributions of romanticism and romantic science have been generally ignored or undervalued in history and philosophy of science studies and science education. Although more recent research in history of science has come to delineate the value of both topics for the development of modern science, their merit for the educational field…
Descriptors: Romanticism, Science Instruction, Science History, World History
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Pennock, Robert T. – Science & Education, 2010
That Intelligent Design Creationism rejects the methodological naturalism of modern science in favor of a premodern supernaturalist worldview is well documented and by now well known. An irony that has not been sufficiently appreciated, however, is the way that ID Creationists try to advance their premodern view by adopting (if only tactically) a…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Creationism, Postmodernism, Sciences
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Irzik, Gurol; Nola, Robert – Science & Education, 2009
Worldviews are not only about whether God exists or whether the world has a purpose. They can contain a lot more, or they can differ in excluding the existence of God and/or a purpose for the world. In this article we define worldviews as answering a variety of worldview questions, which we list. Once this is recognized, it becomes clear that…
Descriptors: World Views, Science Education, Philosophy, Science and Society
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Cordero, Alberto – Science & Education, 2009
This paper discusses the impact of contemporary scientific knowledge on worldviews. The first three sections provide epistemological background for the arguments that follow. Sections 2 and 3 discuss the reliable part of science, specifically the characterization, scope and limits of the present scientific canon. Section 4 deals with the mode of…
Descriptors: World Views, Scientific Methodology, Scientific Literacy, Beliefs
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Reiss, Michael J. – Science & Education, 2009
This article begins by examining whether "science" and "religion" can better be seen as distinct or related worldviews, focusing particularly on scientific and religious understandings of biodiversity. I then explore how people can see the natural world, depending on their worldview, by looking at two contrasting treatments of penguin behaviour,…
Descriptors: World Views, Biodiversity, Science Teachers, Science Education
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Matthews, Michael R. – Science & Education, 2009
A common feature of contemporary science education curricula is the expectation that as well as learning science content, students will learn something "about" science--its nature, its history, how it differs from non-scientific endeavours, and its interactions with culture and society. These curricular pronouncements provide an "open cheque" for…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Sciences, Science Curriculum
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Matthews, Michael R. – Science & Education, 2009
This paper elaborates on the life and publications of Joseph Priestley, the eighteenth-century polymath. The paper outlines his particular place in the European Enlightenment; it stresses the importance of philosophy and worldview in his scientific work on pneumatic chemistry, the composition of air, and his discovery of the process of…
Descriptors: Science History, Botany, Science Instruction, Science Education
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Pinnick, Cassandra L. – Science & Education, 2008
This paper examines the relation between situated cognition theory in science education, and feminist standpoint theory in philosophy of science. It shows that situated cognition is an idea borrowed from a long since discredited philosophy of science. It argues that feminist standpoint theory ought not be indulged as it is a failed challenge to…
Descriptors: Feminism, Women Scientists, Science and Society, Science Education
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Uebel, Thomas E. – Science & Education, 2004
The scientific world-conception is properly understood as an enlightenment philosophy only if the current reassessment of the historical Vienna Circle(as opposed to the caricature still prevalent in the popular philosophical imagination) is once more extended to comprehend not only its thorough-going epistemological anti-foundationalism, but also…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethics, Science and Society, Cognitive Processes