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Pronskikh, Vitaly; Sorina, Galina V. – Science & Education, 2022
The history and philosophy of science (HPS) plays a special role in education. An elective HPS course on the philosophy of scientific experimentation for young scientists and graduate students of natural science is presented. The course bears a pragmatic character, and its main aims include the development of critical thinking (CT),…
Descriptors: History, Philosophy, Graduate Students, Critical Thinking
Tyler Garcia – ProQuest LLC, 2024
One way to bring about change in higher education is to introduce professional development programs for higher education, however these programs have been found to be ineffective at promoting positive change for individuals and departments. To address the need for better programs, I worked on two projects: one project attempts to identify a way to…
Descriptors: Scientists, Ethics, Decision Making, Educational Change
Margolin, Drew Berkley – ProQuest LLC, 2012
This study describes and tests a model of scientific inquiry as an evolving, organizational phenomenon. Arguments are derived from organizational ecology and evolutionary theory. The empirical subject of study is an "epistemic community" of scientists publishing on a research topic in physics: the string theoretic concept of…
Descriptors: Semantics, Epistemology, Models, Scientists
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de Berg, Kevin C. – Science & Education, 2011
This paper discusses the findings of a search for the intellectual tools used by Joseph Priestley (1733-1804) in his chemistry, education, and theology documents. Priestley's enquiring democratic view of knowledge was applicable in all three areas and constitutes a significant part of his lifework. Current epistemological issues in science…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Principles, Chemistry, Epistemology
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Rudge, David W.; Howe, Eric M. – Science & Education, 2009
Monk and Osborne ("Sci Educ" 81:405-424, 1997) provide a rigorous justification for why history and philosophy of science should be incorporated as an integral component of instruction and a model for how history of science should be used to promote learning of and about science. In the following essay we critique how history of science is used on…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Scientific Principles, Problem Solving, Scientists
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Lipton, Peter – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2005
Is science in the truth business, discovering ever more about an independent and largely unobservable world? Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn, two of the most important figures in science studies in the 20th century, gave accounts of science that are in some tension with the truth view. Their central claims about science are considered here, along with…
Descriptors: Science Education, Ethics, Philosophy, Scientific Research
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Jacobs, Struan – Science and Education, 2000
Explains why teachers addressing the nature of science should know the work of Michael Polanyi. Outlines Polanyi's intellectual career and examines his ideas on the education of scientists, research, and knowledge. Polanyi presaged Kuhn, Feyerabend, and the constructivists, yet insisted that science produces true knowledge about reality. (Contains…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Philosophy, Science History, Scientific Enterprise
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Moore, John A. – American Biology Teacher, 1980
Focuses on the analysis of Thomas S. Kuhn's book, "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions." Science history is reviewed as it is viewed through the idea of a paradigm. The sequence in science or life cycle of a paradigm is explained. (SA)
Descriptors: Change, Higher Education, Models, Philosophy
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Wartofsky, Marx W. – Science, Technology, and Human Values, 1980
Discusses the social role of science and the social responsibilities of scientists, along with the concomitant roles that philosophy, history, and sociology of science have in current social concerns. (CS)
Descriptors: Moral Issues, Philosophy, Science Education, Science History
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Agassi, Joseph – Journal of Applied Philosophy, 1986
Maintains that the myth that there is no politics of science is dangerous because the denial prevents the establishment of measures to democratically control the influence. Examines the role behavior of scientists, science as a social phenomenon, and the institutional context of science in the United States. (JDH)
Descriptors: Democracy, Higher Education, Philosophy, Science Careers
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Bligh, Philip – Physics Education, 1989
Explains changes in the scientific world view. Describes the classical mechanistic-reductionist paradigm and some modern examples of changes including evolution, self-organizing universe, non-linearity, subjectivity, and software. (YP)
Descriptors: Epistemology, Evolution, Models, Philosophy
Devons, Samuel – 1975
This paper attempts to promote an understanding of physics through its history and replication of the oscillation experiments of Isaac Newton and Daniel Bernoulli from the 17th and 18th centuries. The experiments described can be treated at a level of sophistication to suit the interests and capabilities of the student. Reproductions in the…
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Laboratory Experiments
Clement, John – 1988
Some central issues in discussions of creative processes in science are: (1) the mechanism(s) by which hypothesis formation takes place; (2) the sources of new knowledge during hypothesis formation; and (3) the "Eureka" versus steady accumulation (accretion) issue concerning the pace of change during hypothesis formation. This paper…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Hypothesis Testing, Models