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Studying the Social (Even Without the Social Studies)
4 weeks ago · 1 comment
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Studying the Social (Even Without the Social Studies)
Another aspect of scientific method is that a complicated hypothesis must give way to an easier, less complicated description. Darwin's hypothesis is less complicated than the idea of intelligent design. His ideas do not need intelligence to describe the development of life.
Darwin's theory is tested any moment that we discover forms of life, whether fossilized, in the laboratory or in nature. So far no discovery has falsified Darwin's ideas.
The science teacher should tell his students that he is not a believer. He doesn't believe in Darwin. He only sticks at Darwin for the time being. He will jettison the theory immediately when something falsifies the idea, or when a more elegant falsifiable theory might pop up that accounts better for the facts of life. He will challenge his students to come up with such a hypothesis. But they must come up with a test to falsify their idea. After all, they are in a science room, they are not in a church.
No. If a student said his religious belief was that the Earth is flat or the Sun revolved around the Earth, what would we do? We would continue to teach that the Earth is an oblate spheroid and that the Earth goes around the Sun.
Remember, everyone has a right to believe what the want, but no one has a right not to have their beliefs challenged. If evidence challenges certain beliefs, it's up to the individual to reconcile that; it's not up to the teacher, school, etc.
Dancing Crocodile's idea was good. If a student or parent wants ID taught, then they should provide "a test to falsify the idea teleological direction in de development of life on earth".
The notions of falsifiability, scientific standards, peer review, and science's usage of the word "theory" also need to be covered in high school science classes.