Week 3-1 Scientific Method

Scientific Method 



1. Summarize 


Overall, it deals with only scientific methods among the many sociological methods we have learned earlier. It was the beginning of the 20th century that the "scientific method" itself was mentioned in dictionaries and textbooks. Later, however, questions about universality emerged and many scholars' opinions were announced. A simple scientific method is empiricism that includes empirical parts. Therefore, the process of making predictions with logical results in general and conducting experiments based on them follows to determine the right or wrong of the preceding guesswork. However, any theory cannot be considered final because the discovery of new evidence at any time can change the prior judgment. For these reasons, however, scientific methods could not be ruled out at all and cannot be ruled out now.



2. Unusual items learned


In the process where scientific methods occur, predictions are made with logical results, and then the post-test guesses are judged to be true. However, it was unusual not to follow this process when carrying out formalized methods. An example of this was "How can I design a drug to cure this particular disease?". Such open questions are said to include finding and evaluating evidence in previous experiments or personal scientific observations or arguments. In other words, because research is not conducted in a universal way, questions that contradict such open questions should be prepared. Indirectly mentioning that scientific methods require self-censorship of questions seems to have been an unusual part of justice.



3. Discussion 


What other situations can we deal with, worthy of scientific methods? For example, "How can I design a drag to create this partition?"






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