Guest guest Posted January 2, 2002 Report Share Posted January 2, 2002 Now and again we discuss criitical and creative thinking. Here are a few extracts from an article that relates directly to these topics: ---------------------- < http://www.scientificexploration.org/jse/articles/sturrock/1.html> Curious, Creative and Critical Thinking Sturrock PA J of Scientific Exploration Vol 11:2, p 225, 1997. Center for Space Science and Astrophysics, Varian 302G, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-4060 Ginzton, one of the founders of Varian Associates, once remarked concerning his colleague Varian that " he had many modes of thought, of which logic was only a special case. " So it is, most likely, with all great inventors and so it is, I believe, with all truly productive scientists. In this essay, I will argue that scientists need at least three modes of thought that I call " curious, " " creative " and " critical. " These requirements, though they may be quite general in their applicability, come sharply into focus when one deals with anomalies within mainstream science or with anomalous phenomena that seem to reside outside of science as we know it. Let us take just one example from within mainstream science. It has been claimed for some years by Halton Arp of The Max-Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Garching, Germany and by Tifft of the Steward Observatory in Tucson, Arizona, that there is evidence indicating that our interpretation of the redshifts of astronomical objects is incomplete. Their results, if taken at face value, contradict the usual assumption that the redshift of distant objects (such as distant galaxies and quasars) is due almost entirely to the expansion of the universe. Arp and Tifft have been curious in examining strange patterns that arose in their early observations; they have also been creative in trying to seek an interpretation of their results; and they have been critical of their own work by seeking new observations and encouraging others to make their independent observations. Then what is the problem? It is that the astronomical community has, by and large, applied only critical thinking to the same problem. There have been some attempts to reproduce Tifft's results, with mixed success, but the general attitude has been " It cannot happen, therefore it does not happen, " just the opposite of good advice once given by the great physicist Leighton of the California Institute of Technology, " If it does happen, it can happen. " As a result of this attitude, Arp and Tifft have come to be regarded somewhat as heretics. Indeed, Arp lost his observing privileges at the Mount and Palomar Observatories, forcing him to leave the United States to go to his present home in Germany. An even more disturbing and challenging situation arises if a scientist takes an interest in a topic that is outside of mainstream science and is believed by the scientific community to represent " pseudoscience, " the " paranormal, " or " pathological science. " Some of the best known examples that are regarded in this light are " parapsychology, " " ufology " (the study of UFO reports) and " cryptozoology " (the search for zoological anomalies, including " Big Foot " and the so-called " Loch Ness Monster " ). Even the mention of such terms will send a shudder through the frame of almost any self-respecting scientist. Why is this so? Typical responses to this question are in fact indicated by the terms I have just used. If I assert that a subject is " pseudoscience, " I am stating that the activity is not truly scientific but merely pretends to be scientific. However, such an assertion is indefensible. A " subject " is neither scientific nor nonscientific. It is only the study carried out by a particular person or group of persons that can be so described. One may be able to make a legitimate case that this person who studies parapsychology is being pseudo-scientific, but that does not mean that it is impossible for some other person to carry out a study in the same field that meets the highest standards of the scientific enterprise. There is a similar problem connected with the term " paranormal. " If I assert that a subject is " paranormal, " I am implying that I know what is " normal. " I am further implying that any subject that is not " normal, " according to my definition of the term, does not accord with scientific knowledge and must be rejected as bogus. This would be a huge responsibility to take on. If pressed on this issue, most scientists would agree that science is incomplete. They would agree with Isaac Newton who stated that he felt like a boy " finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me. " If we do not know all there is to know about the universe (including human beings and everything else in the universe), then clearly we cannot claim to know what is " normal, " and it is therefore foolish to use the term " paranormal. " On the other hand, the term " pathological science " is somewhat more useful. It refers to poor, slipshod and misleading research that yields results that turn out to be false. However, the term was originally coined by the Nobel Laureate Irving Langmuir to imply that certain fields are made up only of bad science. If this were the case (an assertion that is in itself debatable), it would prove only that better work needs to be done, not that such fields should be placed off-limits to scientific research. In thinking about such questions over the years, I have come to the conclusion that the problem with such topics is not a purely intellectual difficulty in trying to understand the nature of the phenomenon or to assess the quality and conclusions of the research. I have concluded that the key to the puzzle is to be found in non-scientific and non-intellectual considerations. Although the prototype of a scientist is that of a lone researcher following the truth according to his own light, with little heed to the world around him, such is not the scientist that we know today, and perhaps the image was never more than a myth. Science today is a collective enterprise. Much of the work is done in groups. Even an individual scientist is dependent upon the good will and support of his fellow scientists for the wherewithall to continue his work..... Of course, some important challenges are not regarded as heresies at all. For instance, it was a major intellectual challenge to try to understand the nature of pulsars or of quasars when they were first discovered. However, these discoveries were made by world-class scientists, at prestigious universities, who were already members of the scientific establishment. Far from being perceived as a demonstration of the shortcomings of the establishment, they were hailed as shining examples of what the establishment does that is right. Far from weakening organized science, these discoveries help to cement the power of those organizations and of science in general...... Any scientist who jeopardizes the good standing of these important scientific organizations may, knowingly or unknowingly, weaken organized science and thereby hurt his fellow scientists. In this way, the issue is converted from one that is purely intellectual to one that has sociological and political consequences. Such issues are perceived as heretical precisely because they involve a combination of intellectual and political considerations. My understanding of the term " heresy " is the following: A heresy is a proposition that is, at the same time, a challenge to understanding and a challenge to power. Galileo faced the investigators of the Holy Inquisition in 1633 as a result of his assertion that the Ptolemaic model of the solar system, in which the Earth is at rest and all bodies revolve around the Earth, is wrong, and that the Copernican model (the creation of a Protestant!), that places the Sun at the center and has the Earth revolve around the Sun, is correct. Perhaps more important was his implicit assertion that we may discover truth about the universe by observation rather than through the reading of Holy Scripture. In addition to the purely intellectual challenge of offering a new model of the solar system, Galileo was challenging the Church as the ultimate arbiter of truth. Galileo was thereby challenging the status and power of the Church. Similarly, in their assertions, Arp and Tifft are challenging the status and power of astronomers who have based their study of the structure of the universe on the assumption that the redshift of galaxies and quasars is a measure of their distance. These astronomers may legitimately fear that, if Arp and Tifft prove to be correct, much of present-day astronomical research--including their own research--will be destined for the dustbin...... In summary, I claim that in trying to understand topics that get an emotional reaction from scientists, it is first essential that we understand the reason for the emotional reaction. Only when one is past that point can one move on to a more rational consideration of these topics: the way to advance curious, creative and critical thinking is to remove the subtle (and perhaps subliminal) obstacles to such thinking. Even when the nonintellectual barriers are removed, there can still be some confusion about the nature of scientific investigation. One may detect in some discussions the implicit assumption that scientific knowledge is absolute. The term " law " promotes such a belief, but a scientific " law " is not an absolute and immutable truth; indeed, it may be more accurate to regard it simply as a short-hand summary of the results of observations and experiments carried out to date. Further observation or new experiments may show that the " law " must be revised if not rescinded. Science advances by trial and error. ing, daughter of the famous chemist Linus ing, once asked her father " How is it you had so many good ideas? " to which he replied, " I had many more ideas, and threw away all the bad ones. " With luck, a scientist can recognize a bad idea very quickly, hopefully before he or she publishes. However, some ideas prove to be wrong or, expressed more charitably, " less than universal in their applicability, " only after centuries of research. It took 300 years for Newtonian dynamics to be superseded by relativity and quantum mechanics. Who is to say that relativity and quantum mechanics will not, in their turn, at some time be superseded by a more intricate and subtle theory of which we now have no conception? It is obvious that, if we wish to learn something new, we should be curious. However, curiosity is not enough. To conceive of a pattern or law or theory, one must make an unjustified leap beyond the evidence. Newton's proposal of a universal law of gravity was simply a guess - but an inspired guess, one that was confirmed by many subsequent observations and analyses. Even so, the guess proved eventually to be not quite right and to require modification by Einstein and others. " Creation " is simply inspired guesswork. It is only after curiosity and creativity have done their work that critical thinking should come into play. At this stage, it is essential to cast a stern critical eye on one's latest act of creation. (We may count upon our colleagues to help us wholeheartedly in this activity.) However, it is essential that criticism be even-handed: it should be applied to old ideas as well as to new ideas. As the astrophysicist Tommy Gold once remarked, " Old ideas are not right simply because they are old, and new ideas are not wrong simply because they are new. " In facing any new proposition, one brings to it years of observation, learning - and perhaps indoctrination. As a human being, one may feel " this idea is so preposterous that I do not even want to consider the evidence, " but as a scientist one should state " this proposition seems very unlikely, and it will take a lot of evidence to persuade me to take it seriously. " Carl Sagan was correct in asserting that " extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, " but that does not mean that anything less than extraordinary evidence may be ignored. We learn from the study of scientific inference that a strong case for a new proposition can be built either from one very strong piece of evidence or from the combination of a number of independent and less spectacular pieces of evidence. In science, as in real life, one may get from point A to point B either in one giant leap or by a number of small steps - either by flying or by walking... ---------------- Dr Mel C Siff Denver, USA Supertraining/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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