Natural Sciences — Perspectives

Natural Sciences
Perspectives
Perspectives in science, unity vs. pluralism, falsificationism and its limits, challenges of observation, and the socio-cultural dimensions of scientific knowledge.
Published

May 7, 2026

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Notes

Are there perspectives in science? Yes — in physics (dark matter, string theory), biology (Modern Synthesis vs. epigenetic extensions), and chemistry. accepts this as normal; the view treats it as unfinished business to be resolved.

Case study: — light behaves as wave or particle depending on the experimental conditions. Is this two perspectives, or one complex perspective with two aspects?

(Popper): scientists should try to falsify hypotheses, not confirm them. The (H₀) is what gets tested. Three problems:

  1. Self-refutation — the falsifiability principle is itself not falsifiable
  2. — an can always absorb a falsification
  3. Stubborn theorists — continental drift (1905 evidence → 1960 acceptance); the periodic table survived noble gases

Observation is not innocent: - — directed by theory before observation begins - observation / — “no immaculate perception” (Nietzsche) - — Blondlot’s N-ray scandal; Percival Lowell’s Martian canals - Equipment challenges: OPERA neutrino experiment (faulty cable), fMRI statistical artefacts

Socio-cultural perspective: systematic exclusion of women and minorities is an epistemological problem — it shaped what questions science asked. Key figures: Ada Lovelace, Marie Curie, Mae Jemison, Katie Bouman.

Deeper challenges: ; (quarks, fields, energy) — anti-realists say they are useful fictions; realists invoke the no-miracles argument.