01 July 2021

Out of Context: On Science (Definitions)

"Science is, I believe, nothing but trained and organized common sense [...]" (Thomas H Huxley, "On the Educational Value of the Natural History Sciences", 1854)

"Science is organized knowledge; and before knowledge can be organized, some of it must first be possessed." (Herbert Spencer, "The Art of Education", The North British Review, 1854)

"In its broadest sense science is organised knowledge, and its methods consist of the observation and classification of the phenomena of which we become conscious through our senses, and the investigation of the causes of which these are the effects." (Richard Strachey, Nature Vol. 12 [E], 1875)

"Science is the observation of things possible, whether present or past; prescience is the knowledge of things which may come to pass, though but slowly." (Leonardo da Vinci, "The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci", 1883)

"Science is not the monopoly of the naturalist or the scholar, nor is it anything mysterious or esoteric. Science is the search for truth, and truth is the adequacy of a description of facts." (Paul Carus, "Philosophy as a Science", 1909)

"Science is the only truth and it is the great lie. It knows nothing, and people think it knows everything. It is misrepresented. People think that science is electricity, automobilism, and dirigible balloons. It is something very different. It is life devouring itself. It is the sensibility transformed into intelligence. It is the need to know stifling the need to live. It is the genius of knowledge vivisecting the vital genius." (Rémy de Gourmont, "Art and Science", cca. 1905-1909)

"Science is frankly empirical in method and aim; it seeks to discover the laws of concrete being and becoming, and to formulate these in the simplest terms, which are either immediate data of experience or verifiably derived therefrom." (J Arthur Thomson, "The System of Animate Nature" Vol. 1, 1920)

"Science is simply setting out on a fishing expedition to see whether it cannot find some procedure which it can call measurement of space and some procedure which it can call the measurement of time, and something which it can call a system of forces, and something which it can call masses." (Alfred N Whitehead, "The Concept of Nature", 1920)

"Science is a magnificent force, but it is not a teacher of morals." (William J Bryan, "Undelivered Trial Summation Scopes Trial", 1925)

"Science is either an important statement of systematic theory correlating observations of a common world or is the daydream of a solitary intelligence with a taste for the daydream of publication." (Alfred N Whitehead, "Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology", 1929)

"Science is feasible when the variables are few and can be enumerated; when their combinations are distinct and clear." (Paul Valéry, "Moralités" ["Morality"], 1932)

"Science is the attempt to discover, by means of observation, and reasoning based upon it, first, particular facts about the world, and then laws connecting facts with one another and (in fortunate cases) making it possible to predict future occurrences." (Bertrand Russell, "Religion and Science, Grounds of Conflict", 1935)

"Science, in the broadest sense, is the entire body of the most accurately tested, critically established, systematized knowledge available about that part of the universe which has come under human observation." (Austin L Porterfield, "Creative Factors in Scientific Research", 1941)

"Physics is not about the real world, it is about ‘abstractions’ from the real world, and this is what makes it so scientific." (Anthony Standen, "Science is a Sacred Cow", 1950)

"Science, then, is the attentive consideration of common experience; it is common knowledge extended and refined." (George Santayana, "The Life of Reason, or the Phases of Human Progress", 1954)

"Science is the creation of concepts and their exploration in the facts." (Jacob Bronowski, "Science and Human Values", 1956)

"Science is the reduction of the bewildering diversity of unique events to manageable uniformity within one of a number of symbol systems [...]" (Aldous L Huxley, "Essay", Daedalus, 1962)

"Science is what scientists do. Science is knowledge, a body of information about the external world. Science is the ability to predict. Science is power, it is engineering. Science explains, or gives causes and reasons." (John Bremer "What Is Science?" [in "Notes on the Nature of Science"], 1962)

"Science is the combined effort to find out what sort of behavior ensues when various conditions are fulfilled." (H Rom Harré, "Philosophical Issues and Conceptual Change", Theory Into Practice Vol. 10 (2), 1971)

"Science is systematic organisation of knowledge about the universe on the basis of explanatory hypotheses which are genuinely testable." (Francisco J Ayala, "Studies in the Philosophy of Biology: Reduction and Related Problems", 1974)

"Within a Metaphysics of Quality, science is a set of static intellectual patterns describing this reality, but the patterns are not the reality they describe." (Robert M Pirsig, "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance", 1974)

"Science is a quintessentially human activity, not a mechanized, robot-like accumulation of objective information, leading by laws of logic to inescapable interpretation." (Stephen J Gould, "Ever Since Darwin", 1977)

"Engineering or Technology is the making of things that did not previously exist, whereas science is the discovering of things that have long existed." (David Billington, "The Tower and the Bridge: The New Art of Structural Engineering", 1983)

"Science is human experience systematically extended (by intent, methodology and instrumentation) for the purpose of learning more about the natural world and for the critical empirical testing and possible falsification of all ideas about the natural world." (Robert E Kofahl, Correctly Redefining Distorted Science: A Most Essential Task", Creation Research Society Quarterly Vol. 23, 1986)

"Science is a mechanism. It's a way of trying to improve your knowledge of nature. It's a system for testing your thoughts against the universe and seeing whether they match." (Isaac Asimov, [Interview by Bill Moyers] 1988)

"Science is more than a mere attempt to describe nature as accurately as possible. Frequently the real message is well hidden, and a law that gives a poor approximation to nature has more significance than one which works fairly well but is poisoned at the root." (Robert H March, "Physics for Poets", 1996)

"Science is like photographing a series of close-ups with your back to the sun. No matter which way you move, your shadow always falls across the scene you photograph. No matter what you do, you can never efface yourself from the photographed scene." (F David Peat, "From Certainty to Uncertainty", 2002)

"Science is that story our society tells itself about the cosmos." (F David Peat, "From Certainty to Uncertainty", 2002)

"Science is the art of the appropriate approximation." (Byron K Jennings, "On the Nature of Science", Physics in Canada Vol. 63 (1), 2007)

"Science is not only the enterprise of harnessing nature to serve the practical needs of humankind. It is also part of man’s unending search for knowledge about the universe and his place within it." (Henry P Stapp, "Mindful Universe: Quantum Mechanics and the Participating Observer", 2007)

"Science is about discovery, but it is also about communication. An idea can hardly be said to exist if you do not awaken that same idea in someone else." (Marcus du Sautoy, "Symmetry: A Journey into the Patterns of Nature", 2008)

"Science isn’t about being right. It is about convincing others of the correctness of an idea through a methodology all will accept using data everyone can trust. New ideas take time to be accepted because they compete with others that have already passed the test." (Tom Koch, "Commentary: Nobody loves a critic: Edmund A Parkes and John Snow’s cholera", International Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 42 (6), 2013)

"Science, at its core, is simply a method of practical logic that tests hypotheses against experience." (John M Greer, "After Progress: Reason and Religion at the End of the Industrial Age", 2015)

"Science is an endeavor to understand and describe the real world out there to (at best) alleviate and enrich human existence." (Achim Zielesny, "From Curve Fitting to Machine Learning" 2nd Ed., 2016)

"Science is a game - but a game with reality, a game with sharpened knives." (Erwin Schrödinger)

"Science is not a technique or a body of knowledge, though it uses both. It is rather an attitude of inquiry, or observation and reasoning, with respect to the world. It can be developed, not by memorizing facts or juggling formulas to get an answer, but only by actual practice of scientific observation and reasoning." (Karl T Compton)

"Science is the knowledge of the many, orderly and methodically-arranged, so as to become comprehended by one." (Sir John Herschel)

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