Science is Fanciful and Factual

The scientific method is a potentiation of common sense, exercised with a specially firm determination not to persist in error if any exertion of hand or mind can deliver us from it. Like other exploratory processes, it can be resolved into a dialogue between fact and fancy, the actual and the possible; between what could be true and what is in fact the case. The purpose of scientific enquiry is not to compile an inventory of factual information, nor to build up a totalitarian world picture of Natural Laws in which every event that is not compulsory is forbidden. We should think of it rather as a logically articulated structure of justifiable beliefs about nature. It begins as a story about a Possible World—a story which we invent and criticise and modify as we go along, so that it ends by being, as nearly as we can make it, a story about real life.

Notes:

It is a competition between what we imagine the answers are and what experimentation tells us they are.

Folksonomies: scientific method meaning experimentation

Taxonomies:
/science (0.577125)
/society/crime/personal offense/homicide (0.248050)
/art and entertainment/books and literature/fan fiction (0.185628)

Keywords:
specially firm determination (0.923928 (neutral:0.000000)), logically articulated structure (0.879869 (positive:0.744377)), totalitarian world picture (0.861966 (negative:-0.638725)), Possible World—a story (0.746172 (negative:-0.540013)), factual information (0.534568 (negative:-0.412117)), justifiable beliefs (0.512756 (positive:0.744377)), common sense (0.490628 (neutral:0.000000)), scientific method (0.454692 (neutral:0.000000)), scientific enquiry (0.449038 (negative:-0.412117)), Natural Laws (0.437481 (negative:-0.638725)), real life (0.426180 (positive:0.512053))

Concepts:
Science (0.957485): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Theory (0.719586): dbpedia | freebase
Scientific method (0.639989): dbpedia | freebase
Epistemology (0.629216): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Mathematics (0.548903): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Aristotle (0.520429): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc | yago
Philosophy (0.503913): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Deductive reasoning (0.502001): dbpedia | freebase

 Induction and Intuition in Scientific Thought
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Medawar , P B (2008-10-02), Induction and Intuition in Scientific Thought, Retrieved on 2012-06-12
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  •