that which can be experienced or sensed; observes or measures some sort of phenomena -
Answers empirical
more abstract and cannot be directly sensed as part of the world; tends to imagine a
hypothetical system or model - Answers theoretical
facts, data and other forms of evidence that others can perceive; hold more authority in science
- Answers objective
endeavors, personal beliefs, opinions, intuition and value judgements; politics and art are
examples - Answers subjective
means to just take note of something happening without explaining it; raw data or raw
information - Answers observation
means to attach an explanation to an observation; an explanation of patterns in the data -
Answers interpretation
is a condition, law or circumstance that we assume to be true when evaluating observation -
Answers assumption
means measuring the real value of what you are after - Answers accuracy
means taking multiple measurements that faithfully reproduce previous results - Answers
precision
something that happens - Answers phenomena
a set of causes and conditions that give rise to a given phenomenon or pattern - Answers
mechanism
means that two measurements vary in similar ways; can be used to check accuracy - Answers
correlation
science that translates directly into the framework of everyday human activity; examples are
medicine and drug research - Answers applied science
science that does not have a n immediately clear objective or application - Answers basic
science
in 1957, the Soviet Union succeeded in launching the worlds first Earth-orbiting satellite; the US
didn't like this so started the "space race" to one up each other - Answers sputnik moments
are the largest-scale and socially relevant challenges we face as our civilization grows, uses
more resources and gets more complicated - Answers grand challenges