2.1 Senses and Instrumentation: Difference between revisions

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"Seeing is believing," but should I believe what I see through a telescope? Or the reading I see on a thermometer? Instruments extend our experience of the world beyond our senses. Just as with our senses, we gain trust in scientific instruments through interactive exploration and comparison.
"Seeing is believing," but should I believe what I see through a telescope? Or the reading I see on a thermometer? Instruments extend our experience of the world beyond our senses. Just as with our senses, we gain trust in scientific instruments through interactive exploration and comparison.
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== The Lesson in Context ==
== The Lesson in Context ==

Latest revision as of 20:27, 21 February 2024

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"Seeing is believing," but should I believe what I see through a telescope? Or the reading I see on a thermometer? Instruments extend our experience of the world beyond our senses. Just as with our senses, we gain trust in scientific instruments through interactive exploration and comparison.

The Lesson in Context

This lesson links the idea that there's a shared reality "out there" and the beginnings of our comprehension about it. It does this by providing the foundation for why we can trust that the instruments we use are in fact measuring something real about reality. The lessons after this are about how we interpret the results of our measurements and start to unpack what they're actually telling us about reality.

Takeaways

After this lesson, students should

  1. Place appropriate trust in instruments where direct observation is not possible (or is less precise/accurate).
  2. Understand that interaction with reality through instruments can extend the belief of a shared objective reality to objects and phenomena to which our raw senses do not have direct access.
  3. Understand the challenges of validating an instrument and general methods of validation.

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