DRAFT
Faculty Senate Statement on
Science
(February 2007)
Science pervades
every aspect of our lives, from energy use, transportation, communication, our
own health and that of the environment in which we live, to the production and
distribution of food and the underpinnings of civilization itself. Some of the
great scientific discoveries upon which our technology is based include the
atomic theory (Physics and Chemistry), quantum theory, electromagnetic theory,
Newton’s theory of gravity, and the theory of relativity (Physics), the theory
of plate tectonics (Earth Science), and the theory of evolution (Life
Sciences).
In popular speech, the word
'theory' means 'a guess' or ‘hypothesis.’ However, in science, 'theory' refers to
an explanation tested by observed facts. A well-tested hypothesis rises to the
level of theory when it has been tested repeatedly without being falsified.
Thus, a theory is as close to the truth as science can come. This is because
scientific theories are rigorously subjected to the test of new knowledge,
often gained by advances in technology that were unavailable when the
explanations were first proposed. Hence, although even the most successful
theories are, by definition, never proven, any scientific theory can be refuted
by facts that are at odds with its predictions. It is this quality that most
distinguishes a scientific concept from a non-scientific one. Because science
relies only on explanations that have the property that they can be falsified by
testing, other kinds of explanations are beyond the scope of science because
they cannot be falsified by empirical data.
Practical
applications of scientific theories include assembly of the periodic table of
elements (atomic theory), development of nuclear energy (quantum theory and
theory of relativity), global positioning systems (theory of relativity),
electronics and nanotechnology (quantum and electromagnetic theories), early
space travel ultimately leading to satellite technology (Newton’s theory of
gravity, later superseded by Einstein’s theory of general relativity),
understanding of the global distribution of volcanoes and earthquakes and the
hazards they pose (plate tectonic theory), and the development of effective
vaccines and drugs to combat ever-changing viruses, such as flu and HIV, as
well as methods to make pathogens evolve to be less virulent (theory of
evolution). All of the above theories share a common element—despite thousands
of independent tests of each, none of them has yet to be falsified by factual
and repeatable evidence, which gives us great confidence in their potential for
further technological application.
We, the Faculty Senate of the
University of Oklahoma, oppose any attempt to weaken standards in any field of
science, to redefine the scientific process so as to exclude the requirement
that explanations be falsifiable, or to weaken the scientific curriculum to
include non-scientific explanations. In an expanding global economy that is
increasingly driven by science and technology, it is essential that our
children receive a first-class science education. In this, we stand with our
colleagues in the National Academy of Sciences, the American Association for
the Advancement of Science, and other scientific organizations worldwide.
* See also http://www.ou.edu/cas/zoology/evolution.htm