Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 40 OF 42

Main Title Understanding the language of science /
Author Darian, Steven G.
Publisher University of Texas Press,
Year Published 2003
OCLC Number 51210597
ISBN 0292716176; 9780292716179; 0292716184; 9780292716186
Subjects Science--Language ; Science--Philosophy ; Taal ; Wetenschappen
Internet Access
Description Access URL
ebrary http://site.ebrary.com/id/10188362
Book review (E-STREAMS) http://www.e-streams.com/es0702/es0702_3048.html
Publisher description http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/description/texas041/2002154613.html
Book review (E-STREAMS) http://www.e-streams.com/es0702/es0702%5F3048.html
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EKAM  Q175.D2 2003 Region 4 Library/Atlanta,GA 06/11/2021
Edition 1st ed.
Collation xi, 248 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-246) and index.
Contents Notes
Chapter 1: The development of scientific thinking -- Chapter 2: The language of definitions -- Chapter 3: The language of classifying -- Chapter 4: The role of figurative language -- Chapter 5: Cause and effect -- Chapter 6: The language of hypotheses -- Chapter 7: The language of experiments -- Chapter 8: More than meets the eye: the role of visuals -- Chapter 9: The language of quantifying -- Chapter 10: The language of comparison. "To my knowledge, there has never [before] been a volume that analyzes, in one place, the actual language of science--those elements of thinking that are acknowledged to be the basis of scientific thought. . . . [Thus] this is a very important book, contributing to several fields: science, education, rhetoric, medicine, and perhaps even philosophy. . . . Darian's erudition is truly astonishing." --Celest A. Martin, Associate Professor, College Writing Program, University of Rhode Island From astronomy to zoology, the practice of science proceeds from scientific ways of thinking. These patterns of thought, such as defining and classifying, hypothesizing and experimenting, form the building blocks of all scientific endeavor. Understanding how they work is therefore an essential foundation for everyone involved in scientific study or teaching, from elementary school students to classroom teachers and professional scientists. In this book, Steven Darian examines the language of science in order to analyze the patterns of thinking that underlie scientific endeavor. He draws examples from university science textbooks in a variety of disciplines, since these offer a common, even canonical, language for scientific expression. Darian identifies and focuses in depth on nine patterns--defining, classifying, using figurative language, determining cause and effect, hypothesizing, experimenting, visualizing, quantifying, and comparing--and shows how they interact in practice. He also traces how these thought modes developed historically from Pythagoras through Newton.