Food for Thought

 

Techlearner


Previous Editorials

  Feb 2003

Nanotechnology

    

 

About Knowledge and Learning: 

Is all our knowledge Scientific?

 

by: Mario Solari, Techlearner Editor

Date: August 30, 2003

 

We acquire knowledge through the learning process.  Some of this 
knowledge consists of scientific kind of knowledge which human beings 
have developed from the very early times.  The scientific method is 
already a well accepted method for explaining the different physical 
(tangible or not) phenomena in nature.  It consists of experimentation 
and theorization. A theory is developed to explain the physical phenomena 
that are observed and at the same time the experiments from which we 
measure physical entities about the subject matter help confirm that theory.  
If new phenomena about the same subject matter are observed which do not 
fit in the current theory, this has to be modified or a new theory must be 
developed to encompass the new behavior encountered.  
This has been the mode of science since its early beginnings, since Galileo
and Newton helped among other scientists to define the Scientific Method.

However, there are other kinds of knowledge.  We learn about History from 
books or from what people tell us about the past.  We learn about other 
aspects of human life such as language, religion, music, carpentry and so 
on also from books, the Internet and from other people and also to a large 
extent from our own experiences.
Knowledge itself can be intellectual or practical.  We may know about a 
certain subject, but we may not know its practical aspects, as for instance 
we may know geometry but not how to draw geometrical figures.
Another aspect of knowledge is that we will never be able to know enough, 
it is unlimited and for sure the main reason why technology and science keep 
always redefining themselves.  Even if we know much about a specific subject,
we will never be able to attain complete understanding and hence complete 
knowledge of the matter at hand.

The senses play an integral part in the attainment of all forms of knowledge.  
It is through them that we observe the world around us and learn about it.
Without observation there would not be any experimentation and hence no 
science and no guide for us to deal with the world.  It is true that some 
physical phenomena lie beyond our perception and therefore we need special 
tools to be able to measure and define those phenomena, but our senses always 
constitute the starting point to guide our observation of reality.
Once the senses bring us to observing and experiencing life in all its 
dimensions, we must be guided by reason so as to interpret correctly these 
observations and so complete the learning process. Sometimes and to some 
extent this learning process will be complemented by actively doing something 
which presupposes that we have acquired knowledge about the subject.  
A simple example would be that we learn by observing that wood can cause fire,
and then we actually take some pieces of wood and make fire ourselves.

As stated before there are some kinds of knowledge that may go beyond simple
observation. Life teaches human beings many lessons in different aspects such
as religion, relationships, philosophy, values and so on and we are formed by 
these experiences such that no two of us are equal to each other regarding 
all of them.  
This aspect of knowledge comes from the fact that we are more than just a 
conglomerate of particles arranged in a particular way; we are indeed living, 
breathing, free, reasoning persons.

In conclusion, knowledge encompasses many different aspects and is not just 
restrained to Scientific Knowledge, although this kind of knowledge accounts 
for teaching us the realities of the physical-measurable world.  The other 
remaining kinds of knowledge are also as important since they constitute part 
of our revelation as human beings.

 

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