The Science of Discovery (Why do scientists so rarely make breakthroughs)

Why Are Breakthroughs So Rare?

Everything scientists do is intended to lead to discoveries. No coincidence, we reward scientists who make meaningful discoveries with things like the Nobel Prize. Clearly, discoveries are the universal holy grail of science. Yet strangely, close to 100% of scientific efforts fail to discover anything. Why? And why does no one ever mention this?

This is not to say scientists discover nothing, let alone nothing meaningful. Every life on this planet is better because of science's advancements. Moreover, scientists themselves are some of the brightest, most amazing people. So how do we explain their close to perfect record of failures?

In part, this book will explore this mystery-why the current scientific method so rarely succeeds. This book will claim the problem lies not with scientists but rather, with their method. But what if scientists had a method which enabled them to make discoveries every time out?

In the opening chapters, this book will describe what such a method would need to be like. We'll then test this method on everything from sleep problems and weight loss issues to the nature of deafness, cancer, meditation, and learning the times tables. Can we possibly discover anything new? Prepare to be amazed.

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The Science of Discovery (Why do scientists so rarely make breakthroughs)

Why Are Breakthroughs So Rare?

Everything scientists do is intended to lead to discoveries. No coincidence, we reward scientists who make meaningful discoveries with things like the Nobel Prize. Clearly, discoveries are the universal holy grail of science. Yet strangely, close to 100% of scientific efforts fail to discover anything. Why? And why does no one ever mention this?

This is not to say scientists discover nothing, let alone nothing meaningful. Every life on this planet is better because of science's advancements. Moreover, scientists themselves are some of the brightest, most amazing people. So how do we explain their close to perfect record of failures?

In part, this book will explore this mystery-why the current scientific method so rarely succeeds. This book will claim the problem lies not with scientists but rather, with their method. But what if scientists had a method which enabled them to make discoveries every time out?

In the opening chapters, this book will describe what such a method would need to be like. We'll then test this method on everything from sleep problems and weight loss issues to the nature of deafness, cancer, meditation, and learning the times tables. Can we possibly discover anything new? Prepare to be amazed.

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The Science of Discovery (Why do scientists so rarely make breakthroughs)

The Science of Discovery (Why do scientists so rarely make breakthroughs)

by Steven Paglierani
The Science of Discovery (Why do scientists so rarely make breakthroughs)

The Science of Discovery (Why do scientists so rarely make breakthroughs)

by Steven Paglierani

Paperback

$19.95 
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Overview

Why Are Breakthroughs So Rare?

Everything scientists do is intended to lead to discoveries. No coincidence, we reward scientists who make meaningful discoveries with things like the Nobel Prize. Clearly, discoveries are the universal holy grail of science. Yet strangely, close to 100% of scientific efforts fail to discover anything. Why? And why does no one ever mention this?

This is not to say scientists discover nothing, let alone nothing meaningful. Every life on this planet is better because of science's advancements. Moreover, scientists themselves are some of the brightest, most amazing people. So how do we explain their close to perfect record of failures?

In part, this book will explore this mystery-why the current scientific method so rarely succeeds. This book will claim the problem lies not with scientists but rather, with their method. But what if scientists had a method which enabled them to make discoveries every time out?

In the opening chapters, this book will describe what such a method would need to be like. We'll then test this method on everything from sleep problems and weight loss issues to the nature of deafness, cancer, meditation, and learning the times tables. Can we possibly discover anything new? Prepare to be amazed.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780984489558
Publisher: Emergence Alliance Publishing
Publication date: 09/14/2016
Pages: 332
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Steven Paglierani is an author, educator, psychotherapist, and film maker whose writings describe the world through the lens of the autism spectrum. As a licensed therapist, he teaches others-especially those who are outside the norm and find it hard to fit in-to stop imitating normal and to be themselves. He has authored the first blamelessly "natural" personality theory, a theory where everything derives from a single fractal pattern. He's also built and raced Shelby Mustangs, been a singer/song writer mentioned in Rolling Stone, and designed his best friend's home as a wedding gift.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Opening Thoughts - The Science of Discovery

Section 1 - Discovery (what can we learn about . . . ?)

Science's Holy Grail: Discoveries

Answers or Questions: Which Should Science Seek?

Science's Big Problem: Understanding Change

What Do You Get if You Marry Geometry & Logic?

Section 1 - Chapter 7 - Logical Geometry (discoveries have a shape)

What Makes Someone a Scientific Genius?

Can Science Make Its Definitions Clear and Precise?

Can Definitions Be Both Universal & Mutually Exclusive?

Can We Eliminate Scientific Bias?

Can We Get Rid of Soft Sciences?

Should Science Even Try to Define Spiritual Concepts?

Why Use Complementary Opposites to Define Things?

So How Does Using Logical Geometry Benefit Us?

Section 1 - Chapter 8 - How the Six Logical Geometries Emerge (a brief look)

Single Points (the First Logical Geometry)

"Connections Between Single Points" IS What You Discover

How Serious Can It Be to Miss a Single Point?

Section 1 - Chapter 9 - Using Logical Geometry (mapping the natural world)

The Old & New Sciences: What's Different?

The Current Scientific Method

The Constellated Science Method

Difference 1: How You Decide Which Evidence to Consider

Difference 2: How You Gather This Evidence

Difference 3: How You Arrange The Evidence You've Gathered

Difference 4: How You Arrive At Your Conclusions

Section One - End Notes (Ch. 7 thru 9) - Afterthoughts & Resources

How This Book Parallels Descartes' Discourse on Method

Section 2 - Introduction - The Cartesian Process (what can we learn about . . . ?

Constellated Science's "Four Processes"

Process One-Step One: the Intuitive Step-Slate Clearing

Process One-Step Two: the Material Step-Fact Gathering

Process One-Step Three: the Empirical Step-Experimenting

Process One-Step Four: the Rational Step-Pattern Seeking

Section 2 - Chapter 10 - Sleep (what can we learn about . . . ?)

Serotonin, Melatonin, & Neurotransmitters

How SSRIs Treat Depression: an Analogy

Sleep, Light, Sunlight, and Darkness

Sleep & Air Quality: CO2, Oxygen, Temperature, Breeze

O2 & CO2 (oxygen & carbon dioxide): Measuring Air

REM Sleep, nonREM Sleep, and Rest

Is This a Better Way to Order Hypnogram Levels?

The Serotonin / Melatonin Sunglass Experiment

Serotonin, Melatonin, and Neurotransmitters

Sleep, Light, Sunlight, and Darkness

Sleep and Air Quality: CO2, Oxygen, Temperature

REM Sleep, non-REM Sleep, and the Nature of Rest

What Are Dreams and Why Do We Need Them?

Section 2 - Chapter 11 - Weight Loss (what can we learn about . . . ?)

Why Can't We Lose Weight and Keep It Off?

Are Dieting & Exercise Making Us Fatter?

Should We Finish Our Food or Not?

Why Are Young Children Naturally Thin?

Is Scale Weight a Predictor of Death?

Are Calories Real?

Is Metabolism Real?

Why Does Diabetes Change People's Weight?

Section 2 - Chapter 12 - Deafness (what can we learn about . . . ?)

Are There Also Two Kinds of Deafness?

[1] Physiological Hearing-How Does it Work?

[2] Hearing as Sensation: Is Hearing, Sensing Sound?

[3] The Mind & Hearing: Is Understanding Sound, Hearing?

[4] Deafness and Hearing: What Do Deaf People Hear?

Section 2 - Chapter 13 - Cancer (what can we learn about . . . ?)

Cancer and Feeling Powerless

Is Cancer Another of Science's Definition Problems?

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