A) researchers must take care not to reach beyond the facts.
B) scientists must account for all of the new information which their investigation uncovers but they need not worry about explaining facts accounted for by previous theories.
C) an "imaginative leap" is often necessary which reaches beyond the facts.
D) the sky is the limit-scientists should realize that a creative hypothesis is like a great work of art, and has no conceptual limits.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) The best classifications tell us something essential about the thing they namesomething that is so much a part of that thing that if it were changed the thing really wouldn't be what it is.
B) There is not enough time in the world to describe any event or object in infinite detail; thus choices must be made about what to include and exclude in the description.These choices are made on the basis of hypotheses concerning what is important.
C) Scientists can't classify organisms without making guesses about how those organisms are causally related to each other; when they do that they are proposing biological hypotheses.
D) Classifications are always made in order to make comprehending a mass of information easier and "easier" is, of course, defined in accordance with whatever interests the classifier has.
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Multiple Choice
A) simple
B) causal
C) explanatory
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) explained everything that the previous theories did and some additional phenomena.
B) was set on a firmer scientific basis than the older theories.
C) got rid of a system of confusing epicycles.
D) had been proved to be true with a series of brilliant crucial experiments.
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Multiple Choice
A) It is the sort of thing that misleads researchers who are searching for objective answers.
B) It should not be formulated until all available information has been evaluated.
C) It is that scientific explanation which subsequent research will ultimately confirm or disconfirm.
D) It is a framework which guides researchers in the collection of data.
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Multiple Choice
A) The hypothesis was devised in order to take some specific data into account.
B) The hypothesis was devised in order to cover up an inconsistency in the theoretical structure caused by the appearance of some new data.
C) The hypothesis was created in a sort of theoretical vacuum: it explains the phenomenon that needs explaining but nothing else.
D) The hypothesis was created in order to provide an adequate explanation of some data, but does not succeed in doing so.
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Multiple Choice
A) the facts in question must be deducible from the proposed hypotheses.
B) certain procedures must be followed in order to generate truly scientific hypotheses.
C) there must be the possibility of making observations that confirm or discon- firm the proposed hypothesis.
D) any system of explanatory hypotheses must be self-consistent.
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Multiple Choice
A) simpler
B) more elegant
C) more popular
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Multiple Choice
A) They want to satisfy their curiosity.
B) They want to find practical solutions to human problems.
C) They want to increase the total amount of information available to humanity.
D) They want to unify knowledge and make it simpler.
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Multiple Choice
A) explanatory
B) preliminary
C) Final
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Multiple Choice
A) evidence
B) scientists
C) politicians
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Multiple Choice
A) a considerable amount of background research has been done on a given ques- tion to determine which hypothesis is the most promising.
B) all the scientists engaged on a project can agree upon what method to use to find answers to a question.
C) the problem to be solved is clearly identified.
D) scientists meet and decide to cooperate in research activity.
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True/False
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True/False
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) a priori
B) empirical
C) biased
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Multiple Choice
A) realize that one cannot reasonably be preferred over the other since all classification springs from whatever practical interests inspired it.
B) prefer the simpler scheme.
C) prefer the scheme which allows more facts to be predicted and more theories to be generated out of it.
D) prefer the scheme which reflects reality most accurately.
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Multiple Choice
A) because they come on good authority
B) because they have overwhelming evidence in their favor
C) because they are based on longstanding tradition
D) because they trigger deeply felt intuitions
Correct Answer
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