Wednesday, July 31, 2019


July 31, 2019 Wednesday

Bedtime Story 


Claude Bernard and Science


If Bernard’s experiments which were primarily vivisections which in their very nature were shocking and ghastly then his thoughts on science were revolutionary for his times.

To him science was not about known but what was obscure and hidden.    

Any authority, whether scholarly or otherwise, ought to be taken with great skepticism and only experimental observation should be the leading authority.

“When we meet a fact which contradicts a prevailing theory, we must accept the fact and abandon the theory, even when they theory is supported by great names and generally accepted.”      

In his 1865 book ‘An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine’ he describes the fundamental principles of scientific method, experimental medicine and objectivity in scientific observations that most doctors till date have not been able to grasp or understand or to come to terms with.

He was a true scientist who took nothing for granted, dismissed any old notions that did not have any experimental basis and relied only on experimentation.

When even today most people find it difficult to accept that there is nothing fundamentally different between a living and non-living object (except for the complexity of multi-layered organization) Bernard was prescient enough to proclaim that all living creatures were bound by the same laws as inanimate matter.           

He for one also was clear that science is a constant play between theory and fact and between induction and deduction.

While mathematics is purely deductive starting from axioms and postulates it is not the case with sciences specially biological and medical science.

Induction to him was reasoning from the particular to the general whereas deduction was reasoning from general to particular and they needed to go hand in hand.

It is crucial that any general theory that is arrived at by the method of observation and induction through a series of theoretical deductions must be tested by specifically designed experiments.

Only the outcome of the experiments can attest to the veracity of our proposed theories and if they do not pass the test of experiments the theories – even the fondest ones – would have to be abandoned.

Claude Bernard lived in the times of Michael Faraday and perhaps he was to physiology and medicine what Faraday was to the traditional hands-on physics.

Both were ardent experimentalists and perhaps for this reason one can him Bernard the “Faraday of physiology and medicine”.  

Bernard also emphasized that it was to the scientist to determine the causality of any natural phenomenon.

It is up to the scientist who has to find the link of a phenomenon to its immediate cause by first observing it carefully and then proposing a hypothesis.

Stay tuned to the voice of an average story storytelling chimpanzee or login at http://panarrans.blogspot.com
                              
Good night Mon Ami and my fellow cousin ape.
                           
  
                

                  












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Another great educator and a teacher that I am aware of is Professor Subhashish Chattopadhyay in Bangalore, India.

While I narrate stories, Professor Subhashish an electronic engineer and a former professor at BARC, does and teaches real mathematics and physics.

He started the participation of Indian students at the International Physics Olympiad.

Do visit him here:


All his books can be downloaded for free through this link:


For edutainment and English education of your children, I recommend this large collection of Halloween Songs for Kids:



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