SEARCH
You are in browse mode. You must login to use MEMORY

   Log in to start

Stats and Research Test #1 on 10/3/24


🇬🇧
In English
Created:


Public
Created by:
Emerald Buchanan


0 / 5  (0 ratings)



» To start learning, click login

1 / 25

[Front]


What are some arguments for Christianity and modern science?
[Back]


God is rational, nature is intelligible, actions provoke reactions, God is the ultimate lawgiver, nature is real, nature is worthy of attention, and the universe is orderly.

Practice Known Questions

Stay up to date with your due questions

Complete 5 questions to enable practice

Exams

Exam: Test your skills

Test your skills in exam mode

Learn New Questions

Popular in this course

multiple choiceMultiple choice mode

Dynamic Modes

SmartIntelligent mix of all modes
CustomUse settings to weight dynamic modes

Manual Mode [BETA]

Select your own question and answer types
Other available modes

Learn with flashcards
Complete the sentence
Listening & SpellingSpelling: Type what you hear
SpeakingAnswer with voice
Speaking & ListeningPractice pronunciation
TypingTyping only mode

Stats and Research Test #1 on 10/3/24 - Leaderboard

0 users have completed this course. Be the first!

No users have played this course yet, be the first


Stats and Research Test #1 on 10/3/24 - Details

Levels:

Questions:

69 questions
🇬🇧🇬🇧
What are some arguments for Christianity and modern science?
God is rational, nature is intelligible, actions provoke reactions, God is the ultimate lawgiver, nature is real, nature is worthy of attention, and the universe is orderly.
What is meant by the phrase nature is intelligible?
It can be comprehended by reasoning about observation and experimentation.
What is meant by nature is worthy of attention?
Nature is good because the Creator said so
What is meant by the phrase the universe is orderly?
Precise calculations accurately and objectively predict many phenomena.
Why is it important to talk about scientific assumptions?
It gives choices of issues to be researched.
What are the types of assumptions?
Pseudo-scientific, scientific, and meta-scientific.
What are examples psuedo-scientific assumptions?
Spiritism, astrology, and parapsychology (telepathic communication).
Arguments for reasoning?
Separate from experience (innate and immutable), sometimes superior to experience and universally shared.
Arguments for rationalism
Dualism, knowledge is obtained by reasoning
What is empiricism?
Admitted intuition, perception of how some ideas may or may not agree between them (ex: existence of God).
How is knowledge obtained?
Through experience and sensation and perception.8
Characteristics of experience?
Direct or indirect source of all knowledge, mind or spirit has no independent activity (we are our body), and valid knowledge can only be obtained by observation and control of the observed phenomena.
What are examples of meta-scientific assumptions?
Reductionism, pragmatism, relativism, and positivism/materialism and sceintism.
What is reductionism?
The assumption that explanations can be reduced to one dimension
Who is associated with pragmatism and what is it?
William James; practical application (what is this for?).
Who is associated with relativism and what is it?
Bauch de Spinoza, idea that things are relative, cannot divide something without relating it something else.
Who is associated with positivism/materialism and what is it?
Auguste Lomte; idea that only physical phenomena are real, things that are actually physically there.
Who is associated with scientism and what is it?
Richard Dawkins; special type of knowledge, exceptional implies measurement, quantification and control, supports scientific community
What are the 5 ways of acquiring knowledge?
Tenacity, authority, intuition, casual observation, and reasoning (deductive and inductive).
What is tenacity?
Resistance to oppositional povs
Characteristics of authority and knowledge
People are weary that people will abuse their power
Intuition and knowledge
Idea that concpets, beliefs, and morals surface intuitively
Casual observation
Knowledge based on observations without any systematic process for observing or assessing the accuracy of observations. (anytime there is an accident there is police)
Deductive reasoning
Reason with arguments
Inductive reasoning
Evidence of abscence
Characteristics of science
Assuming lawfulness of events, empirical, control, objectivity, and self-correction
Assuming lawfulness of events and science
Determination vs free will (freud), enviornment determines who you are (skinner), and every person is unique no law about you (Maslow)
Empirical and science
Direct assessment (cameras, 2 way glass), use data when asking and answering empirical questions
Control and science
Deliberitally and systematically controlled, conditions are free of unwanted or extraneuous influence
Objectivity and science
Apply rational thought and logical statements, collect data impartially
Self correction and science
Most salient characteristics (birth order)
What are the 5 steps to perform scientific research?
Identify ideas to test, design scientific test procedures, observe and collect data, analyze and intepret data, and communicate the results
What are the goals of science
Description, prediction, determining causes, and explaining
What is description in science
Used to detail or categorize events, helps generate hypothesis, cannot draw cause effect conclusions, and conclusions are descriptions
Prediction in science
Relationships, hypothesis, there is a relationship between the variables, can only state whether a relationship exists between variables
Determining causes in science
Cause precedes effect and variables change together systematically (co-vary)
Key features of an experiment
Manipulation of an independent variable, control (condition or procedures), eliminating confounding variables, random assignments of participants to groups
Explaining in science
Once causes are determined, questions remain (how many causes are involved in a behavior)
What are the types of literature
General, scholarly, secondary, primary
General source
For general public, written by professional writers in well-known sources (magazine), little referencing of sources, and lots of general advertising
Scholarly source
For professionals and students, written by experts or researchers, cite references, and little or not general advertising in the source, peer reviewed
Secondary source
Secondhand information, usually bases on the primary source
Primary source
Original, firsthand account of an idea or research finding (journal, article)
NASW general ethic principles
Ideals to which all social workers should aspire
NASW general ethical standards
Ethical standards and guidelines for conduct that can be enforced
What are the 6 NASW Core Values?
Service, social justice, dignity and worth of the person, importance of human relationship, integrity, and competence
Service
Social worker's primary goal is to help people in need and to address social problems
Social justice
Social workers challenge social injustice
Dignity and worth of the person
Social workers respect the inherent dignity and worth of the person
Importance of human relationships
Social workers recognize the central importance of human relationships
Integrity
Social workers behave in a trustworthy manner
Competence
Social workers practice within their areas of competence and develop and enhance their professional expertise
IRB
Perform risk-benefit analysis, strive for minimal risk
Major ethical issues
Informed consent, privacy, ethics in reporting
Types of variables
Quantitative, qualitative, discrete, continous
Quantitative varible
Numerical or can easily be converted to numerical form
Qualitative variable
Usually narrative in nature- listen to someone's story
Discrete variable
Represented by whole numbers or categories, independent units or objects
Continous variables
Represented by a continuum (weight, height)
4 types of scales of measurement
Nominal, ordinal, interval, ratio
Nominal scale
"just a name, not a number" (family) basic level, numbers represent qualitative differences, not intended for numerical calculations only to classify data
Ordinal scale
A scale of measurement in which the measurement categories form a rank order along a continuum
Interval scale
A scale of measurement in which the intervals between numbers on the scale are all equal in size do not have true zeros (temp.)
Ratio scale
Has true zero, ratio comparisons can be made, appropriate stats (mean, medium, mode, standard deviation, etc)