Scientific methods are standardized procedures that scientists should follow when conducting experiments to construct reliable, consistent, and not optional environmental representations. Following scientific methods is the order in which the experiment is observed. First, scientists must observe the phenomena of interest. Next, scientists need to come up with hypotheses, or experiment-based ideas. Then by repeating the experiment, the hypothesis can prove to be wrong, and it can also become a theory.
Over the past several hundred years the success of scientific methods has demonstrated that humans can at least partially overcome their cognitive bias. The scientific method is aimed at offsetting our cognitive bias, which gives us a very intuitive conclusion about how the universe functions. Imagine that it is contrary to the intuition that the earth is circling the sun. That everyone can see for millions of years is how easy it is to believe that the sun 'is crossing the sky' every day. Think of our ancestors first that we must understand that many diseases are caused by intangible things called bacteria. These examples show that our intuition is often proven wrong. This is a valid reason for many aspects of learning problems.
All scientific fields are unified through the use of scientific methods. The scientific method provides an objective way for scientific experiments to enable fair interpretation and sophistication of the world. Sir Francis Bacon (1561 - 1626) first outlined scientific methods and enabled logical and rational problem solving in many scientific fields. In all scientific fields, the main principles of scientific methods are verifiability, predictability, tampering and fairness.
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) British philosopher, politician, speaker and scientist. Bacon is considered to be "father of empiricism" for his work in the study of scientific phenomena and his work in advancing scientific methodology and structured scientific exploration. He encourages his own example and philosophical experience. An important figure in the scientific revolution of the 17th century. Rene de Carte (1596 - 1650) Rene de Carte is a French philosopher and mathematician. Descartes made a great contribution to the philosophy of rationalism. Descartes' meditation is epoch-making. Because he doubts the previous belief and is trying to prove their validity through logic. Later empiricists opposed Descartes' method, but his philosophy broke many topics for further discussion. Descartes has been proved to be "the existence of God", but his doubt is an important step in promoting reasons over faith.