Science is concerned with the investigation of phenomena in nature and the
explanation of those phenomena using basic principles. Science is more than
an accumulation of facts. In the words of the famous French physicist Jules
Henri Poincare, "A collection of facts without a unifying theory is no
more a science than a heap of stones is a house." A science needs a central,
coordinating structure. If you attempt to learn physics, or any science for
that matter, by memorizing facts without understanding the basic principles
explaining those facts, you are almost certainly doomed to fail. Instead of
attempting to memorize isolated facts and relationships presented in the text,
try to understand the underlying theory and the central unifying concepts. Use
the Chapter Outline as a guide to identify the topics to be considered in each
chapter. Try to find the answers to the questions posed in the outline as you
read through the chapter.
Careful observation and testability are two critical elements of science. To
be considered as a scientific theory or hypothesis an idea must make predictions
that can be checked or tested by observations or experiments. A scientist must
be willing to modify a theory if the results of experiments indicate that the
predictions of the theory do not agree with the results of experiments testing
the theory.
In a sense the best way to learn physics is to use the scientific method on
yourself by considering the questions at the end of the chapters and using your
understanding of the concepts presented in the chapters to provide the answers.
If your understanding of the principles does not allow you to provide the correct
answers to the questions, go back and modify your understanding of the concepts
just as a scientist would modify a theory if the results of an experiment did
not agree with the predictions of the theory. Then try again. When you believe
you have sufficient understanding that you can answer all the questions, proceed
to the exercises for which more mathematics is required.
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