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What is science what does it mean?

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  1. a particular branch of scientific knowledge

    "the science of genetics"


  2. The observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena.

    Such activities restricted to a class of natural phenomena.

    Such activities applied to an object of inquiry or study.

    Methodological activity, discipline, or study: I've got packing a suitcase down to a science.

    An activity that appears to require study and method: the science of purchasing.

    Knowledge, especially that gained through experience.

    Science Christian Science.

    [Middle English, knowledge, learning, from Old French, from Latin scientia, from sciēns, scient-, present participle of scīre, to know.]

    Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Science

    In common usage the word science is applied to a variety of disciplines or intellectual activities which have certain features in common. Usually a science is characterized by the possibility of making precise statements which are susceptible of some sort of check or proof. This often implies that the situations with which the special science is concerned can be made to recur in order to submit themselves to check, although this is by no means always the case. There are observational sciences such as astronomy or geology in which repetition of a situation at will is intrinsically impossible, and the possible precision is limited to precision of description.

    Sports Science and Medicine: science

    A systematic study using observation, experiment, and measurement, of physical and social phenomena, or any specific area involving such a study.

    Columbia Encyclopedia: science

    [Lat. scientia=knowledge]. For many the term science refers to the organized body of knowledge concerning the physical world, both animate and inanimate, but a proper definition would also have to include the attitudes and methods through which this body of knowledge is formed; thus, a science is both a particular kind of activity and also the results of that activity

    Promise and Problems of Modern Science

    Modern science holds out a number of promises, as well as a number of problems. In the foreseeable future researchers may solve the riddle of life and create life itself in a test tube. Most diseases may be brought under control. Science is also working toward control over the environment, e.g., dispersing hurricanes before they can endanger life or property. New sources of energy are being developed, and these together with the capacity to manipulate alien environments may make life possible on the moon or other planets.

    Science (from the Latin scientia, 'knowledge'), in the broadest sense, refers to any systematic knowledge or practice.[1] Examples of the broader use included political science and computer science, which are not incorrectly named, but rather named according to the older and more general use of the word. In a more restricted sense, science refers to a system of acquiring knowledge based on the scientific method, as well as to the organized body of knowledge gained through such research.[2][3] This article focuses on the more restricted use of the word.

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