don’t expect links in this version to work: this is just for reading

 

The Art of Scientific Discovery

3 credits

 

Tuesdays and Thursdays in BSW 510 from 14:00 to 15:15

 

A.T. Winfree, 326 or 372 BSW: 621-3495, -3144

winfree@email.arizona.edu

 

You should read this over every month during the course.

It also appears at my lab pages

Most students don't take it seriously at first.

You may need a reminder, or several.

 

Who: Undergrads including freshmen, grad students, and postdocs have enjoyed this course and claimed to benefit from their vigorous engagement in it. Younger students typically do better, perhaps due to their briefer exposure to the educational system. See comments at the lab web pages

 

What: The aim of this course is to develop your ability of solve problems like those encountered in scientific investigations. We examine how specific problems were solved in the past, examine  'inspirational readings', and tackle selected puzzles for pencil and paper and for simple lab manipulation. These exercises are intended as 'practice scrimmages' in strategy and tactics of recognizing ignorance, of posing questions, of cultivating multiple alternative solutions, of eliminating rejectable candidate solutions, of spotting and taking advantage of your own mistakes, and especially of learning a positive attitude toward mistakes, because they are often the most available doors to discovery.

 

These exercises depend as little as possible on knowledge of any particular subject area. That way everyone is on an equal footing of unfamiliarity and no one is likely to be deprived of exercise by already ‘knowing’ 'the' solution. The aim is to experience a feeling of disorientation and hopeless lost-ness, so you will learn not to despair in paralysis but instead focus on method, generate several alternative guesses, and test them for workability. Readings and examples are drawn from all the sciences, often emphasizing biology. The discovery exercises are mostly made from elementary mathematics so as to require no lab setup and so as to be comprehensible to students from diverse backgrounds. There are some hands-on lab-type exercises too. All are contrived much as the organizers of an Easter Egg Hunt do in the hour before little kids arrive with their baskets: surprisingly many discoveries are rigged into these exercises for your gratification if you will but learn how to discover stuff.

 

This is not a lecture course. The objective is not to add to your store of useful facts. Nor will you be passively stuffed by the professor with sophistication and accordingly accredited. As in weight-lifting, you will benefit from this course in proportion to your investment of time and effort. Interactions with your peers in this gym are contrived  to leave you with muscles and installed habits of exercise that will last a long time. Remember the weight-lifting metaphor. The purpose of making this a formal 'course' is to provide you a legitimate (regularly scheduled, graded) escape from the usual pressures, during which to consciously cultivate skills and personal style in problem solving. In this course actually solving the practice problems is way less important than learning how to try (and, for grading, demonstrating real effort.)

 

Some people suppose problem-solving cannot be taught. They suppose that you are born with innate ability or not, and that's all there is to it. In contrast, I think we are all born with it and mostly lose it during and because of schooling and the general intimidation that comes with any competitive society. We can refine and enhance it about as much as we please.  One example: according to the Proceedings of US National Academy of Sciences in spring 2000, London taxi drivers develop bigger hippocampus (the part of the brain involved in navigation) the longer they work at that job.

 

Thinking styles differ immensely between individuals. Evidence: widespread disagreement about almost everything. Given persistent diversity of styles, it seems likely that some styles are better than others for different purposes or for different individuals. If so then by getting acquainted with alternative styles and by exercising some 'natural selection' between alternative styles during diverse exercises, you can prove to yourself that thinking is an improvable skill. In 'real life' we are so intent on getting immediate solutions to urgent hurtful problems that we seldom feel the leisure required to examine how we get them and how we  fail to. While swimming with a goal in sight and a clock running, you don't feel free to experiment, for example, with breathing on the other side of your stroke. In this course you are free and even compelled to. There will be much choking and sputtering, but it's OK here because not much depends on finishing first within this one semester.  We are trying  to improve your whole future life.

 

Your Professor:

A.T. Winfree. See web site for supplementary info on the course and for the prof's resume. 

 

We have three main tools in this course:

 

1)     Readings:

Ehrlich (physicist) Nine Crazy Ideas in Science: A Few Might Even Be True

Adams (consulting engineer) Conceptual Blockbusting

 

And a lot of xeroxed handouts, not listed here, many from current periodicals. You will read these and comment on them, at least by underlining and making marginal notations. I expect you to commit to paper a page per class session to celebrate the best things you find or think of while involved with these readings.

 

If you will save a checklist of good ideas gleaned while reading (from the readings or from your own thoughts in reaction the readings) you can use this checklist to joggle your brains during every problem-solving session. It would be a good idea to put a check mark beside each such item when practiced, together with page number in your GamesWorth book (see below). See which ones help you.

By the way, so far as I am aware, no student has ever done this. I still recommend it.  I am not going to play Big Brother in a effort to make sure you do this and other useful exercises. Your life is up to you.

 

 

 

2) Problems --- the equivalent of bar-bells for lifting --- for homework and for in-class collaboration to allow you to practice intellectual gimmicks suggested by the readings. Write down your approaches, your lucky insights, how you got into and out of blind alleys. This is the main thing, not the ‘answers’. Keep a diary in your GamesWorth book (see below) to focus your mind on strategy and tactics, not just on the ostensible bottom line (which is not the bottom line in this peculiar course). The purpose of the puzzles (many of them silly) is to slow you down for a few minutes so you can examine the working of your own mind. It is hard to develop consciousness of how you do it, but awareness is the first step to correction and improvement of any skill. Contrary to widespread fiction, and unlike watching your feet while dancing, it will not hobble you. Ask any gymnast about such matters.

 

Use these homework puzzles to nucleate a habit of doing a daily 'Game's-Worth' (henceforth, “gw”) of focused thought, as in the first hand-out (Platt: The Art of Creative Thinking: the allusion is to how much thought it takes to play one game of serious chess). This might be the most important (potentially enduring) effect of the course. I will examine your daily (or at least 5 times a week, realistically) GamesWorth notebook at the end of semester.

 

I do insist that you formally log your brains in and out of each session by numbering the pages used (so you can refer to them from elsewhere) and noting the date and start and end times. Also record where you are working: the idea is to find the place that works best. You are to write only on the right side pages of a bound (not-looseleaf) notebook. When you peruse your neighbor’s gw, remind him/her to do all this. You will find that all this is not just busywork.

 

At the end of each session, before you log out, you are to tidily summarize, as though for notarizing in an industrial research lab (but really so your classmates can read it and glean the same harvest as you did.) There being 15 weeks * 5 = 75 days in the semester, you will need at least 150 pages (times 2 because there is also a left side) for thinking and summarizing. Likely this will require two such notebooks.

 

What are the left sides for? (meaning, the backside of each sheet of paper, on the left when the gw book is open before you, not meaning the left half of each side of paper). For two things:

a) In-class notes

b) Re-considering your prior thinking. This Monday-morning quarterbacking or morning-after reconsideration is to be done much later, after you have disengaged from the details and engaged other problems. Then you can look back and sense where you could have taken a different approach, see how well the methods you are trying did in fact work out for you, see what alternative discoveries you might have made (e.g., the ones your classmates did) and why you didn’t. After the first few weeks I expect you to discipline yourself from time to time to do such a "morning-after" re-examination of some problem you struggled with weeks earlier. See how your perspective has changed. See how differently you would tackle it now. See why you got stuck before or why you went straight to a nifty solution without tripping over the obstacles everyone else did. We are here not so much to solve the problems as to see how we didn't or see how some quirky habit of thought saved the day, and benefit from those recognitions. This requires morning-afters. A thoughtful thorough morning-after is a perfectly valid substitute for working a new problem in your gw notebook. This content might become its principal value.

 

My own idea of a gw goes along with feelings of quiet, freedom from distraction, etc., thus necessarily away from people, TV, and music (which completely takes over my cerebral processors.) I need a big open space that becomes littered with drawings and with verbal notes, usually in outline form, and with stacks of  worked-out simple examples. Not everyone works best this way. Some people think productively only in dialogue with a partner. Others only in a coffee shop. If you are that kind, do it that way. An important part of the semester’s experience is to try a few different ways, find a best one for you, and stick to it habitually: log in and out at that place and time each time, many times in a row.

 

Your gw book is to be bound (at least by a wire helix) and even though it contains all your “scrap” “preliminary” work, should be legible like an industrial research notebook, as though to be notarized at intervals: not a collection of scraps. The idea is to make it possible to resume work after an interruption, without having to start all over by rummaging a confused jumble. No loose pages. Don’t forget to number the right-hand pages so you can say "... go to page xxx", "..continued from page...", etc. Succinctly rewrite the essentials of your work before finishing for the day.

 

Keep the readings (plus whatever other pertinent stuff you might encounter elsewhere during the semester) in a separate loose-leaf binder (not interleaved like a bookmark ready to fall out when you open your notebook, and not in a bulging paper pocket stuffed with disorderly sheets), together with your extractions from them or comments on them: As noted under resource (1) above, I expect to see a page of cogent thought, besides marginal scribbles and under-linings, on each.

 

So: a bound notebook, and a loose-leaf binder for hole-punched handouts.

 

3) The genetic diversity and diversity of life-experiences and habits of thought that we collectively bring to the table. There will be daily swapping of gw’s  so that you can benefit from your peers’ perspectives and share in their harvest of insights (supposing you all discipline yourselves to make these fruits plainly accessible). This will also keep you on your toes, unless you enjoy being not-understood or being the one to come empty-handed.

 

You have plenty of opportunity ahead of you in daily gws at home for practicing solo thinking skills. But don't neglect to also work together if you want to: dual GamesWorths often work pretty well, like cutting wood with a long 2-handled band saw. Note your partner's name and contributions, along with your log-in and log-out times.

 

During class we also practice aggregate thinking skills, i.e., braving social opprobrium by blurting out nutty ideas, and risking devastating counter-attack by publicly objecting to nonsense blurted by others. Even though first notions seldom seem presentable, they are essential seeds to catalyze  the next refinement. You must learn to do all parts of the process, not only by echoing within the confines of one skull, but also in the public forum. Class meetings will also prove essential for some problems in which no one individual can collect enough data, but if we pool data, reality will come into focus.

 

 

Grades:

 

Such a course should not be grade-oriented, but the institution is grade-oriented. While under 'pressure' of grades in other courses you might think you have to give this training short shrift 'just temporarily,' but then you will find yourself backlogged and despairing. Same as in athletics: it is vital to keep the daily habit.

 

Worse, if you don't make use of your opportunities in this course and bring contributions of thought to each class meeting, you dampen the spirit of the enterprise. Who wants to work hard at crystallizing a clear insight to share, then swap gw notebooks in class, and receive a muddle in exchange?

 

I accordingly provide countervailing pressure in the form of a daily quiz in a blue exam book, besides paying attention to your contributions in class and by email after class. This also provides me an attendance record. (If you arrive too late for the warm-up quiz, log into the blue book anyhow, noting the time.) I will collect the blue books daily at the end of class.

 

I also want an email from you (to winfree @ email. arizona.edu) after each class session telling me in a couple lines, no more, why either your gw or the one you received in swap during the class meeting was the better of the two.  The aim is that you should pay attention to alternative ways of thinking, evaluate them daily, and use some of them. And having others evaluate yours daily gives a little extra motivation to have something presentable in clear order for this show-and-tell.

 

On the last class day I will collect all gw books (don’t lose yours!) to skim through, just to see if I generally agree with the impression given by emails from daily swaps. I will pay particular attention to stuff on the left-hand sides: your Morning-afters and your daily (signed) insightful and helpful comments on your classmates’ recent work.

 

Your semester letter-grade will be based on those evidences according to a formula in my Excel spreadsheet for grading. If without fail you give this project a securely uninterrupted hour each day outside of class (ideally at the same daily hour 7x; if you feel that weekends are exempt from disciplined effort, then do a specially fine job on weekdays; BTW, hardly anyone actually does this, whatever good intentions they may have resolved on the first day) and participate vigorously and fairly in each of the 30 sessions, then you will likely develop an A.

 

It is a dread fact of history that whatever their expressed intentions at the outset, all but a few students each semester neglect the daily GamesWorth discipline and so find themselves short of ideas, insights, perceptions, and the corresponding intellectual gratifications, so about half the class ends up with a B, and a few flagrant goof-offs receive their customary lower grades. 

 

Caution:

In almost every semester someone, unpredictably, really takes this experience to heart: chews at the problems like a dog with a leather bone, making mock attacks from every direction, actually using the many diverse approaches suggested in the readings. She maybe still fails to solve a lot of practice problems or even most of them, but makes stubborn and resourceful attempts, thinks about the readings and expands upon them in her GamesWorth book, develops real skill in problem solving, occasionally comes up with alternative solutions the professor never thought of, and leaves the course in high excitement. Having seen how people can engage the course, your professor inevitably sets a high standard for grading ...

 

Your grade will come from my spreadsheet formula combining:

1) Lively participation every time (except dire emergency, with advance notice by email)

2) Performance on daily warm-up exercise  in blue books

3) Daily email reports comparing two gw’s … and if you like I will peruse your gw notebook at any time to see how active you have been, and especially to spot-check your left-side morning-afters. BTW in comparing gw’s please make a firm decision: do not cop out by reporting a “tie”. And avoid 3-way swaps, please: I want to see the extent to which the two participants in each match agree about whose play was better. No more than one 3-way is needed, and that only on days with an odd number of participants.

4) My perusal of your gw book with emphasis on “Morning-after”s, and of others’ gw books with emphasis on your insightful and helpful comments on that work

5) Your reading assigned materials  no later than the corresponding class meeting date (see schedule below). Other than the Adams and Ehrlich books, I will get the readings to you a week before.

6) Grad students and Honors students must turn in some extra work as described          below.

 

The Final Exam will be scheduled for in exam week at the usual class time. It will be a collection of problems from which you will choose some, exhibit as many distinct approaches as you can, and as many cross-checking distinct solutions as you can.  All the problems we do solo and as a group during the semester may be regarded as sample practice problems for this Final Exam. At this moment I think this is best done as a take-home, rather than under time pressure: I'll ask your views as the time draws near.

 

Honors students (479H) are additionally required to visit the History of Science shelves in the library (and/or corresponding web sites), and get acquainted with some episode, and write up a clear analysis of how some discovery or discoveries came about, and some other ways they might have come about. I want some attention to mistakes and dead ends and how the investigators recovered from them. And a paragraph at the end declaring whether this is a closed case, or only the beginning of something more that did or might grow from it.  I will hold you to a higher-than-undergraduate standard of English writing. 479-non-H students are also free to do this for extra credit.

 

Graduate students (579)  are required to do as Honors students and additionally to provide a new exercise for next year’s course. This should be an intriguing problem that can be understood with minimal background and can be solved with minimal specialized techniques other than ingenuity and meticulous care. The writeup should display a variety of ways to solve it, mentioning pitfalls of each and showing ways to check and cross-check every part of the solutions. Hide as many Easter-eggs as you can. Booby-traps are also fun.

 

Audits: No. There is nothing to audit (no lectures). Imagine auditing dance or debate or weight-lifting  without full participation: not much point, right?  Besides, with-holding the commitment that goes along with 'really taking the course', auditors (almost by definition, just 'hearing' the course) have chosen to respond preferentially to the inevitable pressures of other commitments than this one, and come to our practice scrimmages wearing white gloves, benefiting nothing from that waste of time. You benefit from lifting weights only by lifting them, not by watching others. No exceptions. (BTW there is always one ostensible student who gives every appearance of merely auditing, though apparently expecting a grade for it. Don’t let it be you.)

 

Remember, most of the work will be done on your own or with someone in the class with whom you find it fun to ping-pong ideas: active involvement is essential. Leave now if you are unmotivated, just passively expecting to have your strings pulled. We will meet twice a week mainly to exchange information, to compare notes not really on the homework puzzles themselves so much as on the approaches tried, and to work jointly for a while on bigger problems or puzzles that need a little equipment or need more diversity of approaches and crazy suggestions or need lots of data-collecting, best pooled from many sources. The effect will presumably be that in real life afterwards you will think of lots of approaches, some of them successful, before launching yourself into the hopeless futility of the first that came to mind..

 

Notice the big problem that only you can solve:

In this course you are expected to act like an independent self-motivated creative individual. Our aim is enhance your creativity and curiosity and the satisfaction you can secure by solving mysteries in your own unique ways. You are to explore crazy new unfamiliar ways most of which won't be productive for you. But you don't know which ones. This course lifts the pressure so you can find out. This requires joyful playfulness, not grim determination. It seems incompatible with deadline pressure. So here is the problem:  since you are under such pressure from elsewhere, you  might procrastinate things not backed by pressure. Then you have to attempt them under time pressure later, and so not very creatively, not playfully, learning nothing from the experience.  Hurrying under pressure is guaranteed to abort the special opportunities you confront in this course. So form the GamesWorth habit immediately and don't let it slip for any ‘reason’. Remember that in such efforts an hour's work punctuated with three 5-minute interruptions has lost you not 15 minutes, as might be the case were you shining shoes or digging a ditch: it has instead prevented you getting warmed up to 60-minute heat, replacing that experience by 3 times getting up to 15-minute heat. You can probably think of other experiences like this. Reserve that sacred daily uninterrupted hour to yourself (or self and partner, if you need to talk to think). 

 

 


 

Readings to ponder before the class meeting (It's hard to catch up so don't fall behind!)

 

Two required books await you in the local bookstores:

J. Adams (consulting engineer)  Conceptual Blockbusting

R. Ehrlich (physicist)  Nine Crazy Ideas in Science: A Few Might Even Be True

 

Another is out of print:   so I will provide Xerox, *.pdf, or text files

H. Judson (historian) Search for Solutions also in Main Libe Reserve

 

And lots of single short articles from here and there.

 

W.I.B. Beveridge (British MD)  The Art of Scientific Investigation  1950 is not required this semester because I find that no one reads it anyhow, I think because archaic attitudes offend.  I consider it the best of the lot and have placed it on Main Library Reserve and made it available on my web site as *.pdf files.  

 

Other Good Books on reserve for your attention if you consider it important to acquire better skills in problem solving:

George Polya  Induction and Analogy in Mathematics  and Patterns of Plausible Inference,  using elementary math as example material for general principles

James Gleick Genius biography of Richard Feynman, a great problem solver

Arthus Koestler The Watershed  biography of Johannes Kepler (a chapter of “The Sleepwalkers”)

 

Students requiring accommodation in testing or notetaking must notify me and must (within the first few days) bring a letter of certification from the Disability Resource Center.

 

The following is a retrospective syllabus of Spring 2001, with dates changed to reflect the future, but not intended as a strict preview of Fall 2001 because the course sharply evolves after each semester’s student critiques, and also adapts to the particular assortment of student backgrounds in each new semester. 

 

Readings and solo exercises are due for discussion of finished results on the date indicated; they were handed out a week in advance of that date (except for the first few).  Group “lab” exercises are indicated here on the day they begin in class. In other words the syllabus tells the dates things are scheduled for in class, but most of your work was in the prior week.

 

01: Tues 21 Aug:       Introduction, handouts

                                    Adams preface and Chapter 1

                                    Demonstrating the need: triangle problem

                                    First of two contrasting challenges: 13 nails problem

                                    (alternatively, the celts problem)

 

Section 1: Five sessions of Detecting Nonsense, Error Checking, False Assumptions, Cherishing Mistakes

 

02: Thur 23 Aug:        Adams preface and Chapter 1

                                    Platt: The Art of Creative Thinking

                                    Feynman: Cargo Cult

                                    Second of two contrasting challenges: conscious machines

 

03: Tues 28 Aug:       Judson Chapter 1: The Rage 

                                    discuss Square Windows solo problem

 

04: Thur 30 Aug:        Golden tooth: facts before explanations of facts

                                    Salvation of Doug

                                    Bookworm’s journey

                                    distinguishing things we know vs only imagine

 

05:  Tues 4 Sep:        N-Rays

                                    Pathological Science

                                    discuss phone cord problem

                                    discuss Stockholm restrooms

 

06: Thur 6 Sep:          Packet of readings: Valuing mistakes

                                    Ehrlich Chapter 1 (Introduction)

                                    some ways to check for errors

                                    hidden assumptions

                                    what is “understand” ?

                                    Evaporated Gold

                                    start group effort on Collective Reproduction

 

 

Section 2: Six sessions of Creative Blocks

 

07: Tues 11 Sep:      Adams Chapter 2: Perceptual blocks

                                    discuss Weird Organism

                                    discuss Rearranged Triangle

                                    start group lab on Dominoes

 

08: Thur 13 Sep:       Barometer Story

                                    Adams Chapter 3: Emotional Blocks

                                    discuss Telltale Number

                                    about assumptions and tying knots

 

09: Tues 18 Sep:      Adams 4: Cultural blocks

Platt: Diversity

                                    discuss Mercury’s mysterious hidden hemisphere

 

10: Thur 20 Sep:    Adams 5: Intellectual blocks

                                    taboo questions

                                    Paths through mazes

 

11: Tues 25 Sep:      Adams 7: Blockbusters

                        `           Walking through walls

 

12: Thur 27 Sep:       Dyson: Unfashionable

                                    Capecci 1-page bio

                                                                                                Narlikar on Venture Funding

                                    Sums of integers: like a jig-saw puzzle of cross-checks

                                    Pedestrian Crosswalk mystery (lab)

 

 

Section 3: Six sessions of Observations and Questions

 

13: Tues 2 Oct:          discuss Ant Walk and Seven Bridges

                                    discuss observations outdoors on Pedestrian Crosswalk

                                    start lab exercise on chemical pattern-formation

                                                                                               

14: Thur 4 Oct:           Judson 4: Chance 

                                    Anderson on research strategy

                                    more chemical observations

discuss what isn’t there (Surprisingly Hard)

 

15: Tues 09 Oct:        Judson 8: Evidence

                                    Mother Nature as magician; hallucinations

                                    last chemical observations

                                    discuss Rainbow Moon

 

16: Thur 11 Oct:         Ehrlich Chapter 2

                                    discuss Hairy People, Green Stars, and Escher Print Gallery

           

17: Tues 16 Oct:        Ehrlich Chapter 3

                                    discuss Zygotes

                                    discuss Martian HoneyCombs

 

Spring break

 

18: Thur 18 Oct:         Ehrlich Chapter 4

                                    discuss Cevians

                                    discuss Superposed filters

 

 

 

Section 4: Six sessions of Patterns, Empirical Generalizations

 

19: Tues 23 Oct:        Judson 2: Pattern

                                    discuss Presidents and States

                                    discuss n dots on rim of circle, connected to slice the disk

 

20: Thur 25 Oct:        Ehrlich Chapter 5

                                                                                              start Cell Shapes lab in class

 

21: Tues 30 Oct:       Ehrlich Chapter 6

                                    collaborative experiments on Cell Shapes

                                    deal with Paired Observations

                                    deal with Neutrinos

 

22: Thur 01 Nov:        Adams 6: Alternative thinking languages

                                    further experiments on cell shapes

                                    do Egg Pouches lab in class

                                    deal with Platonic Solids and applications

 

23: Tues 06 Nov:       Ehrlich Chapter 7

                                    Play Eleusis in class

                                    deal with the Mirror Mystery

 

24: Thur 08 Nov:        Ehrlich Chapter 10

                                    start Stacked Cantilevers lab

 

 

 

Section 5: Six sessions of Inferences, Hypotheses, Explanations

 

25: Tues 13 Nov:       Chamberlin: Multiple Working Hypotheses

                                    further collaborations on Stacked Cantilevers 

 

26: Thurs 15 Nov:      TBA

                                    theory of stacking cantilevers, resolution of wagers

                                    deal with summing a series

                                    deal with stalactites

 

27: Tues 20 Nov:       Platt: Strong Inference 

                                    start LoShu lab experiments in class

 

Thanksgiving Break

 

28: Tues 27 Nov:       Judson 7: Strong predictions

                                    deal with The Miracle of FujiYama

                                    finish complete theory of LoShu

`                       start discovering laws of toy universe in class

 

29: Thur 29 Nov:        Feynman: Character of Physical Law

                                    deal with Antigen Invasions

                                    deal with Martian DNA

                                    finish collaborative discovery of The Laws

                                    All GamesWorth books collected for inspection

 

30: Tues 4 Dec:         Judson 9: Theory 

                                    deal with Bacterial Hybrids

 

 

 

Final exam is scheduled in ?on Tue ? Dec, 2-4 PM