Finals STS Reviewer
Finals STS Reviewer
Finals STS Reviewer
What is Language?
Language is an abstract system of symbols and meanings. This system includes the rules
(grammar) that relate symbols and meanings so that we can communicate with each other.
Symbol- anything that stands for anything else.
Language and its related processes may be the most important feature distinguishing humans
from all other animals.
ma n
man
The words are “informed” because they carry “information” (Chaisson, 2006; Ben-Naim, 2015)
Words are informed with meaning given by the speaker and intended for the listener.
WORDS COMMUNICATE MEANING.
In the human quest for understanding the natural world, the ability to name and classify objects
found in nature was seen as a first step in knowing.
Greeks- Language was an object worthy of emulation. WORDS HAVE POWER.
How is it possible that one’s idea can possibly exist his/her mind and in another’s?
How is it possible that human beings can communicate through words and thus form a
community?
Does the power of the communicated word come from the speaker, who is the thinker and the
source, or from the listener, who is the recipient of the communication?
Thinking in terms of a common system being generated by the speaker and received by the
listener is useful in the pursuit of knowledge.
Science, from the Latin word, scire, is one kind of knowledge the Greeks wanted to know.
WORDS CAN FUNCTION ACROSS SPACE AND TIME WITHOUT REDUCING THEIR MEANING.
The speaker can use the same words over and over again to talk to one, a hundred, or to a
thousand people separately or at the same time.
There is a common intrinsic nature shared by different objects, which determine s their real
sense.
Dog analogy: Many differences in detail across breeds and individual dogs. BUT- the deeper truth is that
they are all built on the same body plan and have far more in common than the superficial differences
suggest.
Social animals
Territorial
Omnivorous but with a strong preference for meat
Same basic configuration of skeleton
Same number and basic shape of teeth
Any dog will breed with any other dog, regardless of large differences in size and general
appearance.
TAXONOMY
There are 7 levels of taxonomy. Each is more specific then the previous and includes fewer
organisms.
1. Kingdom
2. Phylum
3. Class
4. Order
5. Family
6. Genus
7. Species
In the 21st century, we are aware more than ever that there is rich diversity in nature, which
technology has allowed us to discover (BANWA Natural Science, 008)
MATHEMATICS
NATURE can be understood because it speaks language of mathematics and the human brain, to a
certain extent, can comprehend this language (Wigner, 1960).
Biodiversity
- Scientists have identified more than 2 million species. Tens of millions -- remain unknown
- The tremendous variety of life on Earth is made possible by complex interactions among all
living things.
Carl Linnaeus
It builds on the ability of the mind to find the common in the diverse, the ONE IN THE MANY.
Though living things in the world are so diverse, they still share many traits
1. Diversity of genes
Chihuahuas, Greyhound and Newfies are all dogs—but they're not the same because their genes
are different.
2. Diversity of species.
3. Variety of ecosystems
- Each one is different, with its own set of species living in it.
- desert -tropical rainforest -taiga
Oxygen
Food
Clean Water
Medicine
Aesthetics
Ideas
8. Fruits, nuts, vegetables and other crops benefit from nature’s pollinators.
9. Woods and wetlands, prairies and ponds bring beauty to our lives, increase property values.
Biodiversity also has Utilitarian Value
• Goods
• Services
• Information
Three species of plants, animals and other living things vanish forever.
½ of world’s wetlands
Where several different species and genera cohabitate, there is RICH DIVERSITY
. . . The assembly also invited the secretariat to work with other United Nations bodies, environmental
agreements, and organizations to bring greater international attention to the continued biodiversity
loss.
Genes
• Made up of DNA.
• Set of instructions that determine what the organism is like, its appearance, how it survives, and
how it behaves in its environment.
HOWEVER,
GENES AREN’T ALWAYS BUILT CORRECTLY.
Gene
Therapy
The aim of gene therapy is the successful integration of corrected, therapeutic DNA into the genomes of
cells to alter gene expression and, in turn, protein synthesis to correct genetic diseases.
The transferred genetic material then changes how our protein or group of proteins is produced by the
cell.
Appropriate methods to deliver DNA used in gene therapy are vital, as the targeted tissues must
properly receive the appropriate genes.
1. In Vivo – Genes are introduced directly into the patient’s cells while the cells are still in the
patient’s body.
2. Ex Vivo – Cells are removed from the patient’s body, then the genes are added to those cells in
the laboratory. After that, the cells are returned to the patient’s body.
New organisms created by genetic engineering could present an ecological problem. One cannot
predict the changes that a genetically engineered species would make on the environment.
Effects on Human
• Looking at the fact that genetic engineering employs viral vector that carries functional gene
inside the human body; the repercussion are still unknown.
• There are no clues as to where functional genes are being placed. They may even replace the
important genes, instead of mutated genes. Thus, this may lead to another health condition or
disease to human.
• "Playing God" has become a strong argument against genetic engineering. Several issues have
also been raised as regards the acceptance of this technology.
• These concerns range from ethical issues to lack of knowledge on the effects that genetic
engineering may have.
- The result of a laboratory process where genes from the DNA of one species are extracted and
artificially
inserted into the genes of an unrelated plant or
animal.
- Food security
- Agriculture
- Drug production
- Nutrition
• Psychological essentialism
• Misinformation
Climate Change
What is climate?
Climate refers to the general weather conditions of a place over many years.
1. Natural Causes
• Sun’s intensity- Sun doesn’t always shine at perpetually the same level of brightness; it brightens
and dims slightly, taking 11 years to complete one solar cycle. These changes have a variety of
effects in space, in Earth’s atmosphere and on Earth’s surface.
• Volcanic eruptions- During major explosive eruptions huge amounts of volcanic gas, aerosol
droplets, and ash are injected into the stratosphere.
• Changes in naturally occurring greenhouse gas- an increase in the atmospheric concentrations
of greenhouse gases produces a positive climate forcing, or warming effect
2. Anthropogenic causes
• Human activities-the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions we generate—are the leading cause of
the earth’s rapidly changing climate.
The planet's average surface temperature has risen about 2.05 degrees Fahrenheit
Warming Ocean
The ocean has absorbed much of this increased heat, with the top 100 meters of ocean showing
warming of more than 0.6 degrees Fahrenheit since 1969
Satellite observations reveal that the amount of spring snow cover in the Northern Hemisphere has
decreased over the past five decades and the snow is melting earlier.
Global sea level rose about 8 inches (20 centimeters) in the last century.
Ocean Acidification
Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the acidity of surface ocean waters has increased by
about 30%.
GLOBAL WARMING
Global warming is the uncommonly fast expansion in Earth's normal surface temperature over the
previous century.
IS GLOBAL WARMING AND CLIMATE CHANGE THE SAME?!
"GLOBAL WARMING" alludes to the rise in earth temperatures due above all to the expanding
centralizations of ozone harming substances in the environment, while "Climate/Environmental
changes" alludes to the expanding changes in the proportions of atmosphere throughout an extensive
stretch of time – including precipitation, temperature, and wind designs.
Milankovitch theory
Milankovitch theory depict the aggregate impacts of changes in the Earth's developments on its
atmosphere more than a huge number of years.
The term is named for Serbian geophysicist and space expert Milutin Milanković.
Eccentricity- a boundary that decides the sum by which its orbit around another body goes astray from a
perfect circle.
On the question of whether or not this global warming is only natural, there are two conflicting claims. It
has been said that as the sun rises and sets, global warming occurs naturally. But there is another
argument, which claims that human activities are driving global warming.
In Earth's set of experiences before the Industrial Revolution, Earth's atmosphere changed because of
common causes not identified with human movement. Frequently, the worldwide atmosphere has
changed in view of varieties in daylight.
Remember that...