Scientific thinking is understanding something before it is observed
Through observation, calculation, and intuition, leading thinkers gain the ability to understand phenomena before they can actually observe them.
The ability to understand something before it’s observed is at the heart of scientific thinking. In antiquity, Anaximander understood that the sky continues beneath our feet long before ships had circumnavigated the Earth. At the beginning of the modern era, Copernicus understood that the Earth turns long before astronauts had seen it do so from the moon. In a similar way, Einstein understood that time does not pass uniformly everywhere before the development of clocks accurate enough to measure the different speeds at which it passes.[1]
See also:
- Adjacent Possible is the edge of the future
- Paradigms can have phenomenal longevity
- Specialization tends to reduce range
- Intuition is pattern recognition
The Order of Time – Rovelli (2018), ch. 1, § “The Slowing Down of Time.” ↩︎