Some consider the first known scientist to be Greek thinker __. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Number of scientists in the world, according to a 2021 UNESCO report | 8.8 million |
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| | Year the journal Nature allowed the word "scientist" (90 years after its introduction) | 1924 |
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| Banknote that the Royal Bank of Scotland redesigned to feature Mary Somerville in 2017 | £10 |
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| | Year Galileo Galilei sketched Neptune possibly without knowing it (the planet was discovered 233 years later) | 1613 |
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| Some argue that the scientific method was first used by a Muslim natural philosopher in the 11th century CE. |
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During the Islamic Golden Age (mid-seventh to mid-13th centuries, often concentrated in Baghdad), Muslim thinkers expanded human knowledge with advancements in astronomy, engineering, music, optics, manufacturing, and (some argue) by creating the very bedrock of modern science itself, the scientific method. At its most basic, the scientific method is a framework that guides scientists toward facts by using hypotheses tested with controlled experiments. Working mostly in Cairo in the early 11th century, polymath Ibn al-Haytham used this method to produce some of his greatest breakthroughs in optics, one of which included the camera obscura (an optical device that was a forerunner of the modern camera). By the 13th century, al-Haytham's work had been anonymously translated and found its way into the hands of Roger Bacon, an English philosopher who embraced al-Haytham's empirical approach and formed the foundations of modern European science. | |
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