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Einstein said that "the whole of science is nothing more than a
refinement of everyday thinking." David Klahr suggests that we now
know enough about cognition -- and hence about everyday thinking -- to
advance our understanding of scientific thinking. In this book he sets
out to describe the cognitive and developmental processes that have
enabled scientists to make the discoveries that comprise the body of
information we call "scientific knowledge."
Over the past decade Klahr and his colleagues have conducted extensive
laboratory experiments in which they create discovery contexts,
computer-based environments, to evoke the kind of thinking
characteristic of scientific discovery in the "real world." In
attempting to solve the problems posed by the discovery tasks,
experiment participants (from preschoolers through university
students, as well as laypersons) use many of the same higher-order
cognitive processes used by practicing scientists. Through this work
Klahr integrates two disparate approaches -- the content-based
approach and the process-based approach -- to present a comprehensive
model of the psychology of scientific discovery.
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