Definition of Factual Sciences
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Javier Navarro, on Feb. 2018
Scientific knowledge is normally divided into two large blocks, formal science and factual science. The first are all those disciplines of an abstract nature and that do not deal with facts, such as mathematics and logic. The second are those that refer to empirical or factual facts.
General considerations
Biology, history, chemistry, psychology or geology are factual or empirical disciplines, since in all of them concrete facts or data are studied.
Biology studies the simple structure of matter (the cell) and how this basic unit develops to form organisms alive.
History refers to something concrete, the set of historical events. Chemistry focuses on the molecular mechanisms that build reality.
Psychology studies human behavior.
Finally, geology describes the phenomena that take place in the different layers of the earth.
Consequently, these disciplines are factual because their object of study is something concrete, objective and measurable.
They have as a reference some kind of real phenomenon. In other words, humans, animals, or molecules are observable realities.
Real phenomena can be explained, predicted, classified or discovered. In this sense, factual sciences are always related to experience.
Factual sciences versus formal sciences
A mathematical formula is valid regardless of experience. However, all mathematical formulation is applicable to real phenomena. A logic reasoning is a set of axioms and signs that have nothing to do with material reality or dimension time of events, but it is a formal structure that can be projected onto all kinds of realities.
The formal sciences are applicable to the empirical world and, in parallel, the empirical is explainable through a formal language.
The hypothesis of mathematics are proved from proofs, whereas the hypotheses of any discipline factual data are proven from some empirical data. The criterion of truth in mathematics is coherence internal of a reasoning or theorem and the criterion of truth of an empirical science is based on the evidence of the facts.
In short, in the formal sciences reasoning is demonstrated (for example, the Pythagorean theorem) and in factual sciences laws are confronted with a part of reality (for example, the laws of inheritancegenetics are applicable to all living organisms).
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