How is
Science Used in Everyday Life?
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How is science used in everyday
life? It is all around us all of the time! The computer you're using- that's
science! The air you're breathing- that's science too! The great thing about
science is that it is constantly happening and there is always more to discover
and learn. The things that we learn in science class in school give us a
greater understanding of life and the world.
Value of science in Everyday life
Science has metamorphosed the very mode of our daily life.
Science has stepped up the tempo of life; it has widened the range of our
occupations, extended immensely the limits of our curiosity, it has increased
the ways of utilising our leisure ; it has given us comforts and amenities
undreamt of by our forefathers. Yet science is now the handmaiden of a
privileged few who can purchase the service.
As regards our food, science has given us correct ideas of
nutritive and calorie value of the food that we take. It has analysed and
classified the various constituents of our diet according to vitamin content,
caloric value, mineral basis etc. It has explained to us the factors that make
a balanced diet. With the help of all this knowledge, the State can provide
schoolchildren with cheap but nutritive food in order to build up the physique
of future generations. This shows how much science can contribute to the
improvement of national well-being. Science even has started producing
synthetic food in the Laboratory, to supplement our food deficit.
Next item of our necessity is our dress. Modern science has
taught us the utility of light dress in a tropical country. Our knowledge of
science has helped up to manufacture dress materials more comfortable, more
enduring and in the long run more economical and adjusted to the prevailing
environment. Today we are certainly better clothed than ever before.
Also science has shown us how we can do a greater volume of
work in shorter time and with less physical strain and sweat. It has placed at
our disposal innumerable labour-saving devices, so that, life can become far
less difficult than it is.
Electric light and fan have made home-life more comfortable
today. The typewriter, the computer, washing machine, the telephone, the motor
car, refrigerator,-all these and many others show how much work we can do with
minimum labour. They save us from the drudgery of manual work to recuperate and
thus enable us to do much more work with greater output than our ancestors. At
the same time, scientific process creates plenty of leisure, which we may
devote to cultural pursuits. The modern man is thus able to live a fuller and
many-sided life.
In our sickness, we feel more than ever the benefits of
science. The physician and the surgeon are today much more sure in their
diagnosis of diseases through clinical tests, brain scanning and supersonic
devices. The physicians are now more confident in their ability to cure or to
control them.
The microscope, the X-ray, the radium, ultra sonography—all
these have come as real blessings to humanity. With the growth of chemical and
bacteriological sciences, the treatment of diseases has been very much
sophisticated and yet simplified. Wonder drugs like penicillin and streptomycin
and other anti-biotics have proved specific medicines in the cure of diseases,
which were formerly intractable.
Allied to this is the contribution that science has made to
our ideas of sanitation and hygiene. Infectious diseases have been either
completely eradicated, or brought under control, due to better sanitation and
sewerage arrangements. Cholera, smallpox typhoids, aids and the like epidemic diseases
have been largely tamed.
Other killing ailments like TB, Cancer, Coronary attacks are
also considerably subdued, thanks to wonderful progress in medical research.
Dysentery, typhoid etc. have ceased in countries, which believe in science and
make its full use. Epidemic malaria has greatly been diminished. As a result of
all these, the average expectation of human life has almost doubled in the last
hundred years.
The services of science in providing us with cheap and
innocent amusements are equally great. The radio, the television the cinema has
helped to soothe our over-strained nerves with music and with means of
refreshment and recreation. Equally delightful are the gramophone and cassette
players. Outside home, we can drop in at a cinema-house and escape for a time
from the worries of life. Even the theatre is something infinitely superior to
what is used to be in the days of yatra. With the help of scientific devices of
light focusing and the revolving stage, it is able to imitate, more convincingly,
the realities of life.
Thus in our daily life science has been of the greatest help
and benefits us in a variety of ways. It is difficult to say how much we owe to
science in the affairs of our daily life. From morning to midnight we are
served tirelessly by science and scientific devices.
Pretty much anything you do has some
science underlying it. For instance, the computer on which you asked this
question, as well as the Internet, are products of science.
Your radio, television, gamebox, and telephone are as well.
Using many of these devices does not require a knowledge of much science any more, however. Although to use a telephone, for instance, you have to have an understanding of logic, numbers, and geography (area codes), and setting up a gamebox requires a basic understanding of some principles of electrical and mechanical engineering.
Your radio, television, gamebox, and telephone are as well.
Using many of these devices does not require a knowledge of much science any more, however. Although to use a telephone, for instance, you have to have an understanding of logic, numbers, and geography (area codes), and setting up a gamebox requires a basic understanding of some principles of electrical and mechanical engineering.
There
are other so many in daily life where your knowledge of science is applied
directly:
Applied Mathematics:
* Using a calculator
Applied Mathematics:
* Using a calculator
* Calculating a tip in a restaurant
in your heand
* Measuring ingredients or dimensions
Economics:
* Banking
* Writing checks
* Drawing up a budget/determining what you can afford
* Paying income or sales tax
Applied Physics:
* Cooking
* Baking
* Working out
Applied Cartography/Orienteering
* Choosing routes to drive, walk, or ride a balk
* Determining locations using addresses or milestones
* Hiking
* Using a map
Applied Semiotics or Linguistics
* Deciphering signs and symbols everywhere in life
* Deciding how to punctuate or write human speech
* Reading books or magazines
Nutritional Science:
* Preparing food and making decisions on what is good or bad to eat
Medical Science:
* Self-medicating (e.g. taking an aspirin or acetaminophin, etc.)
* Understanding potential interactions of over-the-counter products (e.g. knowing not to mix DayQuil or NyQuil with Tylenol, cough syrup, or antihistamine)
* Bandaging and basic triage (treating pimples, cuts, burns, bruises)
* Taking a temperature
* Stretching and preparing muscles for exercise
* Knowledge and application of proper hygiene
* Knowledge of diseases and how they are transmitted (e.g. flu, cold, chicken box, STDs, etc.)
* Knowledge of birth control and disease prevention
Sociology:
* Understanding how to behave in certain contexts
* Knowing what kinds of behavior to expect from others
* Understanding rules of etiquette and politeness in different contexts
* Following and understanding political discussions or news reports
* An awareness of how the individual fits into larger and larger groups of people
Psychology:
* Taking measures to improve one's own or someone else's mental health (e.g. exercise, relaxation, stress management, etc.
* Measuring ingredients or dimensions
Economics:
* Banking
* Writing checks
* Drawing up a budget/determining what you can afford
* Paying income or sales tax
Applied Physics:
* Cooking
* Baking
* Working out
Applied Cartography/Orienteering
* Choosing routes to drive, walk, or ride a balk
* Determining locations using addresses or milestones
* Hiking
* Using a map
Applied Semiotics or Linguistics
* Deciphering signs and symbols everywhere in life
* Deciding how to punctuate or write human speech
* Reading books or magazines
Nutritional Science:
* Preparing food and making decisions on what is good or bad to eat
Medical Science:
* Self-medicating (e.g. taking an aspirin or acetaminophin, etc.)
* Understanding potential interactions of over-the-counter products (e.g. knowing not to mix DayQuil or NyQuil with Tylenol, cough syrup, or antihistamine)
* Bandaging and basic triage (treating pimples, cuts, burns, bruises)
* Taking a temperature
* Stretching and preparing muscles for exercise
* Knowledge and application of proper hygiene
* Knowledge of diseases and how they are transmitted (e.g. flu, cold, chicken box, STDs, etc.)
* Knowledge of birth control and disease prevention
Sociology:
* Understanding how to behave in certain contexts
* Knowing what kinds of behavior to expect from others
* Understanding rules of etiquette and politeness in different contexts
* Following and understanding political discussions or news reports
* An awareness of how the individual fits into larger and larger groups of people
Psychology:
* Taking measures to improve one's own or someone else's mental health (e.g. exercise, relaxation, stress management, etc.
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