Domain is the foundation of the entire Science Analysis Template. It defines the conceptual world a science operates within—what phenomena it claims, what kinds of things it assumes exist, how those things are described, and which simplifications and background commitments structure its thinking. Before evidence is gathered, before models are built, before methods are chosen, a science must first specify its Domain: the boundaries of inquiry, the scales at which it functions, the entities and properties it presupposes, and the assumptions it allows itself to use. This section lays out those commitments explicitly, providing the framework within which all later reasoning, measurement, and theory must remain coherent.
Domain – Science Analysis Template
| Element | 1. Domain | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scope Category | 1.1 Scope of the Domain | 1.2 Ontological Commitments | 1.3 State-Variables | 1.4 Admissible Idealizations | 1.5 Domain Assumptions | 1.6 Internal Coherence Requirements | |||||||
| Sub-Item | Boundaries | Scale | Entities | Properties | Categories | Variables | Parameterization | Simplifications | Validity Conditions | Structural Assumptions | Implicit Commitments | Consistency | Compatibility |
| Definition | The range of phenomena the science includes and excludes. | The spatial, temporal, or organizational level at which the science operates (e.g., quantum, cellular, social, cosmic). | The kinds of things assumed to exist within the domain (particles, organisms, agents, fields, etc.). | The fundamental attributes these entities possess (mass, charge, genotype, preference, etc.). | The basic ontological types used to classify domain elements (substances, processes, relations, structures). | The measurable or definable properties that describe system conditions. | How variables encode and represent the system’s state. | Conceptual reductions used to make the domain tractable (point masses, rational agents, perfect gases). | The limits and contexts in which idealizations hold or break down. | Background ontological stances such as determinism, continuity, randomness, discreteness. | Unstated but necessary assumptions that shape the field’s conceptual structure. | The demand that domain concepts do not contradict one another. | The requirement that entities, variables, and assumptions fit together into a unified descriptive framework. |
1. Domain –
(The content domain and conceptual context of the scientific inquiry.)
1.1 Scope of the Domain
Scope of the Domain defines what the science addresses and the scale at which it explains phenomena. Boundaries fix what counts; scale fixes the level of analysis. Together they determine the field’s legitimate terrain and the resolution of its explanations.
- Boundaries:
- This refers to the explicit delineation of what phenomena or questions fall within the area of study, and what falls outside. A clear boundary is important so that researchers know the limits of their investigation – for example, a study of cell biology focuses on cellular-level phenomena and excludes cosmic-scale processes. Defining boundaries prevents dilution of effort and ensures clarity about the subject matter. It also helps communicate to others what is (and is not) being addressed by the research, which is crucial for contextualizing results within the larger scientific landscape.
- Scale:
- This indicates the level of granularity or size of the system being studied. Scale can range from the extremely small (quantum or molecular scale) to intermediate (organism or cellular scale) to very large (ecosystem, planetary, or cosmic scale). It can also refer to time scale (e.g. milliseconds vs. millennia) or organizational complexity (individual components vs. networks or societies). Identifying the scale is important because theories and methods often differ by scale – for instance, the assumptions and laws relevant at the quantum scale are very different from those at the cosmic scale. Being explicit about scale ensures that methods and explanations are appropriate and that comparisons or generalizations are made only within a suitable context.
1.2 Ontological Commitments
Ontological Commitments specify what the science assumes is real: the entities it recognizes, the properties they bear, and the categories used to classify them. These commitments define the building blocks of the domain’s conceptual world and determine how explanations are framed, how measurements are interpreted, and how theoretical structures are organized.
- Entities:
- These are the fundamental objects or actors that a scientific domain presupposes as real. In any scientific field, researchers start with assumptions about what the basic entities are – for example, particle physics assumes the existence of subatomic particles, ecology assumes organisms and environments, economics assumes rational agents or institutions. Clarifying the entities involved is crucial because it frames what the theory considers as the “building blocks” of reality in that domain. It influences how experiments are designed (you must know what entities you are manipulating or observing) and how findings are interpreted. An explicit list of entities also helps avoid confusion; for instance, distinguishing whether a theory treats a disease as an entity (thing) or a process can affect how one studies it.
- Properties:
- Properties are the characteristics or qualities of the entities that are considered relevant in the domain. For physical entities, properties might include mass or charge; for biological entities, genetic makeup or phenotypic traits; for human agents, preferences or decision-making criteria. These attributes are important because they are often what scientists measure, alter, or track to understand the system. Clearly identifying key properties ensures that research focuses on measurable and significant aspects of entities. It also underpins how entities interact (for example, charge determines electromagnetic interactions). In scientific reasoning, specifying properties allows for quantitative modeling (assigning numbers to properties like length, energy, growth rate) and for the formulation of laws or hypotheses about how changes in one property affect another.
- Categories:
- This sub-item refers to the classification scheme or taxonomy within the domain – how entities and their properties are grouped or organized into types. Scientists categorize elements of their domain into types or classes (for instance, in chemistry: elements vs. compounds; in biology: species or functional groups; in sociology: institutions, interactions, etc.). These categories are the conceptual buckets that help make sense of complexity by grouping similar things. Defining ontological categories is important because it shapes the structure of theories and explanations: it tells us whether we are dealing with a substance or a process, an object or a relationship. For example, treating “migration” as a process vs. an entity will determine how models are built. Clear categories also help ensure that when scientists use a term, they are referring to the same conceptual class of thing, aiding communication and theoretical consistency.
1.3 State-Variables
State-Variables define how a science represents the condition of its systems. Variables identify which measurable features track the system’s changing state; parameterization specifies how those variables are encoded—units, scales, coordinate choices, and levels of detail. Together, they form the bridge between the domain’s ontology and its models, turning conceptual structure into quantifiable, analyzable form.
- Variables:
- In any scientific domain, variables are the quantities or qualities that can change and that scientists measure to indicate the state of a system. They are essentially a formal representation of some property of entities or the environment (such as temperature, population size, voltage, etc.) at a given time. Emphasizing measurability or definability means each variable must correspond to something that can be observed or calculated. Identifying state-variables is crucial because they encapsulate the system’s condition at any moment and are the primary inputs to models and analyses. By tracking variables, scientists can quantify changes, detect patterns, and test hypotheses (e.g., tracking “population size” and “food supply” variables to understand an ecosystem’s dynamics). State-variables thus bridge the theoretical concepts with empirical observations.
- Parameterization:
- This involves the specific way in which variables are used to model the system, including the units, scales, or coordinate systems chosen, and the level of detail at which variables are defined. Parameterization is essentially the scheme for translating reality into a set of variables – for instance, deciding that a gas in a container will be represented by variables like pressure, volume, and temperature. This sub-item is important because a good parameterization captures the essential degrees of freedom of the system without unnecessary complication. It also involves making decisions about simplification: e.g. treating a distributed property (like temperature varying in space) as a single averaged variable vs. a detailed field. The way variables are parameterized affects how well a model can explain or predict phenomena; a poor choice might omit crucial factors or, conversely, overcomplicate and obscure understanding. Hence, scientists carefully choose parameters so that they meaningfully represent the state and dynamics of the system in question.
1.4 Admissible Idealization
Admissible Idealization defines which simplifications a science permits in order to reason effectively. Simplified models strip systems to their essential dynamics; limit conditions specify where those abstractions hold and where they fail. Together, they formalize the acceptable gap between reality and representation, ensuring tractability without sacrificing validity.
- Simplified Models:
- These are deliberate simplifications or approximations of real systems that scientists introduce in order to make problems solvable or theories clearer. The examples given (point masses, rational agents, perfect gases) illustrate classic idealizations: a point mass assumes an object’s mass is concentrated at a point (ignoring size/shape), a rational agent assumes humans behave with perfect logic, a perfect gas assumes no intermolecular forces and point-like particles, etc. Such simplified models strip away complicating details to focus on core dynamics. Admissible idealization means these simplifications are allowed within the domain’s practice as long as they are useful and not misleading. This is important in scientific practice because without idealizations, many problems would be analytically intractable – we could not derive equations of motion for every particle in a solid, for example, so we treat it as a continuum or an ideal lattice. The key is that these models are conceptual tools: they highlight fundamental mechanisms but are not exact mirrors of reality. They must be used judiciously, with awareness that they are approximations.
- Limit Conditions:
- Every idealized model has a domain of validity – circumstances under which its simplifications yield acceptable accuracy, and beyond which the simplification fails. This sub-item emphasizes identifying those boundaries. For instance, the perfect gas law works well at low pressure and high temperature, but breaks down when gases are very dense or near condensation (where molecular interactions matter). Recognizing limit conditions is crucial so that scientists know when their models can be trusted and when they must be refined or replaced. It also guides future work: if an idealization breaks down in a certain regime, that regime might be a fruitful area for more detailed study or a new theory. In scientific reasoning, stating the limit conditions of an idealization is part of being rigorous and transparent – it prevents overextension of theories beyond where they apply.
1.5 Domain Assumptions
Domain Assumptions articulate the background commitments a science takes for granted. Structural assumptions specify the fundamental stances—deterministic or stochastic, continuous or discrete—that shape how models are built. Implicit commitments capture the unspoken conceptual defaults inherited within a field. Together, they form the unseen scaffolding that governs how the domain interprets phenomena and what kinds of explanations it finds acceptable.
- Structural Assumptions:
- These are broad, foundational assumptions about how the domain operates that are often taken for granted by practitioners in the field. They are not specific to one hypothesis, but permeate the general approach to the science. Examples include assuming deterministic laws (every event has a predictable cause) versus stochastic processes (incorporating randomness), or assuming time/space is continuous versus treating it as discrete steps or units. Such assumptions are important because they shape the form of theories and models: for instance, a deterministic stance leads to certain types of mathematical models (differential equations), whereas a stochastic stance leads to probabilistic models. These assumptions may reflect philosophical positions about the world (e.g., whether truly random events exist). Scientists need to be aware of these because if a background assumption is wrong or only approximate (e.g., assuming continuity when actually discrete quantum effects matter), it can limit the theory’s accuracy. Being explicit about structural assumptions allows questioning and testing them as science progresses (for example, early classical physics assumed continuity, later quantum theory introduced fundamental discreteness).
- Implicit Commitments:
- These refer to the tacit beliefs or conventions that researchers in a domain might not formally state, but that are nonetheless required for their work to make sense. Often, scientists inherit a framework from their training or the dominant paradigm and may not articulate all its underpinnings. For example, an implicit commitment in biology might be that species categories are meaningful units of evolution, or in psychology that mental states correspond to brain states. These commitments are typically so ingrained that they only become visible when someone challenges them or when moving between disciplines (where different implicit assumptions hold). They are important to examine because they can constrain thinking and experimentation in unseen ways. A field’s conceptual structure – how it frames problems and what it considers solutions – will depend on these hidden assumptions. Good scientific practice occasionally involves making the implicit explicit (surfacing these assumptions) to test whether they are valid or need revision. Identifying implicit commitments can also help explain why different fields sometimes talk past each other – they may be assuming different fundamental things.
1.6 Internal Coherence Requirements
Internal Coherence Requirements ensure that a scientific domain forms a unified, non-contradictory whole. Consistency demands that its principles and definitions never conflict; compatibility requires that its entities, variables, assumptions, and laws integrate into a single workable framework. Together, they impose the logical discipline that allows a science to function as a coherent system rather than a collection of disconnected claims.
- Consistency:
- Consistency is a basic requirement for any scientific framework: no element of the theory or set of concepts should logically conflict with another. This is akin to saying the theory must make sense as a whole. For instance, if one principle in a geological theory says “rock type A always forms before rock type B” and another principle says “B forms before A,” that’s an overt inconsistency. More subtly, consistency means definitions are used uniformly (the same term isn’t assumed to have incompatible meanings in different parts of the theory) and predictions from different parts of the theory align. Internal consistency is important because a self-contradictory theory cannot be correct – at least one of the conflicting parts must be wrong. In practice, maintaining consistency requires careful logical checking and often mathematical formulation (since math is a strict language). It also means when extending or revising theories, scientists ensure the new additions don’t undermine previous well-established parts unless they intend to replace them entirely.
- Compatibility:
- Compatibility goes beyond simple non-contradiction and asks that all the components of the domain’s description integrate well with each other. It’s about the cohesion of the framework: the entities defined in one part of the theory should be properly accounted for by the relationships and laws in another part; the assumptions made at the domain level (like those in 1.5) should be in harmony with the evidence and methods used. For example, in a coherent scientific theory, the variables chosen to describe the system (say, in thermodynamics: pressure, volume, temperature) must be compatible with the theoretical laws (the ideal gas law relates those variables) and with the entities considered (the model of gas as particles). If you had a variable or concept that doesn’t relate to any others or an assumption that is never used elsewhere, the framework lacks unity. Ensuring compatibility is important for building a theory where all parts work together to explain phenomena – it increases explanatory power and reduces confusion. In scientific reasoning, a compatible framework allows researchers to connect dots between different observations and sub-theories, whereas an incompatible one leads to isolated fragments of knowledge.