Barclays Paragraph:

Science needs many disciplines from other fields in order to perform at its best. Science is typically seen as a cut and dry way of looking at the world, however when you intergrade the disciplines of art you can un-limit science and allow it to perform at its optimum capacity. Mark B. Boslough, an Albuquerque scientist specializing in impact physics, explains in his paper “We Must Protect U.S Investment in Scientific Knowledge” that “Science is sometimes slow, but it always involves making educated guesses that eventually lead to testable predictions.” We know that science doesn’t always have all the answers, there are many times it takes multiple trials’ and errors’ in order to come to an agreed upon answer. John Lehrer, a neuroscientist, and writer, explores the impacts art could have in science if integrated, in his article “The Future of Science…Is Art?” In this article he explains how Bohr, a famous physicist used “cubism” to redefine the “structure of matter.” Before this time the structure of matter was seen more like an orbit instead of the complex multidimensional structure it is. Science is often so complex to the point we have a difficulty grasping the exact concepts we have created. By integrating other disciplines from fields such as art we can better understand what it is exactly that we’re looking at by unlimiting it from the current strictly factual sphere to our real world understandings. So in order to “speed” science up to where we can better understand and work through the principles we use, the integration and implementation of other fields and their disciplines is required.