 Folks, sometimes other people say things so well that it can't really be improved upon. For millennia-ish, people have been trying to define the word science. My typical definition involves things like, it's a systematic approach to understanding natural phenomenon. Right? Right? You try shit, right? So, you know, I often call science a Lincoln-Loggy approach, right? You just try shit until it works, right? I mean, you have replication, all that fun stuff. But you know what? In the book, authored by Cooper Here and Inherit, there's a definition that I really like for science. So, if you wonder why I click this thing, sometimes I'm just getting some references and here it is. So, I'm going to read you the entire definition for science because I find this quite nice. So bear with me as I look at this screen instead of you. All right. Science. A systematic approach to the understanding of natural phenomenon as evidenced by three things. Description, prediction, and control. Those three are the key, right? That relies on determinism as its fundamental assumption, empiricism as its primary rule, experimentation as its basic strategy, replication as a requirement for believability, parsimony as a value, and philosophical doubt as its guiding conscience. I mean, really, that's a freaking awesome definition. I wasn't going to improve upon it, so I read it word for word. Thank you, Cooper Here and Inherit, and whoever wrote that definition.