'''ᱥᱟᱬᱮᱥ''' ᱫᱚ ᱫᱷᱟᱹᱨᱛᱤ ᱨᱮᱱᱟᱜ ᱢᱤᱫ ᱜᱮᱭᱟᱱ ᱥᱚᱛ ᱥᱟᱹᱨᱤ ᱠᱟᱛᱷᱟ ᱨᱮᱱᱟ.ᱜᱨᱮᱱᱟᱜ ᱯᱚᱨᱢᱟᱱ ᱥᱚᱫᱚᱨ ᱨᱮᱱᱟᱝ ᱢᱤᱫ ᱵᱮᱵᱚᱥᱛᱟ ᱾ <ref> a knowledge or a system of knowledge covering general truths or the operation of general laws especially as obtained and tested through scientific method '''b:''' such knowledge or such a system of knowledge concerned with the physical world and its phenomena* </ref> ᱯᱟᱹᱦᱤᱞ ᱫᱚ ᱥᱟᱬᱮᱥ ᱠᱷᱚᱱ ᱵᱟᱹᱲᱛᱤ ᱫᱚᱨᱥᱚᱱ ᱥᱟᱥᱛᱨᱚ ᱟᱹᱰᱤ ᱵᱟᱹᱲᱛᱤ ᱛᱟᱦᱮᱸ ᱠᱟᱱᱟ ᱾ ᱥᱟᱬᱮᱥ ᱫᱚ ᱥᱟᱹᱨᱤ ᱠᱟᱛᱷᱟ ᱟᱨ ᱥᱟᱬᱮᱥ ᱞᱮᱠᱟᱛᱮ ᱨᱟᱭᱨᱤᱛ ᱮ ᱥᱚᱫᱚᱨᱟ ᱾ <ref name=wilson>Wilson, Edward O. 1998. Consilience: the unity of knowledge. New York: Vintage Books, 49–71. ISBN 0-679-45077-7</ref><ref>Heilbron J.L. 2003. ''The Oxford companion to the history of modern science''. New York: Oxford University Press, vii. ISBN 0-19-511229-6. <br/>"... modern science is a discovery as well as an invention. It was a discovery that nature generally acts regularly enough to be described by laws and even by '''mathematics'''; and required invention to devise the techniques, abstractions, apparatus, and organization for exhibiting the regularities and securing their law-like descriptions".</ref> ᱥᱟᱬᱮᱥ ᱫᱚ ᱟᱭᱢᱟ ᱜᱮᱭᱟᱱ ᱮ ᱥᱚᱫᱚᱨᱟ ᱡᱟᱦᱟᱸ ᱫᱚ ᱱᱚᱣᱟ ᱱᱚᱣᱟ ᱦᱚᱨᱟ ᱛᱮ ᱚᱰᱚᱠ ᱠᱚᱜᱼᱟ ᱾