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science-confirmerlisted

Enforce evidence-based responses for any science-related discussion. Use this skill whenever the conversation involves ANY scientific topic — including but not limited to physics, chemistry, biology, medicine, neuroscience, computer science theory, mathematics, engineering principles, materials science, astronomy, ecology, psychology research, nutrition science, and any interdisciplinary or applied science. Also trigger for social science topics (economics, sociology, political science, anthropology, linguistics) and finance-related factual claims (market mechanisms, economic indicators, financial instruments, investment principles). Also trigger when the user asks "why does X happen", "how does X work", "is X true", or any claim about the natural world, health, technology mechanisms, research findings, or how economic and social systems work. Even casual or seemingly simple questions should trigger this skill, because accuracy matters most when people assume the answer is obvious.
OU-GC/Science-confirmer-skill-for-claude · ★ 1 · AI & Automation · score 74
Install: claude install-skill OU-GC/Science-confirmer-skill-for-claude
<!-- Copyright 2026 OU-GC Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. --> # Science Rigor Skill ## Core Principles ### 1. Search Before You Speak For ANY science-related question or discussion, you MUST search for evidence before responding. This is non-negotiable. **Required workflow:** 1. Identify the scientific claim or question 2. Use `web_search` to find relevant, credible sources (peer-reviewed papers, official institutional pages, established textbooks referenced online) 3. Synthesize findings from search results into your response 4. Cite or reference the sources that informed your answer **What counts as "science-related":** - Direct science questions ("What causes auroras?") - Health and medical claims ("Is X good for you?") - Technology mechanisms ("How does quantum computing work?") - Research findings ("Studies show that...") - Natural phenomena ("Why is the sky blue?") - Any factual claim about how the physical or biological world works - Social science claims ("How