>the uncertainty principle applies to all feilds of science in that all objects of study in science are composed of particles to which the uncertainty principle applies,
The Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle is a specific physical principle, not a general philosophical statement. (it was used incorrectly in the Lost World - the way it got from the citation a more physics-savy listmember gave earlier to the statement given in the Lost World is that the implication of the principle is that you can't measure one value for a subatomic particle without changing another value, and from there you can see how it turned into the "you cant observe something without affecting it" statement. I have this vague suspicion that there is a different name for the general philosophical principle that Heisenburg was mixed up with, but the last time i had a vague suspicion like that, i was thinking that mammals should be classified as reptiles.).
But having said that, it is clear what the original question meant, so i don't mean this as an attack on T. Mike Keesey's perfectly valid reply or anything, just a pedantic footnote.