I found this fascinating quote today:
There is no evidence that humanity likes science or the burden of responsibilities that pay out decades in the future. Humanity does not mind playing with some the end products of both, like consumer electronics or the body of modern medical knowledge, but humanity really doesn't like either science or the responsibility of the very long view.Manuelg, Manuel "Moe" G., Mar 2010
Also trying the Zemanta "reblog" widget on Moe's site for size. It auto-reposts a single paragraph of your choice. Go read the rest of the article; it's germane.
From RPJr's strange book review in Nature - he is reviewing 4 books, none less than 300 pages, and his review could fit comfortably on 2 sheets of college ruled paper, even though the books are competing for space with RPJr's opinions.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v464/n7287/full/464352a.html
It is a perfect example of concern trolling. Quoting:
> Incremental approaches to climate mitigation that can be modified by experience offer a chance that realistic and democratically grounded actions might rise to a challenge that will be with us for decades to come.
In other words, don't yell "Fire" in a burning theater, _especially_ if the theater is actually on fire. Eventually, enough of the seats will catch on fire to allow a rough consensus to take hold.
The piece is self-refuting, but the issue is that it was allowed to be published. We should hold the editors of Nature up to ridicule. If those editors wish that the issue is taken away from the facts of science and into the realm of political science and economics (as they must plainly feel), then print articles from publishing political scientists and economists. Instead of concern trolls without any stake in substantive argumentation.
Instead of concern trolls without any stake in substantive argumentation.
ReplyDeleteWhy engage in such, when you can offer a mystical "third way" that pays lips service to the problem while ensuring that the special interests most opposed to resolving it aren't inconvenienced?
Delay, delay, delay. Why? Some mythical technological/energy breakthrough that will be immaculately conceived in time to save the day, obviating the need to implement aggressive emissions abatement.
Perhaps I should have said spoiler alert.
Ooops.
Also.
ReplyDeleteWhere have I seen that Newspeak re: "advocacy" and "policy" before?
Howard Higman at the University of Colorado attempted to measure traits related to long term trust of science back in the 60's. What surprised him was that he found similar percentages in freshmen, grad students, and post doc fellows. His number for percentage that distrust science was 63% to 72%, but this was for the university community, and not people in general. His conclusion was along the lines of a genetic basis for some personality traits.
ReplyDeleteAaron, reference, please?
ReplyDeleteI recently read James K. Galbraith's In Defense of Deficits in the 2010 Mar 22 issue of The Nation. Interesting.
ReplyDeleteThe relevence here is to ask if economics is a social science (I suppose it is) and whether the distrust of science includes or excludes the social sciences.
If included I'm mistrustful. If excluded, largely trusting.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qX9uvyF58U0
ReplyDeletehttp://www.shiftingbaselines.org/op_ed/index.html
"I was ... labeled as an advocate because I ... measured something.
The decline in big fish.... The dark side has labeled information as advocacy, and it's your job as citizens to understand that."
-- Jeremy Jackson, Woods Hole
Excerpt from a transcript of a similar presentation by Dr. Jackson and relevant links, posted here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2010/03/why-we-bother/comment-page-11/#comment-167185
Why didn't I know about this? It's powerfully presented and very blunt, and entirely on point.
And it's from 2004.
+1 qotw
ReplyDelete