Tuesday, February 24, 2009

"Politics in the Guise of Pure Science "

I have been warning for some time that ideological advocacy often masks as objective scientific reporting--both in the media and the journals--allowing political activists to promote various agendas by bootstrapping their views to the widespread respect society has for the scientific process. Now a much bigger fish than SHS has expressed the same concern. John Tierney, science columnist for the New York Times (of all places, since some of its stories are classics in conflating politics/ideology and science) ponders the problem, riffing off of a book by Roger Pielke Jr. called The Honest Broker. From Tierney's column:

Most researchers, Dr. Pielke writes, like to think of themselves in one of two roles: as a pure researcher who remains aloof from messy politics, or an impartial arbiter offering expert answers to politicians' questions. Either way, they believe their research can point the way to correct public policies, and sometimes it does--when the science is clear and people's values aren't in conflict... But too often, Dr. Pielke says, they pose as impartial experts pointing politicians to the only option that makes scientific sense. To bolster their case, they're prone to exaggerate their expertise (like enumerating the catastrophes that would occur if their policies aren't adopted), while denigrating their political opponents as "unqualified" or "unscientific."

I am afraid this phenomenon reflects the toxic cultural times in which we live. Science, like everything else in society is going show business--by which I mean it is driven to a fairly large degree by the desire for money, hope for fame, and ideological stridency. The field increasingly reminds me of the cruel social pecking order we often see develop among high school kids, in which the cool or hep students--to use the terminology of my time--have all the fun while the nerds find themselves socially rejected, or even, targeted for bullying. Indeed, scientists who dare to challenge the "in" view about publicly provocative issues are often viciously attacked and even driven from their careers--as I have certainly witnessed happen to more than one friend because they took the anti-cloning/ESCR view in the stem cell debates.

Tierney mentions a different example of trying to shoot the messenger of unpopular views from Pielke's book. Several years ago, the John P. Holdren, now President Obama's science adviser, pulled a Torquemada when Bjorn Lomborg became an apostate to the Science Establishment's ideological view about the environment:

Dr. Holdren called it his “scientific duty” to expose the “complete incompetence” of the book’s author, Bjorn Lomborg, a Danish political scientist. Dr. Holdren was one of the authors of an extraordinary 11-page attack on the book that ran in Scientific American under the headline, “Science defends itself against 'The Skeptical Environmentalist'"--as if "science" spoke with one voice. After reviewing the criticisms, Dr. Pielke concludes that a more accurate headline would have been, "Our political perspective defends itself against the political agenda of 'The Skeptical Environmentalist.'"
I think Tierney completely understates McCarthyite atmosphere that stifles free thinking and intellectual freedom within the scientific community. But good on him and Dr. Pielke for noticing that science is being corrupted by politics and ideology. It is one thing for an outsider to sound the alarm. But when a respected voices from the choir loft speak up, perhaps "the scientists" will find the courage and humility to change.

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4 Comments:

At February 25, 2009 , Blogger padraig said...

Nothing new here, years ago cigarette companies sponsored "research" that showed there was no conclusive link between cigarette smoking and cancer.

More recently the alleged connection between autism and vaccination was supported by a study sponsored by a trial lawyer. That study at least was exposed as fraudulent.

I don't believe or disbelieve any study without knowing who paid for it.

 
At February 26, 2009 , Blogger Dark Swan said...

"Science, like everything else in society is going show business--by which I mean it is driven to a fairly large degree by the desire for money, hope for fame, and ideological stridency."

Yeah that would explain why PhDs in academic medical research who apply for grants are so famous. You can really do a lot with 50K a year, after your 10 years of schooling and the huge loans you get to pay off. Why become an MD and make a lot more money?

You get to work long hard hours into the night, chasing the dream of making society a better place by unlocking the secrets to our being, so you can become famous!

Then you get to have zealots tear down the work you do, because your obviously not in this for the right reasons of helping to seek cures and relieving suffering. Grants enable you to be an ideologue power monger!

Grants help fund your pursuit of fame and fortune, regardless that you'll need the grants to power your lab, hire technicians and put a roof over your head as well. Man that Honda you drive just turns heads too!

Forget about the Research Technicians who only have a lowly masters degrees that have to get 2nd jobs to support their basic standard of living.

After a while you start to feel like your just taking advantage of society by getting all this fame and glamor, your cats in your apartment near the university know youre an all star, if only we could scheme ways to let the rest of the world know, because a large degree of scientists just want money, power and fame!! After all, who really cares about the desire for helping people who have cancer or other diseases.

I've got a better idea, instead of being a person who applies their lives to scientific research, lets just become a talking head who gets paid by ??? to tear down people who are actually doing something to make a difference for people.

So how do you get your funding to travel to events and speak as a ideological blogger Wesley?

 
At February 27, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

DS: I would imagine people buy SHS's books, which not enough people have read yet as it is. I think that what would make the most positive difference for people would be to close down the laboratories where animals are used and stop medical and scientific research for a while. SHS wouldn't agree with me on that. It would be disruptive to those in those fields who would have to go to work selling shoes or working at Starbucks or wherever, but it's about time people realized that just being alive is good. If it weren't for the sense of entitlement and "doing what one wants to do" that goes for careerism, we wouldn't have the death culture.

 
At February 28, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

SHS: I think they need to sell shoes for a while in order to get the courage and humility to listen to the voices in the choir.

 

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