• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

Questioning Science

ygolo

My termites win
Joined
Aug 6, 2007
Messages
5,986
How do we go about being skeptical of science?

What should we teach about it?

What keeps science honest?

Is there a "good old boys club" in the scientific establishment?

[MENTION=8413]Zarathustra[/MENTION] made the following points in another thread.

Haven't read most of the thread, but did watch the video and looked at the first 10-15 posts. The woman in the video was an absolute idiot, and I do fear the odd combination of absolutism and relativism as practiced by these conservative christians. When it all comes down to it, though, this is largely a reaction against the complete dominance the scientific establishment possesses when it comes to the "truth".

It only takes a few key observations for this kind of phenomenon to appear:

  1. It is a fact that scientific paradigms shift, so what is taught today will probably not be considered the (whole) truth 100 years from now. Hell, at CERN, the previously inviolable speed of light was just violated. Time to rewrite the science books. Thomas Kuhn had a legitimate point, so there's actually some solid philosophical backing behind a skeptical position toward the scientific establishment.

  2. Scientists are fallible. The favorite of the anti-global warming crowd was the Time magazine cover from the 70s declaring that scientists believed we were about to enter a potentially catastrophic period of global cooling. In the last year or two, Russian scientists have still been arguing that this is the case. When you read about things like this, and recognize what Kuhn was pointing to, it makes you question a bit more the current scientific consensus.

  3. Scientists are dependent upon funding, and sometimes that funding is dependent upon the perpetuation of a certain position. This is the one that really gets people on both sides of the issue rankled up, because the "pro-science" camp gets their panties all in a bunch that scientists could possibly be considered partial to their position, and the "anti-science" camp can't believe that the "pro-science" camp can't understand that scientists could be considered partial to their position, when it comes to their job, livelihood, family, and other reasons of personal self-interest. The ClimateGate scandal certainly didn't help the "pro-science" camp, in this regard, and, at least for the moment, it gave the "anti-science" camp all the fuel it needs to burn its fire for at least another five years. And, strictly from a philosophical perspective, if you don't think scientists are capable of allowing their personal self-interest leak into their take on things, I think you're either stupid, or you're lying to yourself. They are humans before they are scientists, and certain conclusions start seeming a lot more realistic when they are what puts the food on the table.

  4. Science is increasingly getting a stake in political questions, particularly surrounding issues like global warming, and, when you consider the above three observations, and that they all basically point to the fallibility of the current scientific consensus, it's a bit more understandable why people are expressing a degree of skepticism toward the scientific establishment.

What are your thoughts about this?

Is there a 'complete dominance the scientific establishment possesses when it comes to the "truth"' as Zarathustra says?

There were some other points brought up by exchanges between [MENTION=4398]Giggly[/MENTION], [MENTION=10431]Rail Tracer[/MENTION] and myself in that same thread. I will see if I can some those up in the next post.
 
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Messages
7,312
MBTI Type
INTJ
I am sympathetic to Zarathustra's points. It's silly to assume that scientists abandon their humanity when they walk into the lab. Science is infallible, but the people that practice it aren't. The "truth" of science changes too often to assert that criticism of scientific findings is silly. If you want an example, just look at nutrition. I will ask a simple question: Are eggs healthy? You can't possibly answer it, because science keeps changing its mind.

Science is also considered to be beyond criticism because it is falsifiable. That's fine as far as it goes, except that science is only useful for the questions that science is suited to answer. Let's look at football. Two weeks ago the Atlanta Falcons went for it on fourth-and-inches at their own 29 in overtime. They failed to make the first down, turned the ball over, and the Saints kicked the winning field goal. The coach of the Falcons has been defended by statisticians who say that going for it resulted in a 47% chance of a win, while punting would have resulted in a 42% chance of a win. However, this percentage is determined by the raw numbers from similar situations in past games. It ignores any situations specific to this particular game, and it cannot account for momentum, team-specific strategy or the skills of the particular players involved. If one examines only hard numbers, it seems that the coach made a good decision. But many people watching the game would argue that the climate of the moment made it a poor decision, based on factors that are not easily quantified.

Science is great, but it's not suited to answer all questions of truth. And that's why it shouldn't be the ultimate arbiter of truth in all situations.
 

ygolo

My termites win
Joined
Aug 6, 2007
Messages
5,986
OK. To add more kindling to this thread:

Here is the what I said I would post:
Sure.

I also wanted to add that I'd be less inclined to question licensed professionals because that is the purpose of the licensing agencies to question their candidates. Checks and balances (esp from outside sources) is good.

That said, I'm not sure if anyone would be completely transparent and accountable without being ordered by some higher ups to do so.

But don't listen to me. I'm in accounting and I have an accounting mentality.

None of this really addresses university research. It's a good question too. Who is keeping tabs on research institutions? Who is keeping tabs on research publications as well?

I'm not saying they are lying because I don't know that but I am curious about how they are managed.

A lot of the more credible ones tend to wound on scholarly magazines. Peer-review is just that, you get checked by your peers (pretty much in your field also,) the more of them that cite/use/agree with your source, the more credible it is. Often times, a peer-reviewed article can take years before people finally find it to be credible.

Wow. That sounds like it has the makings for a serious good old boys club.

Not sure if you are using it as a derogatory term, but a peer-review makes sense.

I mean, you really don't want someone who isn't experienced to be piloting a plane/ship to be taking you somewhere now, would you?

It is the same reasoning behind why you say that you have an accounting mentality, I am quite sure there are peer-review articles about accounting.

They are focused highly on their subject.

It depends on who the peers that are reviewing it are. Someone from your same university or group is different than someone more removed from you yet within the same profession. In accounting we have auditors who are also accountants who review the work you've done if you are a public company. The auditors must be, by law, completely independent and removed from you and your company and the results are published. In other words, you can't have your friends or colleagues review your work. Is this how it is with scientific peer review?

Here is the way NIH does it:
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/peer_review_process.htm

There are different peer review process for every journal for publication. There are different peer review processes for obtaining funding for research. Science is done internationally. So it would be hard to regulate legally. Though there are export restrictions on certain types of discoveries and technologies.

Just like there is accounting fraud despite the review process, there is scientific fraud as well. In my experience, there are plenty of errors, but out-right fraud is rare.

Consumers of science have to be wary of where researchers get funding, and what sort of biases the particular journal may have. Also, just like in accounting, you can check if everything "adds up" if you are knowledgeable enough (and this is the ultimate test).

Journals that are "Good Old Boy" networks are easy to spot because they publish their own labs results, and you rarely find conflicting theories on the cutting edge.
 

ygolo

My termites win
Joined
Aug 6, 2007
Messages
5,986
I am sympathetic to Zarathustra's points. It's silly to assume that scientists abandon their humanity when they walk into the lab. Science is infallible, but the people that practice it aren't. The "truth" of science changes too often to assert that criticism of scientific findings is silly. If you want an example, just look at nutrition. I will ask a simple question: Are eggs healthy? You can't possibly answer it, because science keeps changing its mind.

Science is also considered to be beyond criticism because it is falsifiable. That's fine as far as it goes, except that science is only useful for the questions that science is suited to answer. Let's look at football. Two weeks ago the Atlanta Falcons went for it on fourth-and-inches at their own 29 in overtime. They failed to make the first down, turned the ball over, and the Saints kicked the winning field goal. The coach of the Falcons has been defended by statisticians who say that going for it resulted in a 47% chance of a win, while punting would have resulted in a 42% chance of a win. However, this percentage is determined by the raw numbers from similar situations in past games. It ignores any situations specific to this particular game, and it cannot account for momentum, team-specific strategy or the skills of the particular players involved. If one examines only hard numbers, it seems that the coach made a good decision. But many people watching the game would argue that the climate of the moment made it a poor decision, based on factors that are not easily quantified.

Science is great, but it's not suited to answer all questions of truth. And that's why it shouldn't be the ultimate arbiter of truth in all situations.

Thanks for starting us off FMW!

But the parts I highlighted in bold are troubling to me. Could you expand on why you believe them? The fact that you stated them lends credence to [MENTION=8413]Zarathustra[/MENTION]'s assertion about the dominance of the scientific establishment on truth.

I certainly believe science itself is fallible, not just the scientists. But perhaps we have different conceptions of the word "science."
 

kelric

Feline Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2007
Messages
2,169
MBTI Type
INtP
How do we go about being skeptical of science?

What should we teach about it?

What keeps science honest?

Is there a "good old boys club" in the scientific establishment?

As someone who used to be a professional scientist (of sorts), I think that the very first problem is how these questions are addressed. "Science", isn't a body of knowledge that is "right" or "wrong". Science is a process, a method (hence, the phrase "scientific method") for arriving at conclusions based on experimental evidence -- and it should be taught from that perspective, instead as of a series of facts. Teach people *why* the current consensus on a topic is such, while still encouraging questions about both the conclusion and the mechanisms at which it was arrived. That's science.

The process of science is inherently skeptical, so there's not much to answer there -- as long as you're not treating it like a body of knowledge. Scientific consensus is actually probably the best way I can think of to "keep things honest" -- basically no conclusion is considered worthy without a lot of peer review and transparency of the data upon which the conclusions were based.

But here's the deal... teaching science like that is harder. It takes more time for both the teacher and the learner. It doesn't provide "answers". It's full of ambiguity, caveats, and "statistically significant" results that aren't black-and-white. As such, it's often hard to explain a *true* scientific result to someone who's not familiar with the topic -- which is where you get into the all-too-common issue where some "scientific result" gets blown way out of proportion because a journalist stripped out the explanations, caveats, and "this is a preliminary result waiting on confirmation from others" statements and tries to play up something as world-shattering when it's just a start on building a case for something new. Science *does* provide answers, but they're in the form of "this is our best conclusion, based on the evidence that we have right now" and "based on our results, we are 95% certain that a similar circumstance will produce this given outcome".

As for the "good old boys network"?... well, yeah. Like FMW says, scientists are people too, and as in any super-specific area, they can be downright cliquey. The model of science itself fights against that, but there's no question that it exists. I'd say no more so (and likely less so) than many other endeavors, though.
 
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Messages
7,312
MBTI Type
INTJ
But the parts I highlighted in bold are troubling to me. Could you expand on why you believe them? The fact that you stated them lends credence to [MENTION=8413]Zarathustra[/MENTION]'s assertion about the dominance of the scientific establishment on truth.

I certainly believe science itself is fallible, not just the scientists. But perhaps we have different conceptions of the word "science."

I only meant to point out that while five apples and five apples are irrefutably ten apples, it is still left to fallible people to count the apples correctly and determine if this information tells us anything useful.
 

citizen cane

ornery ornithologist
Joined
Apr 30, 2010
Messages
3,854
MBTI Type
BIRD
Enneagram
631
Instinctual Variant
sp
There was an excellent parody of the 'science is a fictional conspiracy' mindset on the Daily Show not too long ago. I shall link it when I am not on my phone, remember, and have time (and can find it)...you'll be lucky if that happens.
 

Totenkindly

@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
50,187
MBTI Type
BELF
Enneagram
594
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
Science is great, but it's not suited to answer all questions of truth. And that's why it shouldn't be the ultimate arbiter of truth in all situations.

I do agree with that.
I'm still not sure why people insist on using hammers to cut wood and screwdrivers to hammer nails.
Seems either like laziness or ignorance to me.
 

Totenkindly

@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
50,187
MBTI Type
BELF
Enneagram
594
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
I only meant to point out that while five apples and five apples are irrefutably ten apples, it is still left to fallible people to count the apples correctly and determine if this information tells us anything useful.

Yeah, I meant to post here at some point today at least a comment of similar content: That while science might be falsifiable and contains within it a self-checking mechanism, the problem (to borrow a line from The Matrix) is people. We're the weakest link in the chain.

For an example, consider the whole concept of getting one's scientific discoveries out there. Typically you have to get published (and, before that, funding); and those gateways are controlled by people who might have a vested interest in the status quo, or who have strong opinions without wanting to entertain others, or do not have the knowledge/truth properly 'framed/contextualized", etc.

The dissemination of information and knowledge is one area when people can create ignorance and falsehood even if the scientific principle itself was sound to start with.

EDIT: [MENTION=994]kelric[/MENTION] .... I just saw your post above. That was really nice.
 
Last edited:

ygolo

My termites win
Joined
Aug 6, 2007
Messages
5,986
I only meant to point out that while five apples and five apples are irrefutably ten apples, it is still left to fallible people to count the apples correctly and determine if this information tells us anything useful.

Hmmm. I get what you mean, and I agree with you. However, there is a deep rabbit hole regarding that too.

Inherent assumptions made:
1) There is an objective truth out there
2) "science" seeks and "finds" them

Are 5 apples and 5 apples irrefutably 10 apples? Doesn't the result inherently depend on the counting process? How does one separate the counting from the result? You have to have rules, like "the five apples in one set have to be different from the five apples on the other set" and so on.

The concept of addition is learned at a very young age, and we learn to operationalize the concept quite well. We learn the algorithm for it at a young age. But in order for the addition experiment to come out with the expected result in real life, there are constraints on how we count things vs. not double counting things.

Counting is such a simple thing to most people, but imagine all the ways it could be done wrong. How would you program a robot to count objects? It seems very doable but not trival, to me.

Not only that, the concept of addition itself is limited in it use. What happens if you take 5 L of clear liquid and another 5 L of clear liquid and pour them together? Do you get 10 L of liquid? Not necessarily. Not even if you did the pouring completely correctly with nothing left in the original vials or whatever. If the first 5L was water, and the other 5L was ethanol, you would not get 10L in the mixture. It would be less that that, because the two liquids are miscible.

All this may seem like semantics for such a simple example. But what makes it "simple" is the familiarity you have doing it. You've used the algorithm over and over again. You have interpreted the results over and over again in many different situations.

For more complex or specialized things, the separation between the failure of the concept and the failure of the people applying the concept becomes much less clear.

I would say "the scientific process comes up with concepts and those concepts can be very reliable" rather than "science is infallible".
 

ygolo

My termites win
Joined
Aug 6, 2007
Messages
5,986
Oh. I meant to add this bit, so as not to misinform:

Hell, at CERN, the previously inviolable speed of light was just violated. Time to rewrite the science books.

http://www.typologycentral.com/foru...eutrinos-traveling-faster-than-light-not.html
http://dvice.com/archives/2011/10/speedy-neutrino.php

I think this sort of things happens with relatively somewhat often. I remember there was something a few years ago that was similar, but I don't remember the details.
 
Joined
Jun 6, 2007
Messages
7,312
MBTI Type
INTJ
Hmmm. I get what you mean, and I agree with you. However, there is a deep rabbit hole regarding that too.

Inherent assumptions made:
1) There is an objective truth out there
2) "science" seeks and "finds" them

I take this as a given. Our inability to determine it doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

As for the rest, I don't think we disagree. Your post seems to argue that science as a process is not infallible, which is my point as well. I might not be making myself clear. My position is that the universe is governed by definite inarguable laws. The process of determining how these laws work ("science") is much more up for grabs, and too many people confuse the latter for the former.
 

entropie

Permabanned
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
16,767
MBTI Type
entp
Enneagram
783
The search for "truth" actually is a religious topic, it shouldnt be transferred 1on1 to science. Science means the analysis of the existence and its completly free from idealism.

I often have the impression that scientific research is hold like a religion in America. Something like the "guardians of religion" hold their truth and the "defiants" the science people hold their truth. You often find in posts remarks by people to underline their statements by quoting scientific research as a sort of proof to their theory. What all have in common is that fundamental hardliner approach to assume that there actually is a truth, a kind of black and white or the axis of evil and the axis of light. Science but means that there is a third option, which is there maybe no answer to all or life basically is the sum of a lot of shades of grey and that never really manifests in american science.

Its my impression as an onlooker and I dont want to sound anti-american that religion and science and some sort of egoistical proft-oriented pragmatism are kinda mixed up here. I myself always had America as a sort of rolemodel for me, but when I heard that americans think nuclear power is the best energy source we have, that climate change has become a nagging feeling that one has to ignore so it doesnt bug, because it cant be proven and that creationism is an equally valid theory like darwinism, I dunno: my scientific respect began to stumble.

Then again maybe I am wrong and exactly the basic openess to even the most unrealistic theories is what the real scientific method is about.
 

KDude

New member
Joined
Jan 26, 2010
Messages
8,243
As others have said, science is founded on the idea of falsifying. Not declaring any truth. It has no viewpoint to even question. One can only question it's findings.. and any scientist would tell you that's fair game. They even welcome it. It makes science, and the world even, better when you do. But if you don't, and simply criticize, then that's the only reason why you might make enemies in those communities. And it's not because of opposing ideology. It's because you're being stupid.
 

entropie

Permabanned
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
16,767
MBTI Type
entp
Enneagram
783
ok i got that :). still i dont think being a good critic makes you automatically to someone who is good at inspiring others. dont think that suffices to make you stupid. but i think too that someone who is a good critic can be likely a good inspirer. i just tend to limit myself to being a critic cause i am stupid :)
 

KDude

New member
Joined
Jan 26, 2010
Messages
8,243
ok i got that :). still i dont think being a good critic makes you automatically to someone who is good at inspiring others. dont think that suffices to make you stupid. but i think too that someone who is a good critic can be likely a good inspirer. i just tend to limit myself to being a critic cause i am stupid :)

I thought you were a scientist. Or an engineer at least, and an enthusiast. Why would you include yourself among the critics? You seem like more of a scientist than I am, for sure.

Anyways, I'm just saying it's stupid if you criticize scientific findings with little or no scientific findings of your own to counter them. There's no dialogue there. Just randomly disagreeing is, in fact, "stupid".

Wait, lets say that it's simply "unhelpful". What would be stupid is bringing out the juju beans and start chanting about how we're all living on top of a giant turtle shell, and science simply has it all wrong "just because". That's definitely "stupid". And not "inspired". There's no other word for it.
 

entropie

Permabanned
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
16,767
MBTI Type
entp
Enneagram
783
you have a clear point there.

Regarding myself, I am no scientist and Ill never be. I dont trust statistics which I havent falsified myself and I am too messy and unconcentrated to base my arguements on facts. i am a much worser creature and far closer to any religious dogma than I ever wanted to get. I am believer of my own visions and want to make them come true. and one of this vision is building the warp core and doing that with renewable power supplies that wont harm the planet for my children. no fact, may it monetary or statistical could turn me away from that vision and make believe atomic power was good.

being a critic isnt necessarily what it takes to have an inquisitive mind. critics are most often people who didnt achieve for themselves what they wanted to in society and feel underappreciated. i count myself to those and its my own fault. i tho will never claim for myself that i am a scientist nor do i want to say artist. if i'ld surely now what i am, i guess i wouldnt be here
 

entropie

Permabanned
Joined
Apr 24, 2008
Messages
16,767
MBTI Type
entp
Enneagram
783
ouh yeah you can count on that ! And Ill mark today red in my calendar. Ill call it: the day I received a lesson in Fe from an istp :D.
 

KDude

New member
Joined
Jan 26, 2010
Messages
8,243
ouh yeah you can count on that ! And Ill mark today red in my calendar. Ill call it: the day I received a lesson in Fe from an istp :D.

Is that Fe? I just want a warp drive dude. :D Life can be boring sometimes for the simple fact that I'm not a space pirate. That could be Se.
 
Top