I have seen it here at THE Philosophy Forum. Those who question the dominant narrative with respect to climate change, the safety of vaccines, the safety and food security of GMOs, etc. are regularly portrayed as intellectually incompetent, sociopathic nutcases who are a grave threat to all of humanity. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
If you plan on actually answering all questions, each method of answering cannot contradict another. All knowledge must be integrated into a consistent whole. That whole would be science.Scientism is about claiming that science is the answer to all our questions, a proposition that is palpable nonsense. The use of science should be restricted to scientific topics - LIKE climate change and the risks and benefits of vaccination. — andrewk
Too many people will suffer and die if we wait to consider the feelings of the poor, gullible people that have been sucked in by such nonsense. — andrewk
The use of science should be restricted to scientific topics - LIKE climate change and the risks and benefits of vaccination. — andrewk
Lack of intelligence doesn't correlate well with holding these highly unscientific ideas. Some of the idea holders I've known are really quite intelligent. Maybe slightly crazy, but definitely not stupid. Many of them were also quite pleasant people who, for the most part, led more or less normal lives doing productive work. — Bitter Crank
Yet, apparently their supposedly highly intelligent, highly rational opponents easily fall for the narrative that says that there is a significant anti-science movement made up of nutcases. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
...so they won't explain anything sudden, like. — unenlightened
In respect to the former - there has been considerable fear, uncertainty and doubt cast on the science by lobbyists associated with fossi fuel companies, and by industrialists with vested interests. — Wayfarer
It’s very unfortunate that the facts of climate change have now been dragged into lunatic debates about green politics and conspiracy theory. — Wayfarer
It is a clear and present danger to the lives of billions of people and needs to be dealt with accordingly - soberly, effectively, and guided by the science. — Wayfarer
As for anti-vaccination theories, they are either misguided idealists or simply misinformed. In any case, their misinformation is pernicious and again can lead to many preventable deaths and illnesses. — Wayfarer
As Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, ‘everyone has a right to their own opinions, but nobody has a right to their own facts’. — Wayfarer
Claiming that science and empathy are somehow at odds is a false dichotomy. — NKBJ
Empathy is precisely what drives me to vaccinate my children. If I am fortunate enough to be healthy and have healthy offspring, I have an obligation towards those less fortunate to help establish herd immunity so that they do not die of the whooping cough, rubella, polio, etcetcetc. — NKBJ
Intuition is great, but it can lead you astray. That's where pretty much all logical fallacies come from: our intuitions being imperfect. The gambler's fallacy, for example, feels so right, but is oh so wrong! — NKBJ
But it's foolish to require absolute certainty, — Ciceronianus the White
and so foolish to rely on the lack of absolute certainty as a guide to policy, or practical decisions of any kind. Probability is all we can reasonably require; the higher the better, of course. "There's always some reason to doubt" is no basis for decision-making. — Ciceronianus the White
The problem that skeptics face in grasping the rationale behind some mainstream scientific conclusions isn't methodological. It is rather, to put it crudely, that they don't have a clue what it is they are talking about. That's simply because they lack a sufficient formal training in the relavant fields. — Pierre-Normand
In order to correctly assuage the worries of the skeptics, the mainstream scientists would need to highlight the substantial flaws in their arguments, and also criticize the ideologies that bias the skeptics' evaluations of the practical aims and other social aspects of the research, rather than advocate for them to accept mythical methodological principles that nobody actually obeys. — Pierre-Normand
And all of the ideologues who use science to attack religion, attack social conservative opponents in debates over sex education, transgenderism, homosexuality, etc. do know what they are talking about and do have sufficient training in relevant fields? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
But the ideologies of "pro-science" laypeople do not need to be criticized the same way? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Straw man.
I said that empathy is lacking. I did not say anything about things being "at odds". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Is there, or is there not, an anti-science movement made up of intellectually incompetent, sociopathic nutcases who are a grave threat to all of humanity? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
the rest of my argument still stands: scientists and those who give them credence do not lack empathy; their motivations are very often driven precisely by empathy. — NKBJ
THAT sounds more like a strawperson to me — NKBJ
but I do not think that they are the same, or have the same motivations as the average person who is anti-science. — NKBJ
Are you perhaps mistaking vehemently disagreeing with someone with not being able to understand/empathize with their view? — NKBJ
Too many people will suffer and die if we wait to consider the feelings of the poor, gullible people that have been sucked in by such nonsense. — andrewk
Thank the Good Lord for that!Instead you often get responses like this — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Thank the Good Lord for that! — andrewk
Being patronising will not help your (ahem!) "argument" — charleton
The CO2 concentration in the atmosphere is high enough that, at sea level pressure and dry conditions, almost all of the upwelling infrared radiation has already been scattered by CO2 molecules on the first ten meters on their way up — Pierre-Normand
Another interesting and relevant fact is that collisions between CO2 molecules and other molecules (such as oxygen and nitrogen) produce what is called pressure broadening of the CO2 spectral lines. — Pierre-Normand
No water vapour is the most potent greenhouse chemical and well as methane. — charleton
Interesting but speculative. — charleton
It’s a pretty accurate description actually :smile:are regularly portrayed as intellectually incompetent, sociopathic nutcases who are a grave threat to all of humanity — WISDOMfromPO-MO
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