But maybe we could do something at societal level, because it does not seem normal to me that so many folks would chose to go irrational. We're doing something wrong. — Olivier5
don’t you know most scientists thought the earth was flat once? — Xtrix
Not all scientific progress is progress of the revolutionary sort. There is also progress of the "puzzle solving" sort that happens during what Kuhn called episodes of normal science. Contemporary climate science is indeed "normal science". Scientists tend to be critical of individuals who seek to overthrow the consensus wholesale and promote a scientific revolution. This is not distressing. Before a scientific revolution has occurred, the proponents of the revolution often are seen by the mainstream scientists as fools or crackpots, and indeed this negative judgement is correct most of the time.
There is a very small minority of scientists who have a relevant expertise in climate science, who aren't crackpots, and who purport to be highly critical of the consensus. I am thinking of Richard Lindzen, Roy Spencer, John Christy, Judith Curry, S. Fred Singer, and a handful others. It is hard to see them as promoting a new revolutionary paradigm, though, since their arguments are very weak and all over the place. They all agree much more with the basic science endorsed by mainstream climate science than they do with each other; and their advocacy efforts mainly center on attempts to sow doubts throug highlighting cherry picked results. They do agree with each other on the ideology, though, since they all seem to be ultra-libertarians who believe government regulations and taxes to constitute the highest form of evil the world has ever seen. — Pierre-Normand
Yes, we’re educating people poorly. — Xtrix
It’s a fantastic story for every charlatan and crackpot conspiracy theorist out there. So 97% of climate scientists agree? Who cares! That means nothing— don’t you know most scientists thought the earth was flat once? Etc.
Quite sad and quite scary. — Xtrix
I get that. It's an interesting point, a reasonable point, but what kind of point is it? — Srap Tasmaner
a shocking failure of citizenship — Srap Tasmaner
If it turned out that 97% had ties to the fossil fuel industry would it still make sense to go with the majority? — Isaac
Of course not. — Xtrix
This isn’t a ridiculous contortion— people simply go with one or the other “expert,” for many reasons — Xtrix
I’d say the WHO, the CDC, the AMA, etc, represent a majority of experts. This is all most laypeople know. So is it right to trust the CDC? — Xtrix
the overwhelming evidence that supports one theory (which is usually why there is such a consensus) over others (e.g., evolution vs creationism). — Xtrix
Second opinions, corroboration of witnesses, replication of experiments, etc — Xtrix
I'm just correcting Xtrix's first error mistaking variance in a population with variance in a stratified cohort. — Isaac
In fact that’s exactly what you’re doing, which I pointed out several posts ago. — Xtrix
Again, public health policy is not science. Following it does not have the same logical imperative as following science would have. — Isaac
Yes, but you've given no evidence at all that the theories supported by the majority of scientists have a greater quantity of these properties than theories supported only by a minority. — Isaac
Yes, but you've given no evidence at all that the theories supported by the majority of scientists have a greater quantity of these properties than theories supported only by a minority. — Isaac
a rational or ethical imperative for a population to all believe one single thing, all follow one single solution — Isaac
Public policy is (in this case at least... — Olivier5
If you care for the people around you, you should follow public policy. — Olivier5
So it's not entirely rational to adhere to the prevailing scientific view. — frank
conservative people (in the best sense of the word) want a conservative opinion — frank
If you agree with all of these and also agree that in a community facing an emergency it is a moral imperative that everyone should play their part, just as they are expected to in a military campaign, then what reason could you have for refusing to be vaccinated? — Janus
I wrote a long rambling response about the American culture war, but I'm replacing it with this: — Srap Tasmaner
Yes, orthodoxy is both dangerous and repugnant. I don't cotton to it. — Srap Tasmaner
You've provided no mechanism by which we can distinguish the occasions when public policy is based on science and pursues public goods from the occasions when it is not, rendering the advice to follow public policy completely useless. — Isaac
science never ever told anyone where to go next, reason for which it would be impossible to "follow it", as you wrongly assume — Olivier5
In my country, public policy generally pursues the public good. — Olivier5
it might damage the public good here or there — Olivier5
cases where a policy is crafted to benefit or protect private interest, which is bad — Olivier5
token policies, i.e. policies that are not really meant to be implemented, but mere gesticulation. In this case the policy is dishonest — Olivier5
I need to take a shot of a vaccine, the usefulness of which might not be totally established, in order to protect or rebuild public trust, I will personally do so. — Olivier5
There are (historical) case studies regarding pandemic protocols. I recall coming across some out there. They tend to inform — jorndoe
Where have I assumed this? — Isaac
public health policy is not science. Following it does not have the same logical imperative as following science would have. — Isaac
If people don't trust public policy to be in their interests, how does blindly following it regardless help to restore that trust? — Isaac
Are you suggesting the problems in the DRC would have been solved if people would only have just unquestioningly done what Kabila told them? — Isaac
So it's not entirely rational to adhere to the prevailing scientific view. — frank
Given underdetermination it is rational both to adhere to the prevailing scientific view and to adhere to dissenting scientific views. — Isaac
I'm not seeing the virtue though, you might have explain that one. — Isaac
Science doesn't tell you what you ought to do. It just tells you what is. — Olivier5
At the very least, I am trying not to undermine trust by my own behavior. — Olivier5
I am suggesting that public trust is the only thing that binds us together in societies. Protecting it, when and where it exists, is important to avoid chaos — Olivier5
If we can't rationally pick between them, something irrational has to decide. It's personal bias, isnt it? — frank
That's the scientism. Science where there is no Church. — frank
That's not what I am trying to do. As I explained, I am trying NOT TO UNDERMINE trust. I'm not trying to actively shore it up, but I don't want to contribute to its fall. — Olivier5
Yes, that's basically what I've been saying. — Isaac
That's the scientism. Science where there is no Church. — frank
I don't believe in such a thing. There's always a 'church'. — Isaac
Did the problems with the DRC reside in Kabila or the populace? — Isaac
they shared the guilt of the Mobutu regime, because they had done nothing to oppose it. — Olivier5
You can do that and still take your shot. — Olivier5
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