You mistake the symptom for the ailment. — thewonder
Though I agree with the belief, I do not see how it is applicable to politics. Not to mention, despite the principle, scientists are often wrong. Put a scientist in charge of producing more honey and he creates the Africanized Honey-bee. Put a scientist in charge of explaining homosexuality and he reasons it’s a mental illness. Put him in charge of governing, what then? Perhaps more important principles are required. — NOS4A2
You wouldn't need an opposition. While there is general consensus among natural scientists concerning the facts of their field, there is no such agreement over the uses of science. One could argue that this is the domain of the social sciences , but then there as many opposing camps here as there are in the political domain. Good luck getting anthropologists, economists, political scientists and psychologists to agree on anything. — Joshs
I'm not saying that anyone ought to be against freedom of thought and speech even when it comes to religion, but rather, that the people who would be opposed to a science party would be the heavily religious, and people involved in movements that aren't called religious but might as well be: basically anyone who's upset by science proving them wrong, and who insists that the world should conform to their beliefs even though they can be shown wrong. — Pfhorrest
Religious fundamentalists primarily, plus all manner of kooks, cranks, and quacks who have their own little proto-religions they follow in defiance of scientific evidence. — Pfhorrest
What does science say about what we ought do? — creativesoul
My understanding is that this is a simplistic description of what happened. The Pope was scientifically literate and buddies with Galileo. Galileo went out of his way to be a pain in the ass, and that's why he got in trouble. It was totally avoidable. I haven't time to dive into the full history, but simplistic myths should not be taken for history. — fishfry
Of course, it is entirely up to you how if you wish to form your hypothetical discussion but I would think that to take it out of historical context is not going to be the most truthful way. I would have thought that the two examples you give about Newton and Darwin point to the complex politics of science. — Jack Cummins
Religious fundamentalists primarily, plus all manner of kooks, cranks, and quacks who have their own little proto-religions they follow in defiance of scientific evidence. — Pfhorrest
Who sits in the Science Party I would ask.
The way I see it there would be leftists, centrists, conservatives, greens in that party. Likely that party would break up into factions that oppose each other. — ssu
Politics is about dealing with humans, societies and its issues. We, humans, are mostly irrational, we think with our stomach, our emotions bias us continuously.
Why do you think sociology has never been able to become a science?
Scientific disciplines help us to dialogue with nature, our nature and it tell us we are complex and, again, not rational. This is (among many other reasons like the survival principle, etc) why science party has and will never work to govern humans. It could maybe one day govern cyborgs. — Raul
An opposition might consist of anyone who opposes technocracy, which I wager would include some scientists. — NOS4A2
You conflate what it means to be the opposition in politics with opposition to truth. — baker
I do believe that there already has been so much politics underlying science historically and that this has been extremely complex. A large part of it has involved religious belief, especially Christianity. I don't see that you can possibly explore this question without an exploration of this. — Jack Cummins
YouTube is not a source, but it's a start. Find a paper by this Hans Rosling and quote from it the parts that support your assertion... — Isaac
In fact, resources are a function of the energy available to create them. — counterpunch
we could capture carbon and bury it, desalinate water to irrigate land, produce hydrogen fuel, recycle everything, farm fish etc - and so support human population, at high levels of welfare, even while protecting forests and natural water sources from over exploitation — counterpunch
people only starve these days as a consequence of political turmoil, war, natural disaster, disease — counterpunch
Lawns are a bourgeoisie decadence, fill your boots. — Kenosha Kid
So that's a no to my invite to the Annual Kenosha Death of Communism Lament then? There's free vodka and schnapps? Top prize in the raffle this year is a plough?
Ah well. — Kenosha Kid
I set out meaning and purpose, insofar as it's possible to discern:
I disagree with the assertion that the earth is over-populated.
An answer that does not construe the very existence of human beings as problematic.
Rather, technology is misapplied. In fact, resources are a function of the energy available to create them. Harness limitless clean energy from the core of the earth - we could capture carbon and bury it, desalinate water to irrigate land, produce hydrogen fuel, recycle everything, farm fish etc - and so support human population, at high levels of welfare, even while protecting forests and natural water sources from over exploitation.
An approach that identifies the root cause of the climate and ecological crisis, and in those same terms - describes the possibility of a prosperous, sustainable future.
The climate and ecological crisis is not a matter of how many people there are, but rather, that we have applied the wrong technologies, because we use science as a tool of ideology, but ignore science as an understanding of reality in its own right.
That so, it is not merely reproduction that furthers the interests of the species, but also - knowing what's true. By knowing what's true and acting accordingly we could secure a sustainable, long term future for humankind in the universe - and after that, who knows?
An approach with ontological implications - a way of being, that implies the existence of an ultimate meaning or purpose to be discovered.
It might be travel to other stars, other dimensions, time travel, uploading our minds into machines and living forever. It might even be God; but whatever it is, if we survive our technological adolescence, if our species lives long enough, we will find it.
And it falls upon stoney ground. I cannot explain it. Is it ego? Is it impossible for them to admit they are wrong? Or jealousy - the impossibility of admitting I am right? Is it cowardice - that they hide from reality? Or self hatred - do they think themselves unworthy of existence? How is it that, given a simple answer - they cannot, or will not see it?
— counterpunch — Isaac
Or good arguments, apparently. — Kenosha Kid
Your philosophical approach is to make up empirical facts without having either the qualifications or the sources — Isaac
None of these fact support your conclusion. What have either got to do with the conclusion that capitalism is inseparably linked to agricultural technology, or that geothermal energy is a viable source? — Isaac
Again, you show that you view the world through ideological glasses. — Banno
See, that's were you lose folk. You made the claim that growth was linear, I showed evidence that it wasn't. You claimed the evidence was irrelevant. — Banno
Over 9 million people starve to death every year, in a world that is pretty much entirely capitalist nowadays. Why is that not a failure of capitalism? — Pfhorrest