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I just posted this link in my topic on sff.net, but it's also of some
peripheral interest to the discussions here (and also, I though it was cool, and worth passing on). "Why is science journalism so bad?" from the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/badsc...564369,00.html "Every week in Bad Science [column in the Guardian] we either victimise some barking pseudoscientific quack, or a big science story in a national newspaper. Now, tell me, why are these two groups even being mentioned in the same breath? Why is science in the media so often pointless, simplistic, boring, or just plain wrong? Like a proper little Darwin, I've been collecting specimens, making careful observations, and now I'm ready to present my theory. It is my hypothesis that in their choice of stories, and the way they cover them, the media create a parody of science, for their own means. They then attack this parody as if they were critiquing science... Science stories usually fall into three families: wacky stories, scare stories and "breakthrough" stories.." skipping forward so I'm not posting the whole article, he says that these kinds of stories... "reinforce the humanities-graduate journalists' parody of science, for which we now have all the ingredients: science is about groundless, incomprehensible, didactic truth statements from scientists, who themselves are socially powerful, arbitrary, unelected authority figures. They are detached from reality: they do work that is either wacky, or dangerous, but either way, everything in science is tenuous, contradictory and, most ridiculously, "hard to understand". This misrepresentation of science is a direct descendant of the reaction, in the Romantic movement, against the birth of science and empiricism more than 200 years ago; it's exactly the same paranoid fantasy as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, only not as well written." The archives of Ben Goldacre's "Bad Science" column in the _Guardian_ are also worth a look: http://www.badscience.net/ -- Geoffrey A. Landis http://www.sff.net/people/geoffrey.landis |
#2
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Geoffrey A. Landis,
Perhaps Ben Goldacre's "Bad Science" column in the Guardian can further appreciate how usenet gangs are better off than being continually snookered. Since I've discovered that reality somewhat sucks, thus speaking as a certified pro at myself having been detached from reality: they do work that is either wacky, or dangerous, but either way, everything in science is tenuous, contradictory and, most ridiculously, "hard to understand". This makes perfect sense if you're into knowing thy enemy and thus intent upon snookering thy humanity, in orther words only out and about as looking for taking whatever out of context in order to sustain your mindset. At least that's what I do all the rime, whereas I'm the sort of village idiot that's continually looking on the positive side of achieving the most bang for the buck, while otherwise improving the quality of life for the greater portion of humanity, however realizing my limitations due to the well established opposition that's continually sitting upon those spendy intellectual space toilets trying their best at keeping their mainstream status quo as is. Apparently the reality of folks honestly sharing of truth and nothing but the truth is now having been reclasified as a "Usenet gang" Warning about Usenet gangs! This is actually good news because, I've always wanted to be a "gang" and, as such other folks would lick my boots and brown-nose themselves off of my butt. Having been nominated as one of the usenet gang leaders that's breaking all their precious rules by insisting there has been other life upon Venus, in part because of viable observationology as having been further supported by the regular laws of physics that are offering a rather major contributing factor and, if these Venus establishments were of merely visiting ETs as having been responsible for what I've interpreted, as being a community of large structures and of having a perfectly rational association with having a perfectly desirable form of infrastructure, then obviously with such capable ETI smarts and some basic applied technology is where Venus has been doable. As opposed to getting robotics and humanity onto the moon, at least the thick atmospheric ocean environment of Venus is actually obtainable with the applied technology at hand. Our moon having insufficient atmosphere for aerobreaking on behalf of deploying any significant amount of payload and, since we still haven't a viable fly-by-rocket craft, nor have we the necessary science of any human expedition as to even safely deal with the harsh heat, nasty dust and otherwise highly reactive/TBI conditions of the raw solar illuminated moon, whereas getting a craft below them relatively cool nighttime seasonal clouds of Venus has been entirely doable as of decades ago. As for actually safely deploying robotics onto the surface is entirely doable of even extremely large scale and massive deployments. Eventually our walking upon the surface of Venus that may seem a wee bit humanly testy but, that too has become technically surmountable with the sorts of products and applied technology that's been available within the most recent decade. However, hard-science obtained by way of robotic missions isn't going to take a tenth the time nor 0.1% the cost (especially since robotics do not have to come back home), as such I see no good reason for humanity to be walking upon Venus or even that of our moon, much less Mars. The 0.1% of the trillion+ dollars for supposedly walking upon Mars becomes worth a billion+ dollars on behalf of robotics capable of accomplishing another 100 if not a thousand fold more hard science because, robots will not have to be continually fed O2, food and drink nor subsequently **** and poop upon another planet or moon, nor much less returned to Mother Earth as still alive and kicking. Whereas a billion dollars (especially if extensively spent in Russia, China or India) should get the likes of TRACE-VL2 deployed and of a few surface kiosks of interactive instruments established. Any notion of manned missions to/from another planet or moon needs to have a great deal of good reason(s), thus justifiable logic, that which other than extracting He3 from our moon that in of itself would have to remain primarily a robotic task, whereas it seems that even I can't find such valid reasons nor even an once/gram of remorse as for such investments into manned expeditions that could possibly benefit humanity, especially on behalf of the sorts of humanity as having been focused upon perpetrating cold-wars and as of lately into global energy domination shouldn't even be entitled to the worth of He3/fusion because, they'd only utilize it to improve their lives at the continued expense and/or demise of others because, Earth isn't just running itself out of geological/fossil fuel reserves. Even as of today, the lower 99.9% portion of humanity hasn't benefitted from all of astronomy to date, yet trillions upon trillions have been invested, as well as having diverted countless tens of thousands of supposedly talented souls, their past and ongoing research and exploits as having further diverted vast amounts of human and energy resources and, as far as I can tell we (the lower 99.9% of humanity) certainly haven't specifically benefitted from even the total sum of robotic missions to other worlds or moons (not even that of our own moon since there's still nothing interactively as having been deployed). Thus we're left with spendy sorts of NOVA and so many other infomercials of their incessant hype and promises that have never materialized a gram of food upon the table, nor that of a more affordable or cleaner form of energy from such ET related science, whereas Earth-science and thereby of purely terrestrial satellites focused upon Earth have contributed, or otherwise as having been focused upon our sun and even on behalf of tracking potentially lethal NEOs should eventually become a win-win for at least the upper 10% of humanity. Those that say otherwise are liars of the worse possible kind by insisting their spendy and resource consuming astronomy and of whatever ET exploits are justifiable (I guess that's true as long as it's not their money or other resources getting depleted, and some one else is having to paying extra as a direct result of their matrix of tax avoidance). Science stories usually fall into three families: wacky stories, scare stories and "breakthrough" stories.." I think the discovery of other life/ETs as situated upon Venus fits all of the above. It is my hypothesis that in their choice of stories, and the way they cover them, the media create a parody of science, for their own means. I totally concur. The media (MI6/NSA~NASA influenced if not entirely at their disposal) has been leading us astray while milking us dry, and then some. ~ Life upon Venus, Township w/Bridge and ET/UFO Park-n-Ride Tarmac: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-town.htm The Russian/China LSE-CM/ISS (Lunar Space Elevator) http://guthvenus.tripod.com/lunar-space-elevator.htm Venus ETs, plus the updated sub-topics; Brad Guth / GASA-IEIS http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-topics.htm War is war, thus "in war there are no rules" - In fact, war has been the very reason of having to deal with the likes of others that haven't been playing by whatever rules, such as GW Bush. |
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![]() Geoffrey A. Landis wrote: "Why is science journalism so bad?" from the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/badsc...564369,00.html "reinforce the humanities-graduate journalists' parody of science, for which we now have all the ingredients: science is about groundless, incomprehensible, didactic truth statements from scientists, who themselves are socially powerful, arbitrary, unelected authority figures. They are detached from reality: they do work that is either wacky, or dangerous, but either way, everything in science is tenuous, contradictory and, most ridiculously, "hard to understand". IMHO, Ben Goldacre overestimates the typical journalists's understanding of science. I think most journalists are merely representative of the general population. Like most people, they simply don't understand science or scientific principles on a fundamental level. For better or worse, most people never get beyond the basic knowledge-from-authority model of learning. On a fundamental level, the most advanced argument which most people understand is argument from authority. IMHO, this is why "bad science" and "good science" is viewed on the same level in the media and that's why the audience puts up with it. They have no concept of discriminating between true and false other than guessing which authority figure is more authoritative than the other. Isaac Kuo |
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IsaacKuo wrote:
IMHO, this is why "bad science" and "good science" is viewed on the same level in the media and that's why the audience puts up with it. They have no concept of discriminating between true and false other than guessing which authority figure is more authoritative than the other. And that's why every month or so on a site like Slashdot you see blatant crackpot stuff being trumpeted as serious scientific discoveries. The editors are at least relatively clever; they just wouldn't know basic scientific precepts if it bit them in the ass. In my opinion, things like string theory aren't helping. How many popularizations and media coverage of string theory talk about it like it's a fact, and revel in how weird it makes the universe seem? The problem is it's still uncorroborated theory that we have essentially no practical way to test at the moment. A lack of understand of basic scientific concepts means that you care about the labels rather than the underlying science. Articles about newly discovered bodies busy themselves about what the object will be named, and less so its physical properties and its scientific significance. And then there's the unending nonsense of what defines a planet and what doesn't. The vast majority of astronomers don't care, since it doesn't take long even for an interested observer to realize that these labels are ones that we give and do not connote any deep significance to the bodies in question, that there should be a relatively smooth distribution between large bodies and small ones, and the IAU, which is the organization responsible for providing such labels, does not and never has had an objective definition of _planet_ or _comet_ or _asteroid_ in the first place. -- Erik Max Francis && && http://www.alcyone.com/max/ San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && AIM erikmaxfrancis Grub first, then ethics. -- Bertolt Brecht |
#5
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Isaac Kuo,
How do we village idiots tell an honest journalistic effort from that of another infomercial worth of dog-wagging, spin and hype that's motivated from within deep pockets? For better or worse, most people never get beyond the basic knowledge-from-authority model of learning. On a fundamental level, the most advanced argument which most people understand is argument from authority. It seems we've been badly snookered by way of "knowledge-from-authority" a few too many times in the past, as well as for what's ongoing as we speak. this is why "bad science" and "good science" is viewed on the same level in the media and that's why the audience puts up with it. Of whatever "bad science" and "good science" is NOT viewed on the same level when the likes of NOVA creates those multi-million dollar 3D animated and surround-sound infomercials that are specifically orchestrated as to knock your socks off, whereas otherwise the lesser though more truthworthy souls can't seem to get their two words published. Besides our having to take the safe mainstream status quo as-is where-is media methodology as the words of God, it's also called "show me the money", or rather they'll be shown exactly how much negative financial impact will transpire if they don't publish the infomercial as though it was independently created and thus having been independently verified. The likes of NOVA entertainment is not "science journalism", it's pure and simple SF entertainment that's intended for the sake of comforting those easily dumbfounded about most anything. This however says it all; They have no concept of discriminating between true and false other than guessing which authority figure is more authoritative than the other. Although, there's not all that much guessing when there so much money at risk of being lost forever if the given media and most importantly should publishers of textbooks balk at their publishing whatever supposedly authoritative money-bags worth of disinformation comes along. Thus for the most part humanity has "no concept of discriminating between true and false". If authority is proven as corrupt, then I'd say there's a darn good chance that whatever science they represent and/or associate with is also at risk of being corrupt, or at least having been skewed in the wrong direction. ~ Life upon Venus, a township w/Bridge & ET/UFO Park-n-Ride Tarmac: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-town.htm The Russian/China LSE-CM/ISS (Lunar Space Elevator) http://guthvenus.tripod.com/lunar-space-elevator.htm Venus ETs, plus the updated sub-topics; Brad Guth / GASA-IEIS http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-topics.htm War is war, thus "in war there are no rules" - In fact, war has been the very reason of having to deal with the likes of others that haven't been playing by whatever rules, such as GW Bush. |
#6
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![]() Erik Max Francis wrote: In my opinion, things like string theory aren't helping. How many popularizations and media coverage of string theory talk about it like it's a fact, and revel in how weird it makes the universe seem? The problem is it's still uncorroborated theory that we have essentially no practical way to test at the moment. And it's now obsolete- Membrane Theory is the hot new thing in physics. "Professor Einstein...this is the exact same physics test you gave us last year!?" "Jah...but this year all the answers are different." :-) A lack of understand of basic scientific concepts means that you care about the labels rather than the underlying science. Articles about newly discovered bodies busy themselves about what the object will be named, and less so its physical properties and its scientific significance. And then there's the unending nonsense of what defines a planet and what doesn't. The vast majority of astronomers don't care, since it doesn't take long even for an interested observer to realize that these labels are ones that we give and do not connote any deep significance to the bodies in question, that there should be a relatively smooth distribution between large bodies and small ones, and the IAU, which is the organization responsible for providing such labels, does not and never has had an objective definition of _planet_ or _comet_ or _asteroid_ in the first place. Or for that matter what differentiates a _Bigfoot_ from a _Sasquatch_ from a _Skunk Ape_. Still, it's nice to know that prehistoric flying reptiles really did get as big as the Nazgul's Fell Beasts in LOTR: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4223658.stm And you know why they got that big? Charged Water, that's why. ;-) Pat |
#7
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![]() Erik Max Francis wrote: A lack of understand of basic scientific concepts means that you care about the labels rather than the underlying science. Clearly defined terms with unambiguous meanings are valuable tools in science and elsewhere. -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
#8
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:: A lack of understand of basic scientific concepts means that you care
:: about the labels rather than the underlying science. : Clearly defined terms with unambiguous meanings are valuable tools in : science and elsewhere. Yes, but that's "care about labels the better to communicate and conduct the underlying science" vs "care about the labels *instead* *of* the underlying science. On the other hand, lack of undertanding doesn't *cause* caring about only the labels; in addition to those above who both understand and care, there are *also* plenty who don't understand and don't care. But maybe it's correlated some. Wayne Throop http://sheol.org/throopw |
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Hop David wrote:
Clearly defined terms with unambiguous meanings are valuable tools in science and elsewhere. Sure, it can, under some circumstances. But astronomers already have better terms that they use when needed, like "Transneptunian object" or "Kuiper belt object" rather than merely, say, "asteroid." The point is that classification and namegiving are a minute fraction of the total amount of effort in scientifically studying a subject like astronomy, and one must always remember that those classifications have no objective power -- it's a classification invented by people, after all; something imposed from without rather than from within. That amateurs and the popular media are still stuck in first gear is a good indication that they're off wandering in the bushes rather than dealing with any substantive. -- Erik Max Francis && && http://www.alcyone.com/max/ San Jose, CA, USA && 37 20 N 121 53 W && AIM erikmaxfrancis Every astronaut who goes up knows the risks he or she faces. -- Sally Ride |
#10
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![]() Erik Max Francis wrote: Hop David wrote: Clearly defined terms with unambiguous meanings are valuable tools in science and elsewhere. Sure, it can, under some circumstances. But astronomers already have better terms that they use when needed, like "Transneptunian object" or "Kuiper belt object" rather than merely, say, "asteroid." The point is that classification and namegiving are a minute fraction of the total amount of effort in scientifically studying a subject like astronomy, and one must always remember that those classifications have no objective power -- it's a classification invented by people, after all; something imposed from without rather than from within. Still human invented classifications can be useful and non trivial. Carl Linnaeus, for example, made a big contribution to biology. That amateurs and the popular media are still stuck in first gear is a good indication that they're off wandering in the bushes rather than dealing with any substantive. Professional astronomers as well as amateurs have participateed in the "Is Pluto a planet?" debate. -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
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