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Tuesday 25 April 2017

Need science be idolised to be of use.

Science as Cargo Cult – More Thoughts on the “March for Science”
David Klinghoffer | @d_klinghoffer

When even Slate  turns against a “progressive” event like this weekend’s March for Science, you know something’s wrong. Harvard Medical School instructor Jeremy Samuel Faust complains about the weird, mindless cult-like atmosphere infusing much of the adulation directed at “Science.”

Little of what I observed dissuades me from my baseline belief that, even among the sanctimonious elite who want to own science (and pwn anyone who questions it), most people have no idea how science actually works. The scientific method itself is already under constant attack from within the scientific community itself and is ceaselessly undermined by its so-called supporters, including during marches like those on Saturday. In the long run, such demonstrations will do little to resolve the myriad problems science faces and instead could continue to undermine our efforts to use science accurately and productively.

…Being “pro-science” has become a bizarre cultural phenomenon in which liberals (and other members of the cultural elite) engage in public displays of self-reckoned intelligence as a kind of performance art, while demonstrating zero evidence to justify it.
More:

[T]he march revealed the glaring dissonance of opposing that trough of ignorance by instead accepting a cringe-worthy hive-mind mentality that celebrates Science as a vague but wonderful entity, what Richard Feynman called cargo cult science.” There was an uncomfortable dronelike fealty to the concept — an oxymoronic faith that information presented and packaged to us as Science need not be further scrutinized before being smugly celebrated en masse. That is not intellectually rigorous thought — instead, it’s another kind of religion, and it is perhaps as terrifying as the thing it is trying to fight.
This is…well, frankly it’s remarkably close to our own take on the event. Listen to Discovery Institute’s Stephen Meyer in an interview with  interview with Mike Opelka of The Blaze, explaining how the March for Science reflects a split in the way people think about what science means. There’s the conception we absorbed in school: science is a method of investigating the natural world by collecting facts and then posing and arguing over questions (“multiple competing hypotheses”) of how best to interpret those facts. When the debate stops, so does the science.

And then there’s the very different view that says science has closed all the books and figured out everything in need of being figured out. The debate is over, and properly so. Thus the public needs only to absorb a set of doctrines, while scientists themselves engage in a kind of apologetics campaign. The conclusions are preset and only need to be conveyed for the public’s benefit. In this perspective, that of many of the science marchers, science is rendered as a kind of religious faith.

That may explain why it treats rival religions the way it does. As our Senior Fellow Jay Richards explains in an  ID the Future podcast with Robert Crowther, advocates of materialist ideology habitually portray science as being in a state of perpetual warfare with Judeo-Christian faith.


In fact, the latter tradition was the “seedbed” of science, as Jay points out, not its persecutor. But the rival religion, Science as Cargo Cult, feels an imperative to compete with and blacken the reputation of its competitor. Hence the myth of unending warfare between the two.

Recognised as faithful stewards of our master's property.

Jehovah’s Witnesses Receive an Award for Protecting the Environment


The printing facilities operated by Jehovah’s Witnesses in Mexico received the Clean Enterprise certificate for the seventh year in a row.

On September 26, 2012, the government of Mexico awarded Jehovah’s Witnesses a special certificate of recognition “for [their] dedication to the care and protection of the environment.”

The Clean Enterprise program helps industries develop in ways that are safe for the environment. Jehovah’s Witnesses participate in it every year, though theirs is a not-for-profit organization. A spokesman for the Mexico printing facility said: “To receive the Clean Enterprise certificate, we have to give evidence that our procedures and emissions meet local environmental regulations in seven areas: air, water, urban waste, hazardous waste, safety, electrical energy, and environmental training. Industrial enterprises are not obligated to subscribe to this program. We participate voluntarily.”

Jehovah’s Witnesses around the world do all they can to avoid damaging earth’s precious environment.