Anti-science idiocy threatens catastrophic consequences

For the most part, there might be little harm in idiotic anti-science. Yet there can also be far-reaching consequences.

For this week’s science column, I was all set to write of new discoveries about the amazing eyes of the mantis shrimp (yes, really!), but was instead asked for something “more provocative”.

Well, scientists aren’t really known for being provocative, which is hardly surprising given Wikipedia defines science as “a systematic enterprise that builds and organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about the universe.” Yet a friend or two have remarked that I’m prone to voicing opinions about various issues, so here goes.

Some background first. I’ve long been fascinated by science; a childhood interest in rocks, wildlife, news about the universe and beyond led to a PhD in physical chemistry. While studying, I realised I did not want a career that might involve seeking car fuel that creates less soot, but became highly concerned about major environmental issues, and decided to try telling of these through the media.

Influenced by books and the 1970s environmental movement (Save the Whales!), I thought that if you tell people that bad things happen as a result of polluting the air, destroying rainforests, overharvesting fish, there will be pause for thought, leading to action to halt and reverse the damage. Hah! How wrong I was!

Our anti-science environmental rampage

Instead of pausing for thought, we humans have continued and accelerated our environmental rampage. Science may be yelling “Nooohhh! Stop it!” about a whole range of damaging actions, yet science is held in low regard, unless it can be co-opted to help extract even more from the earth – as in the madness of fracking for oil.

Perhaps there’s something about the word “science” that’s off-putting, like connotations of baffling quantum physics or bizarre bits of information that nobody needs to know (you would find those mantis shrimp eyes intriguing if I told you about them, honest!). But it seems to me that science is pigeonholed into school subjects and tv channels for nerds, a weekly page in a newspaper – which we’re lucky to have here, and too cut off from daily life.

There’s surely broad awareness of the immense importance of science in our lives. We expect to live far longer than our early ancestors, thanks to vaccines, medicines, farming and other now commonplace aspects of modern life. We have global communications, including the internet.

Yet as indicated by the remark of US Senator Ted Stevens – “It’s a series of tubes” – the internet is both a towering technological achievement and no panacea for ignorance and stupidity. Through it, we can monitor moon and Mars rovers, access vast banks of knowledge, help search for extra-terrestrial intelligence; and instantly share inane selfies, boring breakfast photos, urban myths and bigotry.

Commonsense and codswallop

Long before the term “science” was coined, humans would have grasped some of its fundamentals, and knowledge we might call scientific became intermingled with superstition and religion. For instance, fung shui’s advice for locating houses at the foot of hills near winding rivers could help people find good areas for rice farming. Biblical prohibitions against incest are sound given potential problems from inbreeding.

So far, so sensible. But we humans also have a great fondness for irrational codswallop.

Just this week, I read an article on fung shui, which included a recommendation for consulting a book before choosing when to go for a haircut, and mentioned a charge of HK$6000 for picking an auspicious wedding date. Good grief! On what basis are such choices made? There’s no way of knowing if they’re right or wrong, as each “experiment” can be run only once.

Given such chicanery, it may seem a good thing that China has just banned books by Hong Kong fung shui “masters”, though there are negative implications for freedom of speech. To counter these masters, perhaps I should offer consultations about scientifically auspicious dates – charging thousands of dollars to, err, check the weather forecast.

Online, I readily find Christians offering to pray for money. Well, what does science tell us? An experiment into supposed prayer power was held in Harvard University, US, involving cardiac bypass patients. The result: “Not only did prayer not help the patients, those that were told they were being prayed for experienced more complications.”

With the UK experiencing its rainiest January on record in 2014, The Sun newspaper announced a campaign to pray for sunshine. No sooner had it done so than lashing winds and rainstorms arrived, and more storms were queuing up to pummel the UK.

In the US, there was a creationism debate between Bill Nye “the Science Guy” and Ken Ham, founder of Kentucky’s Creation Museum. Reports tell of Nye presenting science, including to rebut Ham’s absurd claim that the earth is just 6000 years old. Ham said his view requires faith rather than evidence, and we can’t know the past, as we weren’t there.

It was, perhaps, a fruitless debate; minds made up beforehand were likely unmoved. Ham’s museum will retain its saddled up stegosaurus, which I earlier read of in an Esquire essay titled “Greetings from Idiot America”.

Idiotic anti-science has consequences

For the most part, there might be little harm in idiotic anti-science. Yet there can also be far-reaching consequences.

Right now, science is telling us the most over-arching issue we face is global warming. There’s no longer any real scientific debate on the fundamentals: of 9136 scientists who wrote 2239 peer-reviewed climate articles published from November 2012 to December 2013, only one rejected the link between human activities and global warming. But much as with creationism, there is powerful climate change denial – and, importantly, this is preventing major efforts to stave off catastrophic consequences.

Here in Hong Kong, we seem splendidly unconcerned about such issues. We have little defence against storm surges that were severe even with past typhoons, and plan major projects on reclamations just above current sea level. Shopping malls run air-conditioning overnight, maintaining absurdly low temperatures. There’s almost religious reverence for foolhardy construction projects.

And at night, the city is aglow with neon and LED signs. We might as well combine them into one monstrous message saying, “Hi From Hong Kong – City of Smart Phones and Stupid Disregard for Science”.

Written for South China Morning Post; published on 16 February 2014.

One comment

  1. Climate change whores n Nazis and more nonsense

    From Slate:
    [quote]the bar has already been set by comparing a climate scientist to a child molester and saying more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is just fine because plants love it.

    But this week has seen the dumbosity go up a solid notch. If I went into details this post would eat up half the available electrons on the Net, so let me give you just a taste of outrage permeating the anti-science realm with a brief commentary.
    …[/quote]

    Climate Change Deniers Lose Their Cool

     

     

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