←back to thread

473 points Bostonian | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.29s | source
Show context
underseacables ◴[] No.42178934[source]
I grew up believing that science was the search for truth and fact, and that it should be constantly challenged to further that. What has happened I think, is that there has been a great polarization of science as government and groups have used and twisted it to fit a political agenda. Which essentially stops that search for truth. Challenging scientific conclusions should be encouraged not cancelled.
replies(9): >>42179018 #>>42183423 #>>42183453 #>>42183639 #>>42184660 #>>42184836 #>>42184876 #>>42184911 #>>42184936 #
1. epistasis ◴[] No.42184876[source]
> that there has been a great polarization of science as government and groups have used and twisted it to fit a political agenda

This does match any reality I know of. What political agenda has government twisted science to?

The government is quite responsive to the science, and generates science, but the NCI and other bodies have little partisan politics, thigh of course the arguments in science get political just like any other group of people. It's just not Republican/Democrat politics.

> Challenging scientific conclusions should be encouraged not cancelled.

Scientific conclusions are challenged all the time. It is highly encouraged. Entire research programs get challenged to justify their existence. Should we really be running all these SNP chips for GWAS? Turns out that it wasn't a great investment, but it seemed promising at the time...

Too often people are doing two things, one good such as challenging science conclusions, and one bad such as lying or being dishonest or arguing in bad faith. And when they get critiqued for the bad one, they retreat to treating it as criticism of the good thing they were doing. I see it all the time.