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The culture of science
Zoltán
Sylvester
Shell International Exploration and Production Inc. , Houston,
USA
Printable version (PDF)
1.The 'Final Truth'
An interview grabbed my attention in a Romanian newspaper a few
months ago. A "researcher" claimed that, his book entitled "The
Final Truth", was "bridging the gaps between the idealistic, materialistic
and ezoteric worldviews". You could also learn from the interview that
thoughts cannot arise in the human brain, they must come from somewhere else;
that Darwinian evolution is wrong; that there must be another Universe that
"consists of electromagnetic waves of higher frequencies"; and that
this high-frequency Universe is the source of all human thought, UFOs, religion,
astrology and paranormal phenomena.
The fact that somebody, who by all means would satisfy most criteria
for the recognition of a crackpot, comes up with a handful of ideas that are
either age-old or simply silly and tries to sell them as revolutionary scientific
results, is not new and would not grab my attention anymore. It was the style
of presentation that forced me to think about this article a bit longer: the
editor (and interviewer) tried to create an aura of scientific authenticity
by saying that people from Chalmers University in Goteborg, Sweden and the Hungarian
Academy of Science "expressed interest" in the book; and by mentioning
that the author has spent many years doing research on these subjects in Sweden.
I could not resist writing a letter to the newspaper and pointing out that the
"research" of this gentleman is far from being science and, if presented
at all, it should be presented accordingly, either as metaphysics or philosophy
(of the sloppiest kind, I must add), or as just another muddled rambling about
other-worldly energies and paranormal nonsense. But not as science and a Nobel-prize-worthy
intellectual achievement.
The letter was published, and it generated a series of pro-and-con
articles in the Transylvanian newspaper. With the exception of a mathematician,
who was slightly critical of "The Final Truth" and its author, everybody,
including the editor, were enthusiastic about them. They either said that this
was science, my opinion nonwithstanding, or that this was more than science,
because it integrates the 'spiritual dimension' with what we know from science.
Those who argued against my criticisms included a 'chief psychiatrist' and a
'university professor'. After a few months of replies-to-the-replies, the editor
finally closed the argument by writing that he was proud of starting these series
of articles about "The Final Truth", and the importance of the book
was also suggested by the fact that it drew the attention of "American
researchers" as well. He just forgot to mention what the "American
researchers" had to say about it.
It is true that the newspaper I am talking about is not a major
paper in Romania; that it is published in Hungarian, therefore it has a relatively
small readership in Transylvania, more precisely in the city of Cluj. I think
however that it is diagnostic of how science is understood in this part of Europe.
After all, Cluj has one of the largest universities in Europe (more than 40,000
students and 1500 faculty), and I find it worrysome that nobody of the several
thousand Hungarian-speaking faculty members and students takes the time to fight
such science-degrading nonsense that surfaces from time to time in the media.
They either do not know how to tell good science from bad science or pseudoscience,
or they do but couldn't care less.
2. Science and culture
Where I grew up, science - if the word is understood correctly
- is not considered an essential part of being well-read, well-informed, and
well-educated. A lot of 'intellectuals' are enthusiastic about science - as
long as astrology or Chinese medicine are included, as long as great scientists
can be used as boosters of national pride, or as long as you do not exclude
postmodern literary criticism (the term "literature science" is often
used in Hungarian and it gives a hint of how broad the meaning of the word 'science'
is in some circles). When I was in high school in a small Transylvanian town
near Brasov, math and physics were thought to be important only because at that
time (in the eighties) these subjects meant the safest route towards college
education. Almost everybody seemed to know that real knowledge and real culture
can only come from the study of literature, art and history. And I think this
attitude did not change since then, or it even got worse: it is still OK if
you don't know what a fractal is or how the genetic machinery inside us works,
but you cannot be a real intellectual if you cannot talk about Shakespeare,
Ionesco, Derrida or Tarkovsky for at least as long as two beers last at the
pub. In their excellent analysis of the status of science in post-communist
Romania, Liviu Giosan and Tudor Oprea suggest that "culture wars"
between the "two cultures" would be "suicidal at best" [1].
I am afraid that there is no danger of "culture wars" or "science
wars" in Romania, simply because the intellectual elite is dominated by
people with little or no scientific background and a 'culture of science' does
not exist. One obvious piece of evidence is that none of the major Romanian
daily newspapers has a science and/or technology section. While 'science writing'
has become an exciting profession in the West, it is essentially non-existent
in Romania. Yes, Discovery Channel is available in many cities [let's put aside
now the fact that not all of its programs are scientific] and I hear there is
even a Romanian edition of Scientific American, but, to put it mildly, there
is a lot of room for improvement in making science more socially accepted, better
understood, and part of mainstream culture.
More reliable than my little pieces of anecdotic evidence are
the results of a recent study prepared for the European Commission: an Eurobarometer
report on "public opinion in the countries applying for European Union
membership" [2]. There are several statistics that suggest a positive attitude
towards science in the candidate countries in general, including Romania. For
instance, 78% of Romanians (81% on average in the thirteen countries) agree
with the statement that "science and technology are making our lives healthier,
easier and more comfortable". Also, 74% think that "even if it brings
no immediate benefits, scientific research which adds to knowledge, is necessary
and should be supported by government", and scientists are regarded by
51% of the respondents as having a highly prestigious profession. Other numbers
however are less encouraging. In the category of "knowledge of fundamental
scientific facts", the average number of correct answers given by participants
in Romania is significantly below the average in the EU or in many other Eastern
European countries. Compared to the rest, Romanians did poorly in in recognizing
the scientifically correct method for drug testing (15% correct answers compared
to more than 30% in most other countries).
I am not convinced that these differences are extremely important
or disconcerting. The gaps between statistics on science in Romania and in other
candidate countries or the EU increase from barely significant to orders of
magnitude as one goes from the attitudes and knowledge among the population
to governmental investments in R&D and to the number of scientific publications.
To add only one number to the analysis of Giosan and Oprea [1]: the gross domestic
expenditure on R&D in the field of natural sciences in 2000 was 12.1 million
euros in Romania, compared to 59.1 million in Hungary, 185.9 million in the
Czech Republic, and 261.9 million in Poland [3].
But my main concern here is not science policies, R&D expenditure, or the
quantity and quality of research in Romania. What I wanted and started to talk
about is the lack of a 'culture of science' in the mass media and among intellectuals
in general, including many of those who are employed by universities or research
institutes.
3. The 'culture of science'
Science has become much more popular and fashionable in the West
during recent decades. Numerous science books written for the general public
in a simple language - but without too much dumbing down - are bestsellers.
It is possible now to make a successful Hollywood movie about the life of a
mathematician. Most large bookstores have an impressive collection of popular
science books. Some of these books are much more than popular science: they
are frequently cited in the real scientific literature and have a strong influence
on the field; many represent an inspired - and inspiring - mix of scholarship
in the natural sciences, philosophy, and good writing. Authors like Richard
Dawkins, Stephen Jay Gould, Steven Pinker, Daniel Dennett, Steven Weinberg have
become a lot more popular than numerous highly regarded names in postmodern
literary criticism and philosophy. [Frankly, I am not surprised. Try reading
an essay or a book by one of the science guys and compare it to a representative
writing of the of the postmodernist camp.] Museums of science, technology and
natural history in the United States are larger, richer, and more interactive
than ever. Whenever a famous scientist gives a public presentation, lecture
halls are quickly filled and tickets are sold out in advance. A few months ago
Stephen Hawking gave a lecture in Houston. All of the almost 5000 tickets that
went on sale were gone by the time of the presentation.
The two cultures of C. P. Snow [4] are antagonistic or lack real
communication only in the eyes of those who still see the arts and the social
sciences entirely independent of the natural sciences. The best and some of
the most influential thinkers of our time are scientists who are also good writers
- or writers/artists who know quite a bit about science. This 'culture of science'
has been given the name "third culture" by literary agent and science
writer John Brockman and is promoted on his website "The Edge" (http://www.edge.org),
a discussion forum for a distinguished group of scientists and 'new humanists'.
Twelve years after introducing the idea of the 'third culture', Brockman suggests
that "the third culture now includes scholars in the humanities who think
the way the scientists do. Like their colleagues in the sciences, they believe
there is a real world and their job is to understand it and explain it. They
test their ideas in terms of logical coherence, explanatory power, conformity
with empirical facts. (…) They are not reducing the humanities to biological
and physical principles, but they do believe that art, literature, history,
politics - a whole panoply of humanist concerns - need to take the sciences
into account."
As I already suggested, I do not think that the 'third culture'
and the 'new humanists' have a strong presence in Romania. Most people base
their worldviews entirely on tradition and authority or embrace either the numerous
new waves of mysticism and pseudoscience or a nihilistic and relativistic postmodernism.
Although not everything is going well in this regard in the Western world either,
I still hope that getting closer politically and economically to the European
Union will increase not only the quantity and quality of research in Romania,
but will also improve science education and the acceptance and understanding
of science.
Like in other, more western parts of the world, most people in
Romania seem to have an overall positive attitude toward science. They just
don't know what exactly it is. Those few who know better have the responsibility
of educating the general public. For example, by speaking out when pseudeoscientific
or antiscientific nonsense hits the media; explaining in simple terms but with
convincing logic why pseudoscience is not science or why darwinism and evolutionary
theory cannot and should not be blamed for the horrors of fascism and communism.
It is unlikely that a country will have its Silicon Valleys and a greatly successful
economy as long as its political leaders and influential intellectuals do not
recognize the importance and value of both scientific research and of science
education. In the long term, they should also realize that the social sciences
and humanities cannot ignore the natural sciences anymore. As evolutionary biologist
Edward O. Wilson put it [5], "most of the issues that vex humanity daily
- ethnic conflict, arms escalation, overpopulation, abortion, environment, endemic
poverty, (…) cannot be solved without integrating knowledge from the natural
sciences with that of the social sciences and humanities. Only fluency across
the boundaries will provide a clear view of the world as it really is, not as
seen through the lens of ideologies and religious dogmas or commanded by myopic
response to immediate need."
References
1. L. Giosan and T. Oprea. Science
in post-communist Romania. Ad Astra, 1 (2) 2002.
2. Candidate
countries Eurobarometer. Public opinion in the countries applying for European
Union membership. CC-EB 2002.3 on science an technology. European Commission,
January 2003.
3. S. Frank. R&D expenditure and personnel in the candidate countries, in
2000, Statistics in focus, Science and technology, Theme 9-1/2003.
4. C. P. Snow. The two cultures. Cambridge University Press, 1993.
5. E. O. Wilson. Consilience: the unity of knowledge. Vintage Books,
1999.
Ad Astra Volume 3, Issue 1, 2004 Culture, society and science
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