Difference between revisions of "Belief-clique/scientific"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (tweaks)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The ''ideal'' [[scientific]] [[belief-tribe]] might be summarized as "the tribe that believes in questioning what the tribe believes in", since science is based on the idea that any [[belief]] must withstand [[skeptical]] inquiry if it is to continue. In other words, '''science is inherently anti-tribal''', since the only belief that could even remotely be described as "[[sacred]]" by the [[scientific belief system]] is the notion that anyone may question any of its beliefs by reasoning from evidence – which flies in the face of the idea of defending tribal beliefs, and of [[tribalism]] in general.
+
The ''ideal'' [[scientific]] [[belief-clique]] might be summarized as "the group that believes in questioning what the group believes in", since science is based on the idea that any [[belief]] must withstand [[skeptical]] inquiry if it is to continue. In other words, '''science is inherently anti-clique''' (at least in theory) since the only belief that could even remotely be described as "[[sacred]]" by the [[scientific belief system]] is the notion that anyone may question any of its beliefs by reasoning from evidence – which flies in the face of the idea of defending cliquish beliefs, and cliquish behavior in general.
  
In practice, however, many of those who self-identify as pro-science pay insufficient attention to the evidence and reasoning supporting their beliefs and, as is [[human nature]], revert to easier heuristics such as accepting the word of scientific or supposedly-scientific authorities (e.g. people with science degrees employed to advocate a company's political position, politicians who use the fact of their past scientific training to boost their apparent credibility, actors dressed as doctors in advertisements, actual scientists speaking outside their fields of expertise, engineers and technicians speaking above their level of understanding) without question – i.e. equating [[authority]] with experience, and/or placing experience too high in the [[hierarchy of evidence]] – or believing anything that is suitably decorated in science-y trappings (e.g. [[pseudoscience]], [[fake journal]]s).
+
In practice, however, many of those who self-identify as pro-science pay insufficient attention to the evidence and reasoning supporting their beliefs and, as is [[human nature]], revert to easier heuristics such as accepting the word of scientific or supposedly-scientific authorities (e.g. people with science degrees employed to advocate a company's political position, politicians who use the fact of their past scientific training to boost their apparent credibility, actors dress as doctors in advertisements to add credibility, actual scientists speaking outside their fields of expertise, engineers and technicians speaking above their level of understanding) without question – i.e. equating [[authority]] with experience, and/or placing experience too high in the [[hierarchy of evidence]] – or believing anything that is suitably decorated in science-y trappings (e.g. [[pseudoscience]], [[fake journal]]s).
  
 
To some extent, this is understandable, since it is quite impossible for any individual to retain enough scientific knowledge to evaluate every possible claim at an expert level. While there are methodologies for laypeople to use in evaluating the credibility of scientific claims, these are generally neglected in public education and there are few if any definitive references available.
 
To some extent, this is understandable, since it is quite impossible for any individual to retain enough scientific knowledge to evaluate every possible claim at an expert level. While there are methodologies for laypeople to use in evaluating the credibility of scientific claims, these are generally neglected in public education and there are few if any definitive references available.

Latest revision as of 13:33, 7 October 2020

The ideal scientific belief-clique might be summarized as "the group that believes in questioning what the group believes in", since science is based on the idea that any belief must withstand skeptical inquiry if it is to continue. In other words, science is inherently anti-clique (at least in theory) since the only belief that could even remotely be described as "sacred" by the scientific belief system is the notion that anyone may question any of its beliefs by reasoning from evidence – which flies in the face of the idea of defending cliquish beliefs, and cliquish behavior in general.

In practice, however, many of those who self-identify as pro-science pay insufficient attention to the evidence and reasoning supporting their beliefs and, as is human nature, revert to easier heuristics such as accepting the word of scientific or supposedly-scientific authorities (e.g. people with science degrees employed to advocate a company's political position, politicians who use the fact of their past scientific training to boost their apparent credibility, actors dress as doctors in advertisements to add credibility, actual scientists speaking outside their fields of expertise, engineers and technicians speaking above their level of understanding) without question – i.e. equating authority with experience, and/or placing experience too high in the hierarchy of evidence – or believing anything that is suitably decorated in science-y trappings (e.g. pseudoscience, fake journals).

To some extent, this is understandable, since it is quite impossible for any individual to retain enough scientific knowledge to evaluate every possible claim at an expert level. While there are methodologies for laypeople to use in evaluating the credibility of scientific claims, these are generally neglected in public education and there are few if any definitive references available.