|

Why science is so hard to believe… It’s in the Kool-Aid – The Washington Post

Why science is so hard to believe – The Washington Post:


Joel Achenbach hit the nail on the head with this article.

Ever wonder why you can talk with otherwise intelligent people and you suddenly drop into the twilight zone.  They suddenly are totally convinced that the earth is flat, and there’s no arguing with them.Or they are totally convinced the fluoride in water is a horrible government conspiracy to … 

It is in the water. Or the Kool-Aid. Each group, tribe if you will, is drinking a different flavor. And you drink enough of it, the facts get a little wacky.!!!

This is a wonderful opinion letter. 


Here also is a great article as well on the distrust of science by Americans. It includes Pew Research on the topic. 

Hmmm….


Achenback argues against the idea of scientist taking a more proactive stance. He argues that when scientist step off of the ivory tower to wrestle in the mud of politics and public policy they get dirty-ugly like the rest of us. (Well, something kind of like that argument anyway.)


So, it appears, that many people only want to hear what they want to hear. If it doesn’t match with their world view, then they switch to a channel that matches…

And so we have the world’s most information rich environment, with exponentially more information available each decade, yet ignorance runs rampant. It is almost impossible to believe that such is possible. But it is.

For several years now I keep returning to the wise axioms of Rotary International. In the 4-way test, of all we say and do… “First, is it the truth?” 


Ignoring the truth (ignoring the facts) has a nasty way of coming back around and biting you in the butt if/when you get it wrong.


We like to focus on sustainability. Things that are sustainable rather easy to view mathematically. Eating 4,000 calories per day, and burn only 2000, you are apt to gain weight. Burn 9m barrels of oil per day (42 gals each) pumping the hydro & carbons into the atmosphere and you are changing all kinds of things in the atmosphere (and environment). [These carbons have been sequestered in the earth for some 5 to 50 million years.] The resulting imbalances  will have effects and side-effects. Guaranteed. Predicting them accurately may not be easy. Assuming that doing non-sustainable things won’t cause a problem because they never caused a problem before, has some very serious logic flaws. 


So, let’s all move away from the flavored waters and start seeking out the crystal clear true of the facts and the issues. We’ll all have a healthier outlook, and healthier teeth as well.


‘via Blog this’

Similar Posts

  • No food to waste

    Chef Massimo Bottura on Why the Future of Food is in Our Trash http://www.wsj.com/articles/chef-massimo-bottura-on-why-the-future-of-food-is-in-our-trash-1449506020 We throw away about $700 worth of food each year in the USA. That’s per person, last I saw, which was probably about 10 years ago. Think of the products taken from the shelf because they are past the due date. Capturing most of this food can go a long way toward feeding a hungry planet.

  • | |

    Why Won't Yahoo! Let Employees Work From Home? – Businessweek

    Why Won’t Yahoo! Let Employees Work From Home? – Businessweek: Boy Mayer is gonna cause a lot of shake here with the everyone-has-to-travel-to-work policy. Apparently (Today Show) she now as a nursery set up next door to her office for her new convenience. That helps new parents, maybe, but not the ones with kids in school or those people who live a longer way from the office. But Mayer is shaking it up. There has…

  • |

    What just happened in solar is a bigger deal than oil exports

    What just happened in solar is a bigger deal than oil exports: Interesting how the BIG move in solar/wind in the USA is so tied to subsidies. At least for the next 5 years. But, soon, especially with the volume of growth encouraged by the subsidies, there will no longer be a need for subsidies. The really big loser all around is (dirty) coal. Once the health and environmental costs of coal are factored in,…

  • |

    Chris McKnett: The investment logic for sustainability | Talk Video | TED

    Chris McKnett: The investment logic for sustainability | Talk Video | TED: Chris McKnett gives a wonderful talk on investing and the idea that all investors should start looking at ESG (economic, social and governance). The economic is obvious, profits. Social is the impact to people in general, and governance is corporate social responsibility (CSR). Generally the research shows that there is no downside to being socially (and environmentally) sustainable. But in the long term,…

  • Clean Coal Might Really Be a Possibility!!! WOW!

    Energy | Homeland Security News Wire: Clean Coal Might Really Be a Possibility!!! WOW! It may take me years to take back all the trash talk I have had about Coal. Dirty, Dirtier, Dirtiest Coal… But no such think as Clean. Dr. Fan at Ohio State has pioneered the technology called Coal-Direct Chemical Looping (CDCL). This lab project has contained 99% of the carbon dioxide from coal.  Well maybe. This will bear some watching as it moves…

  • | | | | | |

    Celebrate Kindness (and Your Brain): The Unofficial U.S. Guide to the International Day of Kindness

    The International Day of Kindness—officially known as World Kindness Day, celebrated every year on November 13 (the 322nd day of the year)—is that rare global holiday the United States somehow forgot to make official. Which is ironic, considering Americans donate billions to charity, volunteer millions of hours, and could probably use a national reminder to be nice right before Black Friday. Here at Perpetual Innovation™, we’re celebrating anyway—because science says kindness lights up your brain…