Reposted from the Manhattan Contrarian
Back at the beginning of the Trump administration in January 2017, it was all the rage for media on the left to accuse Trump and his people of being “anti-science.” I compiled a collection of such accusations in a post on January 27 of that year, using the title “Who Again Is ‘Anti-Science’?” Among those I cited as making the accusation was the venerable magazine Scientific American, which had published a piece on January 18, 2017 with the title “Trump’s 5 Most Anti-Science Moves.”
If you look at that 2017 Scientific American piece, or the other articles that I cited in my post, you will see that those commenters are conceiving of “science” not as a special methodology, but rather as something more like: “science is what people who call themselves scientists do.” The basic complaint of the commenters was that Trump was “anti-science” because he was listening to or appointing people who disagreed with — or worse, sought to de-fund — functionaries in the government who called themselves scientists.
I have a different definition of the term “science.” Here’s my definition: “Science is a process for understanding reality through using experiment or data to attempt to falsify falsifiable hypotheses.” Those are my words, but I have tried there to capture the gist of the classic conception of the scientific method articulated by philosopher Karl Popper. For a somewhat longer articulation of the same thing, here is an excerpt discussing Popper’s principles from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
Popper’s falsificationist methodology holds that scientific theories are characterized by entailing predictions that future observations might reveal to be false. When theories are falsified by such observations, scientists can respond by revising the theory, or by rejecting the theory in favor of a rival . . . In either case, however, this process must aim at the production of new, falsifiable predictions. . . . [Popper] holds that scientific practice is characterized by its continual effort to test theories against experience and make revisions based on the outcomes of these tests. By contrast, theories that are permanently immunized from falsification by the introduction of untestable ad hoc hypotheses can no longer be classified as scientific.
Astute readers of this passage will immediately recognize that today’s political environment is full of theories that claim the mantle of science — indeed, claim to be scientifically-established truth — but at the same time are “permanently immunized from falsification.” Exhibit A is the religion going under the name of “climate science.” Or consider Exhibit B, in the field of social science, the hypothesis that “systemic racism” is the cause of all economic underperformance by African Americans. There are plenty more such examples.
In recent years Scientific American has somehow gotten itself into the position of defending the truth of many such non-falsifiable claims, but most notably in its strenuous advocacy of climate change alarmism. How to reconcile such advocacy with the use of the term “Scientific” in its title? If you are wondering how that could even be attempted, check out the piece in the current issue by a guy named Mano Singham, with the title and sub-title, “The Idea That a Scientific Theory Can Be ‘Falsified’ Is a Myth; It’s time we abandoned the notion.” Singham is identified as a member of the American Physical Society, and is apparently a retired professor from Case Western Reserve University.
Singham begins by acknowledging that “[E]ver since the seminal work of philosopher of science Karl Popper, for a scientific theory to be worthy of its name, it has to be falsifiable by experiments or observations.” However, Singham now understands that that whole approach has become passé. Apparently, there is a new field, going by the name “science studies,” that “compris[es] the history, philosophy and sociology of science.” People in this new field have now demonstrated that “falsification cannot work even in principle.” Here’s the explanation:
[A] theoretical prediction is never the product of a single theory but also requires using many other theories. When a “theoretical” prediction disagrees with “experimental” data, what this tells us is that that there is a disagreement between two sets of theories, so we cannot say that any particular theory is falsified.
Got that? And now that we’ve deep-sixed falsifiability as having anything to do with science, what’s the replacement?
Science studies . . . show[] that the strength of scientific conclusions arises because credible experts use comprehensive bodies of evidence to arrive at consensus judgments about whether a theory should be retained or rejected in favor of a new one. . . . It is the preponderance of evidence that is relevant in making such judgments, not one or even a few results.
Well, Mano, let’s consider my hypothesis that the thing that causes the sun to come up every morning is my going to sleep the night before. I formulated this hypothesis a year ago based on some ten thousand consecutive nights where I had gone to sleep and the sun therefore arose the next morning. I then tested the hypothesis for a full year of going to sleep every night and observing that sure enough, the sun arose every succeeding morning, 365 consecutive times. Surely my hypothesis has been established as true.
A friend points out that one time back in college I pulled an all-nighter, and the sun still came up. So what? Under Singham’s “science studies” principles, that’s just putting “one result” up against “the preponderance of the evidence.” That one conflicting observation does not tell us that my hypothesis has been falsified, but rather only that “there is a disagreement between two sets of theories.” (Another thing that it might be telling us is that Singham is not very bright.)
Anyway, there is an obvious purpose for Singham’s piece appearing at this time in Scientific American, which is to attempt to defend the climate “science” scam against attacks that it is not real science because it lacks falsifiable hypotheses. Singham:
[The] knowledge [of science studies] equips people to better argue against anti-science forces that use the same strategy over and over again, whether it is about the dangers of tobacco, climate change, vaccinations or evolution. Their goal is to exploit the slivers of doubt and discrepant results that always exist in science in order to challenge the consensus views of scientific experts.
I don’t know how Singham chose his examples of arguments used by what he calls “anti-science forces,” but a look at those examples demonstrates what his exercise is really about, which is exempting climate “science” from the requirement of falsifiable hypotheses. The hypothesis that cigarette smoking is a significant factor in causing lung cancer could definitely be falsified by a study of thousands of randomly-selected non-smokers who developed lung cancer at the same rates as smokers. The hypothesis that life forms change over time through a process of evolution could be falsified by discovery of “fossil rabbits in the Precambrian,” in a famous formulation of J.B.S. Haldane that is actually quoted by Singham in his piece. And vaccinations are subjected to double-blind clinical trials, which are explicit attempts to falsify the hypothesis that they are effective. So the only one of the four examples selected by Singham that actually lacks falsifiable hypotheses, and that seeks to be “permanently immunized from falsification,” is climate change.
Overall, this is a thoroughly embarrassing performance, not just by Dr. Singham, but by Scientific American. It is beyond explanation how the editors of this once-prestigious publication, with the term “Scientific” in its name, could have so completely lost track of what makes science science. And then to top it off, they call the people who actually understand what science is “anti-science.”
My message to the editors is this: The proponents of climate change alarmism, if they want to make any kind of legitimate claim to the mantle of “science,” need to specify the falsifiable hypothesis that they claim has been established, and also the evidence which, if it emerged, they would agree had falsified the hypothesis. Until they do that, their assertions have no more claim to the label of “established science” than does my hypothesis that my going to bed is what causes the sun to come up the next morning. Those of us who understand what the scientific method is are onto the climate scammers. As for Scientific American, your reputation at this point is beyond rehabilitation.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Who are we to deny science? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxnLpjQhNBg
It seems like engineers should be emancipated.
“…the strength of scientific conclusions arises because credible experts…”
So there we have it. It seems that if you dispense with the idea of Popperian falsification you are left with opinion, and guess what – to have a valid opinion you must be a ‘credible expert’. I’m not sure who decides who the credible experts are but I am guessing that it is each other, I would be totally unsurprised if it excludes me and probably almost everyone else on this blog.
Interestingly, SciAm published an article about just how fallible “credible experts” such as Lord Kelvin are.
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/roots-of-unity/lord-kelvin-age-of-the-eart/
Yet, they support the idea that Kelvin was just proposing a theory that had equal weight to the ‘theory’ of data contradicting Kelvin. The editors of SciAm and Singham are obviously logic impaired!
Most readers here agree that the Scientific Method when properly applied means that you are trying to prove the null hypothesis, rather than trying to prove your pet theory. A theory must be ‘potentially’ falsifiable before it can even be considered to be a valid Scientific Theory.
Now I want you to challenge yourself because most people on this site also hold to the Theory of Evolution as not being falsifiable. For example, the author referred to this:
Quote: The hypothesis that life forms change over time through a process of evolution could be falsified by discovery of “fossil rabbits in the Precambrian …
But the truth is that whenever such an even occurs (and it happens quite often) – the evidence is dismissed and the theory of Evolution is clung to as inviolate. Oh really?
OK, 1. Out of sequence fossils: http://www.creationscience.com/onlinebook/LifeSciences29.html
And I am quite positive that no evolutionist is willing to consider rejecting the theory.
2. How about the existence of blood cells and soft tissue in dinosaur fossils supposedly millions of years old when actual scientific experimentation has proven that to be impossible?
https://creation.com/dinosaur-soft-tissue
The evidence must be rejected and fairy tales must be invented to try to explain away the clear evidence. If you bothered to read the article, you will see that the so-called ‘explanations’ don’t hold water, yet if you believe in evolution you will still reject the data because you would have to reject the theory to which you cling.
Nuff said?
ian
More than enough. Now some friendly advise: get a real education.
And SA just endorsed Joe Biden, their first political endorsement ever
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/in-first-ever-endorsement-scientific-american-backs-joe-biden
Scientific American is still excellent in its coverage of astronomy. Almost as good as Astronomy Magazine, which I also subscribe to.
Joseph
Much like Wikipedia, if the topic is dry, hard science, with little or no implications for politics, then there is little incentive to corrupt the narrative. So, one should observe the dictum to not talk politics or climate science in polite company, or the family dinner table.
Believe me, Clyde and Joseph, Astronomy’s turn in the barrel is coming. There is nothing and no one who is exempt from control by the Socialist totalitarian juggernaut, unless we stop it now. In National Socialist Germany, you couldn’t rent a room without notifying the police. Everything was politics.
“When a “theoretical” prediction disagrees with “experimental” data, what this tells us is that that there is a disagreement between two sets of theories”
Experimental data is *NOT* a theory. Experimental data is reality! So when theory disagrees with experimental data it is disagreeing with reality.
That pretty much sums up climate science today.
This is nothing more than an extension of postmodernism. This is the religion that has been proselytized in our universities for generations now so it is unsurprising to me that it has taken hold even in what used to be called the “hard” sciences.
God help us when our bridges and buildings are being built by “engineers” who’ve been steeped in the culture that teaches there are no “wrong” answers.
“I don’t know why the bridge collapsed, according to my design, it should have held twice that weight”
“But, your formulas were all wrong and even using those formulas you came up with the wrong answers!”
“But what do you mean ‘wrong’? Wrong by who’s lived experience? That’s a microaggression!!! Imma report you to the thought Police!”
+1
It shouldn’t be a surprise then that SA has endorsed Biden, the first time they have endorsed a candidate in 175 years. Where is the outrage from the left? Germans attempting to influence our election!
Biden wins Scientific American’s first endorsement in 175 years
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/in-first-ever-endorsement-scientific-american-backs-joe-biden
WR2
Yes, the foreign political influence is a little more subtle than Reuters or The Guardian because many people don’t realize the SA is actually Scientific German.
Name one well-predicting scientific theory that isn’t falsifiable, Singham. Oh wait, that would be falsification.
Has anybody noticed that Mano Singham has actually missed the essential point?
Popper’s principle states that in order that a theory can be accepted as scientific, it has to be falsifiable. A NECESSARY condition, not a sufficient one (it is quite easy to formulate theories that are falsifiable, yet not scientific). Yet Singham argues that cases of failed falsification invalidate the principle. That is very faulty reasoning that anybody even vaguely familiar with logic should spot. Scientific American should be ashamed to publish such crap.
miso
Just another example of the shift occurring at institutes of “higher” education.
{Apparently, there is a new field, going by the name “science studies,” that “compris[es] the history, philosophy and sociology of science.” People in this new field have now demonstrated that “falsification cannot work even in principle.”}
The ‘soft’ sciences such as history, philosophy, sociology, etc. are trying to gain a foothold as equivalent to the ‘hard’ sciences like chemistry, physics, mathematics and biology.
They would have you accept that feelings, notions and consensus are equivalent to data. They are wrong. They believe this because they are not willing or capable of doing the hard work involving mathematics and as such when it gets too hard, they don’t want to be discounted as not as relevant.
[[The] knowledge [of science studies] equips people to better argue against anti-science forces that use the same strategy over and over again, whether it is about the dangers of tobacco, climate change, vaccinations or evolution. ] Singham stating this tells you all you need to know. Vaccinations are not without fault or harm, but the notion that feelings trump science will only end in misery for many, many people. Vaccinations by and large are safe for the vast majority of the population and vaccinating the herd means that those that cannot be vaccinated will receive benefit from herd immunity.
We’ve gone full stoopid.
However, let’s look at the bright side…the theories that face-masks do no good against the wuhan flu, lockdowns are a joke, and HCQ is a suitable treatment for said “flu” can no longer be rejected.
In the end, their validity or otherwise will be decided by the survival rate of those who adopt them.
In my case, its no big deal to go with the consensus, and not take the risk that it isn’t right.
Completely the opposite view that I take with ‘climate change;’ where its patently clear to me at least, that the danger inherent in the consensus nonsense totally outweighs any risk of it being right, if ignored.
In short ClimateChange™ the political and social movement is far far more dangerous than any climate change itself could ever be.
It’s been happening for a while. The basic argument is: every scientist is now a specialist. Other scientists cannot understand nor criticise the specialist because others don’t understand the full details and specialist knowledge. Therefore no one can criticise, say, climate models, unless they too, are a modeller.
In addition there’s a counter-Enlightenment, postmodern argument. 1st of all let me say: the defining feature of both the scientific revolution and the Enlightenment which closely followed it was a turn to empiricism. In science this took the form of experiment and controlled observation. In Enlightenment it took the form of criticising the ideas of the past in comparison with the real world.
The postmodern, counter-Enlightenment says: stop reading to those dead, white, European, males, DWEMs. Throw away the past because we, the enlightened wokes, can just make it up as we go along.
The most telling science example I found was a basic climatology textbook (about 500 pages), written for undergraduates, most likely, in environmental science. There was a 2-page section defining science. One of the examples in this definitional section gave as their only example of ‘experiment’ as running a computer model to compare the projection against your theory. They’ve severed the link between empiricism and science made 400 years ago. To these left-activist scientists science is now what a lefty says it is.
If Astrologist start to “quantify” their “preview”, say 60% new love, 75% good experiences at work, eccetera, would then they be a scientist?
The willingness of people who want to shape opinion to hide behind “science” as their justification (even when the data contradicts their opinion) has been evident in the global-warming / climate change scare for years, but it has become more dangerous this year with the counter-scientific response to the COVID-19 epidemic.
Back in February, “experts” at the World Health Organization were telling us there was nothing to worry about, because China had “contained” the spread of the virus, there was no need to panic, and everybody go to their nearby Chinatown and have a Happy Chinese New Year. Suddenly, in the middle of March, it was a “global pandemic” and entire countries had to go into lockdown, causing an economic crash that rivaled that of 1929. It gave national leaders and state governors unprecedented power, which they didn’t hesitate to use for their own benefit against their political opponents.
By April, it was evident that COVID-19 could be deadly to elderly people with pre-existing health conditions, a nuisance flu-like ailment to middle-aged people, and children seemed to be naturally immune. This is similar to chicken pox, which is rather benign to children, but shingles in older adults can be serious. The logical, scientific response should have been to quarantine elderly people, particularly those living in nursing homes, and let everyone else return to life as usual, but what did government do? They shut down the schools, forcing children to lose three months of education, and saddled their working parents (if they were lucky enough to keep their jobs) with having to look after them and tutor them, in addition to their normal jobs! To “protect” the children from a virus that doesn’t affect them, they were deprived of education!
Then, when some studies indicated that the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine, which had been approved as safe by the FDA for over 50 years, was effective against COVID-19 in its early stages, it had to be banned because President Trump recommended it! The main problem with HCQ was not its side effects or its effectiveness, but that it was cheap and Big Pharma wanted to sell us a new, more expensive drug. I know that if I had COVID-19 and was barely clinging to life in a hospital, I would certainly ask my doctor to give me HCQ, having nothing to lose, rather than wait 18 months for a vaccine!
Then, there’s my wife’s 60-something cousin who caught COVID-19 and was told by her doctor to go home and take Tylenol, and she recovered in 10 days.
We are constantly told that we need to “follow the science” to prevent the spread of COVID-19, but the data say that young people are nearly immune, and the median age of death from COVID-19 is 80 years old, so that real science tells us that the best response is to keep retired people at home and away from possibly-infected people, and let everyone else return to normal.
But some governors have instilled such a fear of this disease, and have obtained such power thereby, they are unwilling to relinquish their power, so in the name of “public health” they impose restrictions on going to church or restaurants, but it’s perfectly OK to riot in the streets and burn down shopping malls and police stations. In the name of power, science be d@mned.
I went to elementary school in the 1960’s. At that time, they had vaccines against smallpox and polio, but not against measles, mumps, rubella (German measles), or chicken pox. Measles was a serious disease back then, from which most children recovered, but caused blindness in a few children. I caught the mumps in kindergarten, chicken pox in the second grade, and rubella in the third grade. Nobody shut down the schools if some kids showed up with any of these diseases–the school nurse would send them to a doctor, and the doctor would write a note for an excused absence for a week or two. An infected child would stay home until he or she recovered, then go back to school, and that was how the spread of disease was controlled, without waiting for the MMR vaccine, which was developed in the late 1970’s.
With all the great scientific advances of the last 50+ years, and a cheap MMR vaccine available to all, why can’t we use the common sense we had back in the 1960’s for COVID-19, which has affected fewer children than mumps or rubella did in the 1960’s?
Science should be used to make discoveries that help human life, not to scare people out of their wits of a disease, or some hypothetical disaster hundreds of years in the future (climate change).
Hello Steve. I could have written your post myself, as I agree with everything in it. Here in Canada, we are being treated to a daily cry of Run and Hide because of increasing case numbers for infection. The news stories reporting the case numbers scrupulously avoid mentioning that the hospitalisation numbers are stable, as the bulk of new infections are in the young. We can’t have young people going around thinking that they’re not at risk, now can we?
I love the way the alarmist media have dealt with the near immunity from fatal illness from COVID-19 in the young. A story will typically say that older people are at greater risk of death from COVID. This is like saying that older people are at greater risk of heart disease than the young. It’s true, but it implies that the young are still at significant risk from heart disease. That’s how newspaper lie: They say things that are technically accurate, but designed to evoke an inference that is not.
This is hardly surprising. I believe it was Scientific American that published a lengthy article on how heavier than air flight was impossible, shortly after the Wright brothers demonstrated that it was possible. They tried to cover up their foolishness to no avail.
So I wouldn’t assume anything they publish is accurate.
That is very strange, and I would love to read that article. Patently heavier than air flight was possible, because the birds and the bees did it (amongst other things) and as an engineer with an interest in aircraft, I am aware that many people had indeed accomplished it before the Wrights did. Using gliders and so on. Otto Lilienthal for one. And he was not obscure. He was well known.
Indeed all the Wright brothers did was to add a motorcycle engine to a Lilienthal clone glider, couple it to some monstrous paddle sized airscrews and get a thoroughly unstable box kite off the ground, barely.
Aircraft – heavier than air aircraft – have two barriers they need to overcome in order to fly, one is power to weight – and really that has to be at least 10 watts per lb, to just stay up, and a fair bit more to climb, and that is largely what makes human powered flight nearly impossible. And made flight post the internal combustion engine almost trivial. And the second is the strength to weight of the materials used to construct the necessary wings, and it turns out that the bigger you get, the worse this problem becomes, which is why flies have no problem flying, but no one has ever built an aircraft much bigger than the ‘spruce goose’ and even Howard Hughes wouldn’t fly that a second time.
The mathematics to arrive at these is really very simple and would have been available at the time, so I cannot understand how any competent engineer or scientist could have written such an article.
So I would be fascinated to see the reasoning behind it.
And of course, the methodology of “science studies” would allow you to completely reject “The Bell Curve”, which they’ve already done anyway.
I used to read Scientific American avidly but not for several decades now as they became more and more politically-oriented.
They are no longer “scientific” nor “American”. They are leftists with an agenda. The left is like a malignant virus – it destroys everything it infects.
To the discussion I would add that I was taught that well done science often works through positing the “null hypothesis” and then seeking data that require it to be rejected.
In climate science, then the null hypothesis would be that rising CO2 does not cause global temps to rise. We know that in the past temps have risen without substantial CO2 rising (eg in the centuries entering the Medieval Warm Period or in the 1910-1940 warming. That does not falsify the null hypothesis re CO2….merely shows other causes of warming exist.
But….if warming fails to occur when CO2 rises, the null hypothesis IS confirmed. This is why the “pause” for almost 20’s (1996-2016) was important. CO2 continued to rise as it had been from about 1950, but the warming seen from about 1975-1995 stopped or slowed. Global warming as a direct effect of rising CO2 did not occur.
To avoid the null hypothesis now the warmists had to either challenge the data (which they did by “adjusting” it) or they had to posit an equal and opposite cooling effect during the pause to balance heating effects. They did that with their oceans hiding the heat.
But oceans then should have hidden the heat in the 1980’s, too. So then they down to ocean cycles used in an ad hoc explanation for the pause. But ad hoc in science doesn’t cut it.
A scientist not religio-politically wedded to catastrophic global warming theory would have said: “Maybe CO2 is a far weaker driver of global temps than our theories and models of the 1990’s claimed. We should start over and put hysteria to the side.”
but the warming seen from about 1975-1995 stopped or slowed.
1978/79 were El nino years
there was no warming from 1980-1997.
The trouble with the surface data, is that it is so tainted by UHI effects and adjustments and homogenisations and whatever…, that any such vital information gets wiped away.
Science is basically information but it must be true or it is not science. True information is often elusive and/or complex. Scientific information is the only difference between civilization today and civilization a hundred or a thousand or ten thousand years ago. The nazis perverted science…the soviets perverted science…it is not a recent phenomenon.
Had Douglas Adams been writing his seminal work today, the Golgafrincham Ark ship ‘B’ would have to be considerably larger to accommodate all the students and professors of “Science Studies”
Ark ship ‘A’, on the other hand, would have been rather small.
Scientific American was a part of my life as a teenager in the ’60s through much of my adult life. A neighbor got the cast off copies from a dentist friend who put them in his waiting room (back when there were literary people) and gave them to me. I read them from cover to cover. The Amateur Scientist was a favorite and I even made some of the experiments work! I still have these copies. (Yes I’m an information pack-rat.) When I graduated from college in the early ’70s I subscribed and again found the articles interesting. During the late ’80s it began to degrade and finally about 20 years ago I decided it had become a Political Science magazine with no real value and I cancelled it. My wife got a call from them and they asked why I had cancelled. She made a completely succinct explanation: “too much politics and no science.” I could not have said it better.
Many years ago a teacher made the comment that an educated family had subscriptions to Scientific American and National Geographic. Unfortunately that no longer applies. Political science and social science are not science! I rue the day that the so called “progressives” took over the publication of these once great journals.
The use of consensus and science in the same sentence is an oxymoron.
It’s not going to get better. The current editor in chief joined the magazine last year. She’s a Berkeley PhD who came from the Washington Post. Educated to be a moron. J
On the other hand, if Scientifish American is right, maybe the problem with my fusion reactor isn’t reality, I just need more people to form a consensus that it works!