{"id":4653,"date":"2021-03-31T20:51:35","date_gmt":"2021-03-31T18:51:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.notechmagazine.com\/?p=4653"},"modified":"2021-04-01T02:54:59","modified_gmt":"2021-04-01T00:54:59","slug":"follow-the-science","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.notechmagazine.com\/2021\/03\/follow-the-science.html","title":{"rendered":"Follow the Science?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Two great articles in The New Atlantis 2021 spring issue<\/a>:<\/p>\n “Scientific \u201cobjectivity\u201d emerges not from the unique cognitive qualities or neutrality of researchers but from their critical engagement with each other\u2019s work…. Though the political harms of misplaced certainty are now much discussed, we only hear about one side of the equation. The trouble always seems to be with \u201cconspiracy theorists\u201d who fail to face up to reality, to scientific fact. But the relationship of \u201cdebunkers\u201d to certainty is not all that different… Conspiracism and scientism are jointly preoccupied with certainty. They enjoy a fantasy in which experts are uniquely able to escape the messiness of politics, discern the facts plain and simple, and from their godlike viewpoint turn back to politics and dispense with it. Both seduce members of open, uncertain societies with the promise of a more simply ordered world… ”<\/p>\n