Joey McGee
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2011
- Messages
- 10,307
I really, really don't like Deepak Chopra. I can't read any more of his stuff, I think I'll just skip the new Shermer debate when it comes out and yes, today is the day I'm unsubscribing from his HuffPo blog, masochist, I know. So here it is, my last rebuke of Deepak. Goodbye old friend, I hardly knew ye.
Scientific Proof vs. Public Opinion: A Paradox


Goodbye Deepak, it's beenreal a joke.
Scientific Proof vs. Public Opinion: A Paradox
Yes Deepak, the more that people misunderstand science, and the more people communicate it to them irresponsibly, the more they resist it, I agree.Yet it's not often observed that people suffer from "science shock," a numbness to the flood of data that assaults us almost as if it's in the air we breathe. We've all heard someone greet a new study by saying, "It doesn't mean a thing. These studies are always contradicting each other." The more science rules, the greater the resistance to it.
Yes we certainly are going to have to get rid of the bad communicators of science and educate the public about the meaning of research, it's true.Yet that isn't really the point, because for millions of laymen, the connection between cell phones and cancer has become part of common belief. The more the link is disproved, the stronger their faith.
What Deepak appears to be saying is that the cause of bad science reporting and poor science comprehension is really spirituality?Science shock is also an expression of human nature, just as valid as reason, devoted to emotions, hope, anxiety about death and the impulse not to face our mortality.
An incoherent statement of belief. Science is clearly not a belief system. Unless Deepak is suggesting that there is something about the true nature of reality that causes you to become evil when you discover it. Is this what they secretly fear that causes them to bloviate in woo?As much as science might want to eradicate irrationality, the fact is that a planet ruled by science would be hell on earth.
All subjectivity? There is no objective moral wrongs in science according to Deepak, we can see how insane this idea causes him to think when we see his review of The Moral Landscape, which he did without reading it btw. Again we're talking about bad people using the tools of science here, Deepak gets his information about scientists from comic books?The objectivity of research is a valuable enterprise, but when devoid of emotion and all forms of subjectivity
Doing science isn't known to destroy your humanity. Evil was known to exist before the Royal Society. Making the bomb was torturous work for people like Richard Feynman who suffered from the experience. Deepak's abuse of the problem of war to attack science is an insult to all of those who have been forced to continue the evolutionary arms race of the life on this planet into the 21st century. It wasn't science that made these things necessary, it was evil people, abusing science/scientists! The level of of offense he's willing to rise to serve his woo... shameful., what happens? We get the rise of atomic weapons,
Do you mean robot mechwarriors replacing soldiers? Yes, I can't wait.mechanized death in wartime,
Gee, Deepak, so are all of the scientists that use objective science to work to prevent these things from hurting innocent people, are they all secretly evil too?biological and chemical agents, chemical carcinogens and many other forms of diabolical creativity.
Clearly, you do not.I fully realize the howls of protest that such comments incite.
That is the most insane idea. Science in general wants to shirk all personal responsibility to themselves and the planet and they do this by pointing to how right they are? Hilarious.Science wants to equate objectivity with having clean hands.
Do you know any doctors? No doctor excuses malpractice, if they did, they aren't worth the name. Doctors I know publish on these things all the time. They are very concerned about these things and with their patients knowing and accepting the full risks. Just because a few doctors are perhaps calloused or biased, doesn't hide the fact that the vast majority are truly noble and would certainly resent this vicious slander.In fact, the two are very different things. No doctor wants to take personal responsibility for the side effects of drugs, iatrogenic disease (illness created by medical treatments) or the rise of super germs that are increasingly ravaging hospitals.
What a sick, sick man. Are you really saying Deepak, that oncologists in general don't consider the suffering of their patients? That they aren't informing them of the statistics and risks? That they don't actually believe that are doing the most they can to help? Appalling! Unless you have some evidence of a cure Deepak are you making quack claims again?Much less do they want to consider the enormous suffering that cancer patients go through during chemotherapy and radiation -- as long as the overall mortality rate drops by one-tenth of a percent, that's all that counts.
Bad science comprehension is grounds for more understanding of science Deepak! We have people like you to blame for people getting their hopes up! Maddening disgrace to humanity in this sentece.We've heard too many claims for "promising" cures while watching AIDS and cancer essentially remain a mystery.
I am not science-bashing here.
So you bash science in the most horrific way possible, toss in the doublethink, and now, here comes the wooMy deepest desire is to see the two towers join together,
Science already does understand these phenomena Deepak. What are you saying?which means arriving at a science of wholeness, an expanded science that will accept that reason is compatible with imagination, hope, morality, emotions and every other subjective experience.
Correct, they use the science and data to help them have better experiences. Oh you didn't know this?Because ultimately people live for their experiences, not for science and its data.
Actually Deepak, it has a right to distinguish between truth and delusion, a likely theory and an unlikely theory, and you're science bashing because most of us hate you.Science serves experience, and it has no right to consider that numbers are superior to feelings.
Keeping ourselves free from delusion, wishful thinking and purveyors of both is all-important Deepak, something you have tried, but failed to understand in your apologia for delusion.It is certainly true that human nature is prone to superstition and false hope, but it is equally true that man doesn't live by data alone. Keeping ourselves whole is all-important.
Goodbye Deepak, it's been
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