TFian
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2010
- Messages
- 1,226
As the title suggests, it's a post by the Grand Archdruid John Michael Greer about what can, and can't be salvaged from modern "science".
To break it down,
He repeats the point from earlier postings that in a post peak world, specialization will not be viable, and ties this into science.
Explains a bit of the history of science, and the emergence of the history of science as a profession.
This in particular stuck out
Compares the current scientific culture to the ancient Greek logic culture, and corresponds and compares the two with the emerging death of science (like logic previously) being seen as a tool to discover all knowledge.
He makes the astute point we're probably at the end of scientific discovery.
Also talks about the rampant corruption in the sciences, and how scientific consensus has become a matter of simply a political grant or two.
Any scientists, engineers, etc. and those interested in science want to give their two cents on this piece? I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.
http://energybulletin.net/stories/2011-08-03/salvaging-science
To break it down,
He repeats the point from earlier postings that in a post peak world, specialization will not be viable, and ties this into science.
Explains a bit of the history of science, and the emergence of the history of science as a profession.
This in particular stuck out
It’s rarely remembered these days that until quite recently, scientific research was mostly carried on by amateurs. The word “scientist” wasn’t even coined until 1833; before then, and for some time after, the research programs that set modern science on its way were carried out by university professors in other disciplines, middle class individuals with spare time on their hands, and wealthy dilletantes for whom science was a more interesting hobby than horse racing or politics. Isaac Newton, for example, taught mathematics at Cambridge; Gilbert White founded the science of ecology with his Natural History of Selborne in his spare time as a clergyman; Charles Darwin came from a family with a share of the Wedgwood pottery fortune, had a clergyman’s education, and paid his own way around the world on the H.M.S. Beagle.
It took a long time for scence as a profession to catch on, because—pace a myth very widespread these days—science contributed next to nothing to the technological revolutions that swept the western world in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Until late in the nineteenth century, in fact, things generally worked the other way around: engineers and basement tinkerers discovered some exotic new effect, and then scientists scrambled to figure out what made it happen. James Clerk Maxwell, whose 1873 book Electricity and Magnetism finally got out ahead of the engineers to postulate the effects that would become the basis for radio, began the process by which science took the lead in technological innovation, but it wasn’t until the Second World War that science had matured enough to become the engine of discovery it then became. It was then that government and business investment in basic research took off, creating the institutionalized science of the present day.
Compares the current scientific culture to the ancient Greek logic culture, and corresponds and compares the two with the emerging death of science (like logic previously) being seen as a tool to discover all knowledge.
He makes the astute point we're probably at the end of scientific discovery.
I know it’s utter heresy even to hint at this, but I’d like to suggest that science, like logic before it, has gotten pretty close to its natural limits as a method of knowledge. In Darwin’s time, a century and a half ago, it was still possible to make worldshaking scientific discoveries with equipment that would be considered hopelessly inadequate for a middle school classroom nowadays; there was still a lot of low hanging fruit to be picked off the tree of knowledge. At this point, by contrast, the next round of experimental advances in particle physics depends on the Large Hadron Collider, a European project with an estimated total price tag around $5.5 billion. Many other branches of science have reached the point at which very small advances in knowledge are being made with very large investments of money, labor, and computing power. Doubtless there will still be surprises in store, but revolutionary discoveries are very few and far between these days
Also talks about the rampant corruption in the sciences, and how scientific consensus has become a matter of simply a political grant or two.
Any scientists, engineers, etc. and those interested in science want to give their two cents on this piece? I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.
http://energybulletin.net/stories/2011-08-03/salvaging-science