{{California Governor Gavin Newsom tweeted the other day,
“The West Coast is—and will continue to be—guided by SCIENCE.”}}
My response to that is ... GO SUCK ON A LEMON NEWSOM!
The "west coast" ... AS A LAND MASS ... may be "guided by science" - but, people: ((((ME)))) for 1, IS NOT; nor will I ever be guided by hypothetical guesses based on nothing more than over-exaggerated egos.
That people actually think science is knowledge is laughable.
science has CONSISTENTLY BEEN WRONG ON EVERY ISSUE IN EVERY DECADE since the beginning of time.
science has not "cured" anything: and it never will.
Only an "educated" fool would turn the world upside down putting their trust in nothing more than "educated guesses" that lead nowhere and solve nothing.
My response to that is ... GO SUCK ON A LEMON NEWSOM!
The "west coast" ... AS A LAND MASS ... may be "guided by science" - but, people: ((((ME)))) for 1, IS NOT; nor will I ever be guided by hypothetical guesses based on nothing more than over-exaggerated egos.
That people actually think science is knowledge is laughable.
science has CONSISTENTLY BEEN WRONG ON EVERY ISSUE IN EVERY DECADE since the beginning of time.
science has not "cured" anything: and it never will.
Only an "educated" fool would turn the world upside down putting their trust in nothing more than "educated guesses" that lead nowhere and solve nothing.
**********
Science Alone Can’t
Tell Us How to Respond to the Coronavirus
If you thought the coronavirus presented difficult
policy questions, don’t worry—we have science.
California Governor Gavin Newsom tweeted the other
day, “The West Coast is—and will continue to be—guided by SCIENCE.”
Former
Vice President Joe Biden has urged President Donald Trump, “Follow the science,
listen to the experts, do what they tell you.”
Astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson calls the crisis
“a giant experiment in whether the world will listen to scientists, now and
going forward.”
The invocation of science as the ultimate authority
capable of settling questions of how we should govern ourselves is a persistent
feature of modern Western life going back several centuries, and has always
been a mistake. It is especially so in this crisis, when so much is still
unknown about the coronavirus and immensely complicated and consequential
public-policy questions are in play.
Modern science is obviously one of the wonders of our
age. We owe it an unimaginable debt—for technological advancements in medicine,
transportation, industry, communication, computing and more. All honor to
Newton, Turing, Curie and Einstein.
One of the horrifying things brought home by The
Great Influenza, John Barry’s book about the Spanish flu pandemic of
1918, is how primitive our knowledge and medicine was then by today’s
standards. The world was slow to react to the coronavirus, and yet the genetic
code of the virus was publicly posted by China in January, and South Korea had
deployed a test kit by early February. It’s possible we’ll
have a vaccine by the end of the year.
Of
course, our policymakers should be informed by facts and reason, but science
has a limited competency. Once you are outside a lab setting and dealing with
matters of public policy, questions of values and how to strike a balance
between competing priorities are involved and they simply can’t be settled by
people in white lab coats.
Science can make the atom bomb; it doesn’t tell us
whether we should drop it. Science can tell us how to get to the moon; it
doesn’t tell us whether we should go. Science can build nuclear reactors; it doesn’t
tell us whether we should deploy them.
The great British essayist G.K. Chesterton wrote
compellingly about how to think about the role of science, using the example of
a doctor, "Surely there is not any undue disrespect to our doctor in saying
that he is our doctor, not our priest, or our wife, or ourself. It is not the
business of the doctor to say that we must go to a watering-place; it is his
affair to say that certain results of health will follow if we do go to a
watering-place. After that, obviously, it is for us to judge."
Invoking scientists in this crisis is a little like
saying, “My economic policy is going to be guided by an ECONOMIST.” Well, good
for you. But is your economist on the left or on the right? What are his
assumptions? Does he care most about inequality or dynamism? Is he Paul Krugman
or Art Laffer? Both muster facts and research in support of their positions.
Science can indeed settle debates once and for all—we
don’t argue about heliocentrism anymore. But an extraordinary feature of the
coronavirus is how poorly understood it is. We don’t know how many people have
it, what the death rate is, what the long-term health consequences of having a
severe case are, or how best to treat it, among other things.
The models of how the virus would spread and how many
would be hospitalized and die were invested with a certainty that they didn’t
deserve. They were all over the map, and some have failed to accurately predict
the course of the disease even a couple of weeks in the future.
If
we are going to unquestioningly accept expert opinion, we’d better prepare for
whiplash. At first, the elite consensus was that wearing masks was unnecessary.
Now, we are told, it’s an essential piece of getting out of this mess.
We worried about running out of ventilators, but in
recent weeks some doctors have been wondering whether they have been overused.
Then, there are the big questions. Science can’t tell
us how we should think about the trade-off between economic misery caused by
shutdowns and the public-health risks of reopenings. It can’t determine the
balance between shutting down a hospital’s elective surgeries so it can prepare
for a Covid-19 surge, and tanking its business and forcing it to furlough
employees. It can’t decide what level of infections we deem tolerable while
returning to seminormality.
The people in our political debate who most volubly
insistent that they are simply following “the science” tend also to be most
resistant to nuance and prone to fervency rather than scientific dispassion.
They are using “science” as a bludgeon and conversation-stopper.
Obviously, science already has made an enormous
contribution to our fight against the coronavirus, and may—through therapies or
a vaccine—go a long way to solving this crisis. But life is not an equation,
and neither is politics or policy.
We,
as a self-governing people, will have to decide the important questions about
how to respond to the coronavirus going forward, not the doctors on TV or the
researchers in the labs.
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