Saturday, March 24, 2007

I'm an anti-anti-intellectualist

Anti-intellectualism is very pervasive in American politics, much more so than I had previously thought.

I recently checked out from the library The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney, a journalist who specializes in the relation of science and politics. In this book, Mooney tells the history of the Republican ideologues' attempt to win support for their ideologies by distorting science and misrepresenting facts — substituting sound science with junk science — and then accusing other people of doing this, usually liberals and Democrats. While political groups on the left have distorted science for their own causes before, and while it is healthy to suspect that most politicians distort the facts to some minor extent, the left is almost never as guilty as the right.

This flagrant disregard for science is extremely worrying to me as a man who greatly values the scientific method for its ability to refine our understanding of the universe. The fact that they're succeeding is terrifying to me as a man who values knowledge, intelligence, and critical thinking.

The fronts in the war on science are manifold: There are those who want to confuse the public on whether or not cigarettes and second-hand smoke are harmful, even though many, many habitual smokers die of cancer in the respiratory system. There are many who wish to disparage environmentalism, the movement to literally save the world, by claiming that environmentalists are overreacting over trivial things, even though the facts show they're anything but trivial. And there are many who, for ideological reasons, wish to convince people that evolution has little or no supporting evidence, even though it has mountains of it.

I wish it were more obvious to people that anti-intellectualism is irrational to its core. Think about the common claims made by these people: Universities, well-respected institutions of learning, are propagating left-wing ideology; scientists, largely impartial in their quest for knowledge, are a bunch of liberals with an agenda to brainwash the public; intellectuals, who exercise their mind and think critically, are prone to ideologue.

It all rests on the ideas that smart people are stupid, ignorant people are smart, and that people who aren't experts, are experts. The scientists who have dispassionately discovered and studied the facts don't know what they're talking about, while the common taxi driver or barber with only a high-school diploma — if even that — is perfectly qualified to say exactly what's fact and what's speculation. A person with a Ph.D. makes too many mistakes to count, but the average Joe off the street is practically infallible.

I hope that you, the reader, see how irrational this way of thinking is. And I wish it were more obvious to more people. But sadly, it's not. And this is very troubling.

It's one thing to promote a policy when the facts indicate the policy is unwise. It's another thing entirely to deliberately win support for your side by distorting the facts. It is intellectually dishonest and morally deplorable to do this.

As far as science is concerned, there is no shame in acknowledging our negative impact on the environment but declaring we should do nothing for economic reasons; this much is for economists and politicians to debate. It is very shameful to magnify uncertainty, and to declare that the facts are wrong and that any impact we have is negligible, in order to make your side look better.

Science is not politics. Facts and evidence are not matters of opinion. Scientific consensus does not indicate a political agenda. Scientists may make mistakes — they are human — but the scientific method is a remarkably effective safeguard against the spread of mistaken knowledge among the scientific community. There is room for honest criticism in the scientific community, but no room for Lysenkoism.

I do realize there are people who have simply been misinformed and are not aware of what the facts really are. One cannot blame them; when science is politicized, it often confuses people. It does annoy me to see people confuse fact with speculation and conclude that evolution is "only a theory", or that global warming is "junk science". And I'm sure it annoys many other people too. But we should try to recognize who's deliberately distorting science and who's been victimized by such.

I seriously hope that, in the end, science and intellect will triumph, and that no politician will ever again represent scientific facts as political conjecture.

Further reading:

  • Wikipedia: Evidence of evolution.
  • TalkOrigins Archive: Exploring the Creation/Evolution Controversy.
  • Wikipedia: Causes of global warming.
  • Wikipedia: External links concerning global warming.

  • 7 comments:

    Anonymous said...

    I'm no expert, but wait! All I have is a high school diploma, so I guess I am an expert! But it seems to me that stupidity is a contagious disease, and a very communicable one at that. It seems you can catch it just by hearing a dumb person speaking!
    It's a good thing I have a very strong immune system. And a brain. It helps to have one of those.
    Hey do you think I could sell politician brain to cannibals for about $100 an ounce?

    Bryan said...

    Funny coincidence. I was just recently shown a video clip of a televangelist who attempts to use a jar of Peanut Butter to disprove evolution. It would be humorous if the guy wasn't serious.

    Regardless, though, the development of life and the origins of the planet are still theories, as is the extent of evolution and it's role in creating life. Hopefully future scientific developments will further develop these theories, not that it matters much to those who refuse to see logic in argument, unfortunately.

    Bryan said...

    Forgive me for the double post, but there is just one other thing I wanted to say.

    As far as conservative anti-intellectualism goes (forgive me if that is another neologism), I find it ironic that holding a Ph. D or being a member of the mainstream media (albeit FOX) automatically makes your sources biased. It's like calling the laws of physics as "liberal laws" or some BS like that. It feels like conservatives feel liberals have a monopoly on the facts, and therefore they are forced to discredit them by saying the very facts, be they states of the world, laws of science, or actual partaking of events, are "liberal" and therefore have zero credibility.

    Ok, I'm done. Maybe...

    Anonymous said...

    When you say it's the anti-intellectuals who accuse perfectly impartial universities of promoting a left-wing agenda, you raise a straw man. What these people really are doing is accusing the professors who actually do inject politics into what *should* be an impartial subject. It happens. I have observed it first-hand countless times (in other words, this republican has used the mountains of evidence in front of him to confirm a hypothesis).

    What you fail to realize through all of your spotlight fallacies and straw men is that just as much disinformation and anti-intellectualism comes from the left. I'll name an example - all the 9/11 conspiracy theories that exist. You've probably seen the loose change documentary. This video is rife with anti-intellectualism. They bring in several non-experts and take their testimony as infallible. They raise straw men; they distort facts (and completely ignore other facts and observations).

    You're so intent on finding examples of right-wing anti-intellectualism, that you completely ignore the "manifold [sic]" examples of the war on science from your own side, and you rely on fallacies to show that republicans are the ones to blame.

    Anonymous said...

    Wow. Your comment, Anon, was particularly interesting to read.

    When you say it's the anti-intellectuals who accuse perfectly impartial universities of promoting a left-wing agenda, you raise a straw man.

    Ah, the requisite argumentative refutation via fallacy. It's an interesting claim. Go on:

    What these people really are doing is accusing the professors who actually do inject politics into what *should* be an impartial subject.

    Again, interesting! Let's see if you have any "mountains of evidence" to back it up.

    I have observed it first-hand countless times (in other words, this republican has used the mountains of evidence in front of him to confirm a hypothesis).

    And there we have it! Mountains of evidence as observed by an impartial and creditable reference.

    What you fail to realize through all of your spotlight fallacies and straw men...

    Just in case you missed the "mountains" of sarcasm layered in my analysis, I'll have to ask where these straw men and spotlight fallacies are. Continue...

    is that just as much disinformation and anti-intellectualism comes from the left.

    The left. Interesting, but vague, and an error in inclusion. The left itself is a diverse and non-encompassing entity. I could by that logic assert that neo-conservatism is a product of the right; while it may be true, it certainly isn't all encompassing of that political spectrum.

    Let's see what other "mountains of evidence" you have against us.

    You've probably seen the loose change documentary. This video is rife with anti-intellectualism.

    I have not seen it, but I assume you are going to provide an impartial analysis on the movie based not on your personal political persuasion. Let's see:

    They bring in several non-experts and take their testimony as infallible. They raise straw men cliché ; they distort facts (and completely ignore other facts and observations).

    If you aren't aware of the irony as of yet, you may as well stop reading right now, for it will be better for you to take comfort in the fact that you were incorrectly right as opposed to ironically (and embarrassingly, in my opinion) wrong.

    Is the ideology of a supposed group of ideologist only worth the sum of its weakest members? Should the intelligence of the right be measured by a couple of overly religious nut jobs who attempt to disprove evolution using jars of peanut butter?

    No. Obviously no! But do you think you have any argumentative credibility when you fall into the same trap you accuse others of?

    Your attacks are contra logic, contra fair, contra liberalism, and in it's purest ideological sense, contra political conservative.

    So does it come to you as any sort of surprise that you are the one who is actually "so intent on finding examples of left(subbed for right)-wing anti-intellectualism?" Are you unable to explain the blatant contradiction between your claim of poor logic and your actual argument?

    The Skeptic said...

    LOL

    Bryan...i give you two thumbs up on that one.

    Anonymous said...

    Now that you see the major errors in my comment, I hope your eyes have been opened to the similar errors in the blog post.