Science is uncertain•; and yet we have no better basis for making important decisions about the future than the best scientific knowledge currently available. Moreover, there are powerful economic interests that exert themselves to undermine the confidence of the public and our policy makers in the findings of science that appear to harm those interests. How should we think about these two factors, one epistemic and the other political? The first lays out the reasons for thinking that some of our most confident theories may in fact be erroneous; the second makes us worry that even strongly credible science will be undermined by corporate and financial interests....Understanding Society
Science and decision
Daniel Little | Chancellor of the University of Michigan-Dearborn, Professor of Philosophy at UM-Dearborn and Professor of Sociology at UM-Ann Arbor
This relates to the raging discussion that Paul Romer began with his post on "mathiness." It's still raging.
3 comments:
What irritates me is that economists and climatologists claim that moneyed interests are the reason guys like Patrick Moore or Lars Syll relentlessly and tirelessly point out their flaws. No, the reason people doubt the models is because they are not right. They have been proven wrong. Full stop.
When it comes to how we should live and or to a lesser extent what economic system is best, science can say absolutely nothing. Furthermore, science can have nothing to say, about meaning, purpose, origins, destiny, consciousness, beauty, right and wrong, Good and Evil, death, love or loathing.
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