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Science
developed as an
open-ended method of discovering the workings of existence. It is
operated by people of intelligence, curiosity and ambition with training
in technique and subject matter. The operators are presumed to be rational, objective and value-free.
Skepticism is the watchword of science. Ideally, scientists
present discovered data and hypotheses to explain observations for
review and critique by skeptical colleagues. Skeptical colleagues drive
scientists to further discovery. Skeptical scientists drive science to
healthy ferment. Thus, new data continually displace old
data and new hypotheses displace old. Scientists defend their hypotheses
and attack the hypotheses of others. However, scientists with a personal
or political ideology tend to stifle ferment and dissent. Ideological
scientists promote stagnation in science. Stagnant science is no science
at all. In science, the fat lady never
sings.
Policy is the determination and enforcement of preferred social
and political arrangements. In Jeffersonian democracies, policy is supposed to reflect values, attitudes
and beliefs, whether or not based on fact, reality or other objective
measure. Ideally, policy-makers are influenced by those who are to be
affected by the policy, presenting proposals for public examination,
debate, challenge, review and change. Conflict and controversy generally
precede policy, with the majority or the powerful minority winning
specific policy disputes. In constitutional societies,
fundamental laws or constitutions provide basic principles to be
followed indefinitely, to be amended only for the most compelling
reasons.
Yet policy changes with time. The radical left-wing program of one
era becomes the hidebound right-wing conservatism of the next. In
policy, it's never over.
Using science as a basis for policy offers a degree of confidence
in the suitability of policy-making. However, it also has potentially negative
effects:
1) Scientists in the pay of policy makers tend to discover
that existence is exactly what the boss wants it to be.
2) Using science as a basis of policy invites policy
considerations into science, promoting the erosion of objectivity and
inviting personal or political values to corrupt scientists and scientific endeavors,
i.e., all science tends to become political science;
3) Placing scientists in positions of power as arbiters of
policy invites the superior intellect to act upon its inclination to
dismiss lesser intellects, with consequent disenfranchisement
of vast numbers of citizens;
4) Science can be manipulated to suit political preferences
as easily as any other human activity, with the consequence that any
value, attitude or belief promoted by a powerful group of scientists can
be held up as "scientifically sound," as if that were the only standard
of public policy-making.
Axioms for science
based policy:
Scientific advice for policy is just that: advice.
Science has its place in policy making: servant, not master.
Scientists get one vote per person, same as non-scientists.
Scientists have no right to disregard those who disagree with
them, but they do it anyway, so be skeptical.
Scientific advice for policy should always come with a
dissenting opinion, like appeals court judgments.
Problems already observed with using science as a basis for policy:
Policy debates tend to
degenerate into arguments that "My scientist is better than your
scientist," when experts of equal credential produce diametrically
opposite conclusions from the same raw data, a situation familiar to
attorneys and judges.
The presumption that
sound science somehow leads to sound policy is a presumption false on the
face of it -- policy makers are free to slice and dice any science to
fit any policy scheme they see fit, then tout the policy as
scientifically sound, perpetrating a fraud on the public.
Government scientists act
as philosopher kings and disdain the non-scientist who may not
agree with their policy recommendations or who do not show proper respect
for their wisdom and majesty.
"Government scien
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