http://www.edge.org:80
This note may seem a
bit grumpy to some.
But please forgive
us for our sincere
concern about
loosing valuable
science funding
through reckless
anti science stories
concerning the
trustworthiness of
scientist.
This note is
intended to be
one more plea of caution in
judging science from
those who write
about it.
Someone once
remarked that "one
doesn't know what
its like to be a
pan
cake
unless one has
been one.
There is some truth
in it using Galileo
as a case study of
how wrong things can
get from
those
playing
at reporting
science, and
especially those
businessman,
politicians' and
religions leaders
who are killing (by
discrediting ) the
messengers
(scientist)
to save their
products, profits
or power.
Who gave us the
knowledge of how to
achieve longer
healthier productive
lives. Why do we
feel compelled
to believe it was
those who
take every chance to
discredit science,
who have not worked in
science at a senior
level, writing
proposals, working
in the laboratory,
publishing a
substantial number
of papers in
refereed journals
for a substantial
number of years.
Why?
The loss of the real image of Galileo
has been accelerated
by the growth rate of
the information highway (the internet) . On Google there
are over 21.6*10^6 references to
the word "'Galileo", but there are few
in the 10^6
plus Google
references that go
back to study Galileo's
original
documents
and instruments.
For example from our technical perspective we find that not much has changed in how technologists work, or in the difficulties encountered to gain acceptance of new discoveries or in funding basic research. The authors, looking at Galileo from our experience as an experimental physicist and a chemist's point of view, find that Galileo Galilei really was an excellent technologist in that he applied the most important tool humans have -- the genetically driven urge to understand how nature and the world around us works. TLM. Dava Sobel is a A fun remarkable writer of popular expositions of scientific topics covering the people issues of science.
Comments welcome Galileo@SciTechAntiques.com Last Modified
08/05/2008 07:20:34 AM
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