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Sat 31 Jan, 2009 10:04 pm
Quote:Elevating Science, Elevating Democracy
All right, I was weeping too.
To be honest, the restoration of science was the least of it, but when
Barack Obama proclaimed during his
Inaugural Address that he would "restore science to its rightful place," you could feel
a dark cloud lifting like a sigh from the shoulders of the scientific community in this country.
When the new president went on vowing to harness the sun, the wind and the soil, and to "wield technology's wonders," I felt the glow of a spring sunrise washing my cheeks, and I could almost imagine I heard the music of swords being hammered into plowshares.
Wow. My first reaction was to worry that scientists were now in the awkward position of being expected to save the world. As they say, be careful what you wish for.
My second reaction was to wonder what the "rightful place" of science in our society really is.
The answer, I would argue, is On a Pedestal - but not for the reasons you might think.
Forget about penicillin, digital computers and even the Big Bang, passing fads all of them.
The knock on science from its cultural and religious critics is that it is arrogant and materialistic. It tells us wondrous things about nature and how to manipulate it, but not what we should do with this knowledge and power. The Big Bang doesn't tell us how to live, or whether God loves us, or whether there is any God at all. It provides scant counsel on
same-sex marriage or eating meat. It is silent on the desirability of mutual assured destruction as a strategy for deterring nuclear war.
Read the rest of the essay here.