30 DEC 2013 by ideonexus

 Science Provides, but Science has a Cost

Childbirth and infant mortality have decreased, lifetimes have lengthened, and medicine has improved the quality of life for many people on Earth. But science imposes, in exchange for its manifold gifts, a certain onerous burden. We are enjoined also to consider ourselves scientifically, to surmount as best we can our own hopes and wishes and beliefs, to view ourselves as we really are. We know that in looking deep within ourselves, we may challenge notions that give us great comfort in the f...
Folksonomies: science culture society
Folksonomies: science culture society
  1  notes

James Randi on the hypocrisy of accepting the benefits of science without accepting the reverence or appreciation of it.

18 MAY 2011 by ideonexus

 We Must Apply the Scientific Method to Ourselves

If it is to be applied consistently, science imposes, in exchange for its manifold gifts, a certain onerous burden: we are enjoined, no matter how uncomfortable it might be, to consider ourselves and our cultural institutions scientifically and not to accept uncritically whatever we're told; to surmount as best we can our hopes, conceits and unexamined beliefs; to view ourselves as we really are. Can we conscientiously and courageously follow planetary motion or bacterial genetics wherever th...
Folksonomies: science skepticism culture
Folksonomies: science skepticism culture
  1  notes

Skepticism must extend to ourselves, our culture, and our institutions.