Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

AA: Physicist Lawrence Krauss appeals for a science-literate US president.

2 views
Skip to first unread message

Michael Gray

unread,
Dec 15, 2007, 11:03:51 PM12/15/07
to
Commentary: A science-literate president, please

15 December 2007
From New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues.
Lawrence Krauss

"WE IN the United States are burdened with an election campaign that
lasts for almost two years and saturates the airwaves. To give the
appearance of substantive discussion, each party has imposed a series
of televised debates where, for a whole 90 seconds, each candidate
gets to provide profound, in-depth analysis of the leading issues of
the day.

I wrote some months ago in New Scientist about my dismay resulting
from one Republican debate, in which the candidates were asked if they
believed in the theory of evolution. Three of them bluntly said no. In
the next debate one candidate noted that he was running for president
of the United States, not for a local school board official, and so
the issue was unimportant. Most Americans agreed with him, according
to polls taken shortly after the debate.

But I still believe that widespread disinterest in the scientific
literacy of our next president does not mean the issue is irrelevant.
It may rather reflect the fact that most Americans are themselves
scientifically illiterate. A 2001 National Science Foundation survey
of scientific literacy among US adults, for example, found that 50 per
cent could not say for sure that the Earth orbits the sun and takes a
year to do it.

Earlier this month, I joined a group of scientists, including several
Nobel laureates and heads of major scientific societies, in issuing a
public call for a presidential debate devoted to science and
technology. The debate would cover three broad categories: the
environment; health and medicine; and science and technology policy.

Regardless of who is elected in 2008, and whether or not the public is
currently focused on these concerns, the US president will make
decisions over the following four years on issues ranging from stem
cells to nuclear proliferation. In fact, almost all of the major
challenges the world faces in this new century - the environment,
national security, economic competitiveness, energy strategies - have
their roots in science and technology. The decisions the president
makes in these areas will have a global impact. In some cases, they
may be irreversible.

It will be a big challenge to come up with effective policies to
address these issues. Creating the political will to carry them out
may be an even bigger one. Such leadership requires confidence based
on conviction. Most major successful initiatives in the US can be
traced back to a president who has acted as an "educator-in-chief" as
well as commander-in-chief. Can someone who is not comfortable
thinking about scientific issues have the necessary conviction to lead
instead of follow when it comes to policies based on science?

The strange thing is that in spite of apparent disinterest on the
surface, deep down the American people do seem to understand that
science and technology are essential to solving many of the problems
we face. When reports surfaced that avian flu might arise as a human
threat, everyone from the president down called for studies to
determine how quickly the virus might mutate and jump from birds to
people. In spite of the public controversy regarding evolution, there
were no calls to ignore the threat because the virus might be divinely
"designed".

We owe it to the next generation to take ownership of these issues
now. To achieve this, we need to build on this vague awareness of
science's importance and create a more scientifically literate
electorate and leadership. A presidential debate on these subjects
would be a good start."

<http://www.newscientist.com/channel/opinion/mg19626342.300-commentary-a-scienceliterate-president-please.html>

johac

unread,
Dec 16, 2007, 3:09:09 AM12/16/07
to
In article <5m89m3dv3fccpcmsn...@4ax.com>,
Michael Gray <mike...@newsguy.com> wrote:

> Commentary: A science-literate president, please
>
> 15 December 2007
> From New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues.
> Lawrence Krauss
>
> "WE IN the United States are burdened with an election campaign that
> lasts for almost two years and saturates the airwaves. To give the
> appearance of substantive discussion, each party has imposed a series
> of televised debates where, for a whole 90 seconds, each candidate
> gets to provide profound, in-depth analysis of the leading issues of
> the day.
>
> I wrote some months ago in New Scientist about my dismay resulting
> from one Republican debate, in which the candidates were asked if they
> believed in the theory of evolution. Three of them bluntly said no. In
> the next debate one candidate noted that he was running for president
> of the United States, not for a local school board official, and so
> the issue was unimportant. Most Americans agreed with him, according
> to polls taken shortly after the debate.

I recall that debate. Disgusting.

>
> But I still believe that widespread disinterest in the scientific
> literacy of our next president does not mean the issue is irrelevant.
> It may rather reflect the fact that most Americans are themselves
> scientifically illiterate. A 2001 National Science Foundation survey
> of scientific literacy among US adults, for example, found that 50 per
> cent could not say for sure that the Earth orbits the sun and takes a
> year to do it.

The figure that I recall was 25% but that's still way too high.

>
> Earlier this month, I joined a group of scientists, including several
> Nobel laureates and heads of major scientific societies, in issuing a
> public call for a presidential debate devoted to science and
> technology. The debate would cover three broad categories: the
> environment; health and medicine; and science and technology policy.

I signed a petition like that myself. I think it was run by Union of
Concerned Scientists, but I didn't see it on their website.

>
> Regardless of who is elected in 2008, and whether or not the public is
> currently focused on these concerns, the US president will make
> decisions over the following four years on issues ranging from stem
> cells to nuclear proliferation. In fact, almost all of the major
> challenges the world faces in this new century - the environment,
> national security, economic competitiveness, energy strategies - have
> their roots in science and technology. The decisions the president
> makes in these areas will have a global impact. In some cases, they
> may be irreversible.

And it's too bad that we are stuck with a dumbass making them now.


>
> It will be a big challenge to come up with effective policies to
> address these issues. Creating the political will to carry them out
> may be an even bigger one. Such leadership requires confidence based
> on conviction. Most major successful initiatives in the US can be
> traced back to a president who has acted as an "educator-in-chief" as
> well as commander-in-chief. Can someone who is not comfortable
> thinking about scientific issues have the necessary conviction to lead
> instead of follow when it comes to policies based on science?

Bush couldn't spell 'science', let alone understand it.


>
> The strange thing is that in spite of apparent disinterest on the
> surface, deep down the American people do seem to understand that
> science and technology are essential to solving many of the problems
> we face. When reports surfaced that avian flu might arise as a human
> threat, everyone from the president down called for studies to
> determine how quickly the virus might mutate and jump from birds to
> people. In spite of the public controversy regarding evolution, there
> were no calls to ignore the threat because the virus might be divinely
> "designed".

But they forget that science is hampered in this country by lack of
support for basic research and restrictive government policies.

>
> We owe it to the next generation to take ownership of these issues
> now. To achieve this, we need to build on this vague awareness of
> science's importance and create a more scientifically literate
> electorate and leadership. A presidential debate on these subjects
> would be a good start."

I agree 100%.
>
> <http://www.newscientist.com/channel/opinion/mg19626342.300-commentary-a-scien
> celiterate-president-please.html>
--
John #1782

Smiler

unread,
Dec 16, 2007, 11:28:19 PM12/16/07
to

"Michael Gray" <mike...@newsguy.com> wrote in message
news:5m89m3dv3fccpcmsn...@4ax.com...

They want a science-literate theist president?
That's an oxymoron.
I guess they're halfway there. They only need the oxy.

Smiler,
The godless one
a.a.# 2279


0 new messages