Science has long had an
uneasyrelationship with other aspects of culture. Think of Gallileo's 17th-century trial for his rebelling belief Catholic Church or poet William Blake's harsh remarks against the mechanistic worldview of Isaac Newton. The schism between science and the humanities has, if anything, deepened in this century.
Until recently, the scientific
community was so powerful that it could afford to
ignore its critics - but no longer. As funding for science has declined, scientists have attacked "antiscience" in several books,
notably Higher Superstition, by Paul R. Gross, a biologist at the University of Virginia, and Norman Levitt, a mathematician at Rutgers University; and The Demon-Haunted World, by Carl Sagan of Cornell University.
Defenders of science have also voiced their concerns at meetings such as "The Flight from Science and Reason," held in New York City in 1995, and "Science in the Age of (Mis) information," which assembled last June near Buffalo.
Antiscience clearly means different things to different people. Gross and Levitt find
primarily with sociologists,
philosophers and other academics who have questioned science's objectivity. Sagan is more
concerned with those who believe in ghosts, creationism and other
phenomena that
contradict the scientific worldview.
A survey of news stories in 1996 reveals that the antiscience tag has been attached to many other groups as well, from authorities who advocated the
elimination of the last remaining stocks of
smallpox virus to Republicans who advocated decreased funding for basic research.
Few would dispute that the term applies to the Unabomber, whose manifesto, published in 1995, scorns science and longs for return to a pretechnological utopia. But surely that does mean environmentalists
concerned about uncontrolled industrial growth are antiscience, as an essay in US News&World Report last May seemed to suggest.
The environmentalists,
inevitably, respond to such critics. The ture enemies of science, argues Paul Ehrlich of Stanford University, a pioneer of environmental studies, are those who question the evidence supporting global
warming, the depletion of the ozone layer and other consequences of industrial growth.
Indeed, some observers fear that the antiscience epithet is in danger of becoming meaningless. "The term 'antiscience' can lump together too many, quite different things," notes Harvard University
philosopher Gerald Holton in his 1993 work Science and Anti-Science, "They have in common only one thing that they tend to annoy or threaten those who regard themselves as more enlightened."
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