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The Siren Song of Environmentalism
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16172 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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6 / 1989 |
1,634 Words |
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Hugh W. Ellsaesser Hugh W. Ellsaesser, an atmospheric scientist, retired form the
USAF Air Weather Service after 21 years as a weather officer
and from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)
after 24 years in climate research. He is continuing his
studies at LLNL as a participating guest scientist. |
The spectacular growth in science and technology since World War II has been accompanied by a steady decline in the number of math and science courses required of nonscience students. As a predictable result, we now have a general population and a population of scientists who can hardly communicate with one another. The scientist today evokes not respect and gratitude, but fear. He is regarded not as one of us, but as a madman bent on pursuing his own Faustian bargains. Did he not invent nuclear weapons and energy, which are now poisoning the earth? Did he not introduce the use of fossil fuels, which through greenhouse enhancement are now turning the polar glaciers into rising sea levels and the shrinking continents into deserts?
A glance at any recent news publication reveals that science is in trouble--and not merely for the reason noted above. And if science is in trouble, we are all in trouble. In the tribal sense, the scientist replaced the medicine man as the seeker and repository of truth because he had developed the scientific method by which, in many cases, it was possible to separate that which we know from that which we merely believe. Truth has always been a valuable commodity, and while scientists did not always prosper, they usually survived.
But as history has repeatedly revealed, humans appear to be genetically engineered to cope with almost any adversity save their own successes. Science became too successful. Overconfidence and impatience led to more and more frequent skipping of the tediousness of applying the scientific method. Government support of research for national defense and other societal problems offered a far larger and more lucrative market for the services of scientists than the mere marketing of
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