Re: The Problem Begins with the Elementary School Teachers
by
EbenCooke
11/09/2009, 12:15 PM #
I think the core education should try to instill a better respect for language itself. I see lots of noisy debate about 'evolution", for example, among people who don't have a clue what the heck it is. A good clue as to what evolution is would be the title of the best-known book by Darwin. Of course, very few of the debators could say what that title is, and certainly have not read any of the book itself.
Another example struck me recently, during that experimental crash on the moon (intended to produce a plume that could be sampled for traces of water). The press instantly, and almost unanimously pronounced it a failure, because it did not produce a stunning visual. Even worse, at least one commentator somehow started talking about potential sites on the moon where ice might reside, and injected some strange estimates as to the "area" of the moon's south pole. Now, a "pole" is, of course a geometric point, one of two defining an axis of rotation And I was taught in 8th grade geometry that a point has no "area" at all. Certainly, in earth science, we might meaningfully conflate the South Pole with the continent of Antarctica. But, does the moon have continents? If so, I'd like to be educated on that; but I think it's more likely that the commentator was just blathering anything that seemed "technical".
Back to the language thing: That so much of the public misunderstands how the word "theory" applies in science is the reason for endless mindless "debate". Like so many words in natural language, "theory" can mean one thing in philosophy, another in music, still another in natural sciences. But the use of the word has led many ignoramuses to the non-sequitur that "one theory is as good as another". Which is simply stupid. The fact that evolution is a scientific "theory" does not mean it has equal intellectual standing with a religious "theory" that the earth is 6,000 years old.
I just saw a crawl-text headline this AM "Scientists say exercise lessens the risk of prostate cancer.". Now this seems a reaonable enough assumption to make -- and, heck! we all agree that exercise is generally good for us -- but "scientists say"??? I have no doubt that it's based on some study whose results seem consistent with that assumption. For all I know, it might develop into a scientific consensus. But that headline presented it as a done deal. Of course, future studies might well show results that color this one's -- and the "science" news will then be chirruping that "scientists have changed their minds".