CAKCy
Member
- Location
- Cyprus, East Mediterranean
i've often been in the middle of Science vs Religion debates, perhaps because i have studied both don't belong to an organized faith and have respect for both subcultures but can see the realities of each. It annoys the hell out of me when either side is insulting--even just condescending towards the other.
So, there is only 1 thing that i will take issue with you concerning Science and many who consider themselves 'science minded: The admission of mistakes. While i will concede 'Science' as a discipline will eventually acknowledge mistakes and change its paradigms--in the meantime people with new ideas, even ones supported by experiments and studies are often shunned, ridiculed and it can take decades to budge the paradigms at all--sounds like a 'dogma' problem to me. When the paradigm does shift--they often don't acknowledge the pioneers of the new paradigm as even inspiration for the latest researchers who have produced evidence they finally could not ignore or dismiss. So i can't let the 'moral and intellectual' high ground claim about admitting mistakes slide without pointing out some things.
Doctoral students often have problems getting their dissertations approved if the basis for it challenges any of the accepted paradigms, even when experimental evidence to support their thesis exists. And as Professors or research scientists they often can't get their papers published in mainstream journals if they are challenging existing paradigms. At one time they thought baby males didn't feel their circumcisions much, also thought Black people had less pain receptors (much as i dislike polls--i can believe a recent one that some 50% of recent graduating medical school class still believe that one but then i'd think anyone believing it would be too many). Established scientists ridiculed Plate Tectonics, Neuroplasticity, Mind-Body connection. They circumvented acknowledging the impact of the last one by coining the dismissive term 'Placebo Effect' instead of investigating why a significant number of people in control groups have positive results from a 'sugar pill'.
Not to mention the ease with which non-science degreed people accept the conclusions of studies without investigating how the study was conducted by whom borders on cultish. Thing is not only the how, (i.e. the mechanics of the study, what kind of documentation of results, who was asking whom what) but who paid for it is crucial. And most degreed scientists that are in the public eye do not remind the public often enough, IMO, that if you don't know certain things about a study---you can't really evaluate it's relevance to your life.
But people blithely cite studies they don't understand (often haven't even skim read) and change their nutritional intake, exercise and lifestyle choices on what they think it means. What's more they'll lecture others about it with no understanding of how that other's needs may be different. When they released the findings that salt raises Blood Pressure it helped me understand my lifelong craving for salt--i've had chronically below 'normal' BP most of my life. About the only problem it ever caused me was occasional hypo-orthostatic tension wooziness if i stood up too quick and sometimes having to do jumping jacks to raise it enough to be able to donate blood or plasma. But complete strangers felt comfortable getting in my face about using salt at restaurants, because -- a study says its 'bad' for us. About that--newsflash--everybody is literally a unique combination of genes and bodily 'norms'. Hell, my body temp is chronically below normal too.
i knew what my 'norms' were when in my 20's, and also knew that if i took those measurements several times a day over the course of a day they could be radically different depending on what i'd been doing physically and my emotional state. Way too many doctors, presumably scientifically oriented, will just look at the numbers, and also tend assume patients (especially women) don't know how their bodies work and what their norms are regardless of our age. And i get that a lot of people don't know their own norms and the normal fluctuations of the measurements. But when someone tells you up front they do know--odds are they do, and they're just tired of people labeling something problematic that is just normal for them.
What i'm trying to illustrate with all this is that the 'Science' culture as a whole is only marginally better at updating paradigms, accepting new ideas, admitting mistakes than the Religious Believers camp is. And i've known Religious people better at considering new ideas than some people that have degrees in hard science or consider themselves 'science minded' --this happens because psychologically we're all unique too--every single consciousness.
I am aware (and I cannot disagree) with you about the problems within the realm of science. Science fans or, even worse, scientists may not accept or even ridicule new theories and hypotheses for many reasons: ego, money etc. But my belief is that at the very end Science "gets it nailed" and theories inevitably disappear or become strongly stated laws. This is what makes me say that Science is non-dogmatic while Religion is. Whenever science discovers or proves something new that makes Religion appear wrong the believers are ready to take the blame on their shoulders and "admit" that it wasn't Religion's fault but their own interpretation of it! This is much clearer in older times when Science was making huge leaps with discoveries causing the embarrassment of Religion (and its followers) that had to admit its errors. (No, Sun is not a God, No, Earth is not the center of the universe and everything revolves around it etc.). But yes, you are right to mention that a lot of science fans take what is given to them without even bothering to understand, just like a believer would do with their Religion.
Regarding the field of medicine (which is one of the most incomplete fields of science): Medicine is based hugely on statistics and the treatment of patients follows suit. There are ranges of norms, that the general population falls in and doctors follow mostly blindly because they cannot afford (money and time wise) to consider each case individually. Similar to you, I've found my "specs" to be outside those norms. My blood pressure is lower (in general) than the general norm, my body temperature too. It took me two years of ER visits to determine that while normal levels of potassium are accepted to be 3.5 mmol/L to 5.1 mmol/L (and doctors kept telling me that the reasons of my arrhythmias (AF) were due to my misfunctioning heart) I had to study my analyses myself and determine that I shouldn't let my potassium fall below 4.2 mmol/L otherwise I would have an AF.
I will end with this: When was the last time you experienced a change of the "scriptures" i.e. the Holy Bible scratching something out and replacing it with something else?