Help For The Layman
Feb. 18th, 2008 05:56 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Do you think people would have a better understanding of the situation if evolution is referred to as a "scientific model" rather than a "scientific theory"? "Theory" apparently has too many connotations for the average uninformed person to grasp. Is it not accurate to refer to evolution as a model, the same way that there's a "standard model" of particles and their interactions in physics?
I know it's not possible to convince average uninformed persons of religious conviction of anything. But I'm hoping that maybe we can get the fence-sitting folks less convinced of absolute rightness a bit more over to the side of overwhelming evidence if we change the language slightly. Of course, I suppose it's possible for anti-science folks to just come up with a dismissive "Well, it's just a MODEL, that means it's like a TOY, it's not reeeeal..."
I know it's not possible to convince average uninformed persons of religious conviction of anything. But I'm hoping that maybe we can get the fence-sitting folks less convinced of absolute rightness a bit more over to the side of overwhelming evidence if we change the language slightly. Of course, I suppose it's possible for anti-science folks to just come up with a dismissive "Well, it's just a MODEL, that means it's like a TOY, it's not reeeeal..."
no subject
on 2008-02-19 02:39 am (UTC)no subject
on 2008-02-19 02:47 am (UTC)no subject
on 2008-02-19 09:11 pm (UTC)By favoring religious convictions, it would seem to me that you're a proponent of what I would call "magical thinking" -- that is to say, you believe and act on concepts that you have no objectively understandable reason to consider true. Is that so? If so, how would you address the criticism that you're part of the problem, because you legitimize the type of thinking employed by people who hold more onerous views?
no subject
on 2008-02-19 09:25 pm (UTC)My point in this case is not to legitimize the idea of people basing their understanding on science on religious doctrine, my point is that the OP is running a huge risk of alienating people who are clever, thinking, scientists because they believe they have religious convictions.
To put it another way, when people speak about a subject with righteous indignation and claim that "X" group is unreasonable, you run a great risk. The risk you run is that many of the people who you might find sympathetic to your argument aren't listening because you have already offended them.
Let's not split hairs and say that "religious convictions" means someone who believes doctrine over documented evidence, because I assure you, many forensic scientists, paleogeologists, and the like will call themselves people with "religious convictions" and still believe in evolution.
I'm not touting creationism or doctrine driven science! I'm saying be careful what labels you throw out, because many church going, faithful, but also incredibly clever scientists I used to know would have stopped listening long ago since you already assume they can't be "reasoned with."
no subject
on 2008-02-19 10:57 pm (UTC)But yeah, we're in agreement on the subject of the wording that started this discussion.
no subject
on 2008-02-20 03:08 am (UTC)If society decides to make me an outcast because I don't want to tolerate doctors who believe prayer will heal me, or pharmacists who won't prescribe birth control, or presidents who invade countries because god said so (and yes, even scientists who think a magic man lives behind the curtain of the natural order, an idea that goes completely against scientific reasoning)... well, fine by me! I reject that society, and will watch with sadness as it sinks yet again into another dark age brought on by religious nutjobs who believe in magic.