Demystifying Scientists
In the wonderful book The Golem: What You Should Know About Science, Collins and Pinch record this amusing finding: Sociologists interviewed professional research physicists about reasons for believing or disbelieving their colleaguesÕ experiments. In this particular case, the experiments were the detection and non-detection of gravity waves (conducted between 1969 and 1972).
Their reasons included,
- Faith in a scientistÕs experimental capabilities and honesty, based on a previous working partnership.
- The personality and intelligence of experimenters.
- A scientistÕs reputation gained in running a huge lab.
- Whether or not the scientist worked in industry or academia.
- A scientistÕs previous history of failures.
- ÔInside informationÕ.
- ScientistsÕ style and presentation of results.
- ScientistsÕ Ôpsychological approachÕ to experiment.
- The size and prestige of the scientistÕs university of origin.
- The scientistÕs degree of integration into various scientific networks.
- The scientistÕs nationality.
I highly recommend this book, which presents science as a clumsy, flailing, and extremely powerful force that must be constantly and carefully controlled by its human creator (like the golem of Jewish mythology), though this is not necessarily my view of science. Also, I recommend the second book in the Golem series, The Golem at Large: What You Should Know About Technology.
April 4th, 2002 at 9:14 pm
I disagree with those authors as well. Although I might disagree with you. TouchŽ, my friend! (oh you’re not allowing html tags no matter what you may say. i attempted to italicize my txt to no avail.)
April 4th, 2002 at 9:42 pm
Todd, I did disable HTML and forgot to enable it again. It should work now.
April 4th, 2002 at 11:12 pm
testing :)