How politics of pseudoscience threatens India's scientific literacy
The Indian media, in particular, can and should address issues of
science literacy in the country as science is for all, although literacy is not
yet for all
Current Affairs News: Should the Indian
media pay as much attention as it does to our politicians’
pseudoscientific claims? The Print had
posed this question to me recently – making an apparent reference to the debate
between those who say we should simply focus on ‘good science’ and reinforce
its traits and those who believe ‘bad science’ is an opportunity for
journalists to uncover deeper issues.
For example, when junior education minister Satyapal Singh said, “Darwin’s theory is
scientifically wrong” or when Uttarakhand chief minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank said, “Astrology is the biggest science. It is in fact above science. We should promote it.”
It’s no secret that some Indian ministers have been trying to rewrite Indian
scientific history, and such claims are part of that story.
Science communicators and
journalists should definitely continue to focus on these stories, but perhaps
with a more investigative narrative – shifting the focus from the politician to the problem. We
can use these sensational instances as opportunities to tackle more systemic
problems, offering context and analysis, and reach the people with critical
insights.
For example, Satyapal
Singh seems to be missing the essence of the scientific method – and
what about the story of evolution is scientific.
Science is a type of knowledge system concerned with the observation
of phenomena through controlled and repeatable experiments. Scientific
knowledge is not a fixed or static body of work. Instead, it’s a process and,
like all processes, it evolves. New fields emerge with conceptual shifts in
these processes.
If Singh had understood this as well as how evolution itself
is evolving as more evidence comes to the fore (e.g., the recent spate of
articles questioning parts of the out of Africa theory), his statement would
perhaps be different.
Comments
Post a Comment