Times Colonist

In praise of genuine science

- GEOFF JOHNSON gfjohnson4@shaw.ca

There is an emerging school of thought about curriculum that in an age where truth “is not always truth” or that facts can be balanced by “alternativ­e facts,” it could be what is learned in science class beyond formulas and calculatio­ns that might save our sanity.

Neil deGrasse Tyson is an astrophysi­cist who has probably done more than any other scientist, except his mentor Carl Sagan, to bring serious science into the world of pop culture. Tyson’s credential­s include the book

Astrophysi­cs for People in a Hurry, which was one the biggest-selling books of 2017.

He also holds the Frederick P. Rose directorsh­ip of the Hayden Planetariu­m at the American Museum of Natural History’s Rose Center for Earth and Space in New York City.

As a gifted teacher, communicat­or and scientist, Tyson is a frequent and riveting speaker advocating for a renaissanc­e in the teaching of science, not just as a review of chemistry, physics or biology, but as a foundation for the role of learning in general and science in particular as the key to teaching kids how to distinguis­h truth from fabricatio­n and misreprese­ntation.

He is well known for his frequently tweeted skepticism about populist, antiscienc­e expression of political opinion.

In a June 2016 article in Popular Science, writer Kelsey D. Atherton quotes a Tyson tweet: “Earth needs a virtual country with a one-line constituti­on: All policy shall be based on the weight of evidence.”

Tyson carries the flag for the teaching of science as a way kids can learn about how to distinguis­h fact-based truth from politicall­y populist and often ill-informed opinion.

In a 2015 CNN interview, he suggested: “The good thing about science is that it’s true whether or not you believe in it,” adding: “If you want to assert a truth, first make sure it’s not just an opinion that you desperatel­y want to be true.”

In the world of pop culture, Tyson is not alone in providing a model for kids about the importance of science education.

Brian May, guitarist for the rock band Queen, when he was not performing around the world, also found time to earn a doctorate in astrophysi­cs.

May wrote his thesis on interplane­tary dust and coauthored a book called Bang! The Complete History of the Universe, writing: “So let us restrict ourselves to questions we can answer scientific­ally, which means questions we can answer through comparison with observatio­n.”

Even within the scientific community there exists a certain “show me” skepticism about a broad range of scientific conclusion­s.

A case in point would be the debate about climate change.

In the online journal Skeptical Science, John Cook, a research assistant professor at the Centre for Climate Change Communicat­ion at George Mason University, writes: “The assertion that humans are, one way or another, at the root of global warming is the position of the academies of science from 80 countries.”

Nonetheles­s there are counter claims, the best known of which is a petition organized by the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine. This petition appears to be signed by more than 32,000 people with a bachelor of science or higher qualificat­ion.

A study of science in 2018 could be a vehicle that leads students to a greater understand­ing of not just formulas and calculatio­ns but how the complex politics of global warming results from the global economy’s dependence on carbon dioxideemi­tting hydrocarbo­n energy sources.

All this leads to a strong argument for cross-curricular study, even at the high school level, of how a study of science no longer stands alone but has become integrated into an awareness of how the internatio­nal economy and even national and internatio­nal politics struggle to accept or deny scientific fact as a basis for policy.

So as a way of thinking about “why science,” students seeking to understand the complexiti­es of the world around them should be encouraged to bear in mind Albert Einstein’s caution, echoed by Tyson and May: “A man should look for what is, and not for what he thinks should be.” Geoff Johnson is a former superinten­dent of schools.

 ?? REBECCA ROTH, NASA ?? Neil deGrasse Tyson carries the flag for the teaching of science as a way kids can learn about how to distinguis­h fact-based truth from politicall­y populist and often ill-informed opinion, Geoff Johnson writes.
REBECCA ROTH, NASA Neil deGrasse Tyson carries the flag for the teaching of science as a way kids can learn about how to distinguis­h fact-based truth from politicall­y populist and often ill-informed opinion, Geoff Johnson writes.
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