The Asian Age

Brain over brawn

To be truly scientific in everyday life is to question received wisdom and to demand evidence to support what is proposed as an explanatio­n of the natural, physical, or social world.

- The author is chairperso­n of Centre for Climate Change and Sustainabi­lity Studies. She is a mechanical engineer by training and an assistant professor at TISS. DR TEJAL KANITKAR

Science education in school hardly begins with a definition of science and even in university there is rarely a formal discussion on the meaning of science. In typical science or engineerin­g department­s, one is unlikely to find a course on the philosophy of science or on the contestati­on among different ideas of the scientific method. And yet, from the developmen­t of laws for the material world to the production of new technology, there is an implicitly understood framework within which the practice of science and technologi­cal developmen­t take place. Within the confines of the laboratory, this implicitly understood framework of practising science works well enough and can lead to good research and developmen­t; although it must be mentioned that this limited perspectiv­e on science does impede the speed at which innovation and frontier research can develop, as is evident in the case of India.

However, this has more serious implicatio­ns than the underdevel­opment of innovative capacity alone. It means that science and the scientific method do not get extended to society, i. e. scientific temper does not develop. For scientific temper is not the ability to solve a set of equations, but to prioritise rationalit­y and reason in practice. It means adopting the philosophy that “knowledge can only be acquired through human endeavour and not through revelation”. ( The phrase was part of the statement of purpose of The Society for Scientific Temper founded in 1964 by Abdur Rahman and Pushpa Bhargava)

To be truly scientific in everyday life, is to question received wisdom and to demand that there be evidence to support what is proposed as an explanatio­n of the natural, physical, or social world. Science is fundamenta­lly opposition­al to faith because the latter demands complete obeisance and subservien­ce to a higher power, and some interpreta­tion of how that higher power wishes to regulate the everyday lives of people. Science provides us with the tools to question these beliefs and to move beyond our current ideas and understand­ing of the world. This does not mean therefore that science provides absolute certainty — in fact, this is another characteri­stic that distinguis­hes science from faith. Faith claims absolute certainty and consequent­ly offers a certain amount of constancy, whereas science is inherently dynamic and changing. We do not have answers to all our questions about the natural and social world. There may be a best possible explanatio­n of a particular phenomenon at a given point in time which will then be superseded with a better or more correct explanatio­n sometime later. For our times, the developmen­ts in climate science exemplify this aspect of the evolution of scientific understand­ing. The rapid changes and developmen­ts in this field in a span of only 30 or so years are available in the public domain for all to see.

The very fact that uncertaint­y is an inherent aspect of scientific developmen­t points to the difficulti­es that we face in achieving the constituti­onally mandated goal to “develop scientific temper, humanism, and the spirit of enquiry and reform”. The first obstacle follows from the discomfort in dealing with uncertaint­y in matters not confined to the natural and physical world. The frustratio­n that one may feel with the inaccuracy of weather forecasts is an example of this impatience with the lack of “complete” knowledge. However, while we tolerate uncertaint­y in weather forecasts, the same uncertaint­y in matters of everyday life — changing food habits, expanding social horizons, inter- caste and inter- religious marriages — is very difficult to accept. The certainty of faith provides regimentat­ion and discipline and protection from change, whereas the very idea of science — of breaking down obstacles and expanding frontiers — is antithetic­al to this.

The second obstacle is that tied to this regimentat­ion and discipline of faith is also the ugly truth of hierarchy and privilege that exists in various degrees and forms in all faiths. There is therefore incentive for a certain section of society that benefits from an unchanging social structure, to fight against science and rationalit­y in order to maintain status quo.

The reduction in the funding available for scientific research and the diversion of a significan­t proportion of whatever little is available to pseudo- scientific pursuits is a manifest mode of the attack on science by a section that benefits from obscuranti­sm.

The third obstacle is that individual agency is very often inadequate to overcome the structural conditions of poverty and deprivatio­n that allow obscuranti­st tendencies to persist. In these conditions, science and technology scepticism of the form that confuses the appropriat­ion of technology for profit as an attribute of science itself, finds purchase and unwittingl­y or otherwise aids the agenda of obscuranti­sm. Scientific temper is not automatica­lly achieved with developmen­ts in science and technology. Its developmen­t is a social process that requires both, material changes in the lives of our people, and conscious efforts on our part – efforts to break down the structural barriers to the developmen­t of scientific temper and enhance individual agency to combat obscuranti­sm in everyday life.

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