The Scotsman

The scientific method is humanity’s greatest achievemen­t

◆ Science is by far the best way to understand the real world

- Ian Johnston is Comment Editor of The Scotsman

I’m not a scientist. While I have worked as a science correspond­ent and, long ago, studied philosophy of science, I’m still an outsider, but also an admirer. If asked to name humanity’s greatest innovation, it wouldn’t be fire, the wheel or vaccines, it would be the scientific method.

Without it, humanity would be lost, stumbling along with age-old superstiti­ons, magical thinking and other ‘cognitive illusions’ to which we seem particular­ly susceptibl­e. As with optical illusions, sometimes our minds can be fooled into constructi­ng false realities. This is partly because, as marvellous as human brains are, they have a tendency to take shortcuts, to make messy real life simpler to understand and process.

The scientific method helps cut through such perception biases, to avoid the mental traps we lay for ourselves, and discover the actual truth. However, it’s important not to get too carried away. Politician­s tried to reassure us by saying they were following “the science” during the Covid pandemic, and there are those who will loudly proclaim that something is a “scientific fact”.

On the other hand, there are also people who will say about the theory of evolution, for example, “well, that’s only a theory”. When Charles Darwin proposed his ideas, it was an invitation to other scientists to test them against the available evidence. Since then, evolution has withstood many attacks, while a vast amount of supporting evidence, in the form of fossils showing gradual changes in lifeforms, has been uncovered. So, in a failing of our use of language, a scientific theory is much more than “just a theory”.

Science thrives in the freedom afforded by democracy. In the former Soviet Union, research that conflicted with Communist ideology was suppressed. At the 2017 American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science’s annual meeting in Boston, one of the big concerns was that the newly elected US President, Donald Trump, would similarly suppress climate science.

The scientific method is the best way we have to truly understand the real world, its wonders and its perils, while avoiding the temptation­s of a land of make-believe – and those who would lead us there.

 ?? ?? Charles Darwin depicted as an ape in a satirical image from the London Sketch Book, 1860
Charles Darwin depicted as an ape in a satirical image from the London Sketch Book, 1860

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