When I heard about the Curiosity Rover landing (read Luke
McKinney’s description)
I felt proud of our NASA team. Maybe you feel the same wave of patriotism and
achievement. Even though the entire NASA program – from its inception, through
the space race, to Curiosity – has
cost the same as Pentagon’s 2012 budget , the US non-military science
program still inspires the world.
Americans win more Nobel Prizes for sciences than any other
nationality, including shared prizes for medicine
and physics
this past year. We publish more papers than any other country, and 31
of the world’s top 100 science universities are part of our allegedly
deteriorating education system. And Yanks are well represented at CERN, which
is the future of internationally-sized scientific projects. So you shouldn’t
believe the hype – America remains at the front of science and technology.
On the other hand, when surveyed,
about 40% of Americans believe that people and dinosaurs coexisted, and just
over 50% could tell how often the earth revolved around the sun. What’s more, several
US states are passing educational
reforms that would limit science instruction, in particular disconnecting
math, biology, and hard science. Some reforms have wide effects, like when
textbooks nationwide are changed due to legislation in Texas.
And don’t think this is just conservative Christians –
non-science affects
American opinions from nuclear power to genetic engineered foods to
detoxing.
For most, the internet has brought a whole new age of
collaboration and scientific progress. But the internet can also help very wrong people get together. Everybody
reading this – follow the links, watch some old Carl Sagan or read some
accessible books like Bill
Bryson’s, and get science literate. Then teach other people, and your kids. First, watch the playlist.
We are in a golden age of science, and it is so cool. Don’t
let anyone say different.
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