First of all, a potential fake news alert. A story concerning retiring
judge Mahesh Chandra Sharma of the Rajasthan State High Court went viral this
week. Some of the reported quotations attributed to said judge follow:
“The peacock is a lifelong celibate. It never has sex with
the peahen. The peahen gets pregnant after swallowing the tears of the peacock.”
“(Mother cow) is the only animal that inhales as well
as exhales oxygen.”
“Cow urine has the miraculous property of destroying
any kind of germs. It provides strength to mind and heart. It stops ageing,” he
said, adding that its horns “acquire cosmic energy“.
“Houses plastered with cow dung are safe from radio
waves.”
The reporting of these comments provoked a bit of an international
media storm, well divorced from the initial context. The judge was hearing a
case involving the care of cows in government shelters. Not a big issue you
might think. But you would only think that if you were not an Indian Hindu, to
whom cows, their status and treatment, matter a whole lot more than to your
average Westerner. While as far as I can see the judge exists and said these
things, a bit of care still has to be taken in interpreting the comments. After
all, the original judgement was handed down in Hindi. That said, and taking
them at face value, it’s a reminder that there are people and places that have been
bypassed by a couple of centuries of scientific progress.
Ignorance is neither innocent nor harmless. It also has a
close cousin – denialism. Particularly within healthcare and medicine, there
are a number of denial movements which have either cost, are costing or will
cost lives. HIV denialism took root in South Africa for a while, and with
political support from former president Thabo Mbeki, delayed the introduction
of antiretroviral treatment. According to a study by Chigwedere et al (2008)1,
that delay may have cost 300,000 lives. Currently, lives are being lost because
of the activity of the anti-vaccines movement. Parents are being persuaded not
to have their children vaccinated, whether against measles in the US and
Europe, or polio in Africa and parts of the sub-continent, in the face of
scientific evidence and consensus. This all takes on a further worrying
complexion when the deniers team up with purveyors of snake oil and sugar
water, and seek to provide “alternative” remedies, usually at a profit. Like
alternative facts, alternative remedies rarely have any positive effects.
In the West what is interesting is that this decline in the public
traction that scientific evidence seems to have, at least in some quarters,
parallels the decline in the influence of Biblical Christianity, or more particularly
the values that flow from it. Arguments have raged for a while about the
influence of these values on the rise of science. For all that the conflict
metaphor has come to dominate at least the popular conception of the
relationship between science and Christianity, it was in “Christian” Europe
that the modern scientific enterprise emerged, having faltered in the Muslim
world after a good start. Among others Hooykaas2 claimed that this
was no accident. Perhaps we’re now in a position to begin observing what
happens as nature becomes remythologised (seemingly a problem in Rajasthan) and a personal commitment to truth is devalued.
In addition, this week saw international ructions as result
of President Trump announcing that the US would pull out of the Paris climate
change agreement. This is further evidence of the success of a denial
movement, partly motivated by commercial and industrial interests. Again there’s
a weight of scientific evidence to be processed, not all of which is
unequivocal. Few of us have either the expertise, the time or the inclination
to examine the evidence for ourselves and therefore remain relatively ignorant
of it. And there’s a small, but apparently influential group of dissidents, who
reject both the scientific and the current political consensus. They cite
alternative evidence, or provide alternative interpretations of the evidence.
And of course, given our relative ignorance, we can fall prey to their efforts.
Sometimes, we’re happy to cooperate in this if it supports our prejudices, or
looks like it’s in our local, personal, narrow economic self-interest.
Of course, even if the science were 100% clear on one side
of the argument (it’s probably more like 95%), in areas where political action
is required, there are other considerations that have to come into play.
History, economics, fairness and more besides go into making political
decisions. That said, the evidence that humanity is warming the planet in a
damaging way, while complicated, is fairly compelling. If the consensus is wrong, then lots of money
will be spent to achieve ends that while probably useful we could equally well
live without. But if the consensus is right, but proper action is undermined by
the deniers, then the consequences will be catastrophic in some places, grim in
many others and expensive everywhere. But of course, because the consequences
will unfold over a long period of time, the deniers will be long gone.
Maybe the truth of the matter is that ignorance is never
bliss. But the only alternative is hard work educating the next generation and for that matter hard work informing
ourselves.
1.
Chigwedere P et al (2008) Estimating the lost
beneļ¬ts of antiretroviral drug use in South Africa. J. Acquir Immune
Defic Syndr 49(4):410-5. [Link]
2.
Hooykaas R (1972) Religion and the rise of
modern science. Scottish Academic Press.
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