Defamation laws cover intentional, malicious falsehoods spread against an individual or institution. I would like to see this concept widened to include scientific consensuses (where there is a well established one, of course). I frequently run across intentional misrepresentations of the degree of debate in the scientific community on many issues, such as global warming, evolution, vaccination, alternative medicine, and abstinence only. The malicious requirement would protect those bringing up valid new hypotheses and instead target attempts to warp the very meaning of scientific evidence. That sort of behavior should be unacceptable from a public figure. A celebrity or lawmaker spouting disproven theories about vaccines should hold the same place in free speech law as shouting fire in a crowded theatre; it's leading to entirely preventable deaths.
There is no room for what we wish to be true in science; that belongs in engineering.
Science is essentially reverse engineering nature; ultimately there is only one correct answer. In engineering, there are theoretically (if not practically) unlimited ways to approach the same problem. This is the biggest reason I am drawn to engineering over science, important as it may be.
Some believe that engineering is the intersection of art and science. I agree: it destroys one by turning it into the other.
Markets are a means, not an end.
The aim of the American Dream is the freedom to be fat, dumb, and happy. In practice, we've got two out of three.
Science finds the needle of truth in the haystack of delusion.
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