Good News and Bad News

OK, bad news first. Although I was told I would have internet in my house today, I still don't, despite the militaristic tactics I've resorted to using with BT. However, BT tells me I should be online tomorrow. We'll see. Once that happens, I should be able to get back to some actual serious blogging, unlike what's been going on here lately....

The good news is that I got my copy of Chris Mooney's The Republican War on Science today, so expect a review shortly. In fact, publishers have been sending me books like crazy lately (Is it the sudden hotness?), so you can actually look forward to a few book reviews in the near future.

More like this

Yes, the book. My Job in 10 Years: The Future of Academic Libraries. To rewind a bit, the story begins this past January. I did a little off-the-cuff post on how libraries could model their web presences on commercial book-related sites like Tor.com or the Globe & Mail Books site. It ended…
I've been mostly on vacation for the last little while so I've fallen a bit behind on writing the book reviews I feature here on the blog fairly regularly. In fact, there might even be a few books that, ahem, have been sitting around read and unreviewed for perhaps even longer than the last month…
John Dupuis has been writing Confessions of a Science Librarian since the time blogging software was really physically soft, being made of clay and shaped like a tablet. We finally got to meet face-to-face at the Science Blogging Conference last month - a meeting long overdue until then. Welcome…
No blogging this weekend, and not even a Links Dump for Monday morning, because I was busy with non-blog stuff all weekend. Such as fencing in Lake Steelypips: OK, maybe that's too grandiose a name for the little decorative pond in our back yard. It's not all that large, but it is big enough to…

You know how scientists could really encourage social progress?

All those geniuses should suddenly get the idea that they should stop providing wmds to the worlds governments.

Just a thought.

After all, where would Hitler have been without his scientists? (Hitlers Scientists, by John Cornwell)

By Christensen (not verified) on 06 Sep 2006 #permalink

That's not really on topic... but I (and almost every scientist I know) are concerned with the ethical application of science in society. I think you'll find that scientists are a pretty progressive bunch, although you don't seem to think so.

Christensen certainly has a point.

If scientists are so progessive, why is the world filled with weapons that could end civilization in a few hours?

The politicians are of course responsible, but they could not have done it on their own.

By Emanuel Goldstein (not verified) on 06 Sep 2006 #permalink

Only a very tiny percentage of scientists have ever been involved in weapons-related research. Most scientists, from what I can tell, oppose such research. Linus Pauling is a great example of a scientist who actively spoke out against nuclear proliferation, and he supported his case with scientific evidence, thus making a more convincing case than a non-scientist could have made.

I have to disagree on this one, Nick. It is unquestionable that the majority of funding sources for grants and the like are related to the Military Industrial Complex.

The scientists are in it neck deep.

As Oppenhiemer put it when he said something to the effect that "I have blood on my hands."

We need to face up to it.

That, though, I would argue is a political issue, not necessarily a scientific one, because this is a result of our government pouring so much money into the military and defense. Of course I think that scientists need to do as much as they can to distance themselves from weapons research, but what I'm arguing is that for the most part they do. If you look at these grants coming from the Department of Defense, you'll find that many, if not most, of them have little to do with weaponry--it's often the same case as elsewhere in the sciences, where scientists stretch the relevance of their work in order to land a big grant. What we need to do, scientists and citizens alike, is to push our government to change its funding priorities.