A study guide to Jim Steele’s “What’s Natural?”, featured in the Pacifica Tribune.
What’s Natural? (#5) Jim Steele, Pacifica Tribune, February 20, 2019
The Scientific Baloney Detection Kit.
This is the second half of the previous post, please refer to it for an introduction.
Basically Jim Steele is lecturing us on how to interpret Carl Sagan’s Baloney Detection Kit. It promises to be an insightful journey into the workings of the libertarian deception.
REPRINTED UNDER PROTECTION OF FAIR USE COPYRIGHT LAWS.
My intention is a point by point review of libertarian deception in action.
(please click on image for sharp view)
Before we begin, let me share Sagan's (or was it Dr. Richard Feynman) sage advice for us science spectators: “Keep an open mind, but not so open that your brain falls out!”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jim Steele writes: “To overcome our biases and strive for a greater scientific truth, our discussions will be well served if guided by Sagan's principles. Below I paraphrase the most pertinent points in Sagan's Scientific Baloney Detection Kit. (I add my comments in parentheses.)”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wait a minute. Check out what’s going on here, reread that first line.
“To overcome our biases” and “striving for a greater scientific truth.” Those are two very different things and must be recognized as such.
Carl Sagan’s book was written to and for us regular people, non-scientists, we who look at the scientific community and their studies from the outside.
Recognize that not everyone can be an Earth scientist. It takes a particular perspective on life and a burning curiosity to understand nature, along with a disciplined character that’s always striving for greater scientific truth.
The point I’m trying to get across is that before we can continue with this discussion - we must openly recognize who’s who.