No. But it does have some religious elements to it. I might have written about my book but I didn’t think of it by press time.
I
will use as my example of religion not the hot-headed American conservative
celebration of racism and environmental destruction—nothing could be further
from science than this. Nor will I use Islamic fundamentalism. Instead, I will
use Catholic Christianity.
In many religions, including Catholicism, there is a deep and unquestioning reverence for ritual. Science, too, has its rituals, to which we scientists give our unwavering adoration. In each of these cases, there are essential justifications. I do not mean these practices are bad, but just that we scientists feel a deep reverence for them, like a priest conducting a liturgy. Examples of scientific rituals include:
Holy
language.
When we write scientific articles in peer-reviewed journals, we try to be as
emotionally bland as possible. We are passionate about the avoidance of
passion. We dare not betray any feelings about the importance of wild species
or intact ecosystems. Certainly no humor! I remember finding an article,
decades ago, about shallow freshwater ecosystems. The author and editor allowed
one joke to get published: a certain principle was littorally true. You
didn’t get the joke? Then you aren’t part of our inner circle of priests. Also,
in the 1980s, a fellow graduate student, who studied plant physiology, permitted
herself just once to say that chlorophyll—in particular, chlorophyll a—was such
a beautiful color. But you can bet your bottom thylakoid that she never wrote
this in her thesis. We offer these papers on the holy altar of “objective”
science, undefiled by humor and enthusiasm. Also, only a botanist would get bent
out of shape if someone calls a dandelion a flower.
Holy
objectivism.
Scientists will almost never, even in our unguarded moment, express any idea
for which we do not personally have corroboratory data. We are passionate in
our avoidance of personal bias. Meanwhile, anti-scientific zealots proclaim
their statements with absolute certainty. For example, an epidemiologist can
say that a certain covid vaccine has 99 percent efficacy, thus it “appears that”
the vaccine prevents covid. The lay reader thinks that we scientists are not
quite sure. In contrast, anti-vaxxers loudly dismiss all evidence and proclaim
that the vaccines are dangerous. One even went so far as to call Anthony Fauci a mass murderer.
You have to read into the article a few lines to find the reference.
Anti-scientific zealots are certain; scientists are hesitant; guess whose views
prevail in conservative circles. Scientists use the term “hypothetical” to mean
that a hypothesis is being tested; but anti-scientists, who never bother to
question their own beliefs, think it means not just guesswork but evil
guesswork.
Holy
significance.
Scientists insist that data should only be believed if the odds are 20 to 1
against the results being random. This is the origin of the 5 percent (p =
0.05) significance level. To have an accepted significance level is essential.
A 50 percent significance level would mean that the results are as random as
the flipping of a coin (50 percent heads, 50 percent tails). As discussed in Richard
Harris’s book Rigor Mortis, it may be important for medical studies to
demand even more significance, such as a 1 in 100 or 500 chance, because we
have to be really, really sure before we put human lives at risk. But why 5
percent? Why not 4, or 6, percent? But 5 percent it is. This is a religion
among scientists. Fortunately, in my one remaining scientific study before
retirement, my significance levels are all p < 0.001, that is, there is less
than 1 chance in 10,000 that they are due to chance. But in some analyses, if I
end up with p = 0.06, I feel that I have utterly failed.
Holy place. Scientists do, in fact, have passionate personal opinions. It’s just that we do not express them in the holy scientific scriptures (peer-reviewed journals). We can express them in popular science books, which is why I prefer this venue of publication. In popular books, we can say (with our scientific authority) that humans are causing dangerous levels of global warming. But any scientist who makes such statements has to be very careful to not risk the disapproval of the bishops of the scientific Vatican. This is why there are very few scientists who write popular books; general readers get tired of phrases that depict scientific uncertainty. This is why most popular science writers, such as Carl Zimmer and David Quammen, began as English majors. Their science is very, very good; and being outside of academia, they are permitted to express their emotions. Many scientists would be proud to be called “a scientist’s scientist,” but not me! I want to be known as someone who makes science interesting and exciting. As you might know from my YouTube channel, I transgress fully into the realm of being a science clown. My editor even allowed me to slip a few jokes into Scientifically Thinking.
Liturgical Latin. Scientists love, love, love to use Latin and Greek phrases. And something that means the same thing in Latin as in Greek can have different meanings. If a shot (or, in jolly old England, a jab) goes under the skin (as perhaps all of them do), they are hypodermic (Greek); but an infection under the skin is subcutaneous (Latin). We give Latin, or Greek, or Latinized, names to every species of organism. If you don’t know the Latin names of the animals and plants, how can you be considered knowledgeable about forests or prairies or deserts? It is essential to have standardized names for species. For instance, non-scientists might just call all prairie grasses “grasses,” but each species is a little different and deserves its own name. But why Latin? The language of vicious world conquerors, then later of scholarly snobbery. There are reasons. One is that Latin is international; nobody speaks it today, even many Catholic priests. But I can tell you that it makes me feel really, really good to say Liquidambar styraciflua.
Later
today I will probably start writing on my last scientific paper. I will try
very hard to not get enthusiastic about it, despite all those p < 0.001
values that show that budburst times of Oklahoma deciduous trees, are
responding, and responding clearly, to global warming.
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