A fine article by Tim Adams in The Observer asks why it is that science is simultaneously perceived as boring and childish by so many people; he speaks to Natalie Angier and John Brockman, two of the people who are attempting to do something to rectify the situation.
“Science is rather a state of mind,’ Angier argues and, as such, it should inform everything. ‘It is a way of viewing the world, of facing reality square on but taking nothing for granted.’ It would be hard to argue that this state of mind was advancing across the globe. We no longer make and mend, so we no longer know how anything works.
One of Angier’s interviewees, Andrew Knoll, a professor of natural history at Harvard’s earth and planetary sciences department, suggests that ‘the average American adult today knows less about biology than the average 10-year-old living in the Amazon, or the average American of 200 years ago’. I spoke to Angier to find out why she thought that this might be the case.
To some extent, she suggested, that was a political question. ‘Here in the US we have had the last seven years of this administration which has made everything about the two-cultures divide seem worse.’ But it is not just that. ‘Newspapers are getting rid of all their science pages; they are jettisoning all their science staff. The feeling is people don’t want to read it.'”
Full article at The Observer