Global Warming: a serious climate problem due in large part to human activity or an elaborate hoax by scientists to fool governments into giving them more funding? Now, I imagine most people, myself included, usually roll their eyes and pull their hair when they read that sentence, but I opened with that absolutely ridiculous question to bring to your attention a humbling truth about our society: we live in a nation where there are people that actually think that global warming is a hoax.
To dispel any doubts there may still be (it’s shameful that I have to do this), there is a strong scientific consensus that global surface temperatures have increased over the past several decades and that the trend is mainly caused by human-induced emissions of greenhouse gases. No scientific body of national or international standing disagrees with this view, though a few organisations have maintained neutrality. There are the facts, plain and simple. But a startling high number of people refuse to believe in global warming nonetheless. Why is this? Why is there this deep seeded distrust with the scientific community, this strand of American anti-intellectualism?
Let me just begin by saying that science-denial is not a completely new thing. Copernicus got a lot of crap for his theories. Post-Enlightenment, however, reason and science grew more and more esteemed in Western society, and pseudoscientific theories were pushed off, for the most part, where they belong: on the fringes of society, presumably somewhere near Roswell. It seems that lately, however, this distrust with science and the academia in general has gained more and more favour with the mainstream. Though there are many reasons why it’s grown, there seems to me one spot where it has grown the most: the religious Right.
Science and religion have always had a strange sort of opposition with each other, agreeing on some points, compromising on others, and remaining staunchly opposed on a few others. For the most part, science tends to win out in these disagreements, but there is one issue in particular that, more than a century after its initial theorizing, many religious folks haven’t given up on yet. I speak, of course, about evolution. Schools have long debated whether or not to teach creationism or evolution in their schools, and even in 2005 the Kansas State Board of Education decided to permit the teaching of intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in public school classes. This was luckily overturned in 2007, but the fact remains that public school officials actually voted to allow it and one board member even went so far as to say that “Evolution has been proven false. ID (Intelligent Design) is science-based and strong in facts.” It goes without saying that that is just a silly thing to say, especially since this link – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._coli_long-term_evolution_experiment – will take you to an article about a scientist that actually witnessed the evolution of E. coli bacteria through studying 50,000 generations of the bacteria over the span of 22 years. How can there still be disbelievers? Obviously, the vast majority of disbelievers in evolution do so because it contradicts their literal interpretation of the Bible, but I would not say that religion itself is the problem. Rather, the problem is people failing to separate their faith from their secular lives.
The entire premise of religion is belief by faith, believing in something that does not necessarily have empirical or scientific evidence supporting it. I would argue that this is fine on a completely personal level. If it were completely personal, it likely wouldn’t harm anyone else, even if it were the most ridiculous belief imaginable. And if it makes you feel good, offers you solace, provides spiritual nourishment, then it is perfectly within your rights to believe in it. The problem arises when belief by faith ceases to be a personal issue, when people apply faith or personal feeling to any issue other than religion, whether it is science, law, politics, or education. Religion is a wonderful tool with which to construct your own life but a terrible one with which to construct the life of anybody else. Many people, however, believe that faith, feelings, some kind of Holy Spirit, or simply intuition is a good way to make decisions about science and politics. This is not the case. No matter how fervently one believes in something, even unto the very depths of their heart, that belief alone does not make the thing true. You believe in things because they are true, they aren’t true because you believe in them.
This brings us to the crux of the issue. Many Americans distrust academics because they either contradict their religion or they see them as a sort of academic elite, and many of those same Americans trust their feelings more than reason, evidence, logic, and science. Mix this all together and you have the perfect environment for the growth of American anti-intellectualism. It is unreasonable, it is dangerous, and it hinders human progress.
It goes without saying that this is something that needs to change. We can’t combat global warming effectively when there are so many people that don’t believe in it. Science is hindered in its advancement when people try to replace empirical evidence with faith and feelings. What can be done? To be honest, I don’t really know. That’s an article for another time; this one is already pretty long. I guess that for now, I can only say that we need to recognize that there is a time for faith and a time for reason and that their Venn diagram has significantly less overlap than many people think it does.
I would just like to close by sharing a definition. Delusion: a false belief held with absolute conviction despite superior evidence. And though a delusion is technically pathological, I think an appropriate name for this unreasonable denial of science I have discussed is “voluntary delusion.” Despite superior evidence supporting human-induced global warming, evolution, and even the theory of relativity (yes, some people even disbelieve that one. See http://www.conservapedia.com/Theory_of_relativity), a startlingly large number of Americans still cling to their seemingly delusional beliefs, and many of them do so intentionally. I just hope that intelligence, science, reason, evidence, and logic cease to be stigmatized in our society so that our race can continue moving forward along the tracks of human progress.