| February
11, 2004
UCSD Historian Of Science, Naomi
Oreskes, Presents AAAS
Award Lecture On Topic Of Proof And Consensus In Science
By Barry Jagoda
In
an address at a convocation of leading scientists, the University
of California, San Diego historian Naomi Oreskes argues that
although science cannot offer absolute proof it, nevertheless,
can provide a sufficient basis for action.
In delivering the
George Sarton Award Lecture in the History and Philosophy of
Science at the annual meeting of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science, Feb. 13 in Seattle, Oreskes will
speak on the topic, Consensus in Science: How Do We Know
We Are Not Wrong?. In her remarks the director of the Science
Studies Program at UCSD presents historical examples suggesting
that a consensus of views in scientific conclusions might be
still be invalid. She urges that researchers take pains to look
for alternative models that might NOT have been considered.
Among case studies
on which she focuses are the history and theory of continental
drift and the issue of global warming. Regarding continental
drift Oreskes discusses various theories held by scientists
in Europe during much of the last century and demonstrates that
there was a very different understanding in the United States
in the same period. As the author of The Rejection of Continental
Drift, Theory and Method in American Earth Science, Oreskes
explains how American earth scientists were united in their
opposition to the, then, radical notion of continental drift.
Today this explanation for the shifting of the continents is
accepted as a scientific fact. Why was it rejected in the United
States and accepted 50 years earlier in Europe?
One reason why researchers
resisted continental drift was because American earth scientists
had adopted a certain model of the Earth’s crust which
worked so well that it came to be viewed as fact although this
model also made the theory of floating continents an impossibility.
Americans stuck to their model which resulted in an invalid
rejection of drifting continents.
Regarding global warming,
Oreskes argues that the models and explanations in the case
of climate change already hold up and therefore, while subject
to change, are sufficient for a basis of action.
Oreskes, who earned
her history Ph.D at Stanford, started her professional career
as a field geologist, but her current research focuses on the
development of knowledge, methods and practices in earth and
environmental sciences. Her most recent book is Plate Tectonics:
An Insider’s History of the Modern Theory of the Earth.
She is currently completing Science on a Mission: American
Oceanography in the Cold War and Beyond to be published
by the University of Chicago Press.
The George Sarton
Award Lecture is named for the founder of the discipline of
the history of science and features an annual talk on the history
and philosophy of Science at the AAAS meeting.
Media Contact, Barry
Jagoda (858) 534-8567
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