Scientocracy

Arguments for and against

Peter A. Ubel, an American physician, is a proponent of scientocracy. In an article titled "Scientocracy: Policy making that reflects human nature", he writes, "When I talk about Scientocracy, then, I'm not talking about a world ruled by behavioral scientists, or any other kind of scientists. Instead, I am imagining a government of the people, but informed by scientists. A world where people don't argue endlessly about whether educational vouchers will improve schools, whether gun control will reduce crime, or whether health savings accounts can lower health care expenditures,... but one instead where science has a chance to show us whether vouchers, gun control laws, and health savings accounts work and, if so, under what conditions."[1]

Bernard Boudreau, a Canadian lawyer and politician, is a critic of scientocracy. He writes, "At the dawn of the 21st century, scientific dogmatism is more firmly entrenched than ever. The scientist has become the high priest of the industrial world, certifying both the academic training of new users and the relevance of types and means of production. In all areas of human discourse, scientific reasoning has the force of law. What was once a theocracy is now a 'scientocracy'".[2]

Deepak Kumar, a historian, has written about the "Emergence of 'Scientocracy'" in India.[3]

Earlier use

Florence Caddy (1837–1923) wrote a book titled Through the fields with Linnaeus: a chapter in Swedish history. That book was published in two volumes in 1887. In volume 1 she wrote, "His lesson in Hamburg had taught him that a novus homo must not be arrogant when he enters the society of the scientocracy, and that he must not run himself rashly against vested interests. Yet for all his poverty, Carl Linnaeus seems to have lived in intimacy with the scientocrats of Leyden—Van Royen, Van Swieten, Lieberkuhn, Lawson, and Gronovius."[4] In these two sentences she uses "society of the scientocracy" and "scientocrats" to refer to groups of eminent scientists of that time.

In 2018 the theory was re elaborated by two Italian intellectuals and artists, Giovanni Tartaglia and Vincenzo Nerone, as an achievable dystopia: the scientocracy Is the term that defines a new era that will be ruled by mathematics. The term itself has been considered a political satire towards the increasing request of science knowledge among the youngest part of the population, which has been forced to adapt to the requests of the market in order to survive.

In 1933, Hugo Gernsback defined scientocracy as "the direction of the country and its resources by Scientists and not by Technicians".[5]

See also

References

  1. Peter Ubel (2009). Scientocracy: Policy making that reflects human nature.
  2. Boudreau, B. (1999). "Pursuit of science, New social factors". Canadian Family Physician. 45: 1134–1136, 1141–1136. PMC 2328580. PMID 10349048.
  3. Kumar, Deepak (2004). "Emergence of 'Scientocracy': Snippets from Colonial India". Economic and Political Weekly. 39 (35): 3893–3898. JSTOR 4415469.
  4. Caddy, Florence (1887). Through the fields with Linnaeus: a chapter in Swedish history. 1. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. p. 294.
  5. Gernsback, Hugo (1933). Technocracy Review, March 1933; quoted by Gary Westfahl in Hugo Gernsback and the Century of Science Fiction. McFarland & Company, 2007, p. 68.

Further reading

  • Chris Mooney and Sheril Kirshenbaum (2009). Unscientific America: How Scientific Illiteracy Threatens our Future. Basic Books; New York City, N.Y. ISBN 978-0-465-01305-0
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