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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday August 29 2017, @10:53AM   Printer-friendly
from the who-watches-the-watchers? dept.

In 1979, there was a partial meltdown at a nuclear plant on Three Mile Island, in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. I was a young newspaper editor at the time, and I was caught up in coverage of the resulting debate about whether nuclear power could ever be safe. I have long forgotten the details of that episode, except for one troubling thought that occurred to me in the middle of it: The experts we relied on to tell us whether a given design was safe, or indeed whether nuclear power generally was safe, were people with advanced degrees in nuclear engineering and experience running nuclear plants. That is, we were relying on people who made their living from nuclear power to tell us if nuclear power was safe. If they started saying out loud that anything about the nuclear enterprise was iffy, they risked putting themselves out of business.

I mention this not because I think the engineers lied to the public. I don't. Nor do I think nuclear power is so dangerous it should be rejected as an energy source. I mention it because it shows how hard it can be to make sense of information from experts.

Trust in institutions and expertise has taken a lot of knocks in the last decade. Can society recover it? Are we all called to a higher effort to vet the information we are given, or is there another, better remedy?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 29 2017, @04:17PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 29 2017, @04:17PM (#560882)

    science works because scientists trust each other.

    You have zero idea about how "science" actually works.

    1) you should have some laws in place, stating that the trust should not be violated.

    You really don't need a law for this. What you are trying to get at is "professional reputation". Believe me, good quality scientists care very much about their professional reputation. And in the business, reputation is very hard to get back once you have lost it. What is a bit harder to suss out is which scientists have the best professional reputations. Even for those of us who work in a particular field, it can take a bit of time and experience to figure out who is who.