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by leereeves
374 days ago
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That's rarely the case with science reporting. The subjects that are sufficiently rigorous to allow no reasonable debate (the physical sciences) are rarely political enough to inspire unreasonable debate. On the other hand, the subjects that are politically contentious are not rigorous and leave plenty of room for reasonable debate. If anything, science reporting tends to err the other way, uncritically reporting sensational results that contradict one other, have not been confirmed, or fail to replicate. I rarely see a popular science article that doesn't report the results of a single experiment as if they were instantly established fact. |
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However, there's also the other side of things, which is mostly established science. Which, you're right, don't typically spark political debate... but they do sometimes. Vaccines, climate change, cholesterol, seed oils. The RFK Jr faction of anti-science is rife these days.