Can Science Save U.S. & Muslim Relations?
source: http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/a_universal_truth/
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- DeliaTheArtist
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"President Obama, in an address at Cairo University in June, called for increased scientific collaboration between the US and the Muslim world—specifically the creation of new “centers of scientific excellence” and the appointment of “science envoys” to Muslim countries. This call for new science envoys dovetails with a bill sponsored by Richard Lugar (R-IN) currently being considered in the Senate (S. 838) and is the aspect of Obama’s scientific diplomacy strategy on which there has been the most progress to date.
Science is fundamentally an international endeavor. Even the least senior scientists (i.e. grad students and post-docs) may travel internationally at a frequency that rivals that of the more senior members of many other professions. A lab in the US may have ongoing scientific collaborations (or heated competitions) with labs in Europe, Asia, or elsewhere. Advances in technology have aided these collaborations tremendously, making differences in time zones the only real obstacle still preventing regular face-to-face communication (by voice-over IP video conferencing) between scientists on opposite sides of the globe. Finally, scientific findings are published in international journals accessible to anyone who reads English and whose institution subscribes to the journal (although the rise of open-access publishing is easing this final constraint).
This internationality stems from another fundamental aspect of science: that its truths are universal. Independent of location, culture, or religion, the process of evaluating scientific knowledge should—in principle, at least—remain the same. Of course, as Jasanoff points out, the successful application of scientific findings to address societal needs is affected by all of these subjective factors. But the universality of basic science may be the deepest link that the US and the Muslim world share. (On the flipside, we also share many of the same enemies of scientific progress; as in the US, creationism has flourished in many majority-Muslim countries.) Today, the US can still claim to be the world’s greatest scientific power—though maybe only tenuously. A thousand years ago, however, the Middle East would have unequivocally held that designation—another common link and an important reminder that preeminence is not permanent.
The Obama administration should look for ways to encourage further collaborations between practicing scientists in the US and the Muslim world, and programs along these lines may be simpler to implement and more likely to yield the desired results. New education and travel grants to send American scientists to work in the Middle East and elsewhere—and vice versa—would be one avenue. Additional grants to bring outside scientists to the US to attend conferences or workshops or to meet with collaborators could also be helpful.
These actions should help foster the exchange of ideas between scientists in the US and Muslim countries. New scientific collaborations will help advance scientific progress and may help focus resources to pertinent problems that would otherwise be neglected. Such collaborations also have the immediate benefit of improving the scope and impact of the scientists’ work, assisting with career advancement and raising the prestige of local research communities. In the long run, the hope is that this exchange of scientific ideas will contribute to greater cross-cultural appreciation and understanding. Given the vast resources that have been wasted creating an enormous credibility gap between the US and the Muslim world (particularly through the Iraq war), scientific diplomacy is certainly a cause worth funding. "
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From SEED magazine. What do you think?
Science is fundamentally an international endeavor. Even the least senior scientists (i.e. grad students and post-docs) may travel internationally at a frequency that rivals that of the more senior members of many other professions. A lab in the US may have ongoing scientific collaborations (or heated competitions) with labs in Europe, Asia, or elsewhere. Advances in technology have aided these collaborations tremendously, making differences in time zones the only real obstacle still preventing regular face-to-face communication (by voice-over IP video conferencing) between scientists on opposite sides of the globe. Finally, scientific findings are published in international journals accessible to anyone who reads English and whose institution subscribes to the journal (although the rise of open-access publishing is easing this final constraint).
This internationality stems from another fundamental aspect of science: that its truths are universal. Independent of location, culture, or religion, the process of evaluating scientific knowledge should—in principle, at least—remain the same. Of course, as Jasanoff points out, the successful application of scientific findings to address societal needs is affected by all of these subjective factors. But the universality of basic science may be the deepest link that the US and the Muslim world share. (On the flipside, we also share many of the same enemies of scientific progress; as in the US, creationism has flourished in many majority-Muslim countries.) Today, the US can still claim to be the world’s greatest scientific power—though maybe only tenuously. A thousand years ago, however, the Middle East would have unequivocally held that designation—another common link and an important reminder that preeminence is not permanent.
The Obama administration should look for ways to encourage further collaborations between practicing scientists in the US and the Muslim world, and programs along these lines may be simpler to implement and more likely to yield the desired results. New education and travel grants to send American scientists to work in the Middle East and elsewhere—and vice versa—would be one avenue. Additional grants to bring outside scientists to the US to attend conferences or workshops or to meet with collaborators could also be helpful.
These actions should help foster the exchange of ideas between scientists in the US and Muslim countries. New scientific collaborations will help advance scientific progress and may help focus resources to pertinent problems that would otherwise be neglected. Such collaborations also have the immediate benefit of improving the scope and impact of the scientists’ work, assisting with career advancement and raising the prestige of local research communities. In the long run, the hope is that this exchange of scientific ideas will contribute to greater cross-cultural appreciation and understanding. Given the vast resources that have been wasted creating an enormous credibility gap between the US and the Muslim world (particularly through the Iraq war), scientific diplomacy is certainly a cause worth funding. "
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From SEED magazine. What do you think?
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artemis6
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I hope this works . Historically this religion has pursued science with gusto . They would be fine with stem cell research , for instance .
- 2 years ago
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artemis6
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ocanada
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I am proud that Richard Lugar is my representative! And yes he's a republican. He's what republicans aught to be but aren't.
- 2 years ago
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ocanada
