from phys.org/news of 24 March 2025. What is most interesting is that one can go past the tipping point in a period of instability when things then in a random period of time undergo the transition...all based on the microscopic states of the system. I believe that this hints at Local Involvement for us to articulate the positive sides of scientific institutions, starting with those institutions that directly influence us (and perhaps need change).
Original Message:
Sent: 03-25-2025 06:21 PM
From: Raymond White
Subject: Coalesence on public involement
Douglas Job, et al.:
Restoration of trust in Science is unwarranted until the public sees some retrospection and
some recognition of where Big/Elite Science has deservedly lost trust and
some humility about how the Scientific Community can reform itself.
It might start with becoming familiar with Malcolm Gladwell's Revenge of the Tipping Point (2024).
1. Gladwell describes how people in general respond to stating public preferences through
a series of experiments in which paired people provide a name for the picture of a person
that they both see. Pairs are broken up & reformed randomly within a group of 20 to 100.
Within a few rounds of this, everyone is using the same name. People tend to be Sheeple.
If the experiment manager sets one or a few individuals to persist in choosing a particular name,
they do so without affecting the rest of the group until they are set at 25% or more of the group size.
Then their choice becomes universal rapidly.
2. Gladwell illustrates group behavior on business or school boards of trustees by noting
that if one of five members is female, she is treated as representing females in general.
If there are 2 of 5 females, they tend to be treated as individuals.
3. In communities in which the left/right divide becomes a minority of less than 30% or so,
the majority tends to view members of the minority as representing the most objectionable
type of its side; they are not seen as individuals.
The more homogeneous a community becomes, the less it is able to be scientific or
modern thinking about new ideas. Used to agreeing on everything,
people tend to thoughtlessly absorb floating ideas.
Some really bad ideas become majority opinions and anyone not obviously
sharing them becomes a non-person.
This is what has occurred within the Academic and the Scientific communities.
Free and open speech does not exist, so Science is crippled and Science has lost
a great deal of public trust. This definitely includes Medicine.
Diversity of outlook is our strength.
Homogeneity (consensus, solidarity) is our weakness.
------------------------------
Raymond White
Teacher
Mountain View CA
Original Message:
Sent: 03-24-2025 02:24 PM
From: Douglas Job
Subject: Coalesence on public involement
Thank you Anne, I shared this article with the local science and public engagement group I started.
------------------------------
Douglas Job
Flemington NJ
Original Message:
Sent: 03-24-2025 11:09 AM
From: Anne Toomey
Subject: Coalesence on public involement
Hi Robert and all,
I very much relate to these sentiments and wanted to share some resources in the hopes that they are helpful. I've spent much of my career researching the science-society interface, how science is perceived by diverse publics, and also how scientists can engage to have impact for policy and practice. Here's a piece that gives some ideas for what researchers can do right now to counteract the attacks on science from the Trump administration: https://open.substack.com/pub/christinapagel/p/eight-things-scientists-can-do-right?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
Kind regards,
Anne
Anne Toomey, PhD
Associate Professor
Environmental Studies and Science
Pace University, NYC
Co-Founder of Participatory Science Solutions LLC
New book! Science with Impact: How to Engage People, Change Practice, and Influence Policy
20% off discount code: IMPACT
------------------------------
Anne Toomey
SLEEPY HOLLOW NY
Original Message:
Sent: 02-27-2025 12:39 PM
From: Robert Kellogg
Subject: Coalesence on public involement
I have been a member of AAAS for 50+, and have been through scientific debates on continental drift, climate change, nuclear security and de tante. I've watched the ephemeral nuclear fusion get closer, but never close enough, for practicality...and seen the efficiencies of solar cells grow from 12% to sustained 24%. I now watch the change of our scientific and government institutions. For example today's headline from EPA recommends rolling back the scientific emission studies that have been the basis for regulation. Further, EPA is recommending it cut its staff by 65%.
There is enough scientific data for me to conclude that regardless of immediate actions on atmospheric mediation of CO2 and methane, we are headed for a much warmer world with a far different atmosphere and ocean circulation. I was reminded that these physical changes will result in changes of our food, where we live, and our political structures.
Whether current actions are wise or foolish, I'm struggling to know how I can become engaged as a retired scientist. I suspect that the answer is "all politics are local", meaning that I should work with my city, county and state representatives to help guide their policies.
------------------------------
Robert Kellogg, Ph.D.
Rockville MD
Original Message:
Sent: 02-26-2025 09:18 AM
From: Arthur Stewart
Subject: Coalesence on public involement
I've been a member of AAAS for about 40 years, and now, seeing some coalescence on the need for scientists to actively and firmly engage the public on science-social issues, I've taking that plunge. Perhaps this communication will encourage others to more forcefully inject factual information into the zone of day-by-day public action and effective governmental policies.
Upon reading "Strongmen," by Ruth Ben-Ghiat, I came to understand that, like it or not, we are now firmly under authoritarian rule. That's a shame, for I had come to appreciate life under a democracy, and I had hoped our elected officials would do so as well. But with legislative and judicial complicity, it seems that we, as a country, are becoming far less attentive to the facts of climate change, and more willing to downplay events driven by climate change. Key disruptions in society driven by climate change include increasing frequencies of pandemics, droughts, crop failures, and floods. Avian flu, for example, is hovering now on our doorstep, and this, or another pathogen, could easily transition effectively to become major societal problems. We also routinely 'forget' about the dangers of nuclear weapons. Sam Bledso's new book, "Nukes: How to Survive a Nuclear War," re-educated me about this unhappy likelihood. The Doomsday Clock now is at 89 seconds to midnight. Overall, it is imperative that we get very serious about climate change and its attending problems, and very serious about the likelihood of mutually assured destruction resulting from the use of nuclear weapons. Else, we'll suffer steadily increasing societal and environmental damage as global warming continues, or come to grieve under nuclear war, or both. This is it: we don't need to be distracted by Greenland, or Panama, or by "inefficiencies" in how we as a country do business. This is our one chance to either make a global positive difference, or fall into years of divisive turmoil and foment designed to increase differences in societal power and economic status. The stakes could not be higher.
------------------------------
Arthur Stewart, PhD
------------------------------