Science and Politics – Friends or Foes?

March 4, 2018

First Aired: June 14, 2015

Listen

LOGIN or Subscribe TO LISTEN

The ideal of science is objectivity in the service of advancing knowledge. We tend to assume that to be objective, scientists must keep their politics from influencing their work. But time and time again we see that science, even some of our best science, is awash in political influences. Could politics sometimes have a positive effect on objectivity in science? If so, which kinds of politics might have a positive effect and which might not? What criteria could we use to make the distinction? And does ‘objectivity’ still have meaning in this context? John and Ken take all sides with Sharyn Clough from Oregon State University, author of Beyond Epistemology: A Pragmatist Approach to Feminist Science Studies.

Leave a Reply

Buy the Episode

Listen to the Preview

Guest

clough2016a

Sharyn Clough, Professor of Philosophy, Oregon State University

Related Blogs

  • Science and Politics: Friends or Foes?

    June 13, 2015

Related Resources

Books

Brown, Mark B. (2009). Science in Democracy: Expertise, Institutions, and Representation

Clough, Sharyn. (2003). Beyond Epistemology: A Pragmatist Approach to Feminist Science Studies

Dessler, Andrew & Parson, Edward A. (2010). The Science and Politics of Global Climate Change: A Guide to the Debate

Rowe, Elana Wilson. (2013). Russian Climate Politics: When Science Meets Policy

Walker, Mark. (2013). Science and Ideology: A Comparative History

Web Resources

Crook, Clive. (2013). “Why Science and Politics Don’t Mix.” Bloomberg View

Funk, Cary & Rainie, Lee. (2015) “Americans, Politics and Science Issues.” Pew Research Center

Ottinger, Gwen. (2010).”Drawing the Line Between Science and Politics?” Chemical Heritage Magazine

Smith, Adam. (2012). “Science and politics: chalk and cheese?” The Guardian

Get Philosophy Talk

Radio

Sunday at 11am (Pacific) on KALW 91.7 FM, San Francisco, and rebroadcast on many other stations nationwide

Podcast

Full episode downloads via Apple Music and abbreviated episodes (Philosophy Talk Starters) via Apple PodcastsSpotify, and Stitcher