Oh, what a lot of work you make for m, Rick. I missed this post until Grant quoted it with approval, and i think that someone else endorsed yr sentiments. I found myself in strong disagreement, even when I realized that by "here" you meant the U.S, rather than the forum, and since I have a tendency to be rebarbative in debate (what's that? You never noticed?
) off I trudged with Tucker to get Sunny's take on it. we both test out somewhat brighter than average, and we enjoy the same spectrum disorder so I generally trust her reasoning even if I don't share her opinion..
She agreed with you. "Of course most people are more interested in Facebook, Smartphones and TV than in the NASA program", and that is a major reason why they are thriving as the NASA program goes down the tubes.She also pointed out, that unlike Facebook and the rest, the NASA program is supported by our taxes. What is it called when people are taxed for things in which thy are not interested in and on which they are not consulted? That's right, taxation without representation, and we all know what that leads to.
Neither of us watches much TV, and though she explains things to me like "bumps" and "Mafia Wars" neither of us spends much time on Facebook, but her Droid is her pride and joy and she pointed out that while a mechanical defect in her phone would "ruin my social life" at least it wouldn't kill her -- remember the faulty O ring, remember the wrongly applied insulation panels? I'm sure that the families of the 16 men and women killed due to those errors do. People don't die "in the name of science" or to "save our American [british, German, Vietnamese] way of life"; they just die and hate every moment of it.
I asked her what she thought of the "scientific improvements in our lives" that the program has brought about. Her mom had just bought a cordless drill from Harbor Freight, so she remembered that one, and I have used those lightweight thermal blankets when camping and there is a baby food which uses "space technology" in its formula (I wonder how baby's managed before that?) and we found a few more on Google, but we couldn't find out how many millions each application had cost.
Most importantly, we reflected on the fact that we are prone to intense interests in strange subjects like mantids, anime, and the Victorian British Army, but we have no illusions that anyone else should be interested in them or that our personal interests give us any moral or intellectual superiority. and that is the impression that I got from your post. Was I wrong?
Say I were to state the following:
"Karl Popper's dictum on falsifiability as a criterion of a scientific theory is still regurgitated by introductory college texts on Biology whose authors appear to have no familiarity with his own corollary of that statement, that
"Darwinism is not a testable scientific theory, but a metaphysical research program." It is a pity that many undergraduates are more interested in frat parties and dating than in understanding the fundamental elements of their subject."
Doesn't that appear a little heavy, perhaps even a little condescending?
Sunny says that she doesn't care one way or the other about the program, though she has no illusions that the money saved will find its way back to the American public. I take the more extreme view that it was conceived as a Cold War propaganda device which costs far more than it provides for the tax payers who support it and that though it has contributed much to science, it has long reached the point of diminishing returns, and there is no justification for the expense of continuing it.
Tucker also agrees with you, though. Laika is one of his heroes.