When any given field takes half a lifetime of study to master, who can compare and contrast and properly weight the rate of progress in nanotechnology and cryptography and superstring theory and 610 other disciplines? Indeed, how do we even know whether the so-called scientists are not just lawmakers and politicians in disguise, as some conservatives suspect in fields as disparate as climate change, evolutionary biology, and embryonic-stem-cell research, and as I have come to suspect in almost all fields? [!!! -- SB]
I don’t necessarily dispute the point he makes. But I would like to offer as an alternative perspective Mencius Moldbug’s suggestion that paleoclimatology and climate modelling are not “science” – or at any rate we are not “cleaving reality at its joints” by using the term science to refer to both physics, with its adequately falsifiable hypotheses and controllable experiments, and the likes of climate change and economic modelling. Moldbug regards these as cargo cult sciences which derive a spurious aura of authenticity from their appropriation of the term “science”, and argues that their inherent resistance to the power of the scientific method allows false beliefs to proliferate in these areas if these beliefs serve the interests of political power (which is welded to the University system and its ability to manipulate public opinion.)
There is a significantly greater likelihood that “climate scientists” and “climate science” as a whole are systematically corrupt as truth-finders, in comparison to (for example) physicists. So Moldbug would be more likely to attribute intellectual stagnation to this corrupted-by-power “scientism” of the University system than to the existence of “overspecialized, insular scientific fields” in particular (although the two are not mutually exclusive).
The current crisis of housing and financial leverage contains many hidden links to broader questions concerning long-term progress in science and technology. On one hand, the lack of easy progress makes leverage more dangerous, because when something goes wrong, macroeconomic growth cannot offer a salve; time will not cure liquidity or solvency problems in a world where little grows or improves with time.
Again to supply the Moldbuggian perspective, the ultimate cause of the economic crisis is maturity transformation, of which fractional reserve banking (with its scalar rather than temporally-based accounting) is one example. Frequent banking crises are to be expected until such a time as the maturity-mismatching banking system can no longer reply on implict loan guarantees from the state, and therefore ceases to exist (since in a genuinely free market economic system, banks that practise maturity transformation inevitably go bust and stay bust).
According to this analysis, “liquidity problems” are in fact evidence of the free market assigning a perfectly reasonable (non-MT) value to the overpriced assets in the banking system. And quantitative easing is a means of attempting to push the system from this equilibrium back into yet another cycle of unstable maturity-transformation practices. Therefore (if one finds Moldbug persuasive) at best the economic crisis has merely proximate links to “long-term progress in science and technology”.
Not much evidence in that thar persuasion.
SIAI benefactor and VC Peter Thiel has an excellent article at National Review about the stagnating progress of science and technology, which he attributes to poorly-grounded political opposition, widespread scientific illiteracy, and overspecialized, insular scientific fields. He warns that this stagnation will undermine the growth that past policies have relied on.
Noteworthy excerpts (bold added by me):
In relation to concerns expressed here about evaluating scientific field soundness:
Grave indictors:
HT: MarginalRevolution