A quick look at the Scientific Literacy wikipedia page pulls up this definition of scientific literacy. A scientifically literate person can:
And a few graphics of scientific literacy by country, where one of the top countries is significantly below 50%:
So what's going on here?
All of the talk about cultural relativity lately got me to wondering how scientific the scientific revolution actually was, and how distinct 'western' cultures actually are from their developing counterparts.
What this evidence makes it look like to me is that the scientific revolution was more of a capitalist/technology revolution than an ushering in of enlightenment and cognitive growth. Basically our very best and brightest were given an avenue to innovate and improve the lives of communities of people who have no intrinsic understanding of that innovation. In other words most people reap the rewards of science without really understanding it.
So as for cultural relativity there is a kind of perception that western culture is somehow superior and enlightened, where in reality it's just more complex, and due to technical innovation it's easier for people in these communities to survive and reproduce. The communities of the west at their very basic take on the same kind of form as any other, non-Western community, and are no more altruistic or forgiving, they're just rich. That wealth gives people the appearance of being civilized, but really we just don't have a lot of reason to fight.
- Understand, experiment, and reason as well as interpret scientific facts and their meaning
- Ask, find, or determine answers to questions derived from curiosity about everyday experiences
- Describe, explain, and predict natural phenomena
- Read articles with understanding of science in the popular press and engage in social conversation about the validity of the conclusions
- Identify scientific issues underlying national and local decisions and express positions that are scientifically and technologically informed
- Evaluate the quality of scientific information on the basis of its source and the methods used to generate it
- Pose and evaluate arguments based on evidence and to apply conclusions from such arguments appropriately
And a few graphics of scientific literacy by country, where one of the top countries is significantly below 50%:
So what's going on here?
All of the talk about cultural relativity lately got me to wondering how scientific the scientific revolution actually was, and how distinct 'western' cultures actually are from their developing counterparts.
What this evidence makes it look like to me is that the scientific revolution was more of a capitalist/technology revolution than an ushering in of enlightenment and cognitive growth. Basically our very best and brightest were given an avenue to innovate and improve the lives of communities of people who have no intrinsic understanding of that innovation. In other words most people reap the rewards of science without really understanding it.
So as for cultural relativity there is a kind of perception that western culture is somehow superior and enlightened, where in reality it's just more complex, and due to technical innovation it's easier for people in these communities to survive and reproduce. The communities of the west at their very basic take on the same kind of form as any other, non-Western community, and are no more altruistic or forgiving, they're just rich. That wealth gives people the appearance of being civilized, but really we just don't have a lot of reason to fight.