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Earth Education Science

Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge 681

conoviator writes Bill Nye, one of the foremost science educators in the United States states that only the upper crust members of American science and technology (with degrees from top tier schools) understand science, particularly climate change. He opines that "regular software writers" dwell in the realm of the semi-science-literate. Nye rates science education in the U.S. an F. ("But if it makes you feel any better, you can say a B-minus.")
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Bill Nye Disses "Regular" Software Writers' Science Knowledge

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  • Good grief... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:03PM (#49108443)

    Bill Nye, one of the foremost science educators in the United States...

    I think that's overstating it a bit. I don't know what Nye's bona fides are (some: bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering in 1977), certainly he's a knowledgeable science guy who has done much to interest kids and young adults in science, and of course there is his Great Debate with the "Intelligent Design" idiots. But "one of the foremost science educators"? Hmmm.

    states that only the upper crust members of American science and technology (with degrees from top tier schools) understand science, particularly climate change....

    Well SNOOT SNOOT, my good mad! Not an MIT grad? Did'nt go to Stanford? Hit the bricks! You opinions, masters, PhD, or whatever? Not worth the paper your diploma was printed on.

    Good grief.

    Of course Nye is a Cornell University guy, so, you know, everyone not of the Ivy League is suspect. I wonder which secret society he is a member of...

    Science in the US get's low grades? University in general in the US gets low grades. Why? It's not about education, it's all about money. And football, don't forget the football.

    So let's just solve this by insulting everyone. Washington State University knows nothing about medical science. Oregon State University knows zilch about forestry (or is that not science?). There are many well known public and private universities that while not up to Bill Nye's Ivy Standard, do good and great science.

    Nye is off the beam.

    • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:08PM (#49108457)
      He's still alive?

      Fifteen year old article on his death [theonion.com].

      I was quite saddened when I thought that the United States had lost one of its premiere science guys...
    • Re:Good grief... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:12PM (#49108485) Journal
      To be fair, he was just answering the question an interviewer asked him. It's not like he was writing a thesis or anything. Someone asked him his opinion, and he gave it.

      I can tell you, I've given much, much stupider opinions of my own before.
      • Re:Good grief... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:35PM (#49108911)

        Someone asked him his opinion, and he gave it.

        A fairly accurate opinion, in my opinion. CS people are better educated than the average person, but many of them are still surprisingly ignorant about scientific topics.. Many of them don't even understand how computers actually work.

        • Re:Good grief... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Capsaicin ( 412918 ) * on Sunday February 22, 2015 @11:30PM (#49109125)

          CS people are better educated than the average person, but many of them are still surprisingly ignorant about scientific topics.

          And neither should we expect them to be experts outside their own field. I should have no reasonable expectation that a farmer (Nye wrote "regular software writers and farmers") would have expertise in astrophysics for example. And as science requires ever more specialisation, I should have no reasonable expectation either that an astrophysicist be an expert in pharmacology (just don't try telling any physicist that! ;)

          The problem is not so much the lack of knowledge about "scientific topics," it the lack of humility in regard to those who have knowledge. You are free, of course, to contradict the orthodoxy in absolutely any field of science, but it is impertient to do so unless you have done the hard yards and made yourself an expert. The knowledge, the skill rather, that everyone ought to possess (and this IMO is more important than direct knowledge of "science topics") is the skill to assess the credibility and authoritativeness of sources of scientific "information." It is this skill, in light of the increasing supply of disinformation, that a science education ought to impart.

          You may think that measles isn't that serious (you'd be wrong), but it could just as easily have been polio. The inability to sort out scientific information from scientific disinformation kills!

      • by readin ( 838620 )
        He did answer the question with what I think is a reasonable answer. The only problem I have with his answer is that a guy whose claim to fame isn't science but being a TV star is presuming himself capable of giving grades to the rest of us.

        A good CS program usually requires a good STEM course load. You have to take classes like Physics, Chemistry, Numerical Analysis, etc.. So a CS educated developer should have some understanding of science, but of course in day to day life he probably won't be doing
      • Re:Good grief... (Score:5, Informative)

        by budgenator ( 254554 ) on Monday February 23, 2015 @09:11AM (#49111057) Journal

        Considering the way he and Al Gore were savaged for blatant scientific fraud over at WUTWT in Al Gore and Bill Nye FAIL at doing a simple CO2 experiment [wattsupwiththat.com], his opinion doesn't carry much weigjht. If somebody is going to tell us we are scientifically illiterate, at least find somebody with more chops than Science Fair Baking Soda Vulcanoes.

    • by The Rizz ( 1319 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:13PM (#49108495)

      Wow, holy crap is this article being intentionally bad at characterizing what Nye said in the article. The "F" rating was for overall population in the USA (based on the high level of climate denial).

      His comment about him writing that you need to be from a top-tier school is wrong, as well - he was taking about how we have top-tier scientists in the US (and gave a few schools as examples) and compared them not to non-ivy schools, but to farmers and CS majors who talk about climate change as if they're experts.

      Read the linked article - Nye intimated nothing that the summary does.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Missing footnote after Posted by timothy*

        *Not checked for factual accuracy.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:43PM (#49108707)

        We're talking about analyzing a few sentences that were jotted down by an interviewer, but still, Mr. Nye's attitude is not so impressive.

        He suggests that one's view on climate change is sufficient to determine one's abilities to understand science. Mr. Nye must have been speaking passionately and not intelligently because that assertion is easy to refute by almost any measure of science understanding. What he probably meant to say was climate change is a very important issue and if you disagree with my ideas, then you are don't understand this important topic. Instead, he said, if you disagree with me on this narrow topic, you don't understand anything about any part of science.

        Then he continues with his "passion" to suggest that regular software writers are not scientifically literate. Maybe he wasn't referring to the software writers at Google because they are in the top tier and therefore not regular. Unless they don't agree with his views, in which case, they're stupid.

        Look, climate change is real and important. Bill Nye may be an intelligent guy, but unfortunately too many smart guys are bigoted and dismissive of others and as a result actually damage the causes that they claim to champion.

        • by garyisabusyguy ( 732330 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:09PM (#49108827)

          Classic, 'I know you are, but what am I' response'

          Aside from the well written post above by GP (The Rizz), which outlines how horrible the summary of the article was, I think that the very heart of the matter is that the F- minus crowd relies almost entirely on emotional response and belief when faced with a situation that requires scientific analysis

          You are exacerbating the errors of your beliefs by refusing to look into what he actually said (much less the actions that he has demonstrated) and blindly accusing Nye of acting on emotions

          If there is a single lesson to the American public it is to adopt scientific methods, turn down the volume on your beliefs when the facts in front of your negate them, and learn to handle your emotions when faced with the possibility that you are wrong

          Cognitive dissonance can be a very painful feeling, and learning how to handle it can lead to an increased capability in dealing with the facts that life will present to you

        • by The Rizz ( 1319 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:11PM (#49108831)

          He suggests that one's view on climate change is sufficient to determine one's abilities to understand science [...] if you disagree with me on this narrow topic, you don't understand anything about any part of science.

          Exactly where does he say that? He doesn't say that or even intimate it. He's using climate change as an example to demonstrate his point. (A near-unanimous consensus among scientists maintain that climate change is happening and is a serious problem; over 50% of the US population disagrees. This demonstrates that the US population is largely science-illiterate or science-hostile.) It does not follow from this that everyone who disagrees with him on this point is bad at science, but when 50+% of the population disagrees with scientists for non-science reasons (politics, propaganda, FUD) it is a very real indicator that there is a problem with basic understanding of science.

          He's not saying "scientists researching this who don't agree with me are bad scientists". He's saying "non-scientists saying the bulk of scientists are liars because they don't want to believe them is a problem".

      • He argues about climate denial, and resorts to insults attempting to make the point. Antagonizing people is probably the worst method of teaching them. Sure, he was answering questions but they were _his_answers. I never thought of him as a smart guy, but a decent entertainer. Entertainers need to make noise every now and then to stay relevant in that business. I know this as Sophistry, not Science.

      • Really, the summary of this article has made me want to say, FUCK YOU, SLASHDOT! Fuck you for posting shit that really isn't true, slandering a person that I hold in high esteem, and all for stupid fucking mouse clicks.

        Fucking bottom feeders.

    • Re:Good grief... (Score:4, Informative)

      by horm ( 2802801 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:13PM (#49108497)
      He visited my university when I was still in school, and I had the opportunity to meet him. The man is an asshole.
      • Re:Good grief... (Score:5, Informative)

        by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) * on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:20PM (#49108571)

        He visited my university when I was still in school, and I had the opportunity to meet him. The man is an asshole.

        He lived here in Seattle for many years before he became a Super Star, and many people here (including his ex-girlfriend) agree with your assesment.

      • I know a few people who have met him, and they all have told me the same.

        I guess you don't get famous as a "personality" if you're not a self-aggrandizing Type-A schmuck.

      • by rwa2 ( 4391 ) *

        He visited my university when I was still in school, and I had the opportunity to meet him. The man is an asshole.

        Eh, it goes both ways. I was volunteering at the ASME coffee shop at the Cornell Sibley School of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering student lounge, when Bill Nye stopped by to say 'hi' on his way to give a talk in an auditorium.

        Of course, we grew up in the Mr. Wizard generation, so the students studying in the lounge kinda glanced up at him, shrugged, and went back on to work with their problem sets.

        I'm still sort of kicking myself for not trying to sell him a bagel or muffin, or even giving him one

    • Hey man, he holds a patent on ballet shoes...are you gonna say that's snooty too? That's what I thought, buddy.

      • Hey man, he holds a patent on ballet shoes...are you gonna say that's snooty too? That's what I thought, buddy.

        You put me in my place, Guy Five.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Just because you've self-taught science well doesn't mean every programmer has. He's right. Most programmers are just ordinary people, and most ordinary people aren't very science literate.

      A comp sci degree, if you even have one as a programmer, doesn't ask very much in the way of physical sciences -- it's a math degree as much as it's anything besides plain programmer trainer, in my experience. Doesn't cover many of the skills needed for reading scientific literature or doing proper experimental design (wh

    • Re: Good grief... (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The summary was deliberately provocative. What the TV personality actually said was far less elitist.

      The problem is that he is right, but he would disagree about the evidence. E.g. the fact that the US has spent millions giving dietary advice which is alleged to be science based, and which the medical industry and many others have taken as gosphel, when in fact it is all antiscience, is a great example. They jumped repeatedly from hypothesis to conclusion. Cholesterol correlates with heart disease, food has

    • by muhula ( 621678 )

      Giving the entire US an F in science reminds me of the Doomsday clock (a few minutes from the world's destruction!!). Making these sort of statements is just hyperbole intended to grab attention. Saying these sort of things immediately drops the speaker's credibility.

      • Re:Good grief... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:01PM (#49108785)

        That's actually something he's spot-on about. Science knowledge in general in the US is absolutely dreadful.

        If you don't believe me, try asking people some science questions and see how many of them even get it close. What is the chemical formula for water? How old is the Earth? What's the difference between a dominant and recessive trait? What does half-life mean? What is red shift? What is kinetic energy?

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:33PM (#49108649)

      Of course Nye is a Cornell University guy, so, you know, everyone not of the Ivy League is suspect.

      I'd like to introduce him to my Uncle - doctorate in chemistry from Cornell, literally hundreds of publications and citations, and thinks global warming is bunk. Hee hee.

      • re: your uncle (Score:4, Insightful)

        by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:39PM (#49108941) Journal

        Honestly? I probably have a whole list of people who it would be interesting to introduce to your uncle, then.

        I've almost lost count of the number of times I've watched someone with no real scientific background in the field make a blanket statement declaring anyone who doesn't believe in climate change/global warming is clearly an idiot.

        The fact is, things are much different than that. Quite a few folks who are FAR from being idiots think it's fear-mongering, misplaced nonsense. (I'm certainly no climate expert myself, but I think I fall someplace on the spectrum far from "clueless idiot" -- and I've read enough compelling information from both sides of the argument to feel like the "best stance" to take is one of questioning everything. If we're talking about pretty painless changes we can do, such as substitution of one chemical for another in a product, to reduce the ozone layer depletion - great. Why not? But demanding people spend billions of dollars to try to "fix" the whole climate situation? That just seems like a REALLY tall order for something that reeks of special interest agendas, right now, especially when we don't even have a consensus on a solution that would definitely reverse the claimed problem and revert it to "normal" in a useful time-frame.
         

    • If Nye is "one of the foremost science educators in the United States" and the US gets an F, what does that say about him?
  • by Skarjak ( 3492305 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:09PM (#49108465)
    Go read any slashdot article on climate change and Bill Nye's claims become self-evident.
    • by im_thatoneguy ( 819432 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:41PM (#49108957)

      I've found this to be true also especially in Medical circles. I know a lot of doctors who have taken the fact that they are "Smart" aka studied intensely on a subject who then believe that they are world class economists, physicists, climatologists etc. When they are as much ideologues as your average indoctrinated grunt but have enough intelligence to frame their ignorance well.

      It's not even limited to Climate Change. Look at almost any post:
      "Scientists discover new form of metal."
      "Pfffft, how did they overcome the ion bonding in the alloy. Can't be done."

      No matter the subject there are a bunch of idiotic complaints about the quality of the research done.

  • What he really said (Score:5, Interesting)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:10PM (#49108469) Journal
    He wasn't singling-out software writers (ie, programmers) in the interview. To summarize what he actually said:

    "Scientists in America are really good, but average people need to understand science, too. Average people, including programmers."
    • Whoa! Nothing like the summary, eh? Flamebait article looking for hits.

    • by davecb ( 6526 )
      Very much so... As my father would say, "please attack me for what I said, not something you made up"
      • Very much so... As my father would say, "please attack me for what I said, not something you made up"

        Yeah, that's worth repeating. If people tried to understand what was being said before attacking........half the news stories on the internet would disappear.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      There are a lot of highly educated people, doctors, lawyers, computer scientists, who do not have a good grasp on the scientific process and what it means when a scientist reports a result in research. Most think that they are reporting a immutable fact, which is completely wrong.

      What worries me is that these people who think they are so educated are not really able to differentiate between what they know and what they don't know. I would say that a course in philosophy might fix this, but that would fix

  • Says Howie. (Score:5, Funny)

    by MouseTheLuckyDog ( 2752443 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:12PM (#49108489)

    Says the guy who doesn't even have a science degree. Just a masters in Engineering.

    Hey "SCience GUy" I'll see your crappy Masters in Engineer and raise you a PhD in Mathematical Physics.

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

      Technically, an engineering degree is a "Degree in Science in Engineering." So there.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by The Rizz ( 1319 )

      I would opine that anyone who refers to the field of software development as "software writing" hasn't had much to do with the development industry at any point in their life and wouldn't really know how science literate most developers are.

      I have, and I'd agree with what he actually said. In my experience, programmers run the entire gamut from amazingly brilliant to drooling idiot - at about the same rate as most professions. But even there, their knowledge focuses much more upon the areas of science that intersect with computers and technology, and less into the areas of natural science. Likewise programmers are more likely to know about psychology and human nature that deal with aesthetics and information processing and natural interfaces,

  • Lots of climate change deniers, cornucopians and similar delusional folks in software development.

    • Lots of climate change deniers, cornucopians and similar delusional folks in software development.

      The same as there are in any other field. IT isn't full of science nerds. We have all sorts in this profession.

      Example - when I started programming ages ago, one of my fellow programmers was working on an Astrological program. Another was developing something that would enable him to pick winners on the horse races. I suspect the latter was more scientifically based than the former.

      Personally in my spare time I transmute base metals into gold. And vice versa.

      • Personally in my spare time I transmute base metals into gold. And vice versa.

        That's actually a thing, though.

    • You mean a skeptic like Freeman Dyson? I don't think he's a developer though he is a premier physicist.

      • Dyson is a skeptic, not a denier. He has stated on multiple occasions that agrees with the consensus position that human emissions are responsible for most, if not all, of the warming. Most of his criticisms appear to be about he would solve the same problem with a Dyson Sphere, eg: GM trees that grow diamonds.
  • Michael Faraday, was from a top notch university . The climate has certainly changed these days !
  • Wow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kamapuaa ( 555446 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:15PM (#49108523) Homepage

    Does this guy read Slashdot? How does he know that people who are good with software could have such poorly informed and ridiculous opinions on matters of scientific interest? Makes me want to give the guy a high five! [youtube.com]

  • Misleading Summary (Score:5, Insightful)

    by estitabarnak ( 654060 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:16PM (#49108529)

    Summary is misleading. Nye basically says US as a whole is failing when it comes to educating average people about science. He admits that, sure, we have top top-tier institutions and scientists, but we need to do a better job educating the average person.

    Hardly the swipe aimed specifically at Slashdotters that TFS makes it out to be. Furthermore, if we use /. as a case study, given some of the gems I've seen here recently, I think "semi-science-literate" isn't a bad estimate of the average.

    • by Headw1nd ( 829599 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:29PM (#49108629)
      Second this. Not only is the summary totally misleading, it bespeaks an insecurity that might well be grounded in truth. Or it's just rabble rousing, hard to tell intent with so little of the submission.
      • Or it's just rabble rousing, hard to tell intent with so little of the submission.

        The trouble with the Slashdot rabble is that we are all so jolly easy to rouse!

        Seriously, we're total clickbait-whores, even if it only amounts to a "this crap insults my intelligence" or "what the hell is this doing on /." post. Trouble is, every time we do that, Dice wins at trolling Slashdot.

        Yeah, I'm guilty too.

  • Mostly right. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by rjh ( 40933 ) <rjh@sixdemonbag.org> on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:36PM (#49108675)

    Look at how many people think they're scientifically literate because they think --

    1. The Earth goes around the sun. It doesn't, and in fact, this is just as wrong as saying the sun goes round the Earth. Both positions implicitly advocate there's some privileged and special frame of reference in which to view the universe, and Einstein says there isn't one. It's sort of like people who say there's no such thing as centrifugal force: stand inside a rotating reference frame and derive Newton's Laws and yes, yes it exists, and yes, yes it's real. The mistake: "some reference frames are more true than others." The reality: "you pay your money and you take your frame of reference."
    2. Conservation of energy. Conservation of energy only happens in a static spacetime; astronomy says our spacetime is dynamical; energy is not conserved in our universe.
    3. E=mc**2. Only true for objects at rest, and pretty much nothing in the universe is at rest. The real equation is E**2=m**2c**4 + p**2c**2. This is why light can have energy without mass: a photon's energy is carried entirely in its momentum.
    4. If you measure a particle's position, you'll necessarily tweak its velocity. That's the Uncertainty Principle. No, that's the Observer Effect. The Uncertainty Principle isn't a statement about the fidelity of our measurement apparatus: it's a statement about the total information available, period. If you think the data actually exists but we just can't measure it, then you're subscribing to a Hidden Variables interpretation of quantum mechanics, and the Aspect experiments put a pretty comprehensive set of nails in that coffin.

    ... and that's just the tip of the iceberg. You don't have to talk to flat earthers and antivaxxers to see profound science illiteracy; usually, the people condemning the science illiteracy are just as wrong, but about different things.

    • Re:Mostly right. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by xigxag ( 167441 ) on Monday February 23, 2015 @01:35AM (#49109553)

      What you're describing isn't scientific illiteracy; it's mere ignorance of certain specific scientific facts. Big deal. Nobody knows more than the tiniest fraction of true facts about the universe anyway. And unless you're an actual physicist or cosmologist, knowing that E^2=m^2c^4 + p^2c^2 isn't going to give you a leg up on some poor fool who only knows the standard coffee mug equation.

      By way of comparison, not knowing what an Oxford comma is or how to define a subordinate clause doesn't make you illiterate. Not knowing how to read is what makes you illiterate. Similarly, people are scientifically illiterate because they don't know how to "science." They're clueless how to separate fact from propaganda, good science from mumbo jumbo.

  • by GoddersUK ( 1262110 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:42PM (#49108703)

    Well, this is the world’s most technically advanced society, and we have people denying climate change. These guys are still in deep denial, and future generations, what few of them will be alive, are just going to go, “What were you freaking people doing? What was wrong with you?”

    No. This is why Nye, and people like him, are not "the foremost science educators" anywhere. This is not science. Science is not about being correct, science is not about deferring to authorities; science is a process for understanding our world, for explaining and predicting. It's a philosophy, not a set of facts. People in the future will be saying “What were you freaking people doing? What was wrong with you?”, but they won't be saying it to climate change "deniers" or "sceptics" - they will be saying it to the "science educators" who thought levelling charges of heresy was a better course than providing a reasoned, evidence based argument.

    You see if you truly believe in the scientific method, and the wider philosophy of rationality, you provide a reasoned, evidence based defence of your position and attack on your opponents position. You don't tell them that they're not qualified to speak because they don't have a PhD from Harvard, or because they disagree with the "consensus". Science does not rely on qualification or authority or consensus and the myth that it does is the biggest threat to scientific literacy today.

    And show some f***ing consistency, please. If you're going to shout down "conservatives" for being unqualified to talk about climate change please shout down "liberals" and "greens" that talk about, and accept, climate change as being unqualified to talk about it too.

    • Except on people who are willing to listen to reason and accept evidence. Like for example, take the anti-vaccine crowd.

      You show them studies that say that the risk of the vaccine is really tiny and there's no correlation of receiving vaccines with autism. They whip out Jenny McCarthy and other anecdotal evidence, and postulate vast conspiracies by Big Pharma to perpetuate the fantastically profitable vaccine industry even though vaccines are unbelievably dangerous. Fact is, Big Pharma makes its money on Viagra and pills for chronic diseases, not really on vaccines.

      If someone wants to believe something, your reasoned arguments and evidence based defense of your facts will never persuade them otherwise. Instead, they just end up believing even harder in what you challenged them on.

      --PeterM

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Orgasmatron ( 8103 )
        No snowflake believes that it is responsible for the avalanche.

        Vaccines have a non-zero risk. Not vaccinating one child has very little risk to that one child. The risk of not vaccinating is mostly in the aggregate, rather than the individual. I suspect that some fraction of the people not getting vaccines for their children are hoping to be free riders, trading one tiny risk for another.

        I don't know how common it is, my point is just that not wanting your kids vaccinated isn't necessarily the same a
        • by scruffy ( 29773 )

          In the end, I think the real problem is that we have unions running our schools for the benefit of the union members, rather than for the children.

          Well, Mr. Evidence Guy, does evidence change your opinion or not?

          http://voices.washingtonpost.c... [washingtonpost.com]

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Ooo I'll do it:

      Climate Change Deniers you're as wrong as anti-vaxxers and anti-nuclear power advocates.

      As to science being about reasoned evidence defenses. The reasoned evidence defenses of climate change science have been made. The people who deny it don't use science they use a misrepresentation of science or no science at all "Well it was hot yesterday!"

      So yes it's perfectly legitimate to slam conservatives who refuse to accept a reasoned well cited scientific paper on global warming and it's perfect

  • by Goldsmith ( 561202 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @09:53PM (#49108749)

    Ok "regular software programmers." Go actually read the article, and then come back and read the summary again.

    Now, Nye was trying to say that our technical work force is not trained in enough science. Maybe that's right, and maybe it's wrong, that would be a better discussion for Slashdot. Nye (or the reporter) obviously did a bad job here. At the same getting offended at being called less scientifically literate than the top tier of scientists doesn't help either.

  • by tompaulco ( 629533 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:00PM (#49108777) Homepage Journal
    What a coincidence, I always thought Bill Nye's knowledge of science was rather shallow. Apparently he thinks the same of me.
  • Synopsis (Score:5, Insightful)

    by meglon ( 1001833 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:17PM (#49108861)
    Whoever wrote the lead-in either can't read, doesn't understand basic English, or is a semi-science-literate who's butthurt for being called out as one. Nye hit's it pretty much on the head in his assessment... we have some fantastic scientists in this country, but they are surrounded by a huge morass of people who are intentionally ignorant and outright hostile to anything remotely intellectual; we need more scientists in this country, and less stupid.
  • Context matters (Score:5, Insightful)

    by joebagodonuts ( 561066 ) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `lnrkmc'> on Sunday February 22, 2015 @10:35PM (#49108915) Homepage Journal
    Bill Nye is an entertainer. Just because he used to play a character called "The Science Guy", that doesn't give him credibility on all matters pertaining to science. (yes I know he has an engineering degree-but that's a long time ago. He hasn't been paid as an engineer in decades) His opinion carries the same weight I would give to any entertainer's
  • by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Sunday February 22, 2015 @11:41PM (#49109163)

    ... Science as pop stars do about geopolitics. It is always painful to listen to some pop star lecture people about the middle east or the economic policy of the Fed. It is no less annoying when a television entertainer tries to browbeat basically everyone by suggesting that he's in some elite cliche of thinkers... when really he was paid to put on funny outfits and act WAY too excited about pouring baking soda into vinegar.

    Bill Nye is a poor man's Mr Wizard. Anyone remember Mr Wizard? Way better. And everyone notice how Mr Wizard has spent years acting like the smartest man in the universe long after he stopped even doing his show? Me neither. Get over yourself, Bill. You're not half as smart as you think you are and if the software engineers don't get it then you don't either.

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