DoubtingThomas wrote:
Not all scientists are smart, but I think the average scientist is smarter than the average American.
i'd say that's very likely true. I think it's also very likely true that the average Supreme Court Justice is smarter than the average scientist.
Res Ipsa wrote: think it's reasonable to view law school as an extended exercise in critical thinking.
According to the economist, "One reason why people who learn more mathematics earn more is because doing maths makes you smarter and more productive. According to Clancy Blair, a professor of psychology at NYU, the act of performing mathematical calculations improves reasoning, problem-solving skills, behaviour, and the ability to self-regulate. These skills are associated with the pre-frontal cortex part of the brain, which continues to develop into your early 30s. "
i think we've been down this road before. A quote from a single scientist on any topic doesn't tell me anything except that scientist's opinion. Is his opinion generally accepted by the applicable scientific community? Do any scientists have a different opinion and what is it? What does the overall filed of scientific literature look like?
Picking a single scientist who says something one agrees with as authority on a subject is what global warming deniers do -- not critical thinkers.
I think we need scientific and mathematical minds in Congress and the Supreme Court. Law experts are trained in critical thinking, but I am not sure if they are trained to avoid mental gymnatics. Scientists are not perfect, but they do a lot of Math and are trained to avoid biases.[/quote]
I don't think you really appreciate the fact that the strength of science as a process is not based on training individual scientists to avoid bias. It is the methodology, not the individuals, that can reduce the effect of bias. in my opinion, you place way too much faith in individual scientists. Just for an example, some of the most extreme global warming deniers have been physicists. One of the most extreme HIV deniers was a ground breaking microbiologist. There are tons of examples of brilliant scientists who get things horribly wrong when they venture out of their own narrow specialty. There's nothing magical about being a scientist. And see no reason to believe that a trained paleogeologist would produce better judicial decisions any more than I would believe that a trained jurist would make a better geologist.
“The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists.”
― Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 1951