Affiliation:
1. Department of History and Philosophy of Science and Medicine, Indiana University
Abstract
This paper discusses the claim that science is “messy.” Part I argues first, that a good portion of today’s discussions about messy science is just a portrayal of familiar features of science in new terms. In the paper, I refer to this as “messy science talk.” Second, Part I draws out rhetorical functions of messy science talk, namely the denigration of science in the popular media and the celebration of the maverick. Part II identifies one way in which it is enlightening to think about mess in current science, namely in reference to the problems that scientists need to address. It also shows that we do not need an entirely new conceptual inventory to analyze these problems. “Mess” and “wicked problems” were a theme in operations research and theories of social planning in the 1970s. These older analyses can illuminate important characteristics of today’s scientific problems. Wicked problems cut across different disciplines, engage different stakeholders (including non-scientists), are fluid, and cannot even be clearly formulated. They are urgent and need to be addressed before sufficient evidence is in.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Multidisciplinary
Reference53 articles.
1. Balling, Robert C. Jr. 1994. Global Warming: Messy Models, Decent Data, Pointless Policy. Competitive Enterprise Institute. http://dolearchives.ku.edu/sites/dolearchive.drupal.ku.edu/files/files/historyday/originals/s-leg_462_007_001.pdf
2. The Dappled World
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