Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

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Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab

Transcript of Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Page 1: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Science,The Big Picture,and the Petri Dish

David P. AndersonUC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab

Page 2: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Earth as Petri dish

● Human activities– land clearing, logging, hunting, fishing– roads, dams, pollution

● Species extinction ● Global warming

animalsplants

microbes

animalsplants

microbes

animalsplants

microbes

atmosphere

ocean

ecosystems

Page 3: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Possible outcomes

● Everything somehow works out OK● Humans become sustainable

– but massive starvation, loss of many other species

● All large animals become extinct– plants/microbes survive and resume

evolution● Mars scenario

– atmosphere/water lost; total extinction

Page 4: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Bacterial thinking● Priorities:

– Consumption– Reproduction– Growth

● Selfishness (individual, group)● Small conceptual scale

– Temporal– Spatial

Page 5: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

The Big Picture

Page 6: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Science as Truth detector

● Reproducibility● Experiment design● No power hierarchy● Constant questioning of assumptions● No ulterior motives

Theorymathematical/

statistical

evidence prediction

Page 7: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Orders of magnitude

10-17 meters = a quark10-14 meters = an atom10-9 meters = a molecule10-5 meters = a cell101 meter = a human being107 meters = the Earth1012 meters = the solar system1017 meters = the milky way galaxy (100,000 light-years)1025 meters = the universe (15 billion years light-years)

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Page 9: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Occam's Razor and the Axiomatic method

Is there an analogous basis for ethics?

Zermelo-Frankel Set Theory:

Page 10: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Science respects Mystery

● Quantum mechanics● Chaos theory● Godel's incompleteness theorem

– no theory decides everything– the Continuum Hypothesis

False maybeundecidable

maybe True

Integers (1,2,...),rationals (n/m)

Real numbers(3.14159...)

??< <

Page 11: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

The achievements of Science

● Understanding at wide range of scales● There is only one science● It has liberated humanity● It has empowered humanity (for better

or worse)

Page 12: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Science and nature

● The Earth is not the center of the universe

● Humans were not created separately from the rest of nature

● Humans are a part of the web of life, and depend on it for their survival

Page 13: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Our place in the Universe

● Our lifetime is extremely brief● The world is tiny, and we're stuck here● But we have intelligence and creativity

Carl Sagan:Intelligence is the universe's way of understanding itself.

Page 14: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Scientific government

● The War on Drugs– $1 Trillion spent since 1973– 10 times more drug addicts today than in

1973– 2.1 million people in prison, 25% for drugs– 10% of black males are currently in prison– Dutch drug policy (public-health based)

● drug use is 1/3 of U.S. (hard and soft)● incarceration rate is 11% of U.S.

● Sex education– ignorance doesn't work

Page 15: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

Game TheoryThe mathematical study of conflict and cooperation.“Rational behavior” == bacterial thinking.Example: The Prisoner's Dilemma:

2, 2

1, 13, 0

0, 3prisoner 1

ffo

don't confess

prisoner 2

confess

confess

don'tconfess

“Nash equilibrium”

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Anti-Science and bacterial thinking

● Religion– A society-stabilizing institution

● Chauvinism● Out-of-control Capitalism

Page 17: Science, The Big Picture, and the Petri Dish David P. Anderson UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab.

● Science is relativistic and unemotional● Science doesn't try to be comforting● Science doesn't provide simple answers● The role of evolution

Why is Science losing?

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What can we do?

● Articulate goals● Promote big-picture thinking

– improve education, teach skepticism– promote a scientific belief system– my contribution: volunteer computing

● or use game theory to achieve goals in spite of bacterial thinking