The Science of Elections

The Science of Elections

6 years ago
Anonymous $roN-uuAfLt

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/the-science-of-elections/

Science has always been political. The Enlightenment brought forth a series of revolutions that transformed both our understanding of the universe and our role in it. New scientific discoveries often threaten the justification for power of those in authority, placing scientists at the center of politics. Galileo’s confrontation with the Catholic Church comes immediately to mind, but tensions between scientists and political authorities erupt with relative frequency.

One of the early figures of the English Enlightenment, Thomas Hobbes, fled to Paris over concern about how his political works would be taken by Parliament (Hobbes was a royalist, and hostile to the Catholic Church). This was not without good reason, as Bertrand Russell would later recall in The Impact of Science on Society:

The Science of Elections

Jun 14, 2018, 6:28pm UTC
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/the-science-of-elections/ > Science has always been political. The Enlightenment brought forth a series of revolutions that transformed both our understanding of the universe and our role in it. New scientific discoveries often threaten the justification for power of those in authority, placing scientists at the center of politics. Galileo’s confrontation with the Catholic Church comes immediately to mind, but tensions between scientists and political authorities erupt with relative frequency. > One of the early figures of the English Enlightenment, Thomas Hobbes, fled to Paris over concern about how his political works would be taken by Parliament (Hobbes was a royalist, and hostile to the Catholic Church). This was not without good reason, as Bertrand Russell would later recall in The Impact of Science on Society: