Originally posted by wolram
...
i think a panel of scientists should be given the task
of producing upto date science news on a dedicated TV
program shown at laest twice a week.
so the public will start talking science...
this is potentially a very interesting discussion, partly
because we have different perspectives---you are in the UK
where they have the BBC, others of us are in USA where
there is the "Discovery Channel" which is a
market-driven commercial way of satisfying a directive for
"educational" programming, still others of us are in Canada,
France, Germany, India, Israel etc.
but since you and I are the only ones here at the moment let
us think about the problem of science journalism and science media
just in the UK and USA.
For me the main issue is that science-communication should not "dumb down" or "hype up" but rather it should
translate.
And I think of great explainers like in Victorian England there were these public lectures by greats like J. Priestley and M. Faraday and they would discuss everyday stuff like how magnets and candle flames work, but in a solid respectable scientific way---just in language that the general audience could understand.
And I think of Carl Sagan and Richard Feynman and remember Feynman saying "you don't understand something until you can explain it to [someone you meet at a party or at the bus-stop or your mother or whatever] general audience." A lot of great people have said this. A math teacher named John Kelly said it too, but not many know of him.
In the US if you turn on Discovery Channel you MAY get semi mystical stuff about the Great Pyramids and the Ancient Mayans.
The people in control may think that to get RATINGS (to capture large numbers of viewers) they must dumb down and open the floodgates to speculation that verges on pseudoscience and appeals to deeply rooted mystical tendencies which they believe are in the audience.
Or they hype it up with a lot of Gee Whiz We are Probing the Secrets of the Universe talk. Sci-Pornography. And you also MAY get respectable science journalism! I don't know because I rarely sample educational TV and I have always gotten stuff that was too dumbed down to stomach. Meritorious stuff may well exist and I just missed it.
I think the key to good science journalism is the idea that you are not relaying Authority in a dumbed down version but instead you are TRANSLATING the book of natural philosophy from some obscure language (Greek, Hebrew, Hieroglyphics) into plain English.
You can assume that your reader does not want an Authoritative Pronouncement telling what he or she should think. You can assume that your reader is just as intelligent as the average scientist but simply doesn't understand their language. If they can read it in plain English they don't need Authority because they can form their own opinions.
In the long run their is no way to cheat. The scientific enterprise must speak openly and honestly to the public---and reveal mainstream differences of opinion too. (I don't favor giving "equal time" to the fringe, but controversy within the mainstream should not be concealed---in fact it is part of what makes the whole enterprise interesting.)
Wolram from what you say I guess there isn't a UK science channel or even a biweekly program! This is incredible. I literally can't believe this. Maybe you can clarify, be more detailed. Surely there must be something on BBC about science!
BTW do you know PhysicsWeb's IOP (institute of physics) magazine called "Physics World"?
The November 2003 issue is on Quantum Gravity and it has 3 invited articles one by Susskind (superstring) one by Rovelli (loop) and one by Amelino-Camilia (phenomenology, experimental/observational testing).
Susskind's article, or some version of it, is online at the Physics World site. I haven't seen Rovelli's article. It seems like a bright idea on the part of the Physics World editors, whether the articles turned out good or not.