Posts Tagged ‘science’

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Duck and Cover, photograph by Walter Albertin

Duck and Cover While U.S. Scientific Leadership Evaporates

June 15, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy

The previously unquestioned American leadership in science is evaporating. Groundbreaking medical research is stopping abruptly. Research institutes at NIH are disappearing. As this unfolds, the response of many people in supposed roles of scientific leadership has been to duck and take cover. Tell us when it’s over and we can get back to work. Yes, […]

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Peasant with Red Headscarf, painting by Filipp Malyavin / WikiArt

The Problem When Cynicism Proliferates: Everything Is B.S.

April 13, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

“Political cynicism is rising in many democracies throughout the world.” Explaining this, Ariel Hasell, Audrey Halversen, and Brian Weeks ascribe it to the influence of social media and demonstrate it with data from the 2020 U.S. presidential election. The trouble is that when cynicism proliferates, everything seems like B.S. So this week when Education Secretary […]

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A New Cancel Culture Censoring Science and Research

A New Cancel Culture Censoring Science and Research

February 19, 2025

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

A new cancel culture is sweeping through science and research, censoring mentions of bad words under the new administration. The bad words relate to things like equity, bias, and diversity. Openness? Probably not a good thing to talk about if you don’t want your research funding flagged. This is a problem. Three researchers in pulmonary […]

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Public Confidence in Science Is High, but Declining

Public Confidence in Science Is High, but Declining

March 11, 2024

Consumer Trends, Scientific Meetings & Publications

We can point to any number of symptoms. The rise of measles because of skepticism about vaccination comes to mind. Certainly, we hear from people who reject scientific concepts about obesity. So it’s no surprise to us that a new report in PNAS documents high but declining public confidence in science. Arthur Lupia, David Allison, […]

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The Tension Between Cynicism, Skepticism, and Pragmatism

The Tension Between Cynicism, Skepticism, and Pragmatism

February 25, 2024

Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Are we cynical? We can surely find excuses to be. Examples of cynicism pop up at every glance. Certainly we see it in politics and public policy. Closer to home at ConscienHealth, people routinely find reasons for cynicism about all kinds of medical research and advice – especially nutrition and obesity. This is a real […]

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Are We Set to Emerge from a Dark Age in 2022?

Are We Set to Emerge from a Dark Age in 2022?

January 2, 2022

ConscienHealth, Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity

Perhaps this is a familiar pattern – a mixture of good news and bad news. The bad news is likely not really news. Many people are comparing our difficult circumstances of this past year to the so-called dark ages. But the good news is that it isn’t hard to see signs we are set to […]

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Dynamism of a Car

Following the Science into 2022

December 29, 2021

Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Following the science is a catchphrase in wide circulation throughout this past year with good reason. Scientists have been warning us about a number of threats to humanity and, at times, we seem to have dismissed those threats. Of course, COVID-19 and climate change are two very prominent examples that come to mind. But many […]

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Washing Hands

The Importance of Distinguishing Science from Ideology

March 14, 2020

Consumer Trends, Health & Obesity, Health Policy

Must everything be tribal and ideological? We think not. Yet avoiding this tendency is certainly hard for humans such as ourselves. Facing the health threat of COVID-19, we see a prime example of the importance of distinguishing science from ideology. It’s handwashing. The Most Effective Way to Prevent Transmission This is a matter scientific fact. […]

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Thatcheria Mirabilis, Japanese Wonder Shell

The Value of Curiosity

March 31, 2019

Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity, Health Policy, Scientific Meetings & Publications

How do smart people hold onto some stupid ideas? Motivated reasoning is one very important way. People start with a belief that’s very important to them. Then, they collect information to support it. Also, they arrange their information into a rationale that supports their belief. The result is a fortress of conviction. But one thing […]

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Passion for the Precision of Watchmaking

Overcoming Bias with a Passion for Objectivity

February 20, 2019

Food & Nutrition, Health & Obesity, Scientific Meetings & Publications

Objectivity is tedious. When survival is at stake, snap decisions can confer an advantage. Friend or foe? Fight or flee? We might not have time to collect and analyze data. And thus, humans brains are wired with shortcuts for making instant judgments. But those shortcuts come at a cost when we live in a modern […]

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