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Jack's avatar

To be an effective policy advocate in an area with big unknowns, by definition you need to take liberties with the facts. Climate change is a good example: the IPCC reports paint a fairly nuanced picture, which the policy advocates then amp up to 11 in order to motivate action. You have to erase the asterisked equivocations. I'm not saying this is good, but it's how the sausage gets made.

For a scientist to participate in this directly brings an obvious risk to academic credibility, if they are seen as distorting/omitting the facts in the course of advocating for a position.

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Berder's avatar

> they avoid policy to seem “scientific”.

Could it be that instead they avoid policy talk because it is *not* scientific, never mind how it "seems"?

Scientists like results that can be demonstrated objectively, with measurements and statistics showing a significant result. Such results are more reliable than just people's opinions, which are often wrong, no matter how prestigious the people may be.

Whenever you have a community where people's opinions just feed back into each other, without an external governor in the form of "hard data," that community doesn't tend to make intellectual progress over time. Instead, the opinions of such a community drift in a random walk popularity contest, disconnected from reality. Religion; conspiracy theorists; flat earthers; homeopaths; astrologers; clothing fashion; literary theorists.

Sticking to scientific discussion *is* a policy, and a good one!

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