"... The Altenberg Conference the 'Woodstock' of evolution science
that 'promises to be far more transforming for the world' ..."
Sam Smith
Several months ago, Suzan Mazur wrote of an important upcoming
conference of scientists who did not reject the theory Darwin's
beliefs about evolution but who thought things that had been learned
in the succeeding century and a half might expand or alter some of
the underlying assumptions.
A reasonable, unsurprising, yet important project, one that one
naturally expects of scientists. And newsworthy. In fact, however,
only the New Zealand online journal Scoop and the Progressive Review,
so far as we can tell, told the story.
Now another journal has finally published a report on the conference
(for paid subscribers only): Science Magazine, the publication of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Admittedly, Science takes a number of slaps at what it considers
Mazur's hyperbole, such as her calling the Altenberg Conference the
"Woodstock" of evolution science that "promises to be far more
transforming for the world" than was the 1969 music festival. But
without Mazur's article, Science might have just let this important
meeting remain in the obscurity it had been otherwise awarded.
The popular view of science - which the profession is careful not to
discourage - is of brilliant, earnest and honest sorts plumbing the
inner recesses of reality for new truths. In fact, scientists tend to
be like other human beings, in that they can also be petty, jealous,
cautious and suspicious (albeit expressing these ordinary foibles
with particular erudition).
And, if they are on campus, they are also subject to that most
pernicious of academic temptations: the desires and biases of their
funders. Mazur believes this is a factor key to the way evolution has
been handled of late. Certainly it would not be the first time in
science, witness the distorting role of the Defense Department,
agribusiness and pharmaceutical corporations in supposedly objective
science.
At the very least, it can easily become a matter of what fiscally
correct questions one feels comfortable asking and which are best
left to someone else. And it may explain why the Altenberg 16
conference was not public.
Evolutionary scientists are also particularly on guard these days
because of the craziness of creationism. Mention the possibility that
Darwin may not have told the whole story and the reaction in some
quarters is to consider the mere question to be aid and comfort to
the enemy. To understand how complicated this can get, consider on
the other hand the born again corporate executive who simultaneously
believes his salary and bonus to be the logical product of both
intelligent design and the survival of the fittest.
In any case, scientists, like the rest of us mortals, don't work in a
vacuum. If there is anything we should have learned from Hiroshima
and climate change it is that what goes on in the research lab
doesn't necessarily stay in the research lab.
This is where journalism can help. What Suzan Mazur did is what
journalists find themselves doing from time to time: snooping around
the lab before they're invited. It is an effort often unappreciated
by scientists, who typically feel they should control the amount,
character, timing and wording of the knowledge they possess. But the
reporter's point is not to provide a final or complete explanation,
or to overturn existing ones, but simply to shine some light in the
dark, in this case without fear of either funders or fundamentalists.