Climate
campaigner Greta Thunberg said at a congressional hearing, “I don’t
want you to listen to me, I want you to listen to the scientists. I
want you to unite behind the science"
Without
appearing to be arrogant, the Socialist Party says - Listen to us. Unite with us.
Near-future
science fiction frequently explores the possibilities of imminent
technologies – gadgets and apparatus that haven’t been designed
yet, but could be given recent real advances in technology and
design. Whilst its track record on such predictions have been a bit
wide of the mark, others have been much closer and, in fact, actively
conservative compared to the real accomplishments. Scientists can be
very far-sighted but at the same time have only a very narrow field
of view, like a blinkered racehorse.
William
Morris's News From Nowhere famously describes a deliberately low-tech
socialist society in which people have eschewed the benefits of
technology and adopted simple ways of doing things, although arguably
he cheats by powering his 'force barges' with some mysterious energy
source he never explains, thus hiding his technology rather than
really abolishing it. Nonetheless, this is unusual in that most
portraits of the future, whether socialist or not, depict a society
of advanced technological splendour in which all our needs are met by
a range of technical apparatuses only a voice-command away. The
amount of electronic appliances in the average household now
massively outweighs that of fifty years ago, and half a century from
now we may shudder at the poverty of gadgetry suffered in the early
21st century. But it is not necessarily the case that a socialist
society will produce an equal amount of high-tech gadgetry. Because
socialist production will meet real rather than false needs, it could
be that socialism might be a low-gadget society. Although mobile
phones, i-Pads, lap-tops and so on can satisfy some actual needs, it
is mainly sociologically - and psychologically - induced perceived
needs they actually satisfy, such as the need for conforming to
fashion, group norms, the desire for prestige, and the belief that a
product brings contentment. And because these items are produced to
satisfy manipulated needs, they can have little use value. So if
socialism will be a society that relies far less on contraptions, it
is only because it will be a more honest society than the present
one, without artificial needs.
Most
people have no direct experience of science, only of the technology
that is an almost incidental by-product of it, yet capitalism pours
billions into pure scientific research despite the fact that
virtually none of it will ever yield a profit. Why? Because the one
per cent that does make a profit will pay for the 99 per cent that
doesn't. In capitalism, science is a huge gamble that only
occasionally results in a win, but bets are never placed on research
that helps people who can't pay.
Scientists
do have their heroes, but they don't worship them as infallible gurus
because it is recognised that argument from authority is inferior to
argument from evidence. Socialists take the same view of Marx and
other revolutionary thinkers. Non-market, non-hierarchical socialism,
which has no such agenda and which can therefore collectively
determine the best course of action based on the available evidence.
In science good ideas are not taken seriously enough when they come
from people of low status in the academic world; conversely, the
ideas of high-status people are often taken too seriously. The
scientific method suffers because science is organised
hierarchically. The problem with science in capitalism is that
scientists have mortgages to pay, so they need to chase funding
because they can't afford to work for free.
"Science
uses commodities and is part of the process of commodity production.
Science uses money. People earn their living by science, and as a
consequence the dominant social and economic forces in society
determine to a large extent what science does and how it does
it."(The
Doctrine of DNA by R.C. Lewontin.
And
what will socialism do with pure research? Carry on the same way?
Hardly. What we can say for sure is that curiosity is not likely to
be dimmed by some inexplicable post-capitalist apathy in a society
that releases scientists as well as all other workers from the
compulsion to direct their efforts towards only those endeavours that
the capitalist class sees an interest in funding. So what approach
would socialist society take to the great scientific project?
Priorities would certainly be different. Drug research, for instance,
will not occur in capitalism if the estimated $800m cost is not
likely to be recouped, thus diseases rife in poor countries are
overlooked while the top three drug groups by global sales are fat
reducers, anti-ulcer/indigestion and anti-depressants. Much of the
pharmaceutical industry would be obsolete or transformed anyway if
one can assume, after capitalism, a dramatic fall in heart disease
and obesity, two wealth-related conditions for which the present drug
market is principally geared, and an even more dramatic fall in
poverty and stress-related diseases which presently do not even merit
scientific attention.
Similarly,
science would no longer be prostrate at the feet of the military.
Global military spending for 2004 was $1trillion. The US spends 40%
of this, is home to 5 of the top 6 military corporations (the
sixth, BAE Systems, is in the UK), and is the biggest investor in
military R&D ($62.8b in 2004) while the UK is the second biggest
(£2.6b in 2003-4). While some other lines of research would probably
end, for example cosmetics , including most animal testing which is
for this purpose, there would be a clear need for continued work in
climatology, energy, epidemiology and many others, but it is
questionable whether a socialist community would have the same
passion to send humans to Mars, or to build space hotels for
billionaire space-tourists.
In socialism, science will still be a
speculative gamble, but with the difference that no knowledge thus
gained can ever be money lost. It may be that the huge time, resource
and work investment in such esoteric projects as the Large Hadron
Collider will continue in socialism, but if they do, it will be
because the population understands and respects scientific enquiry
for its own sake, and not because they are expecting to get a new
consumer device out of it.
The
freedom from patent and copyright restrictions, which are forms of
private ownership and will thus be abolished, will almost certainly
unlock a tidal wave of new development which may revolutionise areas
of science which are currently at a near-standstill, for instance
drug research and computing. In addition, the justifiable fear of
what corporations, governments and the military might do with horizon
science will no longer hold back developments in gene research and
nanotechnology.
Lastly,
the ending of male domination of science, in which men are four times
more likely than women to be scientists will produce a vast influx of
new talent and new ideas that can only advance scientific effort for
the acquisition of knowledge and ultimately the betterment of
humanity.
There
are times, though, when even some scientists start to sound a little
reactionary, self-righteous and sanctimonious on their own account.
One such instance is the issue of animal rights. Scientists tend to
be very defensive about animal research, but their arguments, that
such research is always necessary, tightly controlled, responsible
and largely painless, are at best questionable and sometimes plain
wrong, depending as they do on an idealized representation of
scientific research as it is supposed to be, and not as it actually
exists in the dollar-hungry world of capitalist corporations.
Scientists do not help their own case with simplistic no-brainer
dilemmas like “your dog, or your child”, which imply that all
testing is for the common good and which gloss over the large
proportion of experiments done for cosmetics, food colourings, and
other non-health-related products.
Socialists
are not unduly sentimental about animals, and consider that a human’s
first loyalty should be their own species. Nevertheless, the degree
to which human society is ‘civilised’ can reasonably be gauged by
its treatment of animals and the natural world as well as by its
treatment of humans, and socialism, in its abolition of all aspects
of the appalling savagery of capitalism, will undoubtedly do its part
to abolish all unnecessary suffering by non-human sentient creatures.
Even in socialism, where there would be little likelihood of animal
testing for non-medical purposes, eg. cosmetics (such research today
account for around three quarters of testing). Socialist science
would (if it decided to do so at all) conduct animal research only
under conditions of strict and peer-assessed necessity, and with
attendant informed public debate, two key factors notable for their
general absence today.
Technology
is often seen as either the salvation or the scourge of humankind.
Some of us incline to be technophiles and others technosceptics and
others a bit of both. That is not to say, though, that the case for
socialism rests on developing technology. It is neither possible nor
desirable to abolish technology. Without it we would have to go back
to a much harsher form of living. Few people would deny that among
the changes technology has brought there have been tremendous
improvements to our productive capabilities, if not always to our
personal circumstances, or that in a socialist society modern
technology will be vital in making sure everyone gets adequate food,
housing and medical care. What is required is to change the basis of
society so that technology can be developed and applied in the
interests of the majority. Neither nanotechnology nor genetic
modification are required for socialism. Socialism will take, adapt
and use technology as it finds it. What socialism will do, however,
is change our relationship with our tools, so that we can take
control of our own destinies.
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