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Living in denial: Questioning science isn’t blasphemy

Michael Fitzpatrick argues that calling an opponent a denier is illiberal, intolerant and ineffective
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Is 鈥渄enier鈥 just another insult?
(Image: Rodger Bosch / AFP / Getty)

THE epithet 鈥渄enier鈥 is increasingly used to bash anyone who dares to question orthodoxy. Among other things, deniers are accused of subordinating science to ideology. In his book Denialism: How irrational thinking hinders scientific progress, harms the planet, and threatens our lives, for example, Michael Specter argues that denialists 鈥渞eplace the rigorous and open-minded scepticism of science with the inflexible certainty of ideological commitment鈥.

How ironic. The concept of denialism is itself inflexible, ideological and intrinsically anti-scientific. It is used to close down legitimate debate by insinuating moral deficiency in those expressing dissident views, or by drawing a parallel between popular pseudoscience movements and the racist extremists who dispute the Nazi genocide of Jews.

As philosopher Edward Skidelsky of the University of Exeter, UK, has argued, crying denialism is a form of ad hominem argument: 鈥渢he aim is not so much to refute your opponent as to discredit his motives鈥. The expanding deployment of the concept, he argues, threatens to reverse one of the great achievements of the Enlightenment 鈥 鈥渢he liberation of historical and scientific inquiry from dogma鈥.

Don鈥檛 get me wrong: the popular appeal of pseudoscience is undoubtedly a problem. But name-calling is neither a legitimate nor an effective response.

Take, for example, two areas in which I have had some involvement: the controversies arising from Peter Duesberg鈥檚 claim that HIV does not cause AIDS, and the links between vaccines and autism alleged by the former academic gastroenterologist Andrew Wakefield.

Both Duesberg and Wakefield were reputable scientists whose persistence with hypotheses they were unable to substantiate took them beyond the limits of serious science. Though they failed to persuade their scientific peers, both readily attracted supporters, including disaffected scientists, credulous journalists, charlatans, quacks and assorted conspiracy theorists and opportunist politicians.

In both cases, scientists were dilatory in responding, dismissing the movements as cranks and often appearing to believe that if they were ignored they would quietly disappear. It took five years before mainstream AIDS scientists produced a comprehensive rebuttal of Duesberg. Though child health authorities were alert to the threat of the anti-vaccine campaign, researchers were slow to respond, allowing it to gather momentum.

Social psychologist Seth Kalichman of the University of Connecticut in Storrs mounts a typical defence of this stance in his book . According to Kalichman, denialists often 鈥渃ross the line between what could arguably be protected free speech鈥. He justifies suppression of debate on the feeble grounds that this would only legitimise the deniers and that scientists鈥 time would be better spent on research.

Such attempts to combat pseudoscience by branding it a secular form of blasphemy are illiberal and intolerant. They are also ineffective, tending not only to reinforce cynicism about science but also to promote a distrust for scientific and medical authority that provides a rallying point for pseudoscience.

As Skidelsky says, 鈥渢he extension of the 鈥榙enier鈥 tag to group after group is a development that should alarm all liberal-minded people鈥. What we need is more debate, not less.

Read more: Special report: Living in denial

  • , Prospect, January 2010
Topics: HIV and AIDS

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