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imposed on the way we live. In some cases, our analysis justifies the measures that have been taken. In most cases, they challenge the accepted dogmas that have led to the limitations that have been imposed on our freedom. The particular views presented reflect the opinions of the authors. Their views are personal and are iconoclastic. They are not necessarily shared to the same extent by all the contributors or the editors. They are intended to make the reader stop, enquire and think again about what he or she believes to be an accepted fact.

       INTRODUCTION

      STANLEY FELDMAN

      Knowledge may be expensive but it is much cheaper than ignorance.

      The pragmatist says, ‘I change my mind when the facts change.’ The dogmatist says, ‘My mind is made up – do not confuse me with facts’.

      NEWSPAPERS, magazines, television and radio are constantly bombarding us with stories presented as facts. Unfortunately, many of them turn out to be opinion rather than something that has been proven to be likely or correct. The problem we face is how to distinguish between a belief or an opinion, and a fact.

      In the courts of law it is the accumulation of evidence that helps to prove a proposition ‘beyond reasonable doubt’ in criminal cases, or, in the civil courts, the lower standard of proof, ‘on the balance of probabilities’. In the world of science the same criteria should hold true. It requires good, reliable evidence to substantiate a hypothesis. All too often the stories that reach the media fall far short of the level of proof required by the criminal courts and seldom even reach that required by the civil courts. Without corroboration all information is uncertain and exists in a twilight world of half-truths and make-believe.

      In his book The Devil’s Chaplain, Richard Dawkins, the professor of public understanding of science at Oxford University, wrote a letter to his daughter in which he says that it is his greatest wish that when she is grown up and is told that something is a fact she should ask herself, ‘Is this a thing people know because of evidence?’

      Dawkins wanted to impress upon his daughter the importance of distinguishing between dogma – or firmly held belief – and verifiable fact. Unfortunately, it is often more comfortable not to try to make the distinction but to ‘go with the herd’ and unquestionably accept what one is told because it is believed by so many seemingly rational and knowing people. As the author Michael Crichton pointed out, science is based on evidence and proof – not popular opinion or ‘consensus’.

      Let’s be clear: the work of science has nothing whatever to do with consensus. Consensus is the business of politics. Science, on the contrary, requires only one investigator who happens to be right, which means that he or she has results that are verifiable by reference to the real world. In science consensus is irrelevant. What is relevant is reproducible results. The greatest scientists in history are great precisely because they broke with the consensus. There is no such thing as consensus science. If it’s consensus, it isn’t science. If it’s science, it isn’t consensus. Period.

      Accepting a belief as a fact, without convincing evidence, is the way to become a member of an unthinking society of anti-intellectual zombies. Throughout the history of civilisation, many ideas that were previously held as certainties, supported by belief and experience, have been found wanting in the light of new information. Newtonian mathematics, which formed the basis of so much of our teaching, has been found to be only half true by the modern theories of quantum mechanics.

      Our knowledge of the universe has been demonstrated to be based on inadequate concepts that were taken as fact before the theory of relativity and the present means of exploring space had shown their limitations. Until recently we were told, with absolute certainty, that foods rich in cholesterol caused heart disease. This is now known to be wrong. We are constantly developing new ways of testing and evaluating evidence that is causing us to question previously accepted dogma. This is the basis of knowledge; it is the way of science.

      To meet these uncertainties we need to scrutinise beliefs and examine past evidence in the light of new knowledge. It is by experimental evidence and by reason that we distinguish between dogma and fact. Just as the availability of new methodologies, such as DNA typing in criminal investigations, has led to examination of past convictions, and space exploration has shed new light on the origin of the planets, so new research will invariably cause us to challenge more and more present ‘certainties’. If further research casts doubt on the original propositions, it must be categorised as a hypothesis, not as fact. If the new evidence – provided it can be substantiated – is incompatible the hypothesis must be abandoned. To persist in maintaining doubtful dogma in the face of evidence, puts it in the realm of an unsubstantiated ‘belief’ or myth.

      In this book we have looked at some commonly held beliefs – dogmas that countenance no challenge either because they are taken for granted by those in authority or they have the seal of, so-called, ‘scientific approval’. While it is often more comfortable to accept some of these dogmas – indeed to challenge them one runs the risk of being labelled an iconoclast – it is our duty to encourage debate, however certain we are of our own correctness. It is necessary to examine all of the evidence constructively to find out how much supports and how much contradicts a particular proposition or hypothesis. For there to be confidence in a hypothesis it is essential that any evidence that questions the validity of its assumption be answered. When they are, it can be dignified by its description as a theory.

      Belief, hypothesis and fact

      Many people believe in a deity of some form. However, God is not subject to evidence or proof. That so many believe in his/her/its existence does not make God a fact. The absence of evidence of there being a god, or the impossibility of ever obtaining proof of his/her/its existence, distinguishes theism as a belief from observable, confirmable fact. Belief in God is neither a theory nor a fact: it is an unsubstantiated hypothesis based on faith. It may bring immense comfort to those with it but it does not necessarily make it true.

      The purpose of this book is to make the reader think again about what he/she is told is a fact. Too much of the information we are given turns out to be beliefs or hypotheses dressed up as fact. When ‘everybody knows’ something it’s time to challenge it; the ‘scientists believe’ phenomenon, especially when supported by statements such as ‘new research has shown’, should always arouse suspicion. The use of emotive, often pejorative, terms such as ‘will cause the end of the world’, ‘will kill hundreds of thousands’ and ‘time is running out’ should alert readers to the probability that they are being mentally bullied and manipulated. It should warn them of the need to examine the evidence carefully to see whether the case is indeed proven ‘beyond reasonable doubt’.

      Defining our terms

      Beliefs are authoritative statements that have not been subjected to testing or are incapable of being tested. They rely on anecdotal evidence and the power of authority.

      Hypotheses are tentative beliefs that are subject to proof or disproof and consequently a step beyond ‘belief’.

      Facts are measurable and reproducible events. There is no known or current evidence that casts doubt upon their truthfulness. They are therefore ‘beyond reasonable doubt’, although new evidence may emerge to question their accuracy in the future. Such is the nature of progress.

      To illustrate the importance of separating these three categories let us consider some examples.

      Before the 16th century it was universally believed that the sun orbited the Earth. This was a consensus opinion. Not to accept this idea was regarded as heresy. It was an authoritative dogma promulgated by the Church and could not be questioned. The authority of the Bible was invoked as evidence to support the claim – if, indeed, evidence was required, since it was ‘self-evident’ from everyone’s personal daily experience. The idea that the Earth spun at an incredible speed as it orbited the sun

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