We all know the story of聽聽persecution by the Catholic Church. Advocating a heliocentric model of the solar system 鈥 the Earth and planets revolve around the Sun, contradicting biblical literalism 鈥 the religious authorities censored Galileo and placed him under house arrest. Eventually, the maverick scientist, laughed at by the prevailing powers, was proven correct.
An inspiring story to be sure, but this has given rise to the聽. Pseudo scientists and cranks of all kinds 鈥 from global warming deniers to creationists to COVID-19 denialists 鈥 will at some point claim that when the scientific establishment rejects their ideas they are, in fact, the equivalent of Galileo: unfairly聽聽confronting a hostile and dogmatic orthodoxy.
This analogy with Galileo is a logical fallacy on a number of levels.
Galileo was hardly an outsider from the scientific establishment of the time. At age 25, he was the chair of mathematics at the University of Pisa. Regarded as the father of observational astronomy, he settled at the University of Padua and had powerful patrons 鈥斅爄ncluding the聽聽family who supported scientific investigations at the time.
When Galileo presented the results of his observations 鈥斅爐he heliocentric model 鈥斅爃e was building on the foundations of the聽. The latter prompted the paradigmatic shift from the old Ptolemaic system 鈥斅爓hich regarded the Earth as stationary, occupying a central place in the universe 鈥斅爐o the new heliocentrism.
Observing the planets revolve around the Sun, Galileo was not on his own. He was cognisant of the fact that he, like Copernicus before him, was confronting the orthodox dogma of the church.
Today鈥檚 climate change聽聽perversely claim that they are merely scientific mavericks challenging the status quo. However, on closer inspection, it is the global warming deniers who are analogous to the Catholic Church; driven by a fanatical ideological commitment to the capitalist market.
The billionaire corporations which pay for聽聽misinformation to undermine the scientific consensus regarding global warming are espousing a corporatist dogma flying in the face of the preponderance of evidence.
Steven Novella, writing about the聽, said that: 鈥淔or every visionary scientist whose claims are initially rejected because they are so radical, only to be later confirmed and change our view of the universe, there are uncountable wannabes whose ideas are rejected because they are hopelessly flawed.
鈥淏eing rejected is not the best manner in which to be compared to Galileo, and in itself does not imply that one is a visionary or that one鈥檚 ideas are correct. Making the comparison, however, does imply a distorted self-view, and a certain lack of humility that if anything is predictive of being cranky rather than a visionary scientist.鈥
Novella emphasises that Galileo was persecuted, and regarded as a heretic, by a church relying on divine revelation and scriptural authority, not scientific evidence.
Albert Einstein, the typical outsider, rested his case on scientific evidence for his theories of special and general relativity, prior to their acceptance by the scientific community. He never聽聽himself as a latter-day Galileo.
Being rejected by the scientific establishment is emotionally challenging and, throughout history, numerous scientists who were ridiculed were eventually proven correct.
German geologist聽聽(1880鈥1930)聽was laughed at by the scientific community when he first proposed the theory of continental drift, forming the basis of today鈥檚 plate tectonics. He argued that聽, a supercontinent, existed millions of years ago. It聽is聽now widely accepted by the geological community. Only achieving vindication after his death, he never once compared himself to聽聽when debating the scientific establishment.
There are scientific disagreements all the time. Scientists debate issues in a wide range of areas. This is standard practice. They also reject quackery and pseudoscience. There is a long-standing tactic employed by those who are quick to wrap themselves in 骋补濒颈濒别辞鈥檚 mantle 鈥 the聽. The denial of human-induced global warming uses this tactic 鈥斅爀levate the contrarian view to convey the pretence of scientific disagreements among the experts.
Whether it is the proponents of聽, or the now-forgotten HIV/AIDS deniers, posing as the wounded Galileos of our time is a cynical attempt to gain scientific legitimacy for the views of pseudoscience partisans.
Back in the 1980s, with the AIDS epidemic, denial of the causal nature of HIV/AIDS, grew exponentially. The German-American biologist Peter Duesberg still聽聽that HIV is not the cause of AIDS. There were numerous聽聽by dissenting scientists, pushing the case for HIV/AIDS denial.
By the early 1990s,聽聽for the HIV/AIDS connection became overwhelming, but there are still holdouts until today, their hopes revived in part by the growth of COVID-19 denialism.
It is noteworthy to observe the interlapping聽聽between various forms of science denialism.
There are numerous examples of scientists, once considered absurdly mistaken and mocked by the scientific establishment, proven correct by the weight of evidence.
However, whenever the Galileo gambit is deployed, let鈥檚 remember the聽聽of Stephen Lewandowsky: 鈥淏eing dismissed by scientists doesn鈥檛 automatically entitle you to a Nobel Prize鈥.
Being an aspirational Galileo is no guarantee that your ideas are correct.
[This article was first posted at Rupen Savoulian鈥檚 blog Antipodean Atheist .]