New book tutors future presidents and public on science behind the headlines
Date: Sunday, August 17, 2008 @ 12:15:08 UTC Topic: General
In the event of a standoff between the United States and Iran over
uranium enrichment, would Barack Obama, if elected president, know
enough about the physics of nuclear weapons to assess the threat? In
leading the nation toward reduced greenhouse gas emissions, would John
McCain as president understand which technologies would best decrease
America's carbon footprint?
If not, University of
California, Berkeley, physicist Richard A. Muller has the answer: a new
book, "Physics for Future Presidents" (Norton, 2008) that he's written
as a primer for anyone aspiring to the Oval Office.
The book provides the
scientific literacy would-be leaders need to challenge ill-informed,
partisan advice on science-based issues such as terrorist threats,
global warming, the value of manned exploration of space and the
dangers of nuclear weapons. With book in hand, candidates and
presidents will be able to publicly explain and defend their decisions
rather than defer to their science advisors.
"It's hard to think of an issue these days that doesn't have a
science or high tech angle to it," said Muller, a professor in UC
Berkeley's physics department for 30 years and an experimental
physicist and astrophysicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
"My real goal is to make the dialogue more based in knowledge and fact,
because I think that will cool down the rhetoric and help bring
opposite sides of the political spectrum together to reach agreement."
A big reason such a book is needed is the current lack of
scientists at the highest level of government to advise the president,
said Muller, a former MacArthur "genius" Award winner who for 34 years
was a member of the Jasons, a group of top-level scientists who advise
the U.S. departments of defense and energy as well as NASA on
technological issues.
"There used to be a science
advisory committee that was in constant contact with the president and
was expected to think through technology and make suggestions," Muller
said. "There is nothing like that anymore."
The need for such advice was demonstrated in 2003, said Muller,
when President George W. Bush touted a future hydrogen economy in his
State of the Uni0n address, despite the fact that there are many
problems with the use of hydrogen as a transportation fuel.
"There was nobody there to stop him and say, "No, this isn't going
to work,'" Muller said. "I doubt that he knew, for example, that
hydrogen is currently made from fossil fuels in a process that emits
greenhouse gases, or that liquid hydrogen contains only a quarter the
energy of gasoline per gallon, severely limiting an auto's range."
A year later in Bush's State of the Uni0n message, there was no
mention of the hydrogen economy, said Muller, who suspects that the
president learned some physics in the interim.
Muller's book, officially published Aug. 4, is an outgrowth of a
popular UC Berkeley class by the same name taught by Muller since 2000
that has achieved fame through freely-available Webcasts. One Iraq war
soldier called it a "lifeline" during his deployment in Iraq, saying
that the course teaches "the basics needed to be an informed,
critical-thinking citizen of our country." In a poll taken last
semester by the Daily Californian, UC Berkeley's student newspaper,
Muller's class was voted "Best of Berkeley." Muller has received e-mail
from people in 48 states and 84 countries thanking him for the
Webcasts.
Despite a class enrollment of 500 students per semester - the
maximum the lecture hall can hold - and many online followers, Muller
decided he wanted an even larger audience. Hence, a textbook -
currently used at 10 other universities - and now a book for the
general public that covers the physics behind major issues facing the
country today: terrorism, nuclear power and nuclear bombs, energy and
global warming, and space.
Muller's book dispels many myths and gathers facts that even many physics professors find surprising.
"A lot of people base their opinions on the equivalent of urban
legends: stories that are so powerful that you assume they are
incontrovertible, but which may not actually be true," Muller said.
Among these legends is that of the danger of radioactivity at even
small doses. Muller said an irrational fear of radioactivity interferes
with discussion of nuclear power as an alternative to other, more
polluting sources of power, including coal.
"People are afraid of radioactivity because it is invisible and
unknown," he said. "But that doesn't mean that we can't detect and work
with it. Part of this wariness is that people don't trust the
government when it says, 'Don't worry.' Well, they don't have to trust
the government - they can actually learn what levels of radioactivity
are and what they cause and make their own judgment."
Muller emphasized that the facts he presents in the book are not
meant to change people's minds but, rather, provide background for
making decisions. "Policy," he said, "is outside the purview of physics
- but policy should be based on facts and understanding.
"When I teach my class, I say, 'I don't care if you are pro- or
anti-nuke, you're going to learn about nukes. Maybe your opinion will
be strengthened; if so, you will have a way of defending your opinion
that is far more powerful than just stating it. Maybe your opinion will
change. I don't know, and that is not my role. My role is to give you
the facts. Once you understand the facts, your opinion is as good as
anyone else's - and maybe better.'"
Muller's "refuge in the facts" runs counter to the attitude of some
scientists today, he said. For example, while the Nobel Prize-winning
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) wrote an objective
report on the perils of global warming, "many who describe the report,
even members of the panel, when speaking as individuals, put spin on
their description that is not in the report."
This includes co-prizewinner Al Gore, who exaggerates many of the
panel's findings and implies in his book and movie that his opinions
are actually the IPCC consensus, said Muller, who has credentials of
his own as author of a respected technical book on climate change in
Earth's history. Many climate scientists have remained silent about
these misleading statements, hoping that the exaggerations stimulate
public interest. Muller acknowledges this benefit, but feels that there
is a core of intelligent readers that deserve to know the whole truth.
That includes anyone running for office.
Widespread acceptance of the exaggerations has led, for example, to
the belief that the United States is the main culprit in global
warming. In fact, said Muller, the IPCC climate models attribute only
one-fifth of a degree Fahrenheit of global warming to the United States
- a quarter of the total 0.8°F warming estimated to have occurred over
the past 50 years. While the U.S. contribution is far more than that of
any other country and disproportionate with the rest of the world, if
the nation continues at its current rate of emissions, it will be
responsible for another 0.2 degrees of warming in the next few decades,
whereas the emerging economies of China, India and Russia combined
could contribute 4 to 5 degrees of warming, he said. Thus, whatever the
United States does to limit carbon emissions could quickly be negated
by actions in the developing world. China, in particular, might choose
not to slow economic growth - and carbon emissions - until its people
reach the same level of wealth as people in the United States.
"In the end, the issues go
beyond physics, but we need to recognize that many measures we
institute in the United States to deal with global warming can be
classified as feel-good measures or setting-the-example measures," he
said. "We have to ask ourselves which example the developing world will
follow - our example of reducing carbon emissions or our example of
generating enormous wealth."
Muller's efforts to present just the facts often earn him attacks
from both sides of a debate, with each claiming he is on the other's
side. One of his proudest moments came after a semester of discussion
of nuclear bombs and terrorism and global warming, when a student asked
him what his politics were.
"Just in asking the question, he gave me a great compliment,"
Muller said, noting that he refused to divulge his voting preferences.
"Science should be nonpartisan, and that's how I try teach it."
Muller is unsure whether either presidential candidate has seen his
book, but he has already gotten it into the hands of some of the
candidates' senior advisors. His goal is not to turn the candidates
into physicists, but to give them the knowledge they need to make more
informed decisions, and to be better able to defend those decisions to
the public.
"The book was really written for two people," he said, "though, ultimately, just for one. I just don't know which one."
Source: University of California - Berkeley Via: http://www.physorg.com/news138024236.html
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