Title: Longer, Healthier, Happier
1Longer, Healthier, Happier?
- Human Needs, Human Values and Science
- Annual Sense About Science Lecture
2 The physicist of the future ?
3TWO MYTHS
- Science is running into insuperable difficulties
and failing to deliver on human needs - Science undermines human values
4Appreciation of Science
- Understanding
- Celebration
5Themes of this Talk
- Science and human needs
- Science and human values
- The allure of junk science
- Science and human consciousness
6Themes of this Talk
- Science and human needs
- Science and human values
- Junk science
- Science and human consciousness
7The Unconverted (1)
- Fewer than 50 of the British public believed
that science played a positive role in society - Survey cited in Gerry Lawless, What is Science
Education For? Institute of Ideas, 2006
8The Unconverted (2)
- 85 thought science made a good contribution to
society - 71 thought that the benefits of science
outweighed the risks - 44 disagreed with the statement that the
risks of science outweighed the benefits - Science in Society MORI for OST, 2005
9AIMS OF MEDICINE
- Postponement of death from illness, injury etc
- Reduction of suffering arising out of to illness,
injury etc
10WORLDWIDE LIFE EXPECTANCY THE BIG PICTURE
-
- 1800 Less than 30 years
- 2000 Just under 67
- Source Rising Life Expectancy. A Global
History,James Riley, CUP, 2001
11Good news demographic trends in the first 50
years of the NHS
- Life expectancy at birth
- 1948 1996
- Males 66.1 74.4
- Females 70.5 79.6
-
12Life expectancy at birth UK
13 The Story Continues (2)
- At current rates, life expectancy in the UK is
increasing at the rate of about two years for
each decade that passes - Ageing Scientific Aspects
- House of Lords S and T Committee, 2005
14The Story Continues Hot News from the
Actuarial Front
- In 1997 65 year old men who have life
insurance and pensions plans could expect to
live to 83 years and two months. - In 2005, they could expect to live to 86 years
and 7 months. - By 2015, they could expect to live to 89 years
10 months - Continuous Mortality Investigation,
September 2005
15THE PACE QUICKENS
Reduction in the mortality rate for males aged
65-74 in the England Wales population since 1901
- 20 fall between 1901 1969 (68 yrs)
- 20 fall between 1969 1986 (17 yrs)
- 20 fall between 1986 1996 (10 yrs)
- 20 fall between 1996 2002 (6 years)
Source Paternoster calculations using ONS data
16The future of old age gloomy in practice ?
Four scenarios
- 1 year of additional woe for every year of life
gained - Less than 1 year of additional woe for one year
of life gained - No additional woe for each year of life gained
- Less woe despite life gained Fries Compression
of morbidity
17USA National Long Term Care Survey (1982-1999)
- Disability in over 65s decreased from 26.2 to
19.7 - This is double the rate of decrease in the
mortality rate - Rate of decline accelerating
- Manton, cited in Tallis and Fillit, 2003
18Incidence of stroke in 2002-04 (OXVASC) vs
1981-84 (OCSP)
Ratio 0.60 (0.50-0.73) Plt0.0001
Lancet 2004 363 1925-33
19Stroke in Oxford OCSP (1981-84) to OXVASC
(2002-04)
- Incidence expected to rise by 28
-
- Incidence actually fell by 29
- Rothwell et al, The Lancet 2004
20CAUSES OF IMPROVED LIFE AND HEALTH EXPECTANCY
- Wealth, income and economic development
- Nutrition and diet
- Household and individual behaviour
- Literacy and education
- Public health
- Clinical Medicine
21Increased life expectancy at birth increasingly
due to science based medicine
- In the earlier half of the 20th century decline
in infant mortality was most important public
health and broader social measures central -
- At the end of the 20th century decrease in
mortality at relatively later ages most important
- science based medicine central
22CARDIOVASCULAR MORTALITY UNDER 75 UK 1970-2003
- 1970 275/100,000
- 2003 100/100,000
- Source British Heart Foundation (Heartstat)
23DEATHS FROM CORONARY HEART DISEASE
- Fell by 44 in last 10 years
- Causes of mortality decline in 1980s and 1990s
- Treatment of individual patients 42
- Prevention
- Smoking cessation 48
- Blood pressure reduction 9.5
- Cholesterol reduction 9.5
- Source Unal et al, 2003
24- Longer ?
- Healthier?
- Happier?
25- Longer? Yes
- Healthier Yes
- Happier Most probably
26MAKING THE CASE AGAINST SCIENCE
- Emphasise disasters
- Underplay successes
27CHERNOBYL A WARNING AGAINST HUMAN HUBRIS?
- Eventual total of deaths according to UN-Backed
Chernobyl Forum 4,000 - Greenpeace estimate of deaths between 1990 and
2004 200,000 - Source Kaplinsky in Science and Superstition,
2006
28Themes of this Talk
- Science and human needs
- Science and human values
- Junk science
- Science and human consciousness
29Science v Human Values
- Anticipate future disasters destroying the
planet - Industrialisation of death
- Ethical neutrality equals amorality
- The sweet disposition of Mother Nature
30SCIENCE AS A PARADIGM HUMAN ENTERPRISE (1)
- Mighty intellectual achievement
- Penetrating the opacity of the material world
- Breaking the mind-forgd manacles
- Superstition
- Common sense
- Cultural assumptions
- Deception
- Self-deception
31SCIENCE AS A PARADIGM HUMAN ENTERPRISE (2)
- Effortlessly global
- Model for acquisition of reliable knowledge
- Permanently self-critical
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33Relentless Self-Criticism of Science
- a kind of leaning over backwards..Details
that could throw doubt on your interpretation
must be given, if you know them..If you make a
theory..you must put down all the facts that
disagree with it, as well as those that agree
with it. And you must make sure, when you are
explaining what it fits, that those things it
fits are not just the things that gave you the
idea for the theory but that the finished theory
makes something else come out right in addition. - Richard Feynman Cargo Cult Science 1985
34THE COLLECTIVE AUTHORITY OF THE SCIENTIFIC
COMMUNITY
- Stifles debates, closes minds, obstructs
paradigm-busting ideas - Characteristics of Science establishment
- Set out in ranks that close
- Conventional wisdom brings tenure
- Backhanded by e.g. Big Pharma
35A Mighty Paradigm Buster
- That peptic ulcers are due to infection
- Hypothesis in early 80s, initially resisted
- Supported in late 80s
- Antibiotics used in treatment of peptic ulcers
90s onwards
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38What is wrong with science?
- Difficult
- Honest about its many failures en route to
success - Victim of its success
39Raymond Tallis An Everyday Story of Failure
1977-2007
- Unsuccessful treatments
- Epidural spinal cord stimulation for MS
- Patterned Neuromuscular Stimulation for
quadriceps wasting - Patterned neuromuscular stimulation in
age-related wasting of hand muscles - Contingency stimulation in patients with tactile
neglect in stroke - Transcranial magnetic stimulation in stroke
- Lubelizole in acute stroke
- RT ant in ant-heap
40Raymond Tallis An Everyday Story of Failure
1977-2007
- Successful treatments
- Epidural spinal cord stimulation in end-stage
peripheral vascular disease - Aspirin in acute stroke
- RT ant in ant-heap
41ASPIRIN IN ACUTE STROKE
- 1 IN 100 PEOPLE SAVED FROM DEATH OR DISABILITY
- 10-15 YEARS FROM TWINKLE IN EYE TO PUBLISHED
RESULTS - 20,000 PATIENTS
- 467 CENTRES IN 36 COUNTRIES
42Consoling the Troops
- True science is full of disappointments only
charlatans win a prize every time Raymond Tallis
43What is wrong with science?
- Difficult
- Honest about its many failures en route to
success - Victim of its success recalibration of
expectation
44Themes of this Talk
- Science and human needs
- Science and human values
- The allure of junk science
- Science and human consciousness
45Junk science Cognitively Primitive
- Plural of anecdote is data
- Induction based on emotion not numbers
- Confirmation-bias
46Two Complementary Trends
- Free-floating suspicion towards real science and
the authority of those who support it - Credulousness towards junk science and the
authority of its advocates
47Enter Junk Science
- Exaggerates and exploits material failures of
orthodox science - Underplays spectacular success of orthodox
science - Charges orthodox science with being inhuman
48JUNK SCIENCE PROTECTION AGAINST LAUGHTER
- Utilising argument from authority
- Parasitizing the language of orthodox science
- Intuitively attractive
49JUNK SCIENCE PROTECTION AGAINST LAUGHTER
- Utilising argument from authority
- Parasitizing the language of orthodox science
- Intuitively attractive
50 The physicist of the future ?
51The immunologist of the future ?
It seems to me a child of 14 months is
incredibly vulnerable. Why whack all three
vaccines into a child at the same time ?
52Lethal celebrity endorsement
- Stalin Lamarckian genetics
- Thabo Mbeki AIDS not caused by HIV
53JUNK SCIENCE PROTECTION AGAINST LAUGHTER
- Utilising argument from authority
- Parasitizing the language of orthodox science
- Intuitively attractive
54WOODEN HEADPHONES
- Reflexology
- Homoeopathy
- Scientology (Ologyology)
55WOODEN HEADPHONES
56Orthodox Medicine Proton Pump Inhibitors Located
in a Syncytium of Knowledge
- Proton fundamental physics
- Semi-permeable membrane physical chemistry
- Active transport biochemistry
- Acid secretion physiology
- Proton pump inhibition intracellular
biochemistry
57JUNK SCIENCE PROTECTION AGAINST LAUGHTER
- Utilising argument from authority
- Parasitizing the language of orthodox science
- Intuitively attractive
58Junk Science
- Science assimilated to everyday sense
- True biology (lymphatic system) meets Hello
magazine (massage)
59The Unnatural Nature of Science
- the way in which nature has been put together
and the laws that govern its behaviour bear no
apparent relationship to everyday life. Lewis
Wolpert The Unnatural Nature of Science, 1992
60Themes of this Talk
- Science and human needs
- Science and human values
- Junk science
- Science and human consciousness
61The Allure of Junk Science A Tentative Diagnosis
- Human consciousness divided. Gaps between
- sentience and knowledge
- sensory experience and facts
- These gaps widest in science
- Junk science seems to narrow the gap between
science and everyday awareness (intuitive
attraction, common sense)
62Combating Science Phobia and Junk Science (1)
- Increase awareness of the mighty achievement
of science encouraging people to untake the for
granted. - Increase awareness of the ubiquity of science
- Increase awareness of the rigour of science
- Methodological sophistication
- The long hard road to truth
63Combating Science Phobia and Junk Science (2)
- Underline link between science, human values and
human beings at their best - Expose the parasitic nature of junk science and
the groundlessness of its apparent attractions
64Disseminating Sense About Science
- Tough on unreason
- Tough on the causes of unreason