Header-interalia_logo
Wednesday 22 May 2013
  • About
    • Staff
    • Board of Trustees
    • Fellows
    • Annual Report
  • Events
    • Four Star Leadership
    • 2013 Essay Contest
    • Lecture Series
  • Publications
    • Perspective
    • Policy Papers
    • Recommended Reading
  • Research
    • Center for Economic Freedom
    • Center for Educational Freedom
    • Center for Health Freedom
    • Center for Constitutional Freedom
    • Center for Energy Freedom
    • Center for Family Prosperity
    • Other
    • Archives
  • Blog
  • Media
    • Media Inquiries
    • Featured Hot News
    • Request a Speaker
    • Videos
    • News
  • Get Involved
    • Join/Donate
    • Join Email List
    • Policy Impact Team
    • Policy to Share
    • Planned Giving
    • Internships
    • Contact
  • What Would Reagan Do?
  • RSS

BLOG

Home » Blog

Public policy should be informed by science ... and more

By Brandon Dutcher · Tue, Aug 21, 2012 08:00 AM CDT
Public policy should be informed by science ... and more

Our friends at the Mackinac Center, a venerable free-market think tank in Michigan, like to point out that their publications and programs “offer an integrated and comprehensive approach” that considers not just economics but all disciplines.

Center research incorporates the best understanding of economics, science, law, psychology, history and morality, moving beyond mechanical cost/benefit analysis.

OCPA takes the same approach. Yes, we have a high regard for science (even the dismal one), having published papers by economists—both liberal and conservative—of national and even world-historical repute.

But science isn’t everything. “Public policy arguments need an authority to which they can appeal,” Greg Forster writes. “The problem is that, increasingly, our culture has no widely recognized authorities other than science.” Forster, who has written for OCPA on what the science has to say about school choice, writes:

Say that you favor a given approach—in education, in politics, in culture—because it is best suited to the nature of the human person, or because it best embodies the principles and historic self-understanding of the American people, and you will struggle even to get a hearing. But if you say that “the science” supports your view, the world will fall at your feet.

Of course, this means powerful interest groups rush in to seize hold of “science,” to trumpet whatever suits their preferences, downplay its limitations, and delegitimize any contrary evidence. If they succeed—which they don’t always, but they do often enough—“the science” quickly ceases to be science at all. That’s why “scientific” tyrannies like the Soviet Union had to put so many real scientists in jail—or in the ground.

Forster correctly says “we need other sources of wisdom and knowledge—and hence of authority.” As he and some fellow researchers recently put it in Education Week,

[W]e fear that political pressure is leading people on both sides of the issue to demand things from “science” that science is not, by its nature, able to provide. The temptation of technocracy—the idea that scientists can provide authoritative answers to public questions—is dangerous to democracy and science itself. Public debates should be based on norms, logic and evidence drawn from beyond just the scientific sphere.


  • Pdf16 Download PDF

Affiliate Blogs

Choice Remarks »

  • Recent
  • Popular
  •  Twitter
  • Tags
  • Tornado relief donation centers

    Tornado relief donation centers

    Tuesday, May 21, 2013
  • A question of priorities: Taxpayers or pork projects?

    A question of priorities: Taxpayers o...

    Monday, May 20, 2013
  • How fast does Oklahoma’s state government spend your money?

    How fast does Oklahoma’s state govern...

    Monday, May 20, 2013
  • Keep shutting doors on Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion in Oklahoma

    Keep shutting doors on Obamacare’s Me...

    Monday, May 20, 2013
  • Why school boards often don’t represent their constituents

    Why school boards often don’t represent their c...

    Monday, November 21, 2011
  • At a glance: State ballot questions

    At a glance: State ballot questions

    Tuesday, October 09, 2012
  • Oklahoma’s Improved Economic Performance Suggests Right to Work Is Working

    Oklahoma’s Improved Economic Performance Sugges...

    Tuesday, October 04, 2011
  • Mitch Daniels, straight shooter

    Mitch Daniels, straight shooter

    Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Popular Tags
  • Spending FaxLine Report Education WWRD Budget School Choice Taxes Income Tax Higher Education Medicaid Obamacare Economics ObamaCare Special Needs education SoonerPoll Freedom Pension Reform Jobs In Case You Missed It Economy Business Health Care Dr. Fears Oklahoma

Email Signup


FEATURED LINKS

Oklahoma Pension Bomb »

National Debt Clock »

Cost of Living Index Calculator

Spend-O-Meter

How Fast Does State Government Spend Your Money? See Details »

FEATURED VIDEOS

Scholarships Play

Video24 Henry Scholarships for Special-Needs Kids in Oklahoma

Historian J. Rufus Fears Talks Taxes

Video24 Historian J. Rufus Fears Talks Taxes

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Contact

Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs
1401 N. Lincoln Blvd.
Oklahoma City, OK 73104
Phone: (405) 602-1667
Fax: (855) 819-0085
Email: ocpa@ocpathink.org

Site Map

  • About
  • Staff
  • Board of Trustees
  • Fellows
  • Annual Report
  • Four Star Leadership
  • 2013 Essay Contest
  • Lecture Series
  • Perspective
  • Capitol Ideas
  • Policy Papers
  • FaxLine Report
  • Recommended Reading
  • Center for Economic Freedom
  • Center for Educational Freedom
  • Center for Health Freedom
  • Center for Constitutional Freedom
  • Center for Energy Freedom
  • Center for Family Prosperity
  • Other
  • Blog
  • Media Inquiries
  • Featured Hot News
  • Request a Speaker
  • Videos
  • Audio
  • News
  • Join/Donate
  • Join Email List
  • Policy Impact Team
  • Policy to Share
  • Planned Giving
  • Internships
  • Contact
  • Spend-O-Meter
  • Main Features
  • Cost of Living Index Calculator
  • What Would Reagan Do?

© Copyright 2013 Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs. All rights reserved