How Scientific American's Departing Editor Helped Degrade Science
When magazines like Scientific American are run by ideologues producing biased dreck, it only makes it more difficult to defend the institution of science itself.

Earlier this week, Laura Helmuth resigned as editor in chief of Scientific American, the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States. "I've decided to leave Scientific American after an exciting 4.5 years as editor in chief," she wrote on Bluesky. "I'm going to take some time to think about what comes next (and go birdwatching), but for now I'd like to share a very small sample of the work I've been so proud to support (thread)."
Helmuth may in fact have been itching to spend more time bird watching—who wouldn't be?—but it seems likely that her departure was precipitated by a bilious Bluesky rant she posted after Donald Trump was reelected.
In it, she accused her generation, Generation X, of being "full of fucking fascists," complained about how sexist and racist her home state of Indiana was, and so on.
"Fuck them to the moon and back," she said of the dumb high school bullies supposedly celebrating Trump's victory.
Whether or not Helmuth's resignation was voluntary, it should go without saying that a few bad social media posts should not end someone's job. If that were the whole story here—an otherwise well-performing editor was ousted over a few bad posts—this would arguably be a case of "cancel culture," or whatever we're calling it these days.
But Helmuth's posts were symptoms of a much larger problem with her reign as editor. They accurately reflected the political agenda she brought with her when she came on as EiC at SciAm—a political agenda that has turned the once-respected magazine into a frequent laughingstock.
Sometimes, yes, SciAm still acts like the leading popular science magazine it used to be—a magazine, I should add, that I received in print form every month during my childhood.
But increasingly, during Helmuth's tenure, SciAm seemed a bit more like a marketing firm dedicated to churning out borderline-unreadable press releases for the day's social justice cause du jour. In the process, SciAm played a small but important role in the self-immolation of scientific authority—a terrible event whose fallout we'll be living with for a long time.
When Scientific American was bad under Helmuth, it was really bad. For example, did you know that "Denial of Evolution Is a Form of White Supremacy"? Or that the normal distribution—a vital and basic statistical concept—is inherently suspect? No, really: Three days after the legendary biologist and author E.O. Wilson died, SciAm published a surreal hit piece about him in which the author lamented "his dangerous ideas on what factors influence human behavior." That author also explained that "the so-called normal distribution of statistics assumes that there are default humans who serve as the standard that the rest of us can be accurately measured against." But the normal distribution doesn't make any such value judgments, and only someone lacking in basic education about stats—someone who definitely shouldn't be writing about the subject for a top magazine—could make such a claim.
Some of the magazine's Helmuth-era output made the posthumous drive-by against Wilson look Pulitzer-worthy by comparison. Perhaps the most infamous entry in this oeuvre came in September 2021: "Why the Term 'JEDI' Is Problematic for Describing Programs That Promote Justice, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion." That article sternly informed readers that an acronym many of them had likely never heard of in the first place—JEDI, standing for "justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion"—ought to be avoided on social justice grounds. You see, in the Star Wars franchise, the Jedi "are a religious order of intergalactic police-monks, prone to (white) saviorism and toxically masculine approaches to conflict resolution (violent duels with phallic lightsabers, gaslighting by means of "Jedi mind tricks," etc.)"
You probably think I'm trolling or being trolled. There's no way that actual sentence got published in Scientific American, right? No, it's very real.
But what really caught my eye was SciAm's coverage of the youth gender medicine debate. This is one of the few scientific subjects on which I've established a modicum of expertise: I've written articles about it for major outlets like The Atlantic and The Economist, and am working on a book. I found SciAm's coverage to not just be stupid (JEDI) or insulting or uncharitable (the Wilson story), but actually a little bit dangerous.
I know, I know: We're not supposed to call mere words "dangerous." Hear me out: The evidence for youth gender medicine—blockers, hormones, and (sometimes) surgery for minors to treat their gender dysphoria—is scant. We really don't know which treatments help which kids in which situations. Every major government or government-backed effort to look into this question, most recently the U.K.'s Cass Review, has come to this conclusion. The supposed leading professional organization, WPATH, is mired in scandal, with evidence from court cases strongly suggesting it has suppressed negative research results. One of the leading clinicians and researchers in the country admitted to The New York Times that she and her team suppressed negative research results (not the first time, I don't think).
Rather than cover these important developments, Scientific American has hermetically sealed itself and its readers inside a comforting, delusional cocoon in which we know youth gender medicine works, beyond a shadow of a doubt, and only bigots and ignoramuses suggest otherwise. Over and over, SciAm simply took what certain activist groups were saying about these treatments and repeated it, basically verbatim, effectively laundering medical misinformation and providing it with the imprimatur of a highly regarded science magazine.
This was a chronic problem at Scientific American. One article, to which I wrote a rebuttal for my newsletter, contained countless errors and misinterpretations: Most importantly, it falsely claimed that there is solid evidence youth gender medicine ameliorates adolescent suicidality, when we absolutely do not know that to any degree of certainty. As far as I can tell, every article SciAm published on this subject during Helmuth's tenure followed the exact same playbook of reciting activist claims — often long after they'd been debunked.
Some of these articles might have done serious damage to the public's understanding of this issue. For example, SciAm ran a response to the Cass Review written by a pair of writers who were somehow able to issue a searing critique of the review despite having clearly never read it. They wrote that the document's problems "help explain why the Cass recommendations differ from previous academic reviews and expert guidance from major medical organisations such as the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) and the American Academy of Pediatrics." But part of the Cass Review's remit was to evaluate the strength of these exact pieces of expert guidance—the Cass Review explicitly explains why the WPATH and AAP guidelines are weak and untrustworthy. Anyone who read the document would have understood that. Not to put too fine a point on it, but the Cass Review argued that the WPATH and AAP guidelines were shoddily constructed, and SciAm published a response accusing the Cass Review of differing from the WPATH and AAP guidelines. That's the sort of error that can only occur in the context of lax editorial standards married to ideological certitude.
People trust Scientific American. It's not out of the question that parents of trans or gender-questioning kids, who are (unfortunately) more likely to get their information on this subject from media outlets than from carefully conducted efforts like the Cass Review, will "learn" from SciAm that blockers and hormones are safe, effective, and likely to reduce suicidality—even as the jury is still out on all these claims. This false belief could prove disastrous for obvious reasons, and yet SciAm has had no qualms about spreading what can only be described as medical misinformation on this subject—something it decries when the sources and claims in question are right-coded.
To be sure, Scientific American was not alone in its abysmal coverage of the youth gender medicine debate. The popular science show Science Vs, which bills itself as a swashbuckling effort to cut through politics and get to the truth of scientific controversy, repeatedly debased itself on this subject, and CNN took such a hard turn toward propaganda on gender medicine that it recycled the same false passage about the supposedly strong evidence base for youth gender medicine in dozens of its articles.
The crisis of expert authority has many causes. But one of them is experts mortgaging their own credibility. When magazines like Scientific American are run by ideologues like Helmuth, producing biased dreck as a result, it only makes it more difficult to defend the institution of science itself from relentless attack. This lack of trust absolutely contributes to the sorts of dunderheaded, reactionary populism presently threatening America and much of Europe.
If experts aren't to be trusted, charlatans and cranks will step into the vacuum. To mangle a line from Archer, "Do you want a world where RFK Jr. is the head of HHS? That's how you get a world where RFK Jr. is appointed head of HHS."
Going forward, Scientific American can right the ship by simply hiring an editor who cares more about science than progressive political goals. That doesn't mean the editor needs to be apolitical or that there's no role for SciAm to chime in on social justice issues in an informed manner, with the requisite level of humility and caution. It simply means that Scientific American needs to get back to its roots—explaining the universe's wonders to its readers, not lecturing them about how society should be ordered or distorting politically inconvenient findings.
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So can the magazine be sued for false advertising?
Science doesn’t need to be defended.
Science, along with logic are the tools we, humanity, has developed since the beginning of time to prove what is truth, reality, to the best of our ability.
We use this truth to make sound decisions and move forward with confidence.
Liars may try to defraud science, to hope to achieve a corrupt objective through coercion.
Even though they call themselves “scientific American” that doesn’t make what they do science.
I appreciate the Archer reference.
Archer is now proggie propaganada
I gave up on it a couple episodes into the last season. It had a good run, but its time is done, I guess.
We face something far worse than Laura's gaggle of X Generation Antifafellati gargleblasters.
The fungus among us is reason-immune numbskulls like Tucker getting paid a megabuck per IQ point for dumbing the nation down.
You sound like a spoiled Hank word salad.
She did not degrade science.
She was just another symptom of the sheer degradation of science. Science has been fucked for a while. She just personified it.
Science is not an institution, it is a process.
Trump destroyed all of our hallowed institutions. And democracy.
He abolished them. And JD Vance was wrong about it.
Great article, except his prescription for how to reverse the trend vastly understates how entrenched her approach is.
Over and over, SciAm simply took what certain activist groups were saying about these treatments and repeated it, basically verbatim, effectively laundering medical misinformation and providing it with the imprimatur of a highly regarded science magazine.
This is true of effectively all media, the only outlet I can think of this is mostly not true of is the WSJ, which is largely because when money is at risk that audience doesn’t tolerate bullshit. Of course that used to be true of science also. But once leftists control achieved control of our scientific institutions their corruption was inevitable.
The crisis of expert authority has many causes. But one of them is experts mortgaging their own credibility.
Paul Krugman denying that minimum wages reduce jobs comes to mind.
This lack of trust absolutely contributes to the sorts of dunderheaded, reactionary populism presently threatening America and much of Europe.
I'm not sure what he means by this, I presume it's his "I'm still one of the good guys" plea. But until the left is driven out of the institutions having outsiders prevent further corruption is the better path forward.
Not to mention the minor inconvenient fact that 'populism' is just a dirty word for democracy. The irony is the so-called elite's are usually the one's that choose to affix this term to politicians that threaten their oligarchy which is largely what we're seeing in both the United States and the EU.
The issues that cause the divide might be different, and it may take different forms, but there's a generalized revolt in the west against regulatory capture enforced by governments and the only thing keeping the pitchforks out of their hands are the social division issues that keep them fighting each other.
I think this is an anti-immigration comment. When I consider how populism in "western Europe" ties to America the common thread is the surprising resurgence of the right politically. The main link between the generally hated right-Euro parties and Trump is immigration.
Not sure why it would be surprising when immigration has historically been fraught with concerns about domestic employment by the native population.
This goes back centuries, if not millennia.
"Populism" does approximately mean "democracy". However, in situations where democracy or the lack thereof is not directly at issue, "populism" means opposition to elitism. That is, it emphasizes the feature of democracy whereby everybody's input is equal, rather than rule being disproportionately influenced by a self-determined elite.
Yeah the gratuitous takes on "populism" and RFK Jr. only serve to promote his vision of the elitism that he admits has failed. And I wonder what conclusions he might reach on the Covid debacle. But still a worthwhile read, something that's pretty rare at Reason these days.
…dangerous ideas …
This is the problem.
"I'm going to take some time to think about what comes next (and go birdwatching)"
From the MAGA concentration/breeding camp you fear is coming for you?
Have you seen her? She can concentrate but I'm thinking she doesn't make the breeding cut.
I’m thinking she doesn’t make the breeding cut
We’ll still need practice girls.
Wanting to stick it in that would be science fiction.
'Whether or not Helmuth's resignation was voluntary, it should go without saying that a few bad social media posts should not end someone's job.'
Really? According to the left, this is established science. And for free-thinking people--who want to read and watch content not produced by radicals--then publicity and market choices can and should definitely end Helmuth's (and Harris') career.
Whether or not Helmuth’s resignation was voluntary, it should go without saying that a few bad social media posts should not end someone’s job. If that were the whole story here—an otherwise well-performing editor was ousted over a few bad posts—this would arguably be a case of “cancel culture,” or whatever we’re calling it these days.
This is, of course, horse shit. Of course she should be fired for that because she represents the publication and her behavior directly reflects on the publication she is editor of. If she worked for, say, Mother Jones or Jacobin this wouldn’t even be news and she wouldn’t have been fired because that’s exactly who subscribes to those publications. Scientific American is not, or at least pretends not to be, a purely political magazine with a unified viewpoint audience.
Is that unfair? Maybe some people might think so, but at the end of the day it’s just good business not to call a percentage of your own customers retarded fascists and if you do that prepare for your boss to fire your ass immediately. That goes for the greeter at Wal-Mart just as much as this ninny.
There is a zero percent chance she was ‘retiring anyway’, that’s just the publication allowing her out with some amount of dignity for the length of her tenure.
I am really tired of this narrative that SciAm turned bad only recently. It goes back at least 44 years, because I dropped my subscription before I moved in 1980. Their first article was always some kind of socio-political blather incapable of being called science, but this one issue's blather was a supposedly scientific comparison of Communist capitols with capitalist capitols, as cities, as places to live. His shining example was the two Koreas. Pyongyang's picture was of an empty street, gray buildings, drab and cold and boring beyond belief. Seoul's picture was a crowded street, people carrying shopping bags, store windows full of enticements, and full of color in the people, displays, and buildings.
That's when I either canceled the subscription outright or let it expire.
Stop pretending this anti-science pro-leftism tilt is anything new.
Yes, you noticed back then too.
You're right, but I think it started when John Rennie took over as editor in 1994.
If I'm right, then it started twenty years before.
The capture of this institution has allowed too many leftists to justify anti-liberty, morally evil methods of all types. The research on gender affirmation is especially apropos because their cavalier claims that invasive medication was fully reversible led people including Chase Oliver to back Very Bad(TM) interventions into the development of minors.
I grew up reading Scientific American. I stopped in 1995. It was obvious after John Rennie took over in 1994 that the magazine had decided to become a de facto arm of the DNC rather than a venue for sharing interesting science articles. I’d been out of the country for two years and when I got back in ‘95, the decline compare to what it had been in ‘93 was stunning.
Editors since Rennie have continued and accelerated the overt politicization of the magazine at the expense of its scientific credibility, so this latest is no surprise.
Several other magazines have done things like this. I used to really enjoy Smithsonian because it had serious long-form articles. In 2001 I got my father-in-law a subscription (he is a geologist and geographer) and the next issue I got was awful: The articles were dumbed down and shortened and edited in ways that made no sense. Turns out the new editor, Carey Winfrey, was trying to make the magazine more accessible and his solution was to make it stupid. I don’t know if it ever recovered or not, but every issue I bothered to look at after that was marred by stupidity and striving for the lowest common denominator.
But SciAm shows one of the biggest falls.
todays smithsonian is 100% woke every article if it mentions white men it must be how bad they are and how great all others are.
"I've decided to leave Scientific American after an exciting 4.5 years as editor in chief," she wrote on Bluesky
I listened to someone do a video on Bluesky, and according to that someone, near to 100% of the people on Bluesky just bitch about Twitter and Elon Musk.
I've only recently discovered that Bluesky exists. I was led to believe that Mastodon had filled the void created when Musk made Twitter a haven for white supremacists. Viva La Resistance.
Nah, they left for Mastadon, then they left for Threads and now they're leaving for Bluesky. Never any mention of the return before the next performative exit.
Dorsey started up Bluesky after he left Twitter, so that one will probably stick as an alternate platform simply because it mostly functions the same, save for the fact that it's easier for the users to isolate their accounts.
Most of what's going on there now is either a bunch of mutual back-patting, or purity test spats that result in block-fests.
"People trust Scientific American."
I remember to this day the issue in the 1970s that, as a radical departure from the "Scientific American" I had loved and subscribed to, caused me to cancel my subscription and stop reading it permanently. I had to check the cover of that issue to verify that it was, in fact, "Scientific American." I had become used to brilliant non-technical explanations of awesome but complex natural phenomena with illustrations that made a light go on in my poor brain, making me exclaim, "So THAT'S how it works!" Then suddenly the editions started telling me that man-made pollution was changing not only the weather but the CLIMATE; that sociology was hard science and that even the economy was subject to scientific analysis. I remember that somewhat earlier, my beloved Sierra Club had stopped talking about the wilderness and started lobbying Congress and I had to drop that membership, too. One by one institutions became captured by socialists. Don't get me started about the American Civil Liberties Union. So, although the latest editor of SciAm may have been the most obviously egregious, that was only the cherry on top of the whipped cream on top of the granola sundae for the last several decades.
Amen! My recollection is before 1980, but it could well have gone way back.
Couldn’t remember when it started getting ignored – ’~80 sounds about right. A shame.
The Economist, and Fortune both took the same nose-dive.
Laura Helmuth re-introduced the concept of junk science in her publication more than once.
Now Scientific American has as much credibility as The Onion or The National Enquirer.
the onion has more credibility than most all others anymore
The Babylon Bee might, but The Onion doesn't anymore. The Bee has struggled to keep their news satire and not just 3-6 months ahead of official reports. The Onion became disconnected from reality and too focused on partisan hit jobs to be funny.
This has been my contention for a long time!
I wish people would stop reflexively using the onion as the de facto satire reference.
Yes my mistake
Politics replaced science at Sciam long ago. Even during the Reagan years they said his star wars plans would never work no facts provide just said it won't work, that was not very sciency of them. and of course their article about how its ok for BLM to gather and riot during covid since they won't catch it since what they are doing is so important or some such blather. i quit subscribing in teh late 80's but do check them out now and then on line and they have not changed
Nicely done Reason. Whether this happened recently or 44 years ago and slowly increased to intolerable levels, it is a mess.
Me in 2015: Does anyone else see something weird going on?
Other people in 2015: Shut up, and stop bitching about Kultur war hurr durrr.
Other people in 2024: Something weird is going on!
Reason 2024: Shut up, and stop bitching about Kultur war hurr durrr.
Science does tend to attract whackos, and the whackiest of all usually have two X chromosomes https://www.reddit.com/r/labrats/comments/i2nz5q/reasonably_wellknown_science_twitter_account/?rdt=52677
There was a Reason story about this, but I can’t seem to find it.
"Most importantly, it falsely claimed that there is solid evidence youth gender medicine ameliorates adolescent suicidality, when we absolutely do not know that to any degree of certainty."
I don't think that's the most important take away. I'm more interested in what is the cause of the confusion gender and sexuality - young people finding it comfortable to identify with a gender at odds with their biological makeup - something that seems to be growing among the young at least in the more developed societies. How medicine treats the phenomena and the success of these various treatments won't be properly answered until we have a much better idea of the cause of the problem. If Scientific American ignores the issue of aetiology (causation) that indicates a deeper and more serious problem with science than a once beloved magazine's editorial decisions.
They do not want you to ask about the aetiology of the transgender phenomenon we are now seeing, and calling it a “problem” will immediately get you branded transphobic.
The aetiology though is likely bored tweens and attention seeking parents with access to social media.
"The aetiology though is likely bored tweens and attention seeking parents with access to social media."
I very much doubt this. It's not clear that those suffering from the gender disorientation are any more bored than others. or their parents are more attention seeking. Your explanation seems more an attempt to foist the issue on to the shoulders of troubled individuals. I suspect the causes are related to environmental contamination - endocrine disruptors - which maybe also are responsible for dramatically decreased sperm counts in males the world over.
" calling it a “problem” will immediately get you branded transphobic"
That's a risk you should be willing to take. It clearly is a problem and can lead to depression, suicide and mass shootings.
This is an old, tired, sad fight by now! “Science” that suppresses gathering and reporting data!
http://reason.com/blog/2017/10/03/brickbat-dont-ask-dont-tell
I am utterly SHOCKED to learn that NOT offending the “tranny brigade” of PC people is WAY more important than the actual happiness of trannies and potential trannies!!! Or even STUDYING such matters!
Speaking of such things, there are biochemical, often off-label, solutions to your urges towards becoming a tranny, which MIGHT actually lead to better results! To MORE happiness, for many potential trannies! To becoming happy with your body, as it already is! Imagine that!
See http://www.drugs.com/condition/gender-dysphoria.html for “Off Label” uses of drugs for suppressing “gender dysphoria”… 6 drugs listed in web link above, to include (pretty obviously) testosterone…
Also see “The successful treatment of a gender dysphoric patient with Pimozide” at http://www.researchgate.net/publication/14365362_The_successful_treatment_of_a_genderdysphoric_patient_with_Pimozide
(I hope that the PC police won’t be bashing my door down soon, for my sins, in reporting this.)
Sex changes and suicides are too complicated to pull out which is cause and which is effect. Suicides may also be driven by being socially ostracized as opposed to the sex change itself. But IMHO, the current “science” status of forbidding the collection and reporting the data STINKS to the Highest Heavens!
I for one sure wish that the modern medical establishment was as data-driven as the CLAIM to be! But NOOOOO, we may NOT collect data, if it might be used (in BAD ways) by the troglodytes!
Also to continue my rant on there being alternatives to surgery…
Also use below as search-string…
“Transgender woman, who claims pills for male hair-loss sparked gender change, opens up”
Concerns male-hair-loss “…drug (Whose Name May Not Be Mentioned), called (Whose Name May Not Be Mentioned), to halt the onset of hereditary baldness”, which feminized his / her body, and brought around the desire for a sex change, according to him-now-her.
So then drug (Whose Name May Not Be Mentioned) sounds like a darned-good choice for an off-label drug use, if you are female, contemplating sex-change to male, and worrying that your marriage might not survive such a sex change… Which is a strong possibility! Try this first, to see if maybe you’d like to stay female, before you make drastic changes…
I am severely disappointed in Reason.com, in that they (supposedly “pro-free-speech” ones that they are) have repeatedly disallowed my posts mentioning precisely WHICH drug (by name) might be used for off-label uses! Hey Reason! People DESPERATELY needing pain relief just MIGHT use street heroin for pain relief, OFF LABEL, instead of committing severe-pain-induced suicide! Shall we prohibit mentioning “heroin”?
Pro_*_pec>>ia AKA (generic) fin_*_ast&&eride may NOT be mentioned!
finasteride... Propecia... Whoa! It went through!
"Also to continue my rant on there being alternatives to surgery…"
Electroshock therapy has been a treatment for depression. It works too and can be a life saver. I am more interested in finding out more about the cause.
Your earlier comment... "I suspect the causes are related to environmental contamination – endocrine disruptors – ..." ... Is definitely or almost definitely spot on! These chemicals are already released. Their chemical sources are so useful that there may not be much room left there for maneuvering. Every rose has its thorn. PART of the fix is letting people contemplating surgical sex changes know that chemical (hormones etc) tweaks are a less-traumatic, less-radical route to take, which may "fix" their "gender-fender-bender dysphoria". Well, taking a knife to your pubes is more than a fender-bender, butt I imagine you get the idea...
Sad to say, wildlife has no "access" to any of these "fixes" to "endocrine disruptors". One example: https://academic.oup.com/icb/article/40/3/438/379945 Alligators and Endocrine Disrupting Contaminants: A Current Perspective . . . I worry about being bitten by gators... Now I will ALSO need to worry about them dragging me off and forcing me to watch them conduct an "Alligator Drag Queen Story Hour"! (Do NOT pass this idea on! I am also in fear of the next pet-snatching-type groundless panic!)
I’m not saying that all trans kids are just bored-there are some who no doubt are genuinely confused about their identity and there may be an organic cause to it. But for something like this to double in just a few years makes it seem like a lot of it is social not biological.
Personally, I think the widespread use of SSRIs since the 1990s, especially by women of childbearing age and children is behind a lot of the dysfunction we are now seeing, including school shootings.
"But for something like this to double in just a few years makes it seem like a lot of it is social not biological."
That's the problem with humans. You can't really tease out the difference between the two. It's behind the whole nature vs. nurture debate, something that will likely never be resolved.
How medicine treats the phenomena and the success of these various treatments won’t be properly answered until we have a much better idea of the cause of the problem.
And a better understanding of what the problem actually is. It's likely that there is more than 1 problem, which may not even all be related.
As you mentioned, there's probably some environmental factor that may be causal for some, but also it appears that many are confusing fashion/expression with gender confusion.
The cause of the problem is confusion between the physical and the non-physical. It's been noted for a long time that many of the roles that "male" and "female" have been pigeonholed into are unjustified, and that individuals vary in their interests, so that we may advantageously ignore what the average is when choosing for ourselves. Now that enlightened reform has been perverted into an unspoken admission that biologic determinists of culture were right all along, admitting of no variations on an individual basis, and therefore that, rather than stepping across the non-physical boundaries of culture, we need to physically adjust our maleness or femaleness to fit. It's as if instead of trying to counter racism culturally, reformers decided the thing to do is plastic surgery and skin painting to make individuals fit the race they seem suited for.
" It’s as if instead of trying to counter racism culturally, reformers decided the thing to do is plastic surgery and skin painting to make individuals fit the race they seem suited for."
I noticed this in India where it seemed that every other TV commercial was for skin creams to lighten the skin to the desired 'wheat' color. In the US, millions are spent by black people on hair straitening products and procedures.
"and therefore that, rather than stepping across the non-physical boundaries of culture, we need to physically adjust our maleness or femaleness to fit. "
Body modification has been a significant force in our culture for a few decades now. Tattooing is certainly crossing into the physical, as is piercing, nose, breast, eyelid fold jobs. There's a whole transhuman movement going on which Libertarians support, promoting individual choice over 'nature.' This gender business seems a natural extension of this.
The procedures you mention are mostly available only to consenting adults and are cosmetic. If a kid insists on dressing up as the opposite gender, that’s one thing. But blocking a fundamental life process with drugs so that one day they can have surgery is quite another with very little science to support it.
That's why I think it's important to get to the cause of the matter. Once that becomes clear, suitable treatments may become more evident. I agree that irrevocable surgical treatment on minors is problematic, and I personally wouldn't recommend it, but science and medicine have a long history of dead ends and outright errors. Doctors prescribing eating radium or electrocution, for example. It's only natural for new innovations to try to muscle their way into the medical field, often with no or negative results. We've now got a whole slew of hormone blockers that have never existed before, and researchers are itching to try them out as treatments.
I stopped trusting (and reading) Scientific American way back in 2002 when they devoted an entire issue of the magazine to a borderline ad hominem attack on Bjorn Lomborg and his recent book.
There were certainly valid critiques to be made of the book, but that is not what Scientific American did.
“…it should go without saying that a few bad social media posts should not end someone's job.”
Not a shared opinion, in a society where mere accusations of indiscretions are tantamount to convictions for crimes.
That's the nail in the coffin for a leader who has subverted and/or abandoned the mission of the organization. Hopefully KMW gets the same treatment.
or that there's no role for SciAm to chime in on social justice issues in an informed manner
Science has nothing - nothing whatsoever - to do with "social justice." Social justice is a 100% political concept (and a recent one at that, a derivative of Critical Theory), and not one iota of science lends itself to anything to do with it.
Be a science magazine, or don't.
"Be a science magazine, or don’t."
The problem goes back decades before social justice became a thing. Scientific American used to publish a monthly column, every month, called 'Mathematical Games.' The contents of the column had nothing to do with science, but instead an entirely different human endeavor called mathematics.
Mathematics is the language of science. It is not unrelated to science.
Science is based on observing, naming and measuring natural phenomena. Math is an abstract study of axioms, theories and proofs. It is no more a science than social justice.
"Mathematics is the language of science. "
Also the language of sociology, linguistics, music and other arts. I'm not really critical about including a math column in a magazine devoted to science. I'm just not fussing over coverage of social justice as being off limits.
And it was of interest to all scientists, regardless of political ideology.
"And it was of interest to all scientists, regardless of political ideology."
Not the life sciences. Linnaeus based his analysis on appearance and morphology. It can even be argued that the introduction of math into the life sciences has led to its corruption and politicization. Look at Mendel or eugenics for examples.
How is that a problem for a science magazine?
Or are you just trying to downplay a science magazine pretending that social justice has anything to do with science?
It's probably more of a social science. The study of groups of people. I'd have to see the article that set you off before I made any judgements. It's possible that ideas of social justice can be experimentally explored. I'm thinking of those tests on chimps where researchers unfairly withhold rewards to chimps to observe their sense of justice. Would you object to coverage of this area?
And the social sciences at least over the past two decades are incredibly corrupt (see the inability to reproduce results issue), in large part, because the studies are coming to conclusions and shaping their facts to fit an ideological view.
I believe the experiments showing a sense of justice in chimps are sound and the results are reproducible. I wouldn't have any problem if they were to be published in a science magazine. Would you?
mtrueman|8.30.17 @ 1:42PM|#
"Spouting nonsense is an end in itself."
Keep this in mind when wasting time engaging this shit-pile.
There wasn’t an article specified. I was disputing Jesse’s notion that there’s a role for SciAm (or any Science-devoted periodical) to play when it comes to “chiming in” on social justice issues.
There is none. None whatsoever. The minute Science starts crossing over into Social Justice, it stops being science.
It’s possible that ideas of social justice can be experimentally explored.
No, it’s not.
I’m thinking of those tests on chimps where researchers unfairly withhold rewards to chimps to observe their sense of justice.
Chimps don’t have a sense of justice. They simply have chimp behavior. Which is what those researchers were, in fact, actually observing.
Unless you’re using some kind of racial pejorative/slur for a certain human demographic, in which case shame on you.
I was referring to chimpanzees, our closest relatives in the animal kingdom. You should familiarize yourself with the experiments done with chimpanzees. It could be of interest.
"The minute Science starts crossing over into Social Justice, it stops being science. "
It's more properly a social science. It's not quite a science because the object of study are conscious human beings - not atoms or stars, but it's still possible to come up with hypotheses and conduct experiments, though not with quite the rigor of the natural sciences. So you are right to be skeptical. Just don't throw the proverbial baby out with the bath water.
I was referring to chimpanzees, our closest relatives in the animal kingdom.
If by "close" you mean a billion miles apart.
Even the most primitive and tribal of human societies are far more advanced and nuanced than any chimp colony.
It’s more properly a social science.
Social Science isn't a thing. That's just behaviorism with a fancy name which doesn't reflect the true nature of what it studies. And it does not lend itself to any credible predictions (let alone conclusions) about humankind.
That's a subject for philosophy. Or theology (which is about as close to "social science" as you'll ever get).
"If by “close” you mean a billion miles apart. "
Choose any other creature on the planet and it will be at least 2 to 3 billion miles apart. Rest assured, chimpanzees are our closest relatives. Did you have something else in mind? The cetaceans, perhaps? How about mice, if you want to go the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy route.
"Even the most primitive and tribal of human societies are far more advanced and nuanced than any chimp colony. "
Except when it comes to tree dwelling. The chimps beat us at that game hands down, millions of years ago when our ancestors, heads bowed in shame, left their pitiful lives in the trees and took to the African savannah,
"That’s a subject for philosophy. Or theology (which is about as close to “social science” as you’ll ever get)."
You may know them as the 'humanities' but without literature, history, and such. Social sciences are sociology, obviously, also linguistics, economics, criminology. anthropology, psychology, and others. All use experimental methods in their research and math to crunch the numbers. They are unlike natural sciences such as chemistry because the object of study, humans, are living, conscious beings, and not inanimate matter.
Rest assured, chimpanzees are our closest relatives.
"Closest" does not mean the same thing as "close." My closest family lives thousands of miles across the country. That does not make her close in proximity to me.
Except when it comes to tree dwelling.
You make my point for me. Outside of the Swiss Family Robinson, who still did it better than the chimps, human beings came down from the trees and learned to craft shelters out of raw materials. You let me know when a chimp figures out, without any human assistance, a basic lean to, a-frame, or a teepee. I'll wait.
Social sciences are sociology, obviously, also linguistics, economics, criminology. anthropology, psychology, and others. All use experimental methods in their research and math to crunch the numbers.
Studying statistical trends among various demographics is not the same as studying the nature of the physical world.
"That does not make her close in proximity to me. "
I believe your closest relative is your closest relative. If you disagree, make your case.
"You let me know when a chimp figures out, without any human assistance, a basic lean to, a-frame, or a teepee. I’ll wait."
I'm waiting until you abandon your home and take up living in a tree. Until then, my point stands.
"Studying statistical trends among various demographics is not the same as studying the nature of the physical world."
Not the same at all. And botany is different from astrophysics. Once again, I fail to see your point.
I believe your closest relative is your closest relative. If you disagree, make your case.
I already did. My "closest" relative does not tell me anything meaningful about the distance between me and them. I know you want to believe that humans are one step removed from chimps - and you're using this pedantic argument to try and rationalize it - but they're in fact light years apart.
It's like pretending that your lawnmower is "closest" to your Lamborghini. Yea, they share a lot of characteristics - four wheels, an engine, variable speed control. But you're conspicuously ignoring the really important distinguishing differences.
I’m waiting until you abandon your home and take up living in a tree. Until then, my point stands.
No, lmao, it doesn't. It doesn't even a little bit. How do you think a human living in a tree gives ANY credibility to your argument?
Not the same at all. And botany is different from astrophysics.
Except they're both, at the end of the day, studying the nature of the physical world. Which social sciences don't do.
"My “closest” relative does not tell me anything meaningful about the distance between me and them. "
Correct. It tells you there is no relative closer.
"But you’re conspicuously ignoring the really important distinguishing differences."
Correct. Because they are irrelevant to the point I'm making which is that both humans and chimpanzees both share a sense of justice as researchers have repeatedly demonstrated by scientific experiments. This seems to have triggered you into repeated claims that humans were superior to chimpanzees. Perhaps true, but irrelevant.
"No, lmao, it doesn’t. It doesn’t even a little bit. How do you think a human living in a tree gives ANY credibility to your argument? "
It's not meant to give credibility. It's meant as a joke. Your first response, "lmao" was the correct one. Go with you gut. You tend to overthink things. Very post modernist of you.
"Which social sciences don’t do."
Correct. They study human society and social interactions, cleaving as close to the scientific method as circumstances (and ethics) allow.
Because they are irrelevant to the point I’m making which is that both humans and chimpanzees both share a sense of justice
Wrong. They don’t have even the most basic brainpower for such a thing. They lack the physical/genetic capabilities for even contemplating such a notion. They have no means whatsoever of discerning as abstract a concept of “just” vs “unjust.” Justice is an entirely human concept.
I don’t know what “research” you think you’re referring to, but I suspect the “justice” angle of it is rooted in anthropomorphism – that is, mistaking an observation of communal tendencies (which exist widely in the animal kingdom), with an entirely human concept for which they are incapable of abstracting.
There is no such thing as a chimpanzee justice system. What you’re observing is mere behaviorism.
Correct. They study human society and social interactions, cleaving as close to the scientific method as circumstances (and ethics) allow.
Which isn’t science.
Mathematics is considered part of science and occasionally made the cover of the magazine even going back to 1959.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24941145
The Martin Gardner column was a cherished part of Sci Am for many of us growing up in the 60s.
Math is the M in STEM and figures in improving observations, measurements, and analysis of data, as well as modeling and predicting phenomenon. The governing equations from physics and engineering are “in the language of mathematics”.
"Mathematics is considered part of science and occasionally made the cover of the magazine even going back to 1959."
Not by me. Not by the definitions I've given.
" The governing equations from physics and engineering are “in the language of mathematics”.
So is everything else. How about linguistics, economics, music and other areas. Mathematics also can corrupt the science. I'm thinking of biology where math had been absent for centuries. When Mendel introduced math into his analysis, it corrupted and simplified his views. "You can't land on fractions, man!" were the words of the harlequin character in Apocalypse Now! Mendel would have agreed.
Mathematics is considered part of science By who?
It really isn't part of science. It is a distinct approach to gaining knowledge. Science is about experiment, math is about pure reasoning. And there is a lot of math that has absolutely nothing to do with science.
Math is an extremely useful tool for science to the extent that it's almost impossible to do most hard science without it. But it is definitely a distinct venture and definitely not part of science (though it did to a large extent develop along side science).
My God you are a huge idiot
mtrueman|8.30.17 @ 1:42PM|#
“Spouting nonsense is an end in itself.”
No one should be surprised.
Ideology is corruptive of good science, and it appears Helmuth is foremost an ideologue.
"and it appears Helmuth is foremost an ideologue."
She is foremost a magazine editor. ie not a scientist. And magazines, at least the good ones, reflect an ideology - a set of ideas that determine what goes into the magazine and what doesn't. Look at the difference between Nature and New Scientist to see how the ideology of the editors means different editorial positions even though the subject matter may be identical.
Scientific American is supposed to be presenting scientific research to the layperson. Its ideology should be dispassion with regards to ideology, as it is a journal of science and not politics.
" Its ideology should be dispassion with regards to ideology, as it is a journal of science and not politics."
The two intertwine. The author mentions the Star Wars project where science and politics are of a piece. Scientific research has a cost, sometimes a huge cost, coming from the politicians out of the public purse. That makes it political in itself, aside from all the issues of foreign and defense policy.
You don't think this trans issue has a political dimension? You haven't been paying attention.
The trans issue certainly has a political dimension, that is part of the problem. The pro physical intervention side treats their propositions as revealed pseudo-religious dogma and seeks to suppress any thing which comes to a different conclusion through ad hominems and intimidation. See the article about Scientific American's lame attempt to discredit the Cass Report.
More Sciency =Trans Activism and Leftist ideology du jour
Less Sciency = Math and covering both sides
"The pro physical intervention side treats their propositions as revealed pseudo-religious dogma and seeks to suppress any thing which comes to a different conclusion through ad hominems and intimidation."
Someone who commits to a treatment as radical as surgery is probably a believer in the efficacy of the treatment. No surprise there. I don't see anything pseudo-religious about it, though. Are you bringing religious belief into the discussion to discredit a medical treatment? I've noticed many here drag in religion to denigrate research into climate change, as well. Are you one of them?
The two intertwine.
No they don't.
Not one single political system in the history of the universe has ever had any effect whatsoever on the observable/measurable physical world. Politics can rebel against Science all it wants, but Science always wins because it's the study of objective reality.
Politics once declared the we live in a geocentric universe. Science doesn't care. It's heliocentric. Period. Nothing any man, politician, or government says will ever change that.
"Not one single political system in the history of the universe has ever had any effect whatsoever on the observable/measurable physical world."
Are you familiar with the Great Wall of China? The ancient dynasties had it built to preserve their rule against barbaric invaders from the north. You can go to China today and observe and measure it to your heart's content.
"but Science always wins because it’s the study of objective reality."
Sometimes it's just out and out dogma. Matter can't be created or destroyed. That goes back to Aristotle, and there's no evidence to back this up. Don't be taken in by the self serving lies of scientists or editors of science magazines. They want you to believe they alone are the arbiters of truth. Be more skeptical.
Are you familiar with the Great Wall of China?
Yea. Nothing about it changed any scientific law, theory, or observable phenomenon whatsoever.
Sometimes it’s just out and out dogma.
Give me one single example that the physical world did not ultimately become the indisputable arbiter on.
Matter can’t be created or destroyed. That goes back to Aristotle, and there’s no evidence to back this up.
Try destroying it. See what happens.
Better yet, try creating it. GLWT.
"Yea. Nothing about it changed any scientific law, theory, or observable phenomenon whatsoever. "
I'm not sure what you are driving at. Political systems inspire, fund and equip scientific expeditions. The drive for the south pole. The moon landings, the Venus and Mars expeditions. I'm not sure what point you are trying to make. Is it that politicians can't enact legislation that revokes the law of gravity? If that's the case I agree, and I apologize if I led you to believe otherwise.
"Give me one single example that the physical world did not ultimately become the indisputable arbiter on. "
I already gave you the example of dogma in the law about creating or destroying matter. It wasn't derived from experiment or observation but was imported whole hog from ancient Greek philosophy.
Political systems inspire, fund and equip scientific expeditions.
But they don't have any bearing on the science itself. Outside of falsifying it for political purposes, obviously.
Is it that politicians can’t enact legislation that revokes the law of gravity? If that’s the case I agree, and I apologize if I led you to believe otherwise.
Cool.
I already gave you the example of dogma in the law about creating or destroying matter.
Has any political system ever created or destroyed matter?
"But they don’t have any bearing on the science itself."
I still don't know what you're driving at. I already conceded that politicians can't legislate away the law of gravity. What more do you want of me? I could list other laws of nature that politicians can't revoke. Would that satisfy you?
I want you recognize that “science” and “funding/equipping science” aren’t the same thing.
I want you to recant your statement “the two intertwine.”
Because they do not.
...
That's not ideology, that's marketing.
No, it's ideology. Marketing is propaganda, extolling a product or idea as necessary or desirable. Good magazines are informed by a shared idea. Their ideology is implicit.
Lysenkoism; ideology before anything.
Great Article. Thank You. How I miss the classic Scientific American!
SciAm started to be noticeably problematic ~40 years ago, so I stopped reading. I can only conclude they continued to get worse.
It's dead and gone, and never coming back. Another great American institution destroyed by the mentally ill woke democrats.
SciAm veered off the rails long ago. By all means have an op-ed or two on social issues related to science, but the meat of the magazine should be science and maths with no social slant.
Perhaps they'll wake up and realise there still as a market for good quality popular actual science
Even more troubling, hard scientific journals like Science and Nature have begun issuing articles supporting the woke left.
I had a subscription for over 20 years and cancelled a few years ago. The publisher and that dip shit turned it a 21 century OMNI magazine.
Here's a typical article at SA today: "Here’s Why Human Sex Is Not Binary"
Yet the article can't give us one single example of anything outside binary sexual reproduction in humans.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/heres-why-human-sex-is-not-binary/
"Yet the article can’t give us one single example of anything outside binary sexual reproduction in humans. "
Human sexuality goes far beyond sexual reproduction. It determines how we dress, how we style our hair, how we walk, how we name ourselves and even how we throw a ball. Binary pigeonholing is easy and convenient but doesn't describe reality.
How we dress, how we style our hair, how we walk, how we name ourselves, etc has nothing to do with sex. Those are cultural associations with sexual dimorphism.
As far as nature is concerned, the sole purpose of sex is reproduction. And in humans (and most other organisms on Earth), reproductive sex is binary and immutable.
"As far as nature is concerned, the sole purpose of sex is reproduction."
True enough, but as far as humanity is concerned, sex goes far beyond reproduction. It can determine a lot more besides. Economic and legal standing has traditionally been determined by sex, for example. In sports, it determines who can participate in Olympic boxing or an appropiate pairing in mixed doubles tennis. This is where the controversy creeps in. Nobody disputes the role of sex in reproduction.
People do dispute the role of sex in reproduction - they claim it's a spectrum when in fact it's a binary and immutable system. They claim sex is "assigned at birth" as if the doctor flips a coin or something - when in fact it's observed and recorded at birth. In fact, the extremists avoid common terms altogether and refer to people by body parts like "uterus havers" instead of "women".
They try to blur this issue as much as possible because it's very clear that sports, prisons, etc were originally intended to be divided on the basis of biological sex, not cultural things like who wears a dress.
"People do dispute the role of sex in reproduction "
But you are responding to me. I don't. If you want to argue with people disputing the role of sex in reproduction, seek them out and leave me out of this. I can't speak for them.
"In fact, the extremists avoid common terms altogether and refer to people by body parts like “uterus havers” instead of “women”."
Completely beside the point. You asked for examples of sexual reproduction outside a binary opposition. I wrote that it didn't exist. But that sexuality in humans goes beyond the role it plays in producing children. Sexuality is deeply embedded in our legal system, how we present ourselves, how we choose our partners, and a host of other areas that have nothing to do with reproduction. I would have thought this was a trivial point, but you seem to think otherwise.
Yeah, I cited “men evolved to hunt, women evolved to gather” article below.
The whole thing gets virtually all of science ass-backwards in order to generate an assertion no one was making and refute it. Like people *still* trying to resolve any given physical or social trait to either nature or nurture even though, since Mendel’s day, it’s been known to be nature *and* nurture.
Nobody anywhere in history said women were never hunters or warriors or gladiators or laborers. They just said that, like all omnivores and without any moral or social commentary as to whether eating meat or gathering grains is superior or more noble, humans are hunter gatherers. Moreover, across the vast majority of recorded history, archaeology, and contemporary pre-agrarian societies, the majority of the hunting is done by a majority of, but not exclusively by, men.
Akin to the indication regarding Mendel, the science around sexual dimorphism, strength, and physical ability has independently affirmed what was known prior such that SciAm advocating the feminist reinterpretation of history is like someone in modern society trying to advocate for or revive phlogiston theory or phrenology, even by paradoxically reinterpreting the historical theories to agree with their modern reinvention of their junk science. We know about oxygen and we have MRIs, we can determine skull shapes and analyze electrons in ways that not only refute the reinterpretive pseudo-science, but are far more broadly useful well beyond the narrow bounds of your ideological aims.
This can be seen in the articles' invocations of neanderthals. They cite greater parity among them without acknowledging that A) the parity still wasn't 1:1, B) neanderthal females were, in a kinesiology sense, closer to their male peers *and* human males in terms of musculature, bone density, energy metabolism, etc. than they were to human females, and C) neanderthals were still a separate genus with a completely different social structure and the comparison is like saying because lionesses engage in hunting, early female housecats were just as effective at bringing down medium-sized game as their larger peers.
At least the Amish understand that theirs is a moral and spiritual argument rather than pretending that raising buildings by hand is objectively or practically the correct way to build buildings. Superior to the classically chauvinist methods using things like steel girders, concrete, rivets, and cranes.
"That doesn't mean the editor needs to be apolitical or that there's no role for SciAm to chime in on social justice issues in an informed manner,"
No, no, a thousand times NO! This is exactly the thinking that started SciAm down the path to ruin in the first place! Do you somehow not understand that?
And to pick "social justice" issues as an example! How clueless can you be? "Social justice" is 100.0000% political, it's nothing BUT left wing politics.
“Social justice” is 100.0000% political, it’s nothing BUT left wing politics."
When humans are under the microscope, politics is inevitable. That's not to say that social justice can't be explored by experimental scientific methods. It's trickier than investigating galaxies or atoms, which lack consciousness, but you don't have a better alternative, do you?
I'm not saying "justice" is 100% political, I'm saying "social" justice is.
You're knocking on an open door. Of course anything dealing with humans and how they deal with each other is political. You seem to think that it makes the issue somehow illegitimate, and that it sullies the purity of science. Granted, when humans and their politics enter the picture, things get messy, but that's unavoidable.
Scientific American stopped being scientific years ago. They should have changed the name to Popular Science, but that was already taken. I guess they could go with Woke Science.
"Scientific American stopped being scientific years ago."
They may go back to the older format.
"In October 2015, Playboy announced the magazine would no longer feature full-frontal nudity beginning with the March 2016 issue....Playboy announced in February 2017, however, that the dropping of nudity had been a mistake. Furthermore, for its March/April issue, it reestablished some of its franchises, including the Playboy Philosophy and Party Jokes, but dropped the subtitle "Entertainment for Men", inasmuch as gender roles have evolved. "
I gave up my subscription to SA back in 2017 when the political content began to outweigh the scientific.
In it, she accused her generation, Generation X, of being "full of fucking fascists," complained about how sexist and racist her home state of Indiana was, and so on.
Might have to expand. The whine cellar is still stock full of 2016 vintage, but the tears from sour grapes like this are too good to pass up.
But what really caught my eye was SciAm's coverage of the youth gender medicine debate.
And the problem is systemic. In order to support the 'trans' ideological debate, you have to simultaneously reinforce gender roles while tearing down *traditional* gender roles. An action that has nothing to do with trans ideology itself but which Sci Am nonetheless engaged.
Probably the most personally infuriating article in recent memory was the assertion of women as predominantly hunters:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-theory-that-men-evolved-to-hunt-and-women-evolved-to-gather-is-wrong1/
It was pure "Don't believe your lying eyes. Wet roads cause rain and, even if they don't, we know that historically roads could've gotten wet before the surrounding terrain."
Helmuth derides the racist, sexists of Indiana but she's more racist, sexist, and backwardly idiotic than any of them. To the point that her employer, who seemingly approved of the woke content at one point, had to ask her to step aside.
We call the notion that men were hunters and women gatherers a 'just so story' - an untestable narrative explanation for a cultural practice, a biological trait, or behavior of humans or other animals.
The evidence is that women hunted and gathered. Even today women have skills in marks(wo)manship that equal men. Back in the olden times, from the Romans to the Inuit and dozens of cultures besides went as far as worshiping women as goddesses of the hunt. Diana, the Roman goddess of the hunt, was typically depicted with a bow and arrows. The idea that someone today can be personally infuriated by the research shows how deeply in thrall to ideology we can be.
I find it ironic that Kamala Harris' mom was actually a legit scientist (though a poor judge of potential mates). And the campaign focused on Kamala's background as a black woman, which she got from her Marxist professor father.
There really seems to be zero respect for science itself. If it can be used to advance their main goals, fine. If they can lie about science to advance their main goals, fine. If they can ignore science to advance their main goals, fine. But science by itself is essentially worthless to them.
"which she got from her Marxist professor father."
Pete Buttigieg also has a Marxist professor father (translated Gramsci's Prison Notebooks). Harris' Marxist professor father was an entirely different man. Trump's father was never a Marxist professor, but he was arrested at a KKK rally so he's no slack tit when it comes to heterodox political ideas.
Done by a woman, surprise surprise !
So how did this fascist editor get the job. If you disagree then explain to me why her actions and statements are not like Muscleweine circa 1938.