You shouldn’t. They’re entirely different.
There are many paths to believing something, or accepting it as true.
The least reliable is faith. It’s just “wishing makes it true.” Another, is personal experience. But that’s easily biased, and even fooled by our limited and faulty senses. Actual repeatable evidence is the best we have so far.
There is only so much “dumbing down” you can do to scientific research about topics until you lose all contextual nuance or become too long winded for a layperson to understand without being overloaded with information.
Then there is the issue with secondary and tertiary sources using simple language that causes confusion because it lacks the contextual nuance necessary to convey the correct interpretation.
Agreed. There’s definitely a gap in how conclusions are communicated to the public.
It’s crazy to me that so much of the general public don’t understand that science is just a protocol of observing, recording, testing, and analyzing results.
You shouldn’t. They’re entirely different.
There are many paths to believing something, or accepting it as true.
The least reliable is faith. It’s just “wishing makes it true.” Another, is personal experience. But that’s easily biased, and even fooled by our limited and faulty senses. Actual repeatable evidence is the best we have so far.
The evidence should convince people.
Scientists are failing to adequately communicate with the public.
There is only so much “dumbing down” you can do to scientific research about topics until you lose all contextual nuance or become too long winded for a layperson to understand without being overloaded with information.
Then there is the issue with secondary and tertiary sources using simple language that causes confusion because it lacks the contextual nuance necessary to convey the correct interpretation.
Clickbait popsci sites don’t help either.
That’s the point of the second half of my comment.
Clickbait popsci sites are called “secondary sources”.
Agreed. There’s definitely a gap in how conclusions are communicated to the public.
It’s crazy to me that so much of the general public don’t understand that science is just a protocol of observing, recording, testing, and analyzing results.
Eh, mostly not the scientists’ fault but the media sensationalizing the data in secondary and tertiary sources.
And, as you said, general ignorance of how science works internally. That is a problem with education though, again not the fault of the scientists.