How does society view solar radiation modification experiments?

https://www.c2g2.net/c2g-talk-sheila-jasanoff/

"I think that the people who are pushing for solar radiation management or 
indeed any massive technological solutions to climate change are not naïve 
people.  They are quite interdisciplinary in their outlook, and they have 
many ways of talking to other people. 

On the other hand, forgive my saying so, but with engineering, and 
particularly with physics and the hard sciences, there does come a kind of 
arrogance.  It is The Two Cultures kind of arrogance going back to C.P. 
Snow decades ago, that the scientists think that they can do the softer 
stuff, the humanities and what people need, very well, whereas the 
humanists cannot do the things that they do, the calculation and the 
engineering, at all well; and therefore a thoughtful engineer is a better 
judge of where humanity ought to sit and where humanity ought to go than 
even the most erudite and esteemed philosopher on the planet. 

That is an occupational hazard.  It is affecting places of higher learning, 
like my university, where people are voting with their feet. 

But, sitting where I sit, at the nexus of science, technology, and society, 
I also see a huge number of STEM students who realize at some point that 
they don’t understand this complex machinery that is society and that it 
actually takes incredible immersion and a different kind of thought to get 
at the bottom of what people feel and think and how they behave and react 
and also the institutional interfaces — how should people be involved? 

I think it is not the case that engineers and scientists, especially the 
ones who are proponents of solar geoengineering or any of these other 
technological interventions, are naïve and that they don’t get that people 
are out there.  The ones I know personally or have encountered in my 
professional life are very sophisticated people.  I do think that they 
don’t have a sufficient understanding of the complexity of the experiential 
system out of which people come when they are looking at these kinds of 
interventions.  They don’t understand the role of memory, for instance, and 
the ways in which past experience affects one’s understanding of the 
future, or if they do, they tend to turn that into a science. 

This is a little bit of a pet peeve of mine.  When human beings deviate 
from what the scientists and engineers want to tell them, the reaction 
within the behavioral sciences has been to say: “Well, there must be 
something the matter with your brain.  There must be these biases that you 
are inbuilt to forget the distant past and only remember the recent 
experience,” or “You exaggerate the things that you yourself have 
experienced at the expense of the statistical knowledge that you ought to 
have,” and, “Look, you are more afraid of flying in a plane when planes are 
x percent safer than riding in your car, and you ride in your car every 
day.” 

There has been this tendency to depreciate the forms of knowledge that 
people bring to the table, and that is not doing anybody a favor.  That is 
actually, I think, contrary to the very idea of democracy, that you have to 
take people and their understanding of politics and power and work with 
that, not say, “This is an illegitimate understanding” from the start. "

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