https://mronline.org/2020/09/12/the-covid-19-pandemic-and-the-dual-nature-of-science/

The COVID-19 pandemic and the dual nature of science
Posted Sep 12, 2020     by Eds.
 Empire , Health , Imperialism , Strategy United States  Newswire  coronavirus 
,COVID-19 , pandemic
Originally published: Science for the People by Frank Rosenthal (August 23, 
2020) 

It is clear that science is important in combating COVID-19. We need to know 
how the virus spreads and what types of precautions are most effective. We need 
to estimate the number of cases to plan for caring for the sick. We need to 
know the molecular structure of the virus in order to devise tests for it, and 
we need to develop vaccines. None of these things can be done without careful 
observations, experiments, evidence gathering, and the use of deductive and 
inductive logic: the building blocks of science. At the same time, the pandemic 
reveals the political nature of science. COVID-19 has exposed how science is 
controlled, framed, and exploited in ways that run counter to the interests of 
people and public health.

Over two decades ago, Professor Richard Levins, one of the founders of Science 
for the People, described this phenomenon as the “dual nature” of science.(1) 
On one hand, scientific investigations discover truths about material reality 
that are independent of ideology or politics. On the other, the practice of 
science is a human endeavor, deeply embedded in a social and political system 
that determines what subjects are investigated, why they are investigated, who 
investigates them, and how they are used. Beyond that, the dominant ideology of 
the political system influences how the results of scientific investigations 
are framed, conceptualized, and communicated. Because of this, we cannot view 
science as objective with respect to public policy.

Political influence on science in the United States has seriously weakened the 
response to the pandemic in several ways:

The health and medical research program of the United States is primarily 
oriented to drug development and chronic disease diagnosis and treatment–areas 
that are favored by profit-seeking enterprises.(2) Despite a multitude of 
warnings about the vulnerability of the United States to pandemics, before the 
emergence of COVID-19, pandemic research was not a major priority in U.S. 
health and medical research.(3) And within the limited scientific preparation 
that was done, in the past decade it seems that scant attention was paid to 
research on how social determinants of health such as race, poverty, or 
socioeconomic status would affect the control and consequences of a future 
pandemic. For example, the 2017 updated “Pandemic Influenza Plan” released by 
the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) refers to an established 
“scientific preparedness infrastructure that informs sound public health 
practices,” but makes no mention of social determinants in the research areas 
it outlines, or indeed in the entire document.(4) This apparent lack of 
emphasis on social determinants in U.S. pandemic research continued in the 
early stages of the current pandemic, when few published papers discussed these 
determinants.(5) Much of the relevant data for analyzing these factors has not 
been collected. For example, as of April 15, 2020, 78 percent of the COVID data 
reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) did not 
disaggregate race or ethnicity–key factors in understanding the spread and 
effects of the pandemic.(6)
There have been blatant attempts to hide or selectively present scientific 
facts, dissolve scientific panels, and suppress or threaten individual 
scientists whose views contradict the status quo. In 2018, the Trump 
administration disbanded the pandemic preparedness unit of the National 
Security Council.(7)Early in the pandemic, scientists and public health 
officials were told that they must get the approval of Vice President Mike 
Pence on whatever they communicated to the public.(8) More recently, Dr. Rick 
Bright was removed from his position as director of a lead federal agency 
addressing the pandemic because he was outspoken in correcting false 
information about COVID-19 stated by President Trump.(9) In each of these 
cases, the government acted to keep essential public health information from 
its citizens.
Facts about the pandemic are framed to serve political interests. The virus is 
characterized as a foreign invader and referred to as the “Chinese Virus” in 
order to promote xenophobia, drawing attention away from the monumental 
failures of the U.S. government in handling the pandemic and justifying attacks 
on the World Health Organization.(10),(11) The role of individual behavior in 
controlling the pandemic is emphasized, while less attention is given to 
policies and regulations that would create safer workplaces. This framing often 
takes place at press conferences at which government leaders “spin” the facts 
to promote their agendas and sideline the voices of scientists, public health 
experts, and activists from marginalized populations.(12)
Pandemic Denial and Pseudoscience in the Pandemic

Compounding the neglect, obstruction, and distortion of scientific 
investigation related to the pandemic is the denial of scientific facts, 
similar to what has occurred with climate change.(13) There are conspiracy 
theories about the origin of the pandemic, claims that public health measures 
are dangerous and should be ignored, and advocacy for unproven “cures.”(14) 
These “theories,” promoted by reactionary forces up to and including the 
president of the United States,(15) confuse and divide people and weaken our 
ability to unite people in demanding a viable public health program to address 
the pandemic.

Summary and Conclusion

Science is an essential tool in controlling the spread and effects of the COVID 
pandemic. But the effectiveness of this tool is blunted by the political 
shaping of science and the promotion of pseudoscience. We should heed Levins’ 
message about the dual nature of science. While combating the ways in which 
science is molded to serve the political interests of those in power, we must 
affirm and defend the validity of the scientific information that is critical 
to controlling the pandemic.

Frank Rosenthal received his PhD in experimental physics, started an 
alternative radio news service, and taught high school science. Then, after 
doing a postdoc in environmental medicine at New York University, he spent 35 
years doing research and teaching in environmental and occupational health 
sciences before retiring from Purdue University. He was one of the original 
members of Science for the People in the early 1970s and helped to relaunch the 
organization in 2015. He can be reached at [email protected].

Editors:

Søren Hough (Lead Editor)
Matt Moss (Co-Editor)
Nafis Hasan (Technical Editor)
Rachel Mendelson (Copy Editor)
Søren Hough & Matt Moss (SftP Online Editors)

References:

 Richard Levins, “Ten Propositions on Science and Antiscience”, Social Text, 
no. 46/47, Science Wars (Spring–Summer, 1996): 101-11, doi: 10.2307/466847
 David B Resnick, ”Setting Biomedical Research Priorities in the 21st Century”, 
Virtual Mentor, no. 5 (July, 2003): 211-214, doi: 
10.1001/virtualmentor.2003.5.7.msoc1-0307
 Uri Friedman, “We Were Warned”, The Atlantic, March 18, 2020, 
www.theatlantic.com
 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Pandemic Influenza Plan 2017”, 
www.cdc.gov
 Saman Khalatbari-Soltani, Robert G. Cumming, Cyrelle Delpierre and Michelle 
Kelly-Irving, “Importance of collecting data on socioeconomic determinants from 
the early stage of the COVID-19 outbreak onwards”, Journal of Epidemiology and 
Community Health, no. 74 (May,2020): 620-623, doi: 10.1136/jech-2020-214297.
 Gregorio A. Millet, Austin T. Jones, David Benkesr, Stefan Baral, Lana Mercer, 
Chris Beyrer, Brian Honemmann et al., “Assessing differential impacts of 
COVID-19 on black communities”, Annals of Epidemiology, no. 47 (July 2020): 
37-44, doi.org
 Lena H. Sun, “Top White House official in charge of pandemic response exits 
abruptly”, The Washington Post, May 10, 2018, www.washingtonpost.com
 Michaek D. Shear and Maggie Haberman, “Pence Will Control All Coronavirus 
Messaging from Health Officials“, New York Times, February 27, 2020, 
www.nytimes.com
 Laurel Wamsley, “Rick Bright, Top Vaccine Scientist Files Whistleblower 
Complaint”, NPR, May 5, 2020, www.npr.org
 Brian Bennett, “Why President Trump Wants to Frame COVID-19 as a ‘Foreign 
Virus’”, Time, March 12, 2020, time.com
 Anne Gearan, “Trump Announces Cutoff of New Funding Over World Health 
Organization Pandemic Response”, Washington Post, April 14, 2020, 
www.washingtonpost.com Zachary B. Wolf, “Trump’s coronavirus briefings matter 
whether or not he tells the truth”, CNN Politics, March 30, 2020, www.cnn.com
 Dana Nucitelli, “Coronavirus doubters follow climate denial playbook”, Yale 
Climate Connections, April 14, 2020, www.yaleclimateconnections.org
 Jon Alsop, “The many coronavirus conspiracy theories:, Columbia Journalism 
Review, May 15, 2020, www.cjr.org
 “Coronavirus: Outcry after Trump suggests injecting disinfectant as 
treatment”, BBC News, April 24, 2020, www.bbc.com

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