On Sun, 3 Feb 2019 at 16:49, Kiran K Karthikeyan <
[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Or treating scientists as priests, which is possibly worse (Jordan
Peterson). Even worse is when reputation in one field somehow confers
scientific credentials (Gwyneth Paltrow).


Saw this [1] on my feed today and thought it relevant to this discussion.
Kudos to Hathaway.

[1]
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2019/03/10/what-anne-hathaways-prank-on-the-ellen-show-said-about-pseudoscience/

Kiran

What Anne Hathaway's Prank On 'Ellen' Said About Pseudoscience

Y. Lee

Hathaway concluded by explaining,"The takeaway of this is do not put
something in your mouth just because a celebrity tells you to."

Here is one situation where you should definitely listen to a celebrity.
No, not the part about Dr. Q or citrus healing. There was no real Dr. Q.
No, not the part about blowing into fruit to help you meditate. What part
of "made the whole thing up," do you not understand? Rather, listen to what
she said about not simply swallowing anything that celebrities tell or give
you.

Hathaway could have easily used the show as a platform to launch some new
pseudoscientific health practice or potion. She certainly has the star
power to do so. Hathaway is a very accomplished actress, having won an
Oscar for her role in Les Misérables and starred in a wide range of movies
such as The Princess Diaries, Brokeback Mountain, The Devil Wears Prada,
 Rachel Getting Married, Love & Other Drugs, and The Dark Knight Rises.
Plus, how many people can say that they played the Catwoman, as she did?
She can sing too, as demonstrated by this segment on the Tonight Show with
Jimmy Fallon:

Heck, if she told people to converse with or even argue with fruit, you
might find some takers. After all, if a celebrity-run website can convince
you to buy and use coffee enemas, as I have written before for Forbes, why
not the Catwoman Clementine Colonic?

Instead, Hathaway used her time on the show to do something commendable:
warn people about celebrities peddling pseudoscience. As I have written
before, pseudoscience ain't a Phil Collins song (that's Sussudio) but
instead is defined by dictionary.com as "any of various methods, theories,
or systems, as astrology, psychokinesis, or clairvoyance, considered as
having no scientific basis."

What do celebrities have to do with pseudoscience? Ask Timothy Caulfield, a
professor of health law at the University of Alberta, Canada, and author of
the book Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong About Everything? He explained how
celebrities have fueled the amazing rise in pseudoscience in an article by
Wendy Glauser entitled "How celebrities have fueled the amazing rise in
pseudoscience," and appearing in the New Scientist. Just because someone is
a terrific actor, singer, or whatever reality stars do, doesn't mean that
he or she knows anything about science and health.

Therefore, you shouldn't buy a "health" product or do something "for your
health" just because a celebrity, who is not a real health expert, tells
you to do so. That would be akin to liking a song just because a Nobel
Prize winner in Medicine told you that it is a good jam. Instead, think
critically. Think scientifically. Look for real scientific explanations and
evidence that something works. "I am famous and therefore, you should
listen," should never be a reason to do something for your health.

Kudos again to Hathaway for raising more awareness about the growing
problem of pseudoscience. This suggests that Hathaway has a healthy respect
for science. Indeed, she once told Jonathan Heaf who was writing an article
about her for GQ magazine that "Any spare time I have I bury my head in a
physics textbook," which alone raises her several dozen points on the
coolness scale in my book. Her prank on The Ellen Show certainly added to
those points. Orange you glad that she didn't simply use her fame to get
you to buy some baloney, as in pseudo-scientific mumbo-jumbo and not the
lunch-meat? Or in this case, some clementines?

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