maiforpeace wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
Someone who did bad on this test - like only got 50 or 60% correct, really might think about hitting the science section at the Barnes & Nobel and brushing up on some stuff.
Why, so I can pass another test?
No, so that person can have a basic understanding of some basic subject matters. Like, the same reason one might want to have some literacy in English and American literature, some concept of history and geography, some understanding of major philosophies, and some understanding of basic mathematics.
maiforpeace wrote:
I'm just not that interested in reading stuff about science.
Fair enough. Nobody says you have to be. That doesn't make you scientifically literate. You're just not interested in being that. I'm not interested much in the culinary arts, so I'd probably be considered semi-culinary-literate, with little knowledge of the basics of good cooking. I have to live with that, unless I was willing to sit down and give it some attention.
My opinion, and it is just my opinion, is that an educated person ought to know a thing or two about the subjects that I listed, under the same theory that, in the day, a classical liberal arts education gave one the basics of being an educated person.
maiforpeace wrote:
And, literacy shouldn't be the only goal...I also think application of scientific principles in real life count for a lot, and I do pretty good in that department.
How can you apply scientific principles in real life without being literate in them? Without knowing them? I'm of the mind that one can't "apply" a scientific principle without actually knowing the scientific principle applied. I see that as axiomatic.
maiforpeace wrote:
I'm not sure if that would be understanding science better, or simply being able to apply good logic, but I'm satisfied with that.
Not that I don't want to learn anything new about science, but most of the stuff I'm interested in is scientific advances, that sort of thing. And, I exercise the luxury (or laziness, whatever you want to call it) to read up on things I'm really interested in.
That's fine, as do I. But, by the same token, if I took a quiz in Roman history and the quiz focused on emperors, major conquests, and major historical events, and I got 50 or 60% right, I wouldn't find myself to be particularly literate in Roman history. I also can't know "why" or "how" the struggle between Rome and Dacia occurred without knowing the factual context, which necessarily requires some knowledge of who, what, where, and when. That's the analogy I would use to illustrate my point. Not everyone is interested in Roman history, and not everyone is interested in science. However, one can't claim literacy in a subject one doesn't know much about. That's just reality - the value judgment we place on that (whether the subject is worthwhile studying, whether it is "necessary" for a good education or well-rounded intellect, or whether it is "bad" to be deficient in a particular topic, etc.), well that sort of thing is up to each individual to decide for himself or herself.