It seems increasingly like the best way to convince someone of anything is to tell them that scientists all think the opposite.
Global Warming
Creationism
MMR jabs (UK)
Thiomersal (US)
On the subject of the science behind car safety (crumple zones etc.)
Passive smoking
Curing cancer (no they haven't cured it and kept it quiet so they can sell more drugs)
9/11 conspiracies (yes steel does loose a lot of it's structural strength before it melts)
etc.
These are all examples of people who have no actual knowledge of problem they are interested in asking those who know a vast amount about it not liking the answer so they ignore it. Somehow they manage to then convince crowds of people to join in them despite going against the views of the very people most likely to know the right answers. Why doesn't an almost utterly unanimous agreement of those most qualified to know that Thiomersal can absolutely in no way cause autism and the data to back it up not simply end the issue right there and then?
I've been to China where the general public admire scientist and raise them up as heroes. Why does the western world seem so mistrustful?
One idea is that the mistrust began with quantum mechanics. In the 19th century westerners too admired scientists, they were celebrities. At the time they were discovering things that people could understand and relate to. In the 20th century came things like quantum mechanics and relativity. These are very alien concepts to our everyday understanding of the world and often utterly contradict our macro-scale experiences. People don't trust it even if they happily use products that rely on the science. Science is now making the world more complicated and harder to understand as opposed to 100 years ago when they made it easier to understand.
Another idea is the negative stereotyping. If you see a scientist in a film, chances are they are toying with forces they can't comprehend, making some horribly evil weapon and will end up dying a horrible death as punishment for their evil deeds. For a lot of people the only time they ever see a 'scientist' is during a Bond film. Is this enough to subconsciously associate scientists with being evil, untrustworthy people.
The first google images result for the word 'scientist'?

Why don't people believe scientists?
Global Warming
Creationism
MMR jabs (UK)
Thiomersal (US)
On the subject of the science behind car safety (crumple zones etc.)
Passive smoking
Curing cancer (no they haven't cured it and kept it quiet so they can sell more drugs)
9/11 conspiracies (yes steel does loose a lot of it's structural strength before it melts)
etc.
These are all examples of people who have no actual knowledge of problem they are interested in asking those who know a vast amount about it not liking the answer so they ignore it. Somehow they manage to then convince crowds of people to join in them despite going against the views of the very people most likely to know the right answers. Why doesn't an almost utterly unanimous agreement of those most qualified to know that Thiomersal can absolutely in no way cause autism and the data to back it up not simply end the issue right there and then?
I've been to China where the general public admire scientist and raise them up as heroes. Why does the western world seem so mistrustful?
One idea is that the mistrust began with quantum mechanics. In the 19th century westerners too admired scientists, they were celebrities. At the time they were discovering things that people could understand and relate to. In the 20th century came things like quantum mechanics and relativity. These are very alien concepts to our everyday understanding of the world and often utterly contradict our macro-scale experiences. People don't trust it even if they happily use products that rely on the science. Science is now making the world more complicated and harder to understand as opposed to 100 years ago when they made it easier to understand.
Another idea is the negative stereotyping. If you see a scientist in a film, chances are they are toying with forces they can't comprehend, making some horribly evil weapon and will end up dying a horrible death as punishment for their evil deeds. For a lot of people the only time they ever see a 'scientist' is during a Bond film. Is this enough to subconsciously associate scientists with being evil, untrustworthy people.
The first google images result for the word 'scientist'?

Why don't people believe scientists?