बुधवार, 16 जुलाई 2014
SAVE INDIAN AGRICULTURE
Save Indian Agriculture
Reorder Agriculture S&T
Strengthen Rural Extension
Promote Practices of Ecological Farming
AIPSN
Sources
of growth of agriculture and allied sectors have been changing right from the
independence. In the years after independence, India was in a
difficult situation to meet the domestic food needs. Much of the food was
imported. A concerted approach of technology, institutions and policy support
made India food self-sufficient and also brought in prosperity in some rural
areas. The focus on improving food production by improving productivity by
intensive use of chemicals, water and responsive cultivars proved successful
for some time. But now for several years it has been evident that by persisting
with the same approach to technology of crop production the policymakers are
imposing a great amount of economic burden on the peasantry and rural labour.
In agriculture, in the absence of appropriate correctives being made in the
practice of science and technology, there is the challenge of ecological crisis
growing at a rapid pace in certain parts of the country in the form of soil
deterioration, falling groundwater levels, increased chemical use in
agriculture impacting on environment and human health.
The
economics of agriculture has become unfavourable for the farmer. Particularly
the risks for the poor and middle peasants are becoming greater. The
contribution of agriculture to GDP gradually decreased and today we stand at about 14%. While many of the sectors have grown faster,
agriculture has not grown sufficiently and real incomes to farmers are coming
down leading to indebtedness and poverty. Area cultivated both in term of net
sown are and gross sown area has shown a decline in the post reform period due
to urbanisation, industrialisation and marginalization of land holdings which
had an impact on growth on agricultural production. Yield which played a significant role in the
growth of agriculture during 80’s due to spread effects of green revolution has
come down during 90’s with the advent of neo liberal policies due to reduction
in public investment on irrigation and seeds, technology and extension has
greatly affected yield. The engine of agricultural output during post
reform period is cropping pattern. It is observed that, there is a shift in cropping pattern towards from food grains to
commercial crops due to favourable prices and terms of trade but these factors turned
negative which had significant effect on growth of agriculture.
There
are number factors contributed for the slowdown in growth of agriculture in
addition to reduction in
public investment. Volatile output prices, reduction of subsidies on inputs,
dependency on high cost inputs increased cost of cultivation which was not
backed by adequate credit supply on the one hand and on the other hand crop
failures and faulty remunerative prices affected whole peasant community and
pushed them into debts. The NSS 59th round Survey on Indebtedness of Farmer Households
conducted in 2003 reported that48.6% of farmer households were indebted. The poorer sections among the
peasantry, especially the small and marginal farmers and the agricultural
labourers, who constitute the vast majority of the Indian population, are the
worst sufferers. As per the National Commission for Enterprises in Unorganized
Sector report (NCEUS,
2007), real incomes of farmers have stagnated, with the average being Rs.1650
per family per month. This study also made evident that the average family
expense in the villages is Rs.2150 per month; even at such below-poverty-level
consumption, the average family still spends more than it earns, thus getting
into debt.
Finally,
all sectors in agriculture and sections among the peasantry are affected by the
deepening agrarian crisis. The severe crisis in agriculture is pushing farmers
to move out of farming. The 2011 census data show
People depending on agriculture has come down from 69.43% to 54.6% in last
60yrs. During 2001-11 about 86.10 lakh
people have left farming in India which is about 2358/day. While farmers or children of farmer leaving
farming for better opportunities is always welcome, the worrisome issue is the
most of them are ending up as casual agriculture workers. For the first time 2011 census have recorded
agriculture labour numbers have surpassed the numbers of cultivator both in
absolute numbers and in proportion.
Among the 54.6% of people depending on agriculture 29.9% (144.3 m) are
agriculture labour and 24.64% (118.7 m) are cultivators. The farmer suicides are another extreme symptom of such crisis. As per
the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB, 2012) 2, 84,694 farmers have committed
suicide in the last eighteen years.
While
we need to expand the non-farm sector in the rural areas to provide employment
to more people from agriculture, but this cannot be done without putting
agriculture in good health. Non-farm employment has not been growing at the
required pace to absorb people from agriculture at a significant level. The figures show that the net
new jobs created in the economy during 2004-05 to 2009-10 is only 2 million
while the working age population has increased by 55 million. Therefore,
while we make efforts to expand other sectors of the economy, we also need to
ensure sufficient incomes from farm and off-farm activities, in order to
prevent major distress in the farming community.
During
the last three Five Year plans, recognizing the importance of the Agriculture
sector, much effort has been made by the Government to boost the growth in
agriculture. We have seen the improvement from 2.5% growth rate during the 9th
Plan (1997-02) and 10th Plan (2002-07) to 3.2% in the 11th
Plan period (2007-12) and the target of 4% growth in Agricultural GDP has not
been met. The Approach
Paper to the coming 12th Five Year Plan (2012-17) recognizes that a one per
cent growth emanating from the agriculture sector would be at least two to
three times more effective in reducing poverty than the same growth coming from
non-agriculture sectors.
Therefore,
firstly, we should recognize that a boost to the agriculture sector is very
important to the entire economy. Secondly, the problem is not just production
but the income levels of the farmers. If the income levels improve, it will
directly reduce the levels of rural poverty. Furthermore, the increased purchasing
power will also boost the entire economy.The
very first chapter of the National Policy for Farmers which was adopted by the
Government in 2007 is titled “Need for Policy Reorientation.” It says, “There
is a need to focus more on the economic well-being of the farmers, rather than
just on production... The aim of the Policy is, therefore, to stimulate
attitudes and actions which should result in assessing agricultural progress in
terms of improvement in the income of farm families, not only to meet their
consumption requirements but also to enhance their capacity to invest in farm
related activities.”
About 83 per cent of holdings
are less than two hectares in size and together they account for a little more
than 40 per cent of the cultivated area, contributing roughly half of the value
of agricultural output. Where they lose out is in marketing,
as the top end of the value chain (organized retailing and processing) is
consolidating and scaling up, while farm holdings are still fragmenting.This can be addressed by getting small farmers
organized in clusters as cooperatives or farmer producer organizations (FPOs),
get into value addition and link up with processors and organized retailers.
This was achieved under the AMUL model in case of milk and needs to be
replicated for most other high value perishable commodities such as fruits and
vegetables, poultry and meat products.
This will bring plenty of rural off-farm and non-farm employment
opportunities which in turn will improve the incomes and livelihood
opportunities for the rural poor.
Remunerative prices are a major issue for farmers – to get sufficient
incomes, there should be sufficient margins above the cost of cultivation. Many
issues remain with regard to the system of fixing and delivering of the Minimum Support Prices (MSPs).
In many cases, the CACP data itself shows, the Farm Harvest Prices are higher
than the Minimum Support Prices for many of the crops. Though the MSPs are being now announced in
nearly 25 crops, the procurement operations happen only in a few. Therefore,
for many of the major crops, the MSPs do not always deliver. The situation of crops which are left to
markets is much worse. Currently the input subsidies are embedded in certain
products purchased from the market like chemical fertilizers. With the frequent increases in petroleum
prices, the costs of fertilizers are also going up making them unaffordable by
farmers. With declining petroleum reserves and potassium reserves, it is high
time we look for more sustainable methods in agriculture and create newer
support systems around them.
Although
there are certain limitations on the front of increasing the prices of
agricultural commodities, particularly on food items considering the needs of
the consumers and industry, but the government can look at the option of farmer
income support policy to take care of the issue of incentives to peasantry for
technology adoption, higher production and environmental corrections.
Developments in WTO on the subsidy front do also suggest that in order to
protect the concern of food security and farmer income protection the country
needs to shift away from complete dependence in respect of the input subsidies
and output support on the subsidy side and the policy of pricing of farm
produce on the income side.
Major policy changes are needed in order to
improve the quality of life of farmers. The new policy should focus on bringing
economic sustainability in farming ensuring secure incomes. The policy should
address the question of distress among farmers and generate a positive dynamic
by enabling farmers to make positive investments into agriculture, by
increasing their purchasing power, and by retaining more youth in the rural
areas.
Ensuring
Income Security to Farmers
The
goal of all policies supporting agriculture should be to create an environment
where farmers can economically and ecologically sustain farming.
Farmers
Income Commission: A Farmers Income Commission should be established a
statutory body which periodically (once in three to five years) assess the real
incomes of the farmers taking into account the costs of cultivation, prices,
subsidies and other support systems to farmers and their costs of living and
suggest measures to governments to ensure at least minimum living incomes to
all farming households – including tenants, sharecroppers and agricultural
workers. The main function of the Farmers Income Commission should be to
recommend and ensure that the policy measures be implemented to assure income
security to farming households. The minimum living incomes can be arrived at
using the same guiding principles which Pay Commissions’ use while assessing
and recommending salary structure to employees. AIPSN supports the demands for
the introduction of:
a. Minimum
income: to
cover the living costs taking the average consumption units (three in case of
urban areas which can be five in case of rural areas.
The minimum living income recommended by the Farmers Income Commission should
be indexed to inflation and be corrected every year taking into account any
changes in costs of cultivation, prices, support to farmers etc. which impact
on farmers’ incomes.
b.
Attachment benefit: The package should
provide enough incentive to retain the (brightest) people and also attract the
best to join the profession of agriculturist in future.
c. Ecological premium: The global food crisis
has shown that the food security lies in viability of the small farms and not
in the industrial farming by corporations. Provide income support based rewards
for practicing sustainable, eco-friendly agriculture.
d. Remunerative
Pricing Policy: The prices for agricultural commodities should be based on
the real cost of production and linked positively with inflation.
I.
Agriculture being a State subject
establishes a State level Agricultural Costs and Prices Commission which takes
into account real costs of cultivation and recommends the price to the central
government. The real cost estimations should take into account all the costs
including the family labour. For food crops, the national CACP has to take into
account and fix the price taking into account the recommendations by the
Swaminathan Commission. The prices could
be from 10-50% over the C2 depending on the crop. A Price Stabilization Fund
has to be established to deal with the price fluctuations in the commercial
crops. The State Commission should take into account the declared price by the
Centre and any variation compared to the recommended price should be
compensated. The
payments of crop compensation should be made directly to the farmers, through a
local delivery mechanism such as post office, bank account deposit, panchayat
or self-help groups. Timely payment should be made for each season.
II.
It is important that this system should benefit
the real cultivators including tenant farmers and sharecroppers rather than
non-cultivating land-owners. There should be system in place to identify and
record tenants and sharecroppers. For example, the AP government is introducing
a Bill to provide Loan Eligibility Card to tenants and sharecroppers so that
they can access loans, crop insurance, crop compensation and so on. For the
same purposes, it is imperative for governments to introduce such mechanisms in
other states also. The same mechanism can be used to record the cultivator data
for the Price Compensation system.
III.
Labour wage support for all agricultural
operations: Today we are in an ironic situation where agriculture
workers are unable get employment (and government is running a program like
MGNREGA) and farmers are unable to afford agriculture workers due to increasing
wages. The government should provide input subsidy in the form of labour wages
(up to 100 days in a calendar year) to the farmers to monetize the use of
family labour or to pay external labour engaged on the farm. This should
include all agricultural operations from sowing to harvesting. The subsidy
component can be equivalent to the wage rate in MGNREGS and the balance can be
paid by the farmer. For e.g., if the
wage rate in a village for sowing operation is Rs. 250.00/day and the MGNREGS
wage rate is Rs. 120/day, the farmer will get a subsidy of Rs. 120.00 per day
of labour. This can be operationalized
on similar lines as MGNREGS, or by suitably increasing the number of days
covered under MGNREGS and extending it to agricultural work. This will also provide additional employment
to the agriculture workers in the villages.
IV.
Direct Income Support: Direct
Income Support to make up the shortfall to minimum living income to the needy
section. To begin with,
the Direct Income Support will be implemented for all small & marginal
farmers and agricultural labour. The job
of the Farmers Income Commission would be to identify such needy class of
people during its periodic assessment (3-5 yrs) and fix the amount of Direct
Income Support for the next period. This
can be paid directly to the people as direct benefit transfer[1]. The Indian
Government has already acts for conferring the Right to Information, Rural
Employment Guarantee and Education. Also we have an Act providing Lands Rights
to scheduled tribes and forest dwellers.
Parliament has just passed an Act which will confer the Right to Food on
all the needy citizens of the nation. In
a similar fashion Farmers Income Security can be shaped.
Policies for S&T to promote
sustainable farming
Unfortunately,
growth and structural change are being achieved by encouraging the global
integration of Indian agriculture, promoted through the system of contract
farming and corporate input supply. These are the distinctive features of the
new strategy in agricultural development. The latest Indo-American Agreement on
Agricultural education and research in which Wallmart and Monsanto are on the
governing board is its new research arm. Through this new instrument of
agricultural technology development the Indian policymakers are now trying to
move the system rapidly towards the new priorities of “corporate agricultural
biotechnology” and food processing. Just with a paltry 9 percent of the total
investment in agricultural research this new instrument of agricultural
technology development poses a grave threat.
It
is trying to take the system completely in the direction of control of
priorities of the system in the hands of agribusiness. It is taking the system away from the priorities
of location-specific soil and water management, crop rotation and biological
agriculture that thanks to the efforts of some of the members of scientific
community the leadership had chosen to work towards only recently in the Tenth
Five year Plan. Since in the proposed new agri-biotechnology based
socio-technical transition the corporate sector is increasingly going to be
itself in driver seat and is in search of those technologies that can be widely
applied through the agri-business friendly pathways, it can be taken as a given
fact that in this new strategy too there is apparently very little space for
the cultivation of an integrated approach for the realization of values of
ecological and social justice.
This
is becoming the case not only for the development of agri-biotechnologies and
genetically engineered food crops but also for the development of organic
agriculture. In fact, for the agro-food innovation system to be radically
transformed to tackle the problems of diversity, it would be of course
necessary to get out of the current socio-technical regime of green revolution.
We will have to work more vigorously to facilitate the socio-technical
transition to a new type of socio-technical regime and a new kind of system of
STI.
Policies for rural industrialization
As already suggested, it is also becoming
clear that the sector of agriculture is also not able to absorb all the additional
labour available in rural areas. So far by following the industrialization
framework chosen for the support of green revolution agriculture the government
has promoted the practice of externalizing the production of industrial inputs
to the metropolis and making the system of supporting industries import
dependent. This has been hollowing out the rural economy of its potential for
rural industrialization based on agriculture. Agriculture is no more an
important driver of sustainable growth for the rural industries. This is now
being aggravated much further through the new corporate strategy of
diversification into agriculture, aquaculture, animal husbandry, horticulture
and floriculture using even more of external inputs than before.
In order to realize the true
potential of agriculture as a driver for rural industrialization the strategy
of development of agriculture itself must be changed. In the long run, the
framework of rural industrialization needs to be realigned with the proposed
strategy of agricultural development using agro-ecological approaches involving
the use of resource conserving technologies and integrated bio-farming systems
involving multi-storied agriculture. Then only the country would be able to get
the desired results in respect of the productive absorption of labour in
agriculture and rural economy in India. Fifty percent of the Indian population
would be still living in the near future, if not forever, in areas dependent on
rural economy based production systems. Therefore, agriculture and rural
industries need to be upgraded even for the reasons of limitations of both
infrastructure and employability of rural migrants in the metropolis and
cities. They are working not very thoughtfully when they are forcing the people
to quit farming through even the regular operations of capitalist agriculture.
Climate change may also trigger
thinking in this direction. Full implications of climate change are yet to be
realized by the policymakers. In the context of agriculture, it is even
necessary to realize that in many agro-ecological regions the problems of
ecological sustainability have become today the biggest barrier to the
enhancement of agricultural productivity[2].
The pathway being followed for agriculture has been creating the metabolic
rift; agriculture has ceased to be self-sustaining in the sense that it can no
longer find the natural conditions of its own production within itself. In this
pathway, nutrients have to be acquired through long distance trade and separate
industries outside of the agriculture sphere. This creates a rift in the
natural cycles of soil fertility and waste accumulation. Today there are many
more loops resulting in new imbalances introduced, thanks to the perusal of
external input intensive agriculture and the additional of capitalist food
chain based production of processed foods in the world system of agriculture.
At the wider social level, a rift has also been widening between
humanity and the natural world due to the relation of wage labour and capital[3].
Private property in the earth’s resources, the division between manual/mental
labour, and the antagonistic split between the town and country illustrate the
metabolic rift on a social level. Today the rift at social level is manifest in
many ways in the pathway that the country is following, such as the primacy of
corporate speculation in real estate, the loss of autonomy of subsistence
farmers to the knowledge of “expert technicians”, the tenants / landless
labourers becoming alienated from the land and ceasing to be the custodians of
land and water resources, and the demographic transition from rural farms to
urban centres.
For the restoration of this rift, it is clear that today the humanity
needs to move away from the system of capitalist production and enter into a
paradigm of development to solve the metabolic problem of not only agriculture
but also of the economy as a whole. India cannot afford to follow the well-treaded
path which is already producing one disaster after another in the developed
capitalist countries. Although to what extent these societies would continue or
be able to afford the above said limitations is not the most relevant thing to
discuss in India, the challenge of transition is quite different in our case
due to the large percentage of population being still dependent on agriculture.
The kind of transition that the western
world experienced is not repeatable. Only a small percentage of population is
dependent on agricultures in these countries. India colonizing others is
neither desirable nor feasible. If the transition of western kind is more or
less out of question for India ,
it is necessary that we look for those pathways of rural and urban development
that do not aggravate and can solve our problems in a better and sustainable
way.
The road ahead for sustainability
It is
also important that we recognize broadly the complexity of socio-technical
challenge facing the people of India. Take for example the radical popular view
that the neighborhood communities of users and providers of various services
such as water, energy, and infrastructure and health education would have to
come together and how they can be provided for from local sources. While it is
true that there exists much potential in the local human and natural resources
based systems to provide for the basic needs of the people as a whole even
today, but the challenge of building a system that works efficiently is not as
simple as getting together the neighborhoods. The institutions needed to build,
operate and manage are required to be crafted in the midst of unequal power as
associations of producers of new services and products using technologies that
are new and need power relations to be altered completely in the sphere of use
of resources.
This
challenge is quite different from being members of the community or
associations of users of water and energy to be provided from the large systems
as ready- made final products. Even the proponents of radical view now
recognize that in order to provide the marginalized people of their basic
rights or entitlements in respect of water and biomass we would need at this
stage the leverage of the external inputs which the state can offer in the form
of the conditions of programme sanction and facilitate through the subsidized
provision labour. Even this solution would effectively apply to the projects of
infrastructure. But how we would realize the sustainability of production of
goods and services in respect of projects that do not constitute to be part of
the infrastructure and where the conditions of competition in production and
commercial considerations are going to play a critical role.
Peoples’ centric innovation systems
As far
as the pertinent issues of knowledge intensive innovation and diffusion are
concerned, we cannot forget about the significance of multiple scales in
production for achieving efficiency and sustainability. We should also recognize
the importance of adequate capacity to produce within the regions and supply
the needed input at a large scale within the regions. Emulation of the successful
practices is also going to be dependent on the performance of training and
capacity building for which the support will have to come from the public
sector based S&T system. Vocational training, basic education, supply of
finance and credit and incubation infrastructure would be needed. And the state
will have to play a major role in the management of transition. Both, the state
system and society, would be regenerating themselves in the process.
However,
to get going on this front, again needless to say, we need to have a good set
of supporting policies at the centre and state level. As these policies are
still lacking, there are not sufficient efforts taking place on the ground for
the creation of a set of appropriate social carriers. These social carriers
would need the moral and material support of the social movements. Such pioneering
organizations are still small in number; this means the experience is only
beginning to be gained within the country. Although for quite some time the
country has had a cooperative movement of the petty producers, but the
cooperative institutions needed for cooperation in production have been far and
few (Dinesh Beedi, Indian Coffee House, etc.).
At the
moment there exists only many credit and input supply or marketing cooperatives
and loose SHG federations in the states. The challenge is also therefore one of
building the institutions of cooperation in production. We urgently need to
build a large number of associations of producers. Social movements will have
to experiment and practice the art of creation of production systems based on
an appropriate heuristics. They will have to learn by doing and learning before
doing to understand the political economy of production and technology. Those
who are able to internally develop among themselves the relations of planned
cooperation, democratic participation and camaraderie would only succeed.
To
compete in the market economy and with the aim to change the power relations
surrounding the production systems, it is quite clear that they will have to
depend on the systems of technologies which are able to function as the new
forms of productive forces. If we are planning to implement a new
techno-economic paradigm, as is the case with the proposed strategy of banking
on biomass for the development of rural economy in particular, the challenge is
one of developing the local economies as the multi-sectoral systems of
networked planning of production units that bank on biomass for food, energy
and materials.
Lessons from PSM experience
There
has been some effort within the PSM organizations to work in this direction.
But this effort is also yet to achieve its critical threshold. It needs the
cooperation of class organizations to move rapidly. At the level of action
research it is already going on at a few places in the country. It has produced
a set of viable technology systems in the sectors of production of vegetable
tanned leather, processing of fruits and vegetables, processing of oilseeds and
pulses and bio-farming. In other areas, the stage is still one of development
of the systems of technologies. But what is important about this effort is that
it is based on the heuristics of development of local economies as systems in
themselves for the purpose of making an ecologically and socially sustainable
just transition at the level of the rural economy.
This
heuristics suggest that local economies are not just a village level economy
but a system of network of smaller villages carrying out largely primary
production (S level), medium size villages having a higher level of
concentration of agricultural laborers (M level), bazaar villages having a
higher level of artisans and secondary production (B level) and nodal taluk
level town where the level of secondary and tertiary production is high (N
level). These economies are capable of being networked for the creation of
large-scale networked production systems.
Experience
indicates that the democratically formed associations of producers can certainly
become the social carriers of viable economic units of production. This demands
that the initiatives for decentralized planning should also be shaped in the
manner suggested for the organization of production linked S&T based
efforts for the promotion of sustainable local economies. This perspective also
demands going beyond the involvement of panchayati raj institutions (PRIs). We
will have to build the class organizations of rural labour to play a role of
the social carriers of appropriate socio-technical change. This demands that we
also organize the processes of learning and innovation as an integral part of
our mobilization of the people in rural and urban areas to support such a
strategy. It demands a regeneration of the politics capable of combining
constructive action and non-cooperation that the people used to defeat the
colonial pathway only some sixty years ago.
Experiments and going beyond
There is a need to
examine the specific experiences of select experimental interventions underway
in the country to develop the required technological innovation system to
achieve a more desirable socio-technical transition in the case of agro-food
system in India. PSMs also need to take a stock of the efforts being put in by
the network of innovators active in the field of developing appropriate /
alternate technologies for the sustainable development of rural industries to
contribute to the stability, resilience, durability, robustness and
sustainability of the socio-technical transition that India needs to pursue for
upgrading the local economies as systems in themselves in the process of
building a self-reliant multi-level economy.
Since the
marginalized rural people suffering from the current agrarian crisis would have
to be mobilized with the aim to create a pathway for the desirable
socio-technical transition to achieve both, ecological as well as social
justice, efforts for should be for the building of adaptive capacity on the
ground with a view to develop a set of social carriers of techniques for
sustainable development of the agro-food system to act as a countervailing
power which would be capable of pressing the STI system to work towards the
development of techniques for agro-ecological approaches combinable with
endogenous multi-sectoral rural network systems of industrial development.
The challenge is
therefore one of not just how the social movements can press the state to solve
the agrarian crisis but also of how they can help build and support the newly
emerging social carriers of techniques. The social movements can also now start
participating in meeting a totally new challenge of conscious social construction
of technology (Socialism cannot depend on the technology systems organized by
the dominant forces). PSMs will have to participate themselves as co-evolving
actors in the process of transition and learn to steer the emergence of a
desirable socio-technical regime. Participation in the process of steering for
sustainable development would require from the social movements to develop the
capacity for regulation, providing vision, learning to learn and help the
social carriers to build their competencies for production and innovation and
developing countervailing power structures to participate in the task of
coordinating actors and networks.
Engagement with the system of STI
The
challenge of development of a science, technology and innovation (STI) system
suitable for the development of rural economies in India is required to be made
an issue of public engagement. We need to seek the inclusion of the rural
institutes, community polytechnics and other related institutions into the
building of a people centric system of innovation for agriculture in the system
of STI existing in the country. To grapple with the issue of scale and scope of
planning required for making an ecologically and socially sustainable just
transition possible at the level of the rural economies under the currently
prevailing conditions in India, PSMs will have to recommend an integrated
approach to the development of the agro-food system in conjunction with the
pace being created for rural industrialization and agro-ecological approaches
to crop production, animal husbandry, forestry and aquaculture.
Concluding remark
Already many of the successful experiments have
brought out forcefully the point that the regenerative economy would have to be
built on the basis of the principle of minimum use of external inputs of
electricity, water, energy and materials. To maximize the well-being local
economies would have to be shaped to become major providers of water, energy
and infrastructure services. It seems that by taking up the development of rural
industries as an integral part of the strategy of development of agro-food
system that has its root in the agro-ecological approaches the new social
carriers of techniques for sustainable development have a better chance to
embed the new socio-technical transition in the agency and power of the rural
labour and the peasant-artisan networks.
In such a pathway, it is clear that the strategy of
development is to bank on biomass and solar energy (in various forms i.e.,
thermal, hydro, wind and small hydro) and the exploitation of electronics,
telecommunications and information technology. Needless to say, for the
upgrading of local economies the above outlined integrated strategy of
technological change and economic development must be social justice achieving
and environmental friendly. If the strategy of agricultural development and
rural industrialization is not able to achieve the benefit of reducing CO2
emissions, pollution control and arresting land degradation, then it is not
consistent with the achievement of the long term goals of the humanity.
The same can be said of the dimension of social
justice. The people (peasants as well as rural labour) living on this earth are
not only the ultimate owners of land and water but also the custodian of resources
in whom the humanity is putting trust, and they have to use and care for these
resources in an environmental friendly and socially just manner for the benefit
of their progeny and succeeding generations.
………………
[1]Farmers Income Security across
the world
Across the world governments have adopted basket of
measures to ensure income security to farmers with twin objectives
a. To ensure parity
of incomes between agriculture sector/ farmers and other sectors/ non-farmers,
and thereby ensure equality and justice in the society
b. To ensure food
production and food self sufficiency
[2] Land, the earth (and the ecological cycles that define it), and
labour, which is the metabolic relation between human beings and nature,
constitute the two original sources of all wealth. If we want to heal the
metabolic rift and achieve metabolic restoration, we are required to treat land
and water as treasure, ones that must not be exploited for short term gain, but
rather replenished through rational and planned application of ecological
principles to agriculture (agro-ecology). And labour, being the physical
embodiment of a key, can access the land’s rich qualities to provide healthy
food and many other means of livelihood.
[3]Marx explored the ecological contradictions of capitalist society as
they were revealed in the nineteenth century with the help of the two concepts
of metabolic rift and metabolic restoration. The metabolic rift describes how
the logic of accumulation severs basic processes of natural reproduction leading
to the deterioration of ecological sustainability. Marx’s concept of metabolism
is rooted in his understanding of the labour process.
Universalization of Scientific Temper
Universalization
of Scientific Temper
Vivek Monteiro
Dr.
Narendra Dabholkar gave up his career as a medical doctor to devote his life to
promote the scientific outlook among the common public and fight superstitions.
On August 20th this year he was murdered by hired killers at Pune,
Maharashtra. The AIPSN adopted the following resolution on his martyrdom:
The
AIPSN strongly condemns the dastardly murder of Dr. Narendra Dabholkar by
terrorists today at Pune. It is known that Dr. Dabholkar had received constant
threats to his life by terrorist organizations acting in the name of religion.
He continued his work courageously, unmindful of these threats, spreading the
scientific approach and exposing the fraudulent methods of babas, tantric and
self styled godmen. He was the founder and leader of the Andhashraddha Nirmulan
Samiti and was the editor of the progressive magazine “Sadhana”.
We
take inspiration from the life of Dr. NarendraDabholkar and pledge to carry
forward his work and ideals of spreading the scientific temper, and opposing
all forms of superstition and religious obscurantism. We pledge to combat the
forces of communal fascism and terrorism acting in the name of religion which
are active in different parts of our country today. We affirm the values of the
Indian Constitution- of scientific temper, secularism, equality and democracy
and will work to carry their message to every school, to every town and village
of our country.
Just as those who perpetrated the murder of Gandhiji could not stop his
values and message, the values and message of Dr. Narendra Dabholkar will also
not be stopped by this cowardly murder. All of us working in the people’s
science movement will work with greater determination and vigor to promote
science and scientific thinking in the broadest sections of the public to win
the battle of ideas and defeat the forces of obscurantism and communal fascism
in our country.
The murder of Dr. Dabholkar has shaken the
nation out of its complacency and highlighted the importance and urgency of
promoting scientific temper in India today.
The resolution that the AIPSN has adopted
commits us to take up the task of nurturing the scientific outlook in every
citizen, in every school, in every village and town of our country. Is this a
possible task?
More than thirty years back, in 1981, a
group of prominent intellectuals came out with a “Statement on Scientific
Temper” which adopted a far reaching perspective. We are still very far from achieving those
objectives. Superstitions, Astrology, a wide spectrum of irrational beliefs,
fraudulent babas, and self styled godmen still command huge following. Clearly
‘business as usual’ is not enough. We need a better and deeper understanding of
what needs to be done.
Can we now take up the task of building scientific temper on a mass scale
as a scientific problem? What does it mean to take it up as a scientific
endeavor?
Humankind has many great achievements of
universalization to its credit when tasks were taken up scientifically. Deadly
diseases like small pox and polio have been eradicated from most parts of this
planet by scientific mass campaigns. The achievement of universal literacy in
many countries is another example. One hundred and fifty years back it was our
national tradition to deny women and dalits education. Today it is an undoubted
achievement that almost every child in India is in school regardless of sex, or
caste. The seeds for this achievement of universal enrollment were sown by
social reformers like Jotibai Phule and Savitribai Phule working through the
“Satyashodak Samaj”. Scientific Temper
is a definite type of “Satyashodhan”. All the above examples give us the
confidence that universalizing scientific temper (UST) may be possible and
feasible, though it may take many years.
Scientific validity is established by practical
achievement. Universalization means achievement at a mass level. To take up UST
as a scientific endeavor means that we must show practical achievement at a
mass level. We must have measurable and verifiable ways to assess progress or
stagnation, success or failure. In the following pages we analyze some aspects
of universalization of scientific temper as a scientific endeavor.
Part 2.
What is Scientific Temper?
In our effort
to build scientific temper at a mass level we have a very important foundation-
our Constitution. Our country is perhaps the only nation in the world where
building scientific temper is provided for in its Constitution. Article 51 A of
the Constitution of India states:
51A. Fundamental
duties.—it shall be the duty of every citizen of India—
(h) To develop the scientific temper, humanism
and the spirit of inquiry and reform;
In 1981, at a meeting convened by Nehru Centre, a
group of intellectuals formulated a “Statement on Scientific temper” in which
“Scientific Temper” was defined as follows, in terms of method of science:
a) That the method of science provides a viable method
of acquiring knowledge;
(b) That the human problems can be understood and
solved in terms of knowledge gained through the application of the method of science;
(c) Thatthe fullest use of the method of
science in everyday life and in every aspect of human endeavor from ethics to
politics and economics is essential for ensuring human survival and progress
and
(d) That one should accept knowledge gained
through the application of the method of science as the closest approximation
of truth at thatthe and question what is incompatible with such knowledge; and that
one should from time to time reexamine the basic foundations of contemporary
knowledge.
Let us discuss
the above in some more detail:
What do we mean
by the method of science? Basically it means that before accepting something as
scientifically valid, or true, we should put it to rigorous test. There are tests of experience and
experiment. There are tests of reason, consistency and logic. Before something
can be accepted as true it should be put to practical tests and moreover, it
should not be internally contradictory, and should be consistent with other
things which we accept as true- because they too have been put to the tests.
Willingness
to face the test
Anything that claims to be scientifically true
must be open to being tested rigorously. Any system of knowledge that is not
willing to take the rigorous tests of science cannot claim to be scientifically
true.
For example, astrology cannot claim to be
scientifically true, for the simple reason that no astrologer is willing to
take the simple tests posed by the Andhashraddha Nirmoolan Samiti (ANIS). Those
astrologers who came forward to take a test posed by Dr. Jayant Narlikar, Dr.
Dabholkar and others failed.
Critical Questioning
What we today know as the
method of science is the result of a long historyof learning by humankind in
all parts of the world.
Critical questioning is the
core of the method of science. Everyone has the right to question. The highest
authority in science is liable to be questioned by the youngest student, by
every thinking person. There are no sacred texts in science, which cannot be
questioned and there are no high priests in science. Anything claiming to be
scientifically true must be put to proof, must be open to be tested.
The well known physicist
Richard Feynman gave an apt description of science:
"Science is a long history of learning how not to fool
ourselves".
The method of science is always skeptical and critical. It is always in a state of trying to question and refute. It accepts no "truth" as final. As Einstein put it:"In the most favorable cases it says 'Maybe', and in the great majority of cases simply "No”. If an experiment agrees with a theory it means for the latter "Maybe", and if it does not agree it means "No". Probably every theory will someday experience its "No"- most theories, soon after conception."
The method of science is therefore a definite way of approaching questions of validity. In science, there is never certainty. At best, there are only increasing levels of confidence. Or putting it in another way, decreasing levels of uncertainty and disbelief.
The method of science is always skeptical and critical. It is always in a state of trying to question and refute. It accepts no "truth" as final. As Einstein put it:"In the most favorable cases it says 'Maybe', and in the great majority of cases simply "No”. If an experiment agrees with a theory it means for the latter "Maybe", and if it does not agree it means "No". Probably every theory will someday experience its "No"- most theories, soon after conception."
The method of science is therefore a definite way of approaching questions of validity. In science, there is never certainty. At best, there are only increasing levels of confidence. Or putting it in another way, decreasing levels of uncertainty and disbelief.
Fundamentally Opposed to Fundamentalism
Since science is based on systematic disbelief, it is
inherently opposed to all varieties of fundamentalism- which may be described
as unquestioning belief in some type of ‘infallible’ and ‘unquestionable’ scripture,
or dogma. In our country many varieties of religious fundamentalism influence
both the common people and even some intellectuals. And fundamentalism of a non
religious variety is also quite common. Science is inevitably in conflict with
these fundamentalist tendencies whenever there is an overlap of subject of
attention.
Democratic
Religion
On the other
hand, we also have a long tradition of social reform and non fundamentalist,
inclusive, humanist religious movements in various parts of our country- such
as the Buddhism of Gautam Buddha, or the Sufi-Bhakti cults of the Middle Ages,
or the work of Raja Ram Mohan Roy or Sree Narayan Guru. These movements of
religious reform, which encouraged questioning of the prevailing system of
caste discrimination and inequality, though religious in form, had more in
common with scientific temper than with religious fundamentalism. It is not
accidental that ‘scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and
reform” are all mentioned together in our Constitution. The four attributes
have been integrally related throughout our history.
Part 3
Critical Questioning - Universal or
Western?
After the “Statement of Scientific
Temper” (SST) was released it came under fierce criticism from various quarters.
One strain of criticism came from a tendency calling itself “Patriotic and
People Oriented Science and Technology” (PPST). According to PPST, the SST was
seeking to impose a “Western Science” concept on India. Evidently PPST sought to negate a concept of
scientific method which is universal by terming the method of science as a
‘western’ concept.
It is our contention that by doing so the PPST
critique denies the long and diverse traditions of questioning criticism,
materialism and efforts to combat superstition and obscurantism in our history
from ancient times to the present. These traditions are from both the secular
streams of the natural sciences, mathematics and politics such as Lokayata,
Charaka, Sushruta, Aryabhata, PC Ray, Phule, Periyar, Ambedkar, Nehru and
Bhagat Singh as well as in the stream of democratic religious reform from
Gautam Buddha through the Bhakti and Sufi traditions to Ram Mohan Roy,
Vivekananda, Sree Narayana Guru and Gandhiji. The appeal to think critically
for oneself and fight superstitious belief, a strong commitment to equality is
present in not only the materialist schools of thought like Lokayata but also
in idealist thinkers like Swami Vivekananda. We give below only a few examples
from these traditions:
Gautama Buddha
“Do not believe in anything simply because you
have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and
rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written
in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of
your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been
handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you
find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit
of one and all, then accept it and live up to it.”
Vivekananda
Astrology
and all these mystical things are generally signs of a weak mind; therefore as
soon as they are becoming prominent in our minds, we should see a physician,
take good food, and rest.
Superstition
is our great enemy, but bigotry is worse.
If
superstition enters, the brain is gone.
To believe
blindly is to degenerate the human soul. Be an atheist if you want, but do not
believe in anything unquestioningly.
Bhagat Singh
Any man who stands for progress has to
criticize, disbelieve and challenge every item of the old faith. Item by item
he has to reason out every nook and corner of the prevailing faith. If after
considerable reasoning one is led to believe in any theory or philosophy, his
faith is welcomed. His reasoning can be mistaken, wrong, misled and sometimes
fallacious. But he is liable to correction because reason is the guiding star
of his life. But mere faith and blind faith is dangerous: it dulls the brain,
and makes a man reactionary. A man who claims to be a realist has to challenge
the whole of the ancient faith. If it does not stand the onslaught of reason it
crumbles down. Then the first thing for him is to shatter the whole down and
clear a space for the erection of a new philosophy. This is the negative side.
After it begins the positive work in which sometimes some material of the old
faith may be used for the purpose of reconstruction.
Gandhi
Nothing in the Shastras which is capable of being
reasoned can stand if it is in conflict with reason.Faith becomes lame when it
ventures into matters pertaining to reason.
Part 4
A Rational
Understanding of Irrationality
How
to explain and understand the widespread prevalence of irrational beliefs among
all sections of society? Without understanding the roots of irrationality, how
can we uproot it to grow a rational outlook? Scientific practice must be
realistic. If we are realistic we have to acknowledge that one of the strongest
reasons why people believe in something is convenience. In a contest between
inconvenient truth and convenient fantasy, very often it is convenience that
wins. Since a scientific view is often inconvenient does this mean that
universalizing scientific temper is a hopeless task which is doomed to failure
from the outset?
The
vast majority of Indians lives and work in the unorganized sector in conditions
that are difficult, uncertain and insecure. It is a well known phenomenon that
such conditions breed belief in luck, supernatural assistance, charms and other
such irrational morale boosters. The reality of their lives is bleak and
hopeless. Why should they accept rationality if it gives them nothing to hope
for? Marx recognized this problem when he wrote about religion:
Religious
distress is at the same time the expression of real distress and the protest
against real distress. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the
heart of a heartless world, just as it is the spirit of a spiritless situation.
It is the opium of the people. The abolition of religion as the illusory
happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to
give up the illusions about its condition is the demand to give up a condition
that needs illusions.
Marx
makes a crucial point here that if one wants to remove irrational beliefs we
must work to remove the conditions which breed irrational beliefs. Building
scientific temper therefore requires us to build a credible movement to change
society, to abolish conditions of insecurity and fear, conditions which engender
illusions. Changing society requires politics.
Two Questions
What is the
relation of the method of science to politics?
What is the
relation of scientific temper to religion?
Let
us begin with the second question. Religion plays many roles at many levels and
has many forms in a society like India today. It has already been stated that
ST is fundamentally opposed to fundamentalism. It is also irreconcilably
opposed to the use of religion to spread hatred between communities. In a
society based on exploitation of masses of people by a few, religion is shaped
by the exploiting classes into an instrument of domination of the few and
acceptance of that domination by the masses. The caste system played and is
playing such a role in our history. In monarchic dictatorships in the middle
eastern countries use laws enacted in the name of Islam for the same purpose.
Right wing politics in the Western countries has a close ties with Christian
fundamentalist organizations. Sectarian ideology is a mainstay of right wing
politics everywhere in the world, including India. The experience of many
countries across the continents shows that theocratic states are dictatorial
and authoritarian, just as democracy requires secularism. In modern India also
there is a close nexus between corporate capitalism, organized-commercialized
religion, and politics to perpetuate the systems of exploitation. Let us term
all the above manifestations as sectarian-exploitative religion.
Scientific
Temper is in an antagonistic position against sectarian- exploitative religion,
just as it fundamentally opposes fundamentalism.
But
in a scientific view of our own history we have to appreciate the important
role played by democratic religious movements. Just as science is not western
science, liberation theology is also not a western construct. There are many
organizations in India which, though religious in their constitution, support
secularism oppose sectarianism and communalism, and work for social and
religious reform, promoting humanism, pluralism and a spirit of open enquiry.
Such organizations, many of which are working in the field of education, do not
have antagonism to the promotion scientific temper. These are allies of and
participants in the movement for universalizing scientific temper.
Though
scientific outlook is distinct from religious outlook, Section 51 A of our
constitution provides the basis for joint platforms and active work together to
promote the four attributes mentioned therein. Indeed such joint work is
essential for politically isolating sectarian-exploitative religion and
exorcising it from the mass consciousness of the common people.
Part 5
Method of Science
and politics
Coming
now to the first question of the relation of ST to politics, we note that in
the definition of scientific temper, politics and ethics are both included in
its scope:
(c)
that the fullest use of the method of science in everyday life and in every
aspect of human endeavor from ethics to politics and economics is essential for
ensuring human survival and progress;
However,
there is often an attempt made to avoid and evade the continuity between
science and politics. A good example is
from the writings of the same Prof. Richard Feynman whose apt definition of
science we had quoted earlier.
In
the late sixties and early seventies, during the height of the Vietnam War
there were a number of American scientists who were active in the antiwar
movement. But an even larger number of physicists and scientists of repute,
Feynman included, preferred to take no position on the Vietnam War. Most of
them, when asked about this would say that they were scientists, and war was
politics. The underlying presumption was that politics had nothing to do with
science. They preferred to remain neutral or ambivalent on this issue.
In
1967 Feynman was asked to sign a petition against the war in Vietnam, which
would be published as a paid advertisement. Feynman declined to sign the
petition with the words: “I feel unhappy that I am not sure enough of
my position to be able to sign your letter.” He also sent a cheque, writing
“As next best alternative I am enclosing
a small check to help make sure your advertisement is published”.
In
another place he is more assertive, in fact almost bragging about his
apolitical world view. Writing about his association with the brilliant
mathematician John von Neumann at Los Alamos during the Manhattan project, he
writes: “We used to go for walks on Sunday. We’d walk in the canyon, often with
Bethe and Bob Bacher. It was a great pleasure, and Von Neumann gave me an
interesting idea: that you don’t have to be responsible for the world that
you’re in. So I have developed a very powerful sense of social irresponsibility
as a result of Von Neumann’s advice. It’s made me a very happy man ever since.
But it was Von Neumann who put the seed in that grew into my active
irresponsibility.”
What
can explain the question of how a person like Feynman, with intellectual
capacities of the highest ability, can remain permanently unsure of his
position vis-à-vis a war that his country was involved in for more than a
decade? On the other hand why does he
accept so readily the advice of a half baked moral authority like Von Neumann
on an issue as important as personal responsibility? There can be only one
answer-Von Neumann was saying something that Feynman wanted to believe. And in this willingness to believe, to accept
a certain foregone conclusion, without questioning it critically, we see the
sure symptom of a retreat from the method of science.
The inconvenience
of scientific thinking
Science
has given the world many conveniences, but scientific thinking is not one of
these. It is not always convenient to be scientific. There is a natural
tendency to believe what is convenient, so it is not easy to be scientific. Natural scientists like Feynman, who are
unwilling, for their own reasons, to be consistently and constantly scientific
in all areas of life , deal with this
problem of inconvenience with opportunistic intellectual jugglery which is
clearly manifested in the following excerpt from another of Feynman’s essays
titled “The Value of Science”.
“From
time to time people suggest to me that scientists ought to give more
consideration to social problems -- especially that they should be more
responsible in considering the impact of science on society. It seems to be
generally believed that if the scientists would only look at these very
difficult social problems and not spend so much time fooling with less vital
scientific ones, great success would come of it.
It
seems to me that we do think about these problems from time to time, but we
don't put a full-time effort into them -- the reasons being that we know we
don't have any magic formula for solving social problems, that social problems
are very much harder than scientific ones, and that we usually don't get
anywhere when we do think about them.
I
believe that a scientist looking at nonscientific problems is just as dumb as
the next guy -- and when he talks about a nonscientific matter, he sounds as
naive as anyone untrained in the matter.
From
Feynman’s language, it is clear that in his view social problems are not
‘scientific ones’. Social problems are ‘non-scientific’ problems, ‘non
scientific matters’. In his view, which is quite common among natural scientists,
there are two kinds of problems- scientific problems, which one can think about
seriously, and ‘non scientific problems’ about which it is not possible to
think seriously.
Feynman
abandons his own powerful definition of science as a method for arriving at valid conclusions about reality. He retreats from the power of that world
view by dividing reality into two parts, one scientific and the other ‘non
scientific’, nature and society. Having earlier defined science as a method,
he retreats to viewing it only as a subject area, in order to be able to
avoid looking at the inconvenient areas and escape inconvenient implications.
The
above examples are chosen deliberately to show how easily a brilliant scientist
like Feynman, slips casually and repeatedly into intellectual opportunism in
order to avoid having to take a political position. To put it in his own terms,
in any area where ‘not fooling ourselves’ becomes inconvenient, change the
definition of science, from being an all encompassing method to something else,
so that one can escape the responsibility of being thoroughly and consistently
scientific.
Modern Superstition
The
resistance to comprehensive science today comes not only from traditional
quarters like reactionary religion, but also from modern sectors including the
scientific establishment. The modern
superstition that science must be apolitical or anti-political and that
politics has no place in science is widespread among professional scientists.
Many scientists take pride in professing their political illiteracy as if this
were a necessary consequence of their being scientists. Commitment to ST
requires us to demolish the opportunistic obfuscation that is at the root of
this retreat from science by many stalwarts within the ‘science establishment’
itself.
Another
serious abdication of scientific temper by the science establishment is the
absence of critical scientific scrutiny of economic theory and economic policy.
Calculations of economic cost, notions of economic efficiency which have been
adopted uncritically over the years may be said to be directly responsible for
natural resource depletion, environmental degradation, climate change and
distorted concepts and patterns of development on a global scale. Illusions of
efficiency of energy intensive fossil fuel based technology under capitalism,
which for lack of criticism, are being adopted by some socialist countries, and
are rapidly leading to a crisis of unsustainability on a global scale. For
essentially the same reasons that the science establishment avoided a
consideration of politics, it has similarly quarantined economics from critical
scientific scrutiny. It may be said that there has been a comprehensive
avoidance of point c. of the definition of scientific temper by the mainstream
science establishment in all countries.
Some
modern superstitions about the efficiency of high-tech ‘solutions’ to problems
like providing electricity are no less irrational than astrology. The Enron/ Dabhol
/RGPPL project is a contemporary example, where a 2000 MW project is lying shut
because it is unaffordable. The absence of critical scrutiny which is so basic
to scientific temper is again manifest in the phenomenon of major projects like
the Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project ands other similar projects being taken
forward without any techno-economic cost benefit analysis in the public domain.
Moreover there has been no demand from the mainstream science establishment for
scrutiny by the science community of these projects before they are taken forward.
This abdication of scientific temper by the mainstream science establishment
has seriously eroded the credibility of science.
The continuity of
science and politics
What
does it mean to include subjects like politics and ethics within the purview of
the method of science ?Why is ‘the fullest use of the method of science in
every aspect of human endeavor, from politics to ethics and economics,
essential for ensuring human survival and progress ?’
A
thorough discussion of the above question is beyond the scope of this essay.
What we will briefly discuss in the following is the limited question of why
politics, ethics and economics must necessarily and unavoidably come within the
purview of the method of science. The scientific temper does not recognize any
disjoint compartments in reality, in the real world.
Science,
as we have seen, is a method of attempting to arrive at reliable conclusions
about reality. Are there areas of reality which are scientific and others which
are not? Is physics and chemistry scientific, while politics, economics and
culture nonscientific?
Science,
in our schools, is still taught as a number of disparate `subjects', which are
in separate compartments. This is no longer consistent with a modern
understanding of science. Perhaps the single most important scientific
achievement of the twentieth century is the discovery that all these different
subjects are only bits and pieces of a single story. The name of that story is
“The History of the Real World".
The
discoveries regarding the structure of matter and its universal character,
which were made during the nineteenth and twentieth century have far reaching
implications. Atomic physics has made a major contribution to the study of
history. The tools that it has provided
have effectively established that everything that exists in nature: plant,
animal, earth, planet, sun and star, have come into being, and are made of the
same atoms and sub atomic matter. Everything has had a birth and will have a
death. Everything in the real world has its history. Life and living species
also have their history, including the human species. Studying anything in the
real world scientifically means trying to understand the history of that thing
without, as far as is possible, fooling ourselves.
That there may be only one story is not an easy concept to digest. What about religion, culture and ethics? Are they also part of this story called “The History of the real world”?
That there may be only one story is not an easy concept to digest. What about religion, culture and ethics? Are they also part of this story called “The History of the real world”?
The
answer to this question becomes clearer if we ask a few more questions. Is
there ethics on the moon? Is there religion on Mars? What happened to our
ancient cultures and eternal truths in those millions of years when there was
no life on earth?
There is a growing school of researchers who are trying to understand culture and values as aspects of the real world, as aspects of human history. In this view ethics and values are the rules that societies and communities make up for themselves in order to survive. The so called `eternal' values, like truth, honesty, compassion etc. are the common rules that many different societies have found necessary for their well being, survival and growth.
History is not indifferent to values. Societies that adopt the wrong values don't survive. They destroy themselves, and with them their unsuitable values. So with the economic and political systems that society adopt from time to time. Societies with wrong rules have short histories.
Like we study the history of the atoms, the elements, the stars and the planets, the cells and the animals, the apes and the humans, we can also try to study the history of social reality. We can try to learn how not to fool ourselves while understanding what societies and communities need to survive. Reality does not divide into two parts- areas where we can learn how not to fool ourselves, and areas where we can' t. Social reality and social questions do not lie outside the domain of what can be studied scientifically, outside the scope of science. Why then do so many scientists sincerely believe that areas of reality like politics, economics, ethics and values lie outside science?
One reason is that many contemporary societies have a vested interest in people continuing to fool themselves on questions of social reality. One important such fool's notion is the belief that things can never be different. Poverty and inequality has no history. It has always been there and will always be there. It is a matter of ‘human nature’.
There is a growing school of researchers who are trying to understand culture and values as aspects of the real world, as aspects of human history. In this view ethics and values are the rules that societies and communities make up for themselves in order to survive. The so called `eternal' values, like truth, honesty, compassion etc. are the common rules that many different societies have found necessary for their well being, survival and growth.
History is not indifferent to values. Societies that adopt the wrong values don't survive. They destroy themselves, and with them their unsuitable values. So with the economic and political systems that society adopt from time to time. Societies with wrong rules have short histories.
Like we study the history of the atoms, the elements, the stars and the planets, the cells and the animals, the apes and the humans, we can also try to study the history of social reality. We can try to learn how not to fool ourselves while understanding what societies and communities need to survive. Reality does not divide into two parts- areas where we can learn how not to fool ourselves, and areas where we can' t. Social reality and social questions do not lie outside the domain of what can be studied scientifically, outside the scope of science. Why then do so many scientists sincerely believe that areas of reality like politics, economics, ethics and values lie outside science?
One reason is that many contemporary societies have a vested interest in people continuing to fool themselves on questions of social reality. One important such fool's notion is the belief that things can never be different. Poverty and inequality has no history. It has always been there and will always be there. It is a matter of ‘human nature’.
No
religion talks about changing society. Science, in its rigorous modern version,
does. So it is not surprising that the
ruling class of many contemporary societies attach considerable importance to
keeping the methods of science strictly out of areas such as politics,
economics and ethics.
An important reason why many professional scientists try to restrict the scope of science to strictly ‘nature’, excluding 'society', is that the rules of nature are not rules which can be changed. However, the moment we begin to look at things historically with the eyes of science, we discover that the rules of societies and communities have changed in the past and are changing today. This means that they can be changed for the future. We can look critically at all the existing social and economic rules and ask whether they need to be changed. As already stated the ruling class of many contemporary societies has a vested interest in people fooling themselves into believing that social rules 'are a result of human nature, and can never be changed'. Changing the rules of society, or even asserting that the rules can be different, is never convenient, and can be dangerous, requiring courage to assert.
An important reason why many professional scientists try to restrict the scope of science to strictly ‘nature’, excluding 'society', is that the rules of nature are not rules which can be changed. However, the moment we begin to look at things historically with the eyes of science, we discover that the rules of societies and communities have changed in the past and are changing today. This means that they can be changed for the future. We can look critically at all the existing social and economic rules and ask whether they need to be changed. As already stated the ruling class of many contemporary societies has a vested interest in people fooling themselves into believing that social rules 'are a result of human nature, and can never be changed'. Changing the rules of society, or even asserting that the rules can be different, is never convenient, and can be dangerous, requiring courage to assert.
Scientific temper
and Basic needs
But one consequence of modern science is hard to deny, even for those who shun inconvenience. Enough food is, and can be produced in our country to give everybody two square meals a day. The resources and knowledge exist to provide everybody with enough clean water for drinking and washing. The technology and resources for basic needs for all
exists.
Yet, in our country, basic needs are denied to most. Why? This is a social question, and as we have seen, also a question for science.
In 1991 and thereafter, as part of the new economic policy, many rules were changed, and it was vehemently argued that the new rules were necessary 'to speed up development’; Speeding up development through Liberalization, Privatization and Globalization would result in basic needs for all. Twenty four years down, the results of the experiment say "No" to that
hypothesis.
What rules (laws, rights, and economic policies) really need to be adopted to universalize basic needs is probably the most important scientific question before our country today.
The
Directive principles of the Indian Constitution provide for basic needs .They
direct the state to promote the welfare of all its citizens based on economic,
social and political justice. They provide specifically for employment, health,
nutrition, education, living wages, and social security in old age, decent
conditions of living and full enjoyment of leisure for all as rights. Directive
principles are not legally enforceable, but they define the direction in which
laws are to be made through democratic politics in order to strengthen these provisions
into legally enforceable rights. Education of a good quality became a legally
enforceable right in 2010 in this manner.
If
the economic policies being implemented are not delivering basic needs for all,
Scientific temper demands that we examine alternatives and address the problems
of universalization of basic needs in a scientific manner.
If
this scientific exercise points to radical restructuring of society , of
economic policy and laws, as being necessary for universalization of basic
needs, scientific temper demands
political activity to achieve this restructuring, because science is not just a
theoretical exercise, but always has to prove its validity in practice. As Marx
put it succinctly “The philosophers only interpret the world in various ways,
the point however is to change it.”
Defense of
Scientific Temper against reactionary politics
We
have examined a number of reasons for the engagement of scientific temper with
politics. But there is a far more immediate reason for this engagement. The
coming period may see systematic attack against scientific temper, emanating
from politics, and government itself, which will have to defend against.
It
is not only the fringe extremist organizations like the Santana Sanstha from
the self styled Hindutva brigade who were opposed to Dr. Narendra Dabholkar’s
work. A Google search performed on the website archive of the RSS mouthpiece
‘Organizer’ on ‘Dr. Narendra Dabholkar’ turns up only two entries- one from
2007, the other dated 20th July 2013 titled “Its Warkari Vs
Government over Anti Superstition Bill”.
After
20th August 2013, the date of the murder of Dr. Narendra Dabholkar,
till today (early December 2013) there is not a single mention of his name in
Organizer. There is of course, no condemnation of the murder. The silence of
‘Organizer’ and also ‘Panchjanya’ (both organs of RSS) on the murder of Dr.
Narendra Dabholkar is eloquent.
The
RSS is the core of the Sangh Parivar combine of Hindutva communal
organizations, who are expected to become increasingly active and aggressive in
the coming months. The BJP Prime Ministerial candidate Shri Narendra Modi is
himself a former RSS pracharak whose partisan role as Chief Minister of Gujarat
in the 2002 worst communal pogrom of this century in our country is well
documented. The gains made by the BJP in the recent assembly elections may or
may not translate into gains in the 2014 parliamentary elections. If they do
result in a BJP led government in the next Lok Sabha, we are likely to see
attacks on many fronts on the programme of universalization of scientific
temper. Astrology was introduced as a UGC course during the last NDA government
by the HRD Minister Dr. Murali Manohar Joshi, also an RSS leader, with a PhD in
physics! The AIPSN will have to build
self reliant activities promoting scientific temper on many fronts in a
comprehensive manner, without depending on government funding in such changed
circumstances.
Part 6
Building Scientific
Temper Scientifically
We
have taken up universalizing the scientific temper on our agenda. Scientific
mass work means conscious, consistent, systematic and sustained effort at all
levels from micro to macro. Scientific temper can only be built by sustained
work over a long period of time. Initially the focus will be on systematically
expanding the space for scientific temper, spirit of enquiry, humanism and
social reform and trying to restrict and isolate the irrational/ obscurantist
/sectarian combine in every state. The following programme is a long term
programme for universalization of scientific temper.
·
Universalization
of Good quality Science Education under the RTE Act 2009. : Though
universalization of scientific temper is provided for in the constitution, it
is not yet specifically a legally enforceable right. However, with the
enactment of the Right to Education Act 2009, education of good quality has
become a legally enforceable right of every citizen. Universalization of
scientific temper can and must be taken up as an integral part of
universalizing good science education. The universe around us is a wonderful
science laboratory that no nation could ever afford to build. Yet it is
available free of cost in every part of the world. The sun, moon, planets and
stars, the natural world in and around every school, are powerful learning
resources for universalization of quality science education. “Universalizing
the universe” can and must become an effective tool for promoting scientific
temper by encouraging every child to learn
good science by making, doing,
experimenting and questioning. Good science will definitely promote scientific
temper. Even fundamentalists want their children to learn good science
·
Scientific
Temper in Science Teacher Training: The teacher community can become a cadre
force for this effort. Education for scientific temper can and must become an
integral part of their science teaching training courses at the diploma and
degree level.
·
Universalizing
the Universe mass science campaigns: AIPSN has gained valuable experience in
mass science communication campaigns around Astronomy - both Daytime and
Nighttime astronomy- for the general public. This work can be expanded. A seed
organizational network for this is already in place.
·
Dr.
Narendra Dabholkar’s lucid and eloquent lectures on scientific temper are
recorded on video. They must reach every school and every child through the
electronic media including websites, school computers, Akash tablets and
internet e mail. For this purpose AIPSN should take up the task of dubbing
these lectures in Hindi, English and every regional language. This must be done
on a priority basis in 2014.
·
Scientific
Temper and basic needs: As we have seen earlier, it is important for the
campaign to link up with the common citizen’s struggle for basic needs. The
close connect between scientific temper and building alternative economics and politics for meeting the
constitutional mandate for meeting every
citizen’s basic needs and reducing inequality has to be worked out
specifically in each area such as food, housing, energy and electricity, water,
education, health etc. Scientific temper and the scientific understanding of our struggles for universal provision of basic needs can and must be linked together both
theoretically, as well as practically through joint programmes with mass
organizations of workers, farmers, youth, women and students .
·
Scientific
Temper and the Directive principles : Putting back on the national agenda and building popular mass consciousness in
the public about the directive principles of our constitution particularly
Articles 38,39, 41,42,43 and 47 is an important basis for building scientific
temper
·
Scientific
Debate in the mainstream science establishment: Forcing scientific debate in
the mainstream science establishment on important S&T issues like energy,
power, nuclear power, economic policy, natural resource policy, food security
etc. is important for science to recover its credibility as a representative of
public interest.
·
Joint
campaigns with progressive anti-communal organizations (including organizations
with religious affiliation) on issues of defending secularism, and religious
and social reform in the spirit of article 51 A of the constitutions.
·
Establishing
self reliant alternatives in the areas of health, science education, energy,
etc. for providing quality services to people without becoming dependent on
funding.
·
Expansion
of space for good science in public media in a sustained and systematic manner.
सदस्यता लें
टिप्पणियाँ (Atom)









































