Many would argue Science is an ideology and this position is typically used by oppoents of mainstream science. Nowdays that's mainly religious groups who describe Science as an ideology "atheistic-materialism" . you also get that from other areas such as Nazis (who make the accusation of "Jewish Science") or the Soviets (who would accuse it of being "Bourgeois Science"). These are closely linked to debates regarding the neutrality of science and its relationship with politics and religion.
Those who would argue that, rarely (or perhaps never) understand science, and usually have some other ax to grind.
Peter Schuller, long-time head of the APA's Society for the Philosophical Study of Marxism backs you saying that: "Stipulated methodology can be ideological, as when, for example, it is stipulated that only empiricistically (sic) achieved responses count as valid answers or even as evidence."
I would ask you to note two things, Schuller's careful use of the conditional "can be" as opposed to the actual "is" and the fact that all he is really saying is that presuppositional thinking (in this case communist ideology) leads down the primrose path (as surely as does most theism). If you look to a dictionary definition of "ideology" (e.g., a systematic body of concepts especially about human life or culture; a manner or the content of thinking characteristic of an individual, group, or culture the; integrated assertions, theories, and aims that constitute a sociopolitical program) you find it almost exclusively applied to liberal arts and social science and not to the "hard" sciences.
"Hard" science, on the other hand is better described as a method (a procedure or process for attaining an object: a systematic procedure, technique, or mode of inquiry employed by or proper to a particular discipline or art; a systematic plan followed in presenting material for instruction; a way, technique, or process of or for doing something ; a body of skills or techniques; a discipline that deals with the principles and techniques of scientific inquiry; orderly arrangement, development, or classification; the habitual practice of orderliness and regularity).
So why the confusion? I think it is rather simple. When you play the child's game of "why, why, ... why?", it all to often dead-ends into "because I said so!" Similarly, any "method" can easily be turned into a bad case of OCD (at best) or an ideology (at worst) by a slavish and unquestioning idolatry of the practitioners of the "method" itself. Sure, it is important to keep an open mind, just not so open that your brains fall out (credited usually to Carl Sagan, but more likely the product of Walter M. Kotschnig) That can be a difficult balance.
The fact that such a view comes from opponents of mainstream science should not discredit it as a legitimate discussion within the scientific community itself. The accusation of "scientism" is the most common defence against these views which does treat science as an ideology and implicitly treating ideology as "false". This makes an error in treating objectivity and subjectivity as mutually exclusive, where "objective" is true and "subjective" is false. In practice, it's not that simple.
Yes, it is not that simple, science as "ideology" comes both from members of the scientific community, the rank and file of whom are often rather unsophisticated philosophicaly, and also from the opponents of science. Being forced to guard against "ideology" becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy is a reasonable topic of discussion within the scientific community. The problem is that the very accusation of "scientism," rightly or (more often ) wrongly, is a common gambit of those who reject science and who, in their very act of rejection are attempting (and often succeeding) in painting advocates into a corner merely by treating science as though it were an ideology with the foregone presupposition (as you observe) of treating the concept of ideology as inherently "false".
In more respectable academic circles, ...
Where might I find the less respectable academic circles?
... the history of science demonstrates dramatic changes as scientific revolutions or "paradigm shifts" in scientific thought (e.g. Einstein's theory of relativity versus newtonian mechanics) such as the view presented by the philosopher Thomas Kuhn. Philosophically, it is a legitimate debate in the philosophy of science over realism and anti-realism but is very damaging in that it has allowed a host of "reactionary" ideas to come forward and challange science based on assuming that all ideas are "equal" because people are "equal".
Here you hit on a core of the issue. I often quote Daniel Patrick Moynihan, "You have a right to your own opinions, but not to your own facts."
However, the fact that science is understood by its methods as used in the laboratory rather than its history means that typically we over-estimate the degree of scientific objectivity.
I do not agree. That may have been true at one time, but (as you suggest) the paradigm has shifted. The greatest rewards go to the scientists who are able to challenge the most widely held views.
It's only when we take a long view that we can start to see major shifts in scientific reasoning. It should be taken implicitly that I'm using "ideology" to mean ideas in general rather than specifically false ideas. I'm of the view that Science is an ideology because it is inescapably a product of philosophical reasoning about the properties of nature and knowledge, but has better methods for demonstrating its views than the alternatives. I'm still on the side of evolution, but recognise that it's the historical product of alot of philosophical controversies as well as scientific ones.
I would argue that science has reached escape velocity and (in most part) left it roots behind. The availability of various data logging and number crunching devices has shifted the focus of modern science to big data, exploratory data analysis, and comfort rather than confusion in stochastic processes. This has resulted in a major change in grade, the evolution (if you will) of a new form of science since the 1960s.
Science is a methodology, not an ideology or belief system.
Creationism is based on faith, evolution on evidence.
So true, so true.
I agree that many people do blindly follow either scientists or religious leaders without examining the facts for themselves. Belief in evolution is an act of faith, IMO, and often an act of blind faith. On the other hand, many believe the earth was created a few thousand years ago in six 24-hour days, simply because their religious leaders tell them to. Both beliefs are accepted without convincing evidence, IMO.
Does that mean that both views should be viewed as having equal standing? We've already addressed (and dismissed) that concept. If is a logical fallacy know as a "false equivalence". Similarly, it does not matter what the motivation is, blindly following or eyes wide open ... the motivation measured against the evidence is a reflection on the abilities of the "followers" not on the "truth" of the issue. An argument from authority is only a logical fallacy when the authority cited is outside of their area of expertise.
Correct rusra02, Belief in evolution is an act of faith. The evolution is a theory that I can claim most evolutionists have very limited knowledge of but yet they accept it not as a theory but as a fact. I consider that an act of faith
No. evolution is a demonstrated theory (in science that's above a "law"). There is no belief required. It may be that "most evolutionists have very limited knowledge" but that has no effect on evolution's observable evidence. You're just playing with a rather rotten red herring,
sapiens, it appears that you are limiting the subject to your case? I said people. Don't you know or agree that most people are not scientists (like you). I am not a scientist my self but as a scientist don't you need enough knowledge about a subject to be able to make a sound judgment. Do you have theology knowledge? I simply say that most people ( including my self) neither have complete science nor theology knowledge and equally follow the evolution or creationism as an act of faith.
I guess, but then most of the people I know are (or were) scientists. The most important thing is not "enough knowledge" but rather, it is sound judgment, something that is independent of the amount of knowledge or the data. To a degree, you can trade judgment and knowledge off against each other. Do I have theology "knowledge"? Yes, enough to have decided that theology is and more an accidental "jimmying" of the lock than a key to a body of knowledge. I think that religion is the predictable result of an Evolutionary Stable Solution, nothing more (and nothing less). This is the so-called "God Gene Hypothesis."
It is necessary to explain why religions exist at every stage of the development of human societies, all over the world. It is important to recognize that these religions are often in contradiction to one another. Religion appears to be an evolved behavior. It exists, not because there is a god, but because of natural selection. It exists, as described above because it evolved prior to
Homo sapiens ssp. moving out of Africa, providing early humans and their offspring with, "increased access to the gene pool of succeeding generations." I would never suggest that religion was, in its day, useless ... just that it is time, in human development to recognize childhood's end.