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发表于 2017-4-22 23:51:40
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本帖最后由 刘颖 于 2017-4-22 23:57 编辑
Barcelona
Beachside science discussion in Barcelona
About 40 volunteers organized this city’s March for Science event, a roundtable discussion not far from one of its famous urban beaches. Pablo Rodríguez Ros of the Institute of Marine sciences, one among the hundreds of attendee, says he gave up a Saturday “because I think science should be closer to society. We need to involve people to improve the wellbeing of society. We help you, but we need society's help too.”
The event began with a reading of a pro-science manifesto in three languages: English, Spanish, and Catalan. One part declared: “It is worrying the rising acceptance of environmental and safety policies that purposefully go against scientific evidences such as the effectiveness of vaccination, the theory of evolution or climate change.”
The roundtable included scientists, journalists and science policy officials. “We need to march for open science, not just science,” said Joan Subirats a political scientist at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. Another panelist, Mara Dierssen, a neurobiologist at the Centre of Genomic Research, argued that “countries that invest a lot in science have a higher level of life quality and stronger economies. “ Pere Estupinyà, a journalist participating in the roundtable, also noted “Science is not easy, because sometimes it tells us things we don't want to hear. We can't cherry pick only the things we like!” --Luca Tancredi Barone
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