Garvin T
Department of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Risk Anal. 2001 Jun;21(3):443-55. doi: 10.1111/0272-4332.213124.
The effective use of evidence and its resultant knowledge is increasingly recognized as critical in risk analysis. This, in turn, has led to a growing concern over issues of epistemology in risk communication, and, in particular, interest in how knowledge is constructed and employed by the key players in risk--scientists, policy makers, and the public. This article uses a critical theoretical approach to explore how evidence is recognized and validated, and how limits are placed on knowledge by scientists, policy makers, and the public. It brings together developments in the sociology of science, policy and policy development, public understandings of science, and risk communication and analysis to explicate the differing forms of rationality employed by each group. The work concludes that each group employs different, although equally legitimate, forms of rationality when evaluating evidence and generating knowledge around risky environment and health issues. Scientists, policy makers, and the public employ scientific, political, and social rationality, respectively. These differing forms of rationality reflect underlying epistemological distances from which can develop considerable misunderstandings and misinterpretations.
在风险分析中,有效利用证据及其所产生的知识日益被视为至关重要。这反过来又引发了人们对风险沟通中认识论问题的日益关注,尤其是对风险中的关键参与者——科学家、政策制定者和公众如何构建和运用知识的兴趣。本文采用批判性理论方法来探讨证据是如何被认可和验证的,以及科学家、政策制定者和公众是如何对知识加以限制的。它汇集了科学社会学、政策与政策制定、公众对科学的理解以及风险沟通与分析等方面的发展成果,以阐明每个群体所采用的不同理性形式。研究得出的结论是,在评估围绕危险环境和健康问题的证据并生成知识时,每个群体都采用不同但同样合理的理性形式。科学家、政策制定者和公众分别采用科学理性、政治理性和社会理性。这些不同的理性形式反映了潜在的认识论差异,由此可能产生相当多的误解和错误解读。