heavycola wrote:I couldn't agree less.
Most people have taken the 'omg it's a doomsday machine' stories with a huge pinch of salt. It's fun, and funny, to speculate, that's all. What HAS captured the public imagination is the largest science experiment and machine ever built - which is where lay journalists fit in.
Only journalists who are physicists should report on this? Does this mean only journalists who are athletes should write about sport? or that only journalists who are criminals should write about crime? If you are studying journalism you should appreciate its capacity and aim to present complex subjects to the public in a captivating and illuminating way. The LHC has captured the public's imagination, and that has been largely down to journalists. if I want someone to explain this machine to me, i'm going to go with the Times, not the head of CERN. Thats what journalists do.
yeap i am in concordance, there are many people who are captivated by this subject; I am one. I have no background in Physics but i have always had a genuine, burning interest in humanities journey of understanding (no matter how transitory). Concepts do not come much bigger than the understanding of everything and this massive experiment may help us leap a little closer. More likely it will simply lead us to more questions but at least we may have closer to the
right questions.
That's me, and i would have been engrossed without any of the somewhat tongue-in-cheek, wowing of the masses using tales of cataclysmic chain-reactions. Some of the rest of our populations may not have been so engaged.
Why is this important? Well because an enormous amount of money has somehow been syphoned off into this undertaking without any real fuss! Who honestly knew about this as more than a passing random footnote? A very few i would say; that's dangerous because billions of Pounds, from many nations taxes have been expended.
Firstly - these people deserve to gain some excitement from their money and be included in the process. Secondly - if they are not in some way made aware of the huge importance of this, Scientists in the future may not get away with similar magnificent journeys into the esoteric need for complex, marginal knowledge!