The lockdown’s loyal opposition

By no means is this merely a matter of good public relations strategy. For one thing, the lockdown, however temporarily necessary, is an extreme and dangerous remedy and one that has imposed massive inconveniences on people, not to mention threatened their livelihoods. It is unreasonable not to cut the skeptics some slack even when they make intemperate remarks. Defenders of the lockdown also need to keep in mind that intemperate things have been said and done by people on our side too.
For another thing, refusing even to engage with the arguments of one’s opponents is a recipe for confirmation bias, circular reasoning, and other forms of dogmatism. If an argument is wrong, then you should be able to explain how it is, rather than simply dismissing it. Otherwise you are stuck on an intellectual merry-go-round: “People who believe X aren’t even worthy of a reasoned response, because their arguments are so awful; and I know their arguments must be awful because no one who believes something like X could possibly be worthy of a reasoned response.”
Such question-begging condescension is bad enough in the best of times. It is potentially catastrophic in our current circumstances. Given how damaging the lockdown is the longer it goes on, it would be insane not to welcomeconstructive criticism, and regularly to revisit the issue of how long the lockdown ought to continue, given constantly changing circumstances.
To be sure, the fact that the estimated death toll has now been revised downward by no means shows that the lockdown to this point was not necessary. It is, however, reasonable for people to ask how soon it can end, consistent with avoiding a resurgence of the virus. I have no opinion to offer, other than the conventional one that widespread testing is essential. To that I would add only that two extremes need to be avoided.
The first extreme is dogmatically to parrot lurid journalistic accounts of every nightmare scenario that “the science” is purportedly revealing to us, as if they were holy writ. As the Covid-19 lockdown started to ramp up in the U.S. a month ago, one of the skeptical voices I took most seriously was that of Stanford epidemiologist John Ioannidis, with whose work I was familiar from his famous paper “Why Most Published Research Findings Are False.” Anyone familiar with the points made in that paper would be wary of too quickly accepting any bold claim made on the basis of current research, especiallywhen it is filtered through the keyboard of a journalist. Pathologist John Lee has more recently offered a reminder of how important it is to keep the methodological problems in mind when assessing claims about Covid-19.
Naturally, though, there is another extreme, which is to make of the fallibility of research findings an excuse glibly to dismiss them. To observe that Sherlock Holmes is not infallible is hardly grounds to think him incompetent, or to judge yourself to be a better detective than he is. It no less ridiculous for radio hosts and Twitter warriors to decide that they know more than the epidemiologists, on the grounds that the latter have revised their opinions. Moreover, in a crisis situation, fallible research is better than none at all, and all we have to go on. As others pointed out a month ago, Ioannidis’s own reasonable reservations did not entail that the scientific evidence was then too weak to act on.
As I have said before, the lesson of all this is notthat we might as well throw up our hands and cannot arrive at a right answer. The lesson is to calm down and realize that things might be more complicated than whatever it was you read today in your Twitter feed or at your favorite political website. But that’s true for the lockdown’s defenders too, and not just its critics.
Here’s a good debate at Catholic Heraldbetween Helen Andrews and Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry.
Published on April 16, 2020 17:45
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