Can a engineer/scientist be a politician?

  • Thread starter AlexES16
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In summary, Alex is a 17-year-old from El Salvador who is interested in becoming an engineer in the field of mechanical or mechatronics. While his peers call him Karl Marx due to his interest in sociology, he is more interested in philosophy and socialism. He believes in the socialism of Marx and workers democracy, as well as stoic philosophy. He questions whether it is possible to be interested in math and physics while also being interested in socioeconomic debates. He also asks for the opinions of scientists and engineers on socialism versus capitalism. The conversation also delves into the political structures of China and the West, with a focus on the role of engineers and lawyers in leadership. Alex expresses his concerns about the negative impacts of capitalism on the environment and
  • #1
AlexES16
113
1
Hello people =). Well I am very good at public speaking and my partners in school say that I am good at sociology, they call me Karl Marx. I want to become an engineer in mechanical or mechatronics(very interested in robotics), I am not interested in sociology, but more in phylosphy and socialism. Yea i know the USSR failed and Stalinism was a mass muerder ideology, but i believe in the socialism of marx and workers democracy plus i also believe in stoic phylosophy, if you have food, good house, transportation, education, time to have fun with real friends and family, well for me that's hapinnes don't need the last car or monopoly etc. So the question can you be interested in math and physics and also interested in socioeconomic debate?? by the way i have 17 years and live in El Salvador(gangs, corruption and poverty are making El Salvador a bad place to live)

PS: What you scientist/engineers think about socialism(not Stalinism) vs capitalism
 
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  • #2
Anyone can be a politician.

In the US, there are political representative who have been scientists or engineers.

Look at Angela Merkel, the current Chancellor of Germany. She is a physicist.


Eligiblity requirements do not specify exclusions for being a scientist or engineer.
 
  • #3
AlexES16 said:
PS: What you scientist/engineers think about socialism(not Stalinism) vs capitalism

Welcome, Alex!

Just to let you know, we keep political discussion in its own forum, Politics & World Affairs, which is a subforum of this one.
 
  • #4
Hi Alex - this interesting comment was made to me by a Taiwanese political scientist when we were discussing the Chinese confucian approach to politics (what is likely to happen as it moves out of communism and into a future that is not going to be the western system).

He said all the Chinese leaders are engineers, while all the US and other Western leaders are mainly lawyers.

Exaggeration of course. But also true. China is long term and systems thinking in its political approach, while the West is short term and expedient. One builds, the other debates.

Maybe, as a future engineer, this is why a functioning socialism appeals to you? You want to see a system designed properly, with appropriate information flows and feedback.

In China, they are tearing down old community neighbourhoods for tower blocks, but also the tower blocks have their own internet forums to recreate a sense of local neighbourhood.

Neighbourhood political committees are being given more local power and responsibility. There is an exploration of new political structures that, as I say, are not apeing the west.

Google "vertical democracy" if this kind of thing interests you.
 
  • #5
apeiron said:
Hi Alex - this interesting comment was made to me by a Taiwanese political scientist when we were discussing the Chinese confucian approach to politics (what is likely to happen as it moves out of communism and into a future that is not going to be the western system).

He said all the Chinese leaders are engineers, while all the US and other Western leaders are mainly lawyers.

Exaggeration of course. But also true. China is long term and systems thinking in its political approach, while the West is short term and expedient. One builds, the other debates.

Maybe, as a future engineer, this is why a functioning socialism appeals to you? You want to see a system designed properly, with appropriate information flows and feedback.

In China, they are tearing down old community neighbourhoods for tower blocks, but also the tower blocks have their own internet forums to recreate a sense of local neighbourhood.

Neighbourhood political committees are being given more local power and responsibility. There is an exploration of new political structures that, as I say, are not apeing the west.

Google "vertical democracy" if this kind of thing interests you.

It provides bunch of nonsense .. like:
http://opinion.globaltimes.cn/commentary/2009-10/480250.html

Maybe, as a future engineer, this is why a functioning socialism appeals to you? You want to see a system designed properly, with appropriate information flows and feedback.
I disagree. It's just apples and organges ..
 
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  • #6
rootX said:
It provides bunch of nonsense .. like:
http://opinion.globaltimes.cn/commentary/2009-10/480250.html

Yeah, who ever let them get away with printing garbage like...

John: Somebody is going to criticize us, but inevitably they will criticize what they can't understand.
Westerners think they are the judges of democracy. They believe that democracy is about elections, and if a system is different from their model, it is not democracy.
 
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  • #7
apeiron said:
Hi Alex - this interesting comment was made to me by a Taiwanese political scientist when we were discussing the Chinese confucian approach to politics (what is likely to happen as it moves out of communism and into a future that is not going to be the western system).

He said all the Chinese leaders are engineers, while all the US and other Western leaders are mainly lawyers.

Exaggeration of course. But also true. China is long term and systems thinking in its political approach, while the West is short term and expedient. One builds, the other debates.

Maybe, as a future engineer, this is why a functioning socialism appeals to you? You want to see a system designed properly, with appropriate information flows and feedback.

In China, they are tearing down old community neighbourhoods for tower blocks, but also the tower blocks have their own internet forums to recreate a sense of local neighbourhood.

Neighbourhood political committees are being given more local power and responsibility. There is an exploration of new political structures that, as I say, are not apeing the west.

Google "vertical democracy" if this kind of thing interests you.

Hello =). Its sounds interesting, but i feel China with mao was an olygarchy very far from socialism and now its becoming a voracius capitalism. In russia the communist party is the second biggest party so maybe in the future years socialism return to Russia, but i hope russian communist were doing homework after 1991 and learnead from the past. My fear is that (capitalism is going out of control) +(the climatic change)= (deaths) + (destruction of eviroment) + (rich companies get more and more power destroying democracy, buying politicans, buying military , buying robots, buying nanobots) it sounds crazy but could be. Its time for a world Revolution based in true socialism and i hope all skeptics be ready to criticize socialism that can be a fuel to make it go in the right direction not in becoming an olygarchy, dictadorship etc.
 
  • #8
Sorry to be a grammar Nazi, but it's oligarchy, not olygarchy, which I think is rule by oil (not to say that that doesn't apply to the U.S.).

And of course one can be a politician... you just need to know how to lie, cheat, and steal.
 
  • #9
Astronuc said:
Anyone can be a politician.

In the US, there are political representative who have been scientists or engineers.

Look at Angela Merkel, the current Chancellor of Germany. She is a physicist.


Eligiblity requirements do not specify exclusions for being a scientist or engineer.

Didnt know angela merkel was physicist and quantum chemist or something. I was ready Einsteins toughts abouth socialism and they are great. "Why Socialism" by Albert is very good.
 
  • #10
Hey guys my english is not so good, so sorry if i make to much mistakes in the wrting.
 
  • #11
No worries, just correcting your mistakes.

After all, if no one tells me I'm wrong, I'll never learn that I am. And I'd keep using the wrong words.
 
  • #12
Char. Limit said:
Sorry to be a grammar Nazi, but it's oligarchy, not olygarchy, which I think is rule by oil (not to say that that doesn't apply to the U.S.).
Oligarchy simply refers to a government of a few, or a minority, usually for selfish purposes.

And of course one can be a politician... you just need to know how to lie, cheat, and steal.
A cynical view, but certainly not necessarily the case.
 
  • #13
Anyone can be a politician if they can handle the pressures of constantly being watch and having every little mistake you make critiqued and taken as if you are a bad candidate by the other side. No way would I ever have the gusto to be a politician.
 
  • #14
AlexES16 said:
Hey guys my english is not so good, so sorry if i make to much mistakes in the wrting.

No worries. And it looks like yours is a valid alternate spelling anyway. Char seems to have thought your spelling may have confused your meaning.
 
  • #15
I know, but who knows, maybe olygarchy is different. Maybe that while oligarchy (the negative of aristocracy, according to Plato) is what you say, olygarchy is rule by oil...

And the cynical view is usually right, at least in my own experience.
 
  • #17
MotoH said:
Anyone can be a politician if they can handle the pressures of constantly being watch and having every little mistake you make critiqued and taken as if you are a bad candidate by the other side. No way would I ever have the gusto to be a politician.

Obama said that he thinks some small amount of megalomania is necessary to being a politician. Otherwise how do you get up in front of a whole bunch of people and say "No really, out of all of you I am the best person for this job."
 
  • #18
There aren't many politicians with a science degree, but still a lot more than mathematician politicians (at least US politicians, judging from google results).

James Garfield was kind of notable. He published a novel proof of the Pythagorean Theorem while serving as a Representative in Congress. http://mathworld.wolfram.com/PythagoreanTheorem.html

He also was unique in another way. Back in 1880, Senators were elected by the state legislature instead of by popular election. While serving in the House of Representatives, Garfield was elected by Ohio's State Legislature to serve as Senator beginning with the next term starting Jan 1881. During the interim the nomination for Republican Presidential nominee became deadlocked and Garfield wound up being the compromise candidate nominated on the 36th ballot. He won the Presidential election, making him the only person to be a Representative in the House, a Senator-elect, and a President-elect simultaneously.

He wasn't President long enough to judge whether his math background was an asset. He was assassinated only 4 months after taking office. Interestingly, he was assassinated by a man that had failed his entrance exams for the Univ of Michigan due to low math scores (Charles Guiteau). Purely a strange coincidence.
 
  • #19
The Chinese political system is so different from the American, that referring to the central committee of the Chinese Politburo as politicians is misleading. A less inaccurate description would be to call them engineers who went into management. To the extent their work is political, it is the bureaucratic politics of a large corporation or a government agency.

On a more amusing note, here is a recent article in Slate.

http://www.slate.com/id/2240157/"

Then we have another article by Theodore Dalrymple on doctors.

http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/_national_review_cutthroats_in_white_coats.htm"
 
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  • #20
I think that the lack of overlap between politics and science is that science requires great effort to keep from fooling oneself or other people to be done properly while politics requires the opposite.
 
  • #21
I'm surprised nobody mentioned that Herbert Hoover was a mining engineer before his political career. He graduated from, I believe, Stanford.
 
  • #22
Herbert Hoover, gifted though he was, was simply the wrong man at the wrong time... he's not really conclusive evidence either way.

So yeah.
 
  • #23
One can argue whether or not Hoover was a good president, but you can't doubt he was a politician.
 
  • #24
I could. I'd be wrong, but I could.

"De omnibus dubitandum." - Rene Descartes

Of course, the truth is, anyone can be a politician. It's a job that doesn't require any specific skill except perhaps leadership, it's a very cushy job, especially if you work with (read: take bribes from) the lobbyists.

If an actor can do it, anyone can do it.
 
  • #25
Of course not, as soon as you're interested in truth you fail at politics, itself the art of convincing people to live their lives according to wretched moral dogmata and coming up with absurd pseudo-scientific arguments for those.
 

Related to Can a engineer/scientist be a politician?

1. Can a scientist or engineer effectively navigate the political landscape?

Yes, a scientist or engineer can bring valuable skills such as critical thinking, problem-solving, and data analysis to the political arena. These skills can help them understand complex issues and make informed decisions.

2. Do scientists or engineers have the necessary communication and leadership skills to be successful politicians?

While scientists and engineers may not have traditional political communication skills, they are trained in effective communication through their research and work in teams. They also have leadership experience through managing projects and teams, making them well-equipped to lead in the political arena.

3. Is it possible for a scientist or engineer to balance their scientific values with political ideologies?

Yes, it is possible for a scientist or engineer to balance their scientific values with political ideologies. In fact, having a strong foundation in scientific principles can help politicians make evidence-based decisions and prioritize the well-being of society.

4. Are there any potential conflicts of interest between a scientist or engineer's profession and their role as a politician?

There is always the potential for conflicts of interest in any profession, including politics. However, scientists and engineers are held to high ethical standards and are trained to identify and address conflicts of interest. They can also bring a unique perspective to the political arena, advocating for policies that align with scientific evidence and benefit society as a whole.

5. How can scientists and engineers break into the political field?

There are several ways for scientists and engineers to break into the political field. They can start by getting involved in local politics, volunteering for political campaigns, or joining organizations that promote science-based policies. They can also use their expertise to advise politicians or run for office themselves.

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