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- <text id=91TT2167>
- <title>
- Sep. 30, 1991: The Wizards of Hokum
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 30, 1991 Curing Infertility
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 66
- The Wizards of Hokum
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Like many grand enterprises dressed up as serious science,
- Biosphere 2 is part publicity stunt
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York and
- Edwin M. Reingold/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> At dawn outside Oracle, Ariz., this week, amid Indian
- chants and whirring cameras, four men and four women clad in
- bright red jumpsuits will wave farewell to this world and enter
- a newly minted one. For two years they will live inside a sealed
- terrarium, about the size of 2 1/2 football fields, that mimics
- a more primitive earth. Tending their crops and livestock, they
- will receive nothing from outside. Dubbed Biosphere 2 (the
- earth is Biosphere 1), the glass-and-steel-enclosed structure
- has been seeded with 3,800 species of plants and animals in
- five different wilderness ecosystems: a desert, savannah, rain
- forest, marsh and 7.6-m-deep (25-ft.-deep) "ocean" complete with
- coral reef. The experiment, seven years and $100 million in the
- making, has been hailed as the most exciting scientific project
- since the effort to put man on the moon.
- </p>
- <p> But Biosphere 2 raises a question that vexes researchers:
- Is it grand science or a grand stunt? The scheme boasts great
- ambitions: to learn more about our fragile ecosystems and how
- to restore them, and to create a self-sustaining environment
- that could serve as a model for space stations or colonies on
- other planets like Mars. Colossal and romantic, the project has
- attracted the participation of scores of researchers from august
- institutions, including M.I.T., Yale, the Smithsonian, Britain's
- Royal Botanic Gardens and the University of Arizona's
- Environmental Research Laboratory.
- </p>
- <p> But many scientists see Biosphere 2 as a kook's dream and
- a rich man's whim: John Allen, who used to call himself Johnny
- Dolphin, the engineer, ecologist and poet-playwright who
- hatched the scheme and heads the project, and Texas billionaire
- Edward Bass, who is financing the venture, have been described
- as onetime members of a cultlike commune. Biosphere participants
- have admitted that the degrees some of them received from the
- Institute of Ecotechnics in London are something of a sham; the
- institute was set up by Bass to confer legitimacy on the
- project.
- </p>
- <p> Flimsy credentials are matched by flimsy premises, say
- critics. For one thing, knowledge of the earth's ecosystems is
- still so limited that it is ridiculous to attempt to duplicate
- one environment, let alone five. And NASA researchers, who have
- spent more than a decade studying how people could support
- themselves in space, scoff at the idea that a two-year project
- will produce meaningful results. To many scientists, Biosphere
- 2 is little more than an ecological theme park. By summer's end,
- 600 tourists a day--at $9.95 an adult--were visiting the
- site and its well-stocked gift shop.
- </p>
- <p> Biosphere 2 is not the only project to blur the line
- between hokum and hard science. In fact, a vital symbiosis seems
- to be developing. Today even the purest adventuring, from
- climbing Mount Everest to trekking across Antarctica, often
- comes cloaked in scientific respectability. Consider the 1990
- International Trans-Antarctica Expedition. Publicity about the
- seven-month trek played up the scientific recollecting snow
- samples, conducting experiments in meteorology and monitoring
- the team's physiology. But the expedition emerged mainly as an
- exotic sporting event. To date, few scientific findings have
- been published, and critics point out that such information can
- be obtained in cheaper and safer ways.
- </p>
- <p> In a bid to capture public favor--and scarce research
- money--more and more scientists are indulging in overripe
- theatrics. Marine geologist Robert Ballard of Woods Hole, Mass.,
- for example, hyped his search for the wreck of the Titanic to
- lure funds for more serious efforts to develop sophisticated
- underwater cameras and robots. "It's a very fuzzy line," says
- Barry Gold of the National Academy of Sciences. "When is a
- scientist a good entrepreneur, and when does he become P.T.
- Barnum?"
- </p>
- <p> As for the Biospherians, they insist that there is nothing
- fraudulent about their enterprise and chalk up many of the
- objections to misunderstandings between "hard" scientists and
- those in the softer field of environmental research. Ecosystems
- cannot be strictly controlled as can experiments in a lab,
- observes Kathleen Dyhr, the project's director of
- communications. "The charges are those every ecosystem ecologist
- has to face all the time from laboratory scientists."
- </p>
- <p> Defenders of the project predict there will be solid
- scientific findings and benefits, but even if there are not, so
- what? Inventor Paul MacCready, who has won both public praise
- and scientific acclaim for designing the human-powered flying
- machines known as the Gossamer Condor and Gossamer Albatross,
- contends that the true measure of a project's value is not
- whether it produces hard data but whether it provokes the human
- mind. "Who can say Lindbergh's flight was scientifically
- important?" he asks. "There was no new land discovered, and if
- you asked at the time, people might have said the development
- of the eggbeater was of more value. But the flight ended up
- stimulating aviation." As for the trip to the moon, "all we
- really got out of that was a handful of dirt," he notes, "but
- it gave us new insights into the way we view the world." So bon
- voyage, Biospherians!
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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