On 2014 Oct 09, Arturo Casadevall commented:
We thank Joshua L. Cherry for the additional comments. We also feel that our original response applies to much of the new comments but will try again to clarify our answers. As we have done previously, we copy Joshua L. Cherry’s comments and respond below.
Joshua L. Cherry states “We have all encountered writing that refers to science or its subfields and uses scientific language but lacks scientific content. The editorial does something similar with respect to philosophy. It defines epistemology and makes use of its vocabulary, but the arguments that it makes are not epistemological. The only general principle about knowledge that it invokes is the Faberite notion that knowledge is good. This is not an epistemological proposition or a philosophical insight, nor a revelation to scientists”.
We feel that Joshua L. Cherry misses the point in continuing to argue that our essay is not about philosophy and its branch epistemology. GOF experiments are the gold standard for acquiring certain times of information including the capacity of a virus to become mammalian transmissible. GOF experiments are accepted methodology in the field and commenting on their power and their standing within the normative standards of the field of molecular microbiology clearly constitutes epistemological content for scientific methodology is part of the epistemology of science. These experiments provide information with the highest standard of rigor that is unobtainable in any other way.
Joshua L. Cherry states that “The benefits of GOF experiments commonly discussed are indeed benefits of the resulting knowledge. (What else would they be? The economic benefits of creating employment for laboratory personnel?) These have mostly been supposed direct practical applications of this knowledge for preventing human H5N1 infections. The response above suggests that the authors intended to emphasize “the many other possible future uses of that knowledge, some of them practical, but some of them purely theoretical”. As I stated, most or all scientific knowledge has many possible future uses, and it is common knowledge, not a philosophical insight, that science works this way.”
We have no disagreement with this paragraph although we note that if this is indeed ‘common knowledge’ then we have trouble understanding why it is necessary for us to point this out in the context of weighing the epistemic value of GOF experiments.
Joshua L. Cherry states that “Exceptional risks demand exceptional benefits. Satisfaction of normative standards does not imply exceptional benefits. The authors indeed make a logical leap in concluding that GOF experiments must be powerful because they share certain formal properties with experiments that proved to be powerful. The literature is filled with results of experiments that meet these normative standards, with importance ranging from great to nearly nil. Thus, we must consider the value of these particular experiments, using scientific reasoning and judgment. That is exactly what most of the debate has been concerned with.”
We see several problems with this paragraph. First, there is no evidence that the experiments done carry ‘exceptional risks’. These have been done in laboratories with rigorous biosafety protocols and high level bio-containment capabilities. Furthermore, we do not know whether transmissibility in Ferrets confers transmissibility in humans. Second, we never argued that GOF experiments yielded "exceptional benefits," alone capable of balancing exceptional risks. Instead, we merely argued that the epistemological value of GOF experiments must be part of the bookkeeping, and we questioned the objectivity of the claimed exception character of the risk. These experiments have already provided important information regarding the biological potential of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus to acquire the capacity for mammalian transmissibility. We did not assign a specific value to this epistemic gain: we simply argued that it needed to be part of the risk-benefit analysis. We have no problem with the comment that “we must consider the value of these particular experiments, using scientific reasoning and judgment” and if Joshua L. Cherry feels that this “is exactly what most of the debate has been concerned with” then we are mostly on the same page.
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