hi philro,
thank-you for your 2nd response

and, i've read wilson's 'consilience', an interesting view. thanks for that, anyway. i agree with you that specialists can be tribal, vain, territorial or however one identifies it.
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hi psychonaut,
i agree that a lack of accountability and transparency is a big issue for science. this is of course a political issue and science needs to be reigned in and treated with a 'local' injection of democracy, wherever practicable.
i'm still wondering about what i see as a fundamental question: is there something inherent in the orthodox methodology that makes science branch, narrow, burrow and lose touch with it's 'centre' so 'industriously'?
my view is that specialisms of science can never gain closure(since there is no closed 'area' of reality), and are therefore ultimately forced to reach beyond what defines them, creating new specialisms, chasing that 'specialist's chimera' of completeness and coherence, while at the same time, have left behind a flourishing and deepening legacy of specialist infrastructures, 'dialects' and 'languages', that remain dynamic and ripe for new branching(and occasional merging!).
either, this is the only way it can be and there is no hope for a unified understanding, unless all roads do turn out to lead into one 'naturally', or, an organisational remedy is possible whereby a 'data-analogising, data-synthesising centre' is established and run democratically(the research-employees and executives being elected by all registering scientists).
This 'nucleus', if achievable, would hopefully be just as important and accessible to the specialists as their own specialisms are to them. It may even be able to evolve into something of an ethical body as well, as it grows in legitimacy, at first as a voice, and finally as a regulatory body, attached to the UN, say. It may even shift methodological and/or conceptual paradigms!

[specialist]
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what'dya reckon folks?