End of I the day the real problem we have is a scientific illiterate society. Given we rely on high tech industry - that really really worries me.
I'm sorry to say that I find that remark slightly arrogant, Sam. We have long since, imo, passed that point where it's possible for any one person to understand all fields of human knowledge,
everywhere there are specialists.
At the most mundane level, for example, when I was your age, you could service a car with a feeler gauge, a set of spanners and a couple of screwdrivers. That's no longer possible, and it's next to impossible for people to do their own servicing, due to the increasing use of computers within the vehicle. A software engineer might manage, but how good would he be with the spanners?
Music is one of mankind's greatest achievements, but the vast majority of people couldn't sit down and write a symphony, but they can sit down and enjoy one. Some people are great cooks, some produce charcoal. Some people have a way with words and can write, some can't. The list is endless. My nephew is well known in his field, and is currently working in Miami before moving on to Japan. Despite the fact I don't understand his subject in any great depth, he still runs his papers and presentations past me, to draw on my own small skills.
Because we are not trained scientists does not mean we are ignorant or uneducated. It means we haven't chosen a particular speciality. Some of the best scientists in their field worked on Thalidomide, but look how badly wrong they got that. Science isn't always right because scientists are human. To set them on a pillar is to really put the world at risk.