causality. According to traditional scientific conceptions of causality it is not warranted to say that low dose ionizing radiation causes cancer. Standard approaches in radiation protection, however, imply that there is a causal connection, which is due to the strong social commitment in the field. There is a close relationship between social and scientific conceptions of causality, posing a series of challenges: one being that scientists covertly become moral experts, another one that the general public can be misinformed. There is a difference between causality in science and in policy making. Mixing these conceptions, as sometimes is done in radiation protection, can be misleading. Whether low dose ionizing radiation causes cancer is a social and not only a scientific issue. As such those who are warranted to have a say." /> Does low dose ionizing radiation cause cancer? - Hofmann Bjørn M. | sdvig press

Does low dose ionizing radiation cause cancer?

the interplay of epistemology and ethics in radiation protection

Bjørn M. Hofmann

pp. 695-708


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