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Trump eyes conservative intellectual, David Gelernter, for science adviser post

Sarah Kaplan

By Sarah Kaplan The Washington Post

Published Jan. 19, 2017

Trump eyes conservative intellectual, David Gelernter, for science adviser post

Computer scientist David Gelernter, a Yale University professor who has decried the influence of liberal intellectuals on college campuses, is being considered for the role of the Donald Trump's science adviser.


Gelernter met with the president-elect at Trump Tower in New York on Tuesday, according to press secretary Sean Spicer.


Gelernter is a pioneer in the field of parallel computation, a type of computing in which many calculations are carried out simultaneously. The programming language he developed in the 1980s, Linda, made it possible to link together several small computers into a supercomputer, significantly increasing the amount and complexity of data that computers can process.


Since then he has written extensively about artificial intelligence, critiquing the field's slow progress and warning of AI's potential dangers.

In 1993, Gelernter was seriously injured by a letter bomb sent by Ted Kaczynski, the anti-technology terrorist known as the Unabomber.


Beyond computer science circles, Gelernter has made a name for himself as a vehement critic of modern academia. In his 2013 book, "America-Lite: How Imperial Academia Dismantled Our Culture (and Ushered In the Obamacrats)," he condemned "belligerent leftists" and blamed intellectualism for the disintegration of patriotism and traditional family values. He attributed the decline in American culture to "an increasing Jewish presence at top colleges." (Gelernter himself is a traditional Jewish.)


In some ways, Gelernter is a characteristic Trump appointee. He shares the president-elect's bombastic rhetorical style and disdain for elites. In an October op-ed in the Wall Street Journal in which he reluctantly endorsed Trump, Gelernter compared President Obama to a "third-rate tyrant" and called Hillary Clinton a "phony."



But he would be an unusual choice for the role of science adviser. If appointed, he would be the first computer scientist to take the job, and the first adviser who is not a member of the National Academy of Sciences. He has expressed doubt about the reality of man-made climate change - something that 97 percent of active researchers agree is a problem. And his anti-intellectualism makes him an outlier among scientists.


Andrew Rosenberg, director of the Center for Science and Democracy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said he hadn't heard of Gelernter until Tuesday.


"He's certainly not mainstream in the science community or particularly well known," Rosenberg said. "H is views even on most of the key science questions aren't known. Considering the huge range of issues the White House needs to consider, I don't know if he has that kind of capability."

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