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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2015
Rachel Carson's book, Silent Spring, an exposé of the perils of aenal spraying of pesticides in the post-war years, was first published forty years ago, in 1962. Views about the book and its impact vary considerably. This paper takes a critical look at some of the claims made by her supporters, in her name, about the role and value of science. Carson is highly critical of some aspects of science and of some scientists, however, I argue that Carson did not argue against the value of science as a way of knowing. Her message that it is the misuse of science, sustained by individual greed and market forces, that is the problem, has been lost, deliberately or accidentally.