Scientific Temper: The Invisible Foundation of Disaster Preparedness and Disaster Management
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56042/jst.v14i2.31406Keywords:
Disaster Management, Risk ReductionAbstract
Hazards are an inevitable part of nature, technology, and modern society. They may arise from natural processes such as floods, cyclones, landslides, heat waves, and cold waves, or from human activities and technological systems such as fires, industrial accidents, chemical leaks, road crashes, and hospital emergencies. However, hazards do not automatically become disasters. Disasters occur when hazards interact with exposure, vulnerability, unsafe behavior, weak preparedness, and inadequate coping capacity. Recent incidents involving residential fires caused by overloaded electrical systems, boat capsizing despite weather warnings, ICU fires, industrial accidents, urban flooding, landslides, road crashes, heat waves, and cold waves demonstrate that disasters are often amplified by the absence of scientific temper in everyday life. This article explains the scientific distinction between hazards and disasters and argues that scientific temper is the invisible foundation of resilience. It transforms warnings into action, safety norms into culture, and preparedness into collective responsibility. Building a disaster-resilient India therefore requires not only advanced technologies and institutional mechanisms, but also scientifically informed citizens capable of understanding risks, respecting evidence, and acting responsibly.