The American Crisis: Origins-
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #32
Animated by the uniquely Western idea of Progress, many now consider historical events as being predetermined or inevitable, whether we’re talking about technical innovations like the airplane and computer, or the establishment of political liberty and democratic government; given time these advances would eventually suggest themselves to someone’s mind, so it is thought. “A totally materialist conception of nature and man implies determinism” writes economist Thomas Sowell in his Marxism; Philosophy and Economics (1985). “If human thinking and feeling are nothing but mechanical responses to external stimuli,” he continues, “which are themselves determined by the laws of physics, then all of life and history are predetermined.”
In fact, there exists no rigid law of historical determinism. Whether beneficial technological innovation or fruitful political advancement, their existence is contingent upon specifically favorable historical circumstances. Of course, not the least of these circumstances would certainly include personal sacrifice, physical danger, creative inspiration, ingenuity and not a little perspiration. Insofar as historical events are concerned, America could very well have lost World War II even as it could have been vanquished in its infancy by an indomitable British empire in 1776. It is nowhere carved in stone that liberty and democracy will inevitably triumph, nor can we offer any future assurance these must necessarily endure throughout all generations- come what may.
Reasonably enough then, if there exist historical circumstances which give rise to political liberty and democracy- as there must have been- then there must also be circumstances which would bring about their demise. Consulting the turbulent history in the West in the revolutionary years 1776-1848, we find there was no political system exempt from the tremendous political tensions and profound social dislocation brought about as rapid industrialization challenged traditional institutions across Europe. And in antebellum North America we saw a growing industrialized North increasingly at odds with a traditionally rural South which resolved not only to maintain a slave-labor economy, but even to extend it to the new territories being absorbed into the continental Union- even if that threatened secession and Civil War. It is interesting to note here that the apparent cultural divide which separated the industrial North from the rural South was perhaps not quite as wide as we are made to think. Southern society was as much caught up in the maelstrom of rapid industrialization through technological innovation as any region within the Northern States.
In the American Heritage series, the esteemed, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Bruce Catton wrote in The Civil War (1960) that in 1793, “…Eli Whitney had invented the cotton gin- a simple device which made it possible for textile mills to use the short-staple cotton which the Southern states could grow so abundantly- and in a very short time the whole picture changed. The world just then was developing an almost limitless appetite for cotton, and in the deep South enormous quantities of cotton could be raised cheaply with slave labor. Export figures show what happened. In 1800 the United States had exported $5,000,000 worth of cotton- 7 per cent of the nation’s total exports. By 1810 this figure had tripled, by 1840 it had risen to $63,000,000, and by 1860 cotton exports were worth $191,000,000- 57 per cent of the value of all American exports…By 1860 slave property was worth at least two billion dollars, and the abolitionists who insisted that this property be outlawed were not especially helpful in showing how this could be done without collapsing the whole Southern economy.”
Regarding European history, Professor Fischer remarks upon the sixty-year period just prior to Hitler’s 1933 ascension to the chancellorship of Germany in his book Nazi Germany; A New History (1995). From 1871 to 1933 the necessary historical conditions- in addition to Darwinian evolutionary thought- precipitating Nazism “included the establishment of imperial Germany, World War I, the German defeat and its aftermath (the fall of the monarchy, revolution, the impact of the Versailles Treaty, and catastrophic inflation), Germany’s ill-fated experience with democracy under the Weimar Republic, the Great Depression, and the rise of Adolf Hitler.” Interestingly, it was within Germany’s democratic experiment- the Weimar Republic- that the Nazi party went from 2.6% of the vote in the 1928 elections to 37% in 1932, becoming the largest political party in Germany. Democracy in Germany began to split apart in those years as voters rushed to the extremes, amidst massive unemployment and economic stagnation. By 1932- with 5.5 million unemployed, a sudden drop in world agricultural prices, the Wall Street Crash, and the failure of five major banks- the majority of Germans were voting for the Nazi and Communist parties. As is noted in the BBC History of World War II, the Nazi message hadn’t changed in those four years, it was just that more people were starting to listen to it.
And as they listened to that message of a greater destiny awaiting Germany through the Darwinian struggle for racial superiority and the survival of the fittest among nations, Western Civilization approached total war. There is little dispute that in World War II democracy and political freedom were in great peril and were very nearly extinguished by totalitarian ideology combined with the aggressive militarism of the heavily industrialized, highly educated, despotic powers of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. And Western democracy was certainly challenged in the subsequent Cold War era as People’s Revolutionary movements in Russia and China militantly sought to accelerate the class struggle and replace bourgeois Capitalism with Communist political, social and economic arrangements. Now as we have seen, the necessary condition common to the formation of the totalitarian ideologies of Nazism and Communism was Darwinian evolutionary thought. And the sufficient condition for the relative success of these burgeoning ideologies was the intentional and systematic elimination of intellectual freedom- conspicuously evident in both Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany- and most commonly reflected in government policies of suppression through the banning of intellectual debate and dissent, careful government control and planning of civilian training and education, as well as Communist and Nazi party prohibitions on the printing, circulation and discussion of “unauthorized” books and publications.
These two conditions- the necessary and sufficient- figure substantially in importance for the development of American society as science and math curricula quickly gained emphasis in U.S. public education after World War II. As the nation anticipated a future shaped largely by space and the atom, science education in America’s schools also included the Darwinian evolutionary model in biology, growing in value after Crick and Watson published their scientific paper on DNA in 1953. Not unreasonably, it seemed as though the Nobel prize-winning construct of DNA dovetailed somewhat neatly with evolutionary theory. However tenuous the relationship the latter actually shared with the former, the scientific establishment did not appear too apprehensive about associating the DNA’s knack for transmitting genetic inheritance from progenitor to progeny with the transference of evolutionary adaptations, by means of Charles Darwin’s inevitable process of “descent with modification through variation and natural selection.”
Any dispute with Darwinian biological evolution would be viewed by the scientific community as a grave challenge not only to an accepted scientific theory, but also to the scientific method generally, thus discouraging debate and stifling dissent. Thereafter, biological evolution incrementally became exempt from criticism, even as freedom of thought moved, little by little, toward extinction. Illustrating this perception of the unassailable nature and expanding role for science, in a speech delivered in 1960 to the American Association for the Advancement of Science and reprinted in his book The Physicists- A Generation that Changed the World, the physicist C.P. Snow boldly informed his audience that "scientists are the most important occupational group in the world today." Furthermore, this exalted status of the physical sciences was institutionally reflected in the legislative acts of the U.S. Government, intended to advance Cold War-era national policies. The idée fixe, or the Grand Delusion if you will, of 20th century Western thought- scientific certainty- was fast becoming a dominant reality.
In 1950 the U.S. Congress formed the National Science Foundation; in 1957 and 1958 it enacted the Advanced Research Projects Agency, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Defense Education Act. All of these acts represented a national effort reflecting both the recognition of the importance of science to national defense in the post-Second World War world, as well as the overwhelming need to train more scientists and engineers to negotiate what was certain to be a more scientifically oriented and technologically complex future. Indeed, it was in this historical climate that we witness the expansion of an organization that epitomized the close affinity between civilian scientific research, industrial manufacturing and military application and preparedness: that “research and development wing of AT&T”- Bell Labs.
In his exceptional book, The Idea Factory; Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation (2012), Jon Gertner writes; “In the final days of World War II…the Army’s Ordnance Department, along with the Air Force, had selected the Labs ‘to determine the practicability of developing a ground based guided-missile system.’ The results- a concerted effort of the Army, Air Force, Bell Labs, Western Electric, and the Douglas Aircraft Company- were code-named Nike, after the Greek goddess of victory, and put into operation in 1953. ‘Essentially a defensive weapon,’ the Bell Laboratories Record explained, ‘the Nike system will provide defended areas with a far greater degree of anti-aircraft protection than was ever before possible with the more limited ranges and altitudes of conventional anti-aircraft guns.’ Nike ‘systems,’ essentially clusters of missiles poised for flight, were sited on the outskirts of major U.S. cities and near strategic locations, including Bell Labs’ Murray Hill [New Jersey] offices.”
Mr. Gertner further observes; “What made the Labs essential to the Nike program was an expertise in radar and communications. ‘Telephone technology has much in common with that of new weapons systems’…The new missiles, outfitted with several antennas, were guided by a complex control system, both in the air and on the ground, that involved radio detection and guidance…Though nuclear arms and communications were often perceived as distinct phenomena- one was military, the other was civilian; one was deadly, the other benign- it was becoming increasingly difficult to separate the atomic age from the information age…To counter communist intransigence…would require a ‘two-front defense’, each as important as the other. Americans ‘are faced with maintaining a military strength adequate to deter the Russians from a general war, while at the same time maintaining a civilian economy that provides our people with an increasingly abundant life.’”
With the National Defense Education Act, the promotion of science and math education in America’s public schools and universities was considered essential to the country’s material and social progress, in addition to its defense. However, because the natural sciences came to overshadow history and philosophy in the intellectual sphere, scientific ideas and methods would come to dominate the thinking and outlook of America’s students, producing in their minds an incomplete picture of reality, at best. Such an incomplete view of the world provides an inadequate basis upon which to form coherent ideas and make vital decisions, to say the least. A partial picture of reality also significantly impairs the individual’s ability to consult truth found in areas well beyond the boundaries of science and mathematics. This in turn fosters a cultural climate in which an imbalance in rational thinking prevents logical analysis and the comprehensive understanding critical to the stability of self-government and democracy. Basically, a strictly scientific mental picture of the world and of humanity is a severely limited- even stunted- order of understanding. Also obscured in the absence of philosophy is the intellect’s ability to perceive empirically that a strictly material definition of the universe is not only limited, but flawed and disprovable.
That there existed the potential of creating such imbalance and instability in democratic society was anticipated by President Dwight Eisenhower at the time this legislation was presented. Indeed, President Eisenhower was quite explicit in his warning to the American public concerning the National Defense Education Act, warning that such an emphasis on science and math education should not occasion a demotion for humanities-based education, nor should this new policy be made at the expense of the humanities in the long run. “Eisenhower reminded his fellow citizens that the real strength of American democracy came from ‘the quality of our life, and the vigor of our ideals.’ American education, then, had to produce ‘not only Einsteins and Steinmetzes, but Washingtons, and Emersons’ as well”, as recorded by Pach and Richardson in The Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower (1991). We now know the President’s warning fell upon deaf ears and the exaltation of science and mathematics has since taken place and been registered in the public consciousness. Such is reflected in the considered opinion of the MIT historian Jacob Bronowski, offered in his intriguing book The Ascent of Man (1973), as he proposed that “the intellectual leadership of the twentieth century rests with scientists.”
President Eisenhower was rightly wary of the very real danger of promoting intellectual disequilibrium, an imbalance in Western thought and civilization, as a consequence of defining the universe in strictly scientific terms. From the President’s recent war experience as the Supreme Allied Commander heading up the desperate crusade to defeat Adolf Hitler’s Germany, he knew first-hand that where there exists intellectual disequilibrium there follows- by sheer proximity- societal disequilibrium; that is, instability. Such social instability can result in tyranny and can take many forms, be it the First World War era’s Bolshevik Revolution in post-Tsarist Russia, or the subsequent Nazi acquisition of power through the ballot box in interwar Germany.
Respecting historical precedent, Ike realized America was equally as vulnerable to such societal imbalance, or disequilibrium. President Eisenhower knew that an incomplete understanding of the world did not result from a greater or lesser amount of scientific knowledge, but rather viewing our world only through a scientific lens. General Eisenhower personally observed the horrendous carnage to a society guided by the views of those German thinkers and demagogues who saw in Darwin’s evolutionary theory nothing less than a new cosmic philosophy. Such philosophy united all aspects of nature with man and the State- rejecting theology and man’s status as a special creation- and proposing that humans were subject to the same evolutionary “laws” as any other organism. Hence, man was not far removed- nor distinct- from the animal kingdom. From here it was easy to characterize a race or nation as biologically superior or inferior to all others. To dehumanize other humans became a legitimate exercise in scientific classification therefore. By 1945, the tens-of-millions of human beings slaughtered, the near-total destruction of Germany’s cities, industry, and culture he witnessed- together with the innumerable Nazi SS death camps he liberated- convinced General Dwight Eisenhower that there must be more to humanity than its being the embodiment of a strictly material process of natural selection and evolutionary adaptation.
With the triumph in America’s schools of philosophic materialism and its various corollaries, students now receive a largely circumscribed education in which, increasingly since the 1950’s, “the methods of natural science [are] extended to the study of man and society, and the claim [is] advanced in some quarters that these methods constitute man’s only reliable access to knowledge of reality”. Even as American education is severely limited- even damaged- through the diverse and widespread application of the “methods of natural science”, so our ability to reason is likewise constricted and impaired, as it happened in Russia and Germany in the early 20th century. This descent into positivistic naturalism (as it is sometimes termed) is completed to the extent we vigorously insist upon the “fact” of biological evolution. “Darwin gave a powerful impetus to the social sciences and to these far-reaching claims for the all-sufficiency of [the] scientific method”, continues Professor John C. Greene in his excellent book, Darwin and the Modern World View (1961)- originally his Rockwell Lectures delivered at Rice University.
Certainly this generous opinion on the authority of science as being “man’s only reliable access to knowledge of reality” is in keeping with the views we cited earlier of the physicist C.P. Snow, who boldly informed his audience that "scientists are the most important occupational group in the world today", and the MIT historian Jacob Bronowski who proposed that “the intellectual leadership of the twentieth century rests with scientists.” Add to this the many amongst the general public won over by the continual advancements in the practical products of science and technology, and it would seem the opinion is virtually universal. It is, most assuredly, well beyond debate that the natural sciences have thoroughly transformed the world and advanced Western Civilization immeasurably.
Nevertheless, this exalted view of science is not quite shared by all, particularly those prominent in the business of science itself. For example, Stanley Jaki (Benedictine monk; PhD, Physics; visiting member of Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study) writing in The Relevance of Physics (1966), quotes the MIT- educated electrical engineer Vannevar Bush- father of modern computing- who observed that “Much is spoken today about the power of science, and rightly. It is awesome. But little is said about the inherent limitations of science, and both sides of the coin need equal scrutiny.” And then there’s the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell, formulator of the theory of the electromagnetic field- whose work was described by Albert Einstein as “the most profound and the most fruitful that physics has experienced since the time of Newton.” Maxwell opined that "One of the severest tests of a scientific mind is to discern the limits of the legitimate application of scientific methods.”
To the mind governed by logic, these opposing statements about the scope and power of the scientific enterprise are considered contradictories. Logically, even as the method of natural science cannot in fact be both limitless and limited in its reach, so both statements to that effect cannot be true nor can both be false; one must be true while the other must therefore be false. Extensive as the logical gulf appears between the two statements- between the limitless versus the limited method of science- it becomes ever greater in practice, in the conduct of society as the unlimited view of science gains dominance. Sadly, in this view regarding the scientific method as being “man’s only reliable access to knowledge of reality” and by which the world’s “intellectual leadership…rests with scientists”, there is found the greatest danger to our freedom of thought.
Only by recognizing a strictly bounded material universe (the uniformity of natural cause and effect in a closed material system) and by demanding an unyielding materialist philosophy can our scientific method claim to be the sole means to knowledge of all that exists. Only by the assumption all that exists is matter- or some function or property of matter- can science then say that all areas of reality fall within the explanatory range of the scientific method. In gambling this is known as “stacking the deck” or “loading the dice”- sleight of hand, that is. In logic it is a Fallacy of Relevance termed Petitio Principii. Without proper warrant, science then assumes the authority to exercise a prohibition on all other claims to truth. In this denial of intellectual freedom the sufficient condition now joins the necessary conditions about which we spoke- particularly the necessary condition of Darwinian evolution- and tyranny is established. For an illustration of this shift from intellectual freedom to the end of freedom of thought and its accompanying gradational descent into tyranny, we refer to the mathematician David Berlinski’s The Devil’s Delusion; Atheism and It’s Scientific Pretensions (2009).
In it Professor Berlinski diagrams the first step in this descent, as he quotes Chemistry Professor Peter Atkins of Oxford University, who claims that scientists “are at the summit of knowledge, beacons of rationality, and intellectually honest”. The next step is represented in the words of another Oxford scientist, Richard Dawkins, who says that “It is absolutely safe to say that if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in evolution that person is ignorant, stupid or insane.” The final step in the descent into tyranny is described by Klaus Fischer in Nazi Germany; A New History (1995), as he observes that “Hitler and other spokesmen of Nazi ideology were anti-intellectuals who were motivated largely by propagandistic purposes.”
“The bedrock of Hitler’s worldview, what he called his ‘granite foundation,’ was the belief in the biological and cultural superiority of the Aryan race. This belief formed the basis of his philosophy of history and his political ideology. Hitler was a crude naturalist who explained human nature on the analogy of nature. His concept of nature, however, was not the benign view of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment but the cruel Darwinian view that nature is red in tooth and claw and always favors the strongest or fittest.” Let us now take a closer look at the change that has come over the scientific method, as it has all too easily (and subtly) transformed itself from a tool for the advancement of human knowledge, and become- however unintentionally- the sufficient condition for tyranny…
Montag
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
The American Crisis: Origins-
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #31
We have seen that Darwinian evolutionary theory is a necessary condition- an indispensable circumstance- for the establishment of Nazism, but not a sufficient condition- a circumstance the presence of which Nazism must occur. What then is the sufficient condition for the establishment of totalitarianism? The sufficient condition which makes totalitarianism inevitable is wonderfully illustrated in the extraordinary event which played out one night in Berlin in 1933. The German Student Union (Studentschaft) conducted a “cleaning action”, intended to eliminate “un-German or foreign writings, especially Jewish, from libraries and bookstores”. Klaus Fischer writes that such activities “were held at all German universities during which students, professors, and party officials out-did each other in paying homage to Nazi political correctness.” William Shirer, in his Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, registers the report.
“On the evening of May 10, 1933, some four and a half months after Hitler became Chancellor, there occurred in Berlin a scene which had not been witnessed in the Western world since the late Middle Ages. At about midnight a torchlight parade of thousands of students ended at a square on Unter den Linden opposite the University of Berlin. Torches were put to a huge pile of books that had been gathered there, and as the flames enveloped them more books were thrown on the fire until some twenty thousand had been consumed. Similar scenes took place in several other cities. The book burning had begun.” We are told by Klaus Fischer in his book Nazi Germany; A New History, that the nineteenth century German poet Heinrich Heine “once observed prophetically that it was but a small step from burning books to burning people.”
It was not accidental that among the books consumed in the flames that night were the writings of Albert Einstein. Indeed, Professor Einstein's thoughts and work drew sharp criticism from the new Nazi cultural elite, inspired as they were by the ideas of racial purity which they had derived from the logic of Darwinian evolutionary theory. That such criticism of so brilliant and dedicated a scientist as Einstein should have occurred in the bizarre political atmosphere of cultural Nazification should not be at all surprising. What should fascinate the observer, however, is the peculiar direction from which much of this criticism emanated.
William Shirer elaborates in The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich; A History of Nazi Germany (1962) that “there was...Professor Wilhelm Mueller, of the Technical College of Aachen, who in a book entitled Jewry and Science saw a world-wide Jewish plot to pollute science and thereby destroy civilization. To him Einstein, with his theory of relativity, was the archvillain...The world-wide acclaim given to Einstein on the publication of his theory of relativity, Professor Mueller proclaimed, was really only a rejoicing over 'the approach of Jewish world rule which was to force down German manhood irrevocably and eternally to the level of the lifeless slave’.”
“...Even to Professor Lenard [of Heidelberg University] 'the Jew [Einstein] conspicuously lacks understanding for the truth...being in this respect in contrast to the Aryan research scientist with his careful and serious will to truth…Jewish physics is thus a phantom and a phenomenon of degeneration of fundamental German Physics.'...Professor Rudolphe Tomaschek, director of the Institute of Physics at Dresden, went further. 'Modern Physics,' he wrote, 'is an instrument of [world] Jewry for the destruction of Nordic science...True physics is the creation of the German spirit...In fact, all European science is the fruit of Aryan, or, better, German thought.'...And yet from 1905 to 1931 ten German Jews had been awarded Nobel Prizes for their contributions to science.”
How remarkable is the similarity in tone of those “academic” denunciations of Einstein then and the current denunciations of say, Professor Richard Dawkins of Oxford University when he stated; “It is absolutely safe to say that if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in evolution that person is ignorant, stupid or insane.” It would seem then, the sufficient condition for the establishment of Nazism, or any totalitarian regime is the elimination of the freedom of thought using indoctrination, intimidation, propaganda, government decree or judicial fiat. And in the comprehensive elimination of intellectual freedom through the artful use of such tactics, Adolf Hitler was a most competent practitioner.
In the view of Laurence Rees, writer and producer of the superb BBC History of World War II DVD series, Adolf Hitler’s Weltanschauung- or world view- is strikingly revealed in the book he dictated to Rudolf Hess while in jail during the Nazi movement’s early years. Just as it was with animals, so it was with great men and even whole countries. Hitler believed the entire world was locked in a permanent struggle in which the stronger must prevail. It was a theory he developed at length in his 1924 book, Mein Kampf (My Struggle). In it Hitler recognized the inevitable struggle against Bolsheviks, Jews, Slavs (Russians) and the “mongrelized” portions of the human race who sought to dominate the biologically and culturally superior Aryan race. To the world it was nothing less than total war. To Adolf Hitler it was called Lebensraum- “living space”- for the German people.
As we have seen, such an ideology was sustained by Charles Lyell’s view that “in the universal struggle for existence, the right of the strongest eventually prevails”; Charles Darwin’s natural selection and his adoption of Thomas Malthus’ theory that “…survival will be a matter of constant competition for limited resources”; Ernst Haeckel’s Monism and the belief that “nations must fight to survive as organisms did, or perish”; with Herbert Spencer’s “survival of the fittest” and his extension of the biological struggle for existence to political and social arrangements- that is, Social Darwinism. These seminal ideas imbued Hitler’s view that the “weak” are sacrificed for the greater good and of the superiority of the State to make such decisions over the will of the individual. It also indicated a tragic crossroads for Western Civilization.
I am inclined to the opinion that a nation- like an individual- encounters throughout its life many and various historical crossroads, and that the wrong road is as easily chosen as the right one. While the consequences of a nation’s choices are certain they’re not always evident, though the road signs marking the route are conspicuously discernible. For America at the end of the 1930’s there loomed ominously that supreme crossroads which involved another European war- and this after a decade of economic depression.
In fact, for the West it was really a dual challenge, for it involved the conduct of war and a properly managed peace- if, that is, loss or stalemate was avoided. And since the previous peace was not very well managed, the Western democracies discovered it was possible to win the war and lose the peace, finding itself right back in the same place as in 1914. In his outstanding book Freedom’s Forge; How American Business Produced Victory in World War II (2012), Arthur Herman cites May 10, 1940 as the precise date when America arrived at this crossroads.
The lightning-fast mechanized German Blitzkrieg invasion poured through Holland and Belgium supported by thousands of paratroopers and swarms of Stuka dive-bombers. With industrial precision the German shock troops seized vital bridges across the Meuse River, opening the gap for waves of Panzer tanks and mechanized infantry to strike deep into French territory and on toward Paris. German heavy bombers pummeled the ancient Dutch city of Rotterdam, killing a thousand civilians and rendering a like number homeless. By May 20th the Germans reached the English Channel, cutting-off the British army in France. Paris fell by June 14th. Adolf Hitler gazed hungrily across the Channel at a lone England.
On that otherwise bright morning of the spring invasion, Winston Churchill- prime minister for less than five days- would fly to Paris to see if the situation could somehow be retrieved. Before departing he sent President Franklin D. Roosevelt a telegram. “As you are no doubt aware, the scene has darkened swiftly. If necessary, we shall continue the war alone and we are not afraid of that. But I trust you realize, Mr. President, that the voice and the force of the United States may count for nothing if they are withheld too long…You may have a completely subjugated, Nazified Europe established with astonishing swiftness, and the weight may be more than we can bear.”
History tells us President Roosevelt took Winston Churchill’s telegram very seriously, finally moving a largely isolationist America to accept rearming for war against totalitarianism. Five years later on VE Day in April, 1945, after at least 50 million dead, hundreds of millions wounded and almost the entire heartland of Western Civilization shattered, the Allies triumphed. Sadly, it appeared we traded one tyranny for another: Nazism for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, whom we would oppose in a protracted conflict known as the Cold War. Shortly, the USSR would be joined by the other Communist colossus- the Peoples Republic of China. There was nevertheless great relief, joy and hope for the future in 1945- especially so after the total surrender of Imperial Japan in August of that year.
Unlike all previous wars in all of human history however, the Second World War was an industrial war and a scientific war, pushing the boundaries of industrial production and of technological development far beyond anything previously imagined. From the nucleus of the atom to the periphery of the earth’s atmosphere and the threshold of space- seemingly made closer by means of jet propulsion and rocketry- the management of the peace following such a decisive though complex victory in World War II would be anything but clear and simple.
With the return to America of millions of G.I.’s and the explosion of enrollment in schools and universities, it seemed that greater literacy and education would certainly play a major role in managing the new post-War era of international peace. Surprisingly, despite the dazzling prospect of extensive literacy and the unprecedented opportunity for higher education amongst America’s growing middle class, it was forgotten that World War II was as much a gigantic struggle of ideas as it was a colossal military conflict.
This gigantic struggle of ideas is basically the historical conflict between science and religion, ongoing in Western Civilization since the time of Sir Isaac Newton. And the focus of this conflict is the scientific method, whether it will continue to serve the interests of intellectual tyranny as we have seen, or the freedom of thought that once was so prevalent in America…
Montag
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #31
We have seen that Darwinian evolutionary theory is a necessary condition- an indispensable circumstance- for the establishment of Nazism, but not a sufficient condition- a circumstance the presence of which Nazism must occur. What then is the sufficient condition for the establishment of totalitarianism? The sufficient condition which makes totalitarianism inevitable is wonderfully illustrated in the extraordinary event which played out one night in Berlin in 1933. The German Student Union (Studentschaft) conducted a “cleaning action”, intended to eliminate “un-German or foreign writings, especially Jewish, from libraries and bookstores”. Klaus Fischer writes that such activities “were held at all German universities during which students, professors, and party officials out-did each other in paying homage to Nazi political correctness.” William Shirer, in his Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, registers the report.
“On the evening of May 10, 1933, some four and a half months after Hitler became Chancellor, there occurred in Berlin a scene which had not been witnessed in the Western world since the late Middle Ages. At about midnight a torchlight parade of thousands of students ended at a square on Unter den Linden opposite the University of Berlin. Torches were put to a huge pile of books that had been gathered there, and as the flames enveloped them more books were thrown on the fire until some twenty thousand had been consumed. Similar scenes took place in several other cities. The book burning had begun.” We are told by Klaus Fischer in his book Nazi Germany; A New History, that the nineteenth century German poet Heinrich Heine “once observed prophetically that it was but a small step from burning books to burning people.”
It was not accidental that among the books consumed in the flames that night were the writings of Albert Einstein. Indeed, Professor Einstein's thoughts and work drew sharp criticism from the new Nazi cultural elite, inspired as they were by the ideas of racial purity which they had derived from the logic of Darwinian evolutionary theory. That such criticism of so brilliant and dedicated a scientist as Einstein should have occurred in the bizarre political atmosphere of cultural Nazification should not be at all surprising. What should fascinate the observer, however, is the peculiar direction from which much of this criticism emanated.
William Shirer elaborates in The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich; A History of Nazi Germany (1962) that “there was...Professor Wilhelm Mueller, of the Technical College of Aachen, who in a book entitled Jewry and Science saw a world-wide Jewish plot to pollute science and thereby destroy civilization. To him Einstein, with his theory of relativity, was the archvillain...The world-wide acclaim given to Einstein on the publication of his theory of relativity, Professor Mueller proclaimed, was really only a rejoicing over 'the approach of Jewish world rule which was to force down German manhood irrevocably and eternally to the level of the lifeless slave’.”
“...Even to Professor Lenard [of Heidelberg University] 'the Jew [Einstein] conspicuously lacks understanding for the truth...being in this respect in contrast to the Aryan research scientist with his careful and serious will to truth…Jewish physics is thus a phantom and a phenomenon of degeneration of fundamental German Physics.'...Professor Rudolphe Tomaschek, director of the Institute of Physics at Dresden, went further. 'Modern Physics,' he wrote, 'is an instrument of [world] Jewry for the destruction of Nordic science...True physics is the creation of the German spirit...In fact, all European science is the fruit of Aryan, or, better, German thought.'...And yet from 1905 to 1931 ten German Jews had been awarded Nobel Prizes for their contributions to science.”
How remarkable is the similarity in tone of those “academic” denunciations of Einstein then and the current denunciations of say, Professor Richard Dawkins of Oxford University when he stated; “It is absolutely safe to say that if you meet somebody who claims not to believe in evolution that person is ignorant, stupid or insane.” It would seem then, the sufficient condition for the establishment of Nazism, or any totalitarian regime is the elimination of the freedom of thought using indoctrination, intimidation, propaganda, government decree or judicial fiat. And in the comprehensive elimination of intellectual freedom through the artful use of such tactics, Adolf Hitler was a most competent practitioner.
In the view of Laurence Rees, writer and producer of the superb BBC History of World War II DVD series, Adolf Hitler’s Weltanschauung- or world view- is strikingly revealed in the book he dictated to Rudolf Hess while in jail during the Nazi movement’s early years. Just as it was with animals, so it was with great men and even whole countries. Hitler believed the entire world was locked in a permanent struggle in which the stronger must prevail. It was a theory he developed at length in his 1924 book, Mein Kampf (My Struggle). In it Hitler recognized the inevitable struggle against Bolsheviks, Jews, Slavs (Russians) and the “mongrelized” portions of the human race who sought to dominate the biologically and culturally superior Aryan race. To the world it was nothing less than total war. To Adolf Hitler it was called Lebensraum- “living space”- for the German people.
As we have seen, such an ideology was sustained by Charles Lyell’s view that “in the universal struggle for existence, the right of the strongest eventually prevails”; Charles Darwin’s natural selection and his adoption of Thomas Malthus’ theory that “…survival will be a matter of constant competition for limited resources”; Ernst Haeckel’s Monism and the belief that “nations must fight to survive as organisms did, or perish”; with Herbert Spencer’s “survival of the fittest” and his extension of the biological struggle for existence to political and social arrangements- that is, Social Darwinism. These seminal ideas imbued Hitler’s view that the “weak” are sacrificed for the greater good and of the superiority of the State to make such decisions over the will of the individual. It also indicated a tragic crossroads for Western Civilization.
I am inclined to the opinion that a nation- like an individual- encounters throughout its life many and various historical crossroads, and that the wrong road is as easily chosen as the right one. While the consequences of a nation’s choices are certain they’re not always evident, though the road signs marking the route are conspicuously discernible. For America at the end of the 1930’s there loomed ominously that supreme crossroads which involved another European war- and this after a decade of economic depression.
In fact, for the West it was really a dual challenge, for it involved the conduct of war and a properly managed peace- if, that is, loss or stalemate was avoided. And since the previous peace was not very well managed, the Western democracies discovered it was possible to win the war and lose the peace, finding itself right back in the same place as in 1914. In his outstanding book Freedom’s Forge; How American Business Produced Victory in World War II (2012), Arthur Herman cites May 10, 1940 as the precise date when America arrived at this crossroads.
The lightning-fast mechanized German Blitzkrieg invasion poured through Holland and Belgium supported by thousands of paratroopers and swarms of Stuka dive-bombers. With industrial precision the German shock troops seized vital bridges across the Meuse River, opening the gap for waves of Panzer tanks and mechanized infantry to strike deep into French territory and on toward Paris. German heavy bombers pummeled the ancient Dutch city of Rotterdam, killing a thousand civilians and rendering a like number homeless. By May 20th the Germans reached the English Channel, cutting-off the British army in France. Paris fell by June 14th. Adolf Hitler gazed hungrily across the Channel at a lone England.
On that otherwise bright morning of the spring invasion, Winston Churchill- prime minister for less than five days- would fly to Paris to see if the situation could somehow be retrieved. Before departing he sent President Franklin D. Roosevelt a telegram. “As you are no doubt aware, the scene has darkened swiftly. If necessary, we shall continue the war alone and we are not afraid of that. But I trust you realize, Mr. President, that the voice and the force of the United States may count for nothing if they are withheld too long…You may have a completely subjugated, Nazified Europe established with astonishing swiftness, and the weight may be more than we can bear.”
History tells us President Roosevelt took Winston Churchill’s telegram very seriously, finally moving a largely isolationist America to accept rearming for war against totalitarianism. Five years later on VE Day in April, 1945, after at least 50 million dead, hundreds of millions wounded and almost the entire heartland of Western Civilization shattered, the Allies triumphed. Sadly, it appeared we traded one tyranny for another: Nazism for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, whom we would oppose in a protracted conflict known as the Cold War. Shortly, the USSR would be joined by the other Communist colossus- the Peoples Republic of China. There was nevertheless great relief, joy and hope for the future in 1945- especially so after the total surrender of Imperial Japan in August of that year.
Unlike all previous wars in all of human history however, the Second World War was an industrial war and a scientific war, pushing the boundaries of industrial production and of technological development far beyond anything previously imagined. From the nucleus of the atom to the periphery of the earth’s atmosphere and the threshold of space- seemingly made closer by means of jet propulsion and rocketry- the management of the peace following such a decisive though complex victory in World War II would be anything but clear and simple.
With the return to America of millions of G.I.’s and the explosion of enrollment in schools and universities, it seemed that greater literacy and education would certainly play a major role in managing the new post-War era of international peace. Surprisingly, despite the dazzling prospect of extensive literacy and the unprecedented opportunity for higher education amongst America’s growing middle class, it was forgotten that World War II was as much a gigantic struggle of ideas as it was a colossal military conflict.
This gigantic struggle of ideas is basically the historical conflict between science and religion, ongoing in Western Civilization since the time of Sir Isaac Newton. And the focus of this conflict is the scientific method, whether it will continue to serve the interests of intellectual tyranny as we have seen, or the freedom of thought that once was so prevalent in America…
Montag
Saturday, January 12, 2013
The American Crisis: Origins-
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #30
In the spirit of the classical Greek mathematician Archimedes, Western thought by the nineteenth century possessed the fulcrum and lever long enough to move the earth, to say nothing of the entire universe. Such leverage was found in the worldview known as naturalism, the belief that all objects and phenomena- including the human mind- are products of natural processes and can therefore be studied and explained by the methods used in the natural sciences.
Naturalism as a method is perfectly reflected in Charles Darwin’s theory of development. If a plant or animal can be understood as the product of a natural process of “descent with modification through variation and natural selection”, why would an alternate supernatural explanation be necessary- or wanted? As the influence of his 1859 Origin of Species expanded throughout Western Civilization, the obvious challenge it posed to the static creation account of biblical Genesis became irresistible.
Additionally, the ascendancy of Darwin’s work coincided with the emergence of another European movement which accompanied nationalism and imperialism: the notion of racialism. This was the theory of the inherent inferiority or superiority of one race in comparison to another and predates Darwin’s Origin of Species, as evidenced in the 1853 publication Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races written by Joseph Arthur- Comte de Gobineau.
Though not intended to support racialism, Darwin’s theory of biological development nevertheless provided both impetus and a quasi-scientific respectability to such ideas. Klaus Fischer notes in his Nazi Germany; A New History, that racialism shifted in emphasis in the nineteenth century “from a personal or even a social bias to an all-embracing ideology claiming to possess a master key to world history.”
“Since the last quarter of the nineteenth century was dominated intellectually by Darwinian biology, public discussion was intensely preoccupied with such magical phrases as natural selection, heredity, struggle for existence, and the survival of the fittest. A veritable flood of printed material was devoted to racial stocks, racial behavior, and racial breeding, creating the impression that racial issues could be reduced to the level of scientific animal husbandry…large numbers of racial taxonomies were invented.”
“Sir Francis Galton, Darwin’s cousin, was in the vanguard of such sociobiological speculation. He was convinced that heredity rather than environment molded individual characteristics, and he called for a concerted national effort to regulate heredity”, becoming- according to James Burke, in The Day the Universe Changed- a conspicuous advocate of British and American eugenics movements in the 1860’s. From racialism, Darwinian theory was enlisted in support of a general ideology of race, which perceived the biological necessity of maintaining racial purity.
Mr. Burke further relates that on the European continent, the German doctor and scholar Ernst Haeckel saw in the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species a means of uniting Hegel’s idealism (objective or absolute idealism shares with other forms of idealism the common ground that “the external world” is somehow created by the mind) with the German movement Romanticism. The latter sought to reunite man and nature- a connection thought to be subverted by rationalism and industrialism. (The nineteenth century German composer Richard Wagner's music was characteristic of the Romantic movement).
Haeckel went on to articulate the philosophical view of Monism, as distinguished from Dualism, the former regarding man and animals as naturally inseparable. To the Monist, man was not a special creation and possessed no soul, merely a higher degree of natural development. “Darwin had shown that human society and biological nature were one. Human society must therefore be ruled by the same laws of competition, conflict and aggression. Nations must fight to survive as organisms did, or perish.”
It was thought Haeckel’s interpretation of Darwin’s theory was considered crucial to the intellectual joining of racism, imperialism, romanticism and anti-Semitism. In 1906 Ernst Haeckel founded the Monist League in Jena, with the Nobel prize-winning chemist William Ostwald appointed president of the league in 1911. The league went on to inspire the Volkist movement which advocated “blood and purity” of the German race over the surrounding peoples. It was believed that racial purity was a natural means of ensuring the greatness of the German nation.
James Burke’s study also recognizes the racial anthropologist Otto Ammon, who proposed that the “laws of nature were the laws of society…Darwin must become the new religion of Germany…the racial struggle is necessary for mankind.” In 1904 the eugenics journal Archiv was founded, which at once advocated the formation of a national board to determine the racial purity of prospective parents, and promoted various suggestions for elite breeding communities.
The dark days immediately following World War I saw the formation of a German youth movement- a precursor to the Hitler Youth Movement- named after an obscure Aryan deity Artamarzen. Amongst the charter members of which were Heinrich Himmler and Rudolf Hess; their basic vision, observed James Burke, was the elevation of the interests of the State over the individual. The “German nation would become a biological elite. Struggle would be its prime reason for existence. Underpinned by Darwin’s theory of evolution, Nazism was born.”
As with much of Western Europe in the nineteenth century, Germany began to experience the considerable force of rapid industrialization that attended the era of growing nationalism and imperialism. Even as native populations were exploited in Europe’s imperial possessions overseas, so also in Europe’s heavy industrial centers workers were similarly exploited, being subjected to appalling work conditions, long hours and meager pay. It was in this age of the “dark satanic mills” that Karl Marx assessed the future of capitalism in light of his view of history as an ongoing struggle among social classes over wages and profits.
Karl Marx (1818-1883) the German political economist and organizer of the working class, wrote Das Kapital in 1867 in which he provides socialism with a philosophic foundation in Hegel’s dialectic method (thesis vs. antithesis = synthesis), combined with- among other elements- natural selection’s “survival of the fittest” principle of Darwin’s evolutionary theory. James Burke notes in his Day the Universe Changed, that it was said that upon reading Darwin, Marx wrote to his intellectual collaborator Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) that “Origin of Species is the natural history foundation for our views.”
What has been said here in this brief survey of Darwinism should not be construed as an indictment on those who subscribe to evolutionary models of biological causation: belief in evolution does not automatically make one a believer in Nazism or Communism. Darwinian evolutionary theory is not a sufficient condition for Nazism, but it nevertheless is a necessary condition.
To be familiar with necessary and sufficient conditions is to understand a basic principle of the cause and effect universe in which we live. In his Introduction to Logic, Professor Irving Copi discusses Causal Connections in light of that “fundamental axiom”, which states that “in the study of nature…events do not just happen, but occur only under certain conditions.” This axiom applies not only to geophysical events such as volcanoes, glaciers, plate tectonics, hurricanes, etc., but to man-made phenomena as well; in this case, totalitarian societies.
Of critical importance when studying any causal connection is the distinction between necessary and sufficient conditions, as these invariably coincide to promote an event, effect or result. “A necessary condition for the occurrence of a specified event is a circumstance in whose absence the event cannot occur…A sufficient condition for the occurrence of an event is a circumstance in whose presence the event must occur.” Professor Copi uses the example of fire to illustrate the difference between necessary and sufficient conditions. As we know, fire is produced when oxygen, a flammable material and ignition come together.
“For example, the presence of oxygen is a necessary condition for combustion to occur: if combustion occurs, then oxygen must have been present, for in the absence of oxygen there can be no combustion…The presence of oxygen is not a sufficient condition for combustion because oxygen can be present without combustion occurring.” Given the presence of the necessary conditions of oxygen and a flammable material however, ignition becomes the sufficient condition for combustion because with the introduction of ignition a fire must inevitably result. (Italics are mine)
Fortified as we are then, with the knowledge that Darwinian evolutionary theory is a necessary condition- an indispensable condition- for the establishment of Nazism, but not a sufficient condition- a circumstance the presence of which Nazism must occur- then what is the sufficient condition for the establishment of totalitarianism? The answer to this question requires a look at the heart of the scientific enterprise itself: the scientific method…
Montag
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #30
In the spirit of the classical Greek mathematician Archimedes, Western thought by the nineteenth century possessed the fulcrum and lever long enough to move the earth, to say nothing of the entire universe. Such leverage was found in the worldview known as naturalism, the belief that all objects and phenomena- including the human mind- are products of natural processes and can therefore be studied and explained by the methods used in the natural sciences.
Naturalism as a method is perfectly reflected in Charles Darwin’s theory of development. If a plant or animal can be understood as the product of a natural process of “descent with modification through variation and natural selection”, why would an alternate supernatural explanation be necessary- or wanted? As the influence of his 1859 Origin of Species expanded throughout Western Civilization, the obvious challenge it posed to the static creation account of biblical Genesis became irresistible.
Additionally, the ascendancy of Darwin’s work coincided with the emergence of another European movement which accompanied nationalism and imperialism: the notion of racialism. This was the theory of the inherent inferiority or superiority of one race in comparison to another and predates Darwin’s Origin of Species, as evidenced in the 1853 publication Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races written by Joseph Arthur- Comte de Gobineau.
Though not intended to support racialism, Darwin’s theory of biological development nevertheless provided both impetus and a quasi-scientific respectability to such ideas. Klaus Fischer notes in his Nazi Germany; A New History, that racialism shifted in emphasis in the nineteenth century “from a personal or even a social bias to an all-embracing ideology claiming to possess a master key to world history.”
“Since the last quarter of the nineteenth century was dominated intellectually by Darwinian biology, public discussion was intensely preoccupied with such magical phrases as natural selection, heredity, struggle for existence, and the survival of the fittest. A veritable flood of printed material was devoted to racial stocks, racial behavior, and racial breeding, creating the impression that racial issues could be reduced to the level of scientific animal husbandry…large numbers of racial taxonomies were invented.”
“Sir Francis Galton, Darwin’s cousin, was in the vanguard of such sociobiological speculation. He was convinced that heredity rather than environment molded individual characteristics, and he called for a concerted national effort to regulate heredity”, becoming- according to James Burke, in The Day the Universe Changed- a conspicuous advocate of British and American eugenics movements in the 1860’s. From racialism, Darwinian theory was enlisted in support of a general ideology of race, which perceived the biological necessity of maintaining racial purity.
Mr. Burke further relates that on the European continent, the German doctor and scholar Ernst Haeckel saw in the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species a means of uniting Hegel’s idealism (objective or absolute idealism shares with other forms of idealism the common ground that “the external world” is somehow created by the mind) with the German movement Romanticism. The latter sought to reunite man and nature- a connection thought to be subverted by rationalism and industrialism. (The nineteenth century German composer Richard Wagner's music was characteristic of the Romantic movement).
Haeckel went on to articulate the philosophical view of Monism, as distinguished from Dualism, the former regarding man and animals as naturally inseparable. To the Monist, man was not a special creation and possessed no soul, merely a higher degree of natural development. “Darwin had shown that human society and biological nature were one. Human society must therefore be ruled by the same laws of competition, conflict and aggression. Nations must fight to survive as organisms did, or perish.”
It was thought Haeckel’s interpretation of Darwin’s theory was considered crucial to the intellectual joining of racism, imperialism, romanticism and anti-Semitism. In 1906 Ernst Haeckel founded the Monist League in Jena, with the Nobel prize-winning chemist William Ostwald appointed president of the league in 1911. The league went on to inspire the Volkist movement which advocated “blood and purity” of the German race over the surrounding peoples. It was believed that racial purity was a natural means of ensuring the greatness of the German nation.
James Burke’s study also recognizes the racial anthropologist Otto Ammon, who proposed that the “laws of nature were the laws of society…Darwin must become the new religion of Germany…the racial struggle is necessary for mankind.” In 1904 the eugenics journal Archiv was founded, which at once advocated the formation of a national board to determine the racial purity of prospective parents, and promoted various suggestions for elite breeding communities.
The dark days immediately following World War I saw the formation of a German youth movement- a precursor to the Hitler Youth Movement- named after an obscure Aryan deity Artamarzen. Amongst the charter members of which were Heinrich Himmler and Rudolf Hess; their basic vision, observed James Burke, was the elevation of the interests of the State over the individual. The “German nation would become a biological elite. Struggle would be its prime reason for existence. Underpinned by Darwin’s theory of evolution, Nazism was born.”
As with much of Western Europe in the nineteenth century, Germany began to experience the considerable force of rapid industrialization that attended the era of growing nationalism and imperialism. Even as native populations were exploited in Europe’s imperial possessions overseas, so also in Europe’s heavy industrial centers workers were similarly exploited, being subjected to appalling work conditions, long hours and meager pay. It was in this age of the “dark satanic mills” that Karl Marx assessed the future of capitalism in light of his view of history as an ongoing struggle among social classes over wages and profits.
Karl Marx (1818-1883) the German political economist and organizer of the working class, wrote Das Kapital in 1867 in which he provides socialism with a philosophic foundation in Hegel’s dialectic method (thesis vs. antithesis = synthesis), combined with- among other elements- natural selection’s “survival of the fittest” principle of Darwin’s evolutionary theory. James Burke notes in his Day the Universe Changed, that it was said that upon reading Darwin, Marx wrote to his intellectual collaborator Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) that “Origin of Species is the natural history foundation for our views.”
What has been said here in this brief survey of Darwinism should not be construed as an indictment on those who subscribe to evolutionary models of biological causation: belief in evolution does not automatically make one a believer in Nazism or Communism. Darwinian evolutionary theory is not a sufficient condition for Nazism, but it nevertheless is a necessary condition.
To be familiar with necessary and sufficient conditions is to understand a basic principle of the cause and effect universe in which we live. In his Introduction to Logic, Professor Irving Copi discusses Causal Connections in light of that “fundamental axiom”, which states that “in the study of nature…events do not just happen, but occur only under certain conditions.” This axiom applies not only to geophysical events such as volcanoes, glaciers, plate tectonics, hurricanes, etc., but to man-made phenomena as well; in this case, totalitarian societies.
Of critical importance when studying any causal connection is the distinction between necessary and sufficient conditions, as these invariably coincide to promote an event, effect or result. “A necessary condition for the occurrence of a specified event is a circumstance in whose absence the event cannot occur…A sufficient condition for the occurrence of an event is a circumstance in whose presence the event must occur.” Professor Copi uses the example of fire to illustrate the difference between necessary and sufficient conditions. As we know, fire is produced when oxygen, a flammable material and ignition come together.
“For example, the presence of oxygen is a necessary condition for combustion to occur: if combustion occurs, then oxygen must have been present, for in the absence of oxygen there can be no combustion…The presence of oxygen is not a sufficient condition for combustion because oxygen can be present without combustion occurring.” Given the presence of the necessary conditions of oxygen and a flammable material however, ignition becomes the sufficient condition for combustion because with the introduction of ignition a fire must inevitably result. (Italics are mine)
Fortified as we are then, with the knowledge that Darwinian evolutionary theory is a necessary condition- an indispensable condition- for the establishment of Nazism, but not a sufficient condition- a circumstance the presence of which Nazism must occur- then what is the sufficient condition for the establishment of totalitarianism? The answer to this question requires a look at the heart of the scientific enterprise itself: the scientific method…
Montag
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
The American Crisis: Origins-
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #29
Upon his entry into the 2012 presidential campaign, Congressman Paul Ryan observed that the United States of America began as an idea. In this he was right on track. Sadly, this observation is not emphasized enough; really, it’s not emphasized at all. We seldom get past the economics of politics. However, the idea of self-government, the polity of which “deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed”, was the unique product of the Age of Enlightenment.
As Jay Winik describes in his outstanding book The Great Upheaval; America and The Birth of The Modern World 1788-1800 (2007), “…scarcely had there been an age so skeptical toward tradition, so confident in the powers of human reason and science, so firmly convinced of the regularity and harmony of nature, and so deeply imbued with the sense of civilization’s advance and progress. The evidence of this was all around.”
“The literate public greatly expanded…As the 1700’s unfolded before them, their thoughts turned to the question of governance and the human condition. And mostly to this basic notion- that the existing state of society could be improved.” Through the intellectual influence of the French philosophes Montesquieu, Voltaire and Rousseau, and their distinguished followers “d’Alembert, Buffon, Turgot, Helvetius…and Diderot”, Western thought took an entirely new direction.
This new direction inspired a novel belief, “one that radiated outward, radically and exponentially, in Europe, east and west, off to Russia, and far away to the colonies in North America, which would set minds ablaze and soon help kindle two great revolutions, not to mention a counterrevolution. The crux of this belief eschewed [avoided; shunned] an order based on the direct will of God and the fixed nature of the universe. Instead, it focused a bright light on man-made law and man-made authority.”
The new worldview of the French philosophes notwithstanding, the luminaries of the North American colonies- Franklin, Jefferson, Hamilton, Adams, Madison, and especially Washington- respected the “direct will of God and the fixed nature of the universe” as they embraced the libertarian (as opposed to the communal-collectivist) version of the emerging European democratic tradition, according to Klaus Fischer in his fascinating work Nazi Germany; A New History (1995), in the chapter entitled The Origins of Totalitarianism.
“Libertarianism and its various permutations gave rise to the Anglo-American style of thought with its emphasis on representative government, freedom, equality, and human rights, while collectivism informed the rising Socialist and Communist movements and their demands for the abolition of private property, the communal ownership of goods, and ‘true’ equality.”
For the American Founders therefore, all “man-made law and man-made authority” could derive its legitimacy only from “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God”, as the American Revolution’s Declaration of Independence read. This distinction incidentally, between two philosophical versions of democracy is supported in the writings of Thomas Jefferson, who saw a clear distinction between the twin Revolutions of the later eighteenth century.
Jefferson regarded the American Revolution as a conservative political revolution because the pre-war colonial legislatures and representative assemblies were extended and preserved. The subsequent French Revolution he thought a radical social revolution, because it advocated and implemented the dissolution of the Old Regime (ancien regime) as well as the overturning of the older, traditional social order.
As the streets of Paris became awash in blood in the Reign of Terror, many hapless souls were condemned to execution- nobles, bourgeois and commoners alike, even King Louis XVI and his wife Marie Antoinette- all receiving the due process of the guillotine. Of course, in this radical revolutionary madness the Church also was attacked, its property confiscated.
According to Fischer, with the onset of the nineteenth century, global European imperialism combined with aggressive nationalism and the gathering Industrial Revolution, accelerating the scientific, secularized direction of Western thought begun in the Enlightenment. Unlike the mercantilist economic order of Europe’s earlier colonialism period, nineteenth century imperialism saw the organization and implementation of capitalist economic arrangements integrating the geographic and cultural areas of overseas investments.
“In practical terms, this meant investing vast amounts of capital in overseas ventures and in setting up the instruments of production and exchange: mines, factories, docks, warehouses, refineries, railroads, steamboats, and banks.” Reciprocal construction was engaged in the increasingly industrialized European cities to receive the raw materials from these overseas ventures and facilitate production, transport, manufacture and export of finished products.
In the process of establishing these “instruments of production”, the physical excavation of large areas of the earth to accommodate mines, railroads, canals, bridges and tunnels began to reveal strata or earlier surface layers of the earth of apparently great antiquity, which gave impetus to the study of geology. The English surveyor and canal builder William Smith pioneered the systematic study of the stratification of the earth's crust with his book, Strata Identified by Organised Fossils (1816). And of course, within these strata were found layered evidence of differing climates in addition to the fossil remains of long extinct species, giving rise to the study of paleontology and the work of Georges Cuvier.
In 1830 Charles Lyell published the first volume of his Principles of Geology, a copy of which was given to a young English naturalist named Charles Darwin by his Cambridge botany professor, to read on his famous voyage of exploration on the HMS Beagle. In the pages of this seminal book, “Lyell had opened to [Darwin] the vast and exhilarating prospect of nature- ‘no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end’- first unfolded in James Hutton’s Theory of the Earth in 1788”, wrote Professor John Greene in The Death of Adam; Evolution and Its Impact on Western Thought (1959).
According to the concept of uniformitarianism- advanced by Buffon in his 1749 work Natural History- Charles Lyell “reconstructed the history of the earth based on processes still continuing; uniform actions through time implied a uniform rate of change”, observed the historian James Burke in The Day the Universe Changed. Because “only natural causes could be used to explain geological events”, Lyell’s work “shattered the biblical complacency of the Victorian intellectual world.” It also increased the popular misconception that religion and science were very much incompatible.
Awaiting Charles Darwin upon the Beagle’s return in 1832 was the second volume of Principles of Geology, in which Lyell extended the definition of geology “to include the study of organic change as well”, wrote Professor Greene. With the publication in 1838 of Thomas Malthus’ Essay On The Principle of Population, the fossil evidence confirmed in Darwin’s mind Lyell’s view that “In the universal struggle for existence, the right of the strongest eventually prevails”.
For Western thought, what began in 1687 with Isaac Newton’s theory of universal gravitation in Principia Mathematica had come full circle. According to James Burke in The Day the Universe Changed, Newton’s system- predicated as it was upon a rationally operating universe, understood by human reason alone- sought how, not why, the universe operated. Universal gravitation destroyed the medieval picture of the world as a structure moved by the unseen and ever-present hand of God.
Man was no longer at the center of a universal system operated for his edification by the Almighty. Earth was just one small planet of many in an incomprehensibly vast universe that behaved according to mathematical laws. There seemed, for the first time, no place in the cosmos for the Providential involvement of God in the affairs of mankind. The human race was quite alone.
Charles Darwin’s 1859 publication of Origin of Species, though it was concerned with the origin of the plants and animals found in the fossil record, required little imagination in order to be applied to human beings. If there were no Adam and Eve, then Man was subject to the same evolutionary rules as any other organism. Consequently, humanity was no longer a special creation made in God’s image; if this were so, there would be little use for the religion that taught such a lie…
Montag
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes and Summary
Journal Entry #29
Upon his entry into the 2012 presidential campaign, Congressman Paul Ryan observed that the United States of America began as an idea. In this he was right on track. Sadly, this observation is not emphasized enough; really, it’s not emphasized at all. We seldom get past the economics of politics. However, the idea of self-government, the polity of which “deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed”, was the unique product of the Age of Enlightenment.
As Jay Winik describes in his outstanding book The Great Upheaval; America and The Birth of The Modern World 1788-1800 (2007), “…scarcely had there been an age so skeptical toward tradition, so confident in the powers of human reason and science, so firmly convinced of the regularity and harmony of nature, and so deeply imbued with the sense of civilization’s advance and progress. The evidence of this was all around.”
“The literate public greatly expanded…As the 1700’s unfolded before them, their thoughts turned to the question of governance and the human condition. And mostly to this basic notion- that the existing state of society could be improved.” Through the intellectual influence of the French philosophes Montesquieu, Voltaire and Rousseau, and their distinguished followers “d’Alembert, Buffon, Turgot, Helvetius…and Diderot”, Western thought took an entirely new direction.
This new direction inspired a novel belief, “one that radiated outward, radically and exponentially, in Europe, east and west, off to Russia, and far away to the colonies in North America, which would set minds ablaze and soon help kindle two great revolutions, not to mention a counterrevolution. The crux of this belief eschewed [avoided; shunned] an order based on the direct will of God and the fixed nature of the universe. Instead, it focused a bright light on man-made law and man-made authority.”
The new worldview of the French philosophes notwithstanding, the luminaries of the North American colonies- Franklin, Jefferson, Hamilton, Adams, Madison, and especially Washington- respected the “direct will of God and the fixed nature of the universe” as they embraced the libertarian (as opposed to the communal-collectivist) version of the emerging European democratic tradition, according to Klaus Fischer in his fascinating work Nazi Germany; A New History (1995), in the chapter entitled The Origins of Totalitarianism.
“Libertarianism and its various permutations gave rise to the Anglo-American style of thought with its emphasis on representative government, freedom, equality, and human rights, while collectivism informed the rising Socialist and Communist movements and their demands for the abolition of private property, the communal ownership of goods, and ‘true’ equality.”
For the American Founders therefore, all “man-made law and man-made authority” could derive its legitimacy only from “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God”, as the American Revolution’s Declaration of Independence read. This distinction incidentally, between two philosophical versions of democracy is supported in the writings of Thomas Jefferson, who saw a clear distinction between the twin Revolutions of the later eighteenth century.
Jefferson regarded the American Revolution as a conservative political revolution because the pre-war colonial legislatures and representative assemblies were extended and preserved. The subsequent French Revolution he thought a radical social revolution, because it advocated and implemented the dissolution of the Old Regime (ancien regime) as well as the overturning of the older, traditional social order.
As the streets of Paris became awash in blood in the Reign of Terror, many hapless souls were condemned to execution- nobles, bourgeois and commoners alike, even King Louis XVI and his wife Marie Antoinette- all receiving the due process of the guillotine. Of course, in this radical revolutionary madness the Church also was attacked, its property confiscated.
According to Fischer, with the onset of the nineteenth century, global European imperialism combined with aggressive nationalism and the gathering Industrial Revolution, accelerating the scientific, secularized direction of Western thought begun in the Enlightenment. Unlike the mercantilist economic order of Europe’s earlier colonialism period, nineteenth century imperialism saw the organization and implementation of capitalist economic arrangements integrating the geographic and cultural areas of overseas investments.
“In practical terms, this meant investing vast amounts of capital in overseas ventures and in setting up the instruments of production and exchange: mines, factories, docks, warehouses, refineries, railroads, steamboats, and banks.” Reciprocal construction was engaged in the increasingly industrialized European cities to receive the raw materials from these overseas ventures and facilitate production, transport, manufacture and export of finished products.
In the process of establishing these “instruments of production”, the physical excavation of large areas of the earth to accommodate mines, railroads, canals, bridges and tunnels began to reveal strata or earlier surface layers of the earth of apparently great antiquity, which gave impetus to the study of geology. The English surveyor and canal builder William Smith pioneered the systematic study of the stratification of the earth's crust with his book, Strata Identified by Organised Fossils (1816). And of course, within these strata were found layered evidence of differing climates in addition to the fossil remains of long extinct species, giving rise to the study of paleontology and the work of Georges Cuvier.
In 1830 Charles Lyell published the first volume of his Principles of Geology, a copy of which was given to a young English naturalist named Charles Darwin by his Cambridge botany professor, to read on his famous voyage of exploration on the HMS Beagle. In the pages of this seminal book, “Lyell had opened to [Darwin] the vast and exhilarating prospect of nature- ‘no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end’- first unfolded in James Hutton’s Theory of the Earth in 1788”, wrote Professor John Greene in The Death of Adam; Evolution and Its Impact on Western Thought (1959).
According to the concept of uniformitarianism- advanced by Buffon in his 1749 work Natural History- Charles Lyell “reconstructed the history of the earth based on processes still continuing; uniform actions through time implied a uniform rate of change”, observed the historian James Burke in The Day the Universe Changed. Because “only natural causes could be used to explain geological events”, Lyell’s work “shattered the biblical complacency of the Victorian intellectual world.” It also increased the popular misconception that religion and science were very much incompatible.
Awaiting Charles Darwin upon the Beagle’s return in 1832 was the second volume of Principles of Geology, in which Lyell extended the definition of geology “to include the study of organic change as well”, wrote Professor Greene. With the publication in 1838 of Thomas Malthus’ Essay On The Principle of Population, the fossil evidence confirmed in Darwin’s mind Lyell’s view that “In the universal struggle for existence, the right of the strongest eventually prevails”.
For Western thought, what began in 1687 with Isaac Newton’s theory of universal gravitation in Principia Mathematica had come full circle. According to James Burke in The Day the Universe Changed, Newton’s system- predicated as it was upon a rationally operating universe, understood by human reason alone- sought how, not why, the universe operated. Universal gravitation destroyed the medieval picture of the world as a structure moved by the unseen and ever-present hand of God.
Man was no longer at the center of a universal system operated for his edification by the Almighty. Earth was just one small planet of many in an incomprehensibly vast universe that behaved according to mathematical laws. There seemed, for the first time, no place in the cosmos for the Providential involvement of God in the affairs of mankind. The human race was quite alone.
Charles Darwin’s 1859 publication of Origin of Species, though it was concerned with the origin of the plants and animals found in the fossil record, required little imagination in order to be applied to human beings. If there were no Adam and Eve, then Man was subject to the same evolutionary rules as any other organism. Consequently, humanity was no longer a special creation made in God’s image; if this were so, there would be little use for the religion that taught such a lie…
Montag
Thursday, November 8, 2012
The American Crisis: Our Continuing Plight
A Brief Interlude
An Observation on the Recent Election
Journal Entry #28
In their inscrutable wisdom, the majority of American voters have returned Barack Obama to the Presidency to serve a second term. I have no doubt that the Americans who voted thus are sincere people and upstanding citizens who, given the limitations inherent in any candidate seeking high office, nevertheless desire by their vote to achieve hope and change, and a better day in America. This is what they desired; I’m compelled to tell you what they will, in fact, receive.
Before the first day of his new term, before he does anything great or small, President Obama will arrive- like the proverbial blind date- encumbered with a great deal of baggage from the previous engagement. Chief among this encumbrance is that eight-hundred pound gorilla so sweetly overlooked by his erstwhile opponents, done certainly in the spirit of patriotism and magnanimity. This gorilla is what they call nowadays a “done deal”. And like the blind date, we are forced to take all of him or none of him, and that includes his “family”.
That gorilla’s name is the Affordable Health Care Act which, with Mr. Obama’s reelection, has received a guaranteed four year stay of execution- definitely a long enough period of time to graft itself onto the national body politic. And from there, to inextricably intertwine its powerful tendrils with the otherwise necessary nerve-system pathway traversing the spinal column so wisely devised by the original thirteen colonies and codified by the U.S. Constitution.
The Affordable Health Care Act will achieve several things- none of which are good, insofar as good governance is concerned. This Act will, in one mighty stroke, reduce health care quality and availability, dramatically increase health care cost with a reciprocal decrease in the citizen’s overall material standard of living, and enormously increase the power of the STATE- done always at the expense of personal liberty- with the promotion of the STATE’S ability to coerce any and all arbitrarily (thanks to the Supreme Court) in order to force compliance. If that’s not Tyranny, I’ll eat my hat. If we were living in the Islamist regions of the world, this Act would be called a Fatwa.
Montag
A Brief Interlude
An Observation on the Recent Election
Journal Entry #28
In their inscrutable wisdom, the majority of American voters have returned Barack Obama to the Presidency to serve a second term. I have no doubt that the Americans who voted thus are sincere people and upstanding citizens who, given the limitations inherent in any candidate seeking high office, nevertheless desire by their vote to achieve hope and change, and a better day in America. This is what they desired; I’m compelled to tell you what they will, in fact, receive.
Before the first day of his new term, before he does anything great or small, President Obama will arrive- like the proverbial blind date- encumbered with a great deal of baggage from the previous engagement. Chief among this encumbrance is that eight-hundred pound gorilla so sweetly overlooked by his erstwhile opponents, done certainly in the spirit of patriotism and magnanimity. This gorilla is what they call nowadays a “done deal”. And like the blind date, we are forced to take all of him or none of him, and that includes his “family”.
That gorilla’s name is the Affordable Health Care Act which, with Mr. Obama’s reelection, has received a guaranteed four year stay of execution- definitely a long enough period of time to graft itself onto the national body politic. And from there, to inextricably intertwine its powerful tendrils with the otherwise necessary nerve-system pathway traversing the spinal column so wisely devised by the original thirteen colonies and codified by the U.S. Constitution.
The Affordable Health Care Act will achieve several things- none of which are good, insofar as good governance is concerned. This Act will, in one mighty stroke, reduce health care quality and availability, dramatically increase health care cost with a reciprocal decrease in the citizen’s overall material standard of living, and enormously increase the power of the STATE- done always at the expense of personal liberty- with the promotion of the STATE’S ability to coerce any and all arbitrarily (thanks to the Supreme Court) in order to force compliance. If that’s not Tyranny, I’ll eat my hat. If we were living in the Islamist regions of the world, this Act would be called a Fatwa.
Montag
Monday, September 17, 2012
The American Crisis: Origins-
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Part 13- Conclusion
Journal Entry #27
Look at the nations and watch- and be utterly amazed. For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told. –Habakkuk 1: 5.
One of the most world-changing events in my lifetime was the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe and the re-formation of the once-powerful Soviet Union. The Berlin Wall that symbolized a dividing line between Christian and anti-Christian beliefs painted a picture of the moral and philosophical dilemma in the latter years of the twentieth century. The suddenness of these changes baffled scholars, Soviet observers, diplomats, and even the CIA.
I recalled speaking at the wall…to a group of wide-eyed East Germans who told me they were both hopeful and frightened. They were hopeful that peace and freedom would improve their way of life, but they were frightened by the scenes of greed and materialism they saw in the West. They said they would rather remain behind the wall, in poverty and bondage to Communism, than to discover that ‘freedom’ was nothing more than moral decadence, corruption, sin, violence, and greed that characterize much of the West today. I thought those were incredibly wise and stirring sentiments from people who had already suffered so much. –Billy Graham, Storm Warning, pp. 47, 53.
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Part 13- Conclusion
We understand that a dilemma is a situation ultimately requiring a distressing or painful choice one would rather not make. For those of us residing in Western Civilization, this decision involves choosing between two distinct futures. One future sees science as the exclusive interpreter of the universe and humanity, coupled with the dangerous irrationalism its strictly material assumptions would make inevitable- yielding philosophical, social and political totalitarianism.
The other future denies the sufficiency of science alone to define the universe and human beings, with the unavoidable suggestion that the boundaries of reality may very well exceed the material confines of the physical universe. The unsettling implication this latter choice imposes upon the modern intellect and the technologically sophisticated society we’ve made, is that humanity may no longer arrogantly regard itself as the sole arbiter of its own destiny. In other words, Western Civilization would once again be compelled to make some sort of philosophical (the fields of ontology and epistemology) allowance for the existence of a divine presence in the natural order of things.
Because the alternatives are sharply defined, one might think the choice between the two futures- though painful- would nevertheless be a fairly straightforward bargain. From the historical examples we have so far considered, we know any society which adopts a strictly material, evolutionary worldview soon finds it necessary to maintain its legitimacy by official decree, coercion and eventually tyranny, since the appeal of its ideology is made to irrationalism, rather than reason. Once again, one can only imagine how different the history of the twentieth century would read had there been no Darwinist theory of biological evolution to essentially sustain Marxism and Nazism.
In such societies, we inevitably see emerge an official hostility to reason (“logic is an enemy and truth is a menace”) since it is only by well-practiced reasoning that a citizenry may effectively challenge the folly of an irrational worldview. It’s no wonder that totalitarian societies impose empty reasoning and the vigorous denial of universal truth early in state-sponsored education, where young minds simply have no alternative philosophical comparisons upon which to rely. And one may be certain that the court system (much like U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper, in Part 9) of a totalitarian society will always rule according to the party line, the official ideology: no logical comparisons or alternative theories will ever again be available to the students.
To the extent that democratic government is adopted or imitated worldwide, with deference to modern science’s perspective that the material world is the ultimate reality, the eventual collapse of these governments will be equally as widespread. In the final analysis, what should matter most to our enlightened sensibilities is not whether democratic government has vanquished or outlived its totalitarian enemies- Soviet Russia, Imperial Japan, Nazi Germany, Peoples Republic of China, Al Qaeda, whomever.
History would seem to indicate that as humanity’s primordial will to power and impulse to superiority- both intellectual and geopolitical- combines with the more recent adversarial necessities of ideology, democracy will always and everywhere be challenged.
What will truly matter most to us, in the final analysis, is whether we will ultimately persuade ourselves within the context of our great learning of the “logic” of philosophic materialism and evolution. To do so would displace rationalism and promote a philosophic climate conducive to totalitarian ideology; in such a circumstance the difference between democratic government and tyranny would be in name only. In my opinion we come very near that threshold. The absence of stability, propriety, prosperity and unity- the disequilibrium- in our society, and the diminished intellectual freedom to extend truth all attest to this fact.
What truth are we no longer permitted to enlarge? The actual historical events surrounding the real historical figure Jesus of Nazareth, who presented arguably the most relevant philosophical observation to ever challenge the modern scientific mind: “You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times.”
Montag
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Copyright © 2005 by Michael Condon
Next posting:
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes, with a Note on Positivism and Professor Einstein; Summary.
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Part 13- Conclusion
Journal Entry #27
Look at the nations and watch- and be utterly amazed. For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told. –Habakkuk 1: 5.
One of the most world-changing events in my lifetime was the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe and the re-formation of the once-powerful Soviet Union. The Berlin Wall that symbolized a dividing line between Christian and anti-Christian beliefs painted a picture of the moral and philosophical dilemma in the latter years of the twentieth century. The suddenness of these changes baffled scholars, Soviet observers, diplomats, and even the CIA.
I recalled speaking at the wall…to a group of wide-eyed East Germans who told me they were both hopeful and frightened. They were hopeful that peace and freedom would improve their way of life, but they were frightened by the scenes of greed and materialism they saw in the West. They said they would rather remain behind the wall, in poverty and bondage to Communism, than to discover that ‘freedom’ was nothing more than moral decadence, corruption, sin, violence, and greed that characterize much of the West today. I thought those were incredibly wise and stirring sentiments from people who had already suffered so much. –Billy Graham, Storm Warning, pp. 47, 53.
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Part 13- Conclusion
We understand that a dilemma is a situation ultimately requiring a distressing or painful choice one would rather not make. For those of us residing in Western Civilization, this decision involves choosing between two distinct futures. One future sees science as the exclusive interpreter of the universe and humanity, coupled with the dangerous irrationalism its strictly material assumptions would make inevitable- yielding philosophical, social and political totalitarianism.
The other future denies the sufficiency of science alone to define the universe and human beings, with the unavoidable suggestion that the boundaries of reality may very well exceed the material confines of the physical universe. The unsettling implication this latter choice imposes upon the modern intellect and the technologically sophisticated society we’ve made, is that humanity may no longer arrogantly regard itself as the sole arbiter of its own destiny. In other words, Western Civilization would once again be compelled to make some sort of philosophical (the fields of ontology and epistemology) allowance for the existence of a divine presence in the natural order of things.
Because the alternatives are sharply defined, one might think the choice between the two futures- though painful- would nevertheless be a fairly straightforward bargain. From the historical examples we have so far considered, we know any society which adopts a strictly material, evolutionary worldview soon finds it necessary to maintain its legitimacy by official decree, coercion and eventually tyranny, since the appeal of its ideology is made to irrationalism, rather than reason. Once again, one can only imagine how different the history of the twentieth century would read had there been no Darwinist theory of biological evolution to essentially sustain Marxism and Nazism.
In such societies, we inevitably see emerge an official hostility to reason (“logic is an enemy and truth is a menace”) since it is only by well-practiced reasoning that a citizenry may effectively challenge the folly of an irrational worldview. It’s no wonder that totalitarian societies impose empty reasoning and the vigorous denial of universal truth early in state-sponsored education, where young minds simply have no alternative philosophical comparisons upon which to rely. And one may be certain that the court system (much like U.S. District Judge Clarence Cooper, in Part 9) of a totalitarian society will always rule according to the party line, the official ideology: no logical comparisons or alternative theories will ever again be available to the students.
To the extent that democratic government is adopted or imitated worldwide, with deference to modern science’s perspective that the material world is the ultimate reality, the eventual collapse of these governments will be equally as widespread. In the final analysis, what should matter most to our enlightened sensibilities is not whether democratic government has vanquished or outlived its totalitarian enemies- Soviet Russia, Imperial Japan, Nazi Germany, Peoples Republic of China, Al Qaeda, whomever.
History would seem to indicate that as humanity’s primordial will to power and impulse to superiority- both intellectual and geopolitical- combines with the more recent adversarial necessities of ideology, democracy will always and everywhere be challenged.
What will truly matter most to us, in the final analysis, is whether we will ultimately persuade ourselves within the context of our great learning of the “logic” of philosophic materialism and evolution. To do so would displace rationalism and promote a philosophic climate conducive to totalitarian ideology; in such a circumstance the difference between democratic government and tyranny would be in name only. In my opinion we come very near that threshold. The absence of stability, propriety, prosperity and unity- the disequilibrium- in our society, and the diminished intellectual freedom to extend truth all attest to this fact.
What truth are we no longer permitted to enlarge? The actual historical events surrounding the real historical figure Jesus of Nazareth, who presented arguably the most relevant philosophical observation to ever challenge the modern scientific mind: “You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times.”
Montag
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Copyright © 2005 by Michael Condon
Next posting:
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Miscellaneous Notes, with a Note on Positivism and Professor Einstein; Summary.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
The American Crisis: Origins-
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Parts 11 & 12
Journal Entry #26
But if scientific atheists are disposed to challenge God’s existence- the party line, after all- they are far less willing to reflect on what His dismissal entails. –David Berlinski, PhD, Mathematics. The Devil’s Delusion; Atheism and its Scientific Pretensions
The God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth…he himself gives all men life and breath and everything else…From one man he made every nation of men, that they should inhabit the whole earth…For in him we live and move and have our being. –The apostle Paul, addressing the Areopagus in Athens, Acts 17:24-26, 28
By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. –Hebrews 11:3
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Part 11
Of lesser importance here is the issue of whether the beginning of the universe can be traced to a point of infinite density- a singularity- according to Professor Hawking's calculations, or, as other scientists have speculated, the Big Bang was simply one phase of an endless cycle of universal contraction and expansion. Of greater, indeed of critical importance, is the common ground these conceptualizations share: the resort to infinite matter.
Though the conferring of self-sufficiency to material systems via infinite matter offers the human mind the convenience of excluding the qualitative (non-mathematical) aspects of the universe, it also leads human thought into the chaotic and illogical realm of fallacious thinking by means of Petitio Principi, the Argumentum ad Baculum and the Argumentum ad Ignorantiam.
Professor Carl Sagan‘s remarks in Part 6 epitomize this last fallacy, which is “committed whenever it is argued that a proposition is true simply on the basis that it has not been proved false, or that it is false because it has not been proved true. But our ignorance of how to prove or disprove a proposition clearly does not establish either the truth or the falsehood of that proposition.”- Irving Copi, Introduction to Logic, p. 101.
If one hypothesizes only according to material criteria, one essentially "stacks the deck" or "loads the dice" in favor of arriving at a material conclusion. Now, this would be fine if the universe is bound together exclusively by material properties, however, we see also in the universe the distinct presence of transmaterial existence, or being. Unfortunately, in a strictly material interpretation of the universe, the extent and boundaries of being remain largely unexplored by science, leaving the student to wonder whether scientists are aware of it at all.
Consequently, science never resolves the critical issue of whether matter and being are coextensive. The answer to this is of crucial importance to science, though scientists appear quite indifferent to it. Nevertheless, if the boundaries of being exceed the boundaries of matter, then exclusively material explanations- especially about origins- fall woefully short of accurately defining the universe. Phrased another way, the conclusions of strictly material theories become entirely insufficient if the actual evidence shows there exists more to the universe than just material components and properties.
To the extent internal contradictions plague our first two potential explanations of how matter and being might combine, we are left with the third possible way the universe came about: being is the defining and initially occurring ingredient upon which matter is dependent and subsequently founded. If the reverse were true, if matter occurred initially in order to inaugurate being, then matter would be in a state of nonbeing or nonexistence while existing.
Obviously, such a state of affairs contradicts practical experience and empirical observation. Therefore being is first, then comes matter and the material universe. As a corollary we can say this of matter: it should no longer be regarded as the only ingredient composing the universe- nor even the most important, either in the formation of the whole or in the determination of its parts.
Part 12
Because scientists have failed to register all the empirical evidence displayed by the universe and, as a consequence, failed to resolve the critical issue whether matter and being are coextensive, modern science has become entangled in fallacy and error. We are therefore justified in concluding that the current materialist theories of the origin of the universe and of life- the Big Bang and Darwinian evolution- are scientifically deficient.
In fact, a key feature long overlooked and improperly excluded from the body of scientific evidence- the undeniable fact of being- would actually disprove these materialist theories, given the opportunity. The reader should note that some physicists have recently labored to eliminate the Big Bang singularity theory in favor of a physical explanation known as the “quantum vacuum”, which is a fancy way of saying that something (like the universe) could potentially emerge from nothing. How about that??!! If we begin to equate something with nothing, will they eventually become indistinguishable? Can human freedom and self government exist in such a philosophical climate?
In any event, ignoring evidence will ultimately weaken future scientific effort and human thought generally. Though empirically disprovable, the internal contradictions of Darwinian evolution and the Big Bang have not in the least diminished their unchallenged prestige and dominance in Western science and thought. However, the unavoidable philosophic irrationalism fostered by these theories represents a very real threat to the indispensible rationalism necessary for democratic government. Such irrationalism displaces the pursuit and observance of truth so essential to democracy in favor of the much easier political expedience and social utilitarianism characteristic of technocracy and totalitarian states.
In this study I have attempted to make clear the inseparable connection science shares with the entire culture within which it works. Just as practical technology and the products of science (penicillin and Hiroshima, for example) profoundly affect the physical environment of human civilization, we may assume that the philosophical method of modern science similarly penetrates every area of human thought as well. Such philosophical penetration unavoidably extends such methods to influence the general search for knowledge, beyond the range of scientific particularities. If these methods gotten from science are corrupted by fallacy and error, so also will the larger body of human knowledge become corrupted.
Furthermore, these philosophical methods ultimately influence and direct much of humanity's overall worldview. This idea of a worldview, though abstract in its formulation, is in its implementation quite tangible and powerful, and is continuously reinforced by the intellect's interpretation of reality. You will remember in Journal Entry #14 the reader is introduced to the esteemed historian of science and innovation James Burke, through his book and PBS series The Day the Universe Changed.
Mr. Burke explains, “When we observe nature we see what we want to see, according to what we believe we know about it at the time. Nature is disordered, powerful and chaotic, and through fear of the chaos we impose system on it…We need to have an overall explanation of what the universe is and how it functions…we develop explanatory theories which will give structure to natural phenomena: we classify nature into a coherent system which appears to do what we say it does. This view of the universe permeates all aspects of our life. All communities in all places at all times manifest their own view of reality in what they do. The entire culture reflects the contemporary model of reality. We are what we know. And when the body of knowledge changes, so do we.”
So as the scientific method becomes distorted by philosophic materialism, so also will the extended field of human inquiry become distorted, according to the tremendous influence science exerts upon society. As a result, the conceptual status of reality inevitably diverges from- and ultimately rejects- the actually existing status of reality. This process is at the heart of my Disequilibrium Hypothesis, which is a measure of the degree of separation between actual reality and our ideas about that reality. To the extent this divergence increases in a society, so inevitably does that society’s imbalance and instability. As I point out in my book History Remembered, History Forgotten: as human thought goes, so goes human history.
In the preface I write that the human act is the consummation of the thought, even as the thought is the justification for the human act. We have seen the historical impulse to irrationalism conspicuously embodied in the darkest tyrannies of the twentieth century. We can be assured that if we continue to disregard this tendency to irrationalism within current scientific thought, the twentieth century’s Age of the Great Tyrants will be greatly surpassed by a Tyranny of the Intellect in the twenty-first century.
This, of course, would be the most insidious of all tyrannies. Though its illegitimate nature would be real enough- if not readily apparent- it would nevertheless enjoy a mantle of scientific respectability, as it labored to repress dissenting or contrary views. Such a result is unavoidable in that climate where the intellect defiantly determines what reality is, despite reality's counterclaim. But then, that’s the very heart and soul of modern ideology, isn’t it?
What must always be remembered, and forgotten only at our peril- and which obtains whether we are discussing the history of science or general human history- is this salient fact: whatever cannot be sustained by reason must surely be maintained by force. Standing as we are at the threshold of this tyranny, we are compelled to resolve the dilemma into which we’ve placed our civilization. To do less would be foolhardy.
Montag
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Parts 11 & 12
Journal Entry #26
But if scientific atheists are disposed to challenge God’s existence- the party line, after all- they are far less willing to reflect on what His dismissal entails. –David Berlinski, PhD, Mathematics. The Devil’s Delusion; Atheism and its Scientific Pretensions
The God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth…he himself gives all men life and breath and everything else…From one man he made every nation of men, that they should inhabit the whole earth…For in him we live and move and have our being. –The apostle Paul, addressing the Areopagus in Athens, Acts 17:24-26, 28
By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. –Hebrews 11:3
The Failure of Modern Science and Our Historical Dilemma
Part 11
Of lesser importance here is the issue of whether the beginning of the universe can be traced to a point of infinite density- a singularity- according to Professor Hawking's calculations, or, as other scientists have speculated, the Big Bang was simply one phase of an endless cycle of universal contraction and expansion. Of greater, indeed of critical importance, is the common ground these conceptualizations share: the resort to infinite matter.
Though the conferring of self-sufficiency to material systems via infinite matter offers the human mind the convenience of excluding the qualitative (non-mathematical) aspects of the universe, it also leads human thought into the chaotic and illogical realm of fallacious thinking by means of Petitio Principi, the Argumentum ad Baculum and the Argumentum ad Ignorantiam.
Professor Carl Sagan‘s remarks in Part 6 epitomize this last fallacy, which is “committed whenever it is argued that a proposition is true simply on the basis that it has not been proved false, or that it is false because it has not been proved true. But our ignorance of how to prove or disprove a proposition clearly does not establish either the truth or the falsehood of that proposition.”- Irving Copi, Introduction to Logic, p. 101.
If one hypothesizes only according to material criteria, one essentially "stacks the deck" or "loads the dice" in favor of arriving at a material conclusion. Now, this would be fine if the universe is bound together exclusively by material properties, however, we see also in the universe the distinct presence of transmaterial existence, or being. Unfortunately, in a strictly material interpretation of the universe, the extent and boundaries of being remain largely unexplored by science, leaving the student to wonder whether scientists are aware of it at all.
Consequently, science never resolves the critical issue of whether matter and being are coextensive. The answer to this is of crucial importance to science, though scientists appear quite indifferent to it. Nevertheless, if the boundaries of being exceed the boundaries of matter, then exclusively material explanations- especially about origins- fall woefully short of accurately defining the universe. Phrased another way, the conclusions of strictly material theories become entirely insufficient if the actual evidence shows there exists more to the universe than just material components and properties.
To the extent internal contradictions plague our first two potential explanations of how matter and being might combine, we are left with the third possible way the universe came about: being is the defining and initially occurring ingredient upon which matter is dependent and subsequently founded. If the reverse were true, if matter occurred initially in order to inaugurate being, then matter would be in a state of nonbeing or nonexistence while existing.
Obviously, such a state of affairs contradicts practical experience and empirical observation. Therefore being is first, then comes matter and the material universe. As a corollary we can say this of matter: it should no longer be regarded as the only ingredient composing the universe- nor even the most important, either in the formation of the whole or in the determination of its parts.
Part 12
Because scientists have failed to register all the empirical evidence displayed by the universe and, as a consequence, failed to resolve the critical issue whether matter and being are coextensive, modern science has become entangled in fallacy and error. We are therefore justified in concluding that the current materialist theories of the origin of the universe and of life- the Big Bang and Darwinian evolution- are scientifically deficient.
In fact, a key feature long overlooked and improperly excluded from the body of scientific evidence- the undeniable fact of being- would actually disprove these materialist theories, given the opportunity. The reader should note that some physicists have recently labored to eliminate the Big Bang singularity theory in favor of a physical explanation known as the “quantum vacuum”, which is a fancy way of saying that something (like the universe) could potentially emerge from nothing. How about that??!! If we begin to equate something with nothing, will they eventually become indistinguishable? Can human freedom and self government exist in such a philosophical climate?
In any event, ignoring evidence will ultimately weaken future scientific effort and human thought generally. Though empirically disprovable, the internal contradictions of Darwinian evolution and the Big Bang have not in the least diminished their unchallenged prestige and dominance in Western science and thought. However, the unavoidable philosophic irrationalism fostered by these theories represents a very real threat to the indispensible rationalism necessary for democratic government. Such irrationalism displaces the pursuit and observance of truth so essential to democracy in favor of the much easier political expedience and social utilitarianism characteristic of technocracy and totalitarian states.
In this study I have attempted to make clear the inseparable connection science shares with the entire culture within which it works. Just as practical technology and the products of science (penicillin and Hiroshima, for example) profoundly affect the physical environment of human civilization, we may assume that the philosophical method of modern science similarly penetrates every area of human thought as well. Such philosophical penetration unavoidably extends such methods to influence the general search for knowledge, beyond the range of scientific particularities. If these methods gotten from science are corrupted by fallacy and error, so also will the larger body of human knowledge become corrupted.
Furthermore, these philosophical methods ultimately influence and direct much of humanity's overall worldview. This idea of a worldview, though abstract in its formulation, is in its implementation quite tangible and powerful, and is continuously reinforced by the intellect's interpretation of reality. You will remember in Journal Entry #14 the reader is introduced to the esteemed historian of science and innovation James Burke, through his book and PBS series The Day the Universe Changed.
Mr. Burke explains, “When we observe nature we see what we want to see, according to what we believe we know about it at the time. Nature is disordered, powerful and chaotic, and through fear of the chaos we impose system on it…We need to have an overall explanation of what the universe is and how it functions…we develop explanatory theories which will give structure to natural phenomena: we classify nature into a coherent system which appears to do what we say it does. This view of the universe permeates all aspects of our life. All communities in all places at all times manifest their own view of reality in what they do. The entire culture reflects the contemporary model of reality. We are what we know. And when the body of knowledge changes, so do we.”
So as the scientific method becomes distorted by philosophic materialism, so also will the extended field of human inquiry become distorted, according to the tremendous influence science exerts upon society. As a result, the conceptual status of reality inevitably diverges from- and ultimately rejects- the actually existing status of reality. This process is at the heart of my Disequilibrium Hypothesis, which is a measure of the degree of separation between actual reality and our ideas about that reality. To the extent this divergence increases in a society, so inevitably does that society’s imbalance and instability. As I point out in my book History Remembered, History Forgotten: as human thought goes, so goes human history.
In the preface I write that the human act is the consummation of the thought, even as the thought is the justification for the human act. We have seen the historical impulse to irrationalism conspicuously embodied in the darkest tyrannies of the twentieth century. We can be assured that if we continue to disregard this tendency to irrationalism within current scientific thought, the twentieth century’s Age of the Great Tyrants will be greatly surpassed by a Tyranny of the Intellect in the twenty-first century.
This, of course, would be the most insidious of all tyrannies. Though its illegitimate nature would be real enough- if not readily apparent- it would nevertheless enjoy a mantle of scientific respectability, as it labored to repress dissenting or contrary views. Such a result is unavoidable in that climate where the intellect defiantly determines what reality is, despite reality's counterclaim. But then, that’s the very heart and soul of modern ideology, isn’t it?
What must always be remembered, and forgotten only at our peril- and which obtains whether we are discussing the history of science or general human history- is this salient fact: whatever cannot be sustained by reason must surely be maintained by force. Standing as we are at the threshold of this tyranny, we are compelled to resolve the dilemma into which we’ve placed our civilization. To do less would be foolhardy.
Montag
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