Pharyngula

Pharyngula has moved to http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/

Friday, April 08, 2005

Kennedy's editorial: Twilight of the Enlightenment?

I've put Donald Kennedy's editorial from the latest issue of Science below the fold. It's good. You should read it.

Twilight for the Enlightenment?
Donald Kennedy
Editor-in-Chief

For much of their existence over the past two centuries, Europe and the United States have been societies of questioners: nations in which skepticism has been accepted and even welcomed, and where the culture has been characterized by confidence in science and in rational methods of thought. We owe this tradition in part to the birth of the Scottish Enlightenment of the early 18th century, when the practice of executing religious heretics ended, to be gradually replaced by a developing conviction that substituted faith in experiment for reliance on inherited dogma.

That new tradition, prominently represented by the Scottish philosopher David Hume, supplied important roots for the growth of modernity, and it has served U.S. society well, as it has Europe's. The results of serious, careful experimentation and analysis became a standard for the entry of a discovery or theory into the common culture of citizens and the policies of their governments. Thus, scientific determinations of the age of Earth and the theories of gravity, biological evolution, and the conservation of matter and energy became meaningful scientific anchors of our common understanding.

In the United States, that understanding is now undergoing some dissolution, as some school boards eliminate the teaching of evolution or require that religious versions of creation be represented as "scientific" alternatives. "Intelligent design," a recent replacement for straight-up creationism, essentially asserts that a sufficient quantity of complexity and beauty is by itself evidence of divine origin--a retrogression to the pre-Darwinian zoologist William Paley, who saw in the elegant construction of a beetle's antenna the work of a Creator.

In 1998, I helped the National Academies produce a book entitled Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science. At the press conference announcing its publication, I was asked if I knew that most U.S. citizens did not believe that humans descended from other forms. I said I did, but expressed a hope that things might change. Well, things changed in the wrong direction: Alternatives to the teaching of biological evolution are now being debated in no fewer than 40 states. Worse, evolution is not the only science under such challenge. In several school districts, geology materials are being rewritten because their dates for Earth's age are inconsistent with scripture (too old).

Meanwhile, President Bush's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief policies recommend "evidence-based" risk-reduction strategies: abstinence for youth, fidelity for married couples, and condoms recommended only for infected or high-risk individuals, such as sex workers. Failure rates for condoms are commonly quoted, apparently to discourage their use by young people for risk prevention. Mysteriously, the policy doesn't seem able to cite a failure rate for abstinence.

Finally, certain kinds of science are now proscribed on what amount to religious grounds. Stem cell research is said by its opponents to pose a "moral dilemma." Yet this well-advertised dilemma does not arise from a confrontation between science and ethical universals. Instead, the objections arise from a particular belief about what constitutes a human life: a belief held by certain religions but not by others. Some researchers, eager to resolve the problem, seek to derive stem cells by techniques that might finesse the controversy. But the claim that the stem cell "dilemma" rests on universal values is a false claim, and for society to accept it to obtain transitory political relief would bring church and state another step closer.

The present wave of evangelical Christianity, uniquely American in its level of participation, would be nothing to worry about were it a matter restricted to individual conviction and to the expressions of groups gathering to worship. It's all right that in the best-selling novels about the "rapture," the true believers ascend and the rest of us perish painfully. But U.S. society is now experiencing a convergence between religious conviction and partisan loyalty, readily detectable in the statistics of the 2004 election. Some of us who worry about the separation of church and state will accept tablets that display the Ten Commandments on state premises, because they fail to cross a threshold of urgency. But when the religious/political convergence leads to managing the nation's research agenda, its foreign assistance programs, or the high-school curriculum, that marks a really important change in our national life. Twilight for the Enlightenment? Not yet. But as its beneficiaries, we should also be its stewards.


Trackback url: http://pharyngula.org/index/trackback/2143/3tGUa2ux/

Comments:
#21321: — 04/08  at  01:44 PM
Excellent, and unfortunately accurate. It is nice to see people from all corners reminding us that we really dont want to go back to a barbaric theocratic society.



#21323: — 04/08  at  01:59 PM
Many moral choices are not, or at least have not always been, based on "universal values". Indeed, the Enlightenment could be seen to be based somewhat upon this observation. There is nothing inherently wrong about fighting over the morality of stem cell research, even if it's generally fought at the wrong point.

Apart from that issue (which I don't wish to get into other than to grant legitimacy to both sides), however, I'm quite in agreement with Donald Kennedy. The sad thing about evolution is that it decidedly does not select for reason over prejudice, expediency, social competition, and wishful thinking. I have always had the sneaking suspicion that it is the Enlightenment which is the aberration in human thought, while reliance on authority, political power, and human prejudice were bound to win out in the end.

I was hoping for later rather than sooner, though. The usefulness of good thinking to the economy, the military, and to social order, seems to have been enough to bring our rational capacities to the fore during a couple of centuries at least. It may be that we're squandering our general reasoning through specialization, however, so that engineers (to pick on prominent IDers), mathematicians, and even some physicists can use reason and science in their own niches, while abandoning good methodologies for comforting myths outside of their specialties.

We could limp along for a while continuing to use Enlightenment methods in specialized areas, while the usefulness of reasoned methodologies in general declines. The selective value of the Enlightenment in general decays and becomes irrelevant to most people even as it remains important to them in a specialized sense. The specialists may continue to excel as individuals, while as a society we decline in ability to understand science overall.

Everything evolves, and as we all know, it isn't always progress. It's up to us to try to effect progress in society, and not allow it to merely evolve.



#21325: — 04/08  at  02:18 PM
Glenn,

You have made some interesting ponderances above, and introduced the idea of a post-Enlightenment as a further step, as opposed to a return to the Middle Ages as I had implied.

You have piqued my interest and I am curious if you have some vision of how the post-Enlightenment future might play out. This idea that it may not be a step backward strikes me as against the wishes of the theocracy we are currently resisting.



#21326: — 04/08  at  02:20 PM
Which school boards eliminated the
teaching of evolution?
This is stated as fact.



#21329: Burt Humburg — 04/08  at  02:44 PM
They don't have to. They simply make the matter ambiguous enough so that rural high school teachers, who may not know enough about the blood clotting cascade to feel comfortable calling Behe on his bullshit, will be bullied into not teaching it.

That's the point of all this deemphasize stuff. They don't have to outlaw it. They only have to inject false doubt. They leave it to local activists to outlaw it. It's a wink and a nudge - teach the controversy (there is none) - and evolution isn't taught in Protection, KS.

It's for this reason that state and national standards are so important. It's for this reason that education experts need to be very outspoken in stating the facts about evolution and intelligent design, verified science for the former and creationism for the latter.

This is not an innocuous thought experiment the IDCers are proposing. It's dog whistle politics.

BCH

PS - My word today is pseudogene. Does PZ get to setup the verification words himself or am I just really lucky today?



#21330: — 04/08  at  02:49 PM
Joel:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/daily/aug99/creation12.htm

This article is dated 1999.



#21332: — 04/08  at  02:59 PM
This would be more heartwarming if Science hadn't for years published the "reporting" of a certain Mark Plummer on ecological issues, particularly dealing with endangered species. Who is Mark Plummer? He's an economist and the coauthor of a couple of books, one of which, Noah's Choice, argues for weakening the U.S. Endangered Species Act. He also happens to be a "senior fellow" at the ID "think tank" Discovery Institute: http://www.discovery.org/environment/fellows/MarkPlummer/



#21333: Dr Pretorius — 04/08  at  03:06 PM
....the practice of executing religious heretics ended, to be gradually replaced by a developing conviction that substituted faith in experiment for reliance on inherited dogma.

That new tradition, prominently represented by the Scottish philosopher David Hume,


I understand that when most people think of the Scottish Enlightenment they just think of Hume - but seriously, couldn't they have picked a better choice here?

I mean, it's not precisely mistaken, but if you want an example of faith in experiment I'd suggest that perhaps Reid or one of the other members of the group might have been just a little more appropriate...



#21334: — 04/08  at  03:26 PM
Kennedy's editorial hits the nail on the head, but most readers of Science are members of his choir—and the few who aren't will ignore it. However, Kennedy erred in one minor respect: The purveyors of anti-enlightenment values are mostly fundamentalists, not evangelicals. I, and many others, are prone to lump the two together, but they're not one and the same, although there is overlap. Evangelicals embody missionary zeal (I even know some who accept evolution and with whom I can have a rational conversation) but not all of them are fundamentalists with faith in the literal truth of the Christian bible. An example of that kind of evangeligcal is Richard Colling, chair of the Dept of Biology at Oliven Nazarene University, who in his book Random Designer arguing for the validity of evolution wrote "It pains me to suggest that my religious brothers are telling falsehoods."



#21335: kelley b. — 04/08  at  03:30 PM
... and Science also seems to uncritically accept the nonsense that soft tissues- Tyrannosaur cells with nuclei- are preserved after 65 million years.

What is going on out there? Doesn't legitimate peer review exist? If so, why did this nonsense get to press before the material was isotopically dated?

If that was Tyrannosaur soft tissue I'm a velociraptor.

And I'm not.



#21337: — 04/08  at  03:46 PM
kelley b.--

How did velociraptor soft tissue get inside the bone of a tyrannosaur?

Seriously, though, given the apparent presence of blood vessels, what are you suggesting this tissue is??



Trackback: Twilight 2000 and beyond Tracked on: the dubious biologist (66.116.68.132) at 2005 04 08 16:33:04
Courtesy Pharyngula: "Twilight for the Enlightenment?" by Donald Kennedy Rather than quote is here, here is the link: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/308/5719/165 Skeptism: basically good. (Mis)using the vocabulary of science to throw out what you disagree with: very very bad. But like the...



#21345: bj delacruz — 04/08  at  04:34 PM
well, one thing the Internet and blogging is good for is echoing ideas. we post and repost the links and maybe people who don't normally read the editorials in Science Magazine will get to read it.



#21347: — 04/08  at  04:48 PM
Desert D wrote:
introduced the idea of a post-Enlightenment as a further step, as opposed to a return to the Middle Ages as I had implied.

Oh, it could be a "return" to the Dark Ages all right. The Dark Ages repeat, but they're always going to be different. The Greeks had their famous Dark Age between the fall of the Mycenaeans and the time of Homer, but of course the Europeans didn't repeat those Dark Ages.

Anyhow, I might be too gloomy, taking my cue from the title and tone of the article. There aren't very many scientists supporting ID at this time, not even those furthest from biology. Likewise with Republican (I wish I could be more "even-handed" on this, but don't think I can be) anti-environmentalism, most of science isn't fooled. Yet the influence of those relying on the few ID and anti-environmental "authorities" do have a great deal of influence, and this in a nation that actually tends to think quite highly of science.

The fact that the US seems actually to have fewer anti-science intellectuals in it (possibly because of creationism in the US) than we see in Europe might be our saving grace. The problem is that here one may finance an "alternative science", claim to be the underdog, produce a few "experts", and many people will root for the "new Galileos". It's a frustrating fact, made harder because the mountains of evidence for evolution tend to be technical, while the sound bite attacks on accessible-to-the-layman homologies and vestigial organs sound plausible to many not well aquainted with science.

For that and other reasons, any new dark age would have to be considerably different from past ones. The engineers and some on the "hard science" side think that they are genuinely fighting for science, since they have learned how to design complex machines and processes, and they do not think beyond themselves as the "agents" necessary to produce complex integrated entities. I should point out, too, that the metaphysical aspect of philosophy has not been quenched as well in the Anglo-American world as on the continent, and I even ran into a book review by Christof Koch in Science last fall (October or November) that claimed that science is based on metaphysics. If it is, shoot the beast, I say. Fortunately, though, Koch, and Searle who he was reviewing (and obviously believing) are incorrect, and science is not based in metaphysics.

We could slowly drift into guilds of scientists, some believing in metaphysics, some believing in process. The desire for more and more healthcare is on the side of those thinking in terms of change and process, while the increasing reliance on set technique in engineering, design, and even in today's physics, will tend to have people thinking that eternal truths reign. If we do get into competing scientific guilds and methods, which IDists may be a prelude to, the fallout will tend to be a discrediting of both sides of science in the public eye.

You have piqued my interest and I am curious if you have some vision of how the post-Enlightenment future might play out. This idea that it may not be a step backward strikes me as against the wishes of the theocracy we are currently resisting.

Nietzsche said that God is dead during a period of increasing religiosity. That's all it was, though, enhanced religious sentiment, not a great amount of spirituality.

Theocracy could be the upshot no matter that God is almost certainly as dead as He was a century and a half ago. Religion seems not to need God or spirituality to have power. Yet the diversity of religion is on our side. A little bit of power gained, and the various religions will be at each others' throats. The Catholics and fundamentalists still aren't the best of allies, and probably will not be any time soon. Philip Johnson came up with his big tent of ID precisely to try to cobble together a politically strong collection of theists, but the cracks in the framework are ready to become faultlines at any time.

God is still dead, and this is crucial to any future "dark age" or post-enlightenment decadence. The IDists have the philosophers' God, the unknowable God lacking in attributes, precisely because this God is beyond science. Yet they make Him into an engineer and "designer" of machines in order to claim to be able to find his handiwork. It's an old preachers' Enlightenment strategy, however it gains nothing in the hands of mathematicians and engineers. It is really the repudiation of God as anything truly effective in a spiritual manner, for they no longer are telling of God breathing spirit into Adam. Instead God makes a cyborg, essentially, designing the "molecular machines" of life in a manner which is detectable through SETI concepts of intelligence. Sometimes they actually say that the designer could be an alien, and in a sense this is true, since God has lost his spiritual power in their eyes.

I think what I'm trying to get to is that religion remains a force in society, but religious adherents are more likely to believe in a kind of sci-fi religion as anything traditional. Richard Bartholomew and Hugh Ross believe in UFOs, only they're "Satanic". Perhaps more important is that they're not thinking in terms of Satan appearing as a spiritual being, but rather as cyborg, as designer, as the Gnostic demon who might be responbible at least for nasty forms of life. This mirrors life becoming mere matter in the hands of the engineer-God to the IDist, even as the IDists incoherently accuse science of being "materialistic" or "naturalistic". Religion is merging with Star Trek, which maybe is how the US generally remains pro-science in attitude, while remaining altogether too open to pseudoscience.

Almost no part of society is going to relinquish any section of science that works for themselves, though, because they need bits and pieces of science economically and as authority for their ideas, no matter how improperly they may use this science. That's why I think John Rennie may not be altogether correct in his pitch of evolution to the universities, since I can easily see a Behe working in the biotech industry with his belief in designed life. After all, isn't biotech industry about designing life? And Behe merges descent by modification with his ideas of "design", which allows him to accept as much science as he wants, while discarding the basis for his science.

Scientific method in general could break apart into scientific methods in particular, allowing for progress in the science along the same lines as have occurred before. It is the new thought, the new science that probably is most threatened by the merging of sci-fi, religion, and science into incoherent scientific specialties. We had fairly uniform and general concepts of science among the educated populace of the Enlightenment, while Dembski and the IDists, along with assorted non-ID cranks, utilize scientific specialties to discredit the general theory of evolution. The latter was/is a unifier of science, correlating biology, geology, chemistry, and physics, in a reasonable and intelligent manner. But specialists, like biochemist Behe, and mathematician Dembski, assert the superiority of their scientific knowledge over the communal knowledge given to us by evolutionary thought.

We might very well hold together for much longer, if we're lucky and not complacent. But the competition between departments that has always existed has erupted into a politically-charged fight over curriculum, which threatens decadence for science no matter how tightly specialists cling to their versions of science. Old ideas of sci-fi, religion, and science merge, while new fractures open up in science itself, as it evolves beyond the grasp of the ordinary mind. Neither science nor religion will disappear, but they could solidify and become written methods (sacred text), instead of spiritual, creative entities (well, religion was once, though that was long ago). Conservation of one's own knowledge is always the risk to creative processes, and even the maturing and aging of today's societies plays into those tendencies.

I don't know how it will all turn out, and have few if any real predictions. End of the Roman Empire is a possibility, but recall how long that took. The magical superstitions that arose then are unlikely to appear in any foreseeable future, because the ghosts have been explained (unless one still looks for the very most tenuous and ineffectual ghosts yet, as some do), and our machines work far better than does any magic. We should have useful machines for a very long time, I would think.

It's the slow decline of unifying reason and universal knowledge that we face, and we may be able to stave it off for a while yet. No sudden collapses, no witch hunts in the foreseeable future. An erosion, factional claims made regarding science, religion, and law, and attempts to "have the freedom" to believe and teach children whatever garbage there is in the sectarians' minds.

The forces of unity have been declining for some time, from what I have seen, in economic and tax policies, and in calls for "alternative ideas". Of course the latter can be quite beneficial, but to most people this means that anything goes, that an "alternative" need not be based on collective, unified knowledge found in science and in other disciplines. Science, as the ultimate unifier, is bound to get caught up in the decline of community-wide beliefs, both because it threatens alternative claims, and because it seems unimportant to the struggles people individually undergo in society. Superstitions of a sort will have to replace science, but they will almost certainly have to be based in technology or in a factionalized scientism. For no one believes much in spirit any more, least of all the mechanistic thinkers of ID.



#21349: — 04/08  at  04:59 PM
GD, Thanks. Interesting stuff to chew on.



#21352: — 04/08  at  05:05 PM
Actually science perished shortly after the beginning of the Second World War when fundamental physics became state secrets. A fellow named Zworykin killed democracy. Literature was murdered in the most humiliating way possible, that is, strangled by a couple of clowns: Mickey Mouse and Sonny Bono.



#21355: — 04/08  at  05:15 PM
... and Science also seems to uncritically accept the nonsense that soft tissues- Tyrannosaur cells with nuclei- are preserved after 65 million years.

What is going on out there? Doesn't legitimate peer review exist? If so, why did this nonsense get to press before the material was isotopically dated?


The facts that it was published, and was peer-reviewed, and hasn't yet been chalanged by someone who knows what they're taking about(creationist idiots don't count) means that the evidence for what the paper claims the specimen to be is very strong. Also this wasn't published by some hack, these people are paleontologist, they know what is and isn't a dinosaur bone, and how old the rocks are and understand the general limitations of preservation in those rocks and so forth.



#21358: Dr Pretorius — 04/08  at  05:27 PM
I even ran into a book review by Christof Koch in Science last fall (October or November) that claimed that science is based on metaphysics. If it is, shoot the beast, I say. Fortunately, though, Koch, and Searle who he was reviewing (and obviously believing) are incorrect, and science is not based in metaphysics.


I can't believe how many times I have to say this sort of thing to scientists and science minded people:
1. Yes, science is based in metaphysics.
2. No, that is not a bad thing.
3. No, that in no way causes a problem for science.
4. No, metaphysics is not the sort of thing you find in the "metaphysics" section of the bookstore.
5. Yes, professionally trained philosophers do generally have expertise in these sorts of things.



#21360: Dan S. — 04/08  at  05:40 PM
But did the Enlightment itself (not simply its products) ever have that broad a reach - or at least a very patchy, unreflective allegiance once you went out past the intellectual city center, so to speak?



#21363: Burt Humburg — 04/08  at  06:02 PM
I'm with Pretorius. Science can be said to be based in metaphysics, inasmuch as it has no tools to investigate last-thursdayism, the supernatural, living in the Matrix, brains in vats, etc. So, it can be said to have certain metaphysical underpinnings or, using clunky language, science is based in metaphysics.

But two things are worth noting. First, generally speaking, it is not useful for scientists to acknowledge those metaphysical underpinnings. It only becomes useful when you are dealing with creationists or pot smokers who've just watched the Matrix or whatever. When talking with other scientists who don't care about that kind of thing, then it's non-essential and one can neglect it from consideration altogether. That's why I think scientists should be facultatively metaphysical about what it is that they do.

The second thing is that intelligent design creationism has not proven itself to be a useful model of the world. (In fact, there's much evidence to indicate it sabotages the process of discovery.) For this reason, we can reject it on practical grounds even while the pot smokers and creationists are kinda sorta arguing against evolution on metaphysical grounds.

BCH



#21364: — 04/08  at  06:12 PM
1. Yes, science is based in metaphysics.

Metaphysicians have such beliefs. They don't care how important it has been to quit believing in metaphysics for the sake of the advancement of physics, how neo-Kantianism and other roughly anti-metaphysical philosophies helped science to escape its straightjacket of metaphysics, they still believe in metaphysics.

It can't be helped, it's in the curriculum. Not at the universities I went to, true, but in most curricula. And the same old texts are taught to the same gullible students, never mind that Nietzsche and others showed how dull, insipid, and wrong, metaphysics is.

If anyone wants to see how little physics is based in metaphysics, read something like Physics Today. Physics especially cannot put up with the a priori assumptions of metaphysics, for it has to explain how phenomena like "causality" appear to exist.

2. No, that is not a bad thing.

Since it isn't true, no it is not a bad thing. Stodgy analytic philosophers want to cast their gloom over physics, but physicists typically don't make the mistake of caring.

3. No, that in no way causes a problem for science.

It would be a problem if true. Many areas of science can act as if metaphysics were the basis (they can believe in "causality", for instance) and do just fine, but metaphysics is as much an impediment to some areas of science as ID is an impediment to biology.

4. No, metaphysics is not the sort of thing you find in the "metaphysics" section of the bookstore.

Of course not, it's in the "old truths" section. Aristotle, Aquinas, whoever. Good thinkers for their time, hardly relevant to the age of quantum physics.

5. Yes, professionally trained philosophers do generally have expertise in these sorts of things.

Professionally trained philosophers can be extremely opposed to metaphysics. To tell the truth, most have some metaphysical beliefs lurking in their heads, but a Deleuze, Foucault, and especially a Nietzsche know exactly what is wrong with metaphysics, no matter what questionable ideas they might harbor (Nietzsche the least, then Deleuze, IMO).

Anyhow, it's just like I said, in the US you'll get these defenses of a metaphysics that couldn't hold its own for at least 150 years. Logocentrism, onto-theological beliefs, however one wishes to characterize them, they're the menace to science that resides in the halls of academia.



#21368: — 04/08  at  06:37 PM
Here's what Koch wrote:

"Such fundamental notions as reality, space, time, and causality--notions found at the core of the scientific enterprise--all rely on particular metaphysical assumptions about the world" Christof Kock, "Thinking About the Conscious Mind," 979-980 Science v.306 5 Nov. 2004. p. 979.

We don't have to believe in reality to do science, and in fact phenomenological stances are not rare among physicists. "Realism" in particular is hardly the basis of physics.

Space and time are dimensions that can be and are studied empirically. That we might use some of the barest assumptions to "construct" space and time is true enough, but that is true of making any declarative statement about any observation. We do physics, not metaphysics, with the dimensions, which is why we can go beyond Kant and envision multiple spatial dimensions. And even Kant thought that metaphysics was abysmal, even though he didn't even come close to ridding himself of metaphysical prejudices.

And of course causality hasn't been a fundamental part of physics in years. In some sense it might be thought to hold, but only as a construct reflecting issues like conservation of energy and interactions that are relatively conservative of information. Even this deconstructible construct makes little sense in quantum physics.

There really isn't anything to be gained by belief in metaphysics, and it only undergirds the beliefs of creationists and IDists. Were we rid of metaphysics we'd almost certainly be less troubled by IDists and others.



#21370: Linkmeister — 04/08  at  06:50 PM
bj delacruz said: "...maybe people who don't normally read the editorials in Science Magazine will get to read it."

Or people like me, who get the e-letter but don't have the cash to pay for access, so have to make do with the abstracts/summaries.

Thanks, PZ.



Trackback: Science v. Creationism, part II Tracked on: Linkmeister (69.72.224.186) at 2005 04 08 18:58:15
Science has published an editorial which I can't access (due to its policy of charging a ton of money to read the magazine). Fortunately, PZ Myers has access to it, and has reprinted it in full. Here are the opening...



#21380: icecube — 04/08  at  07:56 PM
Abstinence has a remarkably high success rate! One one man born out of less than the 4000 years of life on earth! (and even then, he wasn't a man, he was the son of god...)

Generally speaking, if you get knocked up, you're not abstaining. It doesn't fail in the same way as contraceptives.



Page 1 of 3 pages  1 2 3 >

Next entry: Yes, it's my fault you're getting those funny words

Previous entry: The Ballad of Brave Lady Michele

<< Back to main

Info

email PZ Myers
Search
Archives
UMM—America's best public liberal arts college