Chapter 16 – A Summing Up of the Case So Far
At this stage of my argument, then, a
summing up is needed before I attempt to move on. In order to finish the
argument and bring all the threads together, it is necessary to go backward and
more carefully review some of the assumptions that are implicit in any argument
that is based on Science as this one is.
What are we committing to if we agree with
the points argued so far and with what the entire argument assumes and builds
on? Three ideas are essential.
Afternoon on Mars (photo by the NASA
probe, Spirit Rover)
(credit: Wikimedia Commons)
In the first place, a basic assumption—for
many modern thinkers, an implicit assumption they are not conscious of and do
not examine—is that the universe is a single, integrated system. Every one of
its parts connects to all of its other parts. The universe runs by one set of
laws, each law consistent with all the others. We don’t fully understand the system
of natural laws yet. For example, we don’t yet understand how sub-atomic forces
and electro-magnetism are related to gravity. But in doing Science, we
implicitly assume that the laws of Science apply on Mars and Gliese 581g just
as precisely as those laws apply here on Earth. (Dennis Overbye sums up the
debate in a 2007 New York Times
article.1)
To some readers this assumption may seem
so self-evident that stating it seems silly. But such a reaction is a hasty,
careless one. This basic assumption of Science—along with a few of the other
conclusions reached so far in this book—has implications for all that we think
and do.
To be even plainer, let’s compare this
idea that our universe is all one system with the idea’s alternative. In short,
let’s ask, “As opposed to what?”
Artist’s
conception of the Gliese 581 system (credit: ESO/L. Calçada, via Wikimedia Commons)
The alternative view of our universe sees
it as being made up of areas or dimensions or eras in which different sets of
rules apply or once did apply. This was the view of our forebears. They
saw the universe as being run by many varied and mutually hostile gods, each
with his or her own realm.
For example, for the ancient Greeks,
Poseidon ruled the sea; he could make storms at will and bring them down on any
luckless mariners. Hades ruled the underworld, Zeus, the skies. Hades seized
Persephone and took her down to his realm; even Zeus could only negotiate to
get her back to her mother for half the year. From this quarrel came the seasons. Two
bellicose brats, who happened to be supernatural beings, and who could not get
along. A universe run by lust, caprice, cruelty, and revenge. But today, we know exactly why the seasons occur.
The Return of Persephone
(credit: Frederic Leighton, via Wikimedia Commons)
The classical Greeks also accepted that
their ancestors had been much stronger than they were. Repeatedly in The Iliad, heroes hoist rocks that “no
man today could lift,” and they do it with ease.2 In such a
universe, ideas that were right in one area or era might be
quite different from those that were right (in both senses of right) in some other distant land or
era.
In the modern view, under Science, we
assume that the laws describing the strong force, the weak force, and electromagnetism
and gravity apply everywhere and always have done so. It is true that we have
not yet found a way to translate our model of gravity into the system of ideas
and equations that describes the other three, but we are confident that a
unified field theory does exist. Ours is a single coherent universe, we assume.
Do most people in our modern society truly believe the
universe is a single, coherent system? Yes. That view is the view that Science begins
from. The alternative – superstition – is simply not palatable for most people
in the West today. Whatever the flaws in the current scientific world view—and
it is not logically airtight, as we have seen—we’ve nevertheless seen it
achieve far too many successes to gamble on any superstitious alternatives.
People today, by and large, do not turn a sick child
over to a shaman for treatment. They go to a Western doctor. Who today would
try to fix his broken-down vehicle by casting pennies or lighting incense
sticks or chanting? Farmers everywhere look to agricultural scientists for advice
on which crops to grow on their farms and which fertilizers to use. In today’s
world, for better or worse, we live in the Age of Science. The evidence says
that heeding Science is a smart gamble, a solid Bayesian choice, therefore, a
fully rational one.
Let’s keep this first implicit assumption
of Science in mind: in this universe, all is connected to all else in a
coherent, systematic way. (Nicholas Maxwell discusses this view and its
problems at length in his book From
Knowledge to Wisdom, pp. 107–109.3)
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