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Saturday, March 4, 2017

Hegemony of Science

Comte: the philosopher of Comfort

Auguste Comte


The philosopher of bourgeois comfort was the Frenchman, Auguste Comte. His famous formula of meaning was “science d’où prévoyance; prévoyance, d’où action.” “The reason for knowing is to be able to predict, and the reason for prediction is to make action possible.” As Ortega y Gasset puts it, “The result is that action--advantageous action, of course--becomes the thing that defines the truth of knowledge.”

Epistemology of exploitation

The epistemology of exploitation is clearly explained here, critiqued by a prominent 20th Century philosopher. As the great physicist Boltzmann blandly stated it, “There are no correct reasonings except those which have practical results.” No wisdom exists which does not enable us to exploit, or further the cause of exploitation. Truth, then is at the service of utility. The philosophy that was baked out of these ingredients was called pragmatism in the 20th century. The idea is that there is no other truth than success in dealing with things, making things, consuming things, enjoying and exploiting things. The technical knowledge which advances our exploitation is science and this is the only knowledge. Anything else which goes by the name of knowledge is really outside the realm of useful investigation, therefore useless by definition.


The Virus of Exploitation

This is an audacious epistemology, but one which, like a virus has spread throughout all the organic systems of wisdom and philosophy, weakening them. How can anyone contaminated with such a materialistic view seriously speak of wisdom, of life, or of the “meaning of life?” And yet the imperial triumph of physics owes itself to this epistemology. While science pretends to be value-neutral, the focus on “practical usefulness” has led to some terrible results.

The Mushroom Cloud of Usefulness

Since Ortega y Gasset wrote his critique at the beginning of the last century, the “practical usefulness” of science has mushroomed. 

The "practical" paradigm of science has given us many advances. The soldiers at Verdun, France, in 1916 discovered the effectiveness of modern warfare. Thanks to the advances of the "practical" paradigm of modern science, young men, barely out of school learned how to machine-gun hundreds of thousands of young men in an afternoon on the bomb-torn fields at Ypres and Verdun.
and how to machine-gun hundreds of thousands of young men in an afternoon on the bomb-torn fields at Ypres and Verdun.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Verdun
Fallen Soldiers at Verdun

Spent Shell Casings at Verdun, France 1916
For Hitler, Farben’s Zyklon B gas was a practical and useful solution for the Jews, at Auschwitz and Buchenwald, Bergen and Belsen. Undesirables who did not fit the scientific model of genetic quality as defined by Nazi eugenics were gassed and their body-fat rendered into soap by the scientific method.   https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005189



Thanks to the brilliance of scientists at the Manhattan Project, the  United States found a quicker "practical solution" for the Japanese in the atomic-bombing of Hiroshima, and Nagasaki. (See John Hersey's excellent article in the New Yorker (http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1946/08/31/hiroshima)


The "Fat Boy" Atomic Weapon dropped on the citizens or Nagasaki Japan,



Nagasaki

The science of incendiary bombing and was developed by the Allies in the fire-bombing of the charming porcelain manufacturing town of Dresden, Germany. 

Dresden, Germany after firebombing.
Wreckage of Dresden Firebombing

The science of melting humans would later be perfected by General Curtis LeMay (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtis_LeMay)  in the needless firebombing of Tokyo, which was already on the verge of surrender.
Civilian carnage: Firebombing of Tokyo
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/03/tokyo-firebombing-world-war-ii/

Let me point out here that Hitler was not a particularly religious man. He developed the cult of his own personality as did Stalin.  His destruction of the Jews was done on an economic basis: the Nazis plundered Jewish bank accounts, looted precious art works, and even extracted the gold from their teeth before gassing them. There was nothing Christian about the Nazi view of racial superiority. It was pure cannibalism. But Hitler justified his slaughter on the basis of theories of Eugenics which ultimately flowed from Comte.  Eugenics, the idea that we can "scientifically improve the inborn qualities of a race was invented by a cousin of Comte, Francis Galton.  Galton borrowed from Darwinian evolutionary theory to promote the idea that through marriage, proper breeding and "natural selection" the human race could be improved. His 1904 paper on the subject, states "EUGENICS is the science which deals with all influences that improve the inborn qualities of a race; also with those that develop them to the utmost advantage. The improvement of the inborn qualities, or stock, of some one human population will alone be discussed here." (http://galton.org/essays/1900-1911/galton-1904-am-journ-soc-eugenics-scope-aims.htm)

Hitler's attempt at "improving" the humann population is well-known, but had nothing to do with religion. The important atrocities of the last century--the machine-gunning of hundreds of thousands of men in World War I, Hitler's genocide, Stalin's starvation of the Kulaks, the American firebombing of civilians at Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Tokyo and Dresden--had nothing to do with religion. Mao Ze Dong's "Cultural Revolution" in China had nothing to do with religion. The killing fields of Pol Pot in Cambodia was the work of a dictatorial communist madman--nothing to do with religion. These massacres were politically motivated as are the terrorist acts that disturb us so much today.  

The philosopher Auguste Comte was not a religious man, but wanted to create a "Religion of Humanity." http://www.discovery.org/a/6301 But atheistic humanism based on scientific achievement is not as innocent as it seems.

Dead from Gas Cloud, Bhopal, India

Gas Cloud from Union Carbide Factory, Bhopal India


I could go on. The pesticide plant in Bhopal, the nuclear meltdowns at Chernobyl in Russia and Fukushima in Japan, global warming, climate change, air pollution, the destruction of habitats, extinction of plants, birds, and animals, all these are by-products of our penchant for practical usefulness.

 By excluding ethical considerations from science, we have managed to discover how to weaponize anthrax and smallpox virus, how to reduce the ice at the polar ice-caps. The excesses, disasters, and massacres created by the exploitation paradigm are legion. 







Disasters of Science

We know how to melt Vietnamese children with Napalm and how to register, fingerprint, and database every Muslim on the planet. The Nazi scientists who worked at Auschwitz learned how many hours it takes before human being freezes to death, and exactly how many calories are needed to keep a human alive for a month at hard labor until he starves to death. (See links: http://all-that-is-interesting.com/evil-science-experiments  http://constantinereport.com/searching-for-lost-victims-of-nazi-human-experiments/  

The man-made disasters of science are legion; spend a half-hour watching the news and chances are you will witness one. All these great achievements were made possible by the epistemological paradigm of positivistic materialism. These are not anomalies or aberrations but the natural consequence of the paradigm. 

Scientific positivism claims that it has only "comfort" and "pragmatism" as its ends. It has no moral component. Morality only exists where life "means" something, and "meaning" is not a practical consequence of scientific progress. Atheists proclaim that "religion is the root of all evil," but an argument might be made that the scientific paradigm of karmic exploitation--the determination to satisfy demands for human comfort at the expense of all other considerations--is the true root of all evil.  If science is held in check by moral considerations and yes, religious ethical values--it is capable of great wonders. But when science serves the voracious appetites of a society driven by sensual lust and greed, when there are no moral, ethical, and religious boundaries to scientific exploitation, the result can only be violence and genocide as we have seen in countless examples.

Philosophy is Dead

The scientic paradigm of exploitation is materialistic by definition. As long as our intellectual life is counterbalanced with philosophy, ethics, morality, and theism, we have alternatives. But the scientific community has grown audacious and now demands our complete surrender. We are no longer allowed to contemplate spiritual alternatives, neither at work at school, nor in public life. When atheists like Dawkins, Hawking, and Sam Harris preach that God is Dead, and that Philosophy is also dead, we are left with nothing but the cold exploitation of matter as a value. Only the advance of the human race as defined by practical comforts may be considered "useful." And, as Comte and his followers have schooled us, only the "useful" is valuable. Jesus Christ said, "For what shall it profit a man, if he gain the whole world and suffer the loss of his soul?




To which the atheists reply: "There is no soul. There is no meaning." But as long as we have cheap wifi, internet porn, sex, drugs and rock and roll, and new iphones, why should anyone care? "Philosophy is dead, "says Hawking, since it doesn’t advance the cause of science any further. What questions it contemplates do not bear on the physical science and therefore have no use. 

The Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset looked into the vacuum of scientific thought and was horrified. Writing a hundred years ago, he criticized the imperalism of physics and its determination to kill philosophy:

 “...the intellectual life of Europe has for almost a hundred years suffered from what one might call the ‘terrorism of the laboratories.’ Overwhelmed by this superiority, the philosopher was ashamed of being overwhelmed, which meant that he became ashamed of not being a physicist. As the problems which are genuinely philosophic do not permit of solution according to the method of the physical sciences, the philosopher gave up any attempt to attack them; he renounced his philosophy, contracting it to a minimum, putting it humbly at the service of the physics. He decided that the only philosophic theme worth pursuing was meditation on the fact of physics, that philosophy was merely a theory of knowledge, and nothing more.”

 “Kant was the first to adopt such an attitude in a radical form; he did not interest himself directly in the great cosmic problems, but with the imperative hand of a town policeman he stopped all philosophic traffic--twenty-six centuries of metaphysical thought--by saying, “Let all philosophizing remain suspended until this question is answered: How are synthetic judgments possible a priori?” Well, now, “synthetic judgments a priori” meant to him physics, the factum of the physio-mathematical science. But these statements of the problem as he saw it were not even a theory of knowledge. Their point of departure was the knowledge of physics as it existed, and they did not ask “What is knowledge?”

Is Philosophy Dead?

Insofar as it fails to confront the big questions, philosophy is, in a very real sense, dead. If Ortega y Gasset complained about the death of philosophy a hundred years ago, Stephen Hawking’s snide epitaph drives another nail into the coffin. What role does philosophy play in a world where the imperialism of physics is absolute?

Stephen Hawking and Philosophy’s Epitaph

Speaking to Google's Zeitgeist Conference in Hertfordshire, the author of 'A Brief History of Time' said that fundamental questions about the nature of the universe could not be resolved by philosophy. "Most of us don't worry about these questions most of the time,” he said. “But almost all of us must sometimes wonder: Why are we here? Where do we come from? Traditionally, these are questions for philosophy, but philosophy is dead. Philosophers have not kept up with modern developments in science. Particularly physics."

Imperalism of Physics

This is as good an example as exists of Ortega y Gassets principle of the imperialism of physics. Hawking's mind-numbing hubris is apparent here, as is his lame attempt at philosophy. He refutes himself here with his own sophomoric philosophical musings. “Philosophy is dead” is a philosophical discussion on the nature of epistemology as we have seen in the above comments of Ortega y Gasset.

But of course Hawking sees nothing wrong with appropriating a discipline which he has declared dead. Of course, Hawking is more interested in “imaginary time” and other mind-boggling speculations to muster the proper rigor to make a philosophical proposition.  

Hawking: out of his depth

What Hawking means to say is that metaphysics has not kept up with physics, but he is beyond his depth. Metaphysics, before Kant decided to throw the baby out with the bathwater, was the branch of philosophy that dealt with the “hard” question of consciousness. The metaphysics of Aristotle and Aquinas is a useful framework on which to understand modern science, especially quantum mechanics. Even Heisenberg knew this. Ken Wilber has documented the fascination of modern physicists like Bohr, Einstein, Schrodinger, and Heisenberg with mysticism. In quantum mechanics, cosmology, and evolutionary biology, scientists are just catching up to over two thousand years of philosophical and theological insight from the great philosophers of the Upanishads.

Practical and Useful?

Scientists like Hawking are concerned with the practical and the useful. They rarely understand the philosophical framework of their technical labor. They are mere technicians crunch numbers and tinker with instruments, with little insight into the philosophical basis for their calculations.

Atheist technicians and quasi-scientists

Atheist technicians like Hawking are poor imitations of the great scientists of the scientific enlightenment and the great pioneers in modern physics -- vanishingly few of whom were atheists. Real scientists do more than play with equations and tinker with instruments; they should have a meaningful understanding of natural philosophy as it relates to their work.

Popular Science

It’s hard to believe the present day advocates of atheism and popular science like Dawkins and Hawking would pass a freshman philosophy class. They may be charismatic representatives of popular science, but they are hardly trained in philosophy, or even introspective enough to think through the basic problems.

The imperialists of physics, our scientific priesthood, lack the philosophical basis to ask meaningful questions. Their questions are strictly limited by the paradigm that dominates their fields, that of “practical and useful truths.” And so a great mind like Hawking believes that the cosmos has no purpose. In his case, philosophy is dead; lacking a deep philosophy for himself, he wants it to be dead for everyone else. And sadly, few philosophers challenge the imperialism of science and physics. Those who dare are silenced.

For more, check out these videos.




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