Theory of Everything
So, before the Lavender one set off for Korea, she asked me if I "believed" in super-string theory (one of the latest developments in theoretical physics, yadda, yadda, already superseded by the emerging M-theory, so I‘m told). I didn't have the necessary language or intellectual constructs to answer the question adequately at the time, but I have recently come across both and so will try to present a somewhat exhaustive explanation of my feelings on the "reality" of any theory, scientific or otherwise, below.
The cogent phrase to keep in mind for the following is this: the model is not the reality. This is a restating of Alfred Korzybski's phrase, "the map is not the territory", or as Robert Anton Wilson puts it, in a more gustatory form, "the menu is not the meal." This may seem obvious enough, but if we consider that no sensation, no stimulus, neither internal nor external, comes to us but through a model or map of reality that we use to order and make sense of the near-infinite amount of stimulus with which we are constantly bombarded, we begin to see the depth and implications of this thought.
First, a little background may be in order, so that we might begin to grok the depth of this. For one, scientists have known for some time now (or at least theorized) that the vast majority off all the “stuff” in the universe is "dark" matter. In fact, all the matter and energy that we can sense, with even our most sensitive and powerful scientific instruments, amounts to only about 5% of all the matter and energy in the universe. This seems an almost comically small base of information to be theorizing about the nature of the universe from.
As for objective reality as we, as mere humans, experience it; while we think we see the world around us as it actually is, we are oblivious to all sorts of stimuli and phenomena occurring all around us, all the time. The entire electro-magnetic spectrum, outside the relatively small band of visible light, is invisible to us. We know that radio waves are passing through the air around us (and us) all the time, and yet, without the aid of a radio, we are totally insensate. The same goes for infra-red, ultraviolet, X, and gamma radiation, not to mention all the sonic vibrations above and below our normal range of hearing and the minute aromas of which we are (blissfully?) unaware, but which seem quite apparent to our four-legged friends. And beyond the merely bio-physical limitations restricting our range of awareness, we also have to contend with psychological phenomena that serve to distort or totally block out much, if not all, of the stimuli that we do perceive. We have all had the experience of selective hearing, where we block out the environmental "noise" around us while focused on some absorbing task. Added to this sort of attentional blocking we humans, highly-developed as we are, are also prone to all sorts of psychological imprinting and conditioning, manifesting as various defense mechanisms and prejudices that can and do greatly distort all of the input we receive from our physical and social environments. Equally important is our neuro-linguistic programming which literally hypnotizes us into seeing things like “trees”, which, in reality have no existence outside of the neuro-linguistic structure itself (there is no such thing as “a tree”, in the generic sense, only this or that particular tree, which is genetically and existentially unique from all other “trees”).
It would be possible, at this point, to bemoan our sorry state as "objective" observers of the universe, and conclude that any "true" knowledge of the universe is precluded by our immense perceptual handicaps. Consider, however, that if we really could perceive every stimuli and phenomena that makes up the universe, we would be functionally "blind". If you were aware of all the ultraviolet and infra-red light along with radio waves and cell phone transmissions, not to mention "dark" matter, it would be exceedingly difficult to drive your car to the grocery store to pick up some bread and ice cream, not to mention carry on a conversation, view a sunset or run a multi-national corporation. And without the abstractions and generalizations of our neuro-linguistic models, scientific knowledge would be impossible, as would be forest management programs. In short, in order to function in the universe it is necessary that we remain unaware of the vast majority of the stimuli we are constantly assaulted with and necessary that we order, sort, and distort the stimuli that we do receive.
The stimuli that we filter out and/or distort, and the ways in which stimuli are distorted, is the function of something I've taken to calling our "reality tunnel," after the great Dr. Timothy Leary and Robert Anton Wilson. Our reality tunnel starts, on the most basic level, with the body/mind apparatus, which, as we have seen, serves to block out the vast majority of all the "stuff" in the universe and allows us to deal with the little bit left over. Layered on top of that are our neuro-linguistic programs that order and shape our perceptions, along with the various psychological screens mentioned above (i.e. a pessimistic attitude, or a fear of rejection). The effect of all these social, psychological and biological blocks and distortions is what I will refer to as our reality tunnel.
To some extent our various reality tunnels agree with one another. This is what we call "consensus reality". We all agree, for instance, that this is a chair that I am sitting in. However, our reality tunnels may also diverge from one another. I may see the chair I am sitting is as a humble and rather shoddy piece of furniture, while someone from another culture may see it as an ostentatious display of wealth. Consensus reality, then, forms only a very small part of “reality,” or perhaps better, of “realities.” These realities correspond to our varying models of the universe but, of course, the model is not the reality.
Because the only thing we can have knowledge of are our individual reality tunnels, no particular reality tunnel can be said to have precedence over any other. In fact, the only statement that we can make regarding the “truth” of any particular reality tunnel is that it is not “the truth”, that is, it is not reality. We are reminded here of Einstein’s thought experiments that led ultimately to the theory of special relativity. These experiments showed that the concepts of physics such as distance and motion are dependent upon the perspective from which one is observing them. Right now I am sitting practically motionless in front of my computer, spinning around the earth’s axis at thousands of miles an hour, and/or hurtling through vast reaches of space at near light speed, all depending upon which perspective one views the motion of my body from. As to whether my body is “really” sitting still or traveling at mind-numbing speed, science can only answer “both and neither.” There is no privileged perspective on reality, and so all perspectives must be granted equal validity.
This thought should give us pause to reflect. We have spoken of “consensus reality” above, but even the most widely held of consensus views cannot be given precedence over divergent views, even if held only by one person. Everyone around me may claim that what I am sitting in is a chair of the standard variety, but if I persist in claiming that it is in fact a terrifying dragon with sixteen wings and seven heads, there is no way to “objectively” determine which view is “real”. A physicist, of course, would claim that, whether dragon or chair, it is almost entirely empty space. All of these views are epistemologically equal in that they are all created by models of reality and, once again, the model is not the reality. In answer to the question of what I am “really” seated on, a chair or a dragon or empty space, the only honest reply is, “all of them and none of them.”
Now, this may all seem a little far-fetched to some. Is there really no objective way of knowing what it is I’m sitting on, a chair or a dragon or just empty space? No, there is not. The reason is that our answer will depend on what model of reality we are referring to in gathering information about the object in question. If we see a chair, we are most likely referring to a standard human nervous system model, which, as we have seen, blocks out far more information than it gathers. Tweak that model just a little though, adding some serotonin here and blocking some acetylcholine receptors there, and the resulting view of reality can change drastically. A chair, for instance, becomes a dragon. Or perhaps we forsake the human nervous system model altogether, tweaked or otherwise, in favor of the scientific model, in which case we “see,” with the assistance of super-sensitive analytic equipment and some high-level math, that the chair is in fact almost nothing but empty space, perhaps with a few one dimensional vibrating strings zooming about inside it’s boundaries.
This is why Korzybski felt the word “is” to be the biggest stumbling block in our linguistic conceptual apparatus. Whenever we say something “is” something (“that basketball is orange”), we lie by omission. We know, for instance, that the basketball is not, in fact orange, but is actually blue. It appears orange to us because the ball reflects orange light (or rather, a wavelength of light that our brains present to us as orange) and absorbs blue light. We also know that a color-blind person, or someone with cerebral damage to certain parts of the brain, sees the ball as a different color than we do, yet their perceptions have just as much “validity” as ours. What we should say is, “that basketball appears orange to me at this time,” or, “that object on which you are sitting appears to me, at present, to be a chair.”
And yet, while we cannot say what it is that I am “really” sitting on, chair or dragon or empty space, we do know that there is something there, some source of stimulus, even if we can’t say “objectively” what it is. There must be some reality, therefore, that underlies our personal realities, some ultimate reality which is the source of all the stimulus that we build into our discrete realities by way of our various models. There is an objective reality, but we can only know about it subjectively.
But might we not experience this greater reality directly, without the intermediary distortion and blocking of our biological and psychological models? The answer, I think, is yes, and that many women and men from all over the world have, in fact, had this experience. However, because the experience of this ultimate reality takes place outside of all reality tunnels, there is, by definition, no way of having knowledge of it, since knowledge is a product of the sorting and ordering of stimuli that is the work of the models that have been left behind. Ultimate Reality cannot be known, therefore, only experienced. However, even saying that this ultimate reality can be experienced may be misleading, since perception requires the selective blocking of certain stimuli which is incompatible with the “experience” of ultimate reality, and who can imagine an experience without perception? This is no doubt the source of the highly metaphoric and ambiguous language used by the mystics, saints, and sages of all times, and why many talk of being, becoming, or being filled by God, or Godhead, rather than perceiving it (God, in this case, being just another name for the ultimate reality that lies behind our individual realities). Perhaps we should say that one can not know or experience reality, but only be it.
But what about science? Doesn’t science offer us an objective view of the cosmos, or at least the 5% of it that we can sense? If something can be scientifically proven, can it not be said to be more real than an individual’s skewed perceptions? No. Science is not objective, firstly for the simple fact that it is not possible to test all conceivable hypotheses. Because of time and resource limitations, not to mention sheer impossibility, as regards dark matter for example, science must necessarily limit its investigations to testing those hypotheses, which seem plausible to the scientist at the time. Hypotheses are subjectively chosen, in other words. A truly objective science would have to give equal weight to all hypotheses, until all could be tested and either verified or disproven. Only then, after testing all conceivable hypotheses, could an objective science give a truly objective answer .
For instance, I have a hypothesis that all matter is in fact composed of very small fairies who fly about, much like the particles of conventional physical theory, and the flapping of whose wings gives objects the appearance of solid form. Oh yes, and these fairies are smaller than anything yet discovered in physics, in fact they compose the very strings of string theory. Now what does our supposedly objective scientist have to say about my hypothesis? That it is ridiculous? That it is a piece of raving lunacy and that I would do better to devote my time to making mud pies than to theorizing about the nature of the universe? Of course not, for she is an objective woman, our scientist, and simply informs me that my hypothesis is very interesting but there is, at present, no way of testing any part of it and so a hypothesis it must remain. Not proven, but not disproven either, and so still a possibility. A science (like our actually existing science) that pretends to give a definitive answer before all the hypotheses have been duly tested cannot be said to be in any way objective. From the minute that the scientist forms her hypothesis, she is relying on a huge mass of unstated social biases, neuro-linguistic programming, and physical and conceptual limitations that make the whole endeavor hopelessly subjective from the very beginning. And if the science is subjective in the beginning, can it really be said to be objective in the end?
To demonstrate: math is widely considered to be the most objective of sciences. “2 + 2 = 4” is practically synonymous with undeniable truth. It has been shown, however, that even the most basic of our mathematical principals are based on nothing but human subjectivity. The story of Euclid’s fifth postulate is instructive.
As we should all know, the Greek Euclid was the first person (the first that we know of, anyway) to create a systematic and logical system of geometry. He based his geometry on five postulates or axioms. The first four were pretty straight forward, “between any two points there exists one line connecting them,” stuff like that, that just seems too obvious to second guess. His fifth postulate, however, was quite a bit more wordy and complicated, something about converging lines and the angle of incidence being less than ninety degrees. Just looking at the five postulates, the fifth one seems really out of place. Euclid wasn’t too pleased with it. He tried to get rid of it by proving it as a proposition based on the other four axioms, but no dice, it couldn’t be done. He wanted like anything to just get rid of it somehow, problem was, he couldn’t prove more than 28 propositions without assuming it. It seemed right to him, but somehow it seemed wrong too.
The fifth postulate came to be known as the “parallel postulate” because rephrased, what it says is this; given a line l and a point A not on that line, there exists one line through A that is parallel to l (draw it out, it’ll make sense). It continued to seem wrong to mathematicians long after Euclid was returned to the dust from whence he sprang, and many a budding mathematician whiled away countless hours of their youth working on the mysterious fifth postulate. Most of them grew out of it eventually and went on to more productive areas of math, and for more than a millennia, no one got any farther on the problem than Euclid did. Then a couple of mathematicians thought they’d try to show the necessity of the fifth postulate by showing that assuming something else would lead to insoluble contradictions in the resulting geometric system. One guy assumed that there were an infinite number of lines through A that were parallel to l, somebody else assumed that there weren’t any parallel lines. The thing was they found that the resulting mathematics, using the “nonsensical” alternate fifth postulates, worked out just as well as Euclid’s geometry. This was puzzling.
Eventually, it was discovered that the new “non-Euclidean” geometries were simply descriptions of geometry in “non-flat” space. For instance, the geometry that assumed an infinite number of parallel lines was describing geometry in hyperbolic space, that is, if space is shaped like a hyperbola rather than a flat plane. The geometry that assumed no parallel lines described geometry on a sphere. This was interesting enough in itself, while still remaining in the realm of mathematical abstraction, but then Einstein went and used Riemann’s non-Euclidean geometry in his groundbreaking theory of physical reality, and showed that it was necessary for describing the universe. Robert Anton Wilson has a phrase for this kind of thing. It begins with “mind” and ends with a four-letter explitive starting with “f”.
So, does that mean that Riemann’s geometry is right and Euclid’s is wrong? No, it means that they each describe reality from a particular perspective. Our universe is neither Euclidean nor non-Euclidean, so neither are “right” or “wrong,” in the usual sense, rather, they each present us with a different aspect of some larger, more fundamental truth, of which both are but particular expressions (the particulars of that expression depending on the fundamental axioms upon which the system is founded).
And the thing about axioms is that they are, by definition, unproven (and therefore, at least possibly, subjective). Perhaps it is the case that we first discovered Euclidean geometry not because it is somehow more fundamentally “real,” but because of some idiosyncrasy of our bio-physical or neuro-linguistic apparatus. Maybe it was because Euclid worked out his theorems on a flat surface and not a hyperbolic one. Either way, it seems likely that we first discovered Euclidean geometry because our models of the universe somehow predisposed us to. But of course, the model is not the reality.
Returning now to the “hard” sciences, we see additionally that science experiments do not yield theories or explanations, only data, and it is then up to the scientist to formulate a model of some sort to explain all, or most, of the data. However, even if the model does explain all the data, that does not necessarily mean that it is the “real” explanation of reality, only that it seems to explain all the data we know about at this time, and that we haven't devised any other model that explains the data as well or better. Again, formation of the model to fit the reality is a totally subjective endeavor, dependent largely upon what the scientist thinks is likely.
The final nail in the coffin of “objective” science comes from Kurt Gödel, whose eponymous theorem proved that no logical system can be both complete and non-contradictory. That is, if a logical system describes all that it purports to describe, it will necessarily contain a contradiction (for instance, a mathematical system cannot prove the axioms upon which it is founded), or, on the other hand, if the logical system is free from contradictions, it is necessarily incomplete, having as it were, some dark areas which the system cannot “see.” This is the case for what is called “neutral geometry,” which is basically Euclid without the fifth postulate. You can solve a number of geometric problems with neutral geometry, but there are many more that you can’t solve. For instance, we all know that the sum of the angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees in Euclidean geometry, but neutral geometry isn’t able to give an answer one way or the other. To quote Wikipedia:
Absolute geometry is an example of an incomplete postulational system. Consider the statement "The sum of the angles in every triangle is equal to two right angles". This is not provable in absolute geometry, because if it was, it would be true in hyperbolic geometry, and the sum of the angles in a hyperbolic triangle is less than two right angles. However, the negation of the statement, that there exists a triangle whose angles don't add up to two right angles, is not provable either, because if it was, it would be provable in Euclidean geometry, and the sum of the angles in Euclidean geometry is always two right angles. Therefore this proposition is undecidable in absolute geometry.
Science, of course, works through the medium of logical systems and therefore all supposedly comprehensive scientific theories, such as the physicists’ coveted “theory of everything” (or T.O.E.), must fall prey to Gödel’s theorem (if everything is, in fact, composed of one-dimensional vibrating strings, what are those made out of and where did they come from?). It is futile, therefore, to look to science to provide us with any ultimate answers. It is probable, I think, that if physicists are successful in their hunt for the elusive T.O.E., that it will only be a matter of time before a competing T.O.E. arrives on the scene, like Non-Euclidean geometry, to throw a monkey wrench in the whole works again. At that point, of course, we have to start looking for a new T.O.E. that can explain how there can be more than one T.O.E. And round and round we go…
Reality, however, Ultimate Reality, that which lies behind all of our theorizing and conceptualizing, that source of all stimuli which our bodies and minds literally shape around us into our perceived “realities”, is neither incomplete nor contradictory. It is what Rene Guenon terms the “metaphysical infinite”, and our reality tunnels are far too constrained and finite to ever contain it. We may be able to experience It (or be It), but we can never conceptualize It, never know It. All our perceptions are the result of our particular reality tunnels, our models for organizing and interacting with the universe, and the model is not the reality .
The cogent phrase to keep in mind for the following is this: the model is not the reality. This is a restating of Alfred Korzybski's phrase, "the map is not the territory", or as Robert Anton Wilson puts it, in a more gustatory form, "the menu is not the meal." This may seem obvious enough, but if we consider that no sensation, no stimulus, neither internal nor external, comes to us but through a model or map of reality that we use to order and make sense of the near-infinite amount of stimulus with which we are constantly bombarded, we begin to see the depth and implications of this thought.
First, a little background may be in order, so that we might begin to grok the depth of this. For one, scientists have known for some time now (or at least theorized) that the vast majority off all the “stuff” in the universe is "dark" matter. In fact, all the matter and energy that we can sense, with even our most sensitive and powerful scientific instruments, amounts to only about 5% of all the matter and energy in the universe. This seems an almost comically small base of information to be theorizing about the nature of the universe from.
As for objective reality as we, as mere humans, experience it; while we think we see the world around us as it actually is, we are oblivious to all sorts of stimuli and phenomena occurring all around us, all the time. The entire electro-magnetic spectrum, outside the relatively small band of visible light, is invisible to us. We know that radio waves are passing through the air around us (and us) all the time, and yet, without the aid of a radio, we are totally insensate. The same goes for infra-red, ultraviolet, X, and gamma radiation, not to mention all the sonic vibrations above and below our normal range of hearing and the minute aromas of which we are (blissfully?) unaware, but which seem quite apparent to our four-legged friends. And beyond the merely bio-physical limitations restricting our range of awareness, we also have to contend with psychological phenomena that serve to distort or totally block out much, if not all, of the stimuli that we do perceive. We have all had the experience of selective hearing, where we block out the environmental "noise" around us while focused on some absorbing task. Added to this sort of attentional blocking we humans, highly-developed as we are, are also prone to all sorts of psychological imprinting and conditioning, manifesting as various defense mechanisms and prejudices that can and do greatly distort all of the input we receive from our physical and social environments. Equally important is our neuro-linguistic programming which literally hypnotizes us into seeing things like “trees”, which, in reality have no existence outside of the neuro-linguistic structure itself (there is no such thing as “a tree”, in the generic sense, only this or that particular tree, which is genetically and existentially unique from all other “trees”).
It would be possible, at this point, to bemoan our sorry state as "objective" observers of the universe, and conclude that any "true" knowledge of the universe is precluded by our immense perceptual handicaps. Consider, however, that if we really could perceive every stimuli and phenomena that makes up the universe, we would be functionally "blind". If you were aware of all the ultraviolet and infra-red light along with radio waves and cell phone transmissions, not to mention "dark" matter, it would be exceedingly difficult to drive your car to the grocery store to pick up some bread and ice cream, not to mention carry on a conversation, view a sunset or run a multi-national corporation. And without the abstractions and generalizations of our neuro-linguistic models, scientific knowledge would be impossible, as would be forest management programs. In short, in order to function in the universe it is necessary that we remain unaware of the vast majority of the stimuli we are constantly assaulted with and necessary that we order, sort, and distort the stimuli that we do receive.
The stimuli that we filter out and/or distort, and the ways in which stimuli are distorted, is the function of something I've taken to calling our "reality tunnel," after the great Dr. Timothy Leary and Robert Anton Wilson. Our reality tunnel starts, on the most basic level, with the body/mind apparatus, which, as we have seen, serves to block out the vast majority of all the "stuff" in the universe and allows us to deal with the little bit left over. Layered on top of that are our neuro-linguistic programs that order and shape our perceptions, along with the various psychological screens mentioned above (i.e. a pessimistic attitude, or a fear of rejection). The effect of all these social, psychological and biological blocks and distortions is what I will refer to as our reality tunnel.
To some extent our various reality tunnels agree with one another. This is what we call "consensus reality". We all agree, for instance, that this is a chair that I am sitting in. However, our reality tunnels may also diverge from one another. I may see the chair I am sitting is as a humble and rather shoddy piece of furniture, while someone from another culture may see it as an ostentatious display of wealth. Consensus reality, then, forms only a very small part of “reality,” or perhaps better, of “realities.” These realities correspond to our varying models of the universe but, of course, the model is not the reality.
Because the only thing we can have knowledge of are our individual reality tunnels, no particular reality tunnel can be said to have precedence over any other. In fact, the only statement that we can make regarding the “truth” of any particular reality tunnel is that it is not “the truth”, that is, it is not reality. We are reminded here of Einstein’s thought experiments that led ultimately to the theory of special relativity. These experiments showed that the concepts of physics such as distance and motion are dependent upon the perspective from which one is observing them. Right now I am sitting practically motionless in front of my computer, spinning around the earth’s axis at thousands of miles an hour, and/or hurtling through vast reaches of space at near light speed, all depending upon which perspective one views the motion of my body from. As to whether my body is “really” sitting still or traveling at mind-numbing speed, science can only answer “both and neither.” There is no privileged perspective on reality, and so all perspectives must be granted equal validity.
This thought should give us pause to reflect. We have spoken of “consensus reality” above, but even the most widely held of consensus views cannot be given precedence over divergent views, even if held only by one person. Everyone around me may claim that what I am sitting in is a chair of the standard variety, but if I persist in claiming that it is in fact a terrifying dragon with sixteen wings and seven heads, there is no way to “objectively” determine which view is “real”. A physicist, of course, would claim that, whether dragon or chair, it is almost entirely empty space. All of these views are epistemologically equal in that they are all created by models of reality and, once again, the model is not the reality. In answer to the question of what I am “really” seated on, a chair or a dragon or empty space, the only honest reply is, “all of them and none of them.”
Now, this may all seem a little far-fetched to some. Is there really no objective way of knowing what it is I’m sitting on, a chair or a dragon or just empty space? No, there is not. The reason is that our answer will depend on what model of reality we are referring to in gathering information about the object in question. If we see a chair, we are most likely referring to a standard human nervous system model, which, as we have seen, blocks out far more information than it gathers. Tweak that model just a little though, adding some serotonin here and blocking some acetylcholine receptors there, and the resulting view of reality can change drastically. A chair, for instance, becomes a dragon. Or perhaps we forsake the human nervous system model altogether, tweaked or otherwise, in favor of the scientific model, in which case we “see,” with the assistance of super-sensitive analytic equipment and some high-level math, that the chair is in fact almost nothing but empty space, perhaps with a few one dimensional vibrating strings zooming about inside it’s boundaries.
This is why Korzybski felt the word “is” to be the biggest stumbling block in our linguistic conceptual apparatus. Whenever we say something “is” something (“that basketball is orange”), we lie by omission. We know, for instance, that the basketball is not, in fact orange, but is actually blue. It appears orange to us because the ball reflects orange light (or rather, a wavelength of light that our brains present to us as orange) and absorbs blue light. We also know that a color-blind person, or someone with cerebral damage to certain parts of the brain, sees the ball as a different color than we do, yet their perceptions have just as much “validity” as ours. What we should say is, “that basketball appears orange to me at this time,” or, “that object on which you are sitting appears to me, at present, to be a chair.”
And yet, while we cannot say what it is that I am “really” sitting on, chair or dragon or empty space, we do know that there is something there, some source of stimulus, even if we can’t say “objectively” what it is. There must be some reality, therefore, that underlies our personal realities, some ultimate reality which is the source of all the stimulus that we build into our discrete realities by way of our various models. There is an objective reality, but we can only know about it subjectively.
But might we not experience this greater reality directly, without the intermediary distortion and blocking of our biological and psychological models? The answer, I think, is yes, and that many women and men from all over the world have, in fact, had this experience. However, because the experience of this ultimate reality takes place outside of all reality tunnels, there is, by definition, no way of having knowledge of it, since knowledge is a product of the sorting and ordering of stimuli that is the work of the models that have been left behind. Ultimate Reality cannot be known, therefore, only experienced. However, even saying that this ultimate reality can be experienced may be misleading, since perception requires the selective blocking of certain stimuli which is incompatible with the “experience” of ultimate reality, and who can imagine an experience without perception? This is no doubt the source of the highly metaphoric and ambiguous language used by the mystics, saints, and sages of all times, and why many talk of being, becoming, or being filled by God, or Godhead, rather than perceiving it (God, in this case, being just another name for the ultimate reality that lies behind our individual realities). Perhaps we should say that one can not know or experience reality, but only be it.
But what about science? Doesn’t science offer us an objective view of the cosmos, or at least the 5% of it that we can sense? If something can be scientifically proven, can it not be said to be more real than an individual’s skewed perceptions? No. Science is not objective, firstly for the simple fact that it is not possible to test all conceivable hypotheses. Because of time and resource limitations, not to mention sheer impossibility, as regards dark matter for example, science must necessarily limit its investigations to testing those hypotheses, which seem plausible to the scientist at the time. Hypotheses are subjectively chosen, in other words. A truly objective science would have to give equal weight to all hypotheses, until all could be tested and either verified or disproven. Only then, after testing all conceivable hypotheses, could an objective science give a truly objective answer .
For instance, I have a hypothesis that all matter is in fact composed of very small fairies who fly about, much like the particles of conventional physical theory, and the flapping of whose wings gives objects the appearance of solid form. Oh yes, and these fairies are smaller than anything yet discovered in physics, in fact they compose the very strings of string theory. Now what does our supposedly objective scientist have to say about my hypothesis? That it is ridiculous? That it is a piece of raving lunacy and that I would do better to devote my time to making mud pies than to theorizing about the nature of the universe? Of course not, for she is an objective woman, our scientist, and simply informs me that my hypothesis is very interesting but there is, at present, no way of testing any part of it and so a hypothesis it must remain. Not proven, but not disproven either, and so still a possibility. A science (like our actually existing science) that pretends to give a definitive answer before all the hypotheses have been duly tested cannot be said to be in any way objective. From the minute that the scientist forms her hypothesis, she is relying on a huge mass of unstated social biases, neuro-linguistic programming, and physical and conceptual limitations that make the whole endeavor hopelessly subjective from the very beginning. And if the science is subjective in the beginning, can it really be said to be objective in the end?
To demonstrate: math is widely considered to be the most objective of sciences. “2 + 2 = 4” is practically synonymous with undeniable truth. It has been shown, however, that even the most basic of our mathematical principals are based on nothing but human subjectivity. The story of Euclid’s fifth postulate is instructive.
As we should all know, the Greek Euclid was the first person (the first that we know of, anyway) to create a systematic and logical system of geometry. He based his geometry on five postulates or axioms. The first four were pretty straight forward, “between any two points there exists one line connecting them,” stuff like that, that just seems too obvious to second guess. His fifth postulate, however, was quite a bit more wordy and complicated, something about converging lines and the angle of incidence being less than ninety degrees. Just looking at the five postulates, the fifth one seems really out of place. Euclid wasn’t too pleased with it. He tried to get rid of it by proving it as a proposition based on the other four axioms, but no dice, it couldn’t be done. He wanted like anything to just get rid of it somehow, problem was, he couldn’t prove more than 28 propositions without assuming it. It seemed right to him, but somehow it seemed wrong too.
The fifth postulate came to be known as the “parallel postulate” because rephrased, what it says is this; given a line l and a point A not on that line, there exists one line through A that is parallel to l (draw it out, it’ll make sense). It continued to seem wrong to mathematicians long after Euclid was returned to the dust from whence he sprang, and many a budding mathematician whiled away countless hours of their youth working on the mysterious fifth postulate. Most of them grew out of it eventually and went on to more productive areas of math, and for more than a millennia, no one got any farther on the problem than Euclid did. Then a couple of mathematicians thought they’d try to show the necessity of the fifth postulate by showing that assuming something else would lead to insoluble contradictions in the resulting geometric system. One guy assumed that there were an infinite number of lines through A that were parallel to l, somebody else assumed that there weren’t any parallel lines. The thing was they found that the resulting mathematics, using the “nonsensical” alternate fifth postulates, worked out just as well as Euclid’s geometry. This was puzzling.
Eventually, it was discovered that the new “non-Euclidean” geometries were simply descriptions of geometry in “non-flat” space. For instance, the geometry that assumed an infinite number of parallel lines was describing geometry in hyperbolic space, that is, if space is shaped like a hyperbola rather than a flat plane. The geometry that assumed no parallel lines described geometry on a sphere. This was interesting enough in itself, while still remaining in the realm of mathematical abstraction, but then Einstein went and used Riemann’s non-Euclidean geometry in his groundbreaking theory of physical reality, and showed that it was necessary for describing the universe. Robert Anton Wilson has a phrase for this kind of thing. It begins with “mind” and ends with a four-letter explitive starting with “f”.
So, does that mean that Riemann’s geometry is right and Euclid’s is wrong? No, it means that they each describe reality from a particular perspective. Our universe is neither Euclidean nor non-Euclidean, so neither are “right” or “wrong,” in the usual sense, rather, they each present us with a different aspect of some larger, more fundamental truth, of which both are but particular expressions (the particulars of that expression depending on the fundamental axioms upon which the system is founded).
And the thing about axioms is that they are, by definition, unproven (and therefore, at least possibly, subjective). Perhaps it is the case that we first discovered Euclidean geometry not because it is somehow more fundamentally “real,” but because of some idiosyncrasy of our bio-physical or neuro-linguistic apparatus. Maybe it was because Euclid worked out his theorems on a flat surface and not a hyperbolic one. Either way, it seems likely that we first discovered Euclidean geometry because our models of the universe somehow predisposed us to. But of course, the model is not the reality.
Returning now to the “hard” sciences, we see additionally that science experiments do not yield theories or explanations, only data, and it is then up to the scientist to formulate a model of some sort to explain all, or most, of the data. However, even if the model does explain all the data, that does not necessarily mean that it is the “real” explanation of reality, only that it seems to explain all the data we know about at this time, and that we haven't devised any other model that explains the data as well or better. Again, formation of the model to fit the reality is a totally subjective endeavor, dependent largely upon what the scientist thinks is likely.
The final nail in the coffin of “objective” science comes from Kurt Gödel, whose eponymous theorem proved that no logical system can be both complete and non-contradictory. That is, if a logical system describes all that it purports to describe, it will necessarily contain a contradiction (for instance, a mathematical system cannot prove the axioms upon which it is founded), or, on the other hand, if the logical system is free from contradictions, it is necessarily incomplete, having as it were, some dark areas which the system cannot “see.” This is the case for what is called “neutral geometry,” which is basically Euclid without the fifth postulate. You can solve a number of geometric problems with neutral geometry, but there are many more that you can’t solve. For instance, we all know that the sum of the angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees in Euclidean geometry, but neutral geometry isn’t able to give an answer one way or the other. To quote Wikipedia:
Absolute geometry is an example of an incomplete postulational system. Consider the statement "The sum of the angles in every triangle is equal to two right angles". This is not provable in absolute geometry, because if it was, it would be true in hyperbolic geometry, and the sum of the angles in a hyperbolic triangle is less than two right angles. However, the negation of the statement, that there exists a triangle whose angles don't add up to two right angles, is not provable either, because if it was, it would be provable in Euclidean geometry, and the sum of the angles in Euclidean geometry is always two right angles. Therefore this proposition is undecidable in absolute geometry.
Science, of course, works through the medium of logical systems and therefore all supposedly comprehensive scientific theories, such as the physicists’ coveted “theory of everything” (or T.O.E.), must fall prey to Gödel’s theorem (if everything is, in fact, composed of one-dimensional vibrating strings, what are those made out of and where did they come from?). It is futile, therefore, to look to science to provide us with any ultimate answers. It is probable, I think, that if physicists are successful in their hunt for the elusive T.O.E., that it will only be a matter of time before a competing T.O.E. arrives on the scene, like Non-Euclidean geometry, to throw a monkey wrench in the whole works again. At that point, of course, we have to start looking for a new T.O.E. that can explain how there can be more than one T.O.E. And round and round we go…
Reality, however, Ultimate Reality, that which lies behind all of our theorizing and conceptualizing, that source of all stimuli which our bodies and minds literally shape around us into our perceived “realities”, is neither incomplete nor contradictory. It is what Rene Guenon terms the “metaphysical infinite”, and our reality tunnels are far too constrained and finite to ever contain it. We may be able to experience It (or be It), but we can never conceptualize It, never know It. All our perceptions are the result of our particular reality tunnels, our models for organizing and interacting with the universe, and the model is not the reality .
5 Comments:
I call it as I see it and I say "Bullshit!"
To begin with, you seem to have mistaken the act of communication for a mere proclamation of truth: mathematicians postulate about angles; you sit in a chair-shaped object announcing your physical state; a philosopher squawks about an external reality that we can never perceive.
In communicating these ideas, such as what object you're seated upon, you are sending us package of social understandings assembled for delivery to an assumed audience. Whether or not you're seated on an actual chair is irrelevant; especially irrelevant is whether or not you believe a chair or a dragon or empty space supports your bottom. The same goes for the mathematician and philosopher. What is important is the ideas that are accepted by the audience.
Ideas before broadcast are nothing. Until your message was received, your truth was no more than the unfruitful product of intellectual masturbation. That is, facts and truths (even those beginning with the coveted capital letters) are socially constructed. Until your ideas are negotiated, bartering in old and new concepts, your message is merely a sticky and unsubstantial mess caught in the delicate tissue of your own mind. Furthermore, whether the ideas correspond with any so-called external reality are unimportant since such realities are contingent upon and as malleable as their supporting arguments.
As Protagoras said, "Man is the measure of all things." You tell me that the basketball is blue yet I see it as orange. Further you tell me the science behind your argument. You have placed faith in me as an audience to give greater credibility to science than to my own senses. Furthermore, you have faith that if I were to, as Bruno Latour puts it, skeptically travel upstream of your claims I would see the famous men and women of science proving as fact that orange basketballs are actually blue. I could travel further upstream, back through time and the development of such ideas, but you have faith that I am not that skeptical just as those who told you such facts about blue basketballs assumed you needed no further proof than their word. You've bribed or bullied me with enough factual currency that I accept your claim as true.
So if science is only reliable 5% of the time (that 5% surely includes the color of basketballs. Good thing that science is working on such important questions) we are left to construct the story of reality outside the paradigms of science and its practitioners. Furthermore, if philosophy or religion or whatever basis of reality you rely on is only right X% of the time, we are likewise left to fill in the gaps. As Thomas Kuhn points out, our sciences, philosophies, religions, et al. are constantly subject to revolutions against the prevailing paradigms. We think of new ideas and soldier our resources to overthrow the old guard. This isn't to say that the ideas are qualitatively better, they just have stronger preachers and converts behind them.
So yes, a super-string theory will come and many people will be rattled by it, but the acolytes will push its agenda and work to firmly establish these truths. And you are right, Diptherio, it will be replaced in the future by yet another theory, but not because it is any more or less true, but because, we'll be told, it is more true and, at that time, they will be right.
You somehow seemed (or only seem to me) to miss the entire point of the essay (although I admit, 'tis a bit muddled), since I think we agree with eachother. Yes, truths are indeed socially constructed (and biologically constructed and linguistically constructed (all of which I guess we could roll into "socially constructed")) and that is indeed the whole gist. The problem occurs when we mistake our socially constructed realities for The Reality.
The basketball, for instance, is neither blue nor orange, or rather it is both, depending on which perspective we are viewing it from. To say it is blue or it is orange is necessarily to lie by omission. It appears orange to me, but what it really is I cannot say. The reason is because I have to assume a certain perspective in order to percieve it at all and in assuming a perspective I am creating the perception. And yet, there must be some real reality to the basketball, apart from my perspective-dependent perception of it, but what that is I can never know.
Problems arise when you claim that the basketball is "really" orange and I claim that it is "really" blue and we both set about trying to make everyone believe the same thing we do. And this kind of thing happens all the time (of course, not regarding the color of basketballs). We all assume that the truth we percieve must also be true for everyone else, especially when it comes to religion and politics. What I'm trying to get at is that once we realize that our "truth" is only true from the perspective of our particular reality tunnel, we find it impossible to pass judgement on others whose reality tunnels differ from our own. Which is "true", evolution or creationism? It all depends on which reality tunnel you're in, but when each side is convinced that they have a monopoly on the truth, problems are bound to ensue.
If we don't realize that THE TRUTH of anything is necessarily beyond our ability to conceptualize and that all truths which we can comprehend are necessarily contingent truths and not THE TRUTH, we will continue to despise and destroy eachother because we don't all believe the same lie. All of our truths are lies and THE TRUTH is necessarily unknowable, so what's all the fighting about?
One last thing, when I copied this from Word to the blog, it didn't keep the three footnotes I had. I was too lazy to figure it out, maybe I'll do it now, but the last footnote, I think was important. So, the last sentence, with the footnote in parenthesis, should read, "All our perceptions are the result of our particular reality tunnels, our models for organizing and interacting with the universe, and the model is not the reality (including the model of reality presented above)." Which, I guess, means I probably shouldn't even be trying to persuade you that I'm right.
[I]t will be replaced in the future by yet another theory, but not because it is any more or less true, but because, we'll be told, it is more true and, at that time, they will be right.
It's that last clause that really sticks in my craw. "[A]t that time, they will be right."
But not really, and it's important to not forget that, not to gloss it over and go on to act as if they were really right, which they're not. It's one particular way of looking at the universe, and it in no way refutes any other way. I demand a recognition of relitivity at all levels of existance. No physicst worth her (or his) salt would ever tell you that I am "really" sitting still right now as I type this, even though everyone else in the room might agree that I am. My current velocity is dependent on the perspective from which one views it and my view isn't any more right just because it happens to be mine and that all my friends agree with it.
This is true for intellectual, psychological, spiritual and emotional perspectives as well as for physical perspectives. We may think we know something, anything, for sure, but can we really be sure that we know everything there is to know about a situation, a person, and object, a feeling or a thought? We have to remember that we know next to nothing about the universe we live in (and I mean, if we're rounding...) and to let that knowledge make us humble and to open us up to other possible ways of looking at the world. At the very least it should keep us from condemning others because they happen to beleive a different lie than we do.
The Discordians say "convictions make convicts," we might also say that dogmas make dogs, and that goes for even our most cherished "enlightend" and liberal dogmas (you know the ones I'm talking about, the ones you really believe in). They make us cruel, vicisious dogs, not the nice kind that slobber on you and wag their whole butt.
And it's not just intellectual gymnastics and semantic wordplay. This has implications for living, for interacting with other people on a day-to-day basis. It's yet another reason to "judge not" of others, in case every spiritual giant ever telling us wasn't reason enough already.
You seem to be arguing that there is a (singular) Truth we should acknowledge (while never knowing anything about it) all the while draining our own worldviews of any value. After all, if everyone's point of view is worthless, aren't we all equal?
So on one hand you're an absolutist:
All of our truths are lies and THE TRUTH is necessarily unknowable
On the other hand you're a relativist:
I demand a recognition of relativity at all levels of existence.
I have no problem with staking a claim in both of these opposing positions, after all, if the basketball is both orange and blue, can't Reality both exist and not exist? No according to your argument. In your posts Truth and Reality are the only things immune to self-contradiction. They are the only things that maintain a static position, while everything else is prone to paradox. No matter what we believe, those capitalized words are always out there.
The problem is that your absolutist argument completely undermines the relativist. Reality holds all the value, while realities are held eternally valueless by denying any relationship between the two. The big R is distant, unchanging, and completely unknowable. The multiplicities of little Rs are squalid, erratic, and knowable. There is no bridge between the two; no chance for interchange between the point-of-views and the big R; there is nothing that one side can contribute to the other.
So you're a relativist only in letter, while turning your back on the spirit the stance: relative view points should be recognized only insofar as we recognize that they are all false.
This idea certainly could have real implications for everyday living. You've corrupted and hollowed out the meaning to everyone's worldview, and now expect it to be the basis for an enlightened, fatalistic moralism. The practical effect of this is that we should stop trying to know things because they are all beyond our feeble scope. We are not only humbled, we are made useless.
You're playing the role of the blackjack dealer who refuses to turn over his card, but assures us that he's won. We can never know that card, but believe him when he says it trumps everything else. Don't worry though, the blackjack dealer also suffers because he is equally in the dark about the card. So are we only playing for the exercise of futile enjoyment?
I argue that to be both relativist and absolutist, you must recognize that the real value is in the relationship between the two positions, not in the positions themselves. Let's assume that a single reality exists and that no version of other realities is necessarily false. Between these two positions is an observable and dialectic relationship. Social politics and social actors actively shape and are shaped by reality.
With this relationship, there is no gap between the outside and the in. On one side, the relationship is made up of steps taken by the actors to understand the world (this is external reality exerting its own agency), on the other side is steps taken by the actors to change the world. It is important to understand that mere description of the world is, as I have mentioned previously, a persuasive effort and thus an act by the actor to change the external world.
This too is neither just intellectual gymnastics nor semantic wordplay. I may be pessimistic, but I believe if more people critically acknowledged the relationship between knowledge and reality, instead of focusing solely on knowledge and relationship themselves, we would live in a more tolerable world.
So yes, scientists will produce knowledge and this knowledge will be right (for members of their society) until another social actor (be it preacher, chimney-sweep, or another scientist) marshalls enough resources to act against and overthrow the old dominion of truth.
But that is not the impasse, and on some level, I know you agree with that. Deep down, your problems are that I fail to acknowledge another source of Truth (although "source" may be the wrong word given its reported distance). My problems with your absolutism is that I, the skeptic, cannot travel upstream of your ideas to see who discovered this capital-R-reality (if it could ever really be discovered given its observation would contradict its distance). For me, your truths are persuasive efforts having too little substance for me to base an agreement upon.
Because I believe in the social construction of reality, the creation of knowledge intrigues me and I am drawn in to attempts at understanding it. At this point, I am unwilling to take that leap of faith that would otherwise relegate these beliefs to a category of mental exercises.
You seem to be arguing that there is a (singular) Truth we should acknowledge (while never knowing anything about it) all the while draining our own worldviews of any value. After all, if everyone's point of view is worthless, aren't we all equal?
Acknowledging that there is an absolute Truth and that knowledge of It, as It is in Itself, is necessarily impossible does not drain our worldviews of value. Indeed, our worldviews are of immense value since they are they only mechanism for knowledge creation that we have, and knowledge is undoubtedly a necessary condition for existence (1). Our points of view are not, therefore, worthless, but we are all equal, and that’s exactly the point. What I aim to do is warn us away from all sorts of intellectual, emotional, psychological, scientific or religious imperialism. ALL viewpoints are equal, period; yours and mine (including, of course, mine as expressed in this essay) and everybody else’s.
So on one hand you're an absolutist:
All of our truths are lies and THE TRUTH is necessarily unknowable
Perhaps I should clarify exactly what I meant when I stated that all our truths are lies. When we take our particular truth to be the Truth, when we represent it this way to others or imagine it to be in our own thoughts, then we lie. When we say “Bush is an asshole”, we lie, because to his mother or his daughter or his wife or brother-in-law he might be a very sweet guy and quite far from being an asshole. This was Korzybski’s problem with the word “is” in general. It is acting as though a particular truth is the Truth, and thus it is a “lie”. Bush is not an asshole, Bush is not a very sweet guy, Bush is Bush. Everything we can say about him is only the truth from a particular angle.
On the other hand you're a relativist:
I demand a recognition of relativity at all levels of existence.
Yes, and the reason for this is not destructive, but creative. I do not mean to sap the meaning from our individual existences, but rather to open ourselves to the validity and meaning of other existences, and thereby to fill our own with more meaning than they presently have. By recognizing relativity on all levels of existence, we allow ourselves to enter into reality tunnels quite different from the ones we are normally used to experiencing, and to see other aspects of Truth (other truths, in other words) which may have been invisible from the vantage of our normal reality tunnel. When we make the mental error of smudging the distinction between our truths and the Truth, we close ourselves off to other vantage points on the Truth. True, we can never know the Truth, but we can put together a more complete picture of it the more points of view we can adopt. But in order to be able to adopt other viewpoints, we must first accept their inherent validity as perspectives, of equal value to the perspective we currently happen to occupy (2).
I have no problem with staking a claim in both of these opposing positions, after all, if the basketball is both orange and blue, can't Reality both exist and not exist? No according to your argument. In your posts Truth and Reality are the only things immune to self-contradiction. They are the only things that maintain a static position, while everything else is prone to paradox. No matter what we believe, those capitalized words are always out there.
Actually, to the question of whether Reality can both exist and not exist, I would say yes. Reality, as I have defined it, is the Metaphysical Infinite. It is unbounded in all ways. It necessarily contains and transcends all dualities, including the duality of existence/non-existence. Reality and Truth are one and the same and They (It), are (is) the only things (thing) that are (is) immune to self-contradiction. It is, as Raleigh so succinctly put it, the what Is before perception shows up. It is the ground, the root source, of all the stimuli that we build into our various models. You speak of socially-constructed realities, which is undoubtedly true, but is there not some actual reality out of which our realities are socially-constructed? If not, it would seem that everything is, in fact, all in our heads. Literally. A kind of Matrix of Infinite Regress, wherein each new reality that we discover turns out to be only another preprogrammed dream, out of which we awaken only to find ourselves in yet another dream, ad infintum. I can’t buy that. I’m an Absolutist, as you put it, because I firmly believe that the world is not all inside our heads, that it does have some “actual” reality, even if we can never know that reality (3). And so the capitalized words must remain, as must their lower case partners.
The problem is that your absolutist argument completely undermines the relativist. Reality holds all the value, while realities are held eternally valueless by denying any relationship between the two. The big R is distant, unchanging, and completely unknowable. The multiplicities of little Rs are squalid, erratic, and knowable. There is no bridge between the two; no chance for interchange between the point-of-views and the big R; there is nothing that one side can contribute to the other.
There is a connection between the two, and a most intimate one at that. The big R is the ground, as earlier stated, and the little Rs are the figure. There can be a ground without a figure, but there can be no figure without a ground. Draw it out, you’ll see what I mean.
Some people say that the universe was created when a giant, fiery, all-seeing eye copulated with itself, in order to gaze upon the one thing it could not see; namely, itself. I have written that human consciousness is essentially the Universe contemplating Itself. The Metaphysical Infinite is also the Field of Possibility: the field of all possibilities, according to Rene Guenon (and I’m inclined to agree), is co-terminus with the Metaphysical Infinite. We, on the other hand, are the manifestations of particular possibilities. Without the Field of Possibility, we never could have existed, and if something didn’t exist, the Field of Possibility would itself become meaningless.
We might say that the whole of Existence, the Universe, is like a big mirror held up before the Big R. Each of us is a particular particle on the surface of the mirror, seeing only that part of the Big R that we are reflecting. The problem begins when we mistake the little section of our own personal reflection for the whole of the reflection. But there is something that each offers to the other.
So you're a relativist only in letter, while turning your back on the spirit the stance: relative view points should be recognized only insofar as we recognize that they are all false.
In a manner of speaking, yes, although it would be just as acceptable to me to say, “insofar as we recognize that they are all true.” It comes to the same thing, really. In the end, all roads lead to Nome.
This idea certainly could have real implications for everyday living. You've corrupted and hollowed out the meaning to everyone's worldview, and now expect it to be the basis for an enlightened, fatalistic moralism. The practical effect of this is that we should stop trying to know things because they are all beyond our feeble scope. We are not only humbled, we are made useless.
No, we are not made useless. In our humbleness we must admit that we can do nothing but act without knowing. We cannot help but act, existence requires it. The question is do we act arrogantly, thinking that we know all (or even something), or do we act humbly, knowing that we know nothing. If the former, we will end up as all hubristic heroes end, humbled and destroyed. But if the latter, we will be so flexible, so open, that we will adapt spontaneously and flawlessly to anything life may throw our way. That last bit, of course, you have to take on faith, as it were, as no logical proof is possible regarding statements that are susceptible only to existential proof (4).
I argue that to be both relativist and absolutist, you must recognize that the real value is in the relationship between the two positions, not in the positions themselves. Let's assume that a single reality exists and that no version of other realities is necessarily false. Between these two positions is an observable and dialectic relationship. Social politics and social actors actively shape and are shaped by reality.
There is value in both the positions and in the relationship, as the one implies the other. Drawing a figure creates a ground, and simultaneously, a relationship with that ground. The cool thing about being Human is that we can “re-draw” our own figures, and thereby our relationship to the ground. Or conversely, we can change the nature of our relationship to the ground and see how our figure is changed. As Krishna puts it in the Bhagavad Gita, “Take either road, that of action or that of contemplation, both lead to me. In the end, the seeker after action and the devotee of contemplation will meet in equal freedom.”
This too is neither just intellectual gymnastics nor semantic wordplay. I may be pessimistic, but I believe if more people critically acknowledged the relationship between knowledge and reality, instead of focusing solely on knowledge and relationship themselves, we would live in a more tolerable world.
I think you mean “knowledge and reality themselves,” and I think you are right. That’s what the essay is all about, the relationship between our knowledge, our realities and Reality. If we could just understand that in one sense we all believe lies and stop fighting over which one is “right” the world would indeed be a much more sane place.
As you may recall, the impetus for the essay was Yum-Yum’s query as to whether or not I “believed” string theory, or perhaps whether I believed it was “true.” She asked a question about knowledge and Reality and I responded with a thesis on relationship. I would think you’d be diggin’ it.
So yes, scientists will produce knowledge and this knowledge will be right (for members of their society) until another social actor (be it preacher, chimney-sweep, or another scientist) marshalls enough resources to act against and overthrow the old dominion of truth.
There is NO SUCH THING as knowledge that is “right (for members of…society)”. It may be right for some members of society, some of the time, it may even be right for most of them most of the time, but that doesn’t mean that it’s Right, or even “right”. Rightness and wrongness are categories that can be applied only individually, not generally, and then only by the individuals themselves (and God maybe). The ability of one to “marshal enough resources to act against and overthrow the old dominion of truth” does not mean that the old truth does not live on in the hearts and minds of some, no matter how few, and it doesn’t mean that the old truth is not useful to them, not “right” for them. In reality, the problem you and I have is not with any particular truth, but with the dominion of one particular truth.
But that is not the impasse, and on some level, I know you agree with that. Deep down, your problems are that I fail to acknowledge another source of Truth (although "source" may be the wrong word given its reported distance). My problems with your absolutism is that I, the skeptic, cannot travel upstream of your ideas to see who discovered this capital-R-reality (if it could ever really be discovered given its observation would contradict its distance). For me, your truths are persuasive efforts having too little substance for me to base an agreement upon.
Deep down, my problem is that you seem to imply that there is no actual underlying basis for our realitites, that it’s all socially-constructed realities constructed out of socially-constructed realities. I don’t buy it. Do you? I must be misunderstanding you somewhere.
Because I believe in the social construction of reality, the creation of knowledge intrigues me and I am drawn in to attempts at understanding it. At this point, I am unwilling to take that leap of faith that would otherwise relegate these beliefs to a category of mental exercises.
One last thought. Say I have some behavioral problems. One person might say that I’m demon-possessed, another that I have unresolved neuroses, another that I obviously have some sort of chemical imbalance. The truth of one or another of these hypotheses depends not on which one currently holds dominion over society, but which one works in solving my problems. You may claim that it is absolutely not demon-possession, and be quite sure of yourself, but exorcisms have been known to work, and if it worked in my case, what would you say? Probably that I only thought it was demon-possession and the exorcism acted as some sort of placebo, or something like that. In short, you would put forth another hypothesis to explain why exorcism might be effective even though everybody knows there’s no such thing as demons.
I would propose that the cause of the behavior problems are almost surely not the result of demons, neuroses, or chemical imbalances, but some other thing we haven’t thought of yet, and probably never will. Demons, neuroses, and chemical imbalances may well simply be three different ways of describing a the same phenomenon, which is itself none of the descriptions. Our truths are maps, and the map is not the territory. But the territory does exist, else, on what would we base our map?
(1) I refer to knowledge here in the broadest possible sense of the word. A single-celled organism has “knowledge” of it’s world, in as much as it “knows” enough to pursue light and food. A single-celled organism, we could say, has it’s own reality tunnel, which is far from being co-terminus with Truth, but it is highly valuable nonetheless, as without it, the organism would surely perish.
(2) However, it is not the case that a perspective including many viewpoints is somehow “more true” than one including fewer, or that it is in anyway privileged. There is a qualitative difference between perspectives than is not reducible to being “more” or “less” true, or “better” or “worse”, which are quantitative distinctions and thus inapplicable to qualitative differences.
I should also add that accepting the validity of another’s viewpoint need not mean that we must accept their viewpoint in the same manner that they do. Indeed, that would be impossible, since in order to do that we would have to become the other person. We can accept that the fundamentalist Christian worldview has value without having to become fundamentalist Christians ourselves.
(3) Once a Zen student ran up to his Master in great excitation and exuberantly proclaimed, “I’ve got it, I’ve got it! That rock there is in my head!” To which the Master replied, “You must have an awfully big head to fit a rock that size.”
(4) See Ken Wilber, The Spectrum of Consciousness.
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