429 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
429 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
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The New World Reader
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An Electronic Magazine of Future, Fiction, and the Human Condition
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April 1995
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Vol. 1 * No. 5
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Contents-
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From the Editor: The Critique of Science
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Communications:
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Feature Article: The Deification of Humanity
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Short Fiction:
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Diagnostic Commentary: 1995 Walker Percy Symposium
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Scientific Currents:
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Books: Science as Salvation by Mary Midgley
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___________
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From the Editor: The Critique of Science
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Paul R. Gross, University Professor of Life Sciences and Director of the Center for
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Advanced Studies at the University of Virginia, pointed out the two main problems
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that face science in his article in the February 1995 APS News entitled "Scientists
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Can't Afford To Ignore the Writing on the Wall." The two main problems as
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perceived by the public are "(a) communications by 'science' with the public, that
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which, they remind us, pays for it all, and to which we fail to explain what we do
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and why; and (b) honesty."
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Who is the public? Certainly not your average TV watcher. The public which Gross
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is talking about are the makers and shapers of public opinion: the politicians, the
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columnists, the social "scientists," the lawyers, and the comedians.
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Gross' solution for dealing with this critique is to recruit a qualified force of
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individual who can answer the criticism. He describes the people who should do
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the talking: "They should include, at least, getting a decent number of scientists--
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notable, *working* scientists--to stop what they're doing and become synthesizers,
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writers, arguers with lawyers and politicians, competents in discourse of policy, the
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humanities, and the social sciences, *as well as* in science."
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The important idea here is not writing and arguing but synthesis. Science needs
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people capable of bringing ideas together. As John Locke so astutely pointed out,
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real genius is not seeing that this or that is true, but seeing the connection between
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the two. If science does not make room for those with the talent for synthesis, then
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the critique will go unanswered and the future could be dim for science. Gross's
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warning should be heard and considered seriously. Science has enjoyed a privileged
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position for a long time now. Perhaps a synthesis of important ideas in science and
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the humanities will deliver science from this critique by finding a more realistic
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position for science to occupy. Perhaps it is the wild hubris of science, the pretence
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to authority, which endangers it most. When science sets itself up as the savior of
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mankind, it is setting itself up for a dangerous fall. This is the topic of consideration
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for this issue, below Jack Lang has a discussion of "The Deification of Humanity"
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which takes on this problem science setting itself up to answer all of humanities
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great questions.
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I have a few announcements to make concerning NWR. Those of you who have
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been reading this humble electronic journal since last November have seen it go
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through some changes. At our editorial meetings, we have joked that our mission
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seems to be changing with each issue. The mission certainly has changed
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completely from NWR's original conception back in 1992. Last month, when we
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joined together with The Diagnostic Society we changed our subtitle to "An
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Electronic Magazine of Future, Fiction, and the Human Condition." Even though
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we tend to discuss science a great deal and aim much of the content of NWR to the
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scientific community, we mean for this to be a publication devoted to stimulating
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discussion about humanity. Science is one aspect of humanity; it is an activity
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humans engage in. As I was talking with Thomas Newland, he pointed out that
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Walker Percy once asked the question: "Who is watching the scientists?" Isn't it
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amazing that we humans do science? Why is that? I have never seen a
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chimpanzee studying the universe! Perhaps NWR as it struggles for identity can
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find it in looking at this phenomenon of humanity and trying to understand what
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we humans are up to. This leaves our mission wide open and provides room for a
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great deal of interpretation. So if you have some thoughts on the subject of humans
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and their activities, please share them with us.
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The next announcement is of a practical nature. Our publisher, Donavan Hall, who
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is our ticket onto the Internet, is working on setting up a World Wide Web
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connection for NWR, so soon you will be able to access NWR in a hypertextual
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format. The first couple of issues have been prepared and are available at
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http://goodrich.phys.lsu.edu/NWR/nwr_index.html. This WWW server is "part
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time" in the sense that it is not always running due to the fact that when it is being
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used as a data taking device the HTTP software is disabled. So if you try to make a
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connection and fail, just try again later. Also, if you would like to receive a
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hypertextual version of NWR via e-mail, let us know. The hypertext versions will
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be tested on Mosaic 2.0.0 Beta 3. We know that Web browsers such as MacWeb 1.0
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will not be able to read the files properly as it doesn't support the latest version of
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HTML.
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We hope you enjoy this month's NWR and we would love to hear from you.
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Trevor Austin, Editor of NWR
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__________
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Communications
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\\\Send your comments to NWR at NEWORLDR@aol.com.///
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__________
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The Deification of Humanity
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By JACK LANG
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Science, the God-Maker
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"How science has made a god of humanity" could be another title of this
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short essay. The idea that man has sought to become like God or to posses the
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power of a god is not new--history is replete with world-historic figures who have
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stepped forward to claim ultimate power for themselves. A seemingly benign
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manifestation of the wish to be a god is egocentrism. Take this to the extreme and
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you have solipsism. If you were the only conscious being in the universe, then
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wouldn't you be God? How do we know of the consciousness of others? The Self
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has a view on the universe which no one else can share. It sees itself at the very
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center of all things. Everything that happens, happens in full view of the Self.
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Events that take place outside of its sensing are somehow secondary to the primary
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reality which it directly knows. The Self begins to view itself as omnipotent and
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omniscient. This view is vanity to all but the insane; we always have a sneaking
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suspicion that others are just like we are.
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Gaining control over a few nations or the bias that we are the center of
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existence is not wholly satisfying. Man has developed a method by which true
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deification of the Self can be accomplished; this method is science.
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The shift in the role of science from the discovery of nature to the control of
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nature began about three hundred years ago. The methods of science were honed,
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and it was realized that the cosmos was an orderly place. Science possessed the
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necessary power to predict events, and with prediction came control. With control
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over nature man placed himself in the same position as God--as the arbiter of
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natural events. Francis Bacon stated that knowledge is power; to know nature is to
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control nature, to use it to one's own benefit. This worldview developed in the
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context of Cartesian idealism. Descartes's statement "I think; therefore, I am" made
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it possible for man to eliminate God from the picture entirely and to step into His
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place. Descartes began his philosophy with the principle that he would doubt
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everything until he found that which he could not doubt; upon that indubitable
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proposition he would base his worldview. He decided that the most sure thing was
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that the fact that his thinking and reasoning proved his existing. This was the anti-
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Copernican revolution. The center of being was relocated from "out there" to inside
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our minds. The relocation set the stage for the deification of humanity. To explore
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how science accomplishes this deification, let us first consider what deification
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means.
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Five characteristics are commonly attributed to God: (1) immortality, (2) that
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God is the creator of all things, (3) omniscience, (4) omnipresence, and (5)
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omnipotence. Science promises all these to humanity. The guarantee of science is
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that it will by its power deliver these gifts to man just as Prometheus delivered the
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gift of fire.
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We should bear in mind the problem of being a deity is that we must then
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find meaning within ourselves; meaning for the god is identical to its being. We are
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faced then with a difficult task: the creation of meaning.
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The Pretence to Authority
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Science is the most aggressive of the academic disciplines in its claim to
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intellectual authority. The practitioners of science have worked hard to secure a
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position of irrefutability in the world of knowledge. Scientists appeal to the
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objectivity of observation. How can one argue about the way things are? The laws
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of nature are points of fact that can be discovered and understood but cannot be
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argued with. Thus the scientist when she is certain that she is absolutely right will
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proclaim to the world her discovery and defy anyone to say that she is wrong. This
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scientific authority is achieved through impartiality. The scientist pretends not to
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have any personal emotional attachment to any preconceived notion of how the
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universe should work. In their book, The Anthropic Cosmological Principle, John
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Barrow and Frank Tipler write, "Whereas many philosophers and theologians
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appear to possess an emotional attachment to their theories and ideas which
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requires them to believe them, scientists regard their ideas differently." Mary
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Midgley, in her Science as Salvation, asks in response to Barrow and Tipler, "Do
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they then mean that scientists have no duty to take seriously the things they put
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into print?" Barrow and Tipler cite "emotional attachment" to theories as a
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weakness. Tipler takes detachment to its extreme when he says of his Omega Point
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theory (which we will discuss later) that he is just presenting facts; he would be just
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as happy as his detractors to find a legitimate experiment which would contradict
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his conclusions. Tipler makes this claim with impunity knowing full well that
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many generations will pass away before we are technologically advanced enough to
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test his theory. Until we know otherwise, who can argue with the facts?
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For at least the last five hundred years science and religion have been at odds.
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The point of contention is the claim to certain knowledge and ultimate authority.
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Given the vastly different subject matter of theology and science, it is not readily
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detectable what the source of competition would be. If religion and science are
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viewed properly with respect to their aims, this competition is meaningless. But
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religion and science are both guilty of making attempts to invade each other's
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intellectual territory. One of the territorial lines that seems to be in dispute is the
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question of human mortality. Both theology and science aim to deliver mankind
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from death--they each promise immortality.
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Immortality
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Religion, unlike science, claims immortality for the individual. The spirit
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lives on after the body passes away. Science, not being able to comment on the
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spiritual self as it evades scientific observation, denies the existence of the spirit and
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ascribes immortality to the human race as a whole. The object of science then is to
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equip man with the tools necessary for his collective perpetuation. If science cannot
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discover a way to extend immortality to biological humans, it will content itself
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with the development of mechanized humans, computers and machines will be the
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logical evolutionary descendants of the human race.
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In the title of his recent Scientific American article, Marvin Minsky asks,
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"Will Robots Inherit the Earth?" His answer is supplied in the teaser, "Yes, as we
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engineer bodies and brains using nanotechnology. We will then live longer, possess
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greater wisdom and enjoy capabilities as yet unimagined." Who is the "we" of
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which Minsky is speaking? He certainly is not talking about humanity since he goes
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on to say that "Once delivered from the limitations of biology, we will decide the
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length of our lives--with the option of immortality--and choose among other,
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unimagined capabilities as well." The limitations of biology? Humanity is
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biological. To eliminate biology is to dispense with life.
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Tipler has worked out an elaborate theory as to how through science
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humanity or even individuals will be able to enjoy immortality when the Omega
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Point arrives. What is this Omega Point that keeps cropping up? The actual term
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Omega Point was introduced by Teilhard de Chardin to indicate the end of time.
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Such terms are useful in teleology. Tipler has adopted the term as the title of his
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own theory about the end of time. He argues that we must consider the universe as
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a whole whenever we make our scientific (and philosophical) inquiries into its
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nature. That the universe is a spacetime object requires us not only to consider all
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of space as the whole but all of time as well. This is where Tipler starts to get
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creative. He speculates that human beings or their mechanized offspring will
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spread throughout the entire universe and inhabit every possible nook and cranny
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of all that is. Humanity will be able to stretch out its hand and grasp "the whole" of
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existence. Depending on which version of the end of the universe you like, one can
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then imagine that such a life form which has made it presence known everywhere
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would be likely to make some attempt to avert the natural demise of the cosmos.
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Since human life will be everywhere it is reasonable to think that it would have
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some role to play on the cosmic scale. Tipler imagines that our descendants (billions
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of generations distant) will be able to come up with a way of perpetuating the
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universe. This, as Tipler attempts to demonstrate, will lead them to "resurrect"
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everyone who has ever lived to inhabit this eternal place which we have made for
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ourselves. We will eventually give immortality to ourselves. We are not God right
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now, but someday we will be. This is Tipler's Omega Point theory and, of course, he
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has equations to prove it.
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Man as Creator
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The anthropic principle in its strongest form places primacy on the necessity
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of conscious observers in the universe. Some proponents of this principle go so far
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as to say our observing of the universe today plays a profound role in forming the
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universe.
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According to John Wheeler, the physicist who coined the term "black hole,"
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"Beginning with the big bang, the universe expands and cools. After eons of
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dynamic development it gives rise to oberservership. Acts of observer-participancy -
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- via the mechanism of the delayed choice experiment -- in turn give tangible
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'reality' to the universe not only now but back to the beginning." Thus the
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observations of a few physicists have given shape and form to the universe. We
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have created ourselves in an act similar to Baron von Munchausen lifting himself
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into the air by his bootstraps.
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This defiance of natural causality can only be achieved when science
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abandons ontological interpretations of her theories in favor of epistemological
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interpretations. The most recent shift to epistemological interpretations in science
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came this century when scientist began grappling with the ideas of quantum
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mechanics. The work of Niels Bohr and others established the reigning
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interpretation of quantum mechanics, the Copenhagen Interpretation (CI) as it is
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called. The CI is riddled with all sort of problems and inconsistencies with our
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experience. This is not because quantum mechanics is weird, but because quantum
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mechanics has been interpreted in such a way as to make it appear weird.
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Now let's take a look at how science delivers the remaining characteristics of
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God to man.
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The Four O's: Omnipotence, Omnipresence, Omniscience, and the Omega Point
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Neo-man will be mechanized. This is the consistent message that scientists
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(who engage in this sort of speculation) give us. Von Neuman probes will go forth
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and populate galaxies and star systems on our behalf. The penultimate point in the
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development of neo-man is called by Barrow and Tipler, the Omega Point. Life,
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human life, they explain "will have stored an infinite amount of information,
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including all bits of information which it is logically possible to know... A modern-
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day theologian might wish to say that the totality of life at the Omega Point is
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omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient." Is this real science or have Barrow and
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Tipler watched too many reruns of Star Trek? In the course of researching this
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essay, I ran across Mary Midgley's book, _Science_as_Salvation_ (reviewed below),
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which puts this sort of thinking in perspective. One doesn't have to agree with
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every one of Midgley's complaints to see the point of her argument--scientists who
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go this far into futuristic speculation are getting into dangerous areas and arriving at
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bizarre conclusions, all cloaked in an undeserved air of authority. It is this pretense
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to scientific authority which makes this sort of speculation so sickening. If, as
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Midgley points out, Barrow and Tipler were writing science fiction there may be
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some excuse for their claims, but it is clear that they don't view their work to be
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taken simply as entertainment. So what do we do with them? Are they really doing
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any harm? Does the public actually pay attention to these futurists? These are
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difficult questions and hard to assess quantitatively, but if Internet newsgroups are
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any indication of whether these ideas are making it out into the "public," then we
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can conclude these futurist ideas have a great deal of appeal. This sampling might
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be skewed since those on the Internet seem to be by in large sympathetic to
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technological speculation. A need for responsible scientists to come forward and
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offer intelligent counter arguments to those of the futurists certainly exists.
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Information versus Real Things
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This Omega Point is the natural conclusion of thinking that the universe is
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Information and our sole functions as humans is to be possessors of Information.
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Minsky in his article talks about Wisdom, but when he refers to mental powers he
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discusses the human capacity for memorization. Midgley says that information
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gathering is not an end in itself, it is to be used for something. Gaining an education
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does not aim at simple information consumption; an education is learning how to
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think for ourselves. This was one of the goals of the Enlightenment, to be self-
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sufficient thinkers. The modern descendants of the Enlightenment have gotten the
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message garbled and profess that the fulfillment of life is full conversion into
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information acquisitors. Science teaches the collection of data is the goal and in turn
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teaches students to simply acquire the data without trying to understand it. The
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problem with understanding is that it is subjective. Not everyone understands in
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the same way. No one can understand something for you. Inasmuch as science
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seeks to be objective, then understanding is outside of science. What is to be
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understood about a collection of facts? To be human is to respond and ask the
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question: How do I live my life in light of these facts?
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Re-entry into the Real World: The Advantages of an Ontological Interpretation
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We have taken an excursion into the realm of epistemological thinking and
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seen the sort of problems that arise when the observer is placed in the position of
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being the judge of all that is. All these problems are cured with a proper ontological
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interpretation of physical reality. In an ontological interpretation man takes his
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proper place in the order of things--not outside of the order to breathe being into it
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by knowing.
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Humanity cannot be made into a god, nor can individuals be deified without
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adopting a faulty metaphysics. When man finds himself back in the order of things,
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then he can begin again to search for meaning with a new hope that he will find it
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in the reality that exists outside and apart from his own existing.
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__________
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Short Fiction
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\\\Send your fiction to NWR at NEWORLDR@aol.com.///
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__________
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Diagnostic Commentary: 1995 Walker Percy Symposium
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by Thomas Newland
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In the small town of Covington, LA home of one of America's greatest novelists
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and semioticians, a group of about a hundred friends and admirers gathered in the
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rustic Masonic Hall to honor the memory of Walker Percy and celebrate his "knack"
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for writing. This year's symposium is the fourth annual gathering of Percy fans and
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scholars. The event began two years after the author's death and is organized by the
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Public Library of St. Tammany Parish.
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This year's symposium featured Dr. Edward Dupuy, a recent graduate of LSU and
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Director of Communications at St. Joseph Abbey, who spoke on "The Enduring
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Percy Legacy." Other presentations were made by Brady Fitzsimmons, a poet and
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Judge; Suzanne Parson did an interpretive reading of a selection from _The
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Moviegoer_; Fr. Patrick Samway, Percy's official biographer, spoke on a period
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during Percy's medical training during which Percy received psychiatric counseling.
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Fr. Samway's presentation will form part of the upcoming biography of Percy which
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should soon be published. The most exciting presentation of the day was given by
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Henry P. Mills, a Percy scholar currently working on a book entitled
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_Worldviews_in_Revolution_, who has established in cooperation with the
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University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill a World Wide Web site which is
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devoted to providing information about Walker Percy to the Internet community.
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Mills has many plans for the Walker Percy Internet Project which you can read
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about on the WWW at http://sunsite.unc.edu/wpercy/.
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As I talked with Patrick Samway during the reception which followed the
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symposium our conversation strayed to a topic that might be of general interest: that
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of observership in novels. Invoking the popular metaphor from quantum theory
|
||
|
that we live in a participatory universe, Samway described a reader's approach to
|
||
|
and experience of a novel as being shaped by the existential situation he finds
|
||
|
himself in while reading. He went on to say that critics never take this into account
|
||
|
when they review a book. Each reading of the book is a different experience.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If I may be allowed to use Samway's comments as a springboard to launch us into a
|
||
|
specific direction, let's ask the questions, "What is a novel and how is it like a
|
||
|
quantum object?" A novel before it is read is a potentiality, a space/time event
|
||
|
waiting to happen and residing in some indeterminate state. The reader must pick
|
||
|
up the book and read it, measure it. In this act the reader determines content of the
|
||
|
novel by fusing the collage of images contained therein with his own gestalt. The
|
||
|
reader's experience of the action can differ greatly from those of the author. What
|
||
|
the reader gets out of the novel is dependent on his interpretation which is
|
||
|
ultimately based on his own experiences. As the reader's experiences change,
|
||
|
successive readings of the novel may produce different impressions; in physical
|
||
|
terms a series of measurements could produce a distribution of results.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Viewing a novel as a participatory event can also give us some insight into how to
|
||
|
view the universe properly. Even though our experience of the universe is largely
|
||
|
participatory in that our experiences shape our present and in some complex way
|
||
|
form our future, we cannot conclude from this that our act of participation is the
|
||
|
creative act which brings the universe into being. The universe still stands outside
|
||
|
of us as an objective reality like the events contained in a novel. We do not create
|
||
|
the universe anymore than the reader writes the book in his act of reading.
|
||
|
|
||
|
__________
|
||
|
|
||
|
Scientific Currents
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
__________
|
||
|
|
||
|
Books
|
||
|
|
||
|
Science as Salvation: a Modern Myth and its Meaning
|
||
|
by Mary Midgley
|
||
|
Routledge, 1992
|
||
|
ISBN 0-415-06271-3
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is becoming somewhat fashionable for scientists to write books about the future.
|
||
|
The popularity of the anthropic cosmological principle has given license to science
|
||
|
to engage in something that heretofore has been looked down upon--wild,
|
||
|
unfounded speculation. Mary Midgley, a moral philosopher, takes on this cottage
|
||
|
industry of scientific fortune tellers and their army of crystal balls and exposes the
|
||
|
fallacies in the Omega Point theories of John Barrow and Frank Tipler, the
|
||
|
inconsistencies in Freeman Dyson's futuristic mythology, and the misdirections of
|
||
|
many other attempts in the history of science to invade the intellectual territory of
|
||
|
religion to provide humanity with meaning for its existence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some parts of the book seem to stray into some of the author's pet areas, such as a
|
||
|
seemingly feminist attack on the male violence of science. Even though one might
|
||
|
get a strange feeling that Midgley is trying to tear down the venerable edifice of
|
||
|
science in these passages, that's not really what she is doing. She has a deep respect
|
||
|
for science--science done properly and directed to some useful end. She makes a
|
||
|
plea to science to put is house back in order and concentrate on real problems like
|
||
|
preserving our ecosystem rather than fantasizing about the end of the universe and
|
||
|
how we humans are going to colonize the galaxy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Midgely has an important point to make with respect to the Bernal's, the Haldane's,
|
||
|
and the Tipler's of science, but how much of a problem is this that she has
|
||
|
identified? The future fantasists are an extreme minority in science and for the
|
||
|
most part of looked down upon by their contemporaries. Most of these scientists
|
||
|
have been encouraged by the apparent blessing of Enrico Fermi and Paul Dirac.
|
||
|
These early father's of physics were justified in speculating about life in the universe
|
||
|
and the future of the cosmos, but their off-spring have gone too far. Despite the fact
|
||
|
that Tipler and Dyson are clearly a minority in science, they are certainly more in
|
||
|
the public eye then your run of the mill scientist who is working on trying to save
|
||
|
the ecosystem from destruction. The fantastic ideas which sell books and capture
|
||
|
the imaginations of nerdy teenagers must be dealt with and put in their proper
|
||
|
place. These scientists may mean well, but their ideas stand in the way of people
|
||
|
discovering true meaning in their lives. Midgely desperately wants science to stop
|
||
|
the insanity and return to productive thinking and problem solving. Leave the
|
||
|
moralizing to the philosophers and theologians.
|
||
|
__________
|
||
|
|
||
|
NEXT ISSUE:
|
||
|
|
||
|
NWR Information
|
||
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|
||
|
Subscriptions to NWR are free via e-mail. Send a note to SubNWR@AOL.COM
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|
requesting to be put on the mailing list. Also current and back issues of NWR are
|
||
|
available via FTP at FTP.ETEXT.ORG in the directory
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||
|
/pub/Zines/NewWorldReader.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Contributions should be sent electronically to NEWORLDR@AOL.COM. Essays
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||
|
should be 1000 words or less; book reviews and letters 500. Short stories up to 5000
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|
words in length will be considered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Donavan Hall, Publisher
|
||
|
Danford A. Hall, Senior Editor
|
||
|
Trevor Austin, Editor
|
||
|
Jack Lang, Managing Editor
|
||
|
Adam Fisher, Religion Editor
|
||
|
Red Drake, Subscription Coordinator
|
||
|
Denise Hall, Editorial Assistant
|
||
|
|
||
|
copyright, 1995 FMI Publishing
|