12.29.11

Religionists muddle the question of purpose

Posted in General at 12:36 pm by nemo

Article at Biologos on ‘scientism’, with commentary at
with commentary at
http://whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/guest-post-biologos-on-scientism-part-3/

Whenever a religious writer gets into the discussion, distortion arises. Trying to make the case for extra-scientific forms of knowledge never works. The issue is to get results, and science often fails to get results because the ‘method’ isn’t really ‘science’ as genius level reason/intuition, but mechanical aping of science.
Reductionism is of course a principle issue, but with religious figures this means that some speculative metaphysics should be taken for granted.
The issue of purpose is apt. But it is important to be wary of religionists on teleology. They will always get it mixed up with theism, when the reality is that teleology would be better studied by atheists, or else, like Kant, disciplined theists who do not make mush of separate discourses.

I recomment a study of the eonic effect. Questions of purpose will confuse you, as depicted by theologians who use such things as indirect proofs of the existence of god.

Study the neutral eonic effect to see how a teleological system might work, the question of theology kept to one side.

The latest installment begins with a description of “scientism” taken from Hutchinson’s new book on the subject.

“Scientism says, or at least implicitly assumes, that rational knowledge is scientific, and everything else that claims that status of knowledge is just superstition, irrationality, emotion, or nonsense.” (Monopolizing Knowledge, page 1)

After briefly discussing “Clarity”, essentially meaning a scientific measurement of some unambiguous feature, an aspect that Hutchinson claims is characteristic of the knowledge gained from natural science, he finally provides (at long last – remember this is part three of his series) some examples in which knowledge is supposedly gained through non-scientific means.

“Consider the beauty of a sunset, the justice of a verdict, the compassion of a nurse, the drama of a play, the depth of a poem, the terror of a war, the excitement of a symphony, the significance of a history, the love of a woman.”

Or, perhaps, consider the lily?

Now that we’ve considered them, where exactly is the non-scientific knowledge we were promised and why does “scientism” constitute such a problem?

“Yes, a sunset can be described in terms of the spectral analysis of the light, the causes of the coloration arising from light scattering by particles and molecules, and their arrangement and gradient in the sky. But when all the scientific details of such a description are done, has that explained, or even conveyed, its beauty? Hardly. In fact it has missed the point.”

Hutchinson’s approach to his task is to link “scientism” to the idea of reductionism. He suggests that complex personal experiences—seeing beauty in a sunset, feeling love or appreciating great music or literature—require a type of contextual understanding that is quite separate from that produced from the kind of measurements that result in unambiguous and reproducible scientific knowledge.

“Removal of ambiguity destroys that significance, because ambiguity is at the very heart of their meaning. One cannot appreciate ambiguity unambiguously. Consequently, matters such as these cannot be encompassed scientifically.”

Rather than tackle the obvious question of whether one can appreciate unambiguous ambiguity unambiguously, Hutchinson highlights instead what he views as the inherent reductionism involved in “scientism”.

“A scientistic viewpoint very often adopts reductionism not just as a useful method, but as an inviolable principle.”

Hutchinson suggests that this type of approach cannot lead to an adequate understanding of complex systems.

“It is definitely helpful to analyze animal bodies in terms of their cells, but it is unhelpful, and fundamentally untrue, to conclude that if one completes such an analysis, then animals are demonstrated to be nothing but assemblies of cells.”

But animals ARE nothing but assemblies of cells – albeit very precise assemblies of specific types of cells that exist and function within their appropriate environment. The various genome projects, including that formerly headed by BioLogos founder Francis Collins, are based on the principle that reading the DNA code of an organism can allow us to understand or in some way ‘reconstruct’ them. Scientific investigation points us towards a conclusion that living organisms are the result of an interaction between those organism’s genes and their physical environments, a hugely complex interplay that forms the basis of much of modern biological research. What it doesn’t suggest, however, is the involvement of an additional factor that is distinct from genes and environment.

It is here that Hutchinson finds fault and he finishes this installment with a description of what he sees as a key failing in the scientific method – its inability to deal with Purpose.

Precambrian Microfossils Are Not the Solution to Darwin’s Dilemma

Posted in General at 12:22 pm by nemo

Precambrian Microfossils Are Not the Solution to Darwin’s Dilemma

How the Brain Cell Works

Posted in General at 12:17 pm by nemo

How the Brain Cell Works: A Dive Into Its Inner Network
ScienceDaily (Dec. 21, 2011) — University of Miami (UM) biology professor Akira Chiba is leading a multidisciplinary team to develop the first systematic survey of protein interactions within brain cells. The team is aiming to reconstruct genome-wide in situ protein-protein interaction networks (isPIN) within the neurons of a multicellular organism. Preliminary data were presented at the American Society for Cell Biology annual meeting, December 3 through 7, 2011, in Denver, Colorado.

Fish to animal/tetrapod

Posted in General at 12:15 pm by nemo

Revised due to comment: Fish to animal TO fish to tetrapod

New Theory Emerges for Where Some Fish Became Four-Limbed CreaturesScienceDaily (Dec. 27, 2011) — A small fish crawling on stumpy limbs from a shrinking desert pond is an icon of can-do spirit, emblematic of a leading theory for the evolutionary transition between fish and amphibians. This theorized image of such a drastic adaptation to changing environmental conditions, however, may, itself, be evolving into a new picture.

The Return of Waterboarding?

Posted in General at 12:13 pm by nemo

Published on Thursday, December 29, 2011 by Foreign Policy in Focus
The Return of Waterboarding?

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/29

by Robert Pallitto
During the recent Republican presidential primary debates, three candidates said without hesitation that they would authorize waterboarding as an interrogation technique if elected president. In their recent memoirs, both George W. Bush and Dick Cheney admitted with evident pride that they had approved the technique.
This defense and approval of waterboarding has been voiced despite President Obama’s establishment of a standard for interrogations that would prohibit coercive interrogation techniques altogether. It’s worth asking why we find ourselves in the midst of this debate once again.

An Unbalanced Relationship

Posted in General at 12:03 pm by nemo

The New German Colossus
by WALDEN BELLO
Germany towers over Europe like a colossus. Its economy is the biggest in the European Union, accounting for 20 percent of the EU’s gross domestic product. While most of Europe’s economies are stagnating, Germany’s will have grown by some 2.9 percent in 2011. It boasts the lowest unemployment rate, 5.5 percent, of Europe’s major economies, compared to those of France (9.5 percent), the United Kingdom (8.3 percent), and Italy (8.1 percent).

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/12/28/the-new-german-colossus/

How to think, like neanderthals

Posted in General at 12:00 pm by nemo

NY Times December 27, 2011
If Cave Men Told Jokes, Would Humans Laugh?
By KATHERINE BOUTON

HOW TO THINK LIKE A NEANDERTAL
By Thomas Wynn and Frederick L. Coolidge
210 pages. Oxford University Press. $24.99.

You may think you know someone who thinks like a Neanderthal. You may even think you know someone who is a Neanderthal, or at least part one. Chances are you’re right about both. Webster’s definition of Neanderthal is unflattering: “suggesting a cave man in appearance or behavior.” (The definition of cave man: “One who acts in a rough primitive manner, esp. toward women.”)
Read the rest of this entry »

Equality Must Be the Legacy

Posted in General at 11:57 am by nemo

Rachel Shabi: Equality Must Be the Legacy of the Arab Spring

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/28-2

The Big Lie

Posted in General at 11:56 am by nemo

Michael Thomas: The Big Lie: Wall Street has Destroyed the Wonder That Was America

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/28-7

A Vote for Romney a Vote for War?

Posted in you've got mail at 11:56 am by nemo

Robert Naiman: Is a Vote for Romney a Vote for War?

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/28-4

Occupy Everywhere – But Not at the Mall

Posted in you've got mail at 11:55 am by nemo

Jen Schradie: Occupy Everywhere – But Not at the Mall

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/28-5

How US Foreign Policy Has Lurched Rightward

Posted in General at 11:54 am by nemo

Jeremy Scahill: How US Foreign Policy Has Lurched Rightward

http://www.commondreams.org/vdeo/2011/12/28

If You Can’t Beat Them, Enjoin Them

Posted in General at 11:54 am by nemo

Amy Goodman: If You Can’t Beat Them, Enjoin Them (From Voting)

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/28

Occupy Our Food

Posted in you've got mail at 11:53 am by nemo

Occupy Our Food

http://www.commondreams.org/video/2011/12/28-0

Obama’s Drone War

Posted in you've got mail at 11:52 am by nemo

Kill Lists, Blind Spots Expand As Obama’s Drone War Grows

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/28

Iraq dictators, before and after

Posted in you've got mail at 11:51 am by nemo

Iraq: Did US War Remove One Dictator, Replace with Another?

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/28-6

Squandered Opportunities

Posted in General at 11:50 am by nemo

US, Iran Both Squandered Opportunities for Détente

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/28-9

Russia Scolds United States

Posted in you've got mail at 11:50 am by nemo

Russia Scolds United States for Human Rights Abuse

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/28-8

Iowa Super PACs

Posted in General at 11:48 am by nemo

Iowa Gets Ugly as Super PACs Weigh In

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/28-7

12.28.11

2012 and the Technology Blahs

Posted in General at 12:48 pm by nemo

http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/12/27/2012-and-technology-blahs/

Capture of rare Sumatran rhino gives hope for species

Posted in General at 12:46 pm by nemo

Capture of rare Sumatran rhino gives hope for species

Violence in history

Posted in General at 12:44 pm by nemo

From Reformation to Revolution
Pinker’s idea that violence is decreasing over the long term of history is an open question at this point. It is important to consider the point, but at the same time to keep in mind that we are not at any kind of terminal point from which to judge. The advances of world history are clustered along the lines of the eonic effect, and as we pull away from the early modern regression might occur. In fact, the first World War was a first indication of that regression.

Pinker’s confusion on religion

Posted in General at 12:39 pm by nemo

Has religion made the world less safe? By STEVEN PINKER – THE WASHINGTON POST
Added: Tuesday, 27 December 2011 at 8:47 PM

http://richarddawkins.net/articles/644374-has-religion-made-the-world-less-safe

Pinker is getting unreasonalbe here, and confusing the issue. The Axial Age religions emerged in a very violent world, and their action assisted in creating the modern context, where it seems like violence has declined. I am not sure about Pinker’s thesis, but his take on religion here is unfair, and misguided.

Repost: Barzun before the Synthesis

Posted in General at 12:36 pm by nemo

Darwin, Marx, Wagner by Jacques Barzun, already cited today, is a long lost classic that should be reprinted, but which is now available in Kindle e-book form. Barzun naively produced a critque of Darwinism in the 1940′s in the same spirit as a critique of Marx, and Wagner. There was nothing untoward in that in that period, just before the crystallization of the Neo-Darwinian Synthesis, which was accompanied by the rising tide of dogamatism and intolerance in academia to Darwin dissenters. And Barzun’s book shows how a non-specialist can critique Darwinism better than specialized experts.
We need a real history of this developing Synthesis, and the way in which it began to become a sheme of near mind-control

How Cash Has Corrupted Congress

Posted in General at 12:30 pm by nemo

Occupy Wall Street: How Cash Has Corrupted Congress Dec 28, 2011 4:45 AM EST An Occupy Wall Street press team member explains why members of Congress keep getting richer while the rest of the country has flatlined.

Asian tiger prawn has scientists worried

Posted in General at 12:26 pm by nemo

Giant shrimp raises big concern as it invades the Gulf
Asian tiger prawn has scientists worried

Mystery Behind Anesthesia

Posted in General at 12:25 pm by nemo

The Mystery Behind Anesthesia
Mapping how our neural circuits change under the influence of anesthesia could shed light on one of neuroscience’s most perplexing riddles: consciousness.

Worms Can Pass a Trait Down for 100 Generations…Without Using DNA

Posted in General at 12:23 pm by nemo

Worms Can Pass a Trait Down for 100 Generations…Without Using DNA

North America’s biggest dinosaur

Posted in General at 12:21 pm by nemo

New study reveals North America’s biggest dinosaur

Unknown Sixth Toe Discovered in Elephants

Posted in General at 12:15 pm by nemo

By ELIZABETH PENNISI – SCIENCENOW
Added: Wednesday, 28 December 2011 at 2:38 AM

http://richarddawkins.net/articles/644377-unknown-sixth-toe-discovered-in-elephants

Buried beneath the leathery skin of an elephant’s foot lies one of anatomy’s unappreciated mysteries. Three hundred years ago, a surgeon claimed elephants had six toes instead of the usual five, setting off a debate about whether an extra digit was really possible. Modern anatomists scoffed at the idea, insisting instead that the extra toe was really just a big lump of cartilage. Now a study of scores of elephant feet shows that the lump really does turn into bone. The digit is not a true toe — it’s more like a panda’s faux thumb. But it nonetheless helps support the pachyderm’s mighty girth.

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