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The Galileo Conspiracy: 5 Questions Your Science
Professors Hope You Never Ask
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by:
Carson Christian Day
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As a young lad, I took on my first scientific
experiment simply because I could. Like most curious youngsters who own
walky-talkies, I could only resist for so long the urge to bury one of
them (well behind enemy lines) in the bread aisle at the local grocery
store, to see what startled shoppers might make of extroverted wheat.
This, my first foray into the field of agorology -- the very scientific
study of shopping, shoppers and shoppingcarts -- told me just what I
needed to know.
Would they simply scurry off, fearing all that is both sourdough and
articulate, or might they try to hunt down the source of the taunting
loaves? The jovial, phoney French accent that greeted each customer in
the aisle proved harder to maintain -- while trying hard not to laugh
-- than I had anticipated. In the end, fear of the manager
(bigcheesophobia) cut short the data-gathering event, but not before we
-- Tony (my assistant) and I -- had learned far too much. We now knew
the inside truth about science, kept hidden for many ages: it's a real
kick in the pants.
Much time passed, and the California State University (at Hayward)
received, and then quite foolishly approved, my application for
admission. There I learned that the representatives of "science" bore
the right to decide all matters of cultural importance; that scientists
could provide the answers we need; and that science is
"self-correcting," and so marches forward with unrelenting progress.
Just look at the microwave ovens, and the GPS gadgets in our cars.
Science carries the badge of authority in all matters of knowledge. Or
so the story goes.
But then it happened. I took my first history of science class, and
began studying the items that interested me, even if they weren't on
the menu. Then came the individual study course in the philosophy of
science. By then I had meandered into areas of study best dubbed
"plainly unauthorized." Here, I had realized that the science textbook
authors (and most of my science professors) had completely -- I believe
the scientific term is -- "discombobulated" almost everything they had
taught me in my science classes.
Oh, they managed the empirical details in the books well enough. Like
motorcycle riders who smile too often, the experts had strained out the
empirical gnats with an aggressive and precise toothpick. But
conceptual camel-swallowing became the order of the day. In other
words, their story of what science actually is, how scientists employ
its methods, and what science can actually accomplish -- the whole
story surrounding the details -- proved phonier than a well-modulated,
French accent in a grocery store.
To help illustrate these well-educated fibs, which I have boiled down
to five for the sake of brevity, I have put this section in the shape
of a question and answer format. Here sit before the readers eyes THE
five questions your science professors hope you never ask.
Question 1. Professor, isn't it true, that when you call a model or
theory "true" merely because it makes accurate predictions that you in
fact commit the fallacy called "affirming the consequent?"
Answer: You'd better believe it, Bucko. And nearly all scientists do
this on a regular basis. Coincidentally enough, so do the textbooks
these guys write. "If a mother, then also a woman" seems obvious
enough. In logic, this takes the form, "If P, then Q." But reasoning in
the reverse direction leads to trouble. "If a woman, then a mother [Q,
therefore P]" doesn't ring true at all. Many women do not practice
motherhood. Likewise, "If my theory is true, we should find 'Q' to be
the case [If P, then Q] does not in any way validate the reverse, "We
did find 'Q' to be the case, therefore my model is true [Q, therefore
P]."
This is like the man who argues that "If it is bread, it does not talk.
It does not in fact talk, therefore it must be bread." Imagine that:
science professors make a career of reasoning that poorly, and your
sandwich never said a word.
Question #2. Professor, isn't it true that many highly successful
theories in the past gained the allegiance of entire scientific
communities, only to suffer rejection later as so much molarky by the
same group?
Answer: Yes. In fact Dr. Larry Laudan, former chair of the history and
philosophy of science department at the University of Pittsburgh, wrote
a book (Science and Values) where he catalogued over 30 such theories.
He indicated that he could have lengthened his list extensively (and
others have done this). These truth-status flip-floppers trounce about
like a salmon on deck, where "true yesterday" becomes "false today."
Here, truth comes with an expiration date like raspberry yogurt. And
who knows, these theories may yet make a comeback -- only to get smoked
again (as salmon are want to do).
This tells us that theoretical science shows itself fickle when it
comes to truth-telling. In court, they call this "perjury," but let us
avoid the unpleasantries of name-calling. One commentator on this
problem recently put it quite sublimely in these words: "If the history
of science were a single person, it would present to the world just
that sort of person we should least want to see driving heavy machinery
or carrying sharp objects."
Question #3. Professor, isn't it true that theories considered false
today by the scientific majority, as well as in the past, have often
turned out to be very useful? And doesn't this show that no established
relationship between true theories and useful theories exists?
Answer: Yes, and yes. And this shows from the empirical facts of
history that any theory might be highly useful, and yet utterly false,
so that it's utility offers no real guide to whether or not it's true.
And you guessed it: Dr. Laudan has a long list of these
successful-but-false theories too. And he isn't the only one.
Question #4. Isn't it true professor that scientists often resolve the
contest between rival theories by choosing the one as "more probably
true" which appears either simpler or more elegant than the others, and
doesn't this tell against the alleged "objectivity" of what is supposed
to be a truth-seeking enterprise, reducing it to the status of a Miss
America beauty pageant?
Answer: Yes, but don't tell my wife or she won't let me go to work
either.
Question #5. Professor, isn't it true that various scientists working
in different fields put to use a wide array of different methods,
depending on factors like which field of study they work in, the nature
of the claim under question at the moment, and the like? And doesn't
this rather abolish the popular myth that anything like "THE"
scientific method has ever actually existed?
Answer: Of course. Philosopher of science, Paul Feyerabend at UC
Berkeley wrote a book in the late 90's entitled "On Method," which
proves just that point. Brain-scanning Neurologists do not do anything
like what mechanics do when the latter search to find out how much
pollution your car puts out. They use different instruments, and
entirely different methods. Some methods involve developing
computational models to run different stress-condition scenarios
(structural engineers do this), while others amount to sticking a fancy
wand up your car's tail pipe.
Conclusion: The heroic model of science -- with scientists in the
driver's seat as the keepers of true knowledge -- amounts to a
political ploy designed to exalt those with white labcoats as the final
arbiters of truth about what kind of what this "really" is. But the
kind of reasons scientists (and their textbooks) must invoke to prop up
this flimsy mythology make no headway against the empirical facts known
to students of the history and philosophy of the sciences. Moreover, if
stripped of their technical jargon, and rendered in the common tongue,
such half-baked reasons would not earn scientists a passing mark in a
second-semester logic course at any decent college.
The way I see it, if you are going to try to fool people, you might as
well go all the way, and head for the aisle with the heckling rye.
About the author:
Carson Day has written approximately 1.3 gazillion articles and essays,
many with very insightful, if alternative, viewpoints. He presently
writes for Ophir Gold Corporation, and specialized in the history of
ideas in college. He has been quoted in the past as saying "What box?"
and remains at large despite the best efforts of the civil authorities.
You can visit the Ophir Gold Corporation blogsites at http://scriberight.blogspot.com(Writing
With Power), http://ophirgoldcorp.blogspot.com(OGC's
Free Web Traffic), or http://ophirgold.blogspot.com(Church
and State 101)
Circulated by Article Emporium
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