Philosophy
Ross, Kuhn, and Sokal
A couple very nice discussions going over at Adventures in Ethics and Science about Marcus Ross, the young earth creationist who has written what his advisor termed an impeccable doctoral dissertation about the population dynamics of a marine reptile that went extinct about 65 million years ago even though he thinks the Earth is only 10,000 years old. Here is someone who wrote a dissertation by learning to play the game well without actually believing in the soundness of the game he was playing. Indeed, it is perfectly clear that he learned to play the game in order to gain the credential so that he could then be cited as an expert who opposes the very science he is now accredited as an expert in. Dr.
Freeride has very nice discussions about whether it is intellectually dishonest to do science you don't believe in and whether good science requires belief.
My thoughts are in a somewhat different direction. It is very interesting that he uses the language of Thomas Kuhn saying that paleontology is one paradigm for understanding the past and that scripture is another paradigm. For Kuhn, a paradigm is the basic intellectual structure that sits under the possibility of doing science. the paradigm defines the meanings of the scientific terms, contains the basic necessary presuppositions about the ways the world is ordered, determines what are acceptable questions to ask, what are the acceptable means of answering questions, and what counts as a legitimate answer. The paradigm is the lens through which the world is scientifically constructed. In order to have a meaningful picture of the world, you need to start from some paradigm and all discussion of the world can only occur in the vocabulary of a given paradigm. As such, cross-paradigmatic conversation is impossible since the concepts and terms are paradigm specific. Since we can't talk across paradigms, we also can't compare -- there's no extra-paradigmatic standpoint, Kuhn argues, and so no way to comparison shop. When a scientists gives up on one paradigm and moves to another, Kuhn argues, the basis cannot be rational since reason only exists within
paradigms and therefore is akin to a religious conversion. By taking science to be one
Kuhnian paradigm and scripture to be another, Ross is putting science and religion on an even par AS RELIGIONS.
This move is firmly entrenched in the new creationist strategy of portraying science and religion as coequal explanations of origins, but is clearly disingenuous in that Ross is in fact advocating, or at least allowing himself to be used by those advocating, for one over the other. The two are not really being set out as incomparable and Ross is contending that there can be good reason to prefer one over the other.
The move strikes me as more reminiscent of the
Sokal affair. In 1996, Alan
Sokal, a physicist who thought that contemporary trends in the humanities were intellectually vacuous, published a piece in the journal
Social Text (a leading journal of the sort that
Sokal disliked) that purported to be a post-modern critique of science from the inside. The article, however, was designed to be complete nonsense with a left-leaning political bias. The idea being that if the editors of one of the most prestigious journals of post-modernism couldn't tell legitimate deconstructive analysis from made up, meaningless drivel, then there really
is no difference and all of it is garbage.
Sokal, like Ross, studied enough to come across as playing the game in hopes of playing well enough to be able to be held as a legitimate player so that in the end the game itself could be discredited. In both cases, we have someone trying to play the intellectual equivalent of an undercover cop. In mathematics and logic, we employ a strategy we call
reductio ad
absurdum, to show something is false, we assume it is true and derive a contradiction. Isn't this just what
Sokal and even more so Ross are doing? How can it be intellectually dishonest if we do something similar? Is it just that we are open about it from the start?
The obvious difference here is that while
Sokal's piece IS nonsense, Ross' work isn't.
Sokal merely intended his piece to resemble a bit of deconstruction where Ross intended for his to BE paleontology. Neither believe that their contributions are meaningful and both saw their moves as contributing to correcting runaway academic endeavors, but it does seem that Ross' work could remain within the corpus of legitimate work in the discipline. Both were trying to construct T
rojan horses, but
Sokal's version was a poseur, he never had nor deserved legitimate status in the club. Ross, on the other hand, does. He didn't merely learn to imitate the talk, he really learned to talk the talk -- he just thinks the talk is false. Does this give Ross more credibility or is it a case like that of Alice telling the Mad Hatter that you can't have more if you didn't have any to start with?
-
Is The Time Of Intellectual Revolutions Past?
A question came up in a seminar I'm team-teaching with a buddy in sociology. Is it possible to have another "Copernican revolution," that is, an idea so revolutionary that it changes the general worldview? Thomas Kuhn argues that we think...
-
Occupy Wall Street, Thomas Kuhn, And Goldman-sachs
Kerry pointed me to this insightful commentary on Occupy Wall Street:The central metaphor of the three card monty came is, indeed, apt, but what is it a metaphor for? What is the game in this case? This is the point that allows the shills to plead ignorance....
-
The War On Cool
The shorter shorty rode his two wheeler without training wheels for the first time this weekend. You could tell he was nervous and asked at first that we not remove them. But some gentle coaxing from TheWife and he agreed to give it a try and it was just...
-
Post Modern Philosophy Of Science And Science
"Is Science 'Forever Tentative' and 'Socially Constructed'? No Way!" by David H. Bailey and Jonathan M. Borwein June 7th, 2012 The Huffington Post Introduction In "postmodern science studies" or "postmodern philosophy of science," scholars...
-
"intellectual Impostures"...french Postmodern Science
Intellectual Impostures by Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont ISBN-10: 1861976313 ISBN-13: 978-1861976314 Upfront, I have not seen this book but it apparently has caused quite a turmoil. In 1996, an article entitled "Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward...
Philosophy