Posted on 02/17/2024 4:30:35 AM PST by MtnClimber
The institutions of the West no longer believe in the supposition that the scientific method is the accepted methodology by which to arrive at objective conclusions about the physical world.
Earlier this week, the invaluable Washington Free Beacon published a fascinating story on the Biden administration’s efforts to update the “scientific guidelines” for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). According to the story, a newly released document—a “draft for public comment”—mandates that “going forward, agency staff should employ ‘multiple forms of evidence, such as Indigenous Knowledge,’ when analyzing data.” The paper continues, noting that “‘Indigenous knowledge’ posits that native peoples possess hidden wisdom about the workings of the universe” and that all of this is part of the “agency’s ‘support’ for ‘equity, justice, and trust.’” Finally, the Free Beacon reports that “the proposed guidelines are on track to be finalized this year.”
As ridiculous as this might seem, it’s really no laughing matter. Indeed, there are several possible explanations for such a bizarre and groundless shift away from science and to pseudo-scientific superstition, none of which is especially reassuring.
The first of these explanations is that which one might call Chesterton’s Maxim, in that it proves the most famous thing that G.K. Chesterton almost certainly never said or wrote (but for which he is enduringly credited): “The first effect of not believing in God is to believe in anything.” As our society—and the political left in particular—has moved further and further away from its traditional religious foundations, it finds itself increasingly willing to accept almost any substitute. The Enlightenment’s destruction of conventional faith has not resulted in the adoption of purely secular and rationalistic thinking, as its philosophies promised, but has rather fostered the disposition to believe almost anything else that can be seen as a safeguard against traditionalism. Being non-Christian or non-European, the incorporation of “indigenous knowledge” into “scientific” research satisfies the post-Enlightenment desire to move beyond the traditions of Western Civilization, even as it clearly introduces new and wholly subjective religious beliefs into the process.
Relatedly, the move to incorporate indigenous knowledge into the scientific guidelines for such HHS agencies as the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control confirms the observations made by the mid-20th-century political philosopher Eric Voegelin, who posited that much of the contemporary left is “Gnostic” in its worldview. Gnosticism, both in its ancient heretical form and in its contemporary incarnation, maintains that some people possess secret, hidden wisdom that enables them—and them alone—to chart the path to salvation (temporal salvation in the contemporary version). Voegelin argued that, in many ways, the left’s vision for society constitutes a perversion of the Christian salvation narrative and that it assigns to itself and its adherents the role of spiritual guide, of Gnostic. This, in turn, results in the fabrication of a “dream world” in which the reality of flawed logic and bad decisions serves only as proof of the Gnostic’s righteousness:
In the Gnostic dream world … nonrecognition of reality is the first principle. As a consequence, types of action which in the real world would be considered as morally insane because of the real effects which they have will be considered moral in the dream world because they intended an entirely different effect. The gap between intended and real effect will be imputed not to the Gnostic immorality of ignoring the structure of reality but to the immorality of some other person or society that does not behave as it should behave according to the dream conception of cause and effect.
A third explanation for the Biden Administration’s apparent desire to incorporate indigenous knowledge into its scientific guidelines is the contemporary left’s philosophical predisposition to find reality itself objectionable.
For more than a century, the West and its institutions have been overwhelmed by anti-realism, the primary premise of which is that “truth” and “reality” are mere constructs that can and should be manipulated to serve broader ends. Whether it’s the Pragmatists and their insistence that objective truth is a myth and that the good in the world is defined by what “works;” the Marxist revisionists and their belief that the masses are dissociated from their true consciousness by the culture and its institutions; the Critical Theorists and their fetishization of Freud and his belief that civilization suppresses the id; the post-modernists and their determination that truth and reality are linguistic concepts created and manipulated by power relationship; or any of the countless offshoots of these epistemologies, the West in the 20th and 21st centuries has been defined by an unwillingness or inability to see, much less accept reality.
In short, the institutions of the West—academy and government, most notably—no longer believe in, much less care about, the supposition that the scientific method is the accepted methodology by which to arrive at objective conclusions about the physical world. Indeed, it no longer cares about objective conclusions about the physical world at all. For all its self-promotion as “the party of science,” today’s Democratic Party cares less about the objective validity of research conclusions than it does about the manipulation of language and power to mold a version of reality that is inclusive and affirming, hence its “support for equity, justice, and trust.”
Taken together, these three ubiquitous characteristics of the contemporary left likely explain the majority of the Biden administration’s efforts to supplement science with indigenous knowledge and other pseudo-science. The portion that these three leave unexplained can probably be attributed to good, old-fashioned interest-group pandering. While it is important to recognize and understand the ideological motivations of our thoroughly politicized administrative state, it is also important not to forget the influence wielded over the bureaucracy by partisan interests. As the first Democratic administration in decades to struggle to prove its dedication to and affinity for minority voters, this effort by Team Biden to adopt nontraditional pathways to knowledge is undoubtedly an effort to create a narrative by which it demonstrates its multicultural bona fides. Whether it will prove to be an effective effort is dubious at best.
But then, “dubious at best” applies to so much this administration has done.
Stephen R. Soukup is the Director of The Political Forum Institute and the author of The Dictatorship of Woke Capital (Encounter, 2021, 2023)
The left has an all-out war on the truth.
BTTT
Right?…Am I right?…….Hello?…Anyone out there?…Is this thing on?
She provided the class a lot of history about the tribes and was engaged to help write their history.
That they know secrets of the universe is absurd...but they are citizens ...AND CAN VOTE.
I don’t think that this new Dark Age is going to turn out well.
No in this context, the Bible would be indigenous to the middle east.
This indigenous knowledge would probably take the form of government selected Indians who spout Marxism and claim it’s tribal in origin.
Of course Marxism is indigenous to Germany but that never stops it’s proponents from claiming it and spreading it through lies.
Maybe Boeing is already building them this way.
I’m Choctaw. I know Joe Biden is an idiot. Please incorporate THAT!
What happens if a traditional, indigenous knowledge base has excepted only two genders? Heads will explode. History will be changed. Historic documents will, out of necessity, be destroyed.
ping
indigenous knowledge= all the rot Churchill tried to get out of the turd world.
This is official government support for the occult. Literally demonic.
One can prove communists, Democrats, leftists, “liberals,” Marxists, and “progressives” wrong by using the scientific method. 1 + 1 is NOT 3. Black is NOT white. Earth is NOT flat. But all of those things CAN be so by switching to “indigenous knowledge,” which is subjective: “Big Brother” can change what’s “indigenous,” and therefore “true,” from day to day. Agree, or else you’re against “indigenous knowledge,” and therefore a “racist!” The worst thing you can possibly be nowadays! Right up there with being a “heretic,” “witch,” or “kulak” in times past!
There are medical schools that have included “respecting indigenous knowledge and methods of healing” into the oath physicians take upon graduation. What next, bestowing MD’s on Indian medicine men?
Bookmark
‘’Indigenous knowledge’’, ‘’health foods’’ ‘’alternative medicine’’. Two minutes working in a hospital ER and you’ll see that s**t fly out the window when someone is in real distress.
It’s ‘’Get the doctor stat!’’
And the hell with all that ‘’alternative medicine’’ crap.
Indigenous knowledge of the Incas and Mayans who pulled beating hearts from sacrificed humans, for instance? Can’t happen to this woke crowd of goof balls fast enuf.
The Holy Spirit, through the apostle Paul, had these idiots figured out a long time ago as in Romans 1:18-32.
“Professing themselves wise, they became fools.”
Eric Voegelin also had them figured as well; his masterwork, “Science, politics and gnosticism”was at one time required reading in college; read it along with the Word (Rom. 1:18-32) and a lot of pieces start falling into place.
LOL
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