Posted on 10/28/2010 10:49:08 AM PDT by betty boop
An Open Letter to My Physicist Friend RE: Darwinism and the Problem of Free Will
By Jean F. Drew
Dear A
Regarding the discussion of free will at www.naturalism.org, you wrote: I am surprised to find a scientific naturalism so similar to the utmost banality, shallowness and false superficiality of the scientific materialism that I [had] to learn in school [during] the communist regime.
I think this is a very striking statement; and I understand what you mean. I read in your Book of the Living Universe long ago that you were aware of the problem of tampering with human consciousness, by people and institutions with social and/or political agendas to be carried out, usually without consideration of what is good and true in the real world of human experience.
Once upon a time, the natural sciences were understood to be above all else engaged in the search for the truth of reality. Nowadays, it seems people dont want to do such searches anymore, they just want to protect and defend their personal investments in this or that ideological orthodoxy .
Speaking of a powerful orthodoxy, it seems pretty clear to me that Darwins theory, as it has come to be widely understood and accepted, is entirely premised on the doctrine of scientific materialism. As such, I regard it as an epistemological and ontological nightmare!!!
Moreover, the account of free will at naturalism.org can be true only if Darwins theory is true. But I believe it is not. For it holds that everything in biology supervenes on the physical; everything that happens is determined on the basis of Newtonian mechanics. There is only matter in the universe, nothing else; only that which is directly observed/measured is real. [Already such a view casts doubt on the reality of the universal laws of nature, which are never directly observed: They are non-phenomenal, intangible, immaterial. Not to mention that so is all of mathematics, logic, reasoning.] And this non-living, dumb matter, via an evolutionary process driven by random mutation and natural selection, somehow manages to become alive and more to develop some form of psyche.
But HOW does one get to this result by means of a random process??? In only ~14 or so billion years?
How does low algorithmic complexity (i.e., of the physical laws) generate the astonishing complexity of living systems, not to mention of the universe at large? My trial answer: It doesnt; and cant.
Darwinism, moreover, doesnt even have an explanation of what life IS. All of it is, to me, a just-so story, a myth. It is riddled with self-contradictions. Not a word of its fundamental tenets can be tested by means of real-world investigations/experiments, let alone proved. It is an historical science, like archeology, not a hard science, like physics. It seeks to tell us what life does, but cannot tell us what life is.
But how can we be sure that our impressions of what life does are truthful, if we dont know what life is? Dont we have to understand what life is, first before we can produce a reliable understanding of the how and why of its behavior? Its like saying, Birds fly without bothering to elucidate what a bird is .
But the Cartesian split is manifestly being defended by most Darwinists nowadays. To them, the purity of science somehow depends on its sticking to the objective physical, material, phenomenal. Thus they prohibit any discussion of, for instance, final causes in nature even though the very term survival of the fittest necessarily implies a final cause: fitness for survival! (As do all biological functions, by the way.) Yet the Darwinist says survival of the fittest is the very goal and purpose of evolution! But you cannot call a spade a spade and say that this is a final cause; its just an illusion . It only looks like a final cause, but it isnt really one. Such equivocation is, to me, indefensible.
But lets look at what the article at naturalism.org has to say. As strictly physical beings, we dont exist as immaterial selves, either mental or spiritual, that control behavior. Thought, desires, intentions, feelings, and actions all arise on their own without the benefit of a supervisory self, and they are all the products of a physical system, the brain and the body. The self is constituted by more or less consistent sets of personal characteristics, beliefs, and actions; it doesnt exist apart from those complex physical processes that make up the individual. It may strongly seem as if there is a self sitting behind experience, witnessing it, and behind behavior, controlling it, but this impression is strongly disconfirmed by a scientific understanding of human behavior.
What scientific understanding of human behavior??? I dont see any understanding here at all! Just the deliberate elimination of certain kinds of intractable, non-conforming evidence .
If science cant address the problem, then there is no problem seems to be the motto of the day.
In short, the self must be a fiction; it is really only an epiphenomenon of physical processes proceeding more or less in a random, linear, irreversible (past to present to future) manner that itself has no objective reality (or purpose of goal) and thus cannot serve as a cause of anything in the physical world. That is, the self has zero ontological status: It is simply defined away as not really existing.
Instead, we find that the cause of human willing is simply what arises out of the interaction between individuals and their environment, not from a freely willing self that produces behavior independently of causal connections . Therefore individuals dont bear ultimate originative responsibility for their actions, in the sense of being their first cause. Given the circumstances both inside and outside the body, they couldnt have done other than what they did. [So human beings just cant help what they do; their behavior is utterly determined. I.e., they are programmable robots and nothing more.]
So it seems rather cruel (and unjust) that under this set of circumstances, Nevertheless, we must still hold individuals responsible, in the sense of applying rewards and sanctions, so that their behavior stays more or less within the range of what we deem acceptable. This is, partially, how people learn to act ethically.
Question: Who is this we in the above statement?
Another question: If individuals dont bear ultimate originative responsibility for their actions, then what is the cause of suicide? Does brain function and/or the environment cause this ultimate act of self-destruction? If so, then why arent there more suicides? Or how about acts of heroism, where a person puts his own physical survival at risk to come to the aid of another person in danger? What is the naturalist explanation of a man who throws his body onto a live grenade, so to spare his fellow soldiers from being blown to smithereens, well knowing that his own death would be the likely price of his decision? Did not his self-sacrifice cause (or at least permit) his mates to continue living, when otherwise they may likely all have been killed?
Then there is this pièce de résistence [with my comments in brackets]:
The source of value: Because naturalism doubts the existence of ultimate purposes either inherent in nature or imposed by a creator [final causes either way], values derive from human needs and desires [oh, for instance the desire to kill ones self, which desire must arise in nature/environment according to Darwinist theory, as in the above?], not supernatural absolutes. Basic human values are widely shared by virtue of being rooted in our common evolved nature. [That wipes out all individuality right there.] We need not appeal to a supernatural standard of ethical conduct to know that in general its wrong to lie, cheat, steal, rape, murder, torture, or otherwise treat people in ways wed rather not be treated [Oh? HOW do we know this? As I said earlier, Darwinist orthodoxy is an epistemological nightmare!]. Our naturally endowed empathetic concern for others [as alleged in face of the fact that people frequently choose to conduct themselves evilly towards others and if that is not naturally endowed, then where did that come from?] and our hard-wired penchant for cooperation and reciprocity [how did that get to be hard-wired???] get us what we most want as social creatures: to flourish as individuals within a community. [Tell that to the person who intends to commit suicide! He could care less for flourishing as an individual, let alone in a community]. Naturalism may show the ultimate contingency of some values, in that human nature might have evolved differently and human societies and political arrangements might have turned out otherwise. [Well they might have; but whats the point? Reality is what we have. All else is pure speculation.] But, given who and what we are as natural creatures [please define natural creatures the statement seems oxymoronic to me], we necessarily [???] find ourselves with shared basic values [??? which ones? And tell me how did they become shared when Darwinist theory itself is premised on conflict and competition for the available finite environmental resources necessary for survival?] which serve as the criteria for assessing moral dilemmas, even if these assessments are sometimes fiercely contested and in some cases never quite resolved. [The very fact that there can be conflict, contestation, suggests that the uniformity of natural creatures that we would expect to see on Darwins theory is a total fiction, something simply not borne out by the facts on the ground of real experience, as contrasted with the reductionist abstractions of naturalistic evolution theory.]
It seems to me that Darwinist orthodoxy really doesnt explain very much. The problem seems to be its utter rejection, in principle, of any immaterial component of reality. Although might I point out that a principle is itself immaterial? Even the concept of Reality is immaterial. These people routinely, blithely shoot themselves in the foot; and then blithely pretend that it didnt happen.
In any case, were NOT supposed to notice this. Indeed, to notice this is forbidden.
Shades of Karl Marx here and also I imagine your school experience back in the day of Soviet domination of your country. Marx absolutely forbade all questions about his system. You either bought it whole cloth, or you didnt. What you couldnt do was question it in any way. But if you didnt buy it, then you were probably some kind of enemy .
Is seems to me the biological sciences need a restoration of sanity! Today, all the truly interesting work on life problems is being done by physicists (like you, dear friend!) and mathematicians .
The other day I came across some highly interesting passages in The Pythagorean Sourcebook and Library [by Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie, David Fideler, editor; 1987, Phanes Press] that go straight to the point of what I believe is needed for science to renew itself, to rededicate itself to its ancient mission, the quest for Truth. What is principally involved is the healing of the artificial and unnatural Cartesian split:
Pythagoras, no doubt, would have disapproved of the radical split which occurred between the sciences and philosophy during the 17th century enlightenment and which haunts the intellectual and social fabric of Western civilization to this day. In retrospect perhaps we can see that man is most happily at home in the universe as long as he can relate his experiences to both the universal and the particular, the eternal and temporal levels of being.
Natural science takes an Aristotelian approach to the universe, delighting in the multiplicity of the phenomenal web. It is concerned with the individual parts as opposed to the whole, and its method is one of particularizing the universal. Natural science attempts to quantify the universal, through the reduction of living form and qualitative relations to mathematical and statistical formulations based on the classification of material artifacts.
By contrast, natural philosophy is primarily Platonic in that it is concerned with the whole as opposed to the part. Realizing that all things are essentially related to certain eternal forms and principles, the approach of the natural philosopher strives to understand the relation that the particular has with the universal. Through the language of natural philosophy, and through the Pythagorean approach to whole systems, it is possible to relate the temporal with the eternal and to know the organic relation between multiplicity and unity.
If the scientific spirit is seen as a desire to study the universe in its totality, it will be seen that both approaches are complementary and necessary in scientific inquiry, for an inclusive cosmology must be equally at home in dealing with the part or the whole. The great scientists of Western civilization Kepler, Copernicus, Newton, Einstein, and those before and after were able to combine both approaches in a valuable and fruitful way.
It is interesting that the split between science and philosophy coincides roughly with the industrial revolution for once freed from the philosophical element, which anchors scientific inquiry to the whole of life and human values, science ceases to be science in a traditional sense, and is transformed into a servile nursemaid of technology, the development and employment of mechanization. Now machines are quite useful as long as they are subservient to human good, in all the ramifications of that word but as it turned out, the industrial revolution also coincided with a mechanistic conceptualization of the natural order, which sought to increase material profit at the expense of the human spirit .
Today, in many circles, to a large part fueled by the desire for economic reward, science has nearly become confused with and subservient to technology, and from this perspective it might be said that the ideal of a universal or inclusive science has been lost . [p. 43f]
Still I know that you have not lost this ideal! Yours is an integrative science approach, integrating not only the natural sciences themselves, but also integrating them with the natural philosophy approach; i.e., of whole systems.
You wrote:
I realized the importance of our mail exchange about God and the Universe. Indeed, free will is not explained by present day science, not by physics, of course. As far as I understand it, it is not explained by the mechanical application of the biological principle. It requires more: a deeper understanding of the biological principle, and even more, a deeper understanding of the Universe as a whole. I wrote you that even the laws and principles of Nature can have a soul-like, animate aspect. Ultimately, our free will dwells in the Universe as a whole, and as such, [is] omnipresent, as far as I understand it. If so, the question of free will is a deep question, going beyond the present conceptual framework of science. Free will is rooted in the animate and animating biological principle, in [the] eternal Life of the Universe.
Oh, A I so agree!!!
And Im so looking forward to reading your new article, The Logic of Reality: a model-independent approach towards the self-contained logic of the Universe!
May God ever bless you, dear friend, and your labors!
©2010 by Jean F. Drew.
My dearest hubby B says that I have entirely lost my sense of humor lately: I have become so "grim" in my outlook that I cannot even laugh anymore.
Jeepers, I sure do hope that he is wrong about this! Otherwise, I am probably in deep trouble!
Laughter somehow is balm to the suffering soul....
Truly, there are always guides to the system.
Oh, I certainly agree with you there, dearest sister in Christ!
My Latin is really rusty these days. Where I said "sensorium Deum" in my last, the usage was incorrect. The correct expression would be sensorium Dei.
Newton was an extraordinarily "original" thinker who was also a passionate lover of God....
JHMO FWIW
Good night dearest sister!
Betty, as you said regarding "randomness", I say, "suffering" compared to what? As far as the atheist goes, by what standard does one who says the material universe is all there is judge that the materialist universe is not as it ought to be? What foundation does the atheist have for this notion that the universe is not as it ought to be? None. Atheism renders evil and suffering as meaningless and unintelligible.
Regarding someone's allegation that the Calvinist is put into the position of having to blame God directly for all the suffering in the world which is to conceive of God as a monster.., it shoud be noted that the judgment of God by His putative critic, who presumes to make the finite human mind the ultimate criterion of truth, is self-vitiating in a way similar to that of the atheist. By what moral or epistemological standard does the finite, subjective man judge the infinite God? God's standard? As the Scripture says concerning such arrogant foolishnes of man presuming to have the abilities of God in order to blame God in some fashion:
You will say to me then, "Why does he still find fault? For who can resist his will?"But who are you, O man, to answer back to God? Will what is molded say to its molder, "Why have you made me like this?" Has the potter no right over the clay, to make out of the same lump one vessel for honorable use and another for dishonorable use? What if God, desiring to show his wrath and to make known his power, has endured with much patience vessels of wrath prepared for destruction, in order to make known the riches of his glory for vessels of mercy, which he has prepared beforehand for glory even us whom he has called, not from the Jews only but also from the Gentiles?
Cordially,
Not to mention "sin" as r9etb has pointed out.
...it should be noted that the judgment of God by His putative critic, who presumes to make the finite human mind the ultimate criterion of truth, is self-vitiating in a way similar to that of the atheist. By what moral or epistemological standard does the finite, subjective man judge the infinite God? God's standard?
Oh, so beautifully said, dear Diamond! How can we humans possibly conceive of "God's standard?" Plus it seems to me we never can step outside of it....
Thank you ever so much for your outstanding essay/post!
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