I didn't much like science at school. It was my brother who took things
to bits, not me. Mathematics was the worst, and afterwards an almost
lifelong phobia. Physics was almost as bad as Maths. Chemistry was only
interesting when something exploded. Biology seemed designed
specifically to put me off my lunch. Science for me was just another
cross to bear in a Christian school.

Fortunately we find ways of justifying our little ignorances to
ourselves. I accepted the ancient and venerable "two brains" theory of
learning, according to which you either have a scientific brain or an
artistic brain. There was no point trying to learn science if you
didn't have "that sort of brain", and anyway it was better not to have
"that sort of brain" because then we wouldn't be us, and goodness but
weren't we interesting people! 

We were all artists in those days, naturally, and everyone knew that
scientists had no imagination and no creative talent. Apart from Tom
Lehrer, the singing mathematician, that is, but we'd allow them one. We
decided that science was clever the way a performing poodle is clever,
good at a few tricks but not really genteel company for dinner. And
this wasn't just my snobbery. Post-war Britain just couldn't seem to
turn out scientists, its very culture was against it. Nobody wanted to
do science because it was work as in "manual work" not as in "work of
art". 

Everyone in the sixties wanted to be a beat poet, even the snotty
little kids like me. Harold Wilson tried to do something about the huge
bias in education towards the Humanities (the very name suggested that
scientists were inhuman). Britain was up to its shins in philosophers
and therapists, and no-one to mend the roof or rewire the sitting-room.

My local LETS scheme is still the same today. 

But while Wilson talked thrillingly of the "white heat of technology",
everyone continued to regard science as a good thing for someone else
to learn, and his new science-oriented Polytechnics turned out to be
dustbin colleges for those who couldn't get into a real University.

Was god an astronaut? 

In my late teens Britain was swept by a “revolutionary” new theory,
propounded by a best-selling author, to the effect that God was an
astronaut. In book-after-book the theory expanded, multiplied, made
ever larger claims and sold ever more copies. Everyone, it seemed, had
read these books. Everyone, it seemed was talking about them.
Conventional science, astonishingly, was silent.

Like the excellent scientist I was, I ignored the text, looked at the
pictures, read the captions and the blurb on the back cover, and
concluded that it must all be true. He'd gone to a lot of trouble after
all, so he must know what he's talking about. The phrase "don't believe
everything you read" came back to me, but really, how was one to tell?
Even supposing I read every word properly, how would I know whether it
was right or not? Who was I to criticise? You needed to be a scientist
to criticise.

Eventually, at last, it had to happen. The scientific community wearily
responded. The BBC flagship science programme Horizon finally dealt
with Erik von Daniken's theory. In fact it destroyed his case so
comprehensively that even I, the eminent believer, had to laugh out
loud. I'd been had, big time, and so had everyone else. Maybe I should
have been annoyed at having my time wasted, or being made a fool of,
but I wasn't. We can forgive any sin if it's entertaining.

It made me think of other times when I'd been conned, or baffled,
usually both, by some fantastic claim. Uri Geller, the mind-control and
spoon-bender, had me and my friends stroking teaspoons. We read
assiduously the Arnall Bloxham tape transcripts of people regressing
into past lives, serialised prominently in that most august periodical
the Sunday Times, and were astounded when Bloxham admitted he'd
cheated. 

At school we tried using Ouija boards to try to get in a quick
communication with the hereafter before Afternoon bell. After much
tumbler wrestling we got a name, Bill, and a date, 1780, and we went
around in awe for a week. I didn't think of myself as gullible, or even
ignorant. After all, the world was an amazing place and anything was
possible. I could criticise a poem but not a proposition. School didn't
arm me for that, despite the pickled frogs and the fizzing chemicals.

"Scientific Socialists" 

By the time I encountered the Socialist Party I had already learned how
to criticise society for myself, and I understood the importance of
reason, but I was nevertheless startled by the party's description of
their “scientific socialism”. I envisaged a whole population in lab
coats. A scientific socialist to me was a party member who knew the
Periodic Table. But it was explained to me that it was the "method"
that was "scientific", not the membership. This meant nothing to me. 

They weren't saying simply that the case for socialism was a logical
one. It was more than that. Any stupid idea can be expressed in logical
terms. What was “scientific” was not so much the argument itself but
the means by which the argument was first thought out, the habitual
mode of thinking of the individual. And the scientific method which
socialists follow is both open-minded and sceptical, willing to embrace
or drop an idea depending on the evidence, willing to change the theory
if the evidence demands it. Carl Sagan described it well:

"Science is generated by and devoted to free enquiry: the idea that any
hypothesis, no matter how strange, deserves to be considered on its
merits. The suppression of uncomfortable ideas may be common in
religion and politics, but it is not the path to knowledge."

Those who criticise our rejection of religious beliefs do not perhaps
grasp this "scientific" nature of the case for socialism, that it is
rooted in the real world of hard facts and reliable evidence, and so
must people be if the world is to see any real progress. But we don't
particularly have it in for the God squad, because they're not the only
mystery merchants out there spreading fog and confusion wherever they
go. 

There is a plethora of pseudo-sciences to choose from if virgin births
and original sin are a bit hard to take and Buddha is uncool. In my
area recently there was a spate of UFO sightings, and the local press
had a fun-filled week out of it. Judging by the number of sightings, I
should have been abducted for experiments long since, with the rest of
the town. No aliens have called, however. They probably watched one
episode of Eastenders and decided not to bother with homo sapiens.

According to a report in Cultural Trends, in the past five years the
market for "new age" and occult books has grown by 75 percent. As
Catherine Bennett observed in the Guardian a while ago: 

"neither incoherence, nor ignorance, nor overwhelming implausibility is
any impediment to publication. These books are not going to face
scholarly competition, but sell in a dedicated drivel department, along
with feng shui, astrology [etc]" (31 Oct 2001).

She deliciously strips bare the pretensions of one particularly awful
offering from Channel 4, called 'Quest for A Lost Civilisation'. Graham
Hancock, the best-selling writer, is firmly in the von Daniken
tradition:

"Hancock's principal strategy is to exploit his readers' ignorance,
dazzling them with irrelevant sums, flourishing spurious connections .
. . He asks big questions, rushing on before you realize he hasn't
answered them."

She concludes, correctly, that publishers don't give a damn about truth
so long as they sell books, and attacks the scientists who, by
remaining "mute with distaste" actually do the von Danikens a big
favour. And she is right. Very few scientists seem worried about what
the rest of us believe. 

Undoubtedly, scientists have themselves to blame if nobody understands
what they're doing. In increasing desperation, Horizon has devoted no
less than three programmes in the past year to unravelling Hancock's
nonsense, such is the demand for fake science in a fantasy-filled
world. Yet still scientists seem to think they can ignore reality,
rather like Archimedes thought he could rudely ignore the Roman
sergeant with the drawn sword.

Common sense rules 

But it's not all their fault, and it wouldn't kill us to be a little
more scientific in our thinking when considering the world around us.
Surprisingly, it's not that difficult, if one observes a few basic
rules, most of which are common sense. That these rules can be applied
to politics as much as science will be illustrated in the course of
description. This list is probably not exhaustive, (10 seems a
suspiciously round number, for one thing) and I invite readers to send
in their own suggestions.

1. First of all, don't believe a complicated explanation if a simpler
one will do. 
This rule, known as Occam's Razor, would really dismiss von Daniken
instantly. After all, it is simpler, and fits all the facts, to believe
that astronauts did not land on Earth in prehistory than to believe
that they did. Lack of hard evidence for UFOs can be, and often is,
enthusiastically ascribed to a huge government cover-up, but
conversely, and more simply, it could be ascribed to the fact that UFOs
don't exist. In politics too, conspiracy theories are seldom the
simplest explanation for anything, even if they appeal to some people's
penchant for paranoia.

2. A second rule would be: never believe anyone who will profit by
lying. 
This lets out every politician, I fear, as well as best-selling
authors. By the same token, if one applies this rule to the Socialist
Party, which has no plans to take power for itself now or in the
future, its statements are automatically rendered more reliable than
those of Trotskyist groups with a vested interest in being leaders.
That doesn't mean we're always right, just that we have no particular
reason to lie about it.

3. Exceptions don't prove rules, despite the saying, they break them. 
The term "prove" in this expression is related to the Italian "provare"
which means "test" or "try out", which explains how this sensible maxim
has acquired a modern, nonsensical meaning. As an illustration of this
rule, if some societies are known to be peaceful, it destroys the claim
that humans are basically aggressive and warlike. If a majority of
people are poor in capitalism, it destroys the claim that capitalism is
in the common interest or that it is a "good provider".

4. Even if the structure is logical, the basic assumptions may not be. 
As an example, capitalism is a supremely logical structure, based on
the assumption that resources are limited but wants are unlimited. When
one examines this assumption critically there appears no justification
for it at all, and the entire structure sinks like a Monty Python
castle built on a swamp

5. Beware of the sleight-of-hand known as special pleading, which is
essentially a sales tactic. 
Emotive arguments are a good example of this, and very common in
politics, where it is hard not to be emotional sometimes. I recall a
woman defending the Peace Camp at Greenham Common thus: “Something that
feels so good just can't be wrong.”

6. Don't be bamboozled or "blinded by science". 
Carl Sagan relates how, when discussing with an Egyptologist the
theories of Velikovsky (who had been excitedly compared to Darwin and
Einstein by the popular press), he had remarked that the ancient
history looked impressive whereas the physics was nonsense, whereupon
the Egyptologist responded in surprise that he had thought precisely
the reverse. Even scientists can temporarily be taken in. Anything
emanating from government experts, especially economists, needs to be
treated with caution.

7. An idea is not a valid theory unless a way exists of disproving it
(falsification). 
Hence, the argument that God exists is not a valid theory, whereas you
can disprove the case for socialism by showing, for example, how
material abundance is impossible to achieve.

8. A test result is not valid until and unless it can be recreated. 
One recent sensation was the achievement of "cold fusion", another was
the transmission of light at 4.7 times the speed of light. Neither have
been successfully repeated. Governments which claim economic success
once are certainly just lucky, and are unable to repeat this success
later, when conditions have altered.

9. A theory which cannot predict anything is worthless. 
If the Socialist Party's analysis was incorrect, its predictions would
also be. However, we have a surprisingly good hit rate over the past
100 years.

10. The most obvious (but most often broken) rule is that if the facts
don't fit the theory, change the theory. 
You don't need to be a scientist to know that, but you need to think
like a scientist to stick to it.

Will reason win? 

Socialists try to apply these rules to society, and expect to have them
applied to their own case. Perhaps we are not always as rigorous as we
should be. Perhaps you aren't either. So if you think you can disprove
all, or part, or a bit of our case, go right ahead. We'll listen. If
you find a flaw we'll have to change our ideas, and if, by the same
token, we find a flaw in your thinking, you'll have to change yours.
That is how the scientific method works. It doesn't mean you won't ever
fall for a con, or make a mistake, but it makes it much less likely.

The world is as full of superstition and silly ideas as it was in the
Middle Ages, but it is far richer in knowledge. Whether the scientific
method prevails in the future is open to question, for it has failed in
the past to rescue societies from decline, and the ideology of
capitalism is reinforced constantly by a battery of propaganda and
mystification that are a perpetual obstacle to clear thinking. The
battle is ongoing, and will continue in this new century, and reason
will either win or it won't. The last word ought to go to that
supremely humanitarian scientist and visionary, the late Carl Sagan:

“Humans have evolved gregariously. We delight in each other's company;
we care for one another. We cooperate. Altruism is built into us. We
have brilliantly deciphered some of the patterns of Nature. We have
sufficient motivation to work together and the ability to figure out
how to do it. If we are willing to contemplate nuclear war and the
wholesale destruction of our emerging global society, should we not
also be willing to contemplate a wholesale restructuring of our
societies?”

Jan

www.worldsocialism.org



__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Everything you'll ever need on one web page
from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts
http://uk.my.yahoo.com

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to