M
Matthias123
Guest
In this note I intend to outline the doctrines of scientism, and expose such opinions as erroneous. I must state at this early point that when I say scientism, I am not referring to the scientific method. Science per se works wonderfully, and is perhaps our crowning achievement in our quest to discover the specifics, peculiarities, and operation of the natural order. There is however, a tendency among scientists – especially certain “celebrity” scientists – that attempt to extend the authority of science beyond its competency. In this they have done a disservice to science itself, and human intellectual thought as a whole, by engaging in scientific discovery with false expectation, and committing errors due to the inadequacy of the scientific method, to investigate phenomenon is outside of its established scope.
The doctrine of scientism teaches that science has dominion over all other methods of human intellectual inquiry – whether they are the metaphysics, philosophy, or religion. In addition it requires everyone to be subject to its methodological restrictions.
We will first start off with the notion that science has dominion over the metaphysics. I am not a historian of course, but from what I understand this is the result of the positivism in the enlightenment. For those who are not familiar with positivism, you should know that this philosophical doctrine teaches there is to be no belief without empirical validation, that reason cannot transcend sense, and that metaphysical speculation should be avoided. I do think that positivism has started to fall through, as its inadequacy seems to be realised, as far as I can tell. I will however, offer my own small and amateur argument against such a doctrine:
The scientific method requires observation of a phenomenon, in order to validate a hypothesis by empirical means. Since metaphysics is the study and explanation of reality, it follows that the metaphysics are required for the proper interpretation of the observed phenomenon.
Suppose Charles Darwin is out on the HMS Beagle, categorizing different species of birds in for his upcoming work On the Origin of Species. Now the way he understands categorization, and interprets what he perceives through his senses, depends on Darwin’s metaphysical view. Do these species objectively exist, or do the categories only subjectively exist in his mind? Is there an objective difference between a pigeon and a seagull? Or is it just the mind making distinctions of what is distinctionless? Are species material? If they are, they why is it that we don’t categorize different sizes of seagulls as different species?
Secondly, there are metaphysical assumptions that the entire scientific method relies on. The uniformity in nature, the immutability of truth, and a certain degree of metaphysical realism, are all assumptions that scientists make when they endeavour in scientific pursuits. It is unfortunate that the modern person doesn’t realize that all of this at one time had to be investigated and developed.
Imagine you are one of the some of the first anatomically modern homosapiens existing I in Africa during 200,000 BC – some 100,000 years before the last ice age. You live in a wild and cruel world, without technology, without any knowledge of the natural world. How do you know that the objects you see actually exist? If I know something from the past, will it always be true, or will it change eventually? Human experience says seems to indicate the former, but how do they know?
In truth, the scientific method would not have been possible without the Greek, Muslim, and primarily the Christian metaphysicians.
Now we will proceed to the more general category of human intellectual thought, namely philosophy. I will touch on this briefly as I have already gone into some details with the metaphysics. Basically the notion that science has dominion over philosophy in general is in error for the same reasons that it doesn’t have dominion over the metaphysic – philosophy is the study of reality in general, while science is the study of the specifics. You cannot study the specifics without knowledge of the general.
The final point of discussion is the idea that science has dominion over religion. Now I obviously need to explain some things here, so the reader does not interpret what I am saying to mean something that it is not. Science does not have authority over religion in pursuits that are not within its scope. Obviously, any religious person who treks into the scientific domain, and attempts to argue that the earth was created in six days, or that humans have not biologically evolved by lesser primates, or that the universe is only six thousand years old, or that the earth was once effected by a global flood, is going to be thought of as absurd. I think it would be appropriate to quote Aristotle at this time:
“Let this, then, suffice to show (1) that the most indisputable of
all beliefs is that contradictory statements are not at the same time true” Metaphysics Book IV: Aristotle 350BC
Truth cannot contradict truth, and scientific truth will never contradict the truth of the Word through the Spirit. This would make God a trickster, which is a wicked thing to say of God, as Saint Thomas said in Summa Contra Gentiles. This is a notion that Thomas Aquinas so firmly held – as he is responsible for reconciling Aristotelian physics with Christian theology – as it was in danger of being banned due to some erroneous doctrines. Throughout the entire two thousand year teaching of the Church, nothing has come to challenge a de fide teaching. Even the Galileo affair was not a de fide teaching, and after a lesson in prudence, the Church is well prepared to accept any scientific truth that are certain.
Of course we mustn’t jump to even theory that comes our way, but the ones that are established with certainty will not be a problem. How could it be? We preach that Jesus Christ is the Truth!
Now there are notions that science is not able to investigate that are to be left to theological speculation. The question “why does the universe go to all the trouble of existing in the first place?” – Stephen Hawking.
The doctrine of scientism teaches that science has dominion over all other methods of human intellectual inquiry – whether they are the metaphysics, philosophy, or religion. In addition it requires everyone to be subject to its methodological restrictions.
We will first start off with the notion that science has dominion over the metaphysics. I am not a historian of course, but from what I understand this is the result of the positivism in the enlightenment. For those who are not familiar with positivism, you should know that this philosophical doctrine teaches there is to be no belief without empirical validation, that reason cannot transcend sense, and that metaphysical speculation should be avoided. I do think that positivism has started to fall through, as its inadequacy seems to be realised, as far as I can tell. I will however, offer my own small and amateur argument against such a doctrine:
The scientific method requires observation of a phenomenon, in order to validate a hypothesis by empirical means. Since metaphysics is the study and explanation of reality, it follows that the metaphysics are required for the proper interpretation of the observed phenomenon.
Suppose Charles Darwin is out on the HMS Beagle, categorizing different species of birds in for his upcoming work On the Origin of Species. Now the way he understands categorization, and interprets what he perceives through his senses, depends on Darwin’s metaphysical view. Do these species objectively exist, or do the categories only subjectively exist in his mind? Is there an objective difference between a pigeon and a seagull? Or is it just the mind making distinctions of what is distinctionless? Are species material? If they are, they why is it that we don’t categorize different sizes of seagulls as different species?
Secondly, there are metaphysical assumptions that the entire scientific method relies on. The uniformity in nature, the immutability of truth, and a certain degree of metaphysical realism, are all assumptions that scientists make when they endeavour in scientific pursuits. It is unfortunate that the modern person doesn’t realize that all of this at one time had to be investigated and developed.
Imagine you are one of the some of the first anatomically modern homosapiens existing I in Africa during 200,000 BC – some 100,000 years before the last ice age. You live in a wild and cruel world, without technology, without any knowledge of the natural world. How do you know that the objects you see actually exist? If I know something from the past, will it always be true, or will it change eventually? Human experience says seems to indicate the former, but how do they know?
In truth, the scientific method would not have been possible without the Greek, Muslim, and primarily the Christian metaphysicians.
Now we will proceed to the more general category of human intellectual thought, namely philosophy. I will touch on this briefly as I have already gone into some details with the metaphysics. Basically the notion that science has dominion over philosophy in general is in error for the same reasons that it doesn’t have dominion over the metaphysic – philosophy is the study of reality in general, while science is the study of the specifics. You cannot study the specifics without knowledge of the general.
The final point of discussion is the idea that science has dominion over religion. Now I obviously need to explain some things here, so the reader does not interpret what I am saying to mean something that it is not. Science does not have authority over religion in pursuits that are not within its scope. Obviously, any religious person who treks into the scientific domain, and attempts to argue that the earth was created in six days, or that humans have not biologically evolved by lesser primates, or that the universe is only six thousand years old, or that the earth was once effected by a global flood, is going to be thought of as absurd. I think it would be appropriate to quote Aristotle at this time:
“Let this, then, suffice to show (1) that the most indisputable of
all beliefs is that contradictory statements are not at the same time true” Metaphysics Book IV: Aristotle 350BC
Truth cannot contradict truth, and scientific truth will never contradict the truth of the Word through the Spirit. This would make God a trickster, which is a wicked thing to say of God, as Saint Thomas said in Summa Contra Gentiles. This is a notion that Thomas Aquinas so firmly held – as he is responsible for reconciling Aristotelian physics with Christian theology – as it was in danger of being banned due to some erroneous doctrines. Throughout the entire two thousand year teaching of the Church, nothing has come to challenge a de fide teaching. Even the Galileo affair was not a de fide teaching, and after a lesson in prudence, the Church is well prepared to accept any scientific truth that are certain.
Of course we mustn’t jump to even theory that comes our way, but the ones that are established with certainty will not be a problem. How could it be? We preach that Jesus Christ is the Truth!
Now there are notions that science is not able to investigate that are to be left to theological speculation. The question “why does the universe go to all the trouble of existing in the first place?” – Stephen Hawking.