Something I think may be newer came up recently as well. It
is newer to me at least, as I am only a casual observer of the very disciplined
and complicated field of philosophy. In October a group of scientists and
philosophers all got together to discuss the topic of “Moving Naturalism Forward.” I was not invited, as the group was especially esteemed, and I am not
especially esteemed and would have not contributed anything useful.
Physicist Sean Carroll organized it, and wasn't the only scientist present. Janna Levin, Richard Dawkins, Simon DeDeo, Jerry Coyne, Noble laureate Steven
Weinberg and others were there as well. Though the entire thing is 15 hours
long, and I haven’t watched all that much of it yet, the sections I did watch
seemed especially philosophy focused. This is not surprising as the topics
were big ones in the history and present work of philosophy including free-will,
morality and meaning. While there were many brilliant philosophical arguments
made (I am a big fan of some in the room, especially Rebecca Goldstein), two
things surprised me. First was that it seemed decided that scientists need philosophers
for some big questions. That may be true, but in a way it is a shame, as
scientists should be able to ask their own philosophical questions. This was
true of Einstein, Newton, Darwin and just about every other famous scientist we
can think of. The philosophers even invoked those names as examples of
scientists doing good philosophy, but pointed out that many scientists do not,
which is fair enough. Sean Carroll said that he would like philosophers to help
understand the implications of Quantum Mechanics, and wishes that they would
have done so earlier. That was generous of him I thought, and while I get his
point that a new paradigm needs some deep probing, there is no topic more
misunderstood by philosophers (at least many) than Quantum Mechanics, so I
would in a way prefer that Sean, Janna and the rest of us who use QM, also seek
meaning rather than waiting for the philosophical community to weigh in. Actually I think we do, even if that meaning is confined within a specific area of research.
The more upsetting point of these conversations was
regarding scientific and philosophical ethical responsibility. Even many of the
scientists were swayed by the arguments of Daniel Dennett and others about Free-Will.
I have exhausted the topic in this blog
before, so I won’t again, other than to say that as a pure materialist I find that
since the rules of everything in the universe are governed by physical reality,
so too should humans, including the issue of free-will. Actually most of the attendees agreed to some
extent, though the philosophical argument is nuanced and confusing to a layman
of philosophy such as me. The troubling thing was not the ideas of determinism or
choice, but that it seemed to me that the agreement was that society could not
handle the absence of free –will, whether it was scientifically accurate or
not. Dennett and others sited some experiments where people lose a sense of right
and wrong when they feel that they have no choice. Coyne disputed these
studies, saying that over the long term he would imagine that there is not this
effect. Still, there was near consensus that because we do at least feel we
have choice, it is better to ignore, or at least put off the scientific possibility
that we don’t. This sounds to me a lot like the God argument regarding morals. The
suggestion is that morals don’t fall away when we abandon God for a scientific
view of the universe based on reason, logic and experiment, but they do if we abandon
free-will. I find this insulting to
humanity, and an underestimation in the power of knowledge.
The debate and watching this summit were the bookends of my
week- long journey into the understanding of life. In the middle was something
very different, and actually had nothing to do with
materialism and logic, but rather just about the joy of being alive. It was a
Poets House and American Museum of Natural History event which was a
conversation between one of my favorite naturalists E.O. Wilson (see a blog I
wrote about him here) and the poet Robert Hass, who I had the pleasure of
getting to hear and read for the first time, despite his many years of literary
fame and success. I immediately wanted to write a blog about the night, but I
thought better of it, and instead wrote poetry (some of my poems here. The are admittedly not Hass quality). It seemed that abstraction and
metaphor expressed my thoughts better than I could with normal description.
There is one idea that brings this all together for me. It
is the title of one of the poems I wrote, and the title of this blog. It is “filling
the gaps”. The God of The Gaps is an old expression which is still relevant in
many ways. Humans invoke god to fill in the gaps in our scientific knowledge.
For some these are also filled by philosophy. For others of us we look to
science to fill as many as it possibly can with the understanding that it will
certainly fail to fill them all. Rather than creating myths, or even from
formalized speculation in the way of logical deductions made by philosophy, I
fill these gaps by observing and creating art. Poetry, music, painting and sculpture don’t give
concrete answers, but they provide a way to inspire contemplation, learn about
ourselves, and visualize aspects of the universe that is still incomprehensible.
I will still read philosophy because it
is so challenging and can be enlightening, and I will still do science. What I
can’t forget though is what fills those gaps, which is humanities ability to
create pictures of truth that we cannot explain any other way.