For the Goemchem Prize Discussion 23 July 2005
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Precedence: bulk


Allow me to congratulate Mr Nigale the recipient of this year Goemchem
Prize. This is I think a special kind of prize. Controlled by persons
who live far and wide, the prize is less amenable to the pulls and
pressures of the immediate and local. I feel privileged to share my
views with you on this occasion, also because the organizers have been
more than gracious in inviting me knowing well that I may not share
entirely their perspective on issues they espouse. Thank you for your
generosity.


I did my schooling in a Catholic institution in Goa. There the students
who were Hindu or Muslim were as a matter of course referred to as
‘Non-catholic’ in documents such as the time-table, handbook etc. Much
later in life, I have come to learn that to call persons non-catholic is
to categories persons by what they are not (an absence) and hence erase
and deny what they are. Today’s topic begins with the term
‘'Unscientific methods and practices’. Once we have categorised the
practices by the absence of science, what legitimacy can we discuss,
except to make the rather banal statement that each practice has its own
rationality, take it or leave it.


It is not incidental that Science and Religion share similar discourses
and modes of addressing the other. The Term ‘superstition’ comes from
the long tradition of Western religion (from Cicero) and as defined by
St. Thomas is the worship of false gods or the improper worship of true
gods. When science began to see itself as substituting religion as the
final arbitrator of all knowledge it too burrowed the term
‘superstition’ for all practices that did not conform to its tenants. 


What I propose to share with you today is my own muddling efforts of
coping with Science, Religion and what those two term as superstition.


As an adolescent, struggling to cope with my own questions of identify
and self confidence I felt rebellious towards the norms and values that
came to be from the outside – particularly my family and school. The
sixties were drawing to and end and, anti-establishment vibes was all
over the place. The church as institutional monolith and the family as
disciplining institution were the symbolic targets for my rebellion. It
was easy to expose the inconsistency in the devout Catholic family I
belonged to. My church venerating aunt would, in the quite of the
evening pull out her instruments and remove disht, whenever any persons
returned from visiting a new or strange place. My uncle who had spent
years in a Trappist monastery would visit the Ghaddi when faced with any
piquant circumstance in his business matters. The priests in the family
would turn a nelsons eyes to these superstitious practices while coming
down with a heavy hand on the younger generation that questioned the
faith. It became clear to me that Science was the only way out, the only
edifice that could lead to valid and certain knowledge. Science which
relied on reason and empirical evidence was what we needed to put an end
to this charade. I took to Marxism that pushed Science one step further
and promised that the application of Science could transform society,
liberate it from superstition and eradicate conflict and poverty.

When I joined post graduate education I chose Sociology. I decided to
keeps miles away from the woolly Sociology of Religion and dived into
the Sociology of Science. Here I was introduced to the New Philosophers
of Science through the works of Karl Popper, Imre Lakatos, Thomas Khun
and Paul Feyerband. Through these authors I learnt that the empirical
evidence given by science was not in the ultimate analysis beyond doubt
and as the philosopher W V O Quine put it ‘the Greek's worldview of
Homeric gods is as credible as the physicists' world of electromagnetic
waves’. I also came across Godel's undecidability theorem which proved
that in every formal system there exist propositions that can be neither
proved nor disproved. Though at times the extrapolation to other domains
of knowledge is suspect, from all this it became clear to me that the
belief held in my earlier years that system of Science could prove its
superiority over other systems of knowledge or its certainty was
well ...superstition. This however does not preclude the possibility
that one could still choose science over other systems, but then that is
matter of preference.

Consequently I was introduced to the popular works of Werner Heisenberg,
Douglas Hofstadter's 'Godel Escher and Bach', Fritjof Capra and Roger
Penrose all of whom apply the insights of sub-atomic physics to the
realm of consciousness. I was also looking for ways to validate my own
experience and feelings and found comfort in the existential psychology
of R D Laing and David Cooper and the literature of Fyodor Dostoevsky.
For me Science was no longer omnipotent and the romanticism of
existentialism which so attracted me did not provide the certainty that
I would have love to have.

When I started teaching in Goa, I began working with an anthropologist
who was studying Goa's native religiosity. I helped him and was also
attracted by the magic and mystery of the deochar, the kaul prasad, bhar
and such other ritual practices. I have spent some time in trying to
make the strange familiar and in the process have seen different beliefs
and practices and their consequences. Over time curiosity has given way
to a degree of respect. I have also observed that these practices are
not restricted to less educated villages but are part of normal every
day life around me. A senior university teacher doubles up as a part
time astrologer and another Professor of the hard sciences rushes to his
Kul dev to take prasad, whenever he is confronted with a decision he
needs to take. Yet others have joined new age religions and sects. I too
occasionally peep into the astrology columns or consult with my
astrologer colleague when I fell anxious about future events in my life.
So what I experienced as duplicity in my childhood was writ large both
within me and outside. Lest you think that this is a malady of the less
developed world, Cecil recently forwarded me data of a gallop poll in
the US which showed that 75% of the Americans were firm believers in
paranormal phenomena.

Permit me to share with you the sense I try to make of this? I will do
this through Illustrations:

>From times earlier, persons in Goa are visited by Shantadurga Fotorpekin
in their dreams. She makes all sorts of demands which her devotees are
pleased to oblige. Since Freud we now know that dreams open us to
realities within us which are not in our conscious awareness but deeply
effect the way we behave, choose and live. The difficult with Freud’s
psychoanalysis is however that it tries to bring the unconscious to the
conscious and assumes that it can do so through reason. As I have learnt
from Anjali, Jung seems to offer a less reductive approach in allowing
the unconscious to live and create through us rather than attempting to
rationalise it through the conscious. It appears to me that our native
systems of knowledge were alive to these realities and found what were
then and at times today appropriate ways of coping with these realities
outside our conscious awareness.

Again ritual practices through agents such as Ghaddis and the Bhar are
rituals that open us up and out to different states of consciousness. In
modern psychotherapy a whole range of therapies from dance to art and
even drugs invite us to explore these different states of consciousness.
What I am suggesting is that the practices that are at times dismissed
as superstition are ways of coping with the realms of consciousness and
realms of the non-rational that modern practices, scientific and
otherwise are themselves exploring. I call these "non-rational"
practices because they don't defy logic as "irrational" arguments do.
They simply don't use logic at all.



Stephanie L. Hawkins has suggested: Our science is a drop, our ignorance
a sea. Whatever else be certain, this at least is certain—that the world
of our present natural knowledge is enveloped in a larger world of some
sort of whose residual properties we at present can frame no positive
idea.

Sometimes in the late eighties I recall an advertisement in a local
paper which invited Hindus who would like to eat beef to join an
occasion. This was an effort by some rationalist to debunk the food
taboo among Hindus. There are also demonstrations and television serials
that expose the miracles of Sadhus and such others. I doubt such
exercises would take us far if only because these efforts are simply
incapable of dealing with the non-rational in every day life.

Of course there are practices attributed to tradition that violates our
contemporary sensitivities and values. And these must be dealt with. But
let us also not forget that science in its practise generates its own
myths and superstitions. When I was admitted to the GMC with acute bout
of jaundice, the consultant prescribed Liv 52, an aurvedic drug which
did not have the support of allopathic double blind testing. Much more
serious is the myth of development and progress where all less developed
countries aspire to live the life styles of a few countries in the West.
Planners and experts all trained in their respective sciences tell us
what we should or should not do to reach that state double fast. What is
obvious is often forgotten, namely there is just not enough energy on
the planet for the rest of us to sustain the high consumption life style
for all.

As modern life becomes more complex and more uncertain, the non rational
and unconscious is called upon to deal with much. Sammit, in a recent
exploration has suggested that the rise of militant and violent Hindu
Nationalism has something to do with the construction of the History of
Indian which is enveloped and rooted in what he termed as "primordial
shame". When we ignore our non-rational and that which is not conscious
it erupts and takes rather fantastic forms. If there is a rise in the
number of new age cults, god man and other practices it is not because
we are irrational but rather because we avoid dealing with the
non-rational and unconscious within us and our society. The problem is
not too little science temper in society but rather too much scientific
hegemony - to put it differently the privileging of science over all
other forms of knowledge, eclipses the non-rational and that which is
outside our conscious awareness. 

Our selves as individuals and cultures are made up as much by our reason
and awareness as by that which lies outside our reason and awareness. We
are, I suggest all called to live and create with the tension of this
paradox and not to privilege one over the other.

Alito Siqueira


-------------------------------------------------------------------
To Subscribe/Unsubscribe from Goa-Research-Net
-------------------------------------------------------------------
* Send us a brief self-intro to justify your interest in this
"specialized" forum. This should be     sent to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  or to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* Send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (NOT goa-research-net@goacom.com)
* Leave SUBJECT blank
* On first line of the BODY of your message, type:
subscribe goa-research-net [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
unsubscribe goa-research-net [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to