via John Horgan @Horganism

*The Delusion of Scientific Omniscience*

*As time passes, the claim that science can comprehend everything looks 
increasingly nutty*

By John Horgan on September 4, 2019

Does anyone still believe that science can explain, well, everything? This 
belief was ascendant in the 1980s, when my career began. Bigshot scientists 
proclaimed that they were solving the riddle of existence. They would soon 
explain why our universe exists and takes the form it does, and why we 
exist and are what we are.

For years I believed this claim, out of deference to scientists propagating 
it and desire to believe. The vision of a revelation to end all revelations 
thrilled me. Eventually I had doubts, which I spelled out in The End of 
Science and other writings. Lately, I’ve begun to look at the vision of 
total knowledge as a laughable delusion, a pathological fantasy that should 
never have been taken seriously, even though brilliant scientists 
propagated it.

Stephen Hawking was the most influential know-it-all. In his 1988 
mega-bestseller A Brief History of Time, Hawking predicted that physicists 
would soon find an “ultimate theory” that would explain how our cosmos came 
into being. He compared this achievement to knowing “the mind of God.” This 
statement was ironic. Hawking, an atheist, wanted science to eliminate the 
need for a divine creator.


I’ve often suspected that Hawking, who had a wicked sense of humor, was 
goofing when he talked about an “ultimate theory.” The success of Brief 
History nonetheless inspired lots of similar books by physicists, including 
Theories of Everything by John Barrow (1991), The Mind of God by Paul 
Davies (1992) and Dreams of a Final Theory by Nobel laureate Steven 
Weinberg.

Weinberg, a deadly serious man, was definitely not kidding when he 
envisioned a final theory. He argued that with the help of a new 
“supercollider” in Texas (which ended up being canceled), physicists might 
soon “bring to an end a certain kind of science, the ancient search for 
those principles that cannot be explained in terms of deeper principles.” 

Like Hawking, Weinberg hoped that the final theory would crush, once and 
for all, our superstitious faith in an all-powerful, beneficent deity. “It 
would be wonderful to find in the laws of nature a plan, prepared by a 
concerned creator in which human being played some special role,” Weinberg 
wrote. “I find sadness in doubting that they will.”

Physicists were not the only scientists bewitched by the dream of 
omniscience. “I take the position that there is nothing that cannot be 
understood,” Peter Atkins, a religion-bashing British chemist, stated in 
his 1981 book The Creation. “Fundamental science may almost be at an end 
and might be completed within a generation.” He added, “Complete knowledge 
is just within our grasp. Comprehension is moving across the face of the 
Earth, like the sunrise.”

Then there was biologist Richard Dawkins, who declared in his 1986 
bestseller The Blind Watchmaker that the mystery of life had already been 
solved. Our existence “once presented the greatest of mysteries,” Dawkins 
wrote, but “it is a mystery no longer, because it is solved. Darwin and 
Wallace solved it, though we shall continue to add footnotes to their 
solution for a while yet.”


One of those “footnotes” concerns the problem of consciousness. In the late 
1980s Francis Crick, co-discoverer of the double helix (and another 
hard-core atheist), proposed that consciousness, the subject of 
interminable philosophical speculation, might be scientifically tractable. 
Science could “solve” consciousness by finding its “neural correlates,” 
processes in the brain that correspond to conscious states.

In his 1994 book The Astonishing Hypothesis, Crick declared that “’you,’ 
your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of 
personal identity and free will, are no more than the behavior of a vast 
assembly of neurons.” That statement might have been the high water mark of 
scientism and its corollaries, materialism and reductionism. 

Meanwhile, researchers were claiming that advances in computers and 
mathematics were illuminating chaotic and complex phenomena that had 
resisted traditional scientific analysis. These scientists, whom I like to 
call chaoplexologists, were finding common principles underpinning brains, 
immune systems, ecologies and nation-states. Economics and other social 
sciences would soon become as rigorous as chemistry and nuclear physics. 
Supposedly.

To be charitable, all this hubris wasn’t entirely unjustified. After all, 
in the 1960s physicists confirmed the big bang theory and took steps toward 
a unified theory of all of nature’s forces, while biologists deciphered the 
genetic code. You can see how these and other successes, as well as 
advances in computers and other tools, might have persuaded optimists that 
total scientific knowledge was imminent.

But the concept of scientific omniscience always suffered from fatal flaws. 
Read Brief History and other books carefully and you realize that the quest 
for an ultimate theory had taken physicists beyond the realm of experiment. 
String theory and other major candidates for an ultimate theory of physics 
can be neither experimentally confirmed nor falsified. They are untestable 
and hence not really scientific.


Let’s say physicists convince themselves that string theory is in fact the 
final theory, which encodes the fundamental laws from which nature springs. 
Theorists must still explain where those laws came from, just as believers 
in God must explain where He came from. This is the problem of infinite 
regress, which bedevils all who try to explain why there is something 
rather than nothing.

As for life, Dawkins’s claim that it is no longer a mystery is absurd. In 
spite of all the advances in biology since Darwin, we still don’t have a 
clue how life began, or whether it exists elsewhere in the cosmos. We don’t 
know whether our emergence was likely or a once-in-eternity fluke. 

Brain scientists still have no idea how our brains make us conscious, and 
even if they did, that knowledge would apply only to human consciousness. 
It would not yield a general theory of consciousness, which determines what 
sort of physical systems generate conscious states. It would not tell us 
whether it feels like something to be a bat, nematode or smart phone. As I 
argue in my new book Mind-Body Problems, science appears farther than ever 
from understanding the mind. 

There may still be a few true believers in scientific omniscience out 
there. Big Data boosters indulge in hype reminiscent of the heyday of 
chaoplexity (although the phrase “social science” remains as oxymoronic as 
ever). And in his 2011 book On Being, Peter Atkins, who is now 79, 
reiterated his “faith” that “there is nothing that the scientific method 
cannot illuminate and elucidate.” But I doubt many scientists share this 
view any more.

Over the last decade or two, science has lost its mojo. The replication 
crisis has undermined the public’s confidence in scientists, and 
scientists’ confidence in themselves. It has made them humble--and that is 
a good thing. Because what if scientists had somehow convinced themselves, 
and the rest of us, that they had figured everything out? What a tragedy 
that would be. We’re better off in our current state of befuddlement, 
trying to comprehend this weird, weird world even though we know we’ll 
always fall short.


The older I get, the more I appreciate what philosopher Paul Feyerabend 
said to me in 1992 when I broached the possibility of total knowledge. “You 
think that this one-day fly, this little bit of nothing, a human 
being--according to today's cosmology!--can figure it all out?” he asked me 
with a manic grin. “This to me seems so crazy! It cannot possibly be true! 
What they figured out is one particular response to their actions, and this 
response gives this universe, and the reality that is behind this is 
laughing! ‘Ha ha! They think they have found me out!’”

I’ll close with a quote from Philip Anderson, a Nobel laureate in physics 
and leading chaoplexologist. When I interviewed him in 1994, Anderson 
derided the claims of some of his fellow scientists that they could solve 
the riddle of reality. “You never understand everything,” Anderson said. 
“When one understands everything, one has gone crazy.”


ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)

John Horgan directs the Center for Science Writings at the Stevens 
Institute of Technology. His books include The End of Science, The End of 
War and Mind-Body Problems, available for free at mindbodyproblems.com.

source: 
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/the-delusion-of-scientific-omniscience/

@philipthrift

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