Vlad(imyr) -

It doesn't surprise me that people who are smarter than we are intimidate us. We are often intimidated by people who are bigger or more attractive, why not smarter (more educated, more functional in abstract but relevant topics)? A more general question might be "why do we vilify or scapegoat those more able than us?" One good reason might be that on average, humans have a propensity for "taking advantage", using what advantages they have over others in a selfish way. We can be thoughtless bullies.

I am of two minds on this one.   (does that imply schizophrenia?)

On one hand (mind?), as a member of the class of people who are educated in math and sciences and have some apparent innate ability with these subjects, and who has been subject to "blameful" rhetoric from those who are not educated (or adept?) in such intellectual pursuits, I am very aligned with your thesis about "scapegoating".

On the other hand (mind?), I have observed that a great deal of conventional mathematics and science is based in very analytic and reductionist approaches. <preaching-to-choir> Such approaches can have great utility for isolating and understanding subsystems in said relative isolation. Unfortunately they can obscure total system behaviour/understanding and lead to unfortunate (mis)understandings.

<goofy-personal-anecdote-about-contemporary-science> I feel lucky to have come of age in Math/Science as nonlinear science was just beginning to get a foothold (early 80's). While I never became a harp-playing crystal-gazer, the New Age movement of the 80's and it's influence or congruence with modern science (Tao of Physics, etc.) has been a positive thing. Even "old" modern physics (early 20 century) like Relativity and Quantum Theory has offered science some new paradigms for thinking about reality and even causality than it's roots in Descarte's and Plato and the like.
<long-winded-attempt-to-summarize>
The point of this is that the narrow application of reductionistic, linear approaches to science (and engineering and economics and ...) may have very inconvenient, outrageous, unintended consequences. Smart, educated people (like mathematicians and scientists and engineers) who have been exposed to other ways of thinking who continue to "hold the throttle down" as we plunge toward a potential abyss might not be without blame for the resulting disasters in our various global systems (climate, biosphere, economy, socio-religio-economic)... I'm not big on labels like "evil" but I do think we all deserve to (continue to?) reflect on our role in the myriad global scale problems the world might be facing. Some of us feel absolved when we throw our plastic packaging into a recycle bin, or buy a hybrid car, but it goes just a tad deeper than that, and there is a passive "evil" to stopping there (if that far).

If horrific possibilities (and realities) of nuclear physics didn't wake us up, and the consequences of rampant greenhouse gas release doesn't wake us up, then will it be a silly "unexpected" consequence of genetic engineering or nanotechnology? I believe in the "grey goo" scenario about as much as I might have that the first nuclear explosion might have "ignited the atmosphere", but the probability is not zero and the consequences are about as high as we can measure... not sure how to resolve the limit of the infinite divided by the infinitesmal in this case... but I don't think we can dismiss it entirely. Don't say oops!

- Steve

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

Reply via email to