Progress In Western Civilization
Introduction
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“You know, all is development - the principle
is perpetually going on. First there was
nothing; then there was something; then -
I forget the next - I think there were shells;
then fishes; then we came - let me see -
did we come next? Never mind, we came last
and the next change will be something very
superior to us, something with wings” Lady Constance in Disraleli's novel Tancred, 1847.
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Progress In Western Civilization
Synonyms for "progress": development,
growth, advancement, improvement, evolution,
steps forward, movement Introduction "You
know, all is development - the principle
is perpetually going on. First there was
nothing; then there was something; then -
I forget the next - I think there were shells;
then fishes; then we came - let me see -
did we come next? Never mind, we came last
and the next change will be something very
superior to us, something with wings"
Lady Constance in Disraleli's novel Tancred,
1847.
"Progress" is a common enough word,
used most often to speak of change for the
better, or improvement, and relates most
frequently to the advancements of the sciences,
technologies and other physical accouterments
of civilization. But we also speak of progress
in the arts, politics and social conventions.
but in these, progress relates more to change,
since it is problematic as to the measurability
of "progress" in these areas. The
music of Beethoven, for example, represents
a marked change from that of his immediate
predecessors, Mozart and Hayden, and heralded
the Romantic period of music. But should
we consider this change as progress? I believe
that we must only if it represented a new
and better expression that music can illuminate
vis-a-vis other attributes of Western civilization
at the time - an expression that was more
closely related to the feelings, aspirations
and beliefs of the community. In this regard,
it might be claimed that Beethoven's music
influenced and was influenced by the social
milieu of the time. There was an equivalent
shift in painting at the time, as reflected
in the works of Delacroix and Turner, both
of which began the departure from Classicism
to Romanticism, and in the case of Turner,
Impressionism. This period, beginning around
1800, also evidenced great changes in literary,
political and philosophical systems as well
as science. The movements associated with
Romanticism, were intertwined in ways that
form a cohesive whole as regards progress.
Western civilization gradually shifted from
one kind of social fabric to another very
different one, and the various gears of that
shifted were interrelated in complex ways
across all Western societies. Progress, therefore,
should be seen as an integrated, holistic
process, with multiple interconnections and
influences, and not as a simple linear movement,
as is more the case of specific science and
engineering accomplishments. The way in which
humans began to see their world and their
connection to it and to other humans changed,
and with the seminal events of Darwin's publications,
Wagner's music and the social/economic philosophy
of Karl Marx, that period reached a kind
of apex - i. e. the beginning of its decline.
I quote Jacques Barzun:
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"...after allowing for superficial differences,
we find so many links uniting Darwinism,
Marxism and Wagernism that the three doctrines
can be seen as the crystallization of a whole
century's beliefs. Each of the systems may
be likened to a few facets of that crystal:
at the core they are indistinguishable."
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[Darwin, Marx, Wagner]
The movement surrounding these men can be
simplistically called materialism. Progress,
during that period, was indeed one that was
materialistic, and the idealism of the Romantic
age was slowly replaced by another kind of
idealism - the belief in the physical world
as the only one worth paying serious attention
to.
I use these three men, following Barzun's
use as exemplars of an age, except for Darwin
- his is a special case since his thesis
of genetic variation and natural selection
as the bases for speciation and, if you wish,
progress among organisms, is itself perhaps
the greatest example of the progressive nature
of man's theorizing. His formulations of
natural change itself exemplified progress
in how we see our world. The jury may still
be out as to the ultimate structure of a
complete and provable theory of evolution,
but I see their deliberations as nearing
an end. Recent attempts by the religious
right to undermine the validity of Darwin's
ideas is an example of the retrograde forces
that always seem to operate to impede "progress,"
and can be seen in the doctrines of the early
Catholic Church when men of science were
viewed as dangerous challenges to church
orthodoxy. The use of Wagner is an attempt
to bring into our thought on progress the
question: does art and expressiveness experience
progress, or does it simply change?
Stephen Jay Gould in his essay Up Against a Wall discusses arguments that surrounded dating
the various cave painting of the Paleolithic
age - some seeing a linear progression of
style and accuracy of representation. But
Gould doubting this, points out that a future
archaeologist upon finding a Michelangelo
and a Picasso, would hard pressed to establish
a linear progression of style, with no knowledge
of the intervening art.
So, ascribing progress to art is tricky,
to say the least. But if one ties art, in
general, to the other dimensions of society
the various styles and intentions can be
loosely linked to what was going on in society.
As for Marx, he attempted to grab by the
throat what he considered to be a law of
equity as relates to labor, value and goods
in terms of class. What he witnessed in the
societies was conflict, an ingredient for
progress - conflict of the distribution of
wealth as relates to how wealth is produced.
Indeed, his theories were monumentally influential,
in various forms for a very long time and
cannot be considered as crackpot - being
yet alive in various forms in some countries
today. He was instrumental in making us look
at the conflict and develop solutions, even
if those solutions have to date been less
than completely successful.
Civilization progresses through three not
mutually exclusive forces: need, conflict
and exploration. All of these are seemingly
aspects of our species; there are needs related
to sustenance, shelter, procreation and defense
(and more recently in the history of our
species: expressiveness); there are conflicts
over territory, beliefs and possessions,
and there is exploration of geography, ideas
and invention. There is hardly any progress
or achievement by humanity that has not come
about without one or all of these - including,
of course, progress via accidental discoveries.
These are contrasted with change or evolution
in nature (i. e. in the absence of human
intentions) that are non-teleological, and
the literature is awash with descriptions
of the how's and why's of this process; it
is to be strictly separable from human progress,
even though we are a part of nature.
It is interesting to ponder how ancient man
came about his inventions related to his
needs, and brings up the cognitive processes
involved. In his three stages of human development
and progress, Auguste Comte assigned to our
primitive forbears the belief in the gods
to bring about change and explain earthly
phenomena - the theological stage. The next
stage, the metaphysical, assigned to phenomena
some hidden force or power; and in the third
stage, the positive or scientific, all phenomena
are the result of laws of nature or physics,
which may or may not be discoverable. While
his chronology may be more or less accurate,
he omits dealing with a stage that might
have preceded his theological one - namely
a stage during which man had no gods, but
only a relatively undeveloped cognitive capability,
and dealt with his world very much in the
moment within a narrow spectrum of challenge
and change. Did the invention of the axe
or eventually the spear and bow and arrow
precede early man's concept of gods? I think
it probably did. Yet, even with a limited
language (if any) he was able to perceive
cause and effect to the degree necessary
to make improvements and discoveries. Finding
himself away from the naturally provided
cave, he built huts. Finding the river too
deep and swift to walk across, he rode on
a log. Discovering that very sharp stones
pierced the skin of prey more easily, he
devised a way to make them sharper.
Early man was a problem solver and his daily
needs were the impetus for improvements,
once he was able to perceive causality. Progress,
or improvement was related to an immediate
need, one that may have existed unattended
for some time, and there may have been much
trial and error involved. But in any case,
there was an objective in the process, and
that objective was to accomplish something
better - more quickly, more efficiently,
more thoroughly and more cheaply in terms
of utilizing resources at hand. Today the
same objectives apply in most cases, however
there is a broader set of concerns at play
in the society at large. Changes and improvements
come about via a network of needs and capabilities.
Bridge building in Taiwan is not unrelated
to bridge building in the United States,
since that technology is codified and connected
world-wide through the interaction of people
in various ways, not the least of which being
language. In addition, bridge building is
connected to the traffic that will use the
bridges, and the vehicles have their own
technologies, and the need for those vehicles
vary widely. There exists today a vast network
of interrelated needs and associated technologies
that all go hand in hand to create opportunities
for improvements - progress. This all began
when societies had interlocked needs and
shared solutions for those needs.
Progress in the Small In today's interconnected
societies and material enterprises progress
can be viewed from afar as a massive movement
that includes cultural and scientific achievements,
but each achievement can be examined individually
as progress in the small. Man's early inventions
are basically no different in this respect
from current ones; there was a recognized
need, the wherewithal at hand to effect improvement
and possibly the other influences of conflict
and exploration at work. But, in any case
the singular improvement was the direct result
of the human mind solving some problem arising
from need.
(As Karl Popper says:
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"All organisms are constant problem
solvers; even though they are not conscious
of the problems they are trying to solve.")
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It involved using what was at hand to create
something new - something that satisfied
the need. In the case of a more effective
tool for cutting up carcasses, the idea of
piercing or sharpness became evident, though
probably unnamed as such, thus one tool could
be said to be sharper than its predecessor
and thereby more useful. It perhaps can be
said that the abstract concept of sharpness
came about through its use, thus concepts
grew out of utility, practice and eventually,
tradition.
Over the hundred thousand or so years of
homo sapiens existence as a species, a great
many such concepts have arisen and eventually
became part of the language and thought of
our race. Even today, in the midst of almost
daily findings in quantum physics, this repertoire
of concepts is useful - as in the case of
electron "spin" where spin is a
concept that is a useful, though not exact
concept, to distinguish a certain characteristic
of electrons. No doubt this repertoire is
growing still, both in the sciences and in
cultures, and they are embedding themselves
in our language and thinking. As to the meaning
of "concepts" I recall what Richard
Feynman said of them: "Concept is a
very strange concept." I won't debate
the ontological or epistemological aspects
of the word except to say that, whatever
one may say about them, they are indispensable;
causality may or may not have some ontic
presence, but it is the sine qua non of all
science and most of human intercourse. One
can develop quite a long list of concepts
which have been useful in scientific progress
and invention - a few are:
weight
size
area
straightness
curvature
leverage
advantage
distance
greater than
smaller than
containment
etc.
For the most part this list, if extended
to its fullest extent, form the basic set
of cognitive tools used in invention, therefore
in progress as for physical objects. Another
set is useful in discussing sociological
change and advancements:
good
bad
evil
recompense
reward
equality
fairness
wealth
poverty
control
superiority
power
weakness
etc.
In the field of art, including literature
sculpture and architecture (which is related
to technology) we find concepts such as:
balance
symmetry
meaning
message
impact
content
proportions
imagination
fantasy
etc.
It is easy to picture all three sets being
mixed in a potential palette for invention
and for understanding and using invention
and art and dealing with human interaction.
Another significant aspect of invention is
that of bringing together disparate concepts,
observations and facts to formulate a synthesis,
thus a new construction to solve some need.
The modern automobile is a prime example
of the fusion of many concepts and realities
in the world: the wheel, chemical combustion,
metallurgy, mechanical advantages, processing
of rubber, plastics, electricity, refinement
of crude oil, etc. The transistor, perhaps
the most influential invention of the 20th
century, invented in 1948, came about through
the knowledge of atomic structure and processing
techniques of various metals. It replaced
the thermionic vacuum tube, a bulky, heat
producing, fragile and short lived device.
A host of concepts were involved in the conception
of the transistor, and today if all such
devices were suddenly made ineffective or
removed from the developed nations a monstrous
devastation of civilized society would ensue.
Progress in the small adds to progress in
the large, as witnessed by the example of
the transistor, and may have profound influence
on society. It is by now a two-way street;
the complexities of the modern world beg
more and more improvements since the concepts
and previous inventions at hand offer more
and more opportunities for use.
The recent invention of cell-phones that
take and transmit pictures has spawned the
use of jammers which can thwart the use of
cell phones by those nearby; those who wish
to either not risk being photographed or
are simply irritated at the use of the phones
in their presence merely flip on their jammers.
Similar equipment is used by speeders on
the highway who wish to jam police radars.
Thus we see technology chasing technology.
No doubt the pilotless planes that are being
used in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars will
eventually be jammed to diminish their efficacy
in war. This points to warfare that is without
soldiers on the ground, but an arsenal of
robots fighting one another - technology
at war with itself. Perhaps the good news
might be that eventually wars will be fought
only in and by computers. Is that progress?
Progress in the Large Progress in the large
means the full panoply of what may be called
collective advancements in all human endeavors,
be they scientific or cultural and artistic.
The idea of the improvement of man and his
domain is quite old, perhaps beginning with
Plato and his utopian ideas about what a
society and its governance should look like.
All the concepts mentioned above, to Plato,
would be considered as having a transcendent
ontology that is independent of man, and
that knowledge (as opposed to opinion) will
lead mankind toward finding and using these
concepts to his benefit. The idea of the
perfect man, the man who has attained the
pinnacle of developmental possibilities in
this world was part of the Enlightenment
and remains a part of most religions - man
becoming perfect through contact with the
perfect God. We see progress all around us
every day, and may ask: Progress toward what?
It is tempting to cast this issue in the
same light as non-teleological nature; looked
at from afar, we humans and our world might
be seen as an integrated physical process
that is moving in some direction without
any specific directed vector, but with surety
and apparent success. (More about success
later) But all progresses in the small, which
are surely quite purposeful, accumulate to
become progress in the large; if progress
in the small is purposeful, is not the accumulated
result also purposeful? Perhaps the sheer
complexity of our modern world belies this
possibility, since predicting the future
is undeniably impossible, and predictability
is part of purposefulness. Undoubtedly no
one in Newton's day could predict all the
technology involved in landing a human on
the moon, and though science fiction is filled
with a plethora of possible futures, the
vagaries of human belief and the uncertainties
of the physical world deny even the most
seemingly prescient sci-fi writers the possibility
of accurate predictions. So, progress toward
what?
It has been said by both secular and religious
philosophers that there is a vector for human
progress - the pursuit of truth or of salvation.
Truth in the understanding of the phenomenology
of the physical world and truth in the make
up of human kind and the human mind. Regard
this, Frederick R. Karl, in his Modern and Modernism, says:
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" By pursuing utility, we can arrive
at truth; for, in fact, truth and utility
are dependent on each other."
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This is problematic, since "truth"
is an abstraction (Plato aside) that has
been invented by humans to help deal with
the world, and is nowhere settled in the
world of philosophy. However, it is settled
in the world of science; truth is what works.
This brings us to success. Success normally
relates to the achievement of an intended
objective. Without teleology, there is no
success, since there is no intended objective.
Success in nature (sans human intervention
and objectives) could arguably be considered
the continued existence of a species. The
shark has been around for sixty million years
with scarcely any changes in its habits or
morphology - does that mean it is a successful
species simply due to its longevity? The
fact that it has reached, to date, a state
of stasis with regard to its environment
might by some be considered as a successful
achievement of its evolution. On the other
hand, in lacking the stresses of changing
environments and the ensuing process of selection
through variation, it also might be considered
to be not so much successful as evolutionarily
dormant.
We humans probably shy away from wishing
such dormancy on ourselves since movement
and change (for the "better") is
a continually desirable process. So, can
we even speak of success in terms of reaching
a kind of human developmental nirvana, in
which we are secure and content with what
we have and what we are? During Rousseau's
time, there was an enchanting fixation by
some on the possibility of a society of primitively
content humans, harkening back to the age
of a simple life based on simple needs and
simple solutions. Such a desire was short
lived and went the way of many other utopian
dreams; why? Probably because it is the nature
of humans to change, to explore, to dream,
to lack satisfaction with what is at hand
and hold onto the idea of progress as the
means to make a better life. While we can
envision the Polynesians, without the rude
interruption of the 18th century explorers,
as having a stable and relatively peaceful
existence with their fish and bananas, sexual
freedom and easy going life style, we would,
for a variety of reasons not exchange places
with them. Why is this? They may be seen
as having reached something akin to the developmental
dormancy of the shark, the absence of external
forces and changes in their environment resulting
in a static culture. We "civilized"
humans eschew this state.
Success, therefore, is a relative matter,
and dependent on the presence or absence
of the forces at work to induce change. But
is change always progress? One can ask, with
a perfectly straight face, if the life of
the pre-explored Polynesians is less content
than the life today of the stressed, worrying,
in-debt middle class human, who must deal
with a myriad of influences and temptations.
What is success? What is progress toward
it?
Human nature is strange in this regard. The
millionaire who has every conceivable material
object required to fulfill his basic needs,
often wants still more. While he is considered
a success, he pictures success further down
the road, when he has more of what he already
has. Perhaps this condition is to be placed
in the category of gluttony - a sin in the
Christian faith. But his personal standard
of success demands that he have more. A wonderful
example of the dangers and pitfalls of this
view of success is the recent prison term
given to Sam Waxel, who headed up a successful
pharmaceutical firm that produced new drugs.
He was already a wealthy man, but upon hearing
that the FDA had not approved a new drug
his company had invented, he sold his stock
in the company - what is called "insider
trading"
- and was severely punished. While in prison,
ironically, the drug has since been approved
and the stock is on the rise. Thus, the convolution
of science and greed! Had he merely been
patient, all would have worked out fine.
Is Sam Waxel a success? The same question
can be asked of any criminal who gets away
with something and becomes rich. Is he a
success?
But here we are concerned with society as
a whole and what can be called a successful
society, through progress. No one can have
an accurate vision of the future, and therefore
no one can define the sociological and scientific
vector that will get us there, to some place
where all is well for all humans, and perhaps
the planet as well. But does that mean that
we let progress take its own random walk
to the future, hoping that by some law of
human progress that naturally aims toward
the "good" we will come out alright?
For those who hold to the Platonic idea of
"the good" they might also hold
to the idea of the "right path"
toward this "good." If they are
religious they might believe that the direction
is governed by faith in God; if they are
scientific they might believe that by understanding
the universe and the human mind (pure materialism)
we can choose the most efficacious vector
to get us there. Of course there are others,
myself included, who hold that things will
proceed as they will, much like nature itself,
inexorably moving toward something inexplicable
and unknown, and that we should not fret
about it - it will, and must, happen without
much guidance.
But there appears to be a kind of guidance.
The critical issue is, what kind of guidance
exists in this many-sided society with all
the various forces pulling us this way and
that? There are those, like the descendents
of the Newtonian age, who believe that the
inexorable laws of nature and of physics,
once discovered and harnessed, will open
the doors to the true and beneficent abode
for humanity. But we must think of the consequences
of even getting close to the age in which
we have conquered all disease and infirmities,
fed all the hungry, done away with poverty
and mental illness, eradicated bigotry, become
one people under one sway of a consummately
benign government - will we have attained
the evolutionary stasis of the shark, with
no forces acting upon us to further change
and "progress?" Is it in our human
make up to be satisfied with such a status?
I don't think so. Yes, there is guidance
in our progress, but we have no idea of what
that guidance consists - - it is the sum
total of all separate individual bits and
pieces of progress that go on each day, and
none of us is capable of wrapping our conceptual
arms around the meaning and direction of
this progress. It seems to me that the ingredients
of this progress is the sum of all concepts
that comprise the tools of progress, and
they are legion. We have become a species
of concepts, some in conflict, others in
harmony, but all tending toward an inexorable
movement toward something we know not of.
If we deny that there is some law of human
progress, divine or not, and are left with
a yawning abyss of random direction we may
sink into some existential angst; if we believe
that there is such a law, unless this is
believed by all or most, then it is of little
value and we are left with the same old brand
of conflicts among us.
A Confluence of Progresses I mentioned Darwin,
Marx and Wagner, following Barzun's use of
these as exemplars of an age, for a reason.
We may separate them out as three examples
of disparate tentacles of societal functions,
but they feed on one another in very interesting
ways and conspire to form a whole in terms
of seeing not only how but why societies
take the directions they do. The pinnacle
of romanticism as personified in Wagner was
not only a pinnacle, but it was a repudiation
of what it embodied in the sense that it
took romanticism to the edge and shoved it
over. Wagner cannot be taken as a serious
commentator on his age, but he can be taken
seriously as a force for change. (Music so-called
"classical" or "serious"
still shows the influence of Wagner.) The
gods are dead, and those gods are the gods
of righteous surety, of prescriptions for
morality, of dead and dying styles. All of
Wager is climactic - not introductory. While
it may touch one's emotions in terms of the
sheer force of the music, it also leaves
one with an emptiness - a sense of the tragic
and of loss. Darwin, a somewhat unwilling
representative of the overthrow of creationism
and a God-directed natural order, was as
much a ringer of the death knell of order
as he was the harbinger of a new kind of
order - that was, in fact, uncertainty. If
chance mutations were the main cause of speciation
and the eventual arrival of humans, the God
of Moses must be replaced with the god of
chance.
This startling suggestion remained only that
until the advent of quantum physics wherein
it is demonstrated that uncertainty is one
of the hallmarks of microphysics and a serious
element in understanding the world and the
universe. Marx, seeing a new formula for
establishing what the meaning of value is
in human intercourse, summed up (not invented)
the accumulation of opinions long since held
regarding what is significant in managing
the affairs among men in terms of labor and
the exchange of goods related to that labor.
He attempted to level the playing field in
terms of what progress means for the individual
but more importantly, for the group, the
state. He believed, as opposed to the beliefs
of the Utopians of his day, that a new society
built on the laws he envisioned regarding
value and labor cannot be invented and enforced
by fiat, but must come about naturally through
an inexorable revolution that is an organic
component of mankind once emancipated from
old thinking. Of course he was wrong in this
- there appears to be nothing that is inexorable
except movement and change, a system that
seemingly guides itself. Each of these three
dealt with change in the way humans view
themselves and their world, and they are
connected in both bold and subtle ways.
In looking at where we are today in terms
of the three headings of art, science and
social order and management, the canvas is
large and the colors wild, but there are
changes worth mentioning. No longer can we
look up to great paintings such as those
by Delacroix, David and Goya as depictions
of what humanity is doing to itself, because
there appears to be no single social force,
led by but one or a very few leaders, and
no large single event that dominates our
fears and hopes, and no heroes. We see terrorists,
enthralled with religious fervor using cell
phones - the merging of technology with fundamentalist
religious beliefs. We see art created and
displayed via complex and expensive technology
and obtained at the touch of a button. We
see political persuasions through the medium
of television that uses the art of propaganda
to make us think a certain way. We no longer
witness the rise of great leaders and heroes
who, in an earlier age might be painted on
large canvases and hung in museums where
they can affect public opinion. We see the
advance of medical technology not only in
increasing our longevity, but being used
to augment and alter our physical appearances,
making us conform to some ideal morphology.
We see art and music scattered into a plethora
of styles that do not represent an age or
social milieu as much as a chaos of outlooks
that pervade society. The common thread through
most of this scene is technology, and it
seems that not only is society today dependent
on technology, it is dependent on its continued
advance - its continued progress. There is
no walk of life today, at least in the developed
world, that is not affected in profound ways
by technology, and if there is a vector that
aims in some direction, that vector is nowadays
bound up by technology. Technology in robotics
is increasingly casting Marx' s labor/value
concepts even more in doubt as the paradigm
for desirable social order, since we can
easily envision human physical labor vanishing
altogether, leaving humans to rely solely
on their brain and the computer, activities
that are easily accomplished away from any
concentration of labor at factories, etc.
"Intellectual property" is replacing
physical property - nowadays most would much
rather own a lucrative patent than a acre
of productive land.
Progress today can be seen as an amalgam
of interrelated activities that all have
the common substrate of technology. Even
the most cerebral of activities, writing,
is being influenced by the advent of word
processing with its spell check and instant
availability of reference material via the
internet. Some writers claim that using word
processing, e-mail and the internet has altered
the way they think and pursue their craft.
The most dominant art forms, movies and television,
have become completely taken over by and
dependent on technology. The sociological
influence of the steam engine in the 19th
century can't hold a candle to that of current
technology (begun with the transistor in
1948).
So, progress toward what? If one were to
ask that question of anyone within one of
the sciences, no matter which one, I have
the feeling the answer would always be the
same: A solution to the problem I face at
the moment. This problem and its surrounding
complexities will always be a complete mystery
to laity. All of science and technology is,
for the most part, a mystery to the vast
majority of those who benefit from them.
This situation can be likened to ancient
or so-called primitive societies in which
fire was used and depended on but not understood
and perhaps even worshiped; Western society
today is being structured by a group who
might as well be gods in this regard. The
vector of progression is a strong and diverse
one, but it is at least confined to a group
who are intensely involved in solving their
particular problems within their particular
niche. There are no Marx's or Darwin's in
the mix for whom progress is a global and
monolithic matter, there are no giants of
political, artistic, scientific or economic
vision. The doctor in medical research, though
he may have tucked away in his mind some
far reaching utopian concept of a disease
free world, is mainly dedicated to solving
the specific problem at hand - possibly the
cure for a specific pathology. The world
and its scientific milieu is far too large
and complex for a visionary to wrap his arms
around it as a messiah for the true path
for the future through progress. Perfection
Whence came the abstraction, perfection?
No matter what its distant origins might
be, there is no doubt that mathematics offers
specifics in the matter. The mind offers
up the perfect circle and the straight line,
while neither of these is found in the observable
world. Progress as a process, might be seen
as movement towards perfection: the perfect
machine, the perfect algorithm, the perfect
body, the perfect harmony, the perfect state,
the perfect relationship and so on. But seldom
is perfection the objective of any endeavor.
Could one envision a perfect bridge or car
or chair or soap, or clock? It is easy in
mathematics and geometry to conceptualize
perfection, as in the perfect circle or square
or straight line, but all the while it is
well known that these are purely creations
of our minds and have no known correlate
in the world (By the same cognition of imagining
perfection, we know it is unachievable!).
But the very existence of perfection in the
mind leads many to pursue something as close
as humanly possible to its attainment. Many
would call the perfect anti-viral inoculation
as one that would prevent all known, and
unknown viral infections, which suggests
that in such cases perfection is the creation
of something that performs its intended objective
flawlessly. Would then, the perfect state
be one that functioned flawlessly in its
intended objectives, whatever they might
be? I doubt that perfection is involved in
intentional progress as we witness it. It
remains part of our imagination, and serves
little purpose in the changes we desire and
pursue.
|
"Every step the mind takes in its progress
toward knowledge makes some discovery, which
is not only new, but the best, too, for the
time at least." John Locke
"Science tends to be difficult, subtle,
ambiguous, and biased by all manner of social
and psychic prejudice - though surely directed
in a general way toward increasingly better
understanding of a real world 'out there'"
Stephen Jay Gould
|
Conclusions
Perhaps the metaphor of a random walk is
appropriate - there is progress, but the
compass points are irrelevant or nonexistent..
Today, to some degree, we see a return, if
it can be called that, of more "classical"
art in painting and sculpture, as if there
is a kind of magnetic pull toward representing
the world accurately, perhaps in reaction
to a century of artistic chaos. The clash
of cultures, or in some minds of civilizations,
as indicated by the perceived conflict between
Islam and Western ideologies and religions,
harkens back to the attempted intrusion of
the Ottoman Empire into Europe, and even
the Crusades
- the issues dividing Islam from the West
having only simmered the past few hundred
years. So what's new? What is undeniably
new is the geometric explosion of science
and technology and the resulting impact it
is having on daily life in the developed
nations of the world. What is not new is
the fact recurring global conflict based
on a variety of causes - practiced religion
being not the least of these. While we find
cures for disease and build spacecraft capable
of going to Mars, giant airplanes and huge
ocean going ships, develop complex communication
and entertainment systems, we have not conquered
conflicts within the human psyches and between
cultural groups. Wars of the 20th century
were the most brutal and life-taking in human
history. Drugs are being designed to deal
with depression, what used to be called melancholia
and is yet to be fully understood. We see
a unique kind of human progress at work,
technologies that will someday do away with
human physical labor, leaving us to depend
on our cognitive powers alone, our hands
used only on the keyboard, and eventually
not even that. If there is a directional
vector to our progress it is one that is
gradually tending toward nothing but the
use of the mind, and that mind has yet to
be understood. The internet is also doing
new things to human interaction; it provides
both free-wheeling conversations that may
or may not be honest or accurate in terms
of one's status or nature, and at the same
time it offers us the ability to speak freely
and honestly with little consequences. The
"delete" button accomplishes now
what more and less subtle means of the termination
of conversations existed in the past. For
some, this is an isolating process, for others
it is an expanding one, since we can make
acquaintances around the globe and come in
contact with other views at the touch of
our keyboard. The apparent random walk of
our progress, while not entirely random,
due to technology, remains a mysterious walk
- over the next hill, through unexplored
forests, as if seeking something we cannot
comprehend, or perhaps fleeing that which
we find dangerous. Our progress is apparently
inexorable, but its goal does not exist.
We witnessed at the end of the 19th what
was labeled "the absurd," following
Darwin's revelations about our development
as having been the result of chance mutations.
The theory of quantum physics, particularly
Heisenberg's famous uncertainty principle,
and Gödel's undecidability theorem which
proved there were flaws in our most basic
axiomatic system of integer mathematics,
conspired to cut us loose from the assumed
solidarity of Newton's mechanistic universe
as well as from our belief that there was
such a thing as iron-clad predictability
and mathematical certainty in the world.
Freud's expose of our unconscious mind instilled
in us the frightening knowledge that a great
deal is going on in our minds than we cannot
be aware of, and recent studies in the neurosciences
enforce this fact.
It must not be forgotten that progress and
its synonyms are themselves abstract concepts
we have invented for ease of explanation
in dealing with the world and our social
interactions in it. An alien creature, upon
discovering out planet and our civilization
with all its monuments to our physical progress,
might deem the whole thing as simply another
non-teleological enterprise of matter, and
if we could communicate, it is problematic
as to whether the alien would then change
its mind.
We usually resit being called animals, and
yet, with all the trappings of science and
technology, we remain animals, and as we
watch the deer roaming across the valley
or the eagle circling in the sky, we too
wander and circle. We know that animals,
in their movements are either fleeing predation,
seeking sustenance or procreation or providing
defense; perhaps in our own way we are doing
the same.