Not quite a science blog, not quite a Bible blog, not quite a politics or family blog. Just a box into which almost anything might be thrown. Worth a rummage in. See the labels cloud on the right for an idea of what you might find.
Sunday, 16 April 2017
Easter Blog
A while ago I noted the propensity of scientists to comment outwith
their area of expertise. We'll, I’m sticking very deliberately to an area
within my expertise. I'm going to comment, as a professional scientist, on
Easter - or at least one of the seminal events that gave rise to what we refer
to as Easter. This might strike many as bit odd. After all Easter is a
religious commemoration of certain alleged events that are claimed to have
occurred sometime in the first century in the Middle East. History, with a bit
of theology thrown in for good measure. But what can it have to do with
science? And then there’s the central claim of Easter; the entirely implausible
claim, that a dead man came back to life. Science proves that such things are
impossible right?
Wrong. Science will always struggle to deal with unique events. The
methods we usually apply, repeated observation, manipulation and measurement,
are not appropriate. Aha the sceptic cries, what about the big bang? Clearly
unique, yet also within the purvue of science. But the big bang is a hypothesis.
It's currently the best explanation for current observations (for example the
expanding universe around us cosmic background radiation). There might be
parallels here between the resurrection of Jesus and currently observable
events, but they're not quite the same.
That said, the need in science to collect and analyse data and to weigh
evidence, can be applied to Easter, with the caveat that the tools employed
will be those appropriate to the type of evidence available. So, given that
much of the evidence is in the form of literature, the tools will be literary.
If there's relevant archaeological evidence, the tools of archaeology will be
used. Not surprisingly in the case of an event of central importance to saints
and sceptics this kind of thing has been done extensively. Just do a Web
search.
But surely someone rising from the dead is just not believable? But why
not? Not believable and impossible (particularly scientifically impossible) are
different types of claims. My view is that belief (and unbelief) in the
resurrection of Jesus is not primarily about evidence, and it never has been. It's
about will. There’s plenty of evidence. But any amount of evidence will only
take anyone a certain distance. Easter is not really about whether a
given body is dead or alive, but whether a particular person is known or not. Apologetics
is fine, and a worthy exercise. I indulge (am indulging?) in it myself.
But it's a starting point not a destination. For the Christian (at least for
this Christian) it's an obstacle clearing exercise so that the real discussion
can begin. And the real discussion isn't about facts, truth, proof, argument
and the rest; it's about a person whom I know. A person with whom I have a
relationship just as surely as I have a relationship with my wife and weans. A
person to whom I can introduce others. And here's where my other area of
expertise comes into play.
I am a scientist, that's my profession. But as a person (and all
scientists are also people) I have experience of relationships. There are
some people I know about and there are others I know. I know about Einstein. I
know a bit more about Sherrington. But I never met either of these
distinguished scientists, both of whom died before I was born. But I make this
claim: I know Jesus. Of course, if like Einstein and Sherrington Jesus only died,
then I am deluded. And indeed He did die in antiquity. But my claim and the
testimony of my experience is that He's not dead now. I know Him.
To be clear I came to know Him long before I weighed up the evidence
supporting the fact of His resurrection. And the sceptic would be right to
point out that this means that there's likely to be a big risk of bias when I examine
the evidence for the resurrection. But then the sceptic would have to
accept the risk of bias in the opposite diction on their part. However, this
does not mean that either of us is incapable of examining the evidence, and
doing so fairly. It just means that we have to work at it. In my case, having
considered the evidence carefully, apart from my experience of knowing the
person who some claim is dead, buried and decayed, I have found the evidence
entirely convincing. However, I can conceive of a situation where overwhelming
evidence that counted against the resurrection might come to light and I would
have to re-evaluate my position. This would be a big problem. I would have to
conclude that for a long time I have been deluded. That I have been fooling myself
and fundamentally misunderstanding (and misrepresenting) pertinent facts. But I
accept that this is not impossible. Is the sceptic prepared to make the same
commitment from their side?
But all this talk of evidence is again kind of missing the point about
this being personal. I (the person who is also the scientist) know (rather than
simply know about) Jesus. The same Jesus who, as we reflected on Good Friday,
died on a cross, was alive a few days later, and is alive and knowable today.
And I personally know Him. I don’t think I’m deluded (although I suppose that’s
what a lot of deluded people say!). I think that my experience of Him is
complemented by the objective evidence (ie by evidence separate from my
experience), and by the experience of others both through history and now.
Indeed, my experience now counts, along with the experience and witness of many
others, as further evidence. Now it still might not be persuasive enough to
counter the intuition and observation that normally dead people do not come
back from the dead, do not walk, talk, cook breakfasts, eat fish and so on. But
none of this has any logical traction on the fact that Jesus is alive, did all
of these things, and is knowable today.
I know because I know Him.
Labels:
Easter,
experience,
faith,
Jesus,
resurrection,
science,
scientist
Saturday, 11 March 2017
Alt-facts, fake news and agnotology for beginners
I suppose like many “experts” and not a few scientists, I’ve
been troubled by the apparently recent rise of alternative facts, fake news and
the like. Of course it’s only apparent (rather than real) and it’s ancient not
recent (see Matt 28:11-15). I’ve already discussed why the notion that complex
issues are simple and that all that is needed is a dispassionate collection and
analysis of facts is problematic. However, on further reflection it turns out
that it’s naïve as well. In part, my reflections were stimulated by an excellent
article by Tim Harford, the FT’s
Undercover Economist (“The problem with facts”; unfortunately this is
behind the FT’s paywall so you won’t be able to read it without a subscription,
but see this).
He discusses at length how big tobacco combatted a whole slew of facts showing
that their product was killing people in their thousands if not millions. They
managed to delay by decades any kind of serious reckoning that would east into
their profits. Sixty years on from when the evidence that smoking kills began
to mount, they are still turning a pretty profit. It turns out that it’s the
tobacco playbook that the likes of the Trump and Brexit campaigns have been
following either intuitively or explicitly.
So how do you combat inconvenient but true facts? To quote
Harford about the indisputable facts from unquestionable sources on smoking: “The
indisputable facts were disputed. The unquestionable sources were questioned”.
The aim? To manufacture, encourage and maintain ignorance rather than knowledge
and truth, an exercise Robert Proctor, a Stanford historian, has called “agnotology”.
In fact, last May, during the election campaign, then president Obama spotted
this and commented on it in a speech delivered at Rutgers University. He pointed out that
ignorance is not a virtue. Clearly, however, as a tactic it’s pretty effective.
Look what happened come last November. It turns out that ignorance is in the
interest of some people, and that truth is not an unalloyed good. So make an
issue sound as complicated as you can, with certainly more than one side and preferably
more than two. Question the motives of those whose facts you don’t like and
give them motives if they don’t apparently have any. Destroy the notion of the
seeker after truth for truth’s sake.
Of course the problem is, and this is why these tactics are
so potentially powerful, that we live in a messy world in which many issues are
complicated and motives mixed. Put this together with the observation that
genuine facts are tricky things to find and trickier to deal with effectively,
and you begin to understand the problem. And then of course (and this is why I
was being naïve) clearly there are those (like of big tobacco) whose motives
are very decidedly less than pure (profit over lives). The answer can’t just be
more facts, although if repeating non-facts (ie lies) gives them a deal of
credibility, then repeating facts and finding new and relevant ones must count
for something. It has to be a more subtle analysis that sifts the facts, looks
at the sources, weighs competing motives and judges the relative importance of
different outcomes.
This all takes time and effort. But maybe for democracy to
function, that’s what as citizens we have to do. Investigate, collate,
triangulate, think, judge. Perhaps this is not something we are prepared to do.
Could it be that in complacency most of us would rather stick to narrow sources
of information (our favourite web site, like-thinking friends on social media,
a single newspaper or tv channel), be told what to think, be credulous about
what we’re told, allow ourselves to believe alt-facts we find convenient? If democracy
ceases to function, we’re heading towards something less palatable. In this and other domains it’s time to “be
adults in our thinking” (1 Cor 14:20).
Saturday, 18 February 2017
A bit of Trumpian perspective
Pundits have been having a bad time.
They've been badly beaten up by the people. It’s been a bad time for experts
too. Ignored and even mocked. Leading up to the EU referendum in the UK, we
were told that Brexit would cost us all money. It would cost jobs. There would
be political, educational and cultural costs. A majority ignored the advice.
Some didn't believe if. Some didn't want too. Some wilfully listened to
different voices that made carefully calibrated and worded, deniable, non-promises.
We embarked on an uncertain course to an uncertain destination.
I remember waking with a palpable sense of déjà
vu to something else that was scarcely believable right up to the moment it actually
happened. One Donald Trump won the US Presidential election. The insurgency
that wasn’t really, won again. A rich insider persuaded enough voters in the US
(although not a majority) that he was an outsider like them, and that he would
be their man if they elected him. Post-inauguration something approaching chaos
has ensued, despite claims by the President to the contrary. The “Muslim ban”
that wasn’t has been stymied by the courts. He claims that his executive order
was good and its implementation smooth, but that the administration had
encountered a “bad court”. Courts matter in the US. There will probably,
eventually, be a more conservative Supreme Court. But even then, President
Trump will have no control over Justices once raised to the Supreme Court. Given
that reality has a way of reasserting itself over fantasy, it remains to be
seen what the effects of a more conservative court will be. And what happens
when the “Mexican” wall doesn’t appear? Or when a combination of tax cuts and
infrastructure spending either doesn’t happen or does happen and cripples the
economy? An uncertain course is unfolding towards an uncertain destination. And
how will we know what’s going on? Bad news is likely to be constantly derided
as fake news. And meanwhile it looks like real fake news will be used to
distract and confuse.
What has any of this got do with science?
Well, it's never nice to see facts trashed and experts ignored. Mind you for
the sake of full disclosure I should admit that write from the perspective of
an expert (if only in eye movement control). During the US presidential campaign,
Hillary Clinton said in her stump speech that she 'believed science'. At the
time she was referring to issues around climate change. But this was a risky
thing to do politically. It probably contributed in a small way to her
democratic demise. It suited quite a lot of voters to discount the science of
climate change (complicated and nuanced) in favour of the much simpler idea
that their jobs and standard of living, at least over the short term, were much
more important. She was also drawing a contrast with someone who claimed to know
better experts, whether generals, economists or yes, scientists. And with someone
whose connection with anything resembling reality appears, at least on the
basis of his public pronouncements, to be tenuous. Given the Trump presidential
campaign, and the early weeks of the Administration, given the misinformation
on a heroic scale, insults and fantasy we’re hearing and seeing, things are not
looking good.
But facts matter, there is a reality that
can be usefully contrasted with fantasy. You can get away with voting for
comforting fantasy for a while. There are circumstances, after all, in which it
is possible to deny the reality of gravity for a little while. But in the end
the reality reasserts itself. Get caught in the wrong place at the wrong time
and the end result is unlikely to be pretty.
As an aside it’s interesting (and humbling)
to note that a reality TV star and shady businessman, has had more effect on
the world, than most scientists toiling away diligently will ever have. Time
will tell whether the effects are good or bad. But it’s a reminder that science
the institution is limited in its influence and heavily dependent on other institutions,
including cultural and political institutions. Before my science chums get sneery
about the 'ordinary' folk and their choices, it's worth remembering that those
are the folk science serves. And they are also the folk that, at least in the
UK, fund most science via their taxes. Science has its realm, and is
spectacularly successful at dealing with certain kinds of questions. But they
are not the only questions that bother people, and indeed may not even be the most
important ones. Whether I should vote to leave the EU, or vote for a Trump or
Clinton, or beyond that how I should live, science is only part, maybe just a
small part, of the picture.
Sunday, 11 September 2016
When the facts change….
Over time, people change. Over time their ideas change.
There are probably few of us who think the same in our 50’s as we did in our 20’s.
Those currently in their 20’s will be tempted to dismiss such change as “selling
out”. Those currently in their 50’s will probably shrug and call it “growing up”.
With some things it doesn’t particularly matter. But changing some ideas is a
big deal.
In my 20’s I spent quite a lot of time hanging about with a
bunch of sparky characters in the Glasgow University Christian Union. We were, most
of us, pretty sure of our ideas. Much of our thinking (and a lot of our
arguing) was suffused with the certainty of youth. And this was thinking about
the big stuff, like how we should live, what characteristics and attitudes we
should manifest, and even our eternal destinies. But we had more than just
youthful enthusiasm on our side. We felt that this certainty really sprang from
a sure foundation that we had found. That foundation was both personal and
objective. It was personal in the sense that it was based on a person, none
other than God Himself. It was objective, because God had revealed Himself in a
book that was open to all to read and respond to – the Bible. Certainty was a
bit unfashionable at that time. Some condemned it as naiveté, some as
stupidity. Others saw it as leading to a stifling of adventure and liberty. If
anything, certainty today is even more unfashionable. At the time we had our
critics who claimed this was all a bit of a phase we were going through. We
would grow out of it. We would grow up. We would change our ideas.
Thirty years or so later, these reflections are prompted by
the observation that a number of friends from that period have indeed changed
their thinking. Some changed quickly, some slowly. Some changed superficially,
some fundamentally. And maybe some of us haven’t changed much at all. The
change I’m talking about is not the superficial stuff of hair presence or
colour, tastes in music, or even taste in politics. I’m sure we all change in
lots of ways with age, and should. What I’m talking about are our responses to
those more basic issues: life, death and eternity, lifestyle, values, motives
and attitudes.
Some have claimed they have indeed moved on and grown up. They
weren’t wrong at the time, for that time, but it was indeed just a phase. A
sort of youthful hobby that they had time for then, but not as real responsibilities
accumulated. So grace, Gospel, Bible, Church, Jesus – all that kind of thing faded from importance; like an attachment to
an old childhood toy. Some have made a much stronger claim. The views they held
then, certainties about Heaven and Hell, salvation and sin, Christ and cross,
were just wrong. Forgivable in the young perhaps, but they know better now. It’s
not that their views then aren’t appropriate now, but that those views are
wrong and misconceived now, and in fact were wrong and misconceived then.
My observation is that there is also a group who, in a sense,
have not changed their ideas. It’s not that they haven’t changed. For thirty years
of life experience not to produce change would be tragic. But the changes are
about sensitivity and nuance, not a change to basic ideas and thoughts. Perhaps
an increased sense of life’s complexities, bringing a realisation of where the certainties
are and where they are not. I belong to this group. And I’ve been trying to figure
out why.
It’s a bit unclear who actually said “When the facts change,
I change my ideas”. It has been attributed to J.M. Keyes the renowned
economist. But there appears to be no record of him actually saying these
words. I’ve commented previously about what slippery creatures facts are.
Never-the-less, the notion here is clear. I might hold certain views based on
certain things I know (or think I know). But if what I have based my thinking
on changes, then by implication it’s only right that my thinking changes too.
Changed premises should lead to changed conclusions. Suppose I believe that
Jesus of Nazareth was not just a man (albeit a great one) but that He was God because
he died and rose from the dead. Bit of a bold and contested claim I know. But
suppose I find this belief (and all that flows from it) credible because I have
weighed the evidence supporting it, primarily concerning an empty tomb, and
found it persuasive. Then a startling new piece of evidence comes to light –
say for the sake of argument the bones of Jesus of Nazareth! Not that anyone is
likely to find a casket of bones conveniently labelled, whose provenance is uncontested
– facts are slippery remember. But on weighing the new evidence, I conclude
that it is credible, and trumps the evidence on the other side of the argument.
I would have to change my thinking fundamentally.
So, now flip this around. Reflecting on the experience of
many of my friends who have changed their ideas, I’m curious to know what “facts”
have changed. Because to me, most of the facts on which I based my views all
those years ago have not changed. I have changed. My circumstances have
certainly changed. My responsibilities have changed. But the facts? My conviction
that the God who is, and has revealed Himself in His Son and in His Book,
remains. At various times it has been tempting to turn my back on what to me
are certainties. It would have freed me to perhaps do things that at the time
seemed attractive, or behave in ways that would have been pragmatic or
expedient. But I would have been fooling myself. I would have been conveniently
self-deluded. And although certainty is deeply unfashionable, I don’t see any
point in denying that there are some things, some very important things, of
which I am convinced. Things I am certain of.
Hopefully as long as the facts do not change, neither will
my thinking.
Monday, 25 July 2016
Reflections from Nice
There are large collections of flowers, flags, balloons, football shirts and various other marks of remembrance both on the Promenade des Anglais and round the bandstand next to the Monument de Centenaire here in Nice. Fully armed soldiers patrol in groups of four along the Promenade and up and down the main streets. Nice in July 2016 superficially feels a bit like Belfast 1986. But that was during a concerted campaign with a political agenda. Nice, an attack by a Tunisian resident in France, has been followed by a spate of attacks in Germany by an Afghan asylum seeker, a bullied and anxious teenager and a failed Syrian asylum seeker who was facing deportation. All of these events were magnified by the quickly present mainstream media, amplifying the now ubiquitous social media.
Certainly if the objective in Nice was to terrorise the population, the enraged driver of that now infamous white lorry failed spectacularly. What passes in Nice for a beach is packed with quietly toasting bodies. Bikes (with both one and two wheels) still have to be negotiated by pedestrians trying to get to the beach. The cafes, restaurants and market stalls continue to do a brisk trade. Indeed, large as they are, you need to look to see the memorials to the recent attack, and can easily miss the extra security patrols. Life goes on. Reporting from the scene of one of the attacks in Germany, a BBC reporter commented that what struck him was the normality of life just a few hours after an attack. Life goes on; it has to.
Perhaps this is aided by the lack of a coherent campaign and accompanying narrative. The thing about the IRA campaign that began in the late 1960's was it had a clear cause, a strategy and a desired end-point. It provided a historical narrative as well as a contemporaneous one. The response was a "new normal", one that included both obvious and not so obvious security measures. People adjusted to a particular way of doing things that factored in an ongoing terrorist threat. It seemed to me at the time to be a bit like the way a society deals with other structural challenges like chronically high inflation or electricity only being available for a couple of hours a day. You adjust. You have to. Life goes on.
But currently, the randomness of the attacks on mainland Europe preclude this kind of adjustment. Neither the causes of them, nor the causers, have a high proportion of coherence or commonality. So the responses to them may well also be piecemeal and heterogeneous. There will be responses of course. Life goes on.
What you may ask, has any of this to do with my usual concerns of science and faith and God? Well, in the face of these recent events many of the issues I've been commenting on seem rather narrow. Not unimportant you understand, but narrow. None of them in themselves are life or death issues. No one is going to be heaping up flowers to remember them. Of course we only have time and space to pontificate on narrow matters because of the usual absence of the kind of meaningless violence that has marked these last few weeks in continental Europe. Most of the time, in most places there is no need to look out for a deranged van driver, bomber or axe weilder. Our peace and security, a bit like good health, are perhaps things we only appreciate when they are threatened. They are worth appreciating, and maintaining. Easier said than done.
The kind of calm and space that I've enjoyed in my lifetime did not come at no cost. It may not last. The political and social stability that I've enjoyed may or may not be enjoyed by my children. But while it remains the predominant feature of my surroundings, sitting in Nice I'm reminded to make the most of it. In the words of the Apostle Paul "..making the best use of time.." (Eph 5:16). Perhaps then I'd better get back to narrower, less troubling, matters.
Certainly if the objective in Nice was to terrorise the population, the enraged driver of that now infamous white lorry failed spectacularly. What passes in Nice for a beach is packed with quietly toasting bodies. Bikes (with both one and two wheels) still have to be negotiated by pedestrians trying to get to the beach. The cafes, restaurants and market stalls continue to do a brisk trade. Indeed, large as they are, you need to look to see the memorials to the recent attack, and can easily miss the extra security patrols. Life goes on. Reporting from the scene of one of the attacks in Germany, a BBC reporter commented that what struck him was the normality of life just a few hours after an attack. Life goes on; it has to.
Perhaps this is aided by the lack of a coherent campaign and accompanying narrative. The thing about the IRA campaign that began in the late 1960's was it had a clear cause, a strategy and a desired end-point. It provided a historical narrative as well as a contemporaneous one. The response was a "new normal", one that included both obvious and not so obvious security measures. People adjusted to a particular way of doing things that factored in an ongoing terrorist threat. It seemed to me at the time to be a bit like the way a society deals with other structural challenges like chronically high inflation or electricity only being available for a couple of hours a day. You adjust. You have to. Life goes on.
But currently, the randomness of the attacks on mainland Europe preclude this kind of adjustment. Neither the causes of them, nor the causers, have a high proportion of coherence or commonality. So the responses to them may well also be piecemeal and heterogeneous. There will be responses of course. Life goes on.
What you may ask, has any of this to do with my usual concerns of science and faith and God? Well, in the face of these recent events many of the issues I've been commenting on seem rather narrow. Not unimportant you understand, but narrow. None of them in themselves are life or death issues. No one is going to be heaping up flowers to remember them. Of course we only have time and space to pontificate on narrow matters because of the usual absence of the kind of meaningless violence that has marked these last few weeks in continental Europe. Most of the time, in most places there is no need to look out for a deranged van driver, bomber or axe weilder. Our peace and security, a bit like good health, are perhaps things we only appreciate when they are threatened. They are worth appreciating, and maintaining. Easier said than done.
The kind of calm and space that I've enjoyed in my lifetime did not come at no cost. It may not last. The political and social stability that I've enjoyed may or may not be enjoyed by my children. But while it remains the predominant feature of my surroundings, sitting in Nice I'm reminded to make the most of it. In the words of the Apostle Paul "..making the best use of time.." (Eph 5:16). Perhaps then I'd better get back to narrower, less troubling, matters.
Monday, 18 July 2016
What is a scientist and why does it matter?
Questions
are often easier to ask than to answer. So, before trying to answer this
particular question, why is it worth trying to answer? Well, science is still
generally seen as a good thing, and a useful way of finding things out. And
scientists tend to be regarded as speaking with some authority. But this brings
with it a couple of dangers.
The
first is the propensity of scientists to speak outwith their area of expertise.
I can speak with some authority on a number of fairly obscure topics. With all
modesty, I know a thing or two about what modifies saccade latency (told you
they were obscure). However, I have been known to express opinions on a range
of other issues. How seriously should you take these? While I am entitled to a
polite hearing and a civil response, my views should carry no more weight than
yours outwith my areas of expertise and experience. If I were an economist, and
we were discussing the economic implications of Brexit, then you might pay more
attention (although apparently not). But if I’m an expert in eye movement
control?
Science
seems to have a lingering and subtle authority that has a certain cultural
influence. Advertisers know this and often present their claims in a pseudoscientific
way. So they will be made by a bespectacled, white-coated, grey-haired boffin.
Or reference will be made to something that sounds like a scientific experiment
that has been run, the results of which can inform your purchasing decision.
Subtle biases are being evoked. It is probably true that these effects might be
waning. And there does seem to be an anti-expert, pro-ignorance spirit abroad. This
spectre was raised by President Obama in his Rutgers commencement speech
recently, a speech that also specifically mentioned the merits of science.
Never-the-less, if there is even a lingering authority, then those who speak as
scientists will benefit from this. Time to try and answer that question.
You
might think that a scientist is simply someone who has a degree with science in
the title (in the UK someone with “BSc” after their name). And yet, with the
advent of mass higher education, there are many thousands of science graduates
who have no real practical experience of science. They’ve read about it,
they’ve been exposed to some practical scientific skills, they’ve maybe learned
how to review other peoples’ science. But this is some way short of actually
doing science and being a scientist. And one of the real weaknesses of science
education, at least in the western world, is that it is quite possible to do a
science degree and at no point step back and consider what science actually is.
What is “the scientific method”? Is there such a thing? Is there only one? How
does one do a real experiment, as opposed to a prepared laboratory practical? A
science degree should provide a basic level of scientific literacy. An
understanding that might see through bogus science-type claims in the media and
elsewhere. And this is useful. But can the holder really speak for science with
any authority?
What
about one level up, the “masters” level? Here there are various degree-types. Many
of them are highly vocational in nature, preparing the student for specific
tasks or careers. No harm in that. But does this qualify the holder as an
expert in “science”? Interestingly, again in many of these programmes, there is
no attempt to look more generally at science and how it works. Just as
interesting, those that only examine the history and practice of science, are
by definition not science at all. The next level up is the PhD, still the basic
professional qualification in, at least, academic science. This involves doing
science, and (ideally) becoming the initiator as well as the practitioner of
the science concerned. So, it should involve all those elements of hypothesis
generation, testing, falsification, discovery and confirmation. But this
apparent breadth of experience comes at the cost of specialization. So most of
the activity will probably all be concentrated on a tiny sliver of the broad
endeavour that is science more generally. Specialization is a problem when
making claims about science in general, as opposed to one little bit of it. I
can talk for days about eye movement, but you can easily trip me up by getting
me to hold forth on whether those Italian neutrinos really did go faster than
the speed of light (I don't think they did)!
I
suppose what I’m arguing is that we should all be very wary when we hear anyone
claiming general authority to speak on behalf of “science”. In the apologetic
arena, this applies equally to those speaking for or against propositions
concerning the existence of God, the reliability of the Gospels and the rest.
There’s no replacement for careful listening and critical thought. Factor in
the specific expertise where it is relevant. So, of the discussion is about the
age of rocks, you might want to give weight to a geologist. Be careful of
course if they stray into the issue of when the book of Daniel was written.
There
is also one place where many of these issues come together to annoy. This is in
the final chapter of many popular science books written by senior scientists. The
temptation is to bamboozle the reader with lots of brilliant science, both that
of the author, and that of the author’s scientific heroes. Fine so far. Indeed,
it’s often important and inspiring stuff. But having built up a degree of
credibility and authority in the reader’s mind, often a final chapter will be
slipped in that grinds various metaphysical axes well outwith the expertise of
the writer. The author is, of course, entitled to hold and express such views.
But what is really being perpetrated is a bit of con, whether conscious or unconscious.
The hope is that the authority built up in the first part of the book, will
spill over into the other stuff.
Of
course, most of what I’ve been discussing has nothing to do with my area of
expertise. So, you’ll have to judge for yourself whether I’m making sense.
Saturday, 2 July 2016
It’s (not just) about the facts, stupid
James Carville, the architect of Bill Clinton’s successful
1992 presidential run, gets the credit (blame?) for coming up with the phrase
“It’s the economy stupid”. This was designed to keep the campaign on track by
keeping everyone’s attention focussed on what really mattered. Now you might
think that an appropriate version of this in science might be “It’s about the
facts”. After all science is all about facts – discovering and communicating
them. It’s not about stuff like feelings. This is not to argue that facts are
easy things to work with. It can be really hard to prise them out of the
universe. Just think of the time and expense, trouble and complexity, involved
in finding the Higgs Boson, of establishing as a fact that it exists. However,
it turns out that even in science it’s not that simple. And beyond science, in
the rest of life, if the last week in the UK has demonstrated anything, it’s
that a lot of things besides facts are critical.
Definitions of the word “fact” abound. Let’s assume we mean
statements about things, situations, objects, processes or people that are
true. Just being able to state something (eg “Trump is a chump”) doesn’t make
it a fact. Although, as an aside, it’s interesting that in the social media
age, it seems that the secret to establishing something as a fact is simply to
say it often enough, or to have it said by enough people. But to establish a
statement as a statement of fact, there has to be some interaction with
evidence, with how things actually are. This moves a statement from being an
opinion to being a fact. So if a Trump did or said lots of chump-like things,
then we might feel happier concluding that the statement was a statement of
fact, not of opinion. Of course we have the practical problem of identifying,
gathering and analysing the evidence. And this all turns out to be quite
tricky.
What is going to count as relevant evidence, and who is
going to decide? We tend to depend on various types of institution to decide
what is and what is not relevant. So we have courts and judges and lawyers with
rules to decide what’s relevant in the criminal sphere. In science, different disciplines
tend to act in a similar institutional way deciding what’s relevant to a given
issue. So it was particle physicists who decided the rules in determining what
sort of, and what degree of evidence would be required to show that the Higgs existed
and had been found. They would claim that they were guided by theories that
laid out mathematical criteria for deciding what was what. But it was still a
community effort. And even in physics, there’s still scope for a degree of
interpretation.
But when it gets really interesting is when you realise that
even once you’ve got a stone cold fact, that’s when the fun really begins.
Because facts don’t exist in isolation. Every fact comes embedded in a whole
bunch of contextual stuff. And it’s when both are taken together (the fact/facts
and the context) that we determine whether we’re going to take a fact seriously
(believe it, rely on it, act on it). Take the simple fact that “it’s raining”.
If you run in to my windowless office (it’s not actually windowless, but bear
with me) shouting that it’s raining, just before I leave for home, then you
might expect me to pick up a brolly or put on a coat. But if I know you are a
regular prankster, and you are known for never quite telling things as they are
and for always having your own agenda (and if your name is Boris), even if it
really is raining I might actually leave my office unprotected.
There’s also the issue of deciding between facts. It turns
out that how we might interpret the same fact differs depending on context. Even
in science, deciding which facts to go after, is rarely a matter of the facts
themselves. Experiments guided by provisional theories (hypotheses) will prioritise
some facts over others. So some are discovered, others remain hidden. And prior
views (beliefs and theories) can be so powerful, even in science, that we have
to guard constantly against things like confirmation bias – prioritising the
facts that suit our views. Our prior commitments to theories, it turns out, can
lead us to interpret the same facts in different ways. It can be so bad, that
we become incapable of even communicating sensibly with adherents of other
views. This has happened in science in the past, even (or perhaps particularly)
in physics, the hardest of hard sciences.
This sort of thing is going on now in UK politics. We have
just had a referendum that was in part about facts. Facts about the economic
impact of Brexit. Facts about the numbers coming into the UK from both the EU and
further afield. But how those facts were interpreted, or even whether they were
accepted as facts, depended very much on the prior commitments of people. And
during the campaign there developed a kind of mutual incomprehension between
Remainers and Brexiteers. For many on both sides, the facts were so obvious and
powerful, that communication became almost impossible. But it turned out it
wasn’t just about facts at all. It was about a lot of other stuff too.
So when we come to other important facts, facts like an
empty tomb for example, there’s no warrant for instant dismissal on one side,
or a feeling that its implications should just be obvious on the other. There’s
investigating to be done, evidence to be engaged with and carefully weighed.
And an awareness of background biases and prior commitments. And if you’re
tempted to feel that the facts are just so obvious that you cannot conceive of
how someone can come to view that differs from yours given those facts, then go
sit in a dark cool room and think again.
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