Monday, July 28, 2003
Tuesday, July 22, 2003
What's a bleeding heart to do?
I can't tell if I'm a liberal or a conservative any more.
I'm an environmentalist. I give money to the Nature Conservancy, Defenders of Wildlife, and a dozen other "left-wing" organizations. I love to hike. I own a pair of Tevas.
I support a woman's right to have an abortion. (There, I've just destroyed any policital ambitions I might have harbored by failing to use the convenient euphamism "a woman's right to choose" or the even slimier "a woman's right to make her own medical decisions." I understand why politicians use these phrases, but come on, we all know what we're talking about here.)
I support gay marriage. To me, prohibiting gays from getting married is no more defensible than prohibiting blacks from marrying whites.
I believe marijuana should be legalized. Having tobacco be legal and marijuana not makes no sense at all. We made the same mistake with alchohol back in 1918. Why haven't we learned our lesson? Is it just because the gangsters now are wearing bandanas and sweatshirts instead of fedoras and pinstripe suits?
On the other hand...
I believe in the individual right to bear arms. (See this for a more eloquent defense of this position than I can muster.)
I believe in free enterprise and small government.
I think deficit spending generally ought to be avoided.
Hm, maybe I'm a liberal after all. Whew!
I'm an environmentalist. I give money to the Nature Conservancy, Defenders of Wildlife, and a dozen other "left-wing" organizations. I love to hike. I own a pair of Tevas.
I support a woman's right to have an abortion. (There, I've just destroyed any policital ambitions I might have harbored by failing to use the convenient euphamism "a woman's right to choose" or the even slimier "a woman's right to make her own medical decisions." I understand why politicians use these phrases, but come on, we all know what we're talking about here.)
I support gay marriage. To me, prohibiting gays from getting married is no more defensible than prohibiting blacks from marrying whites.
I believe marijuana should be legalized. Having tobacco be legal and marijuana not makes no sense at all. We made the same mistake with alchohol back in 1918. Why haven't we learned our lesson? Is it just because the gangsters now are wearing bandanas and sweatshirts instead of fedoras and pinstripe suits?
On the other hand...
I believe in the individual right to bear arms. (See this for a more eloquent defense of this position than I can muster.)
I believe in free enterprise and small government.
I think deficit spending generally ought to be avoided.
Hm, maybe I'm a liberal after all. Whew!
You morons!
Sigh. Ralph Nader was right..
Where were these idiots when they were going over plausible deniability in politics school?
[Update: the link above seems to be dead now, but it once pointed to an LA times story about how the Democrats in the California state legislature were planning to delay the already overdue state budget for political gain -- while an active microphone broadcasted their conversation all across the state Capitol.]
Where were these idiots when they were going over plausible deniability in politics school?
[Update: the link above seems to be dead now, but it once pointed to an LA times story about how the Democrats in the California state legislature were planning to delay the already overdue state budget for political gain -- while an active microphone broadcasted their conversation all across the state Capitol.]
Sunday, July 20, 2003
We just like to look at maps
According to documents acquired (finally) by Judicial Watch under a FOIA request, oil executives participating in secret meetings with Vice President Dick Cheney to discuss national energy policy were looking at maps of Iraqi oil fields in March of 2001.
I'm not sure which is more disturbing in light of subsequent events: that they were looking at these maps six months before 9/11, or that they fought tooth and nail to keep anyone from finding out about it.
I'm not sure which is more disturbing in light of subsequent events: that they were looking at these maps six months before 9/11, or that they fought tooth and nail to keep anyone from finding out about it.
Friday, July 18, 2003
Hello, world!
From the better late than never department...
I have finally gotten around to creating a blog. Where to begin? I bounce back and forth between feeling like I have so much to say, and feeling like everything worth saying has been said a million times already.
So I guess I'll start with the basics: I am a scientist. That is intended to be not so much a description of my profession (though it is that too) as it is a statement about my religious beliefs. Whether science is a religion or not depends, of course, on how you define religion. What I mean is this: before you can engage in a pursuit for the truth you have to make an arbitrary decision about what you will accept as persuasive arguments. You must, at root, have faith in something. Even if you choose to assume that nothing is worthy of faith, that in itself is an article of faith.
The central tenet of science in which I choose to place my faith is that experiment is the ultimate arbiter of truth. Any idea that is not consistent with experimental evidence must be wrong.
There are two important limitations to science: it doesn't tell us which ideas are right, only which ones are wrong. Therefore all knowledge is tentative, all ideas subject to being overturned at any time by new experimental evidence. And it is limited in scope. It applies only to ideas that are testable by experiment. So it can provide no guidance on the question of, say, whether modern art is or isn't art. (It can, however, offer guidance on morality. More on this later.)
There is a third problem, which is that many different ideas are consistent with our current suite of experimental data. To choose among them I choose to believe in Occam's razor: all else being equal, a simple idea is more likely to be true than a complicated one. This principle is strictly subservient to the first principle. If experiment rules out all the simple ideas, then the remaining complicated idea must be true. But if experiment is silent, then simpler ideas are preferable to complicated ones.
This is actually a severe oversimplification. A much better explanation of what I'm trying to say here is given by Dave Deutsch in chapter 7 of his book "The Fabric of Reality." If you really want to know what I
believe you will have to read that because he explains it much better than I can ever hope to. (Note that I do not believe the central thesis of the rest of his book, but that's another -- very long -- story.)
Both of these principles actually derive from a more basic, core faith, which is that the truth makes sense, that the Universe is internally self-consistent, that it all "hangs together" in some reasonable way. It is entirely possible that experimental evidence will some day show that the universe is not internally self-consistent. If that ever happens I will have to re-examine my core beliefs.
I do not "choose" this faith in the way that I can choose, say, what color shirt I put on in the morning, or what career to pursue. I have the internal sense that where my actions are concerned I have free will. Not so with my beliefs. I have no idea how I could choose to believe, even if I wanted to, that the Universe, at root, didn't make any kind of sense at all. My brain just doesn't seem to work that way.
I can therefore understand how someone could "choose" a faith that seems on the surface to be very different from mine. The typical religious person has, I suppose, as their core faith that life has a purpose or a transcendant meaning, like serving God, or following His Law, or reaching Nirvana. Life without purpose is no more acceptable to them than a Universe that doesn't make sense is to me. In fact, life without purpose is a universe that doesn't make sense to them, so if science paints a picture of such a world then science must be wrong. This is perfectly sound reasoning, though most atheists don't seem to recognize this.
Science does not, as many religious people claim, paint a picture of life as completely arbitrary and pointless. It does, however, paint a picture of life -- at least an individual life -- as finite. When we
die, that's the end. There is no scientific evidence for resurrection or an afterlife, so by Occam's razor they do not exist. Some find this hard to take; I'm not sure how I feel about it. Some times I'd like to see what the world will be like 100 or 1000 years from now. Other times I feel that when my time comes I will have had my fill. I certainly try to live my life that way.
Believing in science is not the same thing as believing scientists. Science is a business, and so what scientists say is influenced by business as well as scientific considerations. It isn't "supposed" to be that way, but it is, and it is becoming more so all the time. Nonetheless, the business of science seems to me so far to be a relatively honest area of human endeavor, at least when compared to, say, politics or business or even journalism.
Accepting the principles of science is vastly easier than working out for onesself the consequences of those principles. The pronouncements of scientists, like everything else, need to be taken with a healthy dose of skepticism. It is therefore important, I believe, to do experiments for onesself, to develop a worldview of things one believes because one has experienced them firsthand. This serves as a useful guide for subsequent skepticism. Scientific claims that are at odds with personal experience deserve more scrutiny than ones that jibe.
It doesn't much matter what sorts of experiments one does. (In my youth I spent quite a bit of time looking for UFO's.) One of my favorites is to look at Jupiter through a telescope to see the Gallilean moons. Those moons, on the worldview of the people that wrote the Bible, are quite a remarkable thing. I believe they are real not because an astronomer said so, but because I have seen them with my own eyes. (There are likewise things that scientists say that I do *not* believe as a result of similar personal experiences.)
To me, looking at Jupiter through a telescope is a relgious experience.
It is actually very easy to "do experiments" that validate the scientific worldview because we are absolutely surrounded by technology. In fact, it is barely possible to exist in this world without doing so dozens of times a day. Every time we turn on a light switch or start a car or use a computer we personally experience the validity of a huge number of scientific claims. No technology has ever been created by prayer.
On morals...
People -- and other animals as well -- seem to have a built-in sense of right and wrong. Dogs, for example, know when they've done something bad (at least, my dog does). Very few people really take seriously the idea that morals come from God. Many people *think* they take it seriously, but I think they are lying to themselves. To see this, ask yourself: if God said that raping children was OK, would that make it OK? Only the most radical fundamentalist would answer yes. Most people get quite upset if you actually ask them this question because it forces to confront the cognitive dissonance between what they think they believe -- that morals come from God -- and what they actually believe -- that they "just know" what is right and wrong, like that raping children is wrong, even if God says otherwise.
People's moral intuition seems to boil down to variations on the Golden Rule: do unto others as you would have them do unto you. The converse is actually more useful as a moral guide: don't do to others what you don't want them to do to you. I think that is more or less a sufficient guide to being a good person. If everyone followed the Golden Rule the world would be a vastly better place.
Interestingly, science can now provide an account of how this moral intuition arises. It turns out that the Golden Rule (or variations on it) makes an effective survival strategy, and thus arises naturally under Darwinian evolution. For an account of how this happens, read "The Evolution of Cooperation" by Robert Axelrod, or Chapter 27 of Douglas Hoftstadter's "Metamagical Themas."
Even more interestingly, the Bible supports this view as well, at least in the Old Testament. Exodus 32, the story of the Golden Calf, describes how Moses talks God out of destroying the Israelites, wherupon God laments "the evil he thought to do unto his people." The Talmud also endorses humans second-guessing God, a point of view with which I am entirely comfortable.
Well, that seems like a good start.
I have finally gotten around to creating a blog. Where to begin? I bounce back and forth between feeling like I have so much to say, and feeling like everything worth saying has been said a million times already.
So I guess I'll start with the basics: I am a scientist. That is intended to be not so much a description of my profession (though it is that too) as it is a statement about my religious beliefs. Whether science is a religion or not depends, of course, on how you define religion. What I mean is this: before you can engage in a pursuit for the truth you have to make an arbitrary decision about what you will accept as persuasive arguments. You must, at root, have faith in something. Even if you choose to assume that nothing is worthy of faith, that in itself is an article of faith.
The central tenet of science in which I choose to place my faith is that experiment is the ultimate arbiter of truth. Any idea that is not consistent with experimental evidence must be wrong.
There are two important limitations to science: it doesn't tell us which ideas are right, only which ones are wrong. Therefore all knowledge is tentative, all ideas subject to being overturned at any time by new experimental evidence. And it is limited in scope. It applies only to ideas that are testable by experiment. So it can provide no guidance on the question of, say, whether modern art is or isn't art. (It can, however, offer guidance on morality. More on this later.)
There is a third problem, which is that many different ideas are consistent with our current suite of experimental data. To choose among them I choose to believe in Occam's razor: all else being equal, a simple idea is more likely to be true than a complicated one. This principle is strictly subservient to the first principle. If experiment rules out all the simple ideas, then the remaining complicated idea must be true. But if experiment is silent, then simpler ideas are preferable to complicated ones.
This is actually a severe oversimplification. A much better explanation of what I'm trying to say here is given by Dave Deutsch in chapter 7 of his book "The Fabric of Reality." If you really want to know what I
believe you will have to read that because he explains it much better than I can ever hope to. (Note that I do not believe the central thesis of the rest of his book, but that's another -- very long -- story.)
Both of these principles actually derive from a more basic, core faith, which is that the truth makes sense, that the Universe is internally self-consistent, that it all "hangs together" in some reasonable way. It is entirely possible that experimental evidence will some day show that the universe is not internally self-consistent. If that ever happens I will have to re-examine my core beliefs.
I do not "choose" this faith in the way that I can choose, say, what color shirt I put on in the morning, or what career to pursue. I have the internal sense that where my actions are concerned I have free will. Not so with my beliefs. I have no idea how I could choose to believe, even if I wanted to, that the Universe, at root, didn't make any kind of sense at all. My brain just doesn't seem to work that way.
I can therefore understand how someone could "choose" a faith that seems on the surface to be very different from mine. The typical religious person has, I suppose, as their core faith that life has a purpose or a transcendant meaning, like serving God, or following His Law, or reaching Nirvana. Life without purpose is no more acceptable to them than a Universe that doesn't make sense is to me. In fact, life without purpose is a universe that doesn't make sense to them, so if science paints a picture of such a world then science must be wrong. This is perfectly sound reasoning, though most atheists don't seem to recognize this.
Science does not, as many religious people claim, paint a picture of life as completely arbitrary and pointless. It does, however, paint a picture of life -- at least an individual life -- as finite. When we
die, that's the end. There is no scientific evidence for resurrection or an afterlife, so by Occam's razor they do not exist. Some find this hard to take; I'm not sure how I feel about it. Some times I'd like to see what the world will be like 100 or 1000 years from now. Other times I feel that when my time comes I will have had my fill. I certainly try to live my life that way.
Believing in science is not the same thing as believing scientists. Science is a business, and so what scientists say is influenced by business as well as scientific considerations. It isn't "supposed" to be that way, but it is, and it is becoming more so all the time. Nonetheless, the business of science seems to me so far to be a relatively honest area of human endeavor, at least when compared to, say, politics or business or even journalism.
Accepting the principles of science is vastly easier than working out for onesself the consequences of those principles. The pronouncements of scientists, like everything else, need to be taken with a healthy dose of skepticism. It is therefore important, I believe, to do experiments for onesself, to develop a worldview of things one believes because one has experienced them firsthand. This serves as a useful guide for subsequent skepticism. Scientific claims that are at odds with personal experience deserve more scrutiny than ones that jibe.
It doesn't much matter what sorts of experiments one does. (In my youth I spent quite a bit of time looking for UFO's.) One of my favorites is to look at Jupiter through a telescope to see the Gallilean moons. Those moons, on the worldview of the people that wrote the Bible, are quite a remarkable thing. I believe they are real not because an astronomer said so, but because I have seen them with my own eyes. (There are likewise things that scientists say that I do *not* believe as a result of similar personal experiences.)
To me, looking at Jupiter through a telescope is a relgious experience.
It is actually very easy to "do experiments" that validate the scientific worldview because we are absolutely surrounded by technology. In fact, it is barely possible to exist in this world without doing so dozens of times a day. Every time we turn on a light switch or start a car or use a computer we personally experience the validity of a huge number of scientific claims. No technology has ever been created by prayer.
On morals...
People -- and other animals as well -- seem to have a built-in sense of right and wrong. Dogs, for example, know when they've done something bad (at least, my dog does). Very few people really take seriously the idea that morals come from God. Many people *think* they take it seriously, but I think they are lying to themselves. To see this, ask yourself: if God said that raping children was OK, would that make it OK? Only the most radical fundamentalist would answer yes. Most people get quite upset if you actually ask them this question because it forces to confront the cognitive dissonance between what they think they believe -- that morals come from God -- and what they actually believe -- that they "just know" what is right and wrong, like that raping children is wrong, even if God says otherwise.
People's moral intuition seems to boil down to variations on the Golden Rule: do unto others as you would have them do unto you. The converse is actually more useful as a moral guide: don't do to others what you don't want them to do to you. I think that is more or less a sufficient guide to being a good person. If everyone followed the Golden Rule the world would be a vastly better place.
Interestingly, science can now provide an account of how this moral intuition arises. It turns out that the Golden Rule (or variations on it) makes an effective survival strategy, and thus arises naturally under Darwinian evolution. For an account of how this happens, read "The Evolution of Cooperation" by Robert Axelrod, or Chapter 27 of Douglas Hoftstadter's "Metamagical Themas."
Even more interestingly, the Bible supports this view as well, at least in the Old Testament. Exodus 32, the story of the Golden Calf, describes how Moses talks God out of destroying the Israelites, wherupon God laments "the evil he thought to do unto his people." The Talmud also endorses humans second-guessing God, a point of view with which I am entirely comfortable.
Well, that seems like a good start.
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