jackshoegazer: (Default)
[personal profile] jackshoegazer
I DO NOT BELIEVE ANYTHING.

This remark was made, in these very words, by John Gribbin, physics editor of New Scientist magazine, in a BBC-TV debate with Malcolm Muggeridge, and it provoked incredulity on the part of most viewers. It seems to be a hangover of the medieval Catholic era that causes most people, even the educated, to think that everybody must "believe" something or other, that if one is not a theist, one must be a dogmatic atheist, and if one does not think Capitalism is perfect, one must believe fervently in Socialism, and if one does not have blind faith in X, one must alternatively have blind faith in not-X or the reverse of X.

My own opinion is that belief is the death of intelligence. As soon as one believes a doctrine of any sort, or assumes certitude, one stops thinking about that aspect of existence. The more certitude one assumes, the less there is left to think about, and a person sure of everything would never have any need to think about anything and might be considered clinically dead under current medical standards, where the absence of brain activity is taken to mean that life has ended.

My attitude is identical to that of Dr. Gribbin and the majority of physicists today, and is known in physics as "the Copenhagen Interpretation," because it was formulated in Copenhagen by Dr. Niels Bohr and his co-workers c. 1926-28. The Copenhagen Interpretation is sometimes called "model agnosticism" and holds that any grid we use to organize our experience of the world is a model of the world and should not be confused with the world itself. Alfred Korzybski, the semanticist, tried to popularize this outside physics with the slogan, "The map is not the territory." Alan Watts, a talented exegete of Oriental philosophy, restated it more vividly as "The menu is not the meal."

Beliefs in the traditional sense, or certitude, or dogma, amounts to the grandiose delusion, "My current model" -- or grid, or map, or reality-tunnel -- "contains the whole universe and will never need to be revised." In terms of the history of science and of knowledge in general, this appears absurd and arrogant to me, and I am perpetually astonished that so many people still manage to live with such a medieval attitude.

--Robert Anton Wilson
Preface to Cosmic Trigger

Date: 2004-11-20 12:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kiwikat.livejournal.com
me too.

Date: 2004-11-20 12:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackshoegazer.livejournal.com
The trick is balancing Model Agnosticism without getting Aperspectival Madness.

Date: 2004-11-20 12:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kiwikat.livejournal.com
man... i HATE it when i get aperspectival madness. ruins my whole bloody dinner.

; )

Date: 2005-04-23 04:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] antarcticlust.livejournal.com
Niels Bohr, Niels Bohr...why does that name sound familiar?

Date: 2005-04-23 04:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jackshoegazer.livejournal.com
Famous physicist. Won Nobel Prize(s). (http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1922/bohr-bio.html) Had crazy visions of machines and natural laws and just wrote them down and they were right :P
Lucky bastard!

Profile

jackshoegazer: (Default)
jackshoegazer

February 2012

S M T W T F S
   12 34
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 22nd, 2025 12:01 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios