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Your right not to know

Mark Vernon

Published 09 April 2007

In an uncertain age, writes Mark Vernon, we need to question our beliefs

Muslim veils, Christian crosses, God delusions, reason's triumph. Here is a plea for a different voice in this cacophony: that of the passionate agnostic. Even if the rising verbal violence between muscular believers and conviction atheists were not evidence enough for its importance, I think it is one that matters.

The idea of agnosticism sounds strange only in a culture with a lust for certainty. Thomas Henry Huxley coined the term. This other "Darwinian bulldog" never lost sight of the fact that science has its limits. His neologism was a rebuke to all those who peddle their opinions as facts in the name of religion or science.

"The things one feels absolutely certain about are never true," opined Oscar Wilde, neatly summing up the more rigorous argument of the philosopher Karl Popper, that any intellectual system which cannot doubt itself is suspect. The more the militants of the mind dominate debate, therefore, the poorer they leave us all.

Socrates might be thought of as the godfather of the agnostic spirit. The key to wisdom, he argued, is not how much you understand, but is appreciating where the limits of your understanding lie: reason does not reveal all things; it questions all things. He spoke out when he saw the democracy of ancient Athens under threat. Perhaps we would gain from the same insight.

Take religion. Its true spirit - "faith seeking understanding", in Saint Anselm's phrase - is being eroded by a lust for religious certainty. Saint Augustine argued that to be human is to be "between beasts and angels". He means that we are not pig-ignorant like the beasts, but we are also far from wise like the angels. Religion for Augustine was about entering this cloud of unknowing - and, conversely, not about fleeing from it in the shallow certainties that belief can deliver.

Science is similarly reduced by a lust for empirical certainty that presents it as the exclusive path of progress. The methods of science are astonishingly successful in certain parts of life, but of limited value in others: science can heal us but not make us whole; it can entertain us but not make us happy.

Then there is the agnostic spirit and our political well-being. A first point was well made by Daniel J Boorstin: "It is not sceptics or explorers but fanatics and ideologues who menace decency and progress." Second, consider the so-called politics of fear. It transforms politics into a question of who can better deliver an illusion of certainty via the exercise of control, as seen in the increasingly macho posturing of home secretaries. What we need is not fear and control, but an ability to understand risks and a capacity to live freely with them. Without a committed and passionate agnosticism, religion will become more extreme, science more utopian, and our politics increasingly driven by fear.

Mark Vernon is the author of "Science, Religion and the Meaning of Life" (Palgrave Macmillan, £18.99). http://www.markvernon.com

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4 comments from readers

Douglas Chalmers
07 April 2007 at 07:08

One shouldn't reduce science to a mere obsessive pre-occupation with data. The age-old debate between evolution and creation has at last been proved by science - both are correct. If you want the details, the big bang was the original act of creation brought into being by an unknowable "original cause" otherwise historically known as "god".

Essentially, though, the new religion is TRUTH. Nothing is more urgent now than the necessity to find ways of surviving climate change. For some, that means finding water to drink - for others, it may mean having to move away from rising seas and worse storm surges. For all, it means acknowledging and positively dealing with the future scenario through action and change in the present.

It is disappointing that in a week of the release of the most significant findings ever on climate change, nothing has appeared in the New Statesman for discussion. The fantasies of the recent past - the new world order and the war on terror (both merely new names for imperialism) - have to give way to some meaningful and genuine co-operation between nations for any effort to succeed as far as reduction in CO2 is concerned.

These are things which have to be addressed TODAY - not at some more convenient date in the future. Political imperative are no longer relevant as they were in the past. In fact, the new political imperative is to find and to implement workable solutions and to factor them into annual budgets in a sustainable fashion. Talk is no longer enough. Nor is grabbing resources for selfish squandering and especially in the fossil fuels sectors any longer appropriate.

There is no more"...illusion of certainty via the exercise of control..." as no amount of attacking or invading will defend any population from rising sea levels or disastrous hurricane Katrinas. Fear and the manipulation of the ignorant through fear is no longer workable. Only informing everybody and working harmoniously together will see any positive change before it is too late to change. That is the politics of truth and is also the only way to achieve a survivable solution to the results of past wrong thoughts and actions.

Admin
19 April 2007 at 10:27

From Letters to the Editor...

Sirs,

Mark Vernon puts forward a case for a ‘committed and passionate agnosticism’ as an antidote to extreme religion or utopian science (‘Your right not to know’ 9th April). It is an oxymoronic phrase and arguably self-defeating, for a radical agnosticism which claims that reality cannot be known implies some knowledge of reality in order to make such a claim!

Vernon invokes Augustine to support a ‘cloud of unknowing’ theology.

However, Augustine believed that direct knowledge of God is possible, unlike mystics of the apophatic way such as St John of the Cross whose theology can be traced back to the Neo- Platonism of Plotinus. Plotinus thought the material world to be evil and therefore God must be Wholly Other from it. It follows then that a being who is Wholly Other cannot be known rationally but only by a self- attesting experience.

This doctrine of the ‘unknowability of God’ is incompatible with the Christian doctrines of creation, incarnation and revelation. It is incompatible with Jesus’ own claims to reveal knowledge of God in human words.

It is unclear why a claim to knowledge of reality is necessarily more ‘extreme’ or dangerous than a claim that knowledge of reality is impossible. To cite examples of believers acting in ‘extreme’ ways is an ad hominem argument, a logical fallacy which presumably could also apply to ‘extreme’ agnostics. It says nothing of the truth or otherwise of their position which must be tested on other grounds.

Alan Darley

Anton Szautner
23 April 2007 at 17:24

This odd parsing of what agnosticism implies is dubious at best. I do not know where Mr. Vernon learned his science or philosophy, but I learned from many great minds (living and long deceased) that science IS agnosticism, in its essential provisional outlook.

Mr. Vernon is confusing "science" with "technology". There is a very significant difference.

Mr. Vernon offers St. Augustine's take on the nature of humans, arguing "that to be human is to be "between beasts and angels". He means that we are not pig-ignorant like the beasts, but we are also far from wise like the angels."

The hypothetical existence of angels aside, I have never met any "beast" that is even remotely as "ignorant" as humans can be: my agnosticism appreciates the distinction between pigs (say) which behave with astonishing fidelity like pigs with the neuronal equipment they are supplied with, and humans who often behave like swine. Of course, humans behave exactly like humans as well, and as one might expect, with their souped-up brains. A reasonable agnostic frame of mind will find a consistent pattern in this: humans are endlessly wrestling with themselves in their minds over their nature and identity with a disquieting surplus of brains. Not only are they subject to "instinctual" behavior, they literally live within that phenomenon of "mind" that their brains generate. Pigs have comparitievely rudimentary "minds". Surely we may all agree (in our "minds", agnostically-speaking, at least) that ignorance is a function of information-processing power: it does, after all, require a great deal of brains to be capable of stupidity. Or "ignorance."

Mr. Vernon then advances the following as if in corollary: "The methods of science are astonishingly successful in certain parts of life, but of limited value in others: science can heal us but not make us whole; it can entertain us but not make us happy."

Substitute the word "science" with the word "religion", compare the two resulting statements, and you have a much more interesting comparison.

Boorstin's note is well taken, as is Mr. Vernon's concluding focus on the "politics of fear". Exactly so. But please, Mr. Vernon, do not suggest that science is somehow "utopian". Science is merely a way of understanding the world, and has been in practice ever since human beings have had the capacity to make sense of it by applying very simple rules of confirmation, to wit: "Do you see what I see? Can we confirm this observation?" If you want to understand how knowledge (almost all of it from a scientific empirical-observational approach) is APPLIED technologically by all of those non-agnostic (political/economic) forces, then you might begin to understand what's going on.

values
26 April 2007 at 09:20

I am writing currently to alert all to a newly released synthesis

uniting the fields of behavioral psychology and religious ethics,

Here the instinctual terminology of operant conditioning pro-

vides an elementary foundation for a subjective hierarchy of the

traditional groupings of virtues, values, and ideals. This

formal tie-in with behavioral science effectively validates

the subjective prerequisites of the virtuous realm, an

innovation based upon a basic set of instinctual terms:

namely, rewards-leniency-appetite-aversion. These instinctual

terms, in turn, prove consistent with the higher linguistic

hierarchy characterizing the virtuous realm: an innovation

further arranged as a hierarchy of metaperspectives - an

ascending sequence of personal, group, spiritual, humanitarian,

and transcendental power levels, specialized into both authority

and follower roles. The incorporation of individual ethical

terms is partially depicted below...

Solicitous . Rewards ... Submission . Leniency

Nostalgia . . H-Worship ......... Guilt . Blame

Glory . . . . Prudence .......... Honor . Justice

Providence . . Faith .......... Liberty . Hope

Grace . . . . Beauty ........ Free-will . Truth

Tranquility . Ecstasy ........ Equality . Bliss

Appetite . + Reinforce... Aversion . Neg. Reinf.

Desire . . Approval ............ Worry . Concern

Dignity . Temperance ...... Integrity . Fortitude

Civility . Charity ............... Austerity . Decency

Magnanim . Goodness ... Equanimity . Wisdom

Love . . Joy ....................... Peace . Harmony

A complete listing of ethical terms is posted at:

http://www.charactervalues.org

John E. LaMuth M.S.

Member APA

fax: 586-314-5960

http://www.global-solutions.org

_____________

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