💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › alex-gorrion-science-revisited.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 07:04:57. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: Science Revisited
Author: Alex Gorrion
Date: 2018
Language: en
Topics: science, rationalism, the Enlightenment, patriarchy, colonialism
Source: anarchistnews.org

Alex Gorrion

Science Revisited

The same old dogmatism

A response to John Jacobi's “The Revolutionary Importance of Science”

Sometime after I published “Science,” which is a critique of an

institutional complex fundamental to Western civilization, its

worldview, its practices and its mythology, John Jacobi published a

refutation on The Wildernist.

Though his article contains a number of interesting points, it also

demonstrates the same underlying racism, dogmatism, and ignorance as to

its own argumentative structures that I was trying to critique in the

first place.

Defining Science

As is mentioned at the very beginning of “Science”, that text is not a

stand-alone article but the continuation of a previous work. In fact,

both are part of a series of texts that endeavor to construct a

mythological narrative of power and institutionality from an anarchist

sensibility. The article was meant to sketch some criticisms principally

at the mythical level, tracing certain conventions of Western thought

and showing relations between supposedly neutral scientific practices

and the operation of various power structures in our society.

Jacobi seems to evince a belief that all things can be measured with the

same yardstick. As far as discourse goes, I gather that the only valid

format he recognizes is that of objective assertions. This was,

ironically, one of my principal criticisms of “Science,” and one he

never responds to: that it is impossible to only talk about things on

the level of facts, and what's more that objective or empirical

affirmations are not the only valid kind of knowledge or communication,

because there is no learning without cultural framing, nor communication

without mythical context. Mythography is not intended to convince,

refute, prove, or disprove; rather, it gives us a story—that we take or

leave—within which we integrate our experiences, observations, beliefs,

hypotheses, and knowledges. It is a part of every epistemological,

pedagogical, or intellectual project. And from an anarchist or even an

intellectual standpoint, the most dangerous myth for freedom of thought

is the one that claims not to be a myth. In today's world, this is

principally the mythology of the scientific institutional complex.

Since mythography, unsurprisingly, does not sit well with Jacobi, I will

respond in the present text on the level of factual and textual

critique.

Throughout, Jacobi commits what might seem like a trifling misquotation,

saying I am critiquing “science” rather than “Science.” It is a well

known literary convention to capitalize a commonplace noun when we wish

to refer to a specific phenomenon, especially where it concerns a

centralized or official manifestation of said commonplace. In fact, I am

referring to a power structure with its attendant mythologies when I

critique Science. Multiple times I also specify, “Western science,”

again making it clear that I am talking about a specific historical

phenomenon. However, it serves Jacobi's argument to pretend that I am

lashing out against any possible use of the word “science.”

“Gorrion’s article suffers from a lack of a working definition of

science and so predictably falls into this trap. One can, however,

discern at least three targets in his piece. The first is scientific

thought: the epistemology of science, the notion of objectivity, etc.

The second target is the technocratic organization of modern communities

of scientists. And the third is the notion of scientific progress.”

In light of the above quote, I can thank him for providing an

effectively concise summary of my arguments and demonstrating why my

admittedly broad definition of Science works. Ideas, how we think, how

we attain and pass on knowledge, do not occur in a vacuum. I suppose it

is decidedly unmystical of me to assert that such things require people,

they require communities of minds. This brings us to “the technocratic

organization of modern communities of scientists.” When you have such

organizations that determine how scientists are trained, what

regulations they have to follow, what their internal structures for

resolving disputes are, and what their funding and employment

opportunities are, as well as interfacing with other institutions of

power, you have, beyond any doubt, a formal network of communities

capable of producing its own epistemology and its own mythical

self-history (the notion of progress, the third target Jacobi

identifies). These three targets not only converge to provide an

effective working definition of “Science,” in fact it would be naïve to

criticize one of them without at least recognizing the interrelated

existence of the other two.

Yes, Jacobi, institutional communities have their own epistemologies and

their own mythical histories. No big surprises there.

As communities, they also have dissident members, and any of their

members are capable of achieving a critical view of the whole, even if

this view is disincentivized. Criticizing science as a whole, as defined

above, is not “throwing the baby out with the bathwater” any more than

criticizing the police as an institutional complex is unwarranted

because many cops themselves are also critical of police brutality. If I

had intended my original article to be a more complete and factually

detailed article, I would have certainly gone into the tensions between

the social sciences and the “hard,” “pure,” or “natural” sciences.

Without a doubt, many thinkers from the first camp have greatly

influenced my own critiques and do not themselves cleave to objectivity

as a knowledge framework, rationalism as a mythology, nor the belief

that empirical and quantitative processes are the only ways to achieve

valid knowledge. Nonetheless, their status as real scientists is

constantly put in doubt, and one reflection of the scientific mythology

is the fact that ideological hegemony is clearly on the side of the

“natural” scientists, even though, for one, they are professionally

incapable of understanding the meaning, the framing, the cultural

conditioning, and the application of the knowledge they produce, and

secondly, their use of the qualifiers “hard,” “pure,” and (the one they

uncritically inherited from Christianity) “natural” reveals how fully

and unconsciously they—taken as a whole, and with the inevitable

exceptions—buy into their own mythology.

I predicted defensive responses like Jacobi's in the epilogue of my

original article.

“We predict that many believers in Science, especially the academically

initiated, will reject this critique as uselessly broad, if they do not

dismiss it outright. This is worth analyzing. First of all, someone in a

position of power, someone with an accredited brain, a priest with a

position in the hierarchy, need not respond to a non-professional

writer, a layperson, unless the critique begins to be so widely

distributed it constitutes a threat. [Jacobi himself admits that he was

going to ignore the article until he saw that many of his friends were

reading it...]

Secondly, and more substantially, we have noticed a certain pattern. The

academically trained will always insist that the scientific community is

highly self-critical, yet at the same time they always (as far as we

have seen) reject criticisms that come from outside of academia as

“overgeneralized” or unfounded. We would argue that this is a

structurally systematic response. An institution with hegemonic

aspirations, or one that has already achieved dominance, must never

allow itself to be fit into a globalizing theory” [formulated by its

opponents.]

Objectives

The above serves to justify the target of my critique. Scientific

epistemology and technocratic organizations, studies in peer-reviewed

journals and pop science; these are not “radically different” phenomena

constituting a target of critique so “broad” as to be “meaningless”, as

Jacobi claims. They are all structurally related. If Jacobi wishes to

continue denying the validity of my definition, which was already mapped

out in the first essay, he would have to explain how a community with a

technocratic organization does not have its own epistemology, or how it

is that smoothing is not an integral part of the knowledge production of

scientific communities, or how it is that such a massive amount of

funding and the systematic production of jobs does not shape the entire

scientific community to be an industrial complex fully integrated into

the capitalist economy. Needless to say, he is incapable of making any

such arguments, because all of these are naĂŻve positions. On the other

hand, fine-tuning the definition is clearly possible, and I'm open to

suggestions.

Before continuing to other arguments, I think I should dispute one

blatant mischaracterization that Jacobi makes (would he appreciate the

irony if I labeled it as “hysterical,” or is he not as versed in the

history of scientific thought as he claims?). No doubt trying to excite

the passions of his readers, Jacobi writes that my article arrives at

the “wildly audacious conclusion that we should dispose of science

wholesale.” Every institution produces its police, and here Jacobi

resorts to rhetoric that we anarchists have long been familiar with.

Don't listen to these wild, savage types: they want to destroy

everything! On the contrary, even Jacobi is able to recognize that at

various points in my text, I validate the empirical method and the work

of various scientists. In other words, he either wasn't paying attention

to his own arguments or was consciously lying in order to delegitimize

my positions, the majority of which he ignores.

To clarify: I think empirical knowledge and as such the empirical method

are both very useful. However, the empirical method is limited, and

empirical knowledge is by no means the only form of knowledge. For this

reason and others, objectivity as a framework for understanding

knowledge (knowledge is either true or false, knowledge can be unbiased,

there is an absolute frame of reference for the universe, perception can

be illusory or it can be disciplined, quantified, and mechanized in

order to validate objective truths, subjectivity is an obstacle to

objective knowledge, and the organization or history of knowledge does

not necessarily affect its content) is not only a cultural artifact that

reproduces a specific value system connected to specific social

hierarchies, it also flattens and falsifies the world we live in.

The primary objective of my original article is to develop a systemic

critique of a technocratic institutional complex that is inseparable

from power and oppression in our society. Within this critique there is

certainly room to champion a subversive folk science alongside

non-empirical practices of resistance and learning. Perhaps the only

thing that I seek to “dispose of wholesale” is the idea that scientists

and scientific institutions are neutral, that they are not a fundamental

part of how power and oppression exist in our society, and that they are

not currently integral to power and oppression. Rather than address this

argument, Jacobi goes on tangents.

Of Velvet Gloves and Firing Squads

We've spoken of definitions, of objectives, now let's speak about

manners. I am certainly not the ideal writer to call Jacobi to task for

his arrogant and insulting tone, though I would say there is a very real

difference between the tone born of superiority, used by the defender of

what is already hegemonic, and the tone born of anger, used by those who

are marginalized and delegitimized by the institutions of power and

their discourses.

More useful to my argument would be a brief look at who deserves the

velvet glove treatment, and who gets the discursive firing squad. There

are very few producers of discourse who are polite and considerate with

everyone. Nearly every social conversation sets certain boundaries of

civility that implicitly signal who is a legitimate interlocutor and who

is a thoughtless savage to be silenced or excluded. I have no problem

admitting which way I fire my shots. I try to be respectful towards

those who put themselves on the line, who theorize as just another

action within a struggle against authority, even if I strongly disagree

with them (and I admit, I'm not always successful). On the other hand, I

don't really care if I insult careerists, those who are paid to think,

and those who have some influential employment with an institution of

power. Honestly, I have trouble viewing them as people. I'm not saying

it's justifiable, I'm just trying to make the rules I operate by

explicit, to acknowledge and explain my own double standards.

The unwritten rules in normalized discourse, rules which Jacobi

evidently follows, are nearly the opposite. Professionals merit respect

and attention, whereas others, especially angry others, can be insulted

or dismissed. This “self-regulating conspiracy” among professionals

makes sense: within a vast complex of interrelated institutions, you

never know who might control purse strings or future employment

opportunities that interest you (those who find this explanation

insulting might consider that it uses the exact same cynicism with which

game theorists explain customs and organization among the savage

tribes). But because these are the institutions that produce the

dominant discourses and practices in our society, their norms become

everyone's norms. I don't assume Jacobi is a professional with any

possibility of financial gain for his writings, nonetheless he has

learned well that David Hume (involved in the slave trade) deserves

respect and consideration, whereas some anarchist publishing on the

internet can be scornfully disregarded.

The effects of this value hierarchy, imposed across society, should not

be underestimated.

Racism and Colonialism

A brief aside: is Hume's complicity in genocide and enslavement reason

to dismiss his ideas? No. But is it a coincidence that Hume and most of

the other great men of Science were racists, elitists, and exploiters

whom their underclass contemporaries would have been perfectly justified

in murdering? Also, no. A third question, then, which I'll leave

unanswered: if we reject ethical relativism and identify at every moment

with the struggle for freedom and well-being, is it wrong for us to

declare the great men of Science our enemies, giving fair consideration

to but also contextualizing their ideas?

The debates that Hume intervened in are beyond a doubt interesting, but

they reflect their participants' social position as nobles, enslavers,

mass murderers, and rapists. And they were not the only ones having

interesting debates. Social rebels, poor women, kidnapped Africans,

disenfranchised peasants, religious heretics, and armed natives were

also having debates, though they were much less likely to be committed

to paper. In part, that's because they faced the reality of repression

and often had to operate in secret, because dominant society denied them

the resources necessary to publish and keep good records, and also

because dominant society went out of its way to eliminate their oral

histories, their memories, their very identities. The preservation of

one set of debates and the invisibility of the other is neither a

coincidence nor a natural result of neutral factors, but another

reflection of the war waged by rulers and their scientists against

everyone else. It's true, some historians who consider themselves social

scientists have started to recognize and recover these other

conversations, but I don't think that anyone can deny, with evidence,

that the conversations of the great men of Science took place on top of

and against those other conversations, and that the history of knowledge

presented by the dominant strains of social science as well as nearly

all the “pure” scientists directly and aggressively silence the

“wretched of the earth”.

(Another brief aside: Jacobi is apt to cite the rules of logic, not

understanding, it seems, that such rules are a Western cultural artifact

(more later on the value of contradictions). One could easily say that

now, by pointing out Hume's complicity in the slave trade, I am engaging

in the logical fallacy of an ad hominem, even though I have stated that

Hume's conduct does not invalidate his ideas. But ideas are historically

rooted, and they are never impersonal. The separation of ideas and

actions, what's more, is fundamental to the subtle oppressions of

Western democracy. Anarchists, on the other hand, coincide with many

non-Western cultures in favoring the idea of coherence, that in reality

it counts for a lot if someone is able to put their own ideas in

practice, and what the results of that practice are. Furthermore, I

don't think it's a coincidence that the foremost proponents of the view

that we should evaluate ideas without also considering those who promote

them enriched themselves off of genocide, slavery, and the destruction

of the planet. Is it unfair, at this juncture, to declare: Ecce homo?)

To return to my principal line of argument, I was describing the

antagonism between the official and the unofficial histories of ideas.

It is true that those who demand that we take sides are carrying an

ideological stick capable of beating down free debate. But it is also

true that there is no such thing as neutrality, and that in a conflict

between those with more and less power, such as is the case with

colonialism or patriarchy, claims to neutrality amount to support for

the powerful.

Having made that caveat, allow me to suggest that in considering how

colonialism, slavery, and genocide since the Enlightenment have always

made use of science and scientists, when considering the possibility of

inherent racism in the scientific institutional complex, we cannot be

neutral, though we can map out third and fourth positions.

Jacobi, however, dismisses criticisms of scientific racism. Despite the

lengthy criticisms I made of racism in the original article, with

multiple examples, Jacobi only deigns to respond with a single sentence,

without referring to a single example, after affirming, “we shouldn’t

take Gorrion seriously.” To wit: “For one thing, he says that there is

“implicit racism” in the “empiricist mythology,” even though he stated

earlier that he does not reject empiricism, only science.” Does he not

understand that the terms A: “empiricism” and B: “empiricist mythology”

are not equal? Evidently not. If someone says that B is implicitly

racist, and they approve of A, therefore they don't have a problem with

racism, they are supposing that A and B are equal. Well, empiricism is a

method, the empiricist mythology is an entire worldview. Jacobi clearly

has a very weak grasp of the very language he uses to communicate his

supposed truths. It also becomes clear that he does not give any

importance to the criticisms of racism, given that he uses another cheap

bait-and-switch to weasel his way out of the argument.

Nor is it surprising that addressing racism is not a priority for

Jacobi, given that he makes a couple racist quips of his own. They are,

however, well masked: I presume Jacobi is college-educated, and what

does a college degree serve for if not to hide racism in more subtle

language? So, we need to dedicate a little space to unpacking his

comments.

In section V of his response, he jokes: “According to Gorrion, Buddhists

invented quantum mechanics “well over a thousand years” before modern

science. I just wonder where they got the lasers for the double-slit

experiment” (referring to the experiment that demonstrated that photons

act as both waves and particles and that their position, until it can be

definitively measured, exists as a probability wave rather than having

an exact location).

What's most obvious is that Jacobi is once again distorting my argument.

I never said Buddhists invented quantum mechanics. What I said was:

“well over a thousand years earlier, Daoists and Buddhists were already

promoting a worldview that clashed with Cartesian geometry but was

largely compatible with the discoveries of quantum physics.” Embedded in

my sentence is the fact that the discoveries of quantum physics are

posterior to the development of the Buddhist or Taoist worldviews. The

relevant argument is that they had developed a worldview in which

quantum- or relativity-inspired ideas regarding the nature of energy or

the shape and age of the universe could have made a lot of sense, and

would not have clashed with as many fundamental dogmas. In rationalist,

dualist Western society a hundred years ago, the idea that matter and

energy are interchangeable, that space-time is curved, or that a

particle does not exist in any one place but within a probability wave

would have sounded like absolute nonsense, and even today it strikes

(Western) people as a contradiction that is difficult to grasp.

Now let's look at how these subsequent discoveries and theories have

unfolded. For hundreds of years, the Western intellectual elite have

instructed their subject populations—which through force of arms came to

encompass the entire world—with certain beliefs, many of which promote

materialist, Cartesian, and/or neo-Platonic ideas about the world (for

the record, I know that to the proponents of those ideas, they are not

synonymous and in some ways they are mutually contradictory, but from an

outside perspective, especially one critical of fundamental dogmas in

Western civilization, there is far more similarity than difference

between them; there is, for example, a wider range of opinion in the

worldviews of an anarcho-primitivist and an anarcho-syndicalist, but in

general they don't reject being lumped into the same basket, as long as

the pertinent critiques are being leveled at beliefs they both hold in

common).

Authoritarian, institutional, and genocidal forces instructed us

all—sometimes through subtle value hierarchies and other times through

compulsory education—that humans are the superior species (and that

Western man is the most human of all humans), that the world exists for

our consumption, that everything is either matter or energy, that nature

functions mechanically, and so on. As pertains to Cartesian and

Newtonian ideas, we are indoctrinated in the meta-epistemological

framework of objectivity with its idea of an absolute reference, and its

prejudice towards analyzing discrete objects within a neutral space

(although clearly Newton opened the way for an understanding of fields

through his concept of gravity, as every theory opens the space for

possible refutations, expansions, or evolutions). There is also the

Platonic/Catholic/Cartesian opposition between matter and mind, which is

still present at the rationalist extreme in which spirit is abolished

and all that is left is one half of the pair, dead matter, rather than a

synthesis of the two as exists in many other worldviews.

For hundreds of years, we have been taught these things, and in the

process, and with complicity by scientists and scientific institutions,

other cultures have been belittled, ridiculed, and exterminated. Some of

these cultures have believed that all life is interconnected, that there

is no knowledge without a knower, that one person's truth is different

from another's, that the space between two objects is a living field

rather than a neutral, static non-entity, or that things are better

understood through their relations than as separate entities. Some have

believed that the universe is better characterized by principles of

continuous transformation and interrelation rather than by the

machine-metaphors favored by Western scientists (who, as I mentioned

earlier, often do not realize that they are using metaphors).

Then, at a certain juncture, scientists in a few fields began to say

that, in fact, there is no absolute reference point for the universe,

that measurement and observation affect what is measured and observed,

that velocity and position depend on perspective, that something can be

both a wave and a particle, that something can potentially be in two

places at once, that two separate particles can be “entangled” or

connected in non-local space such that one exhibits simultaneous changes

in response to a change experienced by the other particle; they began to

appreciate fields, systems, and relationships, and questioned the

discrete bodies that were the subject of analysis in earlier ages.

It is true that this shift represents a great intellectual courage and

versatility, which is something that a few scientists have, but that

does not characterize scientific paradigms as a whole in their “normal”

periods (see the discussion of Kuhn, below). It is also true that

through scientific flattening, these developments are primarily

presented as technical matters with limited philosophical bearing, that

do not change the fundamental features of society's mentality. They are

intentionally presented to the public as things that only people with

advanced degrees can understand. They reach us only as equations or the

occasional anecdote about photons and black holes.

(E=mc² is a great example: rather than giving us a mythical phrase about

the nature of the world like those frequently used to convey Darwin to

the masses, e.g. “survival of the fittest,” we are given a ready-made

metaphor for the mystically inscrutable intelligence of scientists, an

ergot of technical genius beyond the comprehension of the masses:

behold—the equation! This is highly significant given that E=mc² as a

phrase would have been delivered to us as “matter is energy,” “the

universe is made of energy,” or “anything in the universe can be

transformed into anything else,” statements that reaffirm Buddhist,

hippy, or even alchemist worldviews. Of course, no respectable scientist

would vulgarize Einstein thusly, though they had no problems vulgarizing

Darwin into a capitalist worldview or Newton into a mechanistic one.)

In contrast, every law and principle of classical physics and the

neo-Platonic worldview that preceded the paradigm shift is inscribed in

countless metaphors, language conventions, discursive customs, and

myths, mass-produced even today.

In other words, the technical adjustments that allow Science to be right

with God, so to speak, that allow Science to correct earlier errors and

improve its productive capacity, vastly increasing the power of the

State in the process, are produced in a way that they have no hope of

correcting the impact that earlier scientific theories had and continue

to have on our society's worldview.

The machine-metaphor and other fundamental dogmas are preserved.

Let us for a moment imagine that a stateless Daoist or heretical

Buddhist society of runaways from the Han slaver state, existing in the

mountains of Southeast Asia, had advanced technically and was able to

develop ever better scientific instruments. At a certain point, they

also could have developed complex forms of geometry and physics,

eventually explaining the very phenomena that Newton did so

convincingly. However—and this is what many “hard” scientists or

rationalists like Jacobi have such a hard time understanding—though the

hypothetical Daoists used the exact same equations as Newton, the

packaging, the application, and the institutional interfaces would have

been completely different. And those differences would have affected how

the society understood and thus interacted with the world it lived in,

the applications of the technologies produced with the new knowledge,

and also the course of future discovery. The First Law of

Thermodynamics, we can imagine, would have been conceptualized and

phrased in a different way, one that might not have proved a conceptual

obstacle to the eventual evolution of the theories of relativity and

quantum mechanics (which probably wouldn't have been named “mechanics”).

And those theories, when they arose, would probably not have seemed so

bizarre, but rather a confirmation of the things that people already

suspected about the universe.

I understand that many physicists don't want to have any social

responsibilities, they just want to study subatomic particles and black

holes. It's an admirable curiosity, but it's also hopelessly naĂŻve. To

them, maybe their most important achievement is General Relativity or

Maxwell's equations, but to many other people, it's nuclear weapons. Can

you begin to understand how these are not separate realities? How even

though the so-called Laws of Nature would hypothetically exist

independently of human societies and the things that our power

structures are doing to us and to the planet, in practice they are not

independent at all?

In sum, the precious equations might have remained intact, but the fates

of millions of people and other species would have been completely

different. Can we really countenance a belief system in which that is

irrelevant, in which the applications of a theory are not understood to

be part of the theory, in which the consequences of our actions are

constantly made invisible?

We have been dancing around the topic of colonialism for some time,

unpacking what is wrong with Jacobi's flippancy and his textual

distortions. Now let's get to the grain. What he is doing is ridiculing

the notion that non-Europeans might have had a better—and

healthier—cultural understanding of the universe, and the only arbitrary

evidence he gives—arbitrary because it was a total non sequitur to my

argument—is that they had not developed the technologies deployed by

those ingenious Europeans.

No doubt he is rolling his eyes at this characterization, but the fact

of the matter is that the only references he makes to non-European

cultures in what is supposedly a response to an article that makes a

great many accusations of racism is to ridicule and belittle the

knowledge base of non-Europeans.

This is a basic tenet of colonialism: until they learn how to be like

us, they are illegitimate.

His other main reference to non-European knowledge systems, regarding

acupuncture, shows that this attitude constitutes a pattern. Jacobi

claims there are no studies showing the effectiveness of acupuncture,

and he cites three articles to that effect. One of these articles, “Do

certain countries produce only positive results?” is borderline racist:

it highlights how studies in countries like Japan and China produce more

favorable test results for acupuncture than studies in Western

countries. Rather than presenting this in a comparative way, it posits

the West as the norm and characterizes the other countries as

“abnormal”. In conclusion, the article recommends skepticism towards

data coming from those countries. The implication is that Japanese and

Chinese scientists aren't real scientists, because they are beholden to

their mystical traditions and haven't broken free like Western

scientists. A more Orientalist view would be harder to find.

On examination, it turns out that the Asian countries cited range from

showing 99% to 89% effectiveness in acupuncture trials. Granted, 99%

(for China) seems worrisomely high, but how about Japan's 89%? The white

control country this article cites, a Western nation of rational white

men and proper scientists, is the UK. But in the UK, 75% of studies show

that acupuncture is effective, and the difference between 89% and 75% is

large, but so is the difference between 89% and 99%. It hardly seems

large enough to lump a bunch of Asian countries together and suggest

that all their scientists are too mystical and Asian to be trusted. But

then, when has Science ever needed a justification for racism?

Historically, it has been the principal manufacturer of justifications

for racism.

Also, incidentally, together with Jacobi's tolerance of racism, we also

find his tolerance for hypocrisy and sloppy research. He clamors: “I

must demand to see these “scientific studies” that support acupuncture

as a valid form of treatment”. Well, my dear Jacobi, you need go no

further than the article you referenced in your own text, which states

that 75% of the acupuncture studies from the comfortingly white UK

(since evidently you won't trust the titular studies from Asian

countries) show that it is an effective treatment. Oops!

Nonetheless, I will readily admit that I had an inaccurate view of how

widespread the studies were that give credence to acupuncture, and

Jacobi's article forced me to investigate further. Jacobi, it turns out,

represents the majority position (in white-dominant countries), but not,

however, the scientific consensus. The UK's National Health Service

recommends acupuncture for a few conditions like chronic headaches,

malaises that standard Western medicine has a poor track record in

treating, beyond the effectiveness of, ahem, aspirin. (Recent studies

suggest that the rationalist geometry of cityscapes actually increases

oxygen levels in our brains and can lead to headaches).

The most thorough review of scientific studies that I could find

concludes that the evidence is mixed regarding the effectiveness of

acupuncture

[https://nccih.nih.gov/health/acupuncture/introduction#hed3]. The

evidence is that it is effective for short-term relief of lower back

pain when combined with other therapies; it is effective for treating

osteoarthritis but there is contradictory data as to whether it is more

effective than simulated acupuncture; it is effective for treating

migraines and tension-based headaches.

The primary conclusion of the review is that it is difficult to evaluate

acupuncture using double-blind studies and other rigorously empirical

methods. This is a significant point I will return to later.

For now, I want to focus on the fact that Jacobi and many other

proponents of Western science—the strong majority, according to my

unscientific internet survey—overstate their case, misrepresent the

scientific record, and cover up the positive evidence for the weak or

mild therapeutic effectiveness of acupuncture. Jacobi, the articles he

cites, and many other articles in peer-reviewed journals or on

ideological, pro-Science websites, are totally dismissive of

acupuncture, even though the bulk of studies demonstrate that it has at

least some effectiveness.

It is no coincidence that acupuncture—a non-Western technique—receives

such vicious treatment from the proponents of Science, whereas far more

doubtful techniques, like chemotherapy or early AIDS medication, are

treated as imperfect but legitimate. Jacobi is polite, as are his

references: they only express the positive side of the racist double

standard. Other examples are less circumspect. According to the website,

sciencebasedmedicine.org, “Acupuncture is a pre-scientific assumption.”

Proponents often cite acupuncture’s ancient heritage as a virtue, but it

is more of a vice. Acupuncture was developed in a pre-scientific

culture, before anything significant was understood about biology, the

normal functioning of the human body or disease pathology. The healing

practices of the time were part of what is called philosophy-based

medicine, to be distinguished from modern science-based medicine.

Philosophy-based systems began with a set of ideas about health and

illness and based their treatments on those ideas. The underlying

assumptions and the practices derived from them were never subjected to

controlled observation or anything that can reasonably be called a

scientific process.”

There's a whole lot wrong with this paragraph, steeped as it is in the

coded assumption that a culture is ignorant until it is colonized by the

West. It also demonstrates a total ignorance of the history and the

current cultural limitations of Western medicine. Western medicine

operates within surgery- and drug-based constraints because it evolved

directly from a surgery- and drug-based practice that at the time,

500-1000 years ago, was one of the worst healthcare practices in the

entire world, rightly ridiculed by Arabic contemporaries, for example.

But the idea that ancient heritage is a vice does not hold up across

cultures. On the whole, ancient cultures embody a great deal of

accumulated experience and observation. Chinese, Ayurvedic, and

traditional European medicine, for example, were founded by generations

of observation and experimentation, and the writers for

sciencebasedmedicine.org are speaking from a racially tinged ignorance

when they claim otherwise. No, it wasn't “controlled” experimentation,

but controlled experimentation is also a flawed system that frequently

produces faulty data and willfully ignores the connection between a

person's health and their environment.

In medieval Europe, there was also a very thuggish practice of medicine

based on the humors, bleeding, and liberal use of the scalpel. This was

the practice of medicine that evolved into the supposedly superior

Western medicine of today. The “modern” preference for a negative,

symptomatic view of health and the emphasis on surgery and drugs is a

cultural-historical artifact from those thuggish times. Science-based

medicine, in the West, is philosophy-based medicine. The pretensions to

superiority evinced by proponents of Western medicine would be hilarious

if they didn't have so much power. It's worth noting that its original

proponents and the institutions they created were directly responsible

for the bloody repression of folk medicine through witch hunts,

criminalization, demonization, and later the urbane ridicule of the

scientists of the Enlightenment. We have little remaining evidence as to

the healing practices of the lower and rural classes of European

society, but we know that first it was the Church and then the

scientists who identified these primarily women healers as a threat.

There is also a good bit of evidence to suggest that they had effective

practices for abortion and contraception. And one of the most successful

drugs that Western medicine falsely claims credit for—aspirin—is a

testament to their wisdom. Aspirin is the industrial version of willow

bark, a common remedy among the medieval healers who were repressed by

the surgeons, the priests, and the scientists. It is not a coincidence

that aspirin works; rather, it is evidence of the accumulated experience

and observation passed on by the downtrodden.

Neither is it a coincidence that pharmaceutical companies are stealing,

patenting, and industrializing the herbal remedies of indigenous

societies across the world, nor that the society those companies come

from continues to propagate the idea that “pre-scientific” societies are

ignorant about the world they live in. All of these facts are functions

of the racist colonialism that Science is an integral part of.

Much has been written about the use of science to support racism,

genocide, colonialism, and other atrocities. Today's scientists might

refer to the most embarrassing episodes (like racial skull measurements)

as “pseudo-science,” but this is pure revisionism. The culprits were

recognized scientists in their day, and besides, scientific racism went

well beyond phrenology and Social Darwinism to include nearly every

surveyor, geographer, anthropologist, and doctor for decades if not

centuries.

An acquaintance of mine who is a progressive biologist has been ranting

about the “unfair” treatment being given to yet another biologist who

has been protested and no-platformed while making the rounds claiming a

genetic basis for the supposed intellectual superiority of white people.

It's not a 19th century idea: there is still a great deal of money going

to support scientists making the same tired arguments, ideologically

pre-determined. The acquaintance, who voted for Obama and is certain he

isn't racist, claims the man should be given a fair hearing since he

went and carried out a study. Just out of curiosity, where are all the

scientists getting invited to universities and receiving lucrative book

deals who claim that black people are superior?

Most relevant to this article is the question: to what extent has this

racism continued or been atoned for? Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz provides a

clue [An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States]. Scientific

archives, museums, laboratories, and universities across North America

are filled with corpses and artifacts stolen from Native burial grounds.

The conquerors' scientists systematically refuse to give them back. This

is one strong example of continuing complicity with genocide.

Are there others? Insofar as colonialism continues today, as

neo-colonialism, through the exploitation of occupied territories and

contamination of the land, air, and water primarily of people of color,

maybe the problem is that scientific complicity with thinly veiled

racism and colonialism is so common as to be ubiquitous. There isn't a

single mine, oil well, or commercial timber plantation in the world that

doesn't have scientists working on it in some capacity, either on site

or away in some laboratory making calculations, directing explorations,

improving techniques, engineering more profitable tree species. And then

there's the biologists who expropriate indigenous medicinal plants for

the benefit of the pharmaceutical companies, and the anthropologists who

aid military occupations in Afghanistan and Iraq or state-building

missions in Somalia. All of these millions of scientists have decided

that they prefer getting paid to engaging in a critical examination of

their lives and the effects of their actions. Yet to Jacobi, somehow,

all of this is incidental to the pure nature of Science, not even worthy

of a response.

Leave the critiquing to the experts

I would argue that anyone with a brain and a heart would not trust in an

internal affairs bureau to effectively rein in the murderous power of

the police, much less to do what really needs to be done: abolish them.

It is no surprise, however, that just as institutions always seek to

appropriate the power that regulates and disciplines them, institutional

complexes and society-wide religions do not recognize the critiques of

external authorities.

It is therefore no surprise that Jacobi asks us to leave the problems of

science to scientists themselves, even though—as I argued at length in

the original essay—those problems are primarily suffered by everyone

else: lower class people, women, trans people, people of color, people

in countries victimized by the weapons industry, the targets of policing

technologies, anyone who eats industrial food or has to be subjected to

medical procedures to fix a health problem, all non-human species, the

entire planet... But no, let's trust the people who get paid to make all

the technologies that are fucking us over, the doctors who drug us, the

sociologists who study us.

To wit:

Gorrion might be surprised to learn that a good deal of scientists and

philosophers of science strongly agree with many of his critiques of

scientific thought. In fact, all the limitations he writes about have

been pointed out with much more convincing argumentation by widely

recognized philosophers of science.

I suppose Jacobi can be forgiven for not recognizing any of Thomas

Kuhn's ideas behind my own—he was an influence, but I never cited him

directly. However, I don't think he missed my explicit reference to

Stephen Jay Gould (Jacobi also cites Gould), nor my references to

self-regulating processes of critique within scientific communities

themselves. In other words, Jacobi is aware that I already know about

such critiques made by scientists and philosophers of science, but he

just sees another cheap opportunity to be paternalistic, and he takes

it.

Then he does something curious, though equally reminiscent of a fratboy

intellect. He spends 750 words attempting to show off, quoting David

Hume, Thomas Kuhn, and Karl Popper, evidently thinking he's just gone

over the heads of his audience, or at least bored them long enough to

carry out a skeezy, back-alley word fight bait-and-switch.

Jacobi's brief history demonstrates that, lo and behold, scientists

themselves debate about the nature of knowledge. At no point did I claim

the contrary; I explicitly mentioned these debates, though I did not

give them what would have been their due space if my goal had been to

write an article about the history of conflicts in scientific

epistemology (another characteristic of institutional self-defense: the

institutional players always have to be the protagonists. Just put

yourself in the shoes of that poor cop for a moment, and think of how

scared he felt before he pulled the trigger!).

His summarization of Hume makes me think that Jacobi simply didn't

understand the sorts of discursive shaping that I am talking about. His

poor use of language suggests that he is either a habitual manipulator

or he simply has a stunted verbal intelligence masked by a large

vocabulary.

So let's try to explain this one again: All worldviews are cultural

artifacts related to the reproduction of power in society, either

antagonistic to it, supportive of it, or some combination of the two.

Given their relationship with the exercise of power, worldviews also

constitute worldshapers, though in the original article I reserved that

term for Science, since the scientific worldview directs the exercise of

power in our world far more than any antagonistic worldview.

What does Hume have to say? Actually, nothing of relevance to the

critiques I was making. Causing a big splash on the debates of the

powerful white men of his day, Hume argued that knowledge must be based

on sense-experience (dealing Plato a blow), but that sense-experience

can be flawed. Hume isn't talking about the organization and deployment

of knowledge. He's still dealing with knowledge at the level of whether

it's true or false, and where it comes from. As such, Hume doesn't even

come close. Of course, it's not up to Hume to respond to something that

I wrote 250 years after he died. The fact that Jacobi wheels him out of

the morgue, however, shows that he either doesn't understand or he's

choosing not to.

Jacobi's references to Thomas Kuhn, on the contrary, are relevant to the

present debate, though he presents Kuhn's observations in a way

reminiscent of PR damage control. To recap, Kuhn revealed that

scientific knowledge exists as a consensus within a paradigm, that the

consensus remains stable over time, even as specific elements of the

paradigm are disputed or disproved, and then in “revolutionary” moments

the entire paradigm shifts and new interrelated theories are accepted.

It's hard to give a more tame summary of a dynamic that has some pretty

extreme implications. Nonetheless, Jacobi softens the blow even more by

citing Imre Lakatos' work on “research programs”, translating the

problem into a more technical matter and justifying the pragmatism of

holding on to a flawed theory until a better theory comes along.

(In justifying the conservatism of research programs and the way they

allow ideologies to signal areas for further study, thus conditioning

results, Jacobi claims that “infrastructural determinism” is the best

predictor of many cultural shifts, such as the change from

hunter-gatherer to agricultural societies; what's more, “one is

justified in looking at a society and assuming, before getting any

empirical evidence, that the infrastructure is the primary reason the

society is the way it is.” That's embarrassing for him because actually,

such determinism is on the ropes. Lots of new research shows that the

switch between agriculture and gathering is a political choice, that

infrastructure generally relates to social choices; and there are even

many cases in which a society has drastically changed its infrastructure

without changing its superstructure. The deterministic framework

oversimplifies, ignoring how porous the boundary is. It is favored

because it is mechanistic and adheres to rationalist belief structures.

But then, when you're ideologically motivated to go out and look for

evidence, you'll probably be able to find evidence, no matter how

accurate your theory is.)

In fact, Kuhn's revelations are a little more disturbing than that, and

Kuhn, ever polite, doesn't hit hard against any of his colleagues and he

doesn't talk about the many ways in which people's lives can be ruined

by this little matter of paradigms. What Kuhn actually reveals is that

scientific communities will systematically suppress contrary evidence,

functioning in a conservative, dogmatic way, until reaching a tipping

point at which time the entire paradigm must be discarded and a new

conservative order must be developed. This is not a pragmatic necessity,

nor is it the reflection of a culture that truly believes in questioning

everything and fostering open debates. It is (though Kuhn does not go

this far) the reflection of a religion of power that will run roughshod

over dissenting scientists and people caught up on the wrong side

theory, whether that's queer or trans people who are pathologized and

medicated, institutionalized, or lobotomized, or Africans who are

scientifically determined to be inferior.

A recent example that demonstrates what happens even to privileged,

accredited scientists when they contradict the dominant paradigm: a

number of archaeologists and paleontologists in San Diego investigated a

site of mastodon bones that suggested that tool-using hominids may have

been in North America 130,000 years ago, which would upend the dominant

Clovis and Beringian hypotheses regarding hominid expansion into the

Americas. They told how many scientists refused to work on theirs or

similar sites because it would be “professional suicide,” how they were

advised by colleagues to “Keep it under wraps. No one will believe you.”

Two decades went by and their findings weren't published. Finally, when

a new team of scientists did publish, they were viciously attacked by

much of the rest of the scientific community. “It was like getting lined

up and shot with machine guns,” is how one archaeologist involved with

the study described the reactions of his peers.

The reactions of the scientific community to van der Lummel's

paradigm-threatening research on the experience of consciousness after

medical death was even more insulting. I'll get into that area later on.

Examples like these show that Jacobi has given us a misleadingly

watered-down summary of the dynamics Kuhn was talking about. But Kuhn's

concept of the paradigm shift is only one small part of what I am

talking about. To be as concise as possible, the main problem is

twofold: the inextricable relationship between knowledge and power; and

the continuity of certain practices of power and forms of knowledge

within Western civilization, reproduced and intensified by the

scientific institutional complex, that is currently destroying the

world.

None of the scientists or philosophers of science that Jacobi trots out

speak to this problem. I don't believe, as he suggests, that I am saying

anything new. I could have cited a great many people, but in the end

it's a question of form: some of us believe that ideas don't have owners

and that everyone should feel comfortable expressing themselves in their

own words. (There is an intrinsic elitism of the citation artifact in

scientific discourse, though without a doubt it is highly practical for

research and investigation.)

Jacobi has proved that he is good at citing famous people. So why, then,

does he cite people who aren't making the arguments I'm making? Why does

he not cite anyone who talks about the violence, the destruction, the

oppression that scientists and their institutions are complicit in?

This is where we get to the bait-and-switch. Jacobi, after proving how

smart he is and how ignorant I am, delivers what he supposes is a coup

de grace.

“[E]ven though each of the above-mentioned issues present profound

problems to scientific reasoning, every one of the thinkers who

articulated the problems continued to espouse the scientific worldview.”

In other words, he deliberately misdirects the reader, assuring us that

the problem is well under control because scientists are already

policing themselves, by quoting a number of people who are not making

the criticisms I am making, nor talking about the problems I am talking

about. Why, then, quote these paragons of self-critique? Because they

serve as a parable of reconciliation: they revealed problems but they

never abandoned the Church, they never lost their faith. He assures the

readers, falsely, that they made the same criticisms I do, but they had

much better arguments, clearly they were more intelligent, and the

ultimate symbol of their intelligence is their loyalty to the scientific

worldview.

Jacobi has not yet addressed a single criticism of that worldview, only

underlined tensions that exist within it. And he has shown that he is

willing to use various forms of marginalization, insult, and

misrepresentation in order to protect that worldview.

Scientific Smoothing

True to form, Jacobi misrepresents my criticism of how Newtonian physics

are used to prop up a rationalist worldview. I never say that Newtonian

physics is pop science; in fact, I say that it is dishonest of

scientists to chalk systematic simplifications up to pop science.

Nonetheless, Jacobi has no qualms twisting my words.

To clarify, we should distinguish between scientific smoothing and pop

science. Both of these phenomena are structurally integral parts of

Science, but they function differently. As I stated in the original

article, scientists often respond to criticisms of mythical

(worldview-promoting) usages of science that whatever is not a sound

theory or a quantifiable, technical assertion can be blamed on “pop

science” propagated either by journalists and authors or by scientists

reaching beyond their field of expertise. However, the problem goes well

beyond pop science. We can call the process “scientific smoothing”.

Smoothing is a feature of any knowledge system too complex for any one

person to know or communicate (i.e. any human culture), but scientific

smoothing happens in a specific way, which Jacobi avoids. Because the

body of scientific knowledge is way too vast for any one scientist to be

familiar with even a tenth of one percent of it, the institutional

complex as a whole relies on simplified digests (sometimes these

summaries are produced by specialists, sometimes by non-specialists such

as journalists and educators) to communicate scientific knowledge to

laypersons and also to scientists who are specialists in other fields.

This is a structural part of the body of scientific knowledge and of the

technocratic organization of scientific communities. It is neither an

error nor a marginal occurrence. For this reason, critiquing the

worldviews that are propagated by smoothing is not a case of critiquing

“various stereotypes about science” as Jacobi claims.

Demanding that we exclude considerations of scientific smoothing when we

evaluate the transmission of scientific knowledge, that we only pay

attention to specialists publishing in peer-reviewed journals, is

unrealistic, because smoothing is a structural part of the transmission

of scientific knowledge. There is no communication across scientific

institutions, nor communication between scientific and governmental or

corporate institutions, without scientific smoothing. Pop science is the

profit-motivated production of watered-down or lazily researched

scientific claims for a consumer audience. It is instrumental for

winning funding, building careers, and cementing the influence of

scientific institutions, but it is not as integral to communication

between institutions as smoothing.

Ironically, one of the articles he cites as evidence complains about how

scientists who specialize in one branch can spread completely baseless

ideas in areas they do not study. “Just because you’re a world expert in

one branch of science doesn’t qualify you in any other discipline [...]

this is a particularly bad habit among physicists.” The problem is, they

are only called on it if the ideas they are spreading go against central

dogmas.

The myths or falsehoods (please note that I am not using these terms as

synonyms) that are contained in every paradigm does not mean that every

idea is equally valid or equally unverifiable (Jacobi has already tried

strawmanning me as a relativist, without any textual evidence). But the

way the scientific paradigm works does mean that the uncorroborated

myths that support central dogmas, most of which are inherited from

Christianity and neo-Platonism, will not be challenged, or at least not

marginalized and ridiculed. On the other hand, ideas that break with

those dogmas (and at least some of these will be the very ideas needed

to radically alter the paradigm or found a new one, in other words, the

truths of the future) will be ridiculed and their authors will be

marginalized and dismissed as crackpots. What's more, given the

continuity of power institutions, and given the specifics of the

scientific smoothing process, the myths that carry over from one

paradigm to the next change much less than the technical explanations

and theories that are considered valid. In other words, the “broad

picture” provided by smoothing contains a great deal of Cartesian and

neo-Platonic myth, even though the technical experts in any given field

do not uphold the specific manifestations of those myths in their area

of expertise.

Somehow, Jacobi doesn't find a problem with this.

And as far as outright pop science is concerned, there are a few

features that are worth underscoring.

Western mythology (for example, the common myth that evolution is a

process that went from single-celled organisms to multi-cellular

organisms to vertebrates to mammals to primates to humans: this is a

mythical reframing of evolution that is repeated again and again,

useful, even though it is factually incorrect, because it is progressive

and anthropocentric).

to also be rooted in pop science. This is a problem, given that

scientists' opinions have more legitimacy, even when those opinions are

not the product of an empirical study, due to the ideological role that

science plays within the power hierarchies of our society. Scientists

talking in their social circles, through social media, on television, or

with journalists, are the principal legitimizers of pop science. Rarely

in their interactions with society do they restrict their commentary to

the results of their studies. On the contrary, like anyone else with

privilege, they use positions of power to push their own interests and

worldview. A dramatic example of this would be how scientists who are

not specialists in virology or immunology have been instrumental in

supporting HIV/AIDS denialism. Jacobi would point out that their conduct

is unscientific. There is, however, a wealth of more mundane examples of

scientists carrying out the same kind of manipulations to shape our

understanding of what is natural in areas as diverse as family

structure, sexuality, economics, politics, and so forth. Though they are

advancing non-empirical positions, they are not called to task so long

as they do not support conspiracy theories that violate the scientific

consensus.

an institutional level, scientists are complicit in accepting this

funding and the consequences it has for knowledge production. Scientific

studies on diet might take the cake. There is a great consumer demand,

produced and facilitated by the media, for diet science. The vast

majority of diet studies use small samples or have other design flaws

that make them useless or severely limited for the production of

empirical knowledge. Nonetheless, straight-to-market studies about what

people should or should not eat constitute a major industry and a cash

cow for individual scientists and scientific institutions. It's curious.

Such institutions take part in punishing doctors who prescribe salt

water as a cancer treatment, but they look the other way when it comes

to the constant, large-scale production of “bad science” that also can

have negative effects on people's health (including claims about whether

coffee, red wine, avocados, and so forth increase or decrease cancer

risks). The common factor that accompanies punitive action by the

scientific community is not the accuracy of the empirical knowledge

being spread or how much harm it might cause, but pure, mercenary

economic interests. Diet science is a big business, and so are the

officially validated cancer treatments.

Let's look at one example in which pop science and scientific smoothing

coincide with the systemic complicity of scientists themselves. This is

just a random article I came across the other day; one could find

similar examples every week. Near the top of their page, a CNN headline

ran: “Addiction could stem from ancient retrovirus, study suggests” The

first sentence: “An ancient retrovirus that predates modern humans may

explain why people suffer from addiction, scientists have said.”

[https://edition.cnn.com/2018/09/25/health/retrovirus-addiction-study-intl/index.html]

It turns out, the study says nothing of the sort. Rather, it links a

gene originally introduced by a retrovirus to 34% of drug-users in

Glasgow and 14% of drug-users in Greece (in both cases 2 or 3 times

higher than the presence of that gene in the general population). In

other words, the study suggests that a particular gene may be related to

addiction in a small minority of cases. Contrary to how the media

present the study, it does not offer any evidence that suggests that

this gene is the original cause of addiction, nor that it is related to

the overwhelming majority of addictions. It also does not tell us about

people who have the gene but never develop any kind of addiction.

One thing that the study does suggest, that the media do not pick up on,

is that social factors may play a huge role in encouraging addiction.

After all, there is quite a large difference between the 34% rate in

Glasgow and the 14% rate in Greece, as there is a great difference in

wealth and access to social services between Scotland and Greece (the

greater the poverty, the less this one gene explains cases of

addiction). Of course, this study was not designed to study social

causes of addiction, and as such it is incapable of providing concrete

evidence of such causes, but the huge discrepancies in results at the

very least suggest social causes as another factor. The fact that the

media entirely ignore this line of inquiry gives us an idea of how

likely scientists are to get funding to explore such possibilities,

rather than looking for exclusively genetic explanations of drug use.

Even though CNN has shown a penchant for fact-checking since Trump got

into office, and the article shows a Trumpian level of inaccuracy, their

science editor was neither fired nor reprimanded for grossly

misrepresenting the study. In fact, the article is par for the course as

far as science reporting goes. Nor, as far as I can tell, did the

researchers complain to CNN about their sloppy and misleading reporting.

On the contrary, I would wager they were happy their article got picked

up. Such things build careers.

Why is this important, and not just nit-picking? For one, it shows how

low the bar is, and how scientists are complicit. Would they complain if

a media outlet reported that a new study potentially validated vaccine

skepticism? You bet your ass they would. But they don't complain when

the misrepresentations reinforce dominant power relations and

fundamental worldviews. The article provides yet another example of the

ubiquitous ways in which scientists and the institutions necessary for

spreading scientific information build a rationalist mythology. In this

case, we have the mechanistic idea that genes function as on and off

switches that determine human behaviors. The study itself contradicts

this view, as does most research into genes. What we actually get is

evidence that genes are one of multiple factors that influence human

behavior. Yet when scientists communicate to the media they frequently

use the bodies-as-machines metaphor and present it as objective fact.

The machine metaphor has implications across the social terrain,

relating again and again to the war waged by capitalism and patriarchy

against bodies, with the systematic support of scientific institutions.

The deterministic (and false) vision of addiction has played a

historically important role in colonialism. Alcohol, opium, and other

drugs were and in some cases continue to be key weapons used by

colonizers against colonized peoples. Neo-colonial states then blame

addiction on their victims. Native Americans, for example, suffer

alcoholism in disproportionate numbers not because of social factors,

scientists argue, but because they have inferior genes. Admitting that

all the evidence suggests that addiction is not deterministically caused

by genes, but by a host of factors, many of them social, robs

(neo)colonialism of one of its key weapons. It's hard to argue that

scientists are not complicit in this process, given that the discourse

at play is scientific in its entirety. But the apologists of Western

science have no shame in claiming objectivity and neutrality with

respect to systems of domination.

A century of education that genes constitute programming is no

coincidence, nor was it ever a discovery. It was a religious inference,

an ideological imposition. All biologists discovered was a biochemical

mechanism in the interior of every living cell, without fully

understanding the relation between that mechanism, biological traits,

and lived experiences. What they did was rush ahead to conclusions that

their ideology dictated; otherwise, we never would have heard the word

“programming”. How long did this ideology delay the recent discovery

that lived experiences can actually change which genes get activated and

passed on?

The history of ideas

Mathematical equations may be beyond cultural framing, but nothing else

about science is. The meaning assigned to those equations, their

applications in society, the technology they require, the technology

they enable, what had to be sacrificed so that the technology

mathematical advances rest on could be developed, what questions were

asked, what questions weren't asked, and so on. Western science responds

to a certain history and cultural heritage that informs everything it

does.

Mathematical equations by themselves are next to meaningless. They have

not operational value until they are converted into code that can act on

machines, and all machines are culturally and socially inscribed. Any

other use of mathematics requires its interface with language, which is

the polar opposite of math. Language is by necessity subjective,

ambiguous, contradictory, and constantly changing.

Many mathematicians say that math is also a language. This is only

because they have never studied languages and have no idea what they're

actually saying. Physicists and mathematicians have as much right to

define language as linguists have to define wave functions or imaginary

numbers.

And while we're on the topic of definitional overreach, I need to go on

a random but important tangent: the contention by the scientifically

minded that tomatoes are a fruit. Tomatoes are not a goddamn fruit. The

implication that they are fruits and not vegetables stems from an

arrogant and preposterous attempt by biologists to appropriate the word

“fruit” many centuries after this word came into the common parlance.

They made an inaccurate definition, and rather than correcting

themselves, they tried turning something everybody knew was a vegetable

into a fruit. Hey jerkoffs: what's the scientific definition of

vegetable? Oh wait, there is none. Because the whole world doesn't

belong to you. “Fruit” and “vegetable” are culinary terms, you assholes,

not botanical terms. When you say “fruit”, you're misusing the word. You

actually mean the ovary of angiosperm plants. Get it fucking straight.

In the interest of fairness, we the laity can give back to the

scientists a term we have been misusing: the learning curve. For the

record, now that I have everyone's attention, a “steep learning curve”

means something is very easy to learn, or that it evinces a threshold of

effort or time spent learning, before which it is difficult to learn and

after which it is easy to learn, as in, until you study the subject for

twenty hours you don't really get it, but after that you advance

quickly. (Hint: the curve is plotted on a graph. The X access is

achievement, the Y axis is time or effort.) Something that is difficult

to learn would have a low learning curve. Get it right. To be fair,

though, a true linguophile would never use a metaphor that made

reference to something they didn't understand, nor would they use a

complex term as a simple synonym for “difficult” just to make themselves

seem more intelligent.

But let's get back on topic, shall we? Languages have a far greater

expressive capacity than mathematics due exactly to the linguistic

conventions that make them incapable of pinning down an objective

network of meaning. Rightly so are they incapable, because “objective

meaning” is an oxymoron. Meaning can never be objective.

Many rationalists today do not know that dozens of the greatest

scientific minds and philosophers of the Enlightenment tried to create

objective languages that would not change in translation, that would

have the exact same meaning to people from any country and any time

period, and that could describe and categorize anything in the world in

precise, indisputable, and unchanging terms. Every single attempt was a

total failure, most of them humorously so, as documented by Arika Okrent

in In the Land of Invented Languages.

An objective language is impossible. Meaning is necessarily subjective,

a relationship that people collectively have with a concept only in

reference to a historical and fluctuating pool of experiences and other

concepts that never manifests as a precise consensus because every node

in the network, every individual, has a different perspective of the

whole and a different kind of access to a different mix of the resources

in the common pool. One of the implications of this reality is that

definitions are always posterior and extraneous to concepts, never more

than a convenient fiction.

On a simpler level, objective language is impossible because such a

large part of language is naming and categorization, which too is

subjective.

Categorization is also an indispensable part of the sciences. Sincerity

would have us recognize that the bulk of Science is a cultural exercise.

And the word “cultural” stems from a synonym for “knowledge,” because

human groups are different precisely according to the different

knowledges they pass down and enact. But the priests of empiricism are

capable of recognizing only one kind of knowledge. And they are so

insulated from their origins in massive technocratic structures that

they regularly dismiss philosophy, having forgotten that the men who

created the disciplines they follow were philosophers every one. Today,

they are still fine-tuning this philosophy, they merely pretend it is

the only valid knowledge form in existence.

In fact, scientific philosophy is a direct descendant of Christianity.

Early scientists inherited their penchant for encylopaedism that was so

vital to their work of the 17th-19th centuries, and still present as a

bedrock structure today, directly from the Christian monks, whose dogma

also had them believe that knowledge was bounded, finite.

The French Revolution gave rise to the most definitive break between

Church and Science, a contrast to the model of respectable continuity

practiced in the UK. But even in their exuberance the French

rationalists betrayed an attachment to the exact same forms and

apparatuses as the Church. In fact, they systematically seized churches

and rebaptized them “Churches of Rationality” or “Churches of Science,”

while they spoke of empiricism as the new religion.

Covering up this connection is something like an institutional origin

story. And the thing is, it shouldn't be that embarrassing. All ideas

have histories. All knowledge systems are culturally inflected. It is

only embarrassing to Science because of its absolutist and religious

pretensions, and above all its projection of a monopoly on all

knowledge.

Falsehood and Myth

When I was growing up, we were still taught in school that animals

didn't have feelings, they weren't intelligent, they were just

unthinking machines of instinct. At the time, there were already decades

of scientific studies disputing this view, but as usual, anything that

challenges the myth of human superiority takes a much longer time to

filter down to the masses. This erroneous idea about non-human animals

was created in the first place by scientists out of whole cloth.

Non-human animals in pre-Enlightenment Europe and even moreso in

stateless societies across the globe had personhood. They were often

respected, seen as thinking and feeling, even as possessors of wisdom

that humans could gain through respectful observation. The scientists

who promoted the contrary view were also promoting the view that all

living things were machines to be modified and exploited as needed, and

they were also basing their new empirical model on cruel, unfeeling

practices of vivisection, torturous and generally fatal experimentation

on live animals (often including humans from the lower classes and from

other races).

True to patriarchal form, scientists were also the ones to make the

claim that female orgasms didn't exist, that women weren't intelligent,

that women who sought clitorial stimulation rather than penetration were

pathological, and so forth. In the 16th century, two Italian scientists,

Renaldo Columbus and Fallopius, fought over which of them had discovered

the clitoris, as detailed in Elizabeth Hall's, I Have Devoted My Life to

the Clitoris.

It was scientists who claimed and continue to claim, despite ever more

evidence to the contrary, that IQ is inherited, and thus any social

inequalities are justified. These and similar claims of biological

determinism are often related to the assertion, explicit in the 19th and

20th centuries, nowadays increasingly implicit, that people of color are

inferior.

These are not just chance byproducts of imperfect paradigms. There is no

coincidence in who is targeted by these “unscientific” fallacies that

were promoted by the scientific establishment itself. They always went

against those who have been oppressed by the very social hierarchies

that scientists serve. And in every case, they were blatantly absurd

beliefs, far more ridiculous than the idea that after we die our

invisible spirits go to live in the sky with some dude with a beard,

because that assertion at least is non-falsifiable. Scientists were

believing, and trying to force everyone else to believe, things that any

observant twelve-year-old could see were false. Time and again

throughout history, scientists have been at the vanguard of the

mouth-breathers.

In the examples I've given, scientific mythology and falsehood

coincided, though as I've pointed out before, mythology and falsehood

are not the same thing. What's most dangerous in the long run is not the

falsehood, but the mythology, because Science's baseline mythology is

patriarchal, colonialist, white supremacist, elitist, authoritarian,

anthropocentric, and ecocidal. It's unhealthy. It's damaging. If

something can be proven false, in the long run, scientists will reject

it. It might take them a hundred years, they might be the last ones to

clue in, but eventually, they will discard a demonstrably falsifiable

belief, all the while congratulating themselves on how intelligent they

are and never giving credit to the people who figured it out long before

them. But the way that they promote false beliefs and the way they

correct such beliefs still reinforce their base mythology.

Here's an example: when settlers arrived in the western part of North

America, supported and encouraged not only by the government but also by

the geographic societies of the day, they slaughtered, enslaved, or

evicted the original inhabitants. As soon as the stolen territories were

fully integrated into the United States, there came to be large holdings

of public lands and with them, the scientific management of those lands.

A part of that, from the beginning, was fire suppression. This wasn't

“pop science” or “pseudo-science,” on the contrary it reflected the

efforts and the consensus of the finest scientists of the day. It took

these overwhelmingly white scientists working at the behest of

colonialism more than a hundred years to figure out that they were

totally full of shit, that the observant, respectful, spiritual,

non-scientific native inhabitants had worked out a much better system of

forestry. Finally, in the second decade of the 21st century, when

climate change is causing forest fires to reach new magnitudes, the

Forest Service and related scientific and public agencies have started

allowing native peoples like the Karuk to play a small role in shaping

forestry practices. Today's scientists pat themselves on the back for

recognizing that the Karuk had it right, but the dominant power

relations do not change in any way. Karuk and other indigenous methods

are only validated once scientific studies grant them legitimacy. There

is still a monopoly on who can grant legitimacy to knowledge systems.

And the ones handing out validations are the same ones responsible for

dispossessing successive generations from their lands and their

traditional practices, for helping to wipe out millions of acres of

healthy forests, and for causing the extinction of countless species.

Who atones for all that? What kind of structural changes will we see in

response? None.

If the scientists and institutions involved were sincerely owning up to

their errors, they would resign their positions, throw themselves at the

feet of the Karuk, and seek to learn from a demonstrably superior

knowledge system. They would also do everything in their power to get

indigenous peoples their land back so they could re-institute their

traditional practices. Of course we didn't see any of that. All we see

are condescending displays of recognition coming from those who have no

legitimacy beyond naked force. And progressives like Jacobi will

sometimes go so far as to condescend that in his view, “primitive”

peoples were truly scientific, else who could they have discovered so

many useful things? But the demonstrably superior knowledge systems of

the Karuk and many other indigenous peoples are not at all “scientific,”

nor do they need that label to attain legitimacy. They tend to be

experiential, spiritual, communal, and ecocentric, not institutional,

empiricist, objectivist, anthropocentric, and capitalist.

Another example: scientists are skewed towards monogamy

[https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/love-sex/monogamy-flawed-concept-science-sex-one-person-relationships-university-michigan-a7645271.html].

Researchers who study relationships and family structures tend to favor

monogamous structures in a way that affects their research results, even

as they naturalize certain relationship forms. Again, we see scientists

represent more conservative interests in society that back up dominant

forms. Time and time again, it has been social struggles that have

advanced knowledge, especially where gender, race, and the environment

are concerned. Scientists typically come in later to make the necessary

modifications when the dominant paradigm is already in tatters.

Then there was the amaaaaaazing study about honesty from the University

of East Anglia, which compared the responses of subjects from different

countries to a situation in which they flipped coin a number of times,

and got a small money reward if it came up heads; the trick was that

researchers didn't see the coin and relied on the test subject to report

the result of the toss. In other words, they could lie and get more

money, and researchers could tell who was lying more frequently based on

statistical probability. The conclusion of the study, and one of the

most frequently used headlines, was: “The British are the most honest,”

as opposed to “The British are the least clever,” “The British are the

most blindly obedient to arbitrary authority,” or “The British are the

least likely to take advantage of resources that could be used to enrich

their communities.” Incidentally, the study was carried out in... you

guessed it! Great Britain! As far as honesty goes, well, the study

didn't actually put Britain at the top of the list, it only came first

in one of the two tests. And people from only fifteen countries were

tested. A similar study that compared “honesty” rates to corruption

indexes only tested people from 23 countries, but that didn't stop the

Telegraph from reporting, “Britain has most honest citizens in the

world.” Speaking of honesty, though, that second study actually gave the

top spot not to the UK, but to Lithuania. The paper reported that

“British students were found to be the most honest, along with those

from Sweden, Germany, Lithuania and Italy. At the other end of the scale

were those from Tanzania, Morocco, China and Vietnam.” This racially

tinged list is made more so by the fact that European country Poland was

left off the worst five as reported in the study.

[https://www.uea.ac.uk/about/-/study-finds-honesty-varies-significantly-between-countries]

[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/12189003/Britain-has-most-honest-citizens-in-the-world...-because-politicians-are-less-corrupt.html]

Never mind that media used these studies in nationalist, racist, and

dishonest ways, and the researchers would have to have been idiots not

to predict that result; never mind that their construction of honesty

was embarrassingly simplistic and moralistic, hence, subjective; never

mind that the amount of money given out was worth a lot more in the

countries that were reported as “dishonest” and that most of the people

in the wealthier, “honest” countries didn't have a need a couple bucks.

These studies responded to a need that was not empirical, but political

and racial.

Some more mundane examples of scientific mythology concern inaccurate

concepts that Western scientists uncritically inherited from ancient

Greek philosophy. To wit, elements and atoms don't actually exist. More

specifically, the substances we call “elements” have turned out not to

be so elementary, and “atoms,” the fundamental blocks of matter

theorized by the Greeks, fundamental in the sense that they could not be

cut or divided, which is the very meaning of the word “atom,” likewise

do not exist. They weren't discovered, they were sought out, projected

onto the available evidence.

Nonetheless, we are left with the pernicious myth that the Greek

grandfathers of Western civilization, the putative ancestors and

originators of our most cherished institutions and beliefs, were

sooooooooooooooooooooo smart. A belief in their smartness, an

identification with them in the construction of this subtle “we” that

shows up so much in Western discourse, is a key plank of white supremacy

shared by both the Left and the Right. I have one example that I found,

ironically enough, in a sophomoric article mocking hippies for making

poetic, philosophical and not terribly rigorous use of the discoveries

of quantum physics

[http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/14/science/far-out-man-but-is-it-quantum-physics.html].

After explaining to readers that quantum physics doesn't mean that your

thoughts can alter reality, the author concludes: “In other words,

reality is out of our control. It's all atoms and the void, as

Democritus said so long ago”. (Note that this article falsely claims

that the Parapsychological Association, easy to dismiss as quacks, were

“expelled” from the American Association for the Advancement of Science;

in fact that never happened, and they are still affiliated. So much for

a scrupulous commitment to fact.)

So let me see if I got this straight. The Chinese are pre-modern and

non-scientific, not just two thousand years ago but still today, whereas

Democritus is worthy of consideration. Atoms and the void don't exist,

not as Democritus envisioned him, but he gets credit. On the other hand,

people do have energy coursing through them, every body has an

electrical field, yet we're told that acupuncture is pre-scientific,

even when the majority of empirical studies demonstrate otherwise... If

the same standard were applied to the Chinese as to the Greeks, wouldn't

they have been given credit for discovering electrical fields? Is there

another criterion here I'm missing that explains this double standard,

besides blatant cultural supremacism?

Placebos and consciousness

As mentioned earlier, it is very difficult to effectively evaluate

acupuncture with the kind of double-blind studies that empiricists

prefer. This is because acupuncture, just like other forms of body

therapy, require a good deal of skill. They are not comprised of tasks

that can be mechanized, just as giving a patient a pill or radiation

therapy. A double-blind study means that a method can be rated against a

placebo in a way that neither the patient nor the healthcare

practitioner know which is the real treatment and which is the placebo.

An acupuncturist, however, knows when they are properly performing

acupuncture on a patient. Amazingly, in much of the scientific

literature, this counts as a mark against acupuncture. In other words,

“controlled” studies are incapable of properly evaluating acupuncture,

and rather than understanding this as a limitation of the method of

study, yet another piece of evidence that empirical knowledge is not the

only valid kind of knowledge, the bulk of scientists interpret this as a

failing of acupuncture. Pretty clearly, they feel threatened by a form

of healing that threatens their knowledge paradigm on multiple fronts.

This can be read as yet another front in Science's war on healers, a war

that in earlier centuries was carried out with torture and mass murder

against primarily women practitioners of traditional forms of healing,

and that today is waged with derision, marginalization, and occasionally

the criminalization of alternative therapies. (I can already hear Jacobi

preparing his counterargument, ignoring all my critiques to claim I am

defending quack doctors who prey on desperate people and make a bundle

giving out Vitamin C tablets to people with advanced stages of cancer.)

This is another example of the mechanization of practices, in which any

knowledge or practices that don't fit through the social machine are

forcibly discarded. It's also worth noting that many of those who have

worked in so-called controlled experiments know that they are a joke, or

at the very least, not as controlled as the scientific establishment

pretends. I worked in the role of guinea pig, and I and my fellow test

subjects regularly worked the system, lying to get accepted to the

study, reporting symptoms of conditions we already had to get free

medical care, not reporting symptoms if we knew it would allow us to

continue in the study for longer and make more money. The researchers

treated us like ignorant machines, passive and knowledgeless subjects,

when in reality we were generally smarter than they were, getting the

system to work for us when we were meant to suffer happily in pretty

extreme precarity (enough precarity that we'd be willing to work by

taking experimental drugs, without which the entire medical industry

would fail). The truth of the matter is we had our own interests, our

own strategies, completely illegible to those who thought they were in

control. We also saw how often researchers fudged or omitted results

that were unexpected or undesirable. So yeah, priests of science, keep

talking about control. The underclasses you assume to be ignorant are

just laughing and waiting for our day.

There's another important point easily lost within all this discussion

of the need to distinguish effective treatments from the placebo effect,

which is the concept of the placebo itself. Within dominant scientific

practices, the placebo effect is practically a code word for a

meaningless error, a “nuisance variable” according to one dissenting

view [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2582657/]. It means

the therapeutic effect that patients report when taking a fake

treatment. Researchers rate their experimental treatments against

non-treatment and against a placebo to find out its real effect. The

insinuation is that the placebo effect is not real, which is a rather

arbitrary, subjective distinction given that it has real results. To be

more precise, the placebo effect represents the power of the mind to

heal the body, how the feeling of being cared for, of receiving

attention, and expecting to get better actually heals people. This is a

concept that Science is unprepared to deal with, especially considering

that the mind, according to the dominant paradigm, doesn't exist. It's

supposed to just be the illusion produced by chemical and therefore

wholly material processes in the brain. If the mind is an illusion, it

cannot possibly act as a force, a factor, or a cause of anything, much

less a healing of the body.

An advocate of this view might dodge the bullet by saying that receiving

a placebo triggers endorphins or whatever other chemical that provide

temporary relief. This is a sloppy argument typical of one who hasn't

studied language or logical structures. If the placebo is chemically

incapable of triggering such a chemical reaction on its own, then it is

only the expectation the patient feels on receiving the placebo that

could trigger the chemicals that supposedly relieves their suffering.

Consciousness here still acts as an operational factor. And this

explanation still leaves out cases when people experience a permanent

resolution and not a temporary abatement of their condition.

The placebo effect is especially embarrassing to the scientific

establishment if we consider that its margin of effectiveness is greater

than the margin of effectiveness of many commercial medications. In

other words, if the no-treatment baseline is zero, and the placebo

effect in a drug trial runs at 30% (of patients who report the decrease

of symptoms after receiving the placebo), many drugs only rate an

effectiveness of 40-45% (in other words, only ten to fifteen points on

top of the thirty points of the placebo). This is especially significant

when we consider that the placebo effect is so strong among people who

have received absolutely no training to use their mind to heal their

body, and when the “care” they receive when getting the placebo is the

minimal, cold contact of a doctor looking them over and a nurse handing

them a pill and a plastic cup of water. What if respectful, positive,

experience-based forms of traditional healing were recovered, people

were encouraged and trained to take part in their own healing, and the

professionals were caring, sympathetic, and attentive individuals who

favored hands-on methods instead of arrogant, cold, hostile experts in

lab suits? Coupled with lifestyle- and cause-based rather than symptom-

and disease-based healing, people's health would improve drastically.

But the medical establishment has no interest in breaking with its

authoritarian, torture-complicit, colonial, racist, and patriarchal

history. They are interested in minimizing doctor-patient interactions

and preserving the patient as a passive and ignorant recipient of

treatment. (I can assure you that it is an accurate generalization that

still today, doctors who work in the prison system are torturers, and we

also have to add the medical workers in mental hospitals, in animal

testing laboratories, all those who work in hospitals near the border

and are complicit with the deportation machine...) And these dynamics

long precede the financial incentives of big pharma.

When I participated in a listening project regarding health care, it was

astounding how many people, especially women, had had atrocious

experiences with the medical establishment, which in many cases were not

only humiliating but also dangerous for their health, with many doctors

systematically and ignorantly insisting that they knew their patients'

bodies and problems better after a cursory examination than the patients

themselves.

The question of the placebo, and the broader issue of the demonstrable

power of the mind in healing, points to a major crack in the current

scientific paradigm. I would agree with Jacobi, referring to Kuhn and

others, that a single piece of evidence doesn't justify discarding a

theory. However, the evidence has been amassing for a long time now that

the current scientific paradigm explaining the mind, consciousness, and

the relationship of mind and body through genes and neural structures is

simply inadequate, if not completely wrong. Additionally, we now have a

large body of historical research showing how the scientific paradigm

governing the mind-body relation was never evidence-based, but from the

very beginning was a philosophical imposition stemming from the

prejudices and mythical frameworks of Enlightenment era thinkers looking

for an absolute theory of knowledge. These thinkers, who also gave us

the idea that empirical knowledge is the only valid form of knowledge,

based their arguments not on experimentation but on armchair

speculation.

I would disagree with Jacobi that one theory should not be discarded

until we have a better one to take its place, which I would ascribe more

to an insecurity with humility and uncertainty, since such attitudes

undermine the institutional separation between experts and laypeople.

But if anyone who holds this preference nonetheless wants to overcome

the conservative nature of paradigms, and insists that science has a

revolutionary importance, then they would do well to be more forthcoming

in acknowledging a theory that is clearly insufficient, underlining a

viewpoint that is ready for an update rather than obstinately defending

it and viciously attacking anyone who points to its cracks, as does

Jacobi and so many like him.

One of Jacobi's tactics is to use a total non sequitur on quantum

physics and mock all the spiritualists who use what we might generously

call a poetic understanding of quantum physics to support dissident

ideas about consciousness. Jacobi expresses his suspicion that I hold

the same views, but he is unable to make any textual reference, because,

well, I actually don't hold those views. (Has anyone else noticed how

little importance Jacobi gives to evidence while championing

empiricism?) I would say, however, that those quacks are being more

honest thinkers than the stuffy traditionalists who continue defending a

paradigm that holds no water. At least they are looking for new answers

in a realm where it should be obvious that new answers are needed.

To name one area of study that is breaking the paradigm, we have the

research into consciousness after death, focusing on evidence of

consciousness among people who experience medical death, and who show no

brain activity, and are then resuscitated. The groundbreaking study in

this field was conducted by Dutch cardiologist Pim van der Lommel, who

interviewed hundreds of patients over twenty-five years, recording their

experiences while they were in full cardiac arrest or total comas with

no brain activity. Van der Lommel observed a great deal of similarity in

patients who reported “near death experiences” including having access

to falsifiable sensory experiences at times when there was no blood flow

to their brains, as well as a strong quantifiable difference in

psycho-social experiences in the years after their resuscitation,

comparing those who had had a near death experience with those who had

experienced medical death without such an experience. His study was

published in the peer-reviewed medical journal, The Lancet, and

predictably, many scientists subsequently mocked him, dismissed him as a

quack, and tried to drag his name through the mud. Curiously, they did

not publish their refutations in peer-reviewed journals, which some

might qualify as rather unscientific of them.

Van der Lummel makes an easy target. Not only does he have a funny Dutch

name (and anyone who doesn't think this actually makes a difference is

naĂŻve), but in the book he published after the study, he wanders into a

number of New Agey explanations for how consciousness might actually

work given the inadequacy of the biocentric or neural/mechanical model.

And yes, he makes recourse to quantum physics. But this is only after he

uses decidedly scientific methods to statistically refute all the other

mainstream explanations for consciousness events among people who are

medically dead or in full comas. In any case, his New Agey hypotheses

are independent of and therefore do not discredit his peer-reviewed

research on consciousness after death. This research doesn't tell us

what is actually going on with people who lose blood flow to their

brains but keep on thinking, feeling, and receiving sensory information,

but it most certainly puts another crack in the mechanistic theory of

the brain as producer of consciousness. And what's more, his research

results have been independently reproduced at NYU

[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/mind-works-after-death-consciousness-sam-parnia-nyu-langone-a8007101.html].

(While studies of executed rats suggest their might be a sudden spike in

brain activity after medical death, when even all brain stem reflexes

have stopped, therefore possibly resuscitating mechanistic theories,

this doesn't explain long-lasting consciousness among coma patients.

There's also the troublesome fact, backed up by the NYU study, that not

only can people consistently hear when they're being pronounced dead,

they also often have access to falsifiable visual information about the

emergency room and personnel, whether or not their eyes are closed or

able to focus and respond to light.)

When you consider that plants can hear, smell, and see, as well as

experience fear

[http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20170109-plants-can-see-hear-and-smell-and-respond],

and that slime mold, which has no nervous system whatsoever, is capable

of learning, well, maybe it's time to recognize that Western notions of

other life forms are basically without merit, whereas many indigenous

knowledge systems that treat all other life forms—not just animals—as

our brothers and sisters, as intelligent beings with personhood, are

more accurate. Wouldn't that be embarrassing for all the scientists

standing atop centuries of presumed superiority?

But you know what? Fuck them. The sheer damage wrought by the

application of their paradigm on the natural world has been devastating

enough to prove that it's wrong.

The planet

Who dares to say that Western science has not been involved in the

destruction of the planet? Who is shameless and dishonest enough to deny

that scientific advancement is inseparable from industrial advancement,

and together these two forces are destroying the place that gives us

life, killing hundreds of millions of people, billions of other life

forms, brutalizing the earth, and causing thousands upon thousands of

extinctions every year?

Most scientists make their living working in some way for this ecocidal

system. If they can get funding to study salmon populations, they'll

study salmon populations. If the funding is in fracking and horizontal

drilling, that's what they'll do instead. It's no mystery where most of

the research dollars are, and how the majority of scientists are busy

making the system stronger, more devastating. The small minority whose

funding opportunities allow them to be more idealistic are also a part

of the problem. They continue to support the institutional mythology

regarding solutions to the problem of ecocide.

Where are the scientists who make it clear that alternative energies

have no chance of reducing emissions within a capitalist energy market?

Where are the scientists who release reports stating that the Paris

Agreement is not enough according to accepted climate models?

Where are the scientists who object to the new geological term,

“anthropocene,” pointing out that it is capitalism and not all humanity

that has caused the problem, and that there have been many carbon

neutral, non-ecocidal societies we might learn from?

Where are the scientists who openly refer to the energy companies as

mass murderers?

Where are the scientists getting arrested for direct actions against the

industrial decimation of the planet, for pipeline blockades, for

assassinating the executives of the companies most responsible for

pollution?

Where are the scientists speaking up in support of Greenscare and

Standing Rock prisoners?

Nowhere to be found. Because all the scientists who find it economically

convenient to deal with questions of climate change and ecocide are

sitting obediently right next to those who are most responsible for the

problem, meekly submitting reports to the media, giving their support to

ineffective government treaties and green capitalist pseudo-solutions

even though empirically speaking these cannot possibly stop the ecocide.

The common factor of every false solution, every framing of the ongoing

destruction of the planet, is that the scientific, technological,

industrial system of capitalism afforded the ultimate consideration and

made an absolute priority. Any social response to climate change,

habitat loss, and mass extinctions must first posit the untouchability,

the immortal preservation, of this system. Only then can it begin to

address the question of ameliorating ecological harm. Scientists are

fully complicit in the framing that has us first save capitalism, and

then see if it's also possible to save the planet.

How are we supposed to believe that an institutional complex that

systematically produces people who hate the planet, who hate other life

forms, who think of themselves superior, are going to save the planet?

Constantly we are told to trust in the priests, and to think of anyone

who loves the earth as backward “mystics”. Jacobi is shameless enough to

equate those who fault Science for its role in the devastation with

climate denialists who refute the scientific consensus.

As one final example of ecocide in which scientific institutions

undeniably played an irreplaceable role, we have the so-called Green

Revolution, the forcible industrialization, mechanization, and

chemicalization of agriculture throughout the Global South. The

scientific practices that underpin monocrop agriculture,

machine-planting and harvesting, factory-based meat production and

processing, global transportation, and chemical fertilizers and

pesticides entail a fatal ignorance of biological processes, ecosystems,

and ecological limits and they have destroyed the world's soil, created

dead zones throughout the ocean, poisoned our environment, and condemned

billions to a precarious dependence on the market and millions to

outright starvation. These practices, developed, promoted, and defended

by scientists and scientific institutions, are directly involved in the

forcible suppression of numerous ecocentric, sustainable, traditional

practices of sustenance, while they themselves constitute the most

inefficient form of food production in world history. I am referring to

inefficiency, stupidity, and abusiveness on multiple levels, but those

who are mentally inhibited by rationalism and have trouble appreciating

things that are not numbers-based need only the readily available

calculations of fuel calories spent versus food calories produced.

As just the latest in a cascading series of disasters produced by the

idiocy of scientific agriculture, we have the first empirically

demonstrated factor related to the catastrophic die-offs of bee

populations worldwide. Glyphosate, Monsanto's Roundup, supposedly

doesn't affect animals, except when agricultural workers are exposed to

large quantities, in which case they tend to die quickly. But

officially:

in their digestive tract.

Tell these two facts to any nine-year-old, and they would probably see

that glyphosate presents a danger to animals as well.

Lo and behold, the scientists in their shiny white labcoats have come to

save us. In September 2018, 48 years after scientists identified

glyphosate as an effective herbicide and 44 years after it hit the

market, scientists at the University of Austin reported that when

honeybees visit fields that have been sprayed with Roundup, they suffer

die-offs of their intestinal flora that make them significantly more

vulnerable to a number of contagious diseases, creating the conditions

for the simultaneous deaths of most members of a hive.

[https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180924174506.htm]

It took them 48 years to look into a problem that any pre-adolescent

with only the most basic information on biology would identify as a

potential danger in five minutes. Yet another example of the

mind-blowing stupidity of scientists when they're not getting paid to

think about something. A danger to the world and a boon to capitalism

and states: general stupidity, applied brilliance, coupled with immense

power. They'll solve the problems placed in front of them, avoid any

overarching structural critiques, and delegitimize any affirmations or

perspectives from outside the system.

Revolutionary Science?

Jacobi titles his critique “the revolutionary importance of science,”

but throughout his text he offers very little to clarify what these

revolutionary qualities are. He comes the closest in the following

paragraph, and it's telling that he actually says nothing positive about

Science, he just falls back on an old strawman scare tactic, assuring

readers that there is only one alternative to Science and it is

horrifying. (Sounds familiar, right? Hey Jacobi, ever worked for the

Democrats on a “Get Out the Vote” campaign?)

For one thing, even if this approach has some real problems, the

alternatives are even worse. Mysticism, religion, and various forms of

obscurantism have been the primary tools of the powerful seeking to

justify their power. Science—logic, reason, empirical evidence—has been

the tool that has cut off the legs of those beasts. Science is what

allows us to demystify power relations and the world around us so that

we can properly respond. Otherwise, we are left making decisions that do

not, for example, acknowledge evolutionary processes, economic trends,

sociological tendencies, and human nature. This is as absurd as making

decisions without acknowledging the laws of gravity. Worse, we are left

not believing in the laws of gravity because a monarch or tradition or

“divine revelation” has told us so.

Well, no, actually, you're a couple hundred years late with this claim.

Today Science is the primary tool by which the powerful justify their

power, and while scientists do love cutting legs off beasts, it would be

a better metaphor to claim that Science has built the powerful a

freaking jetpack to zip around in. Also, did anyone notice how he threw

“human nature” in there? Another favorite trope of the status quo and a

part of Enlightenment mythology that many scientists have clung to.

Just as he can't appreciate a global critique of the institutional

complex he feels compelled to defend, he cannot offer a vision about

what is liberating about science, beyond calling up some 19th century

bogeyman regarding the oppression of mysticism, much the same bogeyman

his forebears used to justify the slaughter of witches and the genocide

of indigenous societies in order to usher in the reign of their own

rationalism, in which women and people of color were scientifically

inferior, animals didn't have feelings, and the world was a collection

of dead elements that existed for our benefit.

In conclusion, Jacobi is akin to a liberal when it comes to Science. He

is either unable or he refuses to appreciate a systemic critique. Any

link between Science and capitalism is simply a question of corruption

that needs to be cured with more and better science. This is a naĂŻve,

baseless view. Jacobi is completely unable of describing what science

would look like—how even new scientists would be trained—without the

countless institutional and cultural connections with multiple

interlinked systems of domination and exploitation. Perhaps the

divisionist prejudice that sits at the heart of Science is playing one

final trick on him: he thinks that society is a collection of elements,

and revolution is just a question of picking and choosing which

institutions we like and which we don't, rather than a drawn out

convulsion in which everything is fundamentally transformed. How are we

supposed to make fundamental transformations without fundamental

critiques? We aren't. Which is exactly why every institution of power

rejects fundamental critiques and demands either conservative loyalty or

the kind of liberal critiques like Jacobi's that lead at best to

piecemeal reform.

The only positive scraps Jacobi offers regarding Science have to do with

climate change. We have to believe in scientists because those who don't

believe in them are the climate denialists. Another dishonest, totally

disrespectful strawman. Today, most people trust scientists regarding

climate change, and that is part of the problem. Because they have also

been trusting the solutions validated by scientific institutions, which

as already discussed are false solutions. Today, trust in scientists

regarding climate change means first and foremost passivity: people

leave the experts in charge, and trust that they'll come up with some

technological solution that doesn't require everyone to change how they

live and relate to the planet.

For the umpteenth time, I am not against empirical knowledge, and I

think it is good that there are networks of people taking measurements

and proving that CO2 is increasing and the planet is heating up. But

just as they are not at the forefront of the struggle, they are also not

an indispensable element at the level of knowledge. Anyone who pays

attention to their bioregion and is more than 20 years old has been a

witness to climate change. We don't need fancy equipment to see and feel

the change. Science as an institutional complex convinces people to

disconnect from their own experiences and trust in apparatuses over

which they have no control. This kind of disconnection is part and

parcel of the alienated, exploited relationship we have with the Earth

that allows us to damage it so.

Recently, I was watching a video of a Flat-earther trying to prove his

theory. The most compelling thing he said out of all the harebrained

bits of evidence went along the lines of, “We're just supposed to

believe the world is round because they tell us it is?” How tragic, to

find the scientific spirit, in the best possible sense of the word, so

poorly equipped. Everyone who goes to public school gets a few basic

years of scientific education, and somehow, in those years, the average

student doesn't receive the observational tools they would need to prove

for themselves that the Earth is round.

I have no doubt that most scientists would heartily prefer that

scientific education in elementary and high schools be vastly improved.

Yet hardly any of them move a finger to accomplish this. How many people

with a PhD, much less a PhD in a “hard” science, go back to teach in a

public school? Probably something close to 0%. Overwhelmingly, they

follow the money. How can one not give them their share of the blame for

ensuring that scientific knowledge is enclosed, specialized, monopolized

by a tiny group of people and therefore made an instrument of

hierarchical power, rather than generalized, communalized, shared, and

therefore made an instrument of the common people?

In my vision an anti-authoritarian revolution, empirical tools and

methods would be put at everyone's disposal, but rationalist

spirituality would be thoroughly subverted, indigenous, ecocentric

spiritualities would be allowed to thrive again, and revolutionaries

everywhere would shout at the top of their lungs, making it a common

faith, “the earth does not belong to us, we belong to the earth.”

This means thoroughly destroying the anthropocentric, technophilic

fallacy that sits at the heart of Science and that is also shared by

many Western anti-capitalist movements. Kropotkin and Marx both saw

Nature as a limitation to overcome, and they correctly understood

Science as the weapon to defeat it. None of their predictions regarding

abundance produced by technology have come true.

If there ever were an anti-capitalist revolution that still clung to the

values of Science, those beliefs would resuscitate authority as surely

as the State did in the failed anti-capitalist revolutions of the 20th

century.

Consider this quote from “a Situationist journal in 1969. [It] directly

addresses the seizure of science from capitalism and the state by the

people, and its recuperation for their own utopian goals.

Humanity will enter into space to make the universe the playground of

the last revolt: that which will go against the limitations imposed by

nature. Once the walls have been smashed that now separate people from

science, the conquest of space will no longer be an economic or military

‘promotional’ gimmick, but the blossoming of human freedoms and

fulfillments, attained by a race of gods. We will not enter into space

as employees of an astronautic administration or as ‘volunteers’ of a

state project, but as masters without slaves reviewing their domains:

the entire universe pillaged for the workers’ councils. ”

[Quoted in Stevphen Shukaitis, “Space is the (non)place: Martians,

Marxists, and the outer space of the radical imagination” Sociological

Review 57 Suppl (2009).]

Note all the colonial elements present in this supposedly revolutionary

view: the conquest of a territory once again presented as empty and

therefore waiting for our improvements, the suspicious proposition of

masters without slaves, the pillaging of natural resources, ascendancy

as a superior race, and of course nature as nothing more than a

limitation. The view shares much in common with current day cyborgs of

the transhumanist movement who have no pretensions of being

anti-capitalist as they promise to “free us, as a species, from the

confines of

biology.”[https://edition.cnn.com/style/article/designing-bodies-future/index.html]

It is the abandonment of this nature-hating, body-despising imperative

which is at the very center of Science as a mythological system and

institutional complex that would truly be revolutionary.