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A Witty Mathematician
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(Attempted) Dialogue with a Darwinian

Quotes from an interview with David Berlinski, a mathematician living in Paris and supporter of Intelligent Design. Posted on a website by Jonathan Witt: www.idthefuture.com.
 
See also: "Darwinian Doubts," by David Berlinski, Wichita Eagle, 9 March 2005: A few choice bits:
  • "The suggestion that Darwin's theory of evolution is like theories in the serious sciences-- quantum electrodynamics, say -- is grotesque. Quantum electrodynamics is accurate to thirteen unyielding decimal places. Darwin's theory makes no tight quantitative predictions at all."
  •  "A great many species enter the fossil record trailing no obvious ancestors and depart for Valhalla leaving no obvious descendants."

Also his "The Deniable Darwin," Commentary, 1 June 1996. (Available on www.discovery.org) Also his review of Richard Dawkins' Climbing Mount Improbable, which begins in this wise: "The theory of evolution is the great white elephant of contemporary thought. It is large, almost entirely useless, and the object of superstitious awe." Berlinski says of Dawkins' book: "The science throughout is primitive. Difficulties are resolved by sleight-of-hand."  That Dawkins holds a Chair at Oxford is a telling reminder of the decline of Western thought.

 

 

In the following passages Berlinksi captures the vanishing quality of modern intellectual life with silken nets of wit. I am impressed with how he understands that atheism, moral relativism, and materialism basically are a form of "sentimentalism" -- see below. I think that is a deep insight.

There is no argument against religion that is not also an argument against mathematics. Mathematicians are capable of grasping a world of objects that lies beyond space and time ….

But if you ask me just who is the more credulous, the more suggestible, the dopier, the more perfectly prepared to convey absurdity to an almost inconceivable pitch of personal enthusiasm – a well-trained Jesuit or a Ph.D. in quantum physics, I’ll go with the physicist every time.

Look, for thousands of intellectuals, becoming a Marxist was an experience of disturbing intensity. The decision having been made, the world became simpler, brighter, cleaner, clearer. A number of contemporary intellectuals react in the same way when it comes to the Old Boy – Darwin, I mean. Having renounced Freud and all his wiles, the literary critic Frederick Crews – a man of some taste and sophistication – has recently reported seeing in random variations and natural selection the same light he once saw in castration anxiety or penis envy. He has accordingly immersed himself in the emollient of his own enthusiasm. Every now and then he contributes an essay to The New York Review of Books revealing that his ignorance of any conceivable scientific issue has not been an impediment to his satisfaction...

Another example – I’ve got hundreds. Daniel Dennett has in Darwin’s Dangerous Idea written about natural selection as the single greatest idea in human intellectual history. Anyone reading Dennett understands, of course, that his acquaintance with great ideas has been remarkably fastidious.

The real mark of an ideological system is its presumptuousness.

A congeries of sentimental attitudes are at work in the humanities – atheism, moral relativism, materialism. They are incarnated locally in the United States by Richard Rorty, a philosopher, I must say, who while espousing irony as an antidote to anomie (and anything else that ails you) seems to me, at least, to exhibit an almost elephantine earnestness in everything he writes. The man could paralyze an infantry battalion just by beginning a lecture.

Naturalism is sometimes taken to mean that there is only one body of human knowledge, and that is contemporary science; at other times, it is taken to mean that there is only one method by which knowledge can be acquired, and that is the scientific method. This is a little like arguing that cabbage is the only food and that prayer is the only way to get it.

Where science has a method, it is trivial – look carefully, cut the cards, weigh the evidence, don’t let yourself be fooled, do an experiment if you can. These are principles of kennel management as well as quantum theory. Where science isn’t trivial, it has no method. What method did Einstein follow, or Pauli, or Kekulé? Kekulé saw the ring structure of benzene in what he called a waking dream. Some method.

[Questioner] What is the connection between Darwinism and naturalism? …

DB: There is none – at least if by a connection, you mean a logical connection. There is, however, a sentimental connection. A commitment to naturalism, however defined, very often makes Darwin’s theory seem more plausible than it otherwise might be. Naturalism is sentimentally a sufficient condition for Darwinism. By the same token, Darwinism is sentimentally a necessary condition for naturalism. ...

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