Verwandte Artikel zu Spiritual Snake Oil: Fads & Fallacies In Pop Culture:...

Spiritual Snake Oil: Fads & Fallacies In Pop Culture: Fads & Fallacies in Pop Culture - Softcover

 
9781884365799: Spiritual Snake Oil: Fads & Fallacies In Pop Culture: Fads & Fallacies in Pop Culture

Inhaltsangabe

Spiritual Snake Oil shows that the same fallacies that plague religious apologetics also infect virtually all "new age" and "spiritual" writing. Author Chris Edwards does this by dissecting the arguments and assertions of the most prominent "new age" icons and "spiritual" writers. They include Robert Pirsig ("Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance"), James Redfield ("The Celestine Prophecy"), Deepak Chopra ("Life After Death"), Dinesh D'Souza ("Life After Death"), Francis Collins's ("The Language of God"), Rhonda Byrne ("The Secret"), and even Michael Crichton (a surprising defender of New Age thinking). As Edwards shows, the same fallacies, the same errors in argument, show up time after time in the writings of these-and virtually all other-"new age" and "spiritual" writers. In addition to explaining these fallacies in the chapters devoted to the individual authors, Edwards devotes a final chapter, "A Compendium of Fallacies" to outlining the tricks and deceptive practices common to illogical arguments.

Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Chris Edwards

is the author of Disbelief 101 and haswritten extensively for many skeptical andsecularist periodicals, includingthe two most prominent, Free Inquiry and Skeptic.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Spiritual Snake Oil

Fads & Fallacies in Pop Culture

By Chris Edwards

See Sharp Press

Copyright © 2011 Chris Edwards
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-884365-79-9

Contents

Introduction, by Marie Alena Castle,
Preface,
1. Why Debunk?,
2. Robert Pirsig and Philosophical Attacks on Science,
3. Michael Crichton and Intellectual Defense of the New Age,
4. The Celestine Fallacy,
5. The Secret Is Out (of its mind),
6. Deepak Chopra's Afterlife,
7. Francis Collins's Attempt to Reconcile God and Reason,
8. Dinesh D'Souza's New Revelation,
9. Ray Kurzweil's "Singularity" Isn't Even Close,
10. Simon Young and "Transhumanism",
11. A Compendium of Fallacies,
Appendix: Model-Dependent Realism,
Bibliography,
Index,


CHAPTER 1

Why Debunk?


Skepticism is a provisional approach to claims. Skepticism is a method, not a position.

— Michael Shermer, Editor of Skeptic Magazine and Author of Why People Believe Weird Things


Too many people see non-material philosophy as harmless. No doubt billions of worshippers are comforted by religious or spiritual ideas. Why not leave them alone?

First, in order to increase human happiness we need to make the world a better place. To put this another way, we need to create conditions that will lessen human suffering. There is nothing to be gained by abandoning the logic and rationality that have solved so many of humanity's problems. What if Thomas Edison and Louis Pasteur had spent their time chanting "Om" rather than perspiring in their labs?

Second, non-materialistic thinking clouds the mind and prevents us from seeing real solutions. Entire societies have been dominated by religion; and, unfortunately, many still are. Instead of inquiring, thinking, and experimenting, such societies becomes static and run the same religious program, through ritual and indoctrination, over and over again like broken machines. The spiritual outlook on the world has never been helpful and has instead been a hindrance to understanding the world around us. The atheist/materialist/scientific outlook has always been helpful. So why, then, should we use a spiritual model to study something like consciousness or near death experiences when it has so consistently failed us in the past? Who benefits?

Well, the guru does. I don't buy the idea that religious beliefs are viral "memes." Instead, they are forms of manipulation. Gurus, priests, and preachers benefit in status and wealth if they have believers/followers. They gain power when people believe in their words and people usually believe only if they are kept ignorant.

There are thousands of little old men on mountaintops in the "guru literature," and they always say things that are so vague that the gullible consider them wise. The easily impressed assume that a guru knows the answer to the question being asked, but wants the inquirer to struggle with the question in order to arrive at some kind of wisdom — and that is why the guru won't give a straight answer. The truth is that he won't give a straight answer because he's clueless. The purpose of ambiguous answers and metaphorical stories is not to convey any message of truth, but to preserve the aura of mystery and wisdom that the guru or master has so carefully cultivated around himself.

By giving shamans and gurus, priests and preachers respect, we help to cultivate future generations of people who believe that spiritualistic forms of thinking are respectable. By doing this, we as a society deprive ourselves of the intellectual capital that could provide real solutions to real problems. The history of scientific understanding can be read like tree rings. Sometimes the rings (additions to scientific understanding) are large and at other times they're small. We should attempt to provide the best type of growing conditions for the scientific enterprise. Trees grow well when there is plenty of water and sunlight, and ideas grow well when the environment favors free inquiry and is uninhibited by dogma or anti-scientific notions. Non-materialist thinkers want us to turn away from the only form of thinking that is helpful to us, and they want us to do so because it benefits them. Logic and science, conversely, benefit all.

CHAPTER 2

Robert Pirsig And Philosophical Attacks On Science


[T]he discovery that mathematics is a good language for describing the Universe is about as significant as the discovery that English is a good language for writing plays in.

— John Gribbin (from Schrödingers Kittens and the Search for Reality)


Everything zen, everything zen; I don't think so. — Bush (music group)


Robert Pirsig, author of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, deserves a lot of credit for getting a wide readership interested in philosophy; unfortunately he also deserves some of the blame for creating a market in which non-material philosophers and gurus thrive. After reading his book, I found myself thinking about where he went wrong, and eventually wrote an essay about his mistakes. This led me to start reading other pop philosophy and pop science books with the intent of seeing if their authors made the same mistakes as Pirsig.

During that process, I remembered having read, years before I studied logic, a critique of skepticism and science in a Michael Crichton book called Travels. At the time I first read Crichton's speech/essay, I thought he made some good points. Upon returning to it, however, the flaws in his arguments were obvious.

Both Pirsig and Crichton are/were (unfortunately, Dr. Crichton recently passed away) hyper-intelligent individuals. But that's beside the point. Logic addresses arguments, not people, and even the hyper-intelligent make mistakes.

Robert Pirsig, whose wildly popular Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance still sells thousands of copies annually, can be seen as the founding father of modern pop philosophy. Pirsig may also be the first modern writer to rework old religious fallacies into mysticism/New Ageism. Many of his errors have been repeated by modern day gurus and shamans like Deepak Chopra. Pirsig's book, first published in 1974, sought to undermine scientific thinking and created a cult-like audience of followers who persist in believing in Pirsig's non-material claims.

Those who doubt Pirsig's continuing influence might consider Mark Richardson's recently released book, Zen and Now: On the Trail of Robert Pirsig and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. The author of Zen and Now, like so many of Pirsig's devotees, traveled Pirsig's famous motorcycle route. I too would like to follow Pirsig's path, but with a different intention. I'd like to provide maintenance for his logic. Perhaps debunking Pirsig, even at this late date, will be helpful in addressing the claims of the many pop philosophers and gurus who have begun writing for the niche market that he created.

In the Introduction to the 1999 paperback edition of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Pirsig mentioned schizophrenia. In reference to his own battles with what appears to be some version of split personality disorder, he wrote: "There is a divided personality here: two minds fighting for the same body, a condition that inspired the original meaning of 'schizophrenia.'" The more psychologically correct definition of schizophrenia is the inability of an individual to distinguish between the images in his head and images in the world. When this condition is chronic, it is defined as a mental disorder. When it is selective, we call it faith. Pirsig's philosophical mistakes are all schizophrenic in that he cannot always tell the difference between things that merely exist in the mind and things that exist in the world. New Age philosophers often try to distance themselves from their more dogmatic religious cousins. However, a close examination of Pirsig's writing shows that the errors he makes are carnival-mirror distortions of those that plague religion.

In his book, which Pirsig informs us is a Chatauquah, kind of a long philosophical discourse told through an individual narrative, the central philosophical theme is Pirsig's search for something that falls outside of the traditional philosophical arena. His alter ego "Phaedrus" (Pirsig's personality before a long bout with mental illness) became consumed with the concept of "Quality" and went into a deep cavern of philosophical thought in search of what it meant.

In order to prevent his search from becoming a scientific quest, Pirsig makes a few clumsy attacks on scientific materialism, otherwise known as atheism. Pirsig's brief dismissal of "scientific materialism" aka "atheism" has an outsized importance in his book. Once he has gotten those pesky rules of science out of the way, he is free to meander through the mystical and philosophical caverns until he finds his Quality — a strange trip, given the fact that he doesn't even bother to define it.

Here's a sample passage:

Phaedrus felt that ... scientific materialism was by far the easiest to cut to ribbons. This, he knew from his earlier education, was naïve science. He went after it ... using the reductio ad absurdum. This form of argument rest on the truth that if the inevitable conclusions from a set of premises are absurd then it follows logically that at least one of the premises that produced them is absurd. Let's examine, he said, what follows from the premise that anything not composed of mass-energy is unreal or unimportant.

He used the number zero as a starter. Zero originally a Hindu number, was introduced to the West by Arabs during the Middle Ages and was unknown to the ancient Greeks and Romans. How was that? He wondered. Had nature so subtly hidden the zero that all the Greeks and all the Romans — millions of them — couldn't find it? One would normally think that zero is right out there in the open for everyone to see. He showed the absurdity of trying to derive zero from any form of mass-energy, and then asked, rhetorically, if that meant the number zero was "unscientific." If so, did that mean that digital computers, which function exclusively in terms of ones and zeros, should be limited to just ones for scientific work? No trouble finding the absurdity here. (297-298)


The problem with this passage is that Pirsig reduced the wrong argument to absurdity — his own.

First of all, the number zero was invented not discovered, in the same way that Newton invented, not discovered, calculus and Darwin invented, not discovered, evolutionary theory. This does not mean that moving objects began with Newton or that evolution began with Darwin, it merely means that humanity finally created language that could describe real world phenomena.

The notion that the Greeks and Romans could not see zero is about as significant as saying that the citizens of a landlocked country could not see a ship. In Charles Seife's wonderful book, Zero: Biography of a Dangerous Idea, Seife pointed out that Greek mathematics concerned itself primarily with geometry because it was useful for farming and building. The Greeks could not conceive of negative landholdings, for example. The concept of zero was created sometime during the 5th or 6th century in the Gupta Dynasty when Hindu thinkers began to contemplate the infinite and the void. Gupta mathematics was impressive and the calculations it enabled amounted to a scientific revolution.

This being said, it would not be proper to say that Indian mathematics was right and Greek mathematics was wrong. This would be like saying that the French language is right and German is wrong. What can be said is that Indian mathematics is more expressive than Greek.

The Greeks seem not to have spent much time contemplating the infinite or the void, which is why they had no names for them. The Hindus, driven by a religion that encouraged contemplation of such things, did. Similarly, Central African tribesmen could hardly be expected to have a word for snow. Yet snow, the infinite, and the void exist (or in the case of the last, don't exist but the concept does). It is only when cultures become aware of things for which they have no terms are the mathematical and linguistic "names" for them invented or borrowed. This occurs all the time. When Americans first encountered Mexican salsa they adopted not only the sauce but the word for it as well.

If we were given a certain limited amount of sensory data — say the observation of the sun peeking over the horizon every morning — we could develop two different mathematical models, or languages, to describe this phenomenon: the Ptolemaic (Earth centered) and the Copernican (sun centered).

At first, the Ptolemaic view and the Copernican view would both suffice, and there would be no way of saying which better described the observed phenomena. However, let us say that we get a new piece of sensory data, as Galileo did when he used his telescope to see the orbital patterns of the moons of Jupiter, and that one of these models more accurately predicts and describes these new facts; then we would be able to say that one model was the better descriptor of all the facts.

The Copernican "theory" is more descriptive of sensory data and gives us a more accurate description of what is really happening in the universe. Thus, it displaced the Ptolemaic version. If we understand this we can see that Zeno's famous paradox, for example, is not a paradox at all. (Zeno asked how, if you go half the distance to a goal, then half of that distance, then half of that distance, etc., you could ever arrive at the goal.) Zeno was simply showing the Greeks that their mathematics (devoid of zero) had no way of adequately describing movement.

Modern mathematics, far from being a hard objective "thing" is instead a mish-mash of concepts that arose from a process of cultural synthesis (almost entirely in Eurasia, where cultures were easily able to intermesh because of war and trade). The Greeks contributed geometry; the Gupta Indians the numbers 0-9 and the decimal system; the Muslims gave us algebra; the English gave us physics and calculus; and the Germans contributed the theory of relativity and quantum mechanics. Each time, a culture's language was adopted and added not because it was "right," but because it was more descriptive of objective phenomena and therefore a "better" language.

It is important to note that in his Chatauqua, Pirsig devotes several pages to the mathematician Poncaire' (1854-1912) and the supposed mathematical crisis of his time, which involved the "discovery" that two different types of mathematical language — one called Lobachevskian and the other Euclidian (which became known as the Riemann) — could be used. Pirsig writes:

We now had two contradictory visions of unshakable scientific truth, true for all men of all ages, regardless of their individual preferences. This was the basis of the profound crisis that shattered the scientific complacency of the Gilded Age. How do we know which one of these geometries is right? If there is no basis for distinguishing between them, then you have a total mathematics which admits logical contradictions. But a mathematics which admits logical contradictions is not mathematics at all. The ultimate effect of the non-Euclidian geometries becomes nothing more than a magician's mumbo jumbo in which belief is sustained purely by faith! (335)


We see here that Pirsig is again confused by the nature of mathematics. We cannot ask the question "which of these geometries is right" anymore than we can ask whether Portuguese or Inuit is the "right" language. What we can ask, is, which is more descriptive for the sensory data we have? And, a paragraph down, Pirsig answers his own question: "According to the Theory of Relativity, Riemann geometry best describes the world we live in." (335)

Reification is not a small mistake. Pirsig's claim that computers run on Liebniz's binary code, which works through a series of zeros and ones is not helpful. Does he actually think that computers run on concepts? There are no zeros in a computer but rather a series of electrical "holders" that are either electronically switched on or off. Humans simply describe this in terms of zeros or ones. Again, this description is subjective.

Once this is understood, all of Pirsig's philosophy falls apart. Consider this oft-quoted passage of a conversation between him and his son:

[T]he laws of physics and of logic ... the number system ... the principle of algebraic substitution. These are ghosts. We just believe in them so thoroughly they seem real."

"They seem real to me," John says.

"I don't get it," says Chris.

So I go on. "For example, it seems completely natural to presume that gravitation and the law of gravitation existed before Isaac Newton. It would sound nutty to think that until the seventeenth century there was no gravity."

"Of course."

"So when did this law start? Has it always existed?"

John is frowning and wondering what I'm getting at.

"What I'm driving at," I say, "is the notion that before the beginning of the earth, before the sun and the stars were formed, before the primal generation of anything, the law of gravity existed."

"Sure."

"Sitting there, having no mass of its own, no energy of its own, not in anyone's mind because there wasn't anyone, not in space because there was no space either, not anywhere — this law of gravity still existed?"

Now John seems not so sure.

"If that law of gravity existed," I say, "I honestly don't know what a thing has to do to be nonexistent. It seems to me that the law of gravity has passed every test of nonexistence there is. You cannot think of a single attribute of nonexistence that that law of gravity didn't have. Or a single scientific attribute of existence it did have. And yet it is still 'common sense' to believe that it existed."


(Continues...)
Excerpted from Spiritual Snake Oil by Chris Edwards. Copyright © 2011 Chris Edwards. Excerpted by permission of See Sharp Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Gebraucht kaufen

Zustand: Befriedigend
Some laminate peeling from edge...
Diesen Artikel anzeigen

EUR 8,03 für den Versand von Vereinigtes Königreich nach Deutschland

Versandziele, Kosten & Dauer

EUR 10,23 für den Versand von Vereinigtes Königreich nach Deutschland

Versandziele, Kosten & Dauer

Suchergebnisse für Spiritual Snake Oil: Fads & Fallacies In Pop Culture:...

Beispielbild für diese ISBN

Edwards, Chris
Verlag: See Sharp Press, 2011
ISBN 10: 1884365795 ISBN 13: 9781884365799
Gebraucht Softcover

Anbieter: Hay-on-Wye Booksellers, Hay-on-Wye, HEREF, Vereinigtes Königreich

Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen 5 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

Zustand: Good. Some laminate peeling from edge of cover. Artikel-Nr. 101412-2

Verkäufer kontaktieren

Gebraucht kaufen

EUR 4,10
Währung umrechnen
Versand: EUR 8,03
Von Vereinigtes Königreich nach Deutschland
Versandziele, Kosten & Dauer

Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

In den Warenkorb

Beispielbild für diese ISBN

Edwards Chris Hitchcock S. C.
Verlag: See Sharp Press, 2011
ISBN 10: 1884365795 ISBN 13: 9781884365799
Neu Softcover

Anbieter: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Vereinigtes Königreich

Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen 5 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

Zustand: New. pp. 146. Artikel-Nr. 5462801

Verkäufer kontaktieren

Neu kaufen

EUR 10,54
Währung umrechnen
Versand: EUR 10,23
Von Vereinigtes Königreich nach Deutschland
Versandziele, Kosten & Dauer

Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

In den Warenkorb