Coda: Science as a Way of Knowing
Science is a wondrously successful way of knowing. Science
seeks explanations of the natural world by formulating hypotheses
that are subject to the possibility of empirical falsification
or corroboration. A scientific hypothesis is tested by ascertaining
whether or not predictions about the world of experience derived
as logical consequences from the hypothesis agree with what is
actually observed. Science as a mode of inquiry into the
nature of the universe has been successful and of great consequence.
Witness the proliferation of science academic departments in universities
and other research institutions, the enormous budgets that the
body politic and the private sector willingly commit to scientific
research, and its economic impact. The Office of Management and
the Budget (OMB) of the U.S. government has estimated that fifty
percent of all economic growth in the United States since the
Second World War can directly be attributed to scientific knowledge
and technical advances. The technology derived from scientific
knowledge pervades, indeed, our lives: the high-rise buildings
of our cities, thruways and long span-bridges, rockets that bring
men to the moon, telephones that provide instant communication
across continents, computers that perform complex calculations
in millionths of a second, vaccines and drugs that keep bacterial
parasites at bay, gene therapies that replace DNA in defective
cells. All these remarkable achievements bear witness to the validity
of the scientific knowledge from which they originated.
Scientific knowledge is also remarkable in the way it emerges
by way of consensus and agreement among scientists, and in the
way new knowledge builds upon past accomplishment rather than
starting anew with each generation or each new practitioner. Surely
scientists disagree with each other on many matters; but these
are issues not yet settled, and the points of disagreement generally
do not bring into question previous knowledge. Modern scientists
do not challenge that atoms exist, or that there is a universe
with a myriad stars, or that heredity is encased in the DNA.
Science is a way of knowing, but it is not the only way. Knowledge
also derives from other sources, such as common sense, artistic
and religious experience, and philosophical reflection. In The
Myth of Sisyphus, the great French writer Albert Camus asserted
that we learn more about ourselves and the world from a relaxed
evenings perception of the starry heavens and the scents
of grass than from sciences reductionistic ways.The validity of the knowledge acquired by non-scientific modes
of inquiry can be simply established by pointing out that science
dawned in the sixteenth century, but humanity had for centuries
built cities and roads, brought forth political institutions and
sophisticated codes of law, advanced profound philosophies and
value systems, and created magnificent plastic art, as well as
music and literature. We thus learn about ourselves and about
the world in which we live and we also benefit from products of
this non-scientific knowledge. The crops we harvest and the animals
we husband emerged millennia before science's dawn from practices
set down by farmers in the Middle East, Andean sierras, and Mayan
plateaus.
It is not my intention in this section to belabor the extraordinary
fruits of nonscientific modes of inquiry. But I have set forth
the view that nothing in the world of nature escapes the scientific
mode of knowledge, and that we owe this universality to Darwin's
revolution. Here I wish simply to state something that is obvious,
but becomes at times clouded by the hubris of some scientists.
Successful as it is, and universally encompassing as its subject
is, a scientific view of the world is hopelessly incomplete. There
are matters of value and meaning that are outside science's scope.
Even when we have a satisfying scientific understanding of a natural
object of process, we are still missing matters that may well
be thought by many to be of equal or greater import. Scientific
knowledge may enrich esthetic and moral perceptions, and illuminate
the significance of life and the world, but these are matters
outside science's realm.
On April 28, 1937, early in the Spanish Civil War, Nazi airplanes
bombed the small Basque town of Guernica, the first time that
a civilian population had been determinedly destroyed from the
air. The Spanish painter Pablo Picasso had recently been commissioned
by the Spanish Republican Government to paint a large composition
for the Spanish pavilion at the Paris World Exhibition of 1937.
In a frenzy of manic energy, the enraged Picasso sketched in two
days and fully outlined in ten more days his famous Guernica,
an immense painting of 25 feet, 8 inches by 11 feet, 6 inches.
Suppose that I now would describe the images represented in the
painting, their size and position, as well as the pigments used
and the quality of the canvas. This description would be of interest,
but it would hardly be satisfying if I had completely omitted
esthetic analysis and considerations of meaning, the dramatic
message of man's inhumanity to man conveyed by the outstretched
figure of the mother pulling her killed baby, bellowing faces,
the wounded horse or the satanic image of the bull.
Let Guernica be a metaphor of the point I wish to make. Scientific
knowledge, like the description of size, materials, and geometry
of Guernica, is satisfying and useful. But once science has had
its say, there remains much about reality that is of interest,
questions of value and meaning that are forever beyond science's
scope.
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| Contributed by: Dr. Francisco Ayala
|