Some time ago I related a frustrating conversation I had with one of my relatives, an intelligent and educated person, who however holds onto what I consider hardly rational views not just in politics (where there is usually ample room for disagreement), but also about conspiracy theories, and more broadly the nature of the world. Recently, I’ve done it again. This time spending days on and off having a conversation via social media with a person I’ve never met and will never likely meet. Let me tell you what I learned from it.
First, a disclaimer: I usually do not engage in any one-on-one debates, either via email or on social media, simply because not only they tend to be fruitless, but they are also incredibly time consuming. And the older I get, the more I’m jealous of my time. This story, therefore, is to be considered as a rare exception, and not as an encouragement to send me private messages to try to repeat the experience. That’s why I have two blogs (this one and howtobeastoic.org), so that we can have fruitful public discussions that may benefit a number of people.
The range of topics of this new episode was much narrower than the preceding one, and also far more close to my own areas of expertise: evolutionary biology and philosophy of science. I felt, therefore, like I really knew what I was talking about, providing not just a reasonably intelligent and somewhat informed opinion (as, say, during informal discussions on economics, or politics), but an expert one, based on 35 years (shit!) of studying the subject matter at a professional level.
It didn’t help. Not in the least. My interlocutor — let’s call her Curiosa — is an intelligent woman who has read a lot of stuff on evolution in particular, and science more generally. She has also read several of my blog posts, watched some of my debates, and even bought one of my books on evolution. She discovered me by way of reading Michel Denton’s Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, which cites me several times as a reluctant critic of evolutionary theory, i.e., one of those people who know that there is something seriously wrong with “Darwinism,” and yet somehow can’t let go of the orthodoxy and embrace the revolution.
My actual position is easy to check online, in several places. For instance in these two recent blog posts for the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis initiative. In a nutshell: evolutionary theory has evolved by way of several episodes beginning from 1859 (original Darwinism) to the 1930s and ’40s (the Evolutionary Synthesis) through current times (the Extended Synthesis), and it will likely continue to do so. There is nothing wrong with Darwin’s original twin ideas of natural selection and common descent, but we have added a number of other areas of inquiry, explanatory concepts, and of course empirical results over the intervening century and a half. End of story.
Not according to Curiosa. She explained to me that Darwinism is a “reductionist” theory, apparently meaning something really bad by that term. I explained that reductionism is a successful strategy throughout the sciences, and that when it is well done (i.e., it’s not what Dan Dennett characterized as “greedy” reductionism), it is pretty much the only game in town to advance our knowledge of the world.
But, countered Curiosa, how do you then explain the bacterial flagellum? This was obviously a reference to the infamous Darwin’s Black Box by intelligent design creationist Michael Behe. You know, Behe is a scientist! With a PhD!! Working at a legitimate university!!! How do you explain that, Prof. Pigliucci?
Simple, I said, you will always find legitimate academics who will position themselves outside of the mainstream. It actually is a healthy aspect of the social enterprise we call science. Occasionally, some of these people go way outside of the consensus opinion, into territory that is highly questionable, or even downright pseudoscientific. They may do it for a number of reasons, from the fact that they consider themselves rebels and mavericks to their tendency to put their (usually religious, but sometimes political) ideology ahead of reason and evidence. As in fact is the case for Behe, a fervent Catholic who simply can’t wrap his mind around the conclusion that life originated and differentiated by purely natural means, no gods required.
Ah!, continued Curiosa, if that’s the case, how come there is so much disagreement among scientists about evolution, and even the origin of life? Well, I replied, let’s begin by separating those two:
To begin with, there is no such thing as widespread disagreement about “Darwinism” among evolutionary biologists. Pretty much all professionals I know accept the idea, and the disagreement is over the shape of the current theory, just like physicists disagree on the cutting edge of their discipline, not about Newton, or even Einstein.
Moreover, the reason there are indeed so many theories about the origin of life, and truly no consensus, is because we just don’t have enough information left for us to zero in on one or a small subset of hypotheses. The historical traces of those events are, unfortunately, forever erased. We don’t have, and likely never will have, fossils documenting what happened at the onset of life, which means that our ideas about it will remain speculative. Indeed, even should we one day be able to recreate life from scratch in a laboratory, we will have no guarantee that the path we followed under controlled conditions was the one historically followed by nature on our planet. But so what? Science never promised to answer every question, it only promised to do its best. Sometimes its best is not good enough, and the wise thing is to accept human epistemic limitations and move on.
Not at all satisfied, Curiosa shifted topic again: didn’t you hear of Roger Penrose quantum mechanical explanation of consciousness? Doesn’t that imply that consciousness is everywhere, that it is a holistic property of the universe?
Hmm, I said, with all due respect to Sir Roger, I doubt physicists have a clue about consciousness, which so far as I can see is a biological phenomenon, whose explanation is hence best left to biologists. Besides, I told her, beware of any “explanation” that invokes quantum mechanics for anything that is not quantum level phenomena, even when done by an actual credentialed physicist like Penrose. At any rate, I concluded, even if Penrose is right, what does that have to do with Darwinism and its alleged failures?
I think you get the idea, so I won’t bore you with additional examples of the many increasingly frustrating and downright useless exchanges between Curiosa and me, which continued until I politely pointed out that we were going in circles and that perhaps it was time to call it a day.
What did I learn from this exchange? A number of things, none of them boding too well for the advancement of rational discourse and public understanding of science.
First, let me remind you that Curiosa is a smart, well read, and genuinely curious person. She ain’t no country bumpkin, so to speak.
Second, precisely because she reads widely, she can’t help herself putting what I write — or what truly eminent evolutionary biologists, like Stephen Jay Gould, write — on the same level with the sort of fluff that comes out of the Behes and the Dentons of the world. She simply has no way to discriminate, since all these people have PhD’s, and they all have affiliations with reputable universities.
Third, while we always assume that knowledge is an unqualified good, it turns out that a bit of knowledge may do more harm than complete ignorance. When someone as intelligent as Curiosa thinks she understands enough to draw conclusions, she will not hesitate in doing so, rejecting expert opinion outright. When this has to do with the status of evolutionary theory, no much harm is done. But when it has to do with, say, climate change, or the safety of vaccines, that’s an altogether different, and far more dire, story.
Fourth, Curiosa has fallen for the well known technique of spreading doubt on mainstream science, enough that people cannot genuinely make up their minds about what is going on. This was the deliberate strategy of the tobacco industry in its absurd (and lethal, for many people) denial of a link between smoking and cancer, so well encapsulated in the book and documentary Merchants of Doubt. The same approach has then been used to saw doubts about climate change, vaccines, and so forth. And of course it has also been the main strategy behind the so-called intelligent design movement.
Fifth, and rather ironically, Curiosa has absorbed and internalized the vocabulary of skeptical (i.e., pro-science) organizations, accusing me and others of engaging in all sorts of logical fallacies, a convenient shortcut that saves her the trouble to actually engage with my arguments. When I pointed out — reasonably, seemed to me — that Discovery Institute Fellow Jonathan Wells is a member of the Church of Reverend Moon, and that his antipathy toward evolution is entirely ideological in nature, I of course “committed” an ad hominem. When pointed out plenty of reliable sources on evolutionary theory, I was engaging in confirmation bias. And so on.
Lastly, Curiosa’s spirited discussion with me was very clearly fueled by her pride in taking on Big Science and its Orthodoxy, in favor of open mindedness and revolution. She saw herself as David, and I was the Goliath to be slain.
There is nothing I or anyone else can do for the Curiosa of the world. If, and it’s a big if, they will ever manage to get their head clear about what is and is not legitimate science, they will have to do it on their own, painfully and slowly. The resources are out there, easily at their disposal. But they have no psychological incentive to do so.
What can, and ought to, be done instead is act at two levels: i) engage in public outreach aimed at those who are still not as far gone as Curiosa, hoping to retain them and even strengthened their resolve to support sound science; and ii) to do a far better job than we do now with the next generation. It is children that we should target — just like, not at all coincidentally — creationists write lots and lots of books for children. But there is little incentive for scientists and science popularizers to do so, because children literature is seen as somehow inferior to that aimed at adults (even though it is arguably harder to pull off), and because we won’t see the results for decades.
Science, and reason in general, thus remains — in the beautiful metaphor proposed by Carl Sagan — like a candle in the dark. Our urgent job is for it not to be snuffed out by the forces of darkness.

Paul:
Obviously I don’t know the woman. Going by the anecdotes though she does display a level of unawareness as to her lack of competency. This is all that Dunning and Kruger showed – not ignorance – but the fact that your ability to evaluate your own competence is usually dependent on your competence. The idea of showing her the research is not to brand her as ignorant but to show her that it’s easy to fool yourself into thinking you understand things more than you do. Of course there may be multiple worthwhile strategies to take.
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John, ” Is evolution driven by intelligent design…? That’s a philosophical question”
I disagree. Is there any reason to believe that evolution is driven by intelligent design? I think that question is scientific, not philosophical. Darwin got it right; until the discovery of the principle of natural selection, it seemed that there was, but not since. [To avoid misunderstanding, I hasten to add that I am not advocating palaeo-Darwinian adaptationism, a view at least 50 years out of date, but that is not the point]
For those who do favour intelligent design, there remains the question of how the design gets embodied; I’m not sure what kind of question that is, except that it is one invariably ignored by ID advocates, perhaps because they implicitly assume that the Designer is also a miracle-worker.
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Michael, To me Kant certainly surpasses Hume. I think you are asking me to prove that there is a being external to nature who designed the universe. There are many theories of nature in addition to billiard ball mechanics. Recall that Newton called his work “Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy”. Natural philosophy might have principles other than the mathematical. These principles may be internal rather than external to the natural world.
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John, Why is Kant better than Hume? How did Kant show that intelligent design was a viable argument?
Of course there is a possibility of intelligent design and many people believe in it, what I want from you is – if I look at two things how do I tell if one is designed by an intelligence and one is not. Can you tell me how? How did Kant supposedly do it?
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That’s a good question . I’ll have to think about it. How would you know that a car is a product of intelligent design?
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Because I have seen someone build a car. Cars are not organisms. I think you need to reread Hume.
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Massimo,
Why didn’t you invite her onto this forum? I’m sure quite a few commentators would have willingly rocked her boat.
The funny thing about intelligent design is that intelligence is a function of receiving and storing information, then making decisions based on it. Given computers can do that, wouldn’t such a designer be the equivalent of a cosmic computer?
The real issue is the source of consciousness, not how it manifests in certain bipedal organisms. Logically that would arise from some primal state, not fall from an ideal of our particular ability to organize information. More the new born babe, than the wise old man.
As such, Curiosa might be a breath of fresh air. Or a ball to be batted around.
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Bunsen Burner, I agree with much of your jeremiad on the internet, but I think wikipedia is a remarkably useful feature for starting to look up things, especially if you don’t have access to a good library. Also, I don’t remember anything like this blog being available 50 years ago.
“Magazines that have removed long and thoughtful articles with shorter and more click-baity fare. ”
I’ve been enjoying long and thoughtful articles in the New Yorker for over 30 years. Speaking of which, entirely off topic, the 2/27 issue has an article on a piece of chamber music called “Ipsa Dixit” by Kate Soper. based on Aristotle’s “Poetics,” that might well deserve a place in the weekend reading.
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I have been reading the translation of Haruki Murakami’s book about Aum Shinrikyo’s Tokyo subway murders. Murakami’s commentaries after the interviews with the subway riders and the cult members are fascinating.
He comments on a medical doctor who released sarin by saying this, “Reality is created out of confusion and contradiction, and if you exclude those elements, you’re no longer talking about reality. You might think that – by following language and a logic that appears consistent – you’re able to exclude that aspect of reality, but it will always be lying in wait for you, ready to take its revenge.”
We want some nice linear narrative, but nothing is that simple.
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I generally agree with WTC, and Massimo, on the overall value of Wikipedia.
And, as a classical music lover, where would I be without YouTube? I don’t even listen to my stereo any more. I bought new, pretty decent 2-way computer speakers last fall, and it’s either YouTube, a streaming classical site, or my CDs via computer rather than stereo.
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Michael, I have reread Hume and to me he is a sophomoric sceptic compared to Kant, an actual philosopher. You should read Kant.
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Maybe the Golden Age of scientific discovery and discourse is over, and for the same reasons–in reverse–that started it.
From Galileo to Darwin to Einstein and Bohr we have a smattering of brilliant lovers of truth, empirically grounded and sometimes in the resisting face of religion, using deductive and inductive imaginative methods to propose hypotheses and theories that work and explain things that have given us understanding of gravity yielding accurate GPS in devices that work on propositional logic code that also can Google why bacteria rapidly evolve under conditions of over-prescribed drugs to become antibiotic resistant. We carry the at-least-near-enough products of scientific truth in our pockets every day, certainly the practical unification of general relativity and quantum theory.
But that same damn product–the internet-based smart phone–has led to the near instantaneous and pervasive promotion of mystically motivated iniquity, downright ignorance, half-baked logic, pure sophistry, and the like that Massimo encountered with Curiosa which marries the medium produced by science with the kinds of attitudes that resisted it at nearly every turn. And so ironically science’s products–social media technology–has a role in reversing the trend of science’s influence on social consciousness by magnifying voices that value emotionally-fastened ideological skepticism of the evidential basis of science over anything else. And given the general lack of scientific sophistication of the public, those skeptical voices are particularly loud. What I can’t figure out–especially given the virulent attacks against public education, favoring a much more insular form of private and parochial education–is how to effectively oppose this trend.
The money–very literally now–is not on the side of Galileo, Darwin, Einstein, or Bohr–who ironically gave this money a practically unlimited and raising voice.
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The money is where it always has been–on the military use of technology. God forbid that an unwed mother should get some extra food when we want nuclear powered attack submarines.
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Hume sophomoric? Pretty hard to take that claim seriously.
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I should have prefaced that remark with “in the college of world famous philosophers”. Please recall that the UK fought two world wars against Germany and the US inherited many great German/Jewish thinkers who also were not going to acclaim the great German philosopher. So Hume and other thinkers have been given a lot more credit than was perhaps warranted.
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Well, actually, I think that Socrates is the most overrated philosopher in history, and Hume’s not on my top 10 on such a list.
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John, perhaps you might want to make an argument instead of calling people names. Whatever you want to say about Hume, his dismissal of intelligent design should trouble you. Unless of course you can counter it, can you?
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Hume did not prove anything. This is way off topic so good night and good luck.
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Massimo, you write that we are to “beware of any ‘explanation’ that invokes quantum mechanics for anything that is not quantum level phenomena” but isn’t light itself ‘explained’ by quantum mechanics? And isn’t the idea of light deeply related to the idea of consciousness? Would it be better if we non-scientists simply forgot about the observer effect? Oddly, BBC recently published a discussion of quantum mechanic and consciousness with a good deal of attention to work in the last two years by Fisher and Kent on the subject. Should we beware of it?
It’s a relief to have Pope’s 280 year old truism, ‘a little knowledge is a dangerous thing’ finally confirmed by you. But I do wonder that “we always assume that knowledge is an unqualified good”, as if scientific research were some sort of Pollyanic activity. The more facts crammed into one’s head does not make one a better man. I would propose that knowledge is morally neutral. It’s what is done with knowledge that may be good or bad. It’s conceivable even that a great deal of knowledge might be a dangerous thing.
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Hi Michael,
There are a number of ways of telling. One comes from things like the laryngeal nerve of the giraffe, which follows a path that no intelligent designer would choose. The path only makes sense as the contingent product of an un-intelligent process.
There are a large number of such examples. Another is our eyes, where the wiring of each photocell comes out of the front, and has to run across the face of the retina, and then dive down the “blindspot”. Any intelligent designer would put the wiring coming out of the back. As I recall, Darwin discussed such examples (can’t remember which ones) in OofS, and most intro accounts of evolution have done so since then.
http://scienceblogs.com/grrlscientist/2010/06/22/the-laryngeal-nerve-of-the-gir/
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@Bunsen Burner
Thanks for the link, but again I don’t see an actual Gödel sentence there, though there are other examples of true but unprovable (within PA) statements.
@Dan
Firstly, I was originally talking about a hypothetical clockwork universe without QM. This does not appear to be such a universe, so I was not talking about anything in the real world.
Secondly, I am not saying that such a thing could be simulated in practice. It seems to me unlikely that it would ever be feasible to simulate such a complex physical system as a room containing a discussion between a teacher and students.
But I can’t see how you can escape from the conclusion that if physics is computable (that is, it is possible for a computer to simulate low-level physical interactions to any desired degree of fidelity) then anything that happens in the real world must be simulatable in principle, given arbitrary amounts of computational resources and time. Because everything that happens supervenes on low level physical interactions — and, if you simulate the low level interactions you are necessarily simulating anything that supervenes on those low level physical interactions. Any claim to the contrary is essentially supernaturalism, it seems to me.
I know you tire of our discussions, Dan, but I am honestly very interested to understand your view. You seem to be denying not only reductionism but the idea of supervenience. Is that right?
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Alexei Panshin has an epigram along the lines that everyone should have something harmless to be cranky about. I think it should be a rich speculative hypothesis that has a low but non-zero probability of being correct. His example was that no intelligent life can evolve without a moon (tides and all that). Pluto being reinstated as a planet is one good topic, though that is not particularly hypothetical. I think OrchOR is definitely one: it doesn’t hurt anyone; it combines nuclear gravitational objective reduction of the wave function, magnetic spin dipoles, the Cambrian explosion, each cell doing the same amount of computation as we currently suggest the whole brain does, and 40 Hz episodes of consciousness. There are a few metaphysical hypotheses that might fit as well eg presentism versus eternalism?
“P1 . There are gravitational waves.
P2 . Gravitational waves have non-zero Weyl curvature.
P3 . Non-zero Weyl curvature is only possible in 4 or more dimensions.
P4 . Presentism is incompatible with a 4 dimensional world”
(Romero 2015).
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I forgot to mention the Mathematical Universe Hypothesis! Epiphenomenal theories of consciousness!
My own current cranky hypothesis is hyperbilirubinemis as the road to longevity (increases lung function, reduces atherosclerosis, biliverdins in spirulina improve diabetes and meat quality in sheep)!
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wtc48:
It’s not that I think wikipedia (or the internet for that matter) is an unmitigated evil. It’s just that these things have had an effect on how people consume media and in particular the lengths people will go to educate themselves on a topic. Just the nature of technology – always plusses and minuses.
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DM:
I’m curious – what do you think is the difference between a Godel sentence and a statement that is true but cannot be provable in PA?
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Knowledge is not linear, but a process of accumulation and consolidation. We think narratively is why it seems linear.
David,
The three spatial dimensions are line, surface, volume. Are they foundational to space or descriptive of its properties, e.g. a mapping device, aka, the xyz coordinate system? It would seem that unless we specify the specific dimensions, i.e. coordinates involved, it is just a fuzzy concept, but if we do, than multiple coordinate systems can be used to map the same space. Much as we all exist as the center points of our own coordinate systems, in the same space.
As for time, if we simply have dynamic activity, such as cycles of radiological expansion and gravitational contraction, the configuration of this space changes, creating the effect of time.
This expansion and contraction is foundational to our intellectual process of accumulation and consolidation.
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Hi @Bunsen Burner,
A Gödel sentence is one constructed along the lines of the proof given by Gödel in his theorems. My understanding is that it is impractical to actually construct such a sentence in practice, and I have never been able to find a concrete example.
The other statements are somewhat more natural and compact. It would seem they could serve in the place of a Gödel sentence if one needed a Gödel sentence to prove some point, but with some caveats. I don’t know enough about them yet to know if they are really good enough. From scanning what was said on mathexchange, I don’t follow how we know they are not provable within PA, I only see that they proofs we currently have need to go beyond PA. That’s not to say that I reject the idea that we know they are not provable within PA — I’m just not clear on whether that has been proven or not. I’ll defer to an expert on that one.
Also, the thing about a Gödel sentence is that a Gödel sentence can be constructed even for systems more powerful than PA, and the thing about the kinds of examples on MathExchange is that someone can say “Oh, that’s just because PA isn’t strong enough”. Having concrete examples of Gödel sentences, showing that they can actually be constructed in practice rather than in principle, would be more compelling.
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@Bunsen Burner, @Coel,
OK, I searched once more, and I found a Gödel sentence!
Swear I couldn’t find this last time I looked (which is a while ago now).
http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1472769/what-does-a-godel-sentence-actually-look-like
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DM:
The standard Godel sentence used in the proof of the incompleteness theorem is just a version of the liars paradox – its saying ‘I cannot be proven true in this formal system’. Mathematicians use the term to denote any statement that is true but cannot be proven true under the formal system being studied. If you want to understand the work on Goodstein sequences, Paris-Harrington, and all that, you will have to undertake the study of some very technically sophisticated mathematics.
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Hi DM,
That one is pretty spectacular! However, I don’t see how having an example of a Godel sentence under one particular axiomatic system helps Penrose. He needs an example of a sentence that is known to be true but is unprovable by any axiomatic system, and thus which cannot be computed by any deterministic hardware device.
Surely there can be no such example, since if anyone stated such a sentence, then that sentence could simply be made an axiom of a system, and hence it would be trivially provable within that system (and thus could be arrived at by a deterministic device).
So I don’t see how Penrose can support his claim that mathematicians are doing things that no deterministic hardware could do. You’ve likely looked into this far more than I have, so can you explain how he argues that?
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