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Is Science an Ideology?

In an e-mail exchange with a friend, I claimed that science is an ideology, and I listed all of its ideological components that I could think of, which I will include below.

But before I include that, I’ll clarify what I mean by “science,” since my friend argued that I wasn’t being consistent because I claimed that at least one of science’s ideological components, namely scientism, piggybacks the scientific method, which implies it’s something distinct from the scientific method, yet I also said that it and all the other -isms I named are components of science.

What I responded with was this:

If we define science as the scientific method per se, then most (perhaps not all) of the -isms I mentioned are not science per se. But I’m not really using “science” in that strict a sense. I’m using it more colloquially. And I’m using it sort of in reference to a place it holds in people’s minds. It’s sort of nebulous. It has an aura. Or, if you really want to define science as being the scientific method, or you think I’m being too poetic in my description of how I’m using it, we could just be more technical and say, “Science itself is not an ideology, or at least most of the ideologies I mentioned are not part of science, but the important thing is that science is virtually inseparably linked with these isms in our current culture.

So, here’s my response to my friend with the list of ideological components of science, modified:

I very much see science as an ideology. I think people see science as *not* an ideology because science is seen as merely the rational and neutral search for truth, whatever it might be. Of course, there is some truth to that notion, but there’s also a lot more to it than that. Here are some aspects of the scientific ideology: 

  • A tendency to have faith in the Establishment, in whatever the scientific community currently happens to believe, and in the claims of individual scientists and other sources purporting to be scientific, such as journalists and corporations selling a product. All of these sources are more fallible than they’re taken to be.

    My friend replied with the following:

    trust in the scientific community is not blind faith but is based on the rigorous process of peer review and validation. again, while some individual scientists and studies can indeed be fallible, the collective process of scientific inquiry tends toward self-correction over time.

    To which I replied with this:

    I know that there is good reason to listen to science, and that good reason is what has catapulted the faith in science, but I maintain that the faith is somewhat blind, in that it gives all scientific and purportedly scientific sources too much credit. It believes what they say without enough critical thought or research. And yes, we can’t all spend our time researching scientific topics, nor do we have the necessary education to do so, but we can say that people “overestimate the likelihood” of a given scientific claim of being correct. It’s more or less seen as infallible. Yes, the process tends toward self-correction over time, but there’s still incorrectness in the current time, and secondly, some things never get corrected. For example, there are several nutritional claims that scientists have vacillated back and forth between one claim and its opposite many times.

    And there are systemic problems with the scientific community that self-correction just isn’t enough to fix. Basically, there are various incentives to fudge results, and it happens quite often. (a) If the results are fudged once, they can be fudged the next time, and (b) self-correction doesn’t apply if there are no subsequent investigations into a topic because it’s not a prominent enough topic.
  • The ideology of strict empiricism. This doesn’t just refer to science’s reliance on physical observation/measurement/evidence to arrive at conclusions, but on the ideology that physical evidence is the only legitimate basis in inferring truth.
  • Positivism (maybe not as popular as the other things in this list, at least in its most strict sense). This doesn’t mean being positive; it’s the doctrine that a claim has no meaning if it doesn’t ultimately resolve to a claim about the physical state of things/empirical observation. I say it’s not as popular as the other things, though, because it seems to have fallen out of popularity.
  • Atheism/anti-spiritualism/anti-mysticism/anti-“woo”/anti-paranormal/anti-parapsychology

    My friend replied with this:

    science does not inherently promote atheism or anti-spiritualism. instead, it focuses on what can be empirically observed and tested, nothing more/nothing less. btw many scientists hold personal spiritual or religious beliefs, demonstrating that science and spirituality can coexist. (see my point about how science and religion are actually not at odds when you consider science as methodology)

    I replied to that with the following:

    Most people who are into science seem to be anti-spirituality. Maybe actual scientists are more open-minded than armchair scientists, I don’t know. I’d like to know what percentage of scientists hold spiritual beliefs, actually. Science doesn’t “inherently” promote atheism in that that’s not a part of the scientific method, but this comes back to my comments above regarding my use of the word science. Another thing, there seems to be a strong taboo against spirituality in the scientific community. Some scientists may hold spiritual beliefs, but they have to keep them to themselves, or at least they can’t venture into research into those spiritual or parapsychological beliefs, because they’d lose all credibility in the community. They’d lose their livelihoods. There’s a video explaining this here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qw_O9Qiwqew&ab_channel=GoogleTechTalks (Science and the Taboo of Psi)
  • Physicalism and mechanicalism, and, by extension, the tendency to see living things as non-living, such as your own flesh, trees, the sun, etc. (Trees are technically living according to science, but we don’t see them as alive in the sense of being beings or having any meaning beyond that of an object.) And, to a lesser degree, determinism, implying we have no free will and further cementing the idea that we’re merely complex machines.

    I realize it’s contentious at the very least to say the sun is a living thing, so, in that case, let’s just say, “potentially living things..”

    We see our own and others’ flesh as essentially non-living, a thing, at least on some level of consciousness, because we know it’s made of matter, and we see matter as non-living. These preconceptions are so deeply ingrained into us by our culture that we don’t consciously notice them. So, this perception serves to deaden us by deadening our own self-perception. It also facilitates mad dreams of replacing parts of our living body with non-living machines because of their supposed superiority, i.e., transhumanism.
  • Rationalism. The meaning of rationalism is hard to put a finger on, but maybe you have a feeling for what it means already. Rationalism is to rationality as scientism is to science, simplistic is to simple, and complicated is to complex. I wrote more about it here: https://philosophy.inhahe.com/2018/04/13/notes-on-science-scientism-mysticism-religion-logic-physicalism-skepticism-etc/#Rationalism
  • A fixation with understanding everything via theoretical models of those things
  • A replacement of actual philosophical thought and insight with strictly evidence- and statistics-based methodologies. A good example is how psychology moved away from being creatively insightful to being merely a practice of data collection and pattern finding. Another example is the popular belief among scientists and scientifically minded people that philosophy in general is bunk and has been obsoleted by science. (It hasn’t; philosophy addresses many questions that are inherently outside the purview of science and never will be within it. The very definition/methodology/nature of science determines its inherent limitations.)
  • Scientism. I know, I know, scientism isn’t science, or the scientific method itself. And you could say the same about the other things in this list. But, as I said before, these things are inextricably intertwined with science given the current zeitgeist. And the fact that they go along with science, or with being particularly science-minded, is invisible to us because they’re so widely/deeply accepted/entrenched in culture/ideology.
  • Separationism/compartmentalism as opposed to holism. The anti-holism inherent to science is due to the fact that separating things into parts and compartmentalizing/objectifying their relationships to each other is necessary for effective scientific analysis and modeling. The anti-holism probably also stems from the proliferation of technological devices (which are themselves a product of science), which are modular in nature because that’s the easiest way for our puny brains to design them. This anti-holism becomes unconsciously assimilated into popular culture; we operate under the ideology that, by default, the various components of reality, things or beings are separate from each other, don’t affect each other, and are uncorrelated, unless proven/known to be otherwise.

    An example of this anti-holism in popular culture is the belief that a person’s facial features have nothing to do with their personality. This is bunk. We may not know how to predict personality from facial features, but, if you think about it, there are tons of cases where, if you were to take two people and swapped their faces, it would be obvious that their personalities actually starkly clash with their respective (swapped) faces.

    Another example is the ideology that personality is totally independent of what sex someone is, and additionally that what sex someone is just boils down/reduces to what genitals they have. There are obvious, profound inherent psychological/energetic differences between males and females, and it’s sad that people aren’t perceptive enough to see that. 
  • Reductionism. I mentioned the term “reduces to” in the above entry because that entry reminded me of this ideological component of science, reductionism. By “reductionism,” I mean where all larger-scale objects are thought to be nothing more or less than the sum of their smaller-scale parts and their interactions, and ditto for every possible successively smaller and smaller (or larger and larger) scale of consideration.
  • Technologism. By this I mean the tendency to ascribe or compare various things that have nothing to do with technology (basically, natural things) to various technologies. For example, likening people to mere complex machines, likening the brain to a computer, likening minds to software and brains to hardware, or thinking the universe might actually be a giant computer simulation.

    As ski on IRC once said, “well, it’s tradition to try to understand ourselves through technical revolutions (mechanical, steam, electrical, information, communication).” So, today’s “people are only complex chemical machines” is just yesterday’s “people run on steam engines and hydraulics.”

While I’m elucidating my grievances with science (or the modes of thinking attendant to it), I should include the ones that don’t take the form of ideologies per se. I should first note that, as with many of the ideologies listed above, these thought-tendencies may be just as much the facilitators of the excessive proliferation of science, scientism, technology, etc. as its consequences.

One such grievance is the tendency of scientific thinking to actively quash any and all magic in the world. This behavior is so tragic it’s downright evil, although not in a deliberate way. You may say that such thinking could surely only quash the perception, interpretation, or belief in the magic of the world, rather than the actuality of it (in the case that it exists), but the nature of magic is such that the perception or the belief in it and the reality of it go hand-in-hand.

It may be difficult to explain why that is, but a key point is that one of the composing attributes of magic is that it’s miraculously connective, and, in this case, the relevant connection is between the observer and the observed, between internal experience and external reality, between mind and matter, or whatever.

It would be fair if you’re wondering what in the heck I actually mean by the word “magic.” I wrote an essay on it here: https://philosophy.inhahe.com/2017/07/12/the-meaning-of-magic/. I would add here that magic, as I see it, is very close in meaning to that of life itself. The nature of life is magical. So, if you quash or deny magic, you quash or deny life. If this seems nonsensical to you because “life” refers to specific classes of complex chemical processes, see my essay at https://philosophy.inhahe.com/2020/10/29/life-is-not-a-scientific-concept/.

Another grievance is the overly analytical, representational, left-brained thinking that obsessively models everything, totally misses any holistic perception of events and reality, and is constantly lost in the map while ignoring the territory. Maybe that’s actually a lot of grievances put into one sentence, but they’re all closely related. For further elaboration on some of these ideas, see Dr. Iain McGilchrist, such as in the video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v4IeuIg9nGY, and also my friend Darin’s writings at https://www.facebook.com/darinstevenson and https://organelle.org/.

Regarding the “overly analytical” aspect, I once saw a very bold and insightful Twitter post that basically said that constantly analyzing and evaluating things is actually a trauma response, and that’s exactly what scientists do for a living. So, this group of people among those that are admired most and listened to most and that make the world go around is actually even more neurotic/pathological than your average person.

My final grievance is with the proliferation of technology itself, which is the direct result of, and can only happen due to, scientific advancement. I wrote about why technology doesn’t ultimately help us, but rather does quite the opposite, at https://philosophy.inhahe.com/2023/12/17/on-simulation-theory/ and https://philosophy.inhahe.com/2019/09/13/no-were-not-living-in-a-simulation/. Theodore Kaczynski wrote a good essay on this at https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/unabomber/manifesto.text.htm.

An Important Note About Tarot

This is important.

Tarot is not the universal oracle you probably think it is if you’re a believer in tarot. It’s not necessarily the objective truth (even when it seems to make perfect sense), and it’s not necessarily a sign of what you should do.

I’ve realized from the tarot readings I’ve had done, both personal ones and electronic ones, that what the cards actually reflect is the “energies” you send out at the moment the card selection is determined. This includes your unconscious beliefs about the situation, which is why the readings can seem to make sense. But, while the subconscious mind is very wise and connected, the subconscious take on the situation isn’t always correct.

One experience I had (but not the totality of everything that led me to the above realization) was the time my friend and I were using an online, automated tarot reader and sending each other links to our results, and he sent me a bunch of links in a way to tarot readings that were strikingly similar. I mentioned to him how similar they seemed, and he said that he had been focusing hard to project the same energy/thought when initiating the readings to see if it would give similar results.

Inb4 ‘Tarot is bunk, there are no magical or psychic forces in the universe, therefore this essay/”realization” is meaningless.’: my actual, practical experience with tarot trumps your baseless/axiomatic preconceptions/physicalist bias.

Inb4 “You interpret your experiences how you do because of cognitive biases such as confirmation bias, and the fact that the tarot card meanings are just vague enough to apply to anybody. This is how people in general become convinced tarot works, just like with astrology.”: no; actually, that’s an assumption used to maintain a narrow-minded, mechanistic worldview. You imagine that those principles could theoretically account for such beliefs, so you assume that they necessarily are the reasons, because it’s convenient. In reality, those principles are insufficient to account for such experiences and interpretations, but, due to the lack of objective ways to determine the matter one way or another, it’s easy to deny this for someone who lacks general astuteness.


On Simulation Theory

I’ve already written a post on simulation theory, but I just answered the question again on Quora, and I’m going to post that here for the parts that are better than the other post, and also so that more people see my ideas on the matter, as it seems that most people who come across my blog only view the last few posts.


Someone on Quora asks, “Is it possible that our perception of reality isn’t real at all? Could our entire existence be nothing but a computer simulation from an advanced civilization?” here’s my answer.

No. This consideration is merely a product of the technologistic mindset of our zeitgeist, due to the widespread proliferation and use of computers and technology in general. It’s better to just go out and “touch grass” and regard reality as being exactly as real as it seems to be (and thus also being potentially endlessly deep and nuanced, extending all the way down to the ineffable), and thus to maintain a worldview that’s fully rich, wholesome, open-ended, potentially magical, and true to the heart.

The view supposes that endless technological development of more and more complex systems is the norm for intelligent civilizations, but I think this view is in error. It’s just a projection from our own current industrial fever dream. Intelligent species probably realize eventually that technology—at least highly complex, ubiquitous/immersive, and whatever-the-opposite-of-holistic-and-organic-is technology—takes away more from our wellbeing than it gives. It’s beneficial in specific, overt, and immediate ways, while being much more deleterious in more subtle, long-term ways, so it’s a big trap.

People aren’t happier now than they were 50,000 years ago. In fact, most people are more often unhappy than they are happy, and depression in society is rampant, its frequency only increasing. Technology separates us from nature; hence it separates us from life, thus making us unfulfilled and therefore constantly, anxiously looking to fill the spiritual void with whatever superficial pleasures we can.

A Native American chief once remarked that the whites seemed mad, like they were constantly looking for something they didn’t currently have. And in those days, people were defecting to Native American culture in such large numbers that it became a problem for white society. Anyone who spent some time in Native American culture never wanted to go back to their previous way of life.

So, this technological frenzy of ours is probably, hopefully, just temporary, like a relatively long-running fad, and it probably isn’t the norm for alien civilizations, even/especially the more advanced/older ones. The Kardashev scale is pure fiction, the invention of a highly pathological mindset.

Another problem with simulation theory is that it violates Occam’s razor. The computer that simulates our universe would have to exist in a much larger universe, in order for the computer to be big enough to store and run our entire universe, so that’s introducing a massive number of assumed entities (or one huge assumed entity, depending on how you look at it) that there’s no evidence for and hence no need for it to be included in our model/explanation of the world.

Another problem with simulation theory is that a computer simulation couldn’t possibly give rise to consciousness. There are various arguments I could make for this, but I’ll just include this one, a thought experiment for the purpose of reductio ad absurdum:

1. Take each individual calculation/opcode execution and separate them across a long span of time. Is the resulting “system” conscious?
2. Remove the computation element and just have a sequence of register and/or memory states. Is the resultant information conscious? What part actually matters?
3. Take the register and/or memory states, and maybe even the internal CPU/GPU states composing each individual computation, and encode them in etchings on a marble wall. Is the resulting state of affairs conscious?
4. Instead of etching the encodings into marble, encode them into patterns of water droplets in random places spread over many clouds. Is the resulting data conscious?
5. Just interpret whatever informational patterns that already exist in the water droplets spread over many clouds as the information contained in an AI according to whatever ad hoc encoding is necessary to do that, since the particular method of encoding is arbitrary anyway… are the clouds conscious?

(Maybe the clouds are conscious, but probably not for the reason that they can be arbitrarily interpreted as encoding the digital information of an AI…)

I make more arguments in this essay: On the Possibility of Artificial General Intelligence

And even if a simulation could give rise to consciousness, what’s there to limit any consciousness/mind it creates to one particular character/body in the simulation, which actually has no physical separation in the simulation, only a highly abstract, conceptual one, its actual constituent events being distributed and interspersed in space and time widely across the system? It makes no sense. If any consciousness could come out of it (which is already an absurd proposition), it makes more sense that it would be one consciousness/mind that encompasses the whole system, so you wouldn’t have the experience of being an individual in a single body that you have now.

I’ve already written an essay linked to below about this question, but it probably doesn’t say anything I didn’t say here: No, We’re Not Living In a Simulation


On Validation-Seeking

Validation-seeking is a very common psychological pattern that is often admonished in the name of disseminating wisdom or being helpful. The imperative to stop seeking validation is given without any better alternative or explanation of how to change, as if one had never considered that seeking validation is problematic and can just turn it off at the drop of a hat.

The dictum comes from a place of seeking imperfections in others and trying to fix them in the most facile manner. It also comes, on an unconscious level, from a place of wanting to appear to be wiser than others, to have one’s sh*t together, and trying to glean psychic energy from people they imagine will take their advice.

In truth, people are wiser in their decisions and actions than we think. People tend to do the best thing they can, given their own circumstances and psychological context and conditioning. In the case of validation-seeking, it’s a primal, natural drive to constantly seek wholeness in the only way one knows how.

It may seem futile on the face of it because most of the time one can’t get enough validation: every time one receives it, it boosts their self-esteem for a minute, then the next minute they’re in the same place they started, looking for the next nugget of validation to come their way. But to assume this is the long and the short of it is only cynicism, or at least black-and-white thinking; it’s not that simple. When validation hits just right, it has the potential to melt a person, thus giving them the opportunity to rearrange their insides and truly let in the self-worth. That’s what the validation-seeker is looking for.

Or maybe I’m wrong? Either way, may the very idea of this inspire you to engage in more nuanced, less absolutist thinking and to be less condemning in general.