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Scientism

Scientism is the opinion that science and the scientific method are the best or only way to render truth about the world and reality.[1][2]

While the term was defined originally to mean "methods and attitudes typical of or attributed to natural scientists", some scholars have also adopted it as a pejorative term with the meaning "an exaggerated trust in the efficacy of the methods of natural science applied to all areas of investigation (as in philosophy, the social sciences, and the humanities)".[3]

Overview

Francis Bacon has been viewed by some scholars as an early proponent of scientism,[4] but this is a modern assertion as Bacon was a devout Anglican, writing in his Essays, "a little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism, but depth in philosophy bringeth men's minds about to religion."[5]

With respect to the philosophy of science, the term scientism frequently implies a critique of the more extreme expressions of logical positivism[6][7] and has been used by social scientists such as Friedrich Hayek,[8] philosophers of science such as Karl Popper,[9] and philosophers such as Mary Midgley,[10] the later Hilary Putnam,[10][11] and Tzvetan Todorov[12] to describe (for example) the dogmatic endorsement of scientific methods and the reduction of all knowledge to only that which is measured or confirmatory.[13]

More generally, scientism is often interpreted as science applied "in excess". This use of the term scientism has two senses:

  1. The improper use of science or scientific claims.[14] This usage applies equally in contexts where science might not apply,[15] such as when the topic is perceived as beyond the scope of scientific inquiry, and in contexts where there is insufficient empirical evidence to justify a scientific conclusion. It includes an excessive deference to the claims of scientists or an uncritical eagerness to accept any result described as scientific. This can be a counterargument to appeals to scientific authority. It can also address attempts to apply natural science methods and claims of certainty to the social sciences, which Friedrich Hayek described in The Counter-Revolution of Science (1952) as being impossible, because those methods attempt to eliminate the "human factor", while social sciences (including his own topic of economics) mainly concern the study of human action.
  2. "The belief that the methods of natural science, or the categories and things recognized in natural science, form the only proper elements in any philosophical or other inquiry",[16] or that "science, and only science, describes the world as it is in itself, independent of perspective"[11] with a concomitant "elimination of the psychological [and spiritual] dimensions of experience".[17][18] Tom Sorell provides this definition: "Scientism is a matter of putting too high a value on natural science in comparison with other branches of learning or culture."[19] Philosophers such as Alexander Rosenberg have also adopted "scientism" as a name for the opinion that science is the only reliable source of knowledge.[20]

It is also sometimes used to describe the universal applicability of the scientific method, and the opinion that empirical science constitutes the most authoritative worldview or the most valuable part of human learning, sometimes to the complete exclusion of other opinions, such as historical, philosophical, economic or cultural opinions. It has been defined as "the view that the characteristic inductive methods of the natural sciences are the only source of genuine factual knowledge and, in particular, that they alone can yield true knowledge about man and society".[21] The term scientism is also used by historians, philosophers, and cultural critics to highlight the possible dangers of lapses towards excessive reductionism with respect to all topics of human knowledge.[22][23][24][25][26]

For social theorists practising the tradition of Max Weber, such as Jürgen Habermas and Max Horkheimer, the concept of scientism relates significantly to the philosophy of positivism, but also to the cultural rationalization for modern Western civilization.[13][27] Ernesto Sabato, physicist and essayist, wrote in his 1951 essay Hombres y engranajes ("Man and mechanism") of the "superstition of science" as the most contradictory of all superstitions,[28] since this would be the "superstition that one should not be superstitious". He wrote: "science had become a new magic and the man in the street believed in it the more the less he understood it".[28]

Definitions

Reviewing the references to scientism in the works of contemporary scholars, Gregory R. Peterson[29] detected two main general themes:

  1. It is used to criticize a totalizing opinion of science as if it were capable of describing all reality and knowledge, or as if it were the only true method to acquire knowledge about reality and the nature of things;
  2. It is used, often pejoratively,[30][31][32] to denote violations by which the theories and methods of one (scientific) discipline are applied inappropriately to another (scientific or non-scientific) discipline and its domain. An example of this second usage is to term as scientism any attempt to claim science as the only or primary source of human values (a traditional domain of ethics) or as the source of meaning and purpose (a traditional domain of religion and related worldviews).

The term scientism was popularized by F.A. Hayek, who defined it as the "slavish imitation of the method and language of Science".[33] Karl Popper defines scientism as "the aping of what is widely mistaken for the method of science".[34]

Mikael Stenmark proposed the expression scientific expansionism as a synonym of scientism.[35] In the Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, he wrote that, while the doctrines that are described as scientism have many possible forms and varying degrees of ambition, they share the idea that the boundaries of science (that is, typically the natural sciences) could and should be expanded so that something that has not been previously considered as a subject pertinent to science can now be understood as part of science (usually with science becoming the sole or the main arbiter regarding this area or dimension).[35]

According to Stenmark, the strongest form of scientism states that science does not have any boundaries and that all human problems and all aspects of human endeavor, with due time, will be dealt with and solved by science alone.[35] This idea has also been termed the Myth of Progress.[36]

E. F. Schumacher, in his A Guide for the Perplexed, criticized scientism as an impoverished world view confined solely to what can be counted, measured and weighed. "The architects of the modern worldview, notably Galileo and Descartes, assumed that those things that could be weighed, measured, and counted were more true than those that could not be quantified. If it couldn't be counted, in other words, it didn't count."[37]

Intellectual historian T.J. Jackson Lears argued there has been a recent reemergence of "nineteenth-century positivist faith that a reified 'science' has discovered (or is about to discover) all the important truths about human life. Precise measurement and rigorous calculation, in this view, are the basis for finally settling enduring metaphysical and moral controversies." Lears specifically identifies Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker's work as falling in this category.[38] Philosophers John N. Gray and Thomas Nagel have made similar criticisms against popular works by moral psychologist Jonathan Haidt, atheist author Sam Harris, and writer Malcolm Gladwell.[39][40][41]

Relevance to debates about science and religion

Both religious and non-religious scholars have applied the term scientism to individuals associated with New Atheism.[42][43] Theologian John Haught argued that philosopher Daniel Dennett and other New Atheists subscribe to a belief system of scientific naturalism, which includes the dogma that "only nature, including humans and our creations, is real: that God does not exist; and that science alone can give us complete and reliable knowledge of reality".[44] Haught argued that this belief system is self-refuting since it requires its adherents to assent to beliefs that violate its own stated requirements for knowledge.[45] Christian philosopher Peter Williams argued in 2013 that it is only by conflating science with scientism that New Atheists feel qualified to "pontificate on metaphysical issues".[46] Daniel Dennett responded to religious criticism of his 2006 book Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by saying that accusations of scientism "[are] an all-purpose, wild-card smear ... When someone puts forward a scientific theory that [religious critics] really don't like, they just try to discredit it as 'scientism'. But when it comes to facts, and explanations of facts, science is the only game in town".[47]

Non-religious scholars have also associated New Atheist thought with scientism and/or with positivism. Atheist philosopher Thomas Nagel argued that philosopher Sam Harris conflated all empirical knowledge with scientific knowledge.[48] Marxist literary critic Terry Eagleton argued that Christopher Hitchens possessed an "old-fashioned scientistic notion of what counts as evidence" that reduces knowledge to what can and cannot be proven by scientific procedure.[49] Agnostic philosopher Anthony Kenny has also criticized New Atheist philosopher Alexander Rosenberg's The Atheist's Guide to Reality for resurrecting a self-refuting epistemology of logical positivism and reducing all knowledge of the universe to the discipline of physics.[50]

Michael Shermer, founder of The Skeptics Society, discussed resemblances between scientism and traditional religions, indicating the cult of personality that develops for some scientists. He defined scientism as a worldview that encompasses natural explanations, eschews supernatural and paranormal speculations, and embraces empiricism and reason.[51]

The Iranian scholar Seyyed Hossein Nasr has stated that in the Western world, many will accept the ideology of modern science, not as "simple ordinary science", but as a replacement for religion.[52][page needed]

Gregory R. Peterson wrote that "for many theologians and philosophers, scientism is among the greatest of intellectual sins".[29] Genetic biologist Austin L. Hughes wrote in the conservative journal The New Atlantis that scientism has much in common with superstition: "the stubborn insistence that something ... has powers which no evidence supports."[53]

Repeating common criticisms of logical positivism and verificationism, philosopher of religion Keith Ward has said that scientism is philosophically inconsistent or even self-refuting, as the truth of the two statements "no statements are true unless they can be proven scientifically (or logically)" and "no statements are true unless they can be shown empirically to be true" cannot themselves be proven scientifically, logically, or empirically.[54][55]

Philosophy of science

Anti-scientism

Philosopher Paul Feyerabend, who was an enthusiastic proponent of scientism during his youth,[56] later came to characterize science as "an essentially anarchic enterprise"[57] and argued emphatically that science merits no exclusive monopoly of "dealing in knowledge" and that scientists have never operated within a distinct and narrowly self-defined tradition. In his essay Against Method he depicted the process of contemporary scientific education as a mild form of indoctrination, intended for "making the history of science duller, simpler, more uniform, more 'objective' and more easily accessible to treatment by strict and unchanging rules".[58]

[S]cience can stand on its own feet and does not need any help from rationalists, secular humanists, Marxists and similar religious movements; and ... non-scientific cultures, procedures and assumptions can also stand on their own feet and should be allowed to do so ... Science must be protected from ideologies; and societies, especially democratic societies, must be protected from science ... In a democracy scientific institutions, research programmes, and suggestions must therefore be subjected to public control, there must be a separation of state and science just as there is a separation between state and religious institutions, and science should be taught as one view among many and not as the one and only road to truth and reality.

— Paul Feyerabend, Against Method, p. viii[59]

Pro-scientism

Physicist and philosopher Mario Bunge used the term scientism with a favorable rather than pejorative sense in numerous books published during several decades,[60][61][62][63] and in articles with titles such as "In defense of realism and scientism"[64] and "In defense of scientism".[65] Bunge said that scientism should not be equated with inappropriate reductionism,[62] and he dismissed critics of science such as Hayek and Habermas as dogmatists and obscurantists:

To innovate in the young sciences it is necessary to adopt scientism. This is the methodological thesis that the best way of exploring reality is to adopt the scientific method, which may be boiled down to the rule "Check your guesses." Scientism has been explicitly opposed by dogmatists and obscurantists of all stripes, such as the neoliberal ideologist Friedrich von Hayek and the "critical theorist" Jürgen Habermas, a ponderous writer who managed to amalgamate Hegel, Marx, and Freud, and decreed that "science is the ideology of late capitalism."

— Mario Bunge, Evaluating Philosophies[66]

In 2018, philosophers Maarten Boudry and Massimo Pigliucci co-edited a book titled Science Unlimited? The Challenges of Scientism in which a number of chapters by philosophers and scientists defended scientism.[67] In his chapter "Two Cheers for Scientism", Taner Edis wrote:

It is defensible to claim that scientific, philosophical, and humanistic forms of knowledge are continuous, and that a broadly naturalistic description of our world centered on natural science is correct ... At the very least, such views are legitimate—they may be mistaken, but not because of an elementary error, a confusion of science with ideology, or an offhand dismissal of the humanities. Those of us who argue for such a view are entitled to have two cheers for an ambitious conception of science; and if that is scientism, so be it.

— Taner Edis, "Two Cheers for Scientism"[67]

Rhetoric of science

Thomas M. Lessl argued that religious themes persist in what he terms scientism, the public rhetoric of science.[68] There are two methods of describing this idea of scientism: the epistemological method (the assumption that the scientific method trumps other ways of knowing) and the ontological method (that the rational mind represents the world and both operate in knowable ways). According to Lessl, the ontological method is an attempt to "resolve the conflict between rationalism and skepticism". Lessl also argued that without scientism, there would not be a scientific culture.[68]

Rationalization and modernity

In the introduction to his collected works on the sociology of religion, Max Weber asked why "the scientific, the artistic, the political, or the economic development [elsewhere] ... did not enter upon that path of rationalization which is peculiar to the Occident?" According to the German social theorist Jürgen Habermas, "For Weber, the intrinsic (that is, not merely contingent) relationship between modernity and what he called 'Occidental rationalism' was still self-evident." Weber described a process of rationalisation, disenchantment and the "disintegration of religious world views" that resulted in modern secular societies and capitalism.[69]

"Modernization" was introduced as a technical term only in the 1950s. It is the mark of a theoretical approach that takes up Weber's problem but elaborates it with the tools of social-scientific functionalism ... The theory of modernization performs two abstractions on Weber's concept of "modernity". It dissociates "modernity" from its modern European origins and stylizes it into a spatio-temporally neutral model for processes of social development in general. Furthermore, it breaks the internal connections between modernity and the historical context of Western rationalism, so that processes of modernization ... [are] no longer burdened with the idea of a completion of modernity, that is to say, of a goal state after which "postmodern" developments would have to set in. ... Indeed it is precisely modernization research that has contributed to the currency of the expression "postmodern" even among social scientists.

Habermas is critical of pure instrumental rationality, arguing that the "Social Life–World" of subjective experiencing is better suited to literary expression, whereas the sciences deal with "intersubjectively accessible experiences" that can be generalized in a formal language, while the literary arts "must generate an intersubjectivity of mutual understanding in each concrete case".[70][71] Habermas quoted writer Aldous Huxley in support of this duality of literature and science:

The world with which literature deals is the world in which human beings are born and live and finally die; the world in which they love and hate, in which they experience triumph and humiliation, hope and despair; the world of sufferings and enjoyments, of madness and common sense, of silliness, cunning and wisdom; the world of social pressures and individual impulses, of reason against passion, of instincts and conventions, of shared language and unsharable feelings and sensations...

Media references

  • As a form of dogma, as defined in the PBS documentary Faith and Reason: "Unlike the use of the scientific method as only one mode of reaching knowledge, scientism claims that science alone can render truth about the world and reality. Scientism's single-minded adherence to only the empirical, or testable, makes it a strictly scientific worldview, in much the same way that a Protestant fundamentalism that rejects science can be seen as a strictly religious worldview. Scientism sees it necessary to do away with most, if not all, metaphysical, philosophical, and religious claims, as the truths they proclaim cannot be apprehended by the scientific method. In essence, scientism sees science as the absolute and only justifiable access to the truth."[72]
  • In the novel The Second Sleep by Robert Harris, the church has banned 'scientism', and interest in technology in general.[73][74][75]

See also

References

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  61. ^ Mahner, Martin; Bunge, Mario (1997). Foundations of Biophilosophy. Berlin; New York: Springer-Verlag. p. 135. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-03368-5. ISBN 3540618384. OCLC 36630019. S2CID 6273758. Finally, we should add a version of scientism ... This is the thesis that anything knowable and worth knowing can be known scientifically, and that science provides the best possible factual knowledge, even though it may, and does, in fact, contain errors. This form of scientism should not be mistaken for the neopositivist unification program, according to which every discipline should ultimately be reduced to one basic science, such as physics or psychology.
  62. ^ a b Bunge, Mario (2006). Chasing Reality: Strife Over Realism. Toronto Studies in Philosophy. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 264. doi:10.3138/9781442672857. ISBN 0802090753. OCLC 61174890. As for scientism, it is the thesis that the scientific method is the best strategy for attaining the more objective, more accurate, and deepest truths about facts of any kind, natural or social. ... True, Hayek (1955) famously claimed that scientism is something quite different, namely, the attempt on the part of some social scientists to ape their colleagues in the natural sciences, in ignoring the inner life of their referents. But this arbitrary redefinition involves confusing naturalism, or reductionist materialism (as practised, e.g., by the sociobiologists), with scientism.
  63. ^ Bunge, Mario (2017). "Scientism". Doing Science: In the Light of Philosophy. Singapore: World Scientific. p. 137. doi:10.1142/10333. ISBN 9789813202764. OCLC 959200429. Scientism is the thesis that all cognitive problems are best tackled by adopting the scientific approach, also called 'the scientific attitude' and 'the scientific method.' While most contemporary philosophers reject scientism, arguably scientists practice it even if they have never encountered the word.
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Bibliography

  • Feyerabend, Paul (1993) [First published 1975], Against Method (3rd ed.), Verso, ISBN 978-0-86091-646-8.
  • Haack, Susan (2012). "Six Signs of Scientism". Logos & Episteme. 3 (1): 75–95. doi:10.5840/logos-episteme20123151. We need to avoid both under-estimating the value of science, and over-estimating it. ... One side too hastily dismisses science; the other too hastily defers to it. My present concern, of course, is with the latter failing. It is worth noting that the English word 'scientism' wasn't always, as it is now, pejorative.
  • Mizrahi, Moti (July 2017). "What's So Bad About Scientism?". Social Epistemology. 31 (4): 351–367. doi:10.1080/02691728.2017.1297505. S2CID 151762259. I have argued that scientism should be understood as the thesis that scientific knowledge is the best knowledge we have, i.e., weak scientism. I have shown that scientific knowledge can be said to be better than non-scientific knowledge both quantitatively and qualitatively.
  • Peterson, Gregory R (2003), "Demarcation and the Scientistic Fallacy", Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science, 38 (4): 751–61, doi:10.1111/j.1467-9744.2003.00536.x, the best way to understand the charge of scientism is as a kind of logical fallacy involving improper usage of science or scientific claims.
  • Ridder, Jeroen de; Peels, Rik; Woudenberg, René van, eds. (2018). Scientism: Prospects and Problems. New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780190462758.001.0001. ISBN 978-0190462758. OCLC 949911467. This collection is one of the first to develop and assess scientism as a serious philosophical position.

External links

  • CS Lewis: Science and Scientism, Lewis society, 9 April 2018.
  • Burnett, "What is Scientism?", , American Association for the Advancement of Science, archived from the original on 2012-07-02.
  • "Science and Scientism", Monopolizing knowledge (World Wide Web log), The Biologos Foundation.
  • Martin, Eric C. "Science and Ideology § Science as Ideology: Scientism". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

scientism, opinion, that, science, scientific, method, best, only, render, truth, about, world, reality, while, term, defined, originally, mean, methods, attitudes, typical, attributed, natural, scientists, some, scholars, have, also, adopted, pejorative, term. Scientism is the opinion that science and the scientific method are the best or only way to render truth about the world and reality 1 2 While the term was defined originally to mean methods and attitudes typical of or attributed to natural scientists some scholars have also adopted it as a pejorative term with the meaning an exaggerated trust in the efficacy of the methods of natural science applied to all areas of investigation as in philosophy the social sciences and the humanities 3 Contents 1 Overview 2 Definitions 3 Relevance to debates about science and religion 4 Philosophy of science 4 1 Anti scientism 4 2 Pro scientism 5 Rhetoric of science 6 Rationalization and modernity 7 Media references 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksOverview EditFrancis Bacon has been viewed by some scholars as an early proponent of scientism 4 but this is a modern assertion as Bacon was a devout Anglican writing in his Essays a little philosophy inclineth man s mind to atheism but depth in philosophy bringeth men s minds about to religion 5 With respect to the philosophy of science the term scientism frequently implies a critique of the more extreme expressions of logical positivism 6 7 and has been used by social scientists such as Friedrich Hayek 8 philosophers of science such as Karl Popper 9 and philosophers such as Mary Midgley 10 the later Hilary Putnam 10 11 and Tzvetan Todorov 12 to describe for example the dogmatic endorsement of scientific methods and the reduction of all knowledge to only that which is measured or confirmatory 13 More generally scientism is often interpreted as science applied in excess This use of the term scientism has two senses The improper use of science or scientific claims 14 This usage applies equally in contexts where science might not apply 15 such as when the topic is perceived as beyond the scope of scientific inquiry and in contexts where there is insufficient empirical evidence to justify a scientific conclusion It includes an excessive deference to the claims of scientists or an uncritical eagerness to accept any result described as scientific This can be a counterargument to appeals to scientific authority It can also address attempts to apply natural science methods and claims of certainty to the social sciences which Friedrich Hayek described in The Counter Revolution of Science 1952 as being impossible because those methods attempt to eliminate the human factor while social sciences including his own topic of economics mainly concern the study of human action The belief that the methods of natural science or the categories and things recognized in natural science form the only proper elements in any philosophical or other inquiry 16 or that science and only science describes the world as it is in itself independent of perspective 11 with a concomitant elimination of the psychological and spiritual dimensions of experience 17 18 Tom Sorell provides this definition Scientism is a matter of putting too high a value on natural science in comparison with other branches of learning or culture 19 Philosophers such as Alexander Rosenberg have also adopted scientism as a name for the opinion that science is the only reliable source of knowledge 20 It is also sometimes used to describe the universal applicability of the scientific method and the opinion that empirical science constitutes the most authoritative worldview or the most valuable part of human learning sometimes to the complete exclusion of other opinions such as historical philosophical economic or cultural opinions It has been defined as the view that the characteristic inductive methods of the natural sciences are the only source of genuine factual knowledge and in particular that they alone can yield true knowledge about man and society 21 The term scientism is also used by historians philosophers and cultural critics to highlight the possible dangers of lapses towards excessive reductionism with respect to all topics of human knowledge 22 23 24 25 26 For social theorists practising the tradition of Max Weber such as Jurgen Habermas and Max Horkheimer the concept of scientism relates significantly to the philosophy of positivism but also to the cultural rationalization for modern Western civilization 13 27 Ernesto Sabato physicist and essayist wrote in his 1951 essay Hombres y engranajes Man and mechanism of the superstition of science as the most contradictory of all superstitions 28 since this would be the superstition that one should not be superstitious He wrote science had become a new magic and the man in the street believed in it the more the less he understood it 28 Definitions EditReviewing the references to scientism in the works of contemporary scholars Gregory R Peterson 29 detected two main general themes It is used to criticize a totalizing opinion of science as if it were capable of describing all reality and knowledge or as if it were the only true method to acquire knowledge about reality and the nature of things It is used often pejoratively 30 31 32 to denote violations by which the theories and methods of one scientific discipline are applied inappropriately to another scientific or non scientific discipline and its domain An example of this second usage is to term as scientism any attempt to claim science as the only or primary source of human values a traditional domain of ethics or as the source of meaning and purpose a traditional domain of religion and related worldviews The term scientism was popularized by F A Hayek who defined it as the slavish imitation of the method and language of Science 33 Karl Popper defines scientism as the aping of what is widely mistaken for the method of science 34 Mikael Stenmark proposed the expression scientific expansionism as a synonym of scientism 35 In the Encyclopedia of Science and Religion he wrote that while the doctrines that are described as scientism have many possible forms and varying degrees of ambition they share the idea that the boundaries of science that is typically the natural sciences could and should be expanded so that something that has not been previously considered as a subject pertinent to science can now be understood as part of science usually with science becoming the sole or the main arbiter regarding this area or dimension 35 According to Stenmark the strongest form of scientism states that science does not have any boundaries and that all human problems and all aspects of human endeavor with due time will be dealt with and solved by science alone 35 This idea has also been termed the Myth of Progress 36 E F Schumacher in his A Guide for the Perplexed criticized scientism as an impoverished world view confined solely to what can be counted measured and weighed The architects of the modern worldview notably Galileo and Descartes assumed that those things that could be weighed measured and counted were more true than those that could not be quantified If it couldn t be counted in other words it didn t count 37 Intellectual historian T J Jackson Lears argued there has been a recent reemergence of nineteenth century positivist faith that a reified science has discovered or is about to discover all the important truths about human life Precise measurement and rigorous calculation in this view are the basis for finally settling enduring metaphysical and moral controversies Lears specifically identifies Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker s work as falling in this category 38 Philosophers John N Gray and Thomas Nagel have made similar criticisms against popular works by moral psychologist Jonathan Haidt atheist author Sam Harris and writer Malcolm Gladwell 39 40 41 Relevance to debates about science and religion EditBoth religious and non religious scholars have applied the term scientism to individuals associated with New Atheism 42 43 Theologian John Haught argued that philosopher Daniel Dennett and other New Atheists subscribe to a belief system of scientific naturalism which includes the dogma that only nature including humans and our creations is real that God does not exist and that science alone can give us complete and reliable knowledge of reality 44 Haught argued that this belief system is self refuting since it requires its adherents to assent to beliefs that violate its own stated requirements for knowledge 45 Christian philosopher Peter Williams argued in 2013 that it is only by conflating science with scientism that New Atheists feel qualified to pontificate on metaphysical issues 46 Daniel Dennett responded to religious criticism of his 2006 book Breaking the Spell Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by saying that accusations of scientism are an all purpose wild card smear When someone puts forward a scientific theory that religious critics really don t like they just try to discredit it as scientism But when it comes to facts and explanations of facts science is the only game in town 47 Non religious scholars have also associated New Atheist thought with scientism and or with positivism Atheist philosopher Thomas Nagel argued that philosopher Sam Harris conflated all empirical knowledge with scientific knowledge 48 Marxist literary critic Terry Eagleton argued that Christopher Hitchens possessed an old fashioned scientistic notion of what counts as evidence that reduces knowledge to what can and cannot be proven by scientific procedure 49 Agnostic philosopher Anthony Kenny has also criticized New Atheist philosopher Alexander Rosenberg s The Atheist s Guide to Reality for resurrecting a self refuting epistemology of logical positivism and reducing all knowledge of the universe to the discipline of physics 50 Michael Shermer founder of The Skeptics Society discussed resemblances between scientism and traditional religions indicating the cult of personality that develops for some scientists He defined scientism as a worldview that encompasses natural explanations eschews supernatural and paranormal speculations and embraces empiricism and reason 51 The Iranian scholar Seyyed Hossein Nasr has stated that in the Western world many will accept the ideology of modern science not as simple ordinary science but as a replacement for religion 52 page needed Gregory R Peterson wrote that for many theologians and philosophers scientism is among the greatest of intellectual sins 29 Genetic biologist Austin L Hughes wrote in the conservative journal The New Atlantis that scientism has much in common with superstition the stubborn insistence that something has powers which no evidence supports 53 Repeating common criticisms of logical positivism and verificationism philosopher of religion Keith Ward has said that scientism is philosophically inconsistent or even self refuting as the truth of the two statements no statements are true unless they can be proven scientifically or logically and no statements are true unless they can be shown empirically to be true cannot themselves be proven scientifically logically or empirically 54 55 Philosophy of science EditMain article Philosophy of science Anti scientism Edit Philosopher Paul Feyerabend who was an enthusiastic proponent of scientism during his youth 56 later came to characterize science as an essentially anarchic enterprise 57 and argued emphatically that science merits no exclusive monopoly of dealing in knowledge and that scientists have never operated within a distinct and narrowly self defined tradition In his essay Against Method he depicted the process of contemporary scientific education as a mild form of indoctrination intended for making the history of science duller simpler more uniform more objective and more easily accessible to treatment by strict and unchanging rules 58 S cience can stand on its own feet and does not need any help from rationalists secular humanists Marxists and similar religious movements and non scientific cultures procedures and assumptions can also stand on their own feet and should be allowed to do so Science must be protected from ideologies and societies especially democratic societies must be protected from science In a democracy scientific institutions research programmes and suggestions must therefore be subjected to public control there must be a separation of state and science just as there is a separation between state and religious institutions and science should be taught as one view among many and not as the one and only road to truth and reality Paul Feyerabend Against Method p viii 59 Pro scientism Edit Physicist and philosopher Mario Bunge used the term scientism with a favorable rather than pejorative sense in numerous books published during several decades 60 61 62 63 and in articles with titles such as In defense of realism and scientism 64 and In defense of scientism 65 Bunge said that scientism should not be equated with inappropriate reductionism 62 and he dismissed critics of science such as Hayek and Habermas as dogmatists and obscurantists To innovate in the young sciences it is necessary to adopt scientism This is the methodological thesis that the best way of exploring reality is to adopt the scientific method which may be boiled down to the rule Check your guesses Scientism has been explicitly opposed by dogmatists and obscurantists of all stripes such as the neoliberal ideologist Friedrich von Hayek and the critical theorist Jurgen Habermas a ponderous writer who managed to amalgamate Hegel Marx and Freud and decreed that science is the ideology of late capitalism Mario Bunge Evaluating Philosophies 66 In 2018 philosophers Maarten Boudry and Massimo Pigliucci co edited a book titled Science Unlimited The Challenges of Scientism in which a number of chapters by philosophers and scientists defended scientism 67 In his chapter Two Cheers for Scientism Taner Edis wrote It is defensible to claim that scientific philosophical and humanistic forms of knowledge are continuous and that a broadly naturalistic description of our world centered on natural science is correct At the very least such views are legitimate they may be mistaken but not because of an elementary error a confusion of science with ideology or an offhand dismissal of the humanities Those of us who argue for such a view are entitled to have two cheers for an ambitious conception of science and if that is scientism so be it Taner Edis Two Cheers for Scientism 67 Rhetoric of science EditMain article Rhetoric of science Thomas M Lessl argued that religious themes persist in what he terms scientism the public rhetoric of science 68 There are two methods of describing this idea of scientism the epistemological method the assumption that the scientific method trumps other ways of knowing and the ontological method that the rational mind represents the world and both operate in knowable ways According to Lessl the ontological method is an attempt to resolve the conflict between rationalism and skepticism Lessl also argued that without scientism there would not be a scientific culture 68 Rationalization and modernity EditSee also Rationalization sociology and Antipositivism Frankfurt School In the introduction to his collected works on the sociology of religion Max Weber asked why the scientific the artistic the political or the economic development elsewhere did not enter upon that path of rationalization which is peculiar to the Occident According to the German social theorist Jurgen Habermas For Weber the intrinsic that is not merely contingent relationship between modernity and what he called Occidental rationalism was still self evident Weber described a process of rationalisation disenchantment and the disintegration of religious world views that resulted in modern secular societies and capitalism 69 Modernization was introduced as a technical term only in the 1950s It is the mark of a theoretical approach that takes up Weber s problem but elaborates it with the tools of social scientific functionalism The theory of modernization performs two abstractions on Weber s concept of modernity It dissociates modernity from its modern European origins and stylizes it into a spatio temporally neutral model for processes of social development in general Furthermore it breaks the internal connections between modernity and the historical context of Western rationalism so that processes of modernization are no longer burdened with the idea of a completion of modernity that is to say of a goal state after which postmodern developments would have to set in Indeed it is precisely modernization research that has contributed to the currency of the expression postmodern even among social scientists Jurgen Habermas The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Habermas is critical of pure instrumental rationality arguing that the Social Life World of subjective experiencing is better suited to literary expression whereas the sciences deal with intersubjectively accessible experiences that can be generalized in a formal language while the literary arts must generate an intersubjectivity of mutual understanding in each concrete case 70 71 Habermas quoted writer Aldous Huxley in support of this duality of literature and science The world with which literature deals is the world in which human beings are born and live and finally die the world in which they love and hate in which they experience triumph and humiliation hope and despair the world of sufferings and enjoyments of madness and common sense of silliness cunning and wisdom the world of social pressures and individual impulses of reason against passion of instincts and conventions of shared language and unsharable feelings and sensations Aldous Huxley Literature and ScienceMedia references EditAs a form of dogma as defined in the PBS documentary Faith and Reason Unlike the use of the scientific method as only one mode of reaching knowledge scientism claims that science alone can render truth about the world and reality Scientism s single minded adherence to only the empirical or testable makes it a strictly scientific worldview in much the same way that a Protestant fundamentalism that rejects science can be seen as a strictly religious worldview Scientism sees it necessary to do away with most if not all metaphysical philosophical and religious claims as the truths they proclaim cannot be apprehended by the scientific method In essence scientism sees science as the absolute and only justifiable access to the truth 72 In the novel The Second Sleep by Robert Harris the church has banned scientism and interest in technology in general 73 74 75 See also Edit Philosophy portal Religion portalAnti technology Antitheism Antireductionism Cargo cult science Conflict thesis Consequentialism Deformation professionnelle Demarcation problem Eliminative materialism Francis Bacon Greedy reductionism High modernism Materialism Non overlapping magisteria Pseudoskepticism Radical empiricism Relativism Science and the Catholic Church Science of morality Science wars Scientific management Scientific mythology Scientific realism Scientific reductionism Scientific imperialism Scientific skepticism Scientistic materialism Secular religion Sokal affair State atheism Technological dystopia New Frontier Post scarcity economy Technocentrism Technological utopianism Technological progress Techno progressivism Progress WorldviewReferences Edit Glossary Definition Scientism www pbs org 1999 Archived from the original on 2000 10 11 Retrieved 2022 07 30 Hietanen Johan Turunen Petri Hirvonen Ilmari Karisto Janne Pattiniemi Ilkka Saarinen Henrik July 2020 How not to criticise scientism Metaphilosophy 51 4 522 547 doi 10 1111 meta 12443 Scientism can be divided into four categories in terms of how strong science is the only source of knowledge or weak science is the best source of knowledge and how narrow only natural sciences or broad all sciences or at least not only the natural sciences they are Scientism Meriam Webster 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Beale Jonathan January 2019 Scientism and scientific imperialism International Journal of Philosophical Studies 27 1 73 102 doi 10 1080 09672559 2019 1565316 S2CID 171857595 There are also several philosophers in addition to Wittgenstein for whom anti scientism is a leitmotif in their work such as Mary Midgley and the later Hilary Putnam a b Putnam Hilary 1992 Renewing Philosophy Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp x ISBN 9780674760936 Todorov Tzvetan The Imperfect Garden the legacy of humanism Princeton University Press 2001 Pg 20 Scientism does not eliminate the will but decides that since the results of science are valid for everyone this will must be something shared not individual In practice the individual must submit to the collectivity which knows better than he does a b Outhwaite William 2009 1988 Habermas Key Contemporary Thinkers 2nd ed Polity Press p 22 Peterson 2003 p 753 the best way to understand the charge of scientism is as a kind of logical fallacy involving 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handmaiden of the sciences and dependent upon the sciences for their advance and even their survival Lears T J Jackson 6 November 2013 Get Happy The Nation Archived from the original on 13 November 2013 Retrieved 21 December 2013 scientism is a revival of the nineteenth century positivist faith that a reified science has discovered or is about to discover all the important truths about human life Precise measurement and rigorous calculation in this view are the basis for finally settling enduring metaphysical and moral controversies explaining consciousness and choice replacing ambiguity with certainty Brunkhorst Hauke 1995 Dialectical Positivism of Happiness Max Horkheimer s Materialist Deconstruction of Philosophy In Seyla Benhabib Wolfgang Bonss John McCole eds On Max Horkheimer New Perspectives The MIT Press p 74 ISBN 978 0262522076 Archived from the original on 2021 01 26 Retrieved 2020 01 29 a b Sabato Ernesto 2003 1951 El Nuevo Fetichismo Hombres y engranajes in Spanish 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knowledge seem to have failed Gray John 22 November 2013 Malcolm Gladwell Is America s Best Paid Fairy Tale Writer The New Republic Archived from the original on 4 December 2013 Retrieved 22 December 2013 the mix of moralism and scientism is an ever winning formula as Gladwell s career demonstrates Nagel Thomas 20 October 2010 The Facts Fetish The New Republic Archived from the original on 27 October 2013 Retrieved 22 December 2013 Harris urges that we use scientific knowledge about humans to discover what will maximize their well being and thereby to discover the right way to live This is an instrumental use of science starting out from his basic moral premise Robinson Marilynne Nov 2006 Hysterical Scientism The Ecstasy of Richard Dawkins Harper s Magazine Stephen LeDrew on his The Evolution of Atheism an Interview 10 Dec 2015 archived from the original on 10 March 2016 retrieved 10 March 2016 Haught John 2008 God and the New Atheism A Critical Response to Dawkins Harris and Hitchens Westminster John Knox Press pp X Haught John 2008 God and the New Atheism A Critical Response to Dawkins Harris and Hitchens Westminster John Knox Press p 17 Williams Peter S 2013 C S Lewis vs the New Atheists Paternoster p 1928 Byrnes Sholto 10 April 2006 When it comes to facts and explanations of facts science is the only game in town New Statesman archived from the original on 16 October 2011 Nagel Thomas 20 October 2010 The Facts Fetish The New Republic Archived from the original on 27 October 2013 Retrieved 22 December 2013 He says that the discovery of moral truth depends on science but this turns out to be misleading because he includes under science all empirical knowledge of what the world is like Harris urges that we use scientific knowledge about humans to discover what will maximize their well being and thereby to discover the right way to live Eagleton Terry 2010 Reason Faith and Revolution Reflections on the God Debate Yale University Press p 6 Kenny Anthony June 2012 True Believers Times Literary Supplement The main tenets of this philosophy are bracingly summed up in a series of questions and answers Is there a God No What is the nature of reality What physics says it is Shermer Michael June 2002 The Shamans of Scientism Scientific American 286 6 35 Bibcode 2002SciAm 286f 35S doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0602 35 archived from the original on 2006 10 16 Chittick William 2007 The Essential Seyyed Hossein Nasr Bloomington World Wisdom ISBN 978 1 933316 38 3 Hughes Austin Fall 2012 The Folly of Scientism The New Atlantis 37 32 50 Archived from the original on 22 July 2018 Retrieved 26 July 2018 Ward Keith 2006 Is Religion Dangerous Alston William P 2003 Religious language and verificationism In Moser Paul K Copan Paul eds The Rationality of Theism New York Routledge pp 26 34 ISBN 978 0 415 26332 0 Preston John 21 September 2016 Paul Feyerabend In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Feyerabend s youthful positivist scientism makes quite a contrast with his later conclusions Feyerabend 1993 p vii Imre Lakatos loved to embarrass serious opponents with jokes and irony and so I too occasionally wrote in a rather ironical vein An example is the end of Chapter 1 anything goes is not a principle I hold but the terrified exclamation of a rationalist who takes a closer look at history Feyerabend 1993 pp viii 9 11 Feyerabend 1993 p viii Bunge Mario 1983 Epistemology amp Methodology II Understanding the World Treatise on Basic Philosophy Vol 6 Dordrecht Boston D Reidel p 263 doi 10 1007 978 94 015 6921 7 ISBN 9789027716347 OCLC 9759870 Mahner Martin Bunge Mario 1997 Foundations of Biophilosophy Berlin New York Springer Verlag p 135 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 03368 5 ISBN 3540618384 OCLC 36630019 S2CID 6273758 Finally we should add a version of scientism This is the thesis that anything knowable and worth knowing can be known scientifically and that science provides the best possible factual knowledge even though it may and does in fact contain errors This form of scientism should not be mistaken for the neopositivist unification program according to which every discipline should ultimately be reduced to one basic science such as physics or psychology a b Bunge Mario 2006 Chasing Reality Strife Over Realism Toronto Studies in Philosophy Toronto University of Toronto Press p 264 doi 10 3138 9781442672857 ISBN 0802090753 OCLC 61174890 As for scientism it is the thesis that the scientific method is the best strategy for attaining the more objective more accurate and deepest truths about facts of any kind natural or social True Hayek 1955 famously claimed that scientism is something quite different namely the attempt on the part of some social scientists to ape their colleagues in the natural sciences in ignoring the inner life of their referents But this arbitrary redefinition involves confusing naturalism or reductionist materialism as practised e g by the sociobiologists with scientism Bunge Mario 2017 Scientism Doing Science In the Light of Philosophy Singapore World Scientific p 137 doi 10 1142 10333 ISBN 9789813202764 OCLC 959200429 Scientism is the thesis that all cognitive problems are best tackled by adopting the scientific approach also called the scientific attitude and the scientific method While most contemporary philosophers reject scientism arguably scientists practice it even if they have never encountered the word Bunge Mario 1986 In defense of realism and scientism Annals of Theoretical Psychology Springer Verlag 4 23 26 doi 10 1007 978 1 4615 6453 9 3 ISBN 978 1 4615 6455 3 As for scientism I take it to be quite different from Tennessen s belief in some sort of scientific world view miraculously emanating from the main bulk of the testimony of the senses or so called scientific results The brand of scientism I defend boils down to the thesis that scientific research rather than the navel contemplation or the reading of sacred texts can yield the best truest and deepest possible knowledge of real concrete material things be they fields or particles brains or societies or what have you I take the scientific method rather than any special results of scientific research to be the very kernel of scientism Consequently I cannot accept Tennessen s implicit approval of Feyerabend s antimethodology or epistemological anarchism the latest version of radical skepticism Bunge Mario December 2014 In defense of scientism PDF Free Inquiry Council for Secular Humanism 35 1 24 31 Archived PDF from the original on 2019 09 18 Retrieved 2019 09 19 Scientism is the thesis that all cognitive problems concerning the world are best tackled adopting the scientific approach also called the spirit of science and the scientific attitude While most contemporary philosophers reject scientism arguably scientists practice it even if they have never encountered the word However the correct meaning of scientism has proved to be even more elusive than that of science Bunge Mario 2012 Evaluating Philosophies Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 295 New York Springer Verlag p 24 doi 10 1007 978 94 007 4408 0 ISBN 9789400744073 OCLC 806947226 a b Boudry Maarten Pigliucci Massimo eds 2017 Science Unlimited The Challenges of Scientism Chicago University of Chicago Press p 76 doi 10 7208 chicago 9780226498287 001 0001 ISBN 9780226498003 OCLC 975442387 a b Lessl Thomas M Fall 1996 Naturalizing science Two episodes in the evolution of a rhetoric of scientism Western Journal of Communication 60 4 1 doi 10 1080 10570319609374555 Habermas Jurgen 1990 The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Polity Press ISBN 0 7456 0830 2 pp 2 3 Olson R 2008 Science and scientism in nineteenth century Europe University of Illinois Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 252 07433 2 LCCN 2007005146 Archived from the original on 2016 07 31 Retrieved 2016 01 27 Habermas J Shapiro JJ 1971 Toward a rational society student protest science and politics paperback Beacon Press pp 50 51 ISBN 978 0 8070 4177 2 LCCN 73121827 Archived from the original on 2016 07 31 Retrieved 2016 01 27 Scientism Faith and Reason PBS archived from the original on 2017 07 07 retrieved 2017 09 11 The Second Sleep by Robert Harris review an elegant post apocalyptic thriller the Guardian 2019 09 09 Retrieved 2021 11 30 Griffith Nicola 2019 11 19 It s 1468 Why Does the Village Priest Have an iPhone The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 11 30 Skidelsky William 2019 09 06 The Second Sleep by Robert Harris an ingenious medieval thriller Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 2021 11 30 Bibliography EditFeyerabend Paul 1993 First published 1975 Against Method 3rd ed Verso ISBN 978 0 86091 646 8 Haack Susan 2012 Six Signs of Scientism Logos amp Episteme 3 1 75 95 doi 10 5840 logos episteme20123151 We need to avoid both under estimating the value of science and over estimating it One side too hastily dismisses science the other too hastily defers to it My present concern of course is with the latter failing It is worth noting that the English word scientism wasn t always as it is now pejorative Mizrahi Moti July 2017 What s So Bad About Scientism Social Epistemology 31 4 351 367 doi 10 1080 02691728 2017 1297505 S2CID 151762259 I have argued that scientism should be understood as the thesis that scientific knowledge is the best knowledge we have i e weak scientism I have shown that scientific knowledge can be said to be better than non scientific knowledge both quantitatively and qualitatively Peterson Gregory R 2003 Demarcation and the Scientistic Fallacy Zygon Journal of Religion and Science 38 4 751 61 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9744 2003 00536 x the best way to understand the charge of scientism is as a kind of logical fallacy involving improper usage of science or scientific claims Ridder Jeroen de Peels Rik Woudenberg Rene van eds 2018 Scientism Prospects and Problems New York Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oso 9780190462758 001 0001 ISBN 978 0190462758 OCLC 949911467 This collection is one of the first to develop and assess scientism as a serious philosophical position External links Edit Look up scientism in Wiktionary the free dictionary CS Lewis Science and Scientism Lewis society 9 April 2018 Burnett What is Scientism Community dialogue American Association for the Advancement of Science archived from the original on 2012 07 02 Science and Scientism Monopolizing knowledge World Wide Web log The Biologos Foundation Martin Eric C Science and Ideology Science as Ideology Scientism Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scientism amp oldid 1170598177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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