“Scientism”
refers to the view that only scientific knowing is valuable or acceptable as
truth. A problem with this view is that it devalues commonsense and every-day
knowing, while treating all knowers as an average individual. However, the
entire point of many philosophic traditions is to cultivate wisdom and expert
knowing not captured by the statistical averages of science, as well as to
address fields of study that cannot be a science.
For
instance, the metaphysical foundations of science, which science must presume, cannot be a science, yet
is the subject of philosophy. Likewise, analysis of science as a social
practice reveals that science follows a regulatory ideal, yet the ideal is not
the actual, although scientism treats pursuit of the ideal of scientific
knowing as if it were its attainment. Hence, when someone denigrates philosophy
as “fantasy” wishing it were science, I hear a resonance of ressentiment.
Ressentiment, per Friedrich
Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Morals, is
an inversion of value hierarchy. The inversion is both experiential and formal:
a person of ressentiment both
experiences and theorizes the weaker as the stronger.
I name scientism to be ressentiment
because it disavows its own weaknesses and proclaims itself strong, yet it
accomplishes this through illogical means that reveal its weakness. The logic
is clear: scientific knowing is the best for predicting and controlling the
world, yet there is more to nature than what yields to such treatment.
Moreover, scientific practice cannot be made wholly transparent to itself, and
scientific pretends, even when it insists otherwise, that any opaqueness in its
practice is irrelevant. Such insistences become the subject of satire in works
such as The Golem.
Scientism
doubles-down on its ressentiment when
it proclaims scientific naturalism, the view that only the objects of science
are real. Rather than tacitly claim that only what can be predicted and
controlled is real, it raises the proclamation to ontological doctrine—and
often disavows metaphysics while performing this ontological move.
I
will you with a concluding thought from Nietzsche. At the end of the Genealogy of Morals, he proposed that
the ascetic will to deny life has become the ascetic will to truth. That is, Christian
ressentiment, supposing that Christians deny nature for the world of the spirit,
has become a denial of anything that cannot be purely represented as truth. Yet
once again, the ascetic will to truth denies anything that does not meet its
own standard, and does so from its weakness rather than its strength, since it
cannot admit that there is more to truth than science can achieve.
is apologetics like footnotes2plato practices the other side of the coin?
ReplyDelete-dmf
I don't think Matt is a good example of the flip side, because he's aware and congenial about the rational status of the claims that he makes. Moreover, he's still giving rational arguments. In fact, can you explain how he is the flip side? What is on this side versus the other?
ReplyDeleteThe conventional sides are a "naive humanism" that gives humanity a special epistemic status (or denies that epistemic authority may exist such as in bad pomo) versus a scientism that so degrades the human that it is erased and becomes subservient to a method or ideal of practice.