ALT REALITY
Jerry
Harkins
But the Lord came
down to see the city and the tower the people were building.
The Lord said, “If as one people speaking the same
language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be
impossible for them. Come, let us go
down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other.” –Genesis 11:5-7
As
a strategy for keeping the people in perpetual darkness, God should have known
that a people smart enough to build the Tower of Babel would not have been
seriously challenged by the need to translate.
Modern acolytes of the Great Deceiver – whether of the church, the
state, business or the media have accomplished far more than that. Indeed, they have learned to re-shape not only reality but the very definition of reality. They are a talented species that has created a serious problem for themselves. Alt Reality has become the new anarchy.
Oh,
yes, we live in strange times. Until
about twenty years ago, the history of the human race was largely the story of
a young species of intelligent animals trying to understand its surroundings
and its place in them or, in short, to get a grip on reality. That curiosity is not unique to humans but,
unlike our fellow creatures, we developed tools and processes specifically to
enhance our quest for truth. And we were
successful. We learned to make fire and
split the atom, to sow and reap, to read and write, to dance and sing and play
and pray. We learned that space and time
are relative and, in 1969, we sent explorers to the moon. In short, we cast out some of the darkness
and tamed parts of nature. We also came to
understand that every time we answered a question, new ones popped up but we
found the journey itself exciting. We
were hooked not only or even mainly on the ends but at least equally on the
means we invented to get to the ends. On
science and philosophy and art and theology.
Our intellectuals were addicted. But
always there were some who regarded this obsession as either arrogant or
heretical. A few saw it as an
opportunity for self-enrichment.
The
Book of Genesis depicts a Creator whose most important commandment was that we
should stay away from the tree of knowledge lest we ourselves become godlike. The specific knowledge that unlocked
godliness was said to be the knowledge of good and evil but, as it turned out,
all knowledge could be good or evil and you never knew which from one moment to
the next. We ate the apple but did not became
godlike. We became fully human, pilgrims
on a journey with no final destination. We were trapped, neither here nor there like Schrödinger's
cat which could be both alive and dead simultaneously.
Truth was elusive and often counterintuitive. A physicist, Werner von Heisenberg,
discovered an inherent uncertainty at the heart of reality and a mathematician,
Kurt Gödel, formulated a theorem that purported to prove that a provable system
must necessarily be false. For a time,
it seemed that Lewis Carroll might have been right after all. Needless to say, God, who does not play dice
with the universe, was not amused and, ever since, some of his principal agents have waged war
on behalf of ignorance. They are not the
only ones.
The
cult of willful ignorance is a characteristic of every kind of autocracy and an
intimate companion of deceit and
dishonesty. In the Oceania of George
Orwell’s 1984 this intimacy is made
explicit in three slogans: Ignorance Is
Strength, War Is Peace, and Freedom Is Slavery.
Orwell modeled Big Brother on Joseph Stalin who was famous for
re-writing history to obliterate enemies of the state. “Socialist Realism” was anything but
realistic whether in art or science or economics. Trofim Lysenko was more a madman
than a biologist but his crackpot agricultural theories enjoyed official favor
for decades in the face of widespread Soviet starvation because Stalin saw in
them a path toward creating the Soviet superman just as Hitler had seen the
extermination of the Jews as the way to create the Teutonic superman. It was madness and morally repugnant but it was also harebrained – contrary to established fact. Yet the deliberate cultivation of ignorance
and darkness dominated Russian life for seventy years and German life for
twelve.
The advancement of knowledge always
involves the need to change one’s thinking and is, therefore, threatening. Knowledge is power only in the narrow sense
that it conveys an advantage to those who have it over those who do not. Otherwise it is frustrating, especially for
those who lack it and are most likely to fear it. Today, the world faces what is the most
profound revolution it has ever witnessed:
the Information Revolution and its inevitable consequence, the global
economy. Everywhere everything – religion,
politics, national and personal economic prospects, cultural values,
philosophical assumptions – is changing at warp speed. We all live in a profoundly disconcerting
world. As King Mongkut of Siam sings, “Some things nearly so / Some things nearly
not / There are times I almost think / I
am not sure of what I absolutely know.” It is not at all surprising that a cabal of
scoundrels has arisen to take advantage of these dislocations through deceit, deception
and outright fraud. Their weapon is
being called “alternative reality” but George Orwell called it simply “The Big
Lie” in his dystopian novel, 1984. The idea is simply to lie outrageously about
everything to everyone. Most people will believe anything if your lie is big
enough, simple enough and repeated often enough.
Leaders,
of course, require followers, in this case followers willing to embrace what is
obviously and objectively unreasonable. The root of this vulnerability is fear of
change abetted by simple incomprehension or mistrust of science or even an
attraction to conspiracy theories. People
who think the earth was created in seven days some six thousand years ago and
that the fossil record is the work of the devil are flying in the face of logic
and evidence. They are stubborn in their
ignorance but their belief systems are not necessarily due to a lack of intelligence or education. They believe what they want to believe but
they are also the victims of those who intend to profit from the social chaos
they can engender. The same is true of
people who believe that space aliens landed at Roswell, New Mexico in 1947 but
here the case is more subtle. It assumes
the unproven but highly probable idea that intelligent life has evolved
elsewhere in the universe but it ignores the engineering
obstacles that act to reduce the probability of an actual encounter in 1947 (or 2018) to
virtually zero. At present, it is far
more likely that the debris found near Roswell is exactly what the Air Force
said it was, a weather balloon. Only a
person with a paranoid personality could believe that dozens of military and
government officials knew about a crash landing of space aliens and kept it
secret for more than seventy years.
One
problem with alternative reality is that there is almost no such thing as
reality itself if we insist on certainty.
In bygone years, students were introduced to probability theory with an
example of a zero probability statement:
one day I will swim across the Atlantic Ocean. Then in 1998, Benoît Lecomte swam across the Atlantic Ocean. The most obvious thing about reality is that
our perception of what is true constantly evolves. It takes nothing away from the achievement of
Christopher Columbus to note that he thought he had reached Asia and that the
islands he saw were parts of India, China and Japan. His discoveries were part of a learning
process which was extended by Vasco Balboa who crossed the Isthmus of Panama to
encounter the Pacific Ocean in 1513 and Ferdinand Magellan one of whose five ships
circumnavigated the globe in 1519.
Intellectuals had long known that the earth must be spherical but after
Magellan’s voyage any other hypothesis became untenable. Yet there remain Flat Earthers to this
day. The pictures taken from space? Their web site says, “…the space agencies of
the world are involved in a conspiracy faking space travel and
exploration.” Sound familiar?
So
“truth” or, more accurately, reality evolves – changes if you insist – but it
does not go backwards. Our understanding
of the universe is incomplete but no reasonable person can ever again believe
that it is six thousand years old or that it has always and will always exist
in its present state. The cumulative
weight of empirical observation, measurement and experimentation has overwhelmed
what once was a tenable belief. The Big
Bang theory did not close the book of cosmology but it did provide the evidence
that precluded any version of steady state.
The discovery of the Higgs Boson did not cast the Standard Model of
particle physics in bronze as truth for all ages but it did confirm it as the
right direction toward such a truth.
Probably. Always probably. Those who reject Darwinian evolution in favor
of the biblical creationism story are no longer within the pale of rationality
on the subject. When Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859, he
stressed in his summary that “this view of life” was a beginning, not an end;
that it promised to open a wide variety of questions to scientific
inquiry. Most famously, he wrote, “Light
will be thrown on the origin of man and his history.” And it was. Darwin’s seminal work has been richly
elaborated and validated especially by the discovery of its genetic mechanism. But his fundamental ideas of common descent
and natural selection are as indelible as any truth can be and theories to the
contrary must be consigned to Wonderland.
But
truth is always probabilistic. For one
thing, people make mistakes. A third
grade child trying to add three plus four and coming up with five is counting,
not adding. An adult who argues that the
sun revolves around the earth because it says so in the Bible is substituting
faith for fact. There is an important
difference here. The child is invoking a
reality, that of counting, even if it does not apply to the problem at
hand. The adult is appealing to what may
have been a fortuitous eclipse of the sun during the Battle of Gibeon which was
misunderstood by the author of the Book of Joshua. But the politician who claims that climate
change is a myth is simply lying for personal gain and is forfeiting the right
to be believed about anything.
However,
isn’t it possible that the climate scientists are overstating what is
essentially a natural fluctuation in average temperatures? Of course it is possible. It is also possible that the changes we
observe are not significantly related to human activity. And it is possible that one day you will swim across the Atlantic
Ocean. But don’t bet the rent money on
it. The empirical evidence and the logic
strongly point in a different direction.
Moreover if you want to entertain remote possibilities about the climate,
you owe it to yourself and others to make a persuasive case for some other
agent, something non-human that causes global warming. It is simply not enough to appeal to “natural
fluctuations” any more than it is to appeal to the work of the devil to explain
the fossil record.
Of
course practitioners of alternative reality readily reject evidence preferring
to argue from the absence of evidence, an unknown that they can promote as a
fatal flaw. In the evolution debate, it used to be the
lack of what was called “the missing link” without which it was obvious that homo sapiens had to be the result of spontaneous,
unique and intelligent creation. This is
the fallacy of argumentum ad perfectionem,
the idea that until every I is dotted
and every t crossed a theory is false
and its opposite must be true. When that
fallacy fails the next resort is to conspiracy theory which is why thousands of
Americans believe the Apollo moon landings never happened and the whole thing
was a government conspiracy. It is also
why dinosaurs never existed, why fluoridation is a Communist plot and why 65%
of Americans reject the theory of evolution.
The
Big Lie has been a frequent actor in world history, always available to
sacrifice truth and rationality in the service of ideology. Ideology is not itself immoral but it must
follow truth, not lead it. Cardinal
Robert Bellarmine, the Grand Inquisitor in the Galileo trial, knew this well. A year after Galileo had been silenced, the
prelate wrote, “I say that if there were a true demonstration that the sun is
at the center of the world, that the earth shares the same heavens where God
lives and that the sun does not circle the earth but the earth circles the sun,
then one would have to proceed with great care in explaining the Scriptures
that appear contrary, and say rather that we do not understand them, than that
what is demonstrated is false…” Perhaps
we can say that by 1615 he should have known what revolved about what but it
would take the church another 380 years to accept reality. At least little harm was done. The most credulous continued to believe an
error but life went on. The same cannot
be said of the Big Lies we have been confronting for the past century or
so. It is a long list – a veritable
theater of the absurd – of claims that pose existential threats to our lives
and well-being.
We
indeed live in strange times when our most pressing need is for a child who
will shout out loudly, “But the emperor has no clothes.” Neither we nor that child will ever resolve
the debate between Plato and Aristotle about the nature of reality but we can
agree with them both that that reality is singular and moral and
beautiful. Even if our understanding of
it is imperfect, it has no alternative.
Subsequently
"And a little child shall lead them." (Isaiah 11:6). In 2019, along came a sixteen year old girl named Greta Thunberg who fearlessly explained not only that the emperor was intellectually naked but, more importantly, why his big lies constituted a crime against humanity.
Subsequently
"And a little child shall lead them." (Isaiah 11:6). In 2019, along came a sixteen year old girl named Greta Thunberg who fearlessly explained not only that the emperor was intellectually naked but, more importantly, why his big lies constituted a crime against humanity.
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