by dorlomin » Sun 02 May 2010, 11:48:22
I have yet to see an internally consistent narrative raised as a counter explanation to the events of the Apollo 11 moon shot on this thread. There seems to be an acceptance of an amorphous series of questions about that event being sufficient to act as proof that 'some nefarious' was afoot.
Reflecting on this I am struck by how instructive this thread is in explaining the course of history that became the triumph of the west. And how people should reinforce these lessons as we move into a post peak oil world.
Human minds are incredible pattern matching machines. Having taken some undergraduate courses in AI we were taught the huge capacity of humans to derive patterns from the world around us and the huge difficulty we have in making machines perform remotely on that scale. We have an ability to take a series of disparate events and create narratives from them that that we can use to imagine how the world could be not only how it is. [To be a bit more technical we take abstractions of the world around us and build mental models, for example we could see the changes in the seasons and the arrival of the herds of Springbok out on the African Veldt this allowed us to plan our lives ahead and to read the weather not just simply react by instinct]. But there is a flaw in this, we can perceive patterns where none exist. This flaw is not fatal and sometimes can be useful, we anthromorphised nature, declaring weather gods with human-like behaviors so we developed stories to explain the weather that applied our imagined gods and their needs. With this we had a simple model for weather that was better just random guesses or even instinct but was imperfect.
Now rewinding to the year 1000AD, famously given as the nadir of Europe or atleast the jump off point where it was able to end the external invasions and begin our slow outward push. Looking at the world of 1000AD almost no one would have predicted that Europe would surge out to become the dominant global culture in merely 500 years. The Fatimid Calaphate ruled the huge expanses of the MENA and was among the most advanced civilizations history had ever known, the Song dynasty in China had over 100 million people and an economy Europe could not even begin to imagine, great and famous empires also existed in India, Pakistan, and the Khemer in SE Asia. Western Europe was not even the most advanced part of Europe as the Byzantians still ruled a literate and well structured Empire. Western Europe was a backward illiterate, technologically retarded and politically disparate.
What changed that within 500 years these barbarian dukedoms and principalities clinging onto the edge of the great Eurasian land mass would go on to sweep all before them and in just over 950 years walk on the moon?
They developed a series of intellectual tools that allowed them to go beyond the intuition of our pattern matching machine. These tools are what are sometimes referred to as memes of a culture, the same way that genes are to a species. We developed tools that allowed us to view the evidence of the world objectively, to compare different possibilities and to enumerate the properties of the world we observed. Skipping lightly through the history this began within the church and the scholastic movement specifically (which before it became dogmatic and ossified in the post reformation view of Aquinus was a dynamic and explorative philosophical\ theological movement). Through Arabian (and a couple of Jewish) philosophers, the scholastics discovered the Ancient Greek\ Roman worlds of science (the Western Christians had retained some Plato largely as a result of St Augustus' reverence for him). An intellectual explosion was ignited as Europeans discovered Galens, Ptolomy, Pythagoras and not least Aristotle. But this surge of curiosity broke out in a world that did not have gran imperial palaces and bureaucracies, it was into a region of tribes and petty warchiefs who were forging protostates. Originally confined to the church it broke out into the aristocracy and merchant classes. Science as we know it was conceived.
But this was not an abstract love of knowledge. The tools of the ancients of looking at the world, discussing it and trying to build models of the universe and explanations of its behavior gave the new kings the tools they need to become strategists and not just war chiefs of large tribes. Before this intellectual movement warfare was largely calling together your vassals (Such as Harold Godwinson and William the Bastard did for there epic confrontation in 1066) and charging off living off the land, robbing the locals and hoping for some kind logistics. Yet by the time of Edward I (crudely caricatured in Braveheart as Edward the Longshanks) his military expeditions were properly supported by logistics tails with prebuilt supply dumps, calculated food consumption levels, animal fodder and weapons needs. The skills of observing the world and developing more advanced explicitly literate models of the world beyond the intuition of a good war chief had arrived. As strong states emerged the kings who could apply premeditated planning and analysis won out over the more romantic types who relied on God, chivilraic values and intuition.
But Europe was now a mass of competing states. The reverence for the ancients that stifled innovation in Empires and Imperial courts was not able to work in Europe, every petty king wanted to get one over the next guy. Experimental science became hugely important in the arms races, better steel, better gun powder, better castles, better logistics. Europe’s avaricious consumption of any technology no matter its origin meant that Chinese compasses and Arabian star maps were incorporated into Europe who immediately set about improving them and trying to explain them better to make more use of them. This is not just reductionist meta historiography, people like John the Navigator founded an institution that was the NASA of its day to incorporate these new foreign technologies and explore to find new lands to exploit. He was able to do so because he was a king and not subjected to a centralized empire.
Of all the competing kingdoms and all the competing means of analyzing the world what we now think of as the scientific method emerged. You take all the facts you can observe and construct an explanation of an event with them and use that explanation to derive as of yet unknown information about the world. The competitive nature of the kings and states was being reproduced by academics, each explanation for an event was put up and subjected to scrutiny by peers. The best were accepted.
This system of competitive analysis of the world allowed Europeans to built ever better and better guns, better navigation, better ships, better steel. The old great empires began to fall in front of these barbarians with their science. But it was not just science, over the longer term the Europeans that had the most scrutiny of their governments tended to perform the best so the NW kingdoms that were able to shake of Romes Bishops sprinted ahead of the old powers of Spain and Italian cities.
Why is this relevant to this thread, well our intellectual tools are being abandoned in the west. We now want to fall into a more primitive and comforting world of emotional truth, intuition and feeling. We want to believe what feels right. It is the old world certainties that predate the brutal cold hard world of empirical science. People will boast that they 'believe' what feels right to them. That they do not and cannot build internally consistent narratives to set up against the mainstream but at looking at a couple of pieces of evidence 'feel' they know the right answer.
Many people like to boast they are the intellectual heirs of western skepticism because they question mainstream narratives. But this is a total failure to understand what western skepticism has been. Its not just questioning but building strong counter examples and submitting them to peer review. These septics are far more the heirs of the Chinese mandarins who 'questioned' western science because it did not fit what they wanted to believe about the universe or the Popes and Cardinals who rejected Copernicus because it felt wrong, they also knew that they had questions about much of that model of the universe that did not 'feel' right. But there counter example was week and relied on what people felt.
In a prepeak world we have been pampered by the indulgence of over abundant energy. This has cushioned us from hard choices. In a post peak world for democracies to function and make good choices many people are going to have to discover that questioning authority for its own sake is not skepticism if it prevents us taking hard and unpopular actions that are necessary to adjust to changing energy availability. If people wish to be skeptical that will mean putting up clear well argued counter examples that can be examined and the consequences explored.
This whole world of reacting intuitively to politics is over.
Or at least the states where citizens indulge in that will find it a very hard job keeping any kind of civilization going.