The concept of scientism, the quasi-religious belief in science and scientists, has risen in prominence over the past year. It has been a theme explored in many UnHerd interviews, ranging from Matthew Crawford, who detailed the ways in which science has evolved from a mode of inquiry into a source of authority, to Richard Dawkins, who dismissed scientism as a “dirty word”.
To author and biologist Rupert Sheldrake, it means something different: “It is the idea that science can solve all the problems of the world,” he tells Freddie Sayers in today’s LockdownTV. “Where science becomes a religion and that it’s humanity’s salvation. The scientists are the saviours of the world.”
The religious fervour with which phrases like ‘following the science’ and ‘trust the experts’ have been uttered and adhered to over the course of the pandemic would seem to underscore Sheldrake’s point. But according to Sheldrake, who has spent his entire career researching controversial or ‘fringe’ areas of science, the phenomenon is “nothing new”. As he himself has experienced, the scientific community does not like entertaining radical or dissent opinion, and goes out of its way to snuff it out:
One might therefore expect him to be sympathetic to those who have been dismissed as cranks and charlatans during the Covid debate. But curiously, he admits to having a rather “conventional” view when it comes to the pandemic:
On the increasing acceptance of non-orthodox viewpoints:
On his own religious journey:
On ‘evangelical atheism’:
Should religion be eliminated?
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SubscribeI was dissappointed that Rupert would not acknowledge the scientism prevalent around covid.
I am really torn by this interview.
On one hand, he starts strong and makes many reasonable points. The way he defines scientism is eloquent and seems highly relevant to the world today. The comparison of science and realms like law, politics and sport is good. He looks and sounds like the epitome of a rational, reasonable man, even saying that he has no time for people who claim a dead person told him to avoid the vaccines. Yet he is also reflective and willing to consider the benefits of consciously adopting a religion. There could be a lot of valuable ideas to unpack here and indeed Freddy repeatedly prompts him to go deeper into those areas.
But … he doesn’t want to. His beef with the scientific orthodoxy is not as you might imagine to do with COVID, modelling, vaccines, masks, ivermectin, doctors vs scientists or any of the other topics where the establishment is currently under fire.
No, his beef is that it’s too hard to get funding for his research into whether dogs are telepathic. That’s what he means by “unconventional research”. But, note, it’s not impossible to get such funding – he has apparently published his research on telepathy in “peer reviewed journals” and there are two or three universities in the UK that are willing to fund this, like the University of Northhampton. The justification for researching this topic is that “if you mention the word telepathy, most people say oh yeah I’ve had telepathic experiences”.
I don’t really know what to make of this. It can be viewed two ways:
Scott Alexander has a fascinating essay on parapsychology which is probably worth reading as a followup to watching this interview. The gist of it is that for better or worse, governments do in fact fund parapsychological studies and lots of those studies appear to find evidence that ESP exists. Moreover, this problem is extremely difficult to solve because every time the “real” scientists laugh off the results as obviously the result of bad study design or whatever, the parapsychologists come back with what looks like better studies that resolve those complaints. Because there appears to be nearly nothing academia won’t fund this has been going on for decades and has reached absurd heights, in which Daryl Bem and others are now presenting large meta-studies filled with randomized controlled trials that conclude ESP is a small but real effect.
The conclusion here is not that ESP is actually real. If it was, we presumably would have evidence of it from outside the world of academia. The conclusion is that it’s really easy for scientists to produce research that supports whatever conclusions they want. In an environment where there are no mechanisms to detect fraud, and in which criticizing mistakes in research just causes the mistakes to mutate rather than the research to genuinely improve, attempting to improve the usefulness of research outcomes is a thankless task.
And this is the core problem with Sheldrake’s views. There are lots of genuinely good points to make about the corruption of research, the conflation of science with institutional authority and so on. But what he wants is to be paid to research things that are very likely to be useless. Medical science, despite its flaws, is actionable: you can at least in theory read a research paper and then cure someone with the knowledge contained within. Research that pre-supposes the existence of a mind separate from the body may or may not be valid in some philosophical sense, but it’s not actually useful for anything, nor is detecting a P=0.05 effect suggesting telepathy in dogs. If it was useful he could find funding from outside of government sources and use it to create a terrifying group of billionaire superpower-wielding X-Men or something. No such group exists which is pretty good evidence that ESP is not actually real and parapsychology is just more noise being churned out by a grossly over-funded state-run research endeavor.
So. We need people to criticize the scientific institutions. But we probably don’t need it to be by people who are actually benefiting from the corruption of the existing system, who see little to complain about in COVID research and whose primary complaint is that Wikipedia keeps deleting their articles on mind reading dogs. It needs to be criticism by people who remember that at the end of the day academia doesn’t spring from nothing like a natural phenomenon: it’s your local barman, bus driver, cleaner, office worker, son daughter mother and brother who pay the cheque for all this.
If what you took from this is he wants free money to research dog telepathy I think you are using your own subjective bias rather than his to find your conclusion.
An example paper is:
“EXPERIMENTAL TESTS FOR TELEPHONE TELEPATHY”, 2003, Sheldrake & Smart
which notes in the conclusion:
(fortunately the Telephone Telepathy paper appears to have been funded by charities of various kinds rather than the government!)
His criticisms of science seem to mostly come from this angle – that this sort of research gets neglected. Hence the absence of discussion about the problems in COVID research, despite Freddy’s best effort to drag the interview in that direction. It’s hard not to view the interview through the same lens.
I do agree, most of what he seems to be intersted, like the dogs, is silly, and I fear his attempts at using science to work with spiritual, or paranormal, is very misguided indeed.
But I like his way that a belief in science does not mean a belief in ultimate are incompatible. That that is his main push, that the two are not mutually exclusive. He is a kook, and I would not wish his funding to increase as I think research in ‘Paranormal’ is a bad thing for many reasons.
But I do agree that the Mind is more than the Brian, and pointing out that is why I liked the interview.
Fair enough then!
…..Sheldrake’s ideas about morphogenesis are really what deserve serious attention, not the suggested experiments whether such physical fields exist, which as here, naturally attract a degree of derision.
mmmm, it seems that you are starting from the view that the results of his research will be useless…. hence the government will waste money on this….. what makes you so sure it will be useless????
I did allow for the possibility that ESP is real in my comment. As I said, if their claims are true then they’re mavericks who will go down in history as heroes.
But it seems incredibly unlikely that we’d have evolved the ability to use powers so exotic they break all known physical laws and create time-travel paradoxes, but not so well that these powers are actually visible or consciously accessible. Just judged by evolutionary theory alone that’s quite a stretch.
Renaming Lockdown TV how about UnLock TV if the aim is to get particular views open to scrutiny?
… or “UnLocked TV”
Good guest – I skipped the previous Dawkins/Freddy talk as I find Dawkins a total creepshow, and so may have liked this guy more as his book, and jabs, are obviously directed at the scientist-ist and Militant Atheist Dawkins. I studied ‘The Selfish Gene’, and know Evolutionary Biologists have a weird mindset. Bret Weinstein, who Freddy also did, is one too – an Atheist Mechanismist, a universe of ‘God as a Clock-maker’, but without the God bit…., or Dawkin’s ‘The Blind Watchmaker,’ So it is fun to hear the opposite science side of the coin.
The minute 9:45 – 10:45 was a good beginning, the mind as greater than the brain.
But he lost me at hallucinogenics as I feel they are a great cloud on the issue of what is ultimate because they fool the brain, they totally fake reality in a very believable way, they are the charlatan, not the truth. They are the convincing con man Shaman, not enlightenment, rather the opposite.
Anyway, having seen a great deal of the world, the religious, spiritual, human, and a really great deal indeed of Nature, I am very suspicious of his sort of nod towards Pantheist Spiritualism that he kind of hints at. I feel his direction without the anchor of Christianity would be dark indeed. CS Louis and his wonderful book ‘That Hideous Strength’ is the most frightening book ever written on what happens when science and spiritual join without the goodness and restraints of God.
So, a good talk, but I took nothing from it in the end but for how the system censors any unorthodox thinking from the media. He lacks any kind of unified point. He needs to work on some kind of ontological argument sort of thing, like a ‘what it all means’, rather than snips which together build nothing coherent I could get, but that mechanical science fails in seeing truth (which it does). I guess I should read his book, but doubt I will as I am past interest in philosophy, and am now just in the Annie Dillard, spiritual, mind set of life: ‘Seems we just set down here, and don’t nobody know why’ with a Christian bias.
I am in almost complete agreement with him and his views.
I do believe that there is more NOT understood in the brain and mind than IS. If we are exploring things that were dismissed as pseudoscience in the past, and if it is being rejected by old mainstream scientists like Richard Dawkins, then it leads me to believe that they (old science) are actually AFRAID of being toppled over and that’s why they are sticking so religiously to one view & shutting down possibilities of new way of looking at things. The world WAS flat before it WAS round.
I do believe that this FEAR among mainstream scientists leads them to group together to protect themselves from an attack of being proven wrong. Hence we may be at the cusp of new discoveries and new science. The science that challenges us, is also humble and thus progressive. In the future, perhaps the old science of the ‘matter’ may be laughed at as a dogma especially the medical science where the human body cannot be disassociated with its mind. There is an incredible amount that is misunderstood or not understood at all ie not been ventured into.
I may not agree with his view that technology is bringing more of us together ( like for church services) because physical human contact is rooted in our biology. You cannot satisfy it with zoom calls. But I agree that our world wide travel obsession needed curbing and we have to wean ourselves away from travelling afar regularly in order to have a holiday.
All said I can’t help feel annoyed that it had to come to this lockdown to come to terms with our obsessions, that science/ purveyors of science could have handled it better. I’ve lost much faith in them.
A great discussion. As a follow-on, I would so love to hear Freddie interview either Jacques Vallee or one of two SUNY Albany physicists — Kevin Knuth or Matt Szydagis — on the UFO phenomena.
To me, it’s obvious that science cannot explain everything, and any intelligent child would be able to tell you that. That is, before they start taking science classes. I had very severe hepatitis when I was working for Save the Children Fund in Sudan in 1982, nearly died, and had a Near Death Experience which lasted several days, or longer. During this time (when I could hardly get out of bed to dag myself to the toilet a few steps away), I felt that I was hovering above my bed, and could see myself lying there, and I felt extremely happy, although happy is much too small a word to describe how I felt. So I’m very open to the idea that science is useful but finite, and that there is an infinity of other stuff out there which works all the time, and cannot be described as scientific in any classical sense. Like, for example, a dog knowing that its master is going home.
I don’t know. “Towards Enlightenment TV” or “TETV” maybe? Hard to think of a name that doesn’t sound “holier than thou.”
NAME CHANGE SUGGESTION:
UNLOCKED TV