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- #5 06 Oct 89 14:29:17 [2]
- From: Rick Moen
- To: All
- Subj: Review in "The Nation"
-
- Keith Rowell (keithr@tolkien.WV.TEK.COM) has made reference in this
- discussion group to "the perceptive book review of Not Necessarily
- the New Age (Prometheus Press) by Tom Anthanasiou posted here
- recently" (review from "The Nation", July 10, 1989, pp 61-3).
- As chance would have it, Mr. Athanasiou recently sent me a copy
- of that review and asked for my comments. Following is the text
- of my recent reply:
-
- Dear Tom:
-
- First of all, thank you for the copy of your review from "The
- Nation". It's always a pleasure to read a well-written review of
- any type, and I collect those on topics like yours, as part of my
- little hobby of being a card-carrying skeptic.
-
- May I indulge myself with a few comments? It might help to tell
- you a bit about my own perspective, first. I'm an old-time leftie,
- a sort of anarcho-socialist: volunteer worker on a far-left
- kibbutz in Israel, volunteer campaign worker for Art Agnos, Leo
- Ryan, Ron Dellums, & Jesse Jackson, ACLU member, NOW member,
- donator to Greenpeace, that sort of thing. Your article was all
- the more interesting, given that background.
-
- So, your skirting around the brink of saying that New Age-ism is
- (or might be) some sort of progressive force was one of the things
- that perplexed me. You do this in several places: "[The New Age]
- shares its dark visions, if not always its metaphysical
- conclusions, with ecological movements and often with the left."
- "The left, for its part, can't afford such an easy dismissal, for
- in the New Age we can measure a profound alienation, one that we've
- largely failed to link to an attractive and compelling vision of
- socialism."
-
- You do draw back from the brink to say "New Age theorists are
- largely hostile not only to the left tradition, which they see as
- bound to reductionism and domination, but to critical thought and
- historical analysis as well [etc.]", yet I sense that you are
- looking back wistfully. Tom, New Age thought has, to date, been
- antithetical to ANY organized political efforts. A movement that
- teaches people not to analyse is NOT going to be an effective force
- for meaningful social change.
-
- On the other hand, you ascribe to the skeptics a hidebound
- ideological stance "that scientific knowledge can be easily and
- unproblematically abstracted from the society that holds it", and
- "rejects superstitions about the supernatural world only to embrace
- equally superstitious beliefs in science". This IS NOT THE
- SKEPTICISM I'M FAMILIAR WITH.
-
- Skeptics use scientific inquiry as, as a friend of mine puts it,
- "a neat tool". Belief in science is NOT a part of it. I do know
- some folks who do take part in a quaint worship of science -- I
- keep them at a distance. The day that belief becomes prevalent in
- skepticism is the day I and many others drop out.
-
- You would not criticise your neighbourhood carpenter for a
- "superstitious belief in hammers", so why criticise skeptics for
- their attraction to the tool called science? Yet, as BAS Secretary
- and as system operator of our computer conference system, I hear
- this sort of (unsupported) criticism all the time. We are (take
- your pick) fundamentalist materialists, victims of scientism,
- scientific realists, logical positivists, atheistic humanists,
- simple-minded rationalists, and/or bourgeois ideologues, according
- to our critics. And I didn't even get a bumper sticker!
-
- Also, skeptics already have their work cut out for them. Our
- chosen area of concentration is the EXAMINATION OF TESTABLE CLAIMS,
- in the fringe-science/medicine and paranormal fields. That's quite
- a task. We should be critics of science and epistemology, too?
- If we don't take on that additional chore, does that mean we
- "embrace superstitious beliefs in science" and are "bourgeois
- ideologues"?
-
- You also say that "science is a form of power as well as a method,
- and there are good reasons to distrust, not to say hate, its
- existing institutions". But we don't anywhere endorse those
- institutions. We teach and advocate a particular application of
- critical thought. I submit that critical thought is a (welcome)
- threat generally to entrenched institutions. Who is more likely
- to empower people to attack those institutions, the New Agers, who
- shun critical thought, or we, who teach it?
-
- You say "Martin Gardner, James Randi, and other luminaries of the
- skeptical movement are mercilessly logical in their pursuit of
- superstitious bunko, but they're uncritical to the point of
- servility when it comes to science and instrumental technology. And
- when high technology is at issue, artificial intelligence and
- nuclear power plants, skeptics are prone to an optimism both naive
- and credulous...." Well, I have ALL the back issues of "Skeptical
- Inquirer" and "BASIS" (our newsletter), and I can't find that
- ANYWHERE. Where, sir, might I find it?
-
- You certainly won't find it in our organization, and certainly not
- in ME. I'm no Feyerabend or Roszak, but I am a critic of science
- institutions and of technology, particularly of the type you
- mention. In addition, like most skeptics, I respect other
- approaches to knowledge (such as anthropology, non-scientific
- psychology, and mystical experience), where they are appropriate.
-
- The skeptics' movement has had two good tactical reasons to remain
- silent on political issues of all kinds: 1. The movement caters
- to very diverse sorts. There's a significant (but definitely
- minority) libertarian contingent, an almost equal number of genuine
- lefties (the chair and vice-chair of BAS are, respectively, a
- "Black Scholar Magazine" worker/Black Panther hanger-on and a
- dedicated union activist), some Norman Rockwell Reaganites, and the
- rest are all over the map. ANY political alignment would
- drastically restrict our appeal, and so be unwise. 2. In the
- opinion of many, it would diminish our credibility, reduce our
- impact, and diffuse our efforts. For similar reasons, we stay
- clear of purely philosophical/ethical disputes.
-
- So, those of us who DO advocate political change do so outside of
- the skeptics' movement, and hope that in the long term, less public
- credulity toward channeling, UFOs, psychic surgery, and other
- opiates will stimulate more interest in real societal change.
-
- Notwithstanding the fact that it is not our chosen field to examine
- epistemological problems, the psychology of belief, and so on, you
- WILL find such examination in the pages of "Skeptical Inquirer" and
- "BASIS". Thus I find your allegation of its absence to be
- mystifying. I refer you in particular to "SI" XIV.1 pp. 25-34,
- XIII.4 pp. 365-90, XIII.1 pp. 70-75, XII.4 376-85, XI.4 pp 44-50,
- IX.1 pp 36-55, and "BASIS" of June 1987 (on metaphysics) for
- starters.
-
- Even if all we did was "debunk", a world with less bunk would be
- a better place, no? However, that is NOT all we do!
-
- Your further comments would be most welcome, if you have time. If
- you would like to write an article for "BASIS" on problems of
- skepticism or most any topic, I'm sure it would be warmly received.
-
- -- Rick Moen, Secretary, Bay Area Skeptics
- (Rick_Moen@f27.n125.z1.fidonet.org)
- Sysop, The Skeptic's Board, 415-648-8944, 1:125/27, 8:914/207
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