Scientism: A New Religion?

By Michael Grosso

 

The title of an essay published by Michael Shermer in the Scientific American a while back caught my eye: ‘The Shamans of Scientism”. It was faintly alarming. I could make sense of “a scientifically educated shaman”, somebody who brings a scientific attitude to (say) the healing practices of a shaman.

What puzzled me was Shermer’s use of the term scientism. According to the Shorter Oxford Dictionary, it’s defined like this: “Excessive belief in the power of scientific knowledge and techniques, or in the applicability of the methods of physical science to other fields, especially human behavior and the social sciences, freq. depreciative.” Does Shermer really mean to be preaching the unscientific excesses of scientism? It is possible he’s unacquainted with the meaning of the term? Or was he trying to be humorous or ironical?

Scientism is reductive materialism in action and could only be dismissive of the assumption of spirits in shamanism. So the title seems to want to make fun of itself, but in fact is incoherent. To be consistent, scientism would have to rank shamanism as nonsense. A shaman of scientism must be a highly conflicted creature.

The point of the author’s mini-manifesto of reductionism is to hasten the twilight of the gods. Make way all you gods of old! It’s time for a new religion, according to scribe Shermer. Stephan Hawking, we are told with a wink, is the new “Delphic Oracle” and “the scientific equivalent of the deity.” Shermer himself seems the equivalent of the enthusiast or the devotee.

So far not so bad, but the new religion of scientism – is, alas! like many religions, intolerant. So in Shermer’s fantasy, scientism will banish from being, he says– “eschews supernatural and paranormal speculations.” A sweeping negation. Eschews – a prissy word – shun, avoid vast regions of human experience. How tyrannical we can be with other people’s experience!

Free speculation is suppressed in the State of Scientism, certain subject matters and fields of subjectivity are proscribed, redacted, made to go away. Scientism is a blueprint for a very subtle but wearing type of metaphysical oppression, the assumption being: If it can’t be explained by physical agency, it’s not allowed to exist!   Or if it does exist, it must be in a form of ontological low-life.

Ideas have consequences. By order of the Scientistic Police Force, you may not have a transcendent near-death experience, nor are you allowed to have a telepathic impression of your child in danger, and it’s utterly inappropriate to see a ghost. I could go on. We need to underscore this. Many things are forbidden in the Land of Scientism.

Come to think of it, you most certainly cannot and will never be allowed in public to levitate.

Moreover, any unseemly displays of ecstatic swooning may land you in metaphysical jail. So, goodbye, Joseph of Copertino! In scientism country, the penal system for anomalous offenders is enormous.   There are more prisons in that part of the world than there are private homes and libraries.

The trouble with Scientism is that it truncates the universe of possibilities; and it’s thoroughly out of tune with the soul, heart and mind of collective humanity.

It’s also important to note that science as such cannot provide practical wisdom; no calculations or experiments can determine our moral, social, or aesthetic choices. They may figure in the choices we make but not determine them.

We can use science to destroy or elevate life; but science by itself cannot make the choice. We have to dig deeper than the world of measurable certainties for that. My conclusion: science, yes; scientism, no thank you.

About The Author

Michael Grosso, Ph.D. is an independent scholar and part of an ever growing group of scholars and thinkers critical of the prevailing materialistic view of the world. He has taught humanities and philosophy at Marymount Manhattan College, City University of New York, and City University of New Jersey. The Man Who Could Fly: St. Joseph of Copertino and the Mystery of Levitation is his 6th book.
Michael is proud to announce the recent publication of  Wings of Ecstasy: Domenico Bernini’s Biography of St. Joseph of Copertino (1722) , translated by Cynthia Clough. Abridged, with Commentary by Michael Grosso.

 

 




Come Follow Us on Twitter     –   Come Like Us on Facebook

 Check us out on  Instagram   –   And Sign Up for our Newsletter