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| [Reprinted from The
Gargoyle, April, 1961] |
Because of the brilliant scientific and technological achievements of
the past few decades, a certain degree of cleavage is arising between
the scientists and the mass of the people. Whereas at one time people
looked with skepticism mixed with a little scorn, though possibly tinged
with some fear on scientists puttering around in their laboratories,
today they appear to look upon them as though they were gods. If any
problem arises the people almost instinctively feel that the scientists
can solve it. This near veneration is mixed with an indefinable feeling
of fear, that fear which besets all when confronted by something which
is not understood. And the people do not understand science.
If they did they would realize that scientists are not gods. They are
men just like the rest of us. Most of them are routine investigators who
merely refine the knowledge which has been discovered. Only occasionally
does an Einstein arise with a revolutionary concept of Nature which
results in mankind taking a drastically new turn.
Paradoxically, today, when so many look upon science as the cause of
many of our problems, as the atom bomb, and also as the means of solving
these problems, actually the real causes and solutions of our problems
lie in the domain of economics and morality. Surprisingly, an atomic
scientist, Dr. Polykarp Kusch, winner of the Nobel prize for physics in
1955, brought this out. He said "the crucial issues of this age are
not strongly related to the discovery of new scientific knowledge and
the elaboration of new techniques; rather they relate most importantly
to having man become attunded to a world that is heavily conditioned by
science and technology.
Science cannot do a very large number of
things and to assume that science may find a technical solution to all
problems is the road to disaster.
The problems facing man are ethical ones and science cannot give
answers to those problems. It may help but that is about all. Dr. Kusch
said "science, in itself, is not the source of the ethical
standards, the moral insight, the wisdom that is needed to make
value-judgments; though it is an important ingredient in the making of
value-judgments. Social, political and military decisions are made on
grounds other than those in which science is authoritative."
And these problems which face the people must be solved by the people.
They cannot let the so-called experts solve them. Without realizing it,
men people look to the "experts" to solve the great social and
economic problems, they are, in effect, adopting the statist concept.
They are adopting the belief that they should be told what to do. When
they do that they lose their freedom, they 1ose their dignity, and their
problems become worse instead of better. Dr. Kusch says "an
appalling number of citizens believe that it is up to the scientist to
make the judgment, as though he had an especially valid set of values.
This leads to an abdication of the right and the responsibility of every
mail to participate in the forming the fabric of his society."
To those suffering from the delusion that science will bring utopia Dr.
Kusch says "I am quite certain that the mass of men believe that
the better world of tomorrow will come through science. I think that the
belief ought to be publicly combated. ...You would all agree that the
technical excellence of television does not guarantee that it will
enrich life to say nothing of demeaning it. ...The point that science
alone will not create the good life should be endlessly explored by the
press."
The problems today really are the problems which have always been
present in man's history -- economic and moral. The fundamental one is
how to divide the unequal opportunities of the earth among the equal
claimants to those opportunities with justice to all. That is an
economic and a moral problem. To the extent that science can help focus
man's attention on this problem, to that extent it can be of assistance.
But it can never, itself, solve the problem. Henry George recognized
that the crucial problem was this one of the just division of the
earth's opportunities and warned that unless it was solved, the great
civilization we had built would go the way all previous civilizations
have gone.
So, our job today is to keep pounding away constantly day after day on
this problem and its solution, the broad outlines of which are contained
in Henry George's works. This is the really great work of man and those
who enlist in it, though they gain nothing material, will have the
satisfaction of knowing that they are striving to bring to the world
light on this fundamental task which the Almighty gave to man in return
for giving him a portion of His Divinity.
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