Already, the Trump presidency has scored a clear success. It
has gotten progressives to care about facts. Surely, it’s a good thing. If people know more facts they can think more rationally. More rational thinking means less emotion. We
are happy to welcome progressives to the club.
And yet, it’s bait and switch. Progressives, liberals and
the alt-left do not really believe in facts. Idealistic to a fault, they
worship ideas. Theirs is an alternative world, one that is more fiction than
reality.
In a better political world idealism would be the province
of the liberal left while respect for tradition and pragmatism would belong to conservatism.
Or better, we would see the divide that Henry Kissinger defined for the world
of foreign policy, where Wilsonian idealism often clashed and competed against
Kissingerian balance-of-power diplomacy.
On the other hand, back in the day the rallying cry of the American
conservative movement was: “Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice.
Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.” Surely, it does not take
too much understanding of history to know that those words would have been more
congenial to Maximilien Roberpierre than to Edmund
Burke.
As I said, in a better world the distinctions would be
clearer.
Some thinking is idea-driven and some is fact-driven. For
example, some people believe that America is an idea. Even some conservatives
believe this. Others believe that it’s a country. Ideas do not have borders or
boundaries. You can think an idea, but you cannot belong to it. You do not need to be a citizen to vote in an
idea. You do need to be a citizen to vote in a country. Being a citizen confers
duties and responsibilities. Believing in an idea does not.
Ideas present themselves as narratives and theories. Those
who believe in ideas will cherry-pick facts to sustain their idea. For an
idealist the narrative is never wrong. The goal is to persuade you to believe
in the idea, not to discover the truth by weighing the facts.
Idealists need to subject people to this mental seduction
because their ideas make no sense. Based on no empirical evidence, Sigmund Freud
convinced large numbers of people that they really, really wanted to copulate
with their mothers. Let’s show enough decency not to call it science.
Science, like all empirical thinking, begins with facts. It
formulates a hypothesis and subjects it to experimental verification. Or
falsification, as the case may be. As philosopher Karl Popper once argued, if
you will not allow facts to refute your theory you are not doing science.
From Plato to Kant and beyond, the great thinkers of Western
idealism have rejected facts. They have argued that we cannot know things as
they are, but we can only know them as they appear
to our senses and our minds.
By their theories, a fact is not a fact when it is an
appearance. That is, when it appears to be indicating something that it is not indicating.
If forensic science determines that your fingerprint is on a
murder weapon, it’s a fact. If you were in Egypt riding a camel in the desert
at the time the crime was committed, that is also a fact. An unscrupulous
prosecutor might develop a theory that is confirmed by the fingerprint and
discredited by the alibi. If so he might emphasize the fingerprint and forget
to mention your alibi. In his
alternative reality you were not where you were. You were where you needed to
be to prove him right. He does not seek the truth. He seeks to convict you. He
does not present what really happen. He produces an alternative reality.
A clue can be a fact without telling you who did the crime. In some cases, especially with DNA evidence, the clue, in itself, suffices to identify the criminal. A detective wants first do know who did it-- that's why detective stores are called whodunits. Then a prosecutor will try to explain to a jury what happened. Keep in mind, a fact that identifies the criminal is not the same as a fact that appears to identify the criminal. You can concoct a narrative to prove either, but only one is true.
Of course, the criminal justice system is organized to
prevent prosecutors from suppressing inconvenient facts. Scientific research requires the presentation of all
the facts, not just those that appear to prove a certain ideal.
The political sphere is far less concerned with facts. Except
now, where people who prefer ideals to facts are currently in highest dudgeon
over the Trump presidency… because he does not respect the facts. Trump’s
opponents are emotionally overwrought; they are wailing and flailing, consumed
by impotent rage. Having taken leave of their rational faculties they have
yielded to emotion. They believe that if they feel strongly about something
that must mean that they are right, beyond any doubt. About the facts!
And yet, by definition, people who are so emotionally overwrought that they have overcome all doubt are not respecting the facts, or the faculty of reason. They ought to have heeded Richard Feynman’s words: “All scientific
knowledge is uncertain.” When you are have achieved complete certainty you are
not doing science and you are not dealing in facts. In common parlance we say
that you have lost your mind.
The concern for fact is a novelty on the American left. Remember
Benghazi. Remember when we were told that it had been caused by a video. How
many of today’s intrepid truth tellers refused to say that the Obama
administration had been lying. How many of them dared assert that the Secretary
of State bore responsibility for the death of the American ambassador? Even if
we accept that Hillary Clinton was asleep at the time of the attack or that
nothing could have been done, she as Secretary of State was responsible for the
safety of the ambassador. Even if it was factually true that she was not
involved, it was also a fact that she was responsible.
The alt-left has been hard at work trying to undermine our
confidence in the facts. They want us to ignore the facts, to refuse to let the
facts or the results obtained by an experiment or by the market influence our
judgment. This is the first step toward mind control.
Today, they have convinced a large number of people that a
human being with XY chromosomes and a male genital apparatus is--if he so
believes-- a female. If you accept that, you are on the way to accepting that
beliefs supersede reality.
Some zealots insist that they can foresee the future and
that their knowledge of the climate’s future is “settled science.” Yet, we have
it on the highest philosophical authority that predictions cannot be facts.
Ludwig Wittgenstein famously said that, while today’s weather is a fact,
tomorrow’s weather is a hypothesis—to be verified or falsified by empirical
data.
Similarly, today’s climate is a fact. Tomorrow’s climate is
a hypothesis. The next century’s climate is, frankly speaking, a prophecy. All
of the world’s computer simulations cannot make it into a fact. Why else would
they call them “simulations?”
If your thinking is idea-driven you will cling to your
narrative, whatever the facts say. If you believe in Barack Obama’s messianic
powers you will ignore facts that
suggest otherwise. If you see Donald Trump as the Antichrist you will reject
any fact that refutes your belief.
Idea-driven thinkers belong to what Plato called the
guardian class. Today we call them the elites. They see the Ideas more clearly
than you and know what is best for you. During the last election media elites
believed that they needed to forestall a Trump presidency by skewing the facts
to fit their theory.
After the election, the media guardians were appalled to see
that so many people had voted for Donald Trump. Some, like the New York Times,
offered pro forma apologies, but then
they went back to slanting the news. When you apologize and then go back to
doing what you apologized for, your apology is insincere.
Recently, the Times editorialized that Trump suffers from an
“allergy to empirical facts.” With a peculiar mix of anguish and pomposity, it
added that Trump’s allergy was causing him to attack a media “whose job it is to report accurately and to
hold politicians to account for the things they say and do — goals that are
anathema to a huckster.” That is, Trump hurt their feelings.
Didn’t the Times media columnist, Jim Rutenberg apologize
for the paper’s failure to provide its readers with sufficient facts to allow
them to form a reasoned judgment? When you report accurately only the facts
that sustain your ideologically-driven narrative you are not reporting the
facts. How many times did the paper call out Barack Obama for promising that people could keep their doctors and their insurance plans? How many times did the newspaper call Obama a liar?
And, how often did the Times hold Obama accountable for
his failures? Prof. Cornell West, a card-carrying alt-leftist, wrote in the Guardian
that Obama’s cheerleaders in the media had rendered him a disservice by failing
to hold him to account. When Cornell West is thinking more clearly than you are,
you have a problem.
"If people know more facts they can think more rationally. More rational thinking means less emotion. We are happy to welcome progressives to the club." Perhaps they can think more rationally, but they will refuse to do so.
ReplyDelete"Of course, the criminal justice system is organized to prevent prosecutors from suppressing inconvenient facts. Scientific research requires the presentation of all the facts, not just those that appear to prove a certain ideal." And yet, that happens with some prosecutors.
"The alt-left has been hard at work trying to undermine our confidence in the facts. They want us to ignore the facts, to refuse to let the facts or the results obtained by an experiment or by the market influence our judgment. This is the first step toward mind control." I've recently seen "ctrl-left" used instead of "alt-left", and think it a much more apt descriptor.
"...Trump’s allergy was causing him to attack a media “whose job it is to report accurately and to hold politicians to account for the things they say and do — goals that are anathema to a huckster.” Well, it IS supposed to be the media's job, and that ISN'T what they are doing.
"Ludwig Wittgenstein famously said that, while today’s weather is a fact, tomorrow’s weather is a hypothesis—to be verified or falsified by empirical data."
ReplyDeleteYet the position of the moon at 1300 GMT on February 20 of 2154 is very close to being a fact. Some simulations do model reality so closely that they can be granted a very high believability status.
The problem is that too many people fail to distinguish among the levels of trust that should be assigned to different *kinds* of simulation, preferring to wave their hands and talk about "science."
It is useful to look at narrative vs. facts.
ReplyDeleteThe problem emerges most strikingly when the facts don't fit the media/academia/entertainment/bureaucratic narrative about how the world works. That's how we get Deplorables. That's how we got analysis of the Election Day returns. That's how we get Brexit people being "small-minded." Repeat, repeat, repeat until it's unchallenged. Not true -- but unchallenged.
The media abandoned facts long ago when they began to sift facts through their biases and worldview. For them, everything is scale: big, bigger, biggest. Therefore, it is easier to cover what goes on in Washington. And given D.C.'s voting history, there is a definite narrative to how the world works.
Sam L.: I like ctrl-left
David Foster: You are correct. Predictive modeling and simulations of mindbogglingly-complex systems like climate will never be accurate. Scent proclaimed a "butterfly effect" in chaos theory decades ago, but we're still stuck talking about climate like it's a static system. And they use all the weather events to bolster their Climate Change case, but then tell us "Weather is not climate." Then they chant "Science says..." and move onto telling us we're one step closer to destroying the planet.
The problem we face is narrative. Most all the narrative-producing industries (media, new reporters, actors, lyricists, teachers, professors, etc.) believe in an identical narrative. That's a powerful coalition to repeat the same thing over and over until the majority of people believe it.
The trick to distinguishing narrative is to look ahead to how the story ends, or who wins. With the current cast of characters, it's always government. Government just gets bigger and bigger. Ctrl-Left, indeed.
David, celestial mechanics (Moon forecasting example) is a straightforward problem solved with an analytical closed-form (albeit sometimes complex) mathematical expression called a model. It's true that the Moon won't be precisely at the predicted point due to random perturbations (eg, space objects moving by), but, as you note, the model will be close.
ReplyDeleteIn everyday conversation, a computer simulation is applied to problems having no known closed-form solutions, like telecom network traffic management or, horrors, climate. Usually, these problems are simply too complex to model in closed form.
So comparing the two is really apples/oranges. But you're right, it's tempting to look at models and lump them with simulations. Dangerous mistake, though. :-)
It's particularly confusing, and vexing, when simulations are called computer models.
TW....I'm pretty sure that the multiple-body problem in celestial mechanics can't be solved analytically but needs to be solved numerically....that is certainly the case with artillery trajectory calculations, for example. In both cases, you can write the differential equations that describe the problem, but the solution requires stepping through small intervals of time and repeatedly doing the appropriate calculations. Unlike the situation with, say, a simple falling body in a vacuum, where you *can* start with the equation that describes the motion and derive analytically another equation that will tell you the solution...no step-by-step computation required.
ReplyDeleteSo I think it is accurate to refer to the celestial mechanics problem, like the artillery trajectory problem, as a model.
I agree. And you're right about the 3-Body Problem. It's humbling (or should be) how fast we get to problems that hit the limits.
DeleteOne of my favorite jokes is about perfectly elastic spherical horses moving in a vacuum on a frictionless track.
RE: Guided Missile Guidance; How It Works
ReplyDeletehttp://www.tacmissileers.org/usaf-training-missile-guidance/
To be fair, Cornell West was critical of Obama for compromising too much and not standing up to the Republicans, and like not standing up for his black brothers enough.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2015/06/22/cornel_west_on_obama_the_first_black_president_has_become_the_first_niggerized_black_president.html
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Reacting to President Obama's use of the n-word on Marc Maron's podcast, Cornel West called him the first "niggerized" president in an appearance on CNN. West criticized Obama as "a person who is afraid and intimidated when it comes to putting a spotlight on white supremacy."
"Too many black people are niggerized," West said Monday on CNN. "I would say the first black president has become the first niggerized black president."
"A niggerized black person is a black person who is afraid and scared and intimidated when it comes to putting a spotlight on white supremacy and fighting against white supremacy," West explained. "So when many of us said we have to fight against racism, what were we told? 'No, he can't deal with racism because he has other issues, political calculations. He's the president of all America, not just black America.' We know he's president of all America but white supremacy is American as cherry pie."
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And racism is clearly a complicated place where "facts are not facts". Or the problem is maybe the difference between "single facts" and "patterns of facts". Its easier to deal with single facts, but when we imagine patterns, like systemic discrimination as Blacks see, or systemic favoritism of undeserved minorities, as Whites see, both are not facts, but interpretations based on selective facts, and both sides have many true facts to support their conclusions, while both sides are necessarily incomplete.
Fact-checking is clearly necessary, yet also clearly not sufficient. People read opinion pieces because they want and need interpretations of facts. And if you consider a wide range of opinions you may have a good chance of breaking through your own predetermined conclusions and seeing something closer to what is. But if you don't pick educated and knowledgeable sources, you may end up worse than you started. But at least you might be able to see which "facts" are in dispute.
Overall it does seem like democracy is an impossibility. We all have to trust that other people know more than we do, and trust they are not trying to deceive us. Once we lose that trust, we're very vulnerable to listening to fools, and not being able to decide who is who.