Friday, September 10, 2010

God, the universe, and selling books

I have a comment on the Prospect blog about the way the media has been hyperventilating (see here and here (Graham Farmelo being characteristically astute) and here) about Stephen Hawking. Here is how it started out. [Incidentally, I can't figure out why my last paragraphs are reverting to Roman typeface. Sorry for this distraction.]


It’s a harsh reality of journalistic life that you will sometimes have to write up ‘news’ that is neither new nor significant, simply because your editor knows that everyone else will do so. That is the generous interpretation of the blanket media coverage of Stephen Hawking’s pronouncement that God is no longer needed to create the universe.

Hawking has form in this arena, having previously been accorded oracular status when he uttered some comment about a Theory of Everything permitting us to ‘know the Mind of God’, the kind of idle metaphor that only someone lacking any serious interest in the interface of science and religion would employ. Hawking clearly had not read Francis Bacon’s Advancement of Learning, which wisely declares that ‘if any man think, by his inquiries after material things, to discover the nature or will of God, he is indeed spoiled by vain philosophy.’ Although interpretations of Bacon’s pieties as those of a closet atheist minding his back are unlikely, he did at least have the good taste thus to dispense with God at the outset.

Let’s not be too harsh on Hawking: the man is one of the best physicists in the world. The problem is that, in the public view, this statement probably seems as absurd as saying that Messi is a good striker: a lame way of acknowledging incomparable genius. Most people will be astonished to hear that Hawking is not rated by his peers among the top ten physicists even of the 20th century, let alone of all time. They probably imagine he has so far been denied a Nobel prize out of sheer jealousy. Hawking is extremely smart, but so are others, and he is a long way from being Einstein’s successor.

More importantly, Hawking has no reputation among scientists as a deep thinker. There is nothing especially profound in what he has said to date about the social and philosophical implications of science in general and cosmology in particular. There is far more wisdom in the views of Martin Rees, John Barrow or Phil Anderson, not to mention the old favourites Einstein, Bohr and Feynman. Hawking’s latest remarks on the redundancy of God have little depth, as Paul Davies showed easily enough in the Guardian: if you have any kind of law-like regularity in the universe, the door is always open for those who like to attribute it to God. And Mary Warnock (no religious apologist) points out – or reminds us that Hume pointed out – that the Biblical God is not simply or even primarily a God who made the universe. It’s a sterile debate, as Bacon already saw.

This makes it ridiculous, then, that Hawking’s announcement in his new book The Grand Design (I’m currently reviewing this, and will post the review shortly) has been greeted as though it is the final judgement of science on the Biblical Creation: Hawking Has Spoken. Even atheists must feel some sympathy for the likes of Rowan Williams having to comment on such a shallow assertion, as though Hawking is supposed to have set the foundations of their faith quaking. Hawking is speaking about the God of Boyle and Newton, not the God of contemporary theology. (This is not to deny that millions still believe in this anachronistic, childish vision of God, who waved his fingers and made the world, but just to say that it is a bit silly to pander to it.)

So why does Hawking get awarded this status by the idolatory press? It’s time to stop being squeamish and take the bull by the horns. The Cult of Hawking is the Cult of the Great Mind in the Useless Body. It is attributable in part to a simple, ghoulish fascination with the man’s physical disability, but more so (and more troublingly) to the unspoken astonishment that a man with such severe bodily impairment can be intelligent. It speaks volumes about our persistent prejudices about disability.

I find it disturbing that the media plays along with this so readily, even while now seemingly keen to feign blindness to Hawking’s condition. It is hard to know whether Hawking recognizes this situation himself. He has always seemed inspiringly stoical, even gently self-mocking, in the face of the extreme challenges of his affliction. If he knows that his fame and reputation stem from his illness, no one has any right to expect him to comment on it. But as for the rest of us: the more we turn Hawking into a guru, the more we do a disservice to everyone else whose minds are vibrant while their bodies are impaired.

3 comments:

JimmyGiro said...

From your experience as an author, do you think that the publisher could be the prime motivation?

If so, it doesn't paint a pretty picture, envisioning a Fagin like character, inducing the little Oliver Twisted to: "You got to pick apocryphal or two."

As an 'old atheist', I'm growing deeply sceptical regarding the true motives behind the 'New Atheist' movement. I can't look at Dawkins any more, without seeing the Fabian Polly Toynbee peering over his halo.

These 'New Atheists' rap themselves in the flag of science, yet contribute nothing to it. Their hobby doesn't need scientific authority if it is based on good reason, hence science gets nothing from the deal, yet risks political association with who ever is driving that campaign.

You might ask yourself: why does 'science' need to challenge religion now, when real science was doing splendidly, thank you very much, for the last 200 years; whilst religion was busily sinking into private contemplation?

As a games player, my instinct is roused; I smell Fabians, and Marxist-Feminists. And I see the rising of a state that will suffer no other gods before it; that so shames its own politicians, that the Leviathan of the state no longer needs to take orders from the etiolated parliamentary democracy; that it keeps alive as a half dead stalking horse, to dupe the 'free men' from thoughts of insurrection.

Or maybe Jeremy Kyle can tell me what to think?

Edward said...

re: typeface issues

Try: blogger.com > Edit Posts > select Edit "offending post" > select the Edit Html tab > ...

In this view you should be able to see the html markup that's causing the font change. Likely something you inhereted when you cut and paste into the Compose mode.

Alex Rowbotham said...

Re: type face issue

Edward is correct, you should remove:

style="font-family: Times; font-size: 12pt;

from within the preceeding tag < > to the offending paragragh.