Love the Inventions, Hate the Inventors: Smacking Around Mark Morford, Round 2

Markmorford_1
Once again, the otherwise smart and funny SF Gate/SF Chronicle columnist Mark Morford has written a column revealing a strange and unsettling brand of New Agey religious intolerance. This time, his target is the stupidity of science — in particular, scientific studies that confirm common sense and common knowledge, and scientific studies that attempt to understand mystical and religious experience.

So once again, I’ve taken it upon myself to smack him around. Here’s my latest letter to him. Enjoy! (And let me know if you think my “persecution of Galileo” analogy went too far…)

Dear Mark,

Ned_flanders
This is getting frustrating. I usually love your column, and usually feel that we’re on the same side. But this is now the second time that you’ve written something intolerant and insulting — not to mention flat-out factually inaccurate — about people who don’t share your spiritual views. You’re beginning to sound like a New-Age version of a fundamentalist Christian, and I’m pretty sure you don’t want to be doing that.

Mushroom
I’m referring to your August 4 column, “God Is In The Magic Mushrooms,” in which you refer to the Johns Hopkins study showing that taking psilocybin mushrooms can create profound and life-changing mystical experiences. To me, this study was a beautiful example of how science and spirituality can connect, can come together to provide new information and create insight. But instead, you chose to use it as another opportunity to be snarky and bitchy and disdainful about science, with comments like “studies that merely reinforce ageless common sense,” “the illuminating shortcomings of science itself,” “the Science of the No Duh,” “smacking us upside the scientific head,” “science peering over the edge of understanding and jumping back and saying, ‘Holy crap.'” And so on, and so on.

Earth_orbit
Your dismissive remarks about scientific studies that confirm obvious, self-evident, common-sense conclusions are a good example. See, one of the most important things scientists do is investigate the obvious — because the obvious isn’t always true. It used to be obvious that the sun went around the earth. It used to be obvious that black people were inherently less intelligent than white people. It used to be obvious that ulcers were caused by stress and best treated with antacids and a bland diet. These things were obvious — but they weren’t true. It’s important to actually test the things we think are true (the ones that are testable, anyway)… because they might not be. And that’s the value of the scientific method — it short-circuits pre-conceived notions. It tells you whether or not the thing you believe is true, regardless of how strongly you believe it. It doesn’t do this 100% perfectly — the history of science is full of bad experiments whose methodology and results were warped by unconscious bias — but on the whole and in the long run, it does it pretty damn well.

Professor_frink
If your point is that science is limited, that it can’t completely explain every single facet of human experience — well, duh. But if your point is how stupid and blind scientists are for thinking that it can… that’s kind of a pointless point. The reductionist scientist who thinks science and logic can answer all questions and solve all problems — that’s a straw man, a cartoon character. I’ve never in my life known or read a scientist who thought that. I’ve never known or read a scientist who didn’t care about art and emotions and ethics and ecstasy and so on, or who believed science could answer all life’s mysteries. If you’re going to argue against science, then at least do so against science as it really is — not some made-up Professor Brainiac from a New Yorker cartoon.

Lsd25
What’s more, your “three choices” of ways to look at the experience of psychedelic drugs are not only pissily judgmental — they’re also seriously limited. I could think of half-a-dozen more just off the top of my head — and not one of your three comes close to describing my own life-altering experiences with hallucinogens. (For me, the mind-bending kicker was the revelation of just how profoundly my perception of reality could be altered simply by a minuscule amount of foreign chemicals in my brain — and the corresponding revelation of just how much of my perception of reality was my perception, and how little of it was reality.)

Brain
And since you seem to think this study somehow proves the objective reality of mystical experience, I feel compelled to point out that it does nothing of the kind. In fact, it could easily be argued that this study does the exact opposite — it demonstrates that mystical experience is a mental process, a function of the nervous system that can be induced by the consumption of a chemical compound. I’m not sure I would make that argument — but it’s not an unreasonable one.

Nelson_haha
I am particularly puzzled by the fact that you accept on its face the validity of the Johns Hopkins study — and yet at the same time you mock it for being redundant and pointless. Don’t you think that’s a little hypocritical? And do you really want to be making fun of people who are trying to understand how human consciousness works, in the most careful, most rigorous, most unbiased way they can? When scientists come up with a result that surprises them, and acknowledge their surprise with humility and awe, do you really want to respond by pointing and laughing at what ignoramuses they are? Do you really want to be one of the kids in the schoolyard making fun of the nerdy Poindexters and how they think they’re so smart? It seems to me that the researchers in the Johns Hopkins study were very respectful of the spiritual experiences of the study’s subjects — do you really want to be returning the favor with contempt?

Galileo
More to the point, do you really want to be taking the position that dumb old scientists don’t know anything about the real world, the important world, the world of the metaphysical divine whose reality always trumps the mundane physical? Because when you do that, you ally yourself philosophically with creationists. You ally yourself with the Pope who made Galileo recant about the earth orbiting the sun. And I’m pretty sure you don’t want to be doing that. I’d bet dollars to donuts that if you read a fundamentalist Christian screed about science that had the same level of snide, pitying superiority towards non-believers that your piece did, you’d be foaming at the mouth.

But here’s what truly puzzles me about your piece.

Ipod
You love technology. Passionately. You’ve written in glowing terms, and at great gushing length, about the coolness of iPods, and electric cars, and Macintosh computers, and hundred-dollar vibrators, and so on and so on.

Scientist
So what I want to know is: Who do you think makes those things? They’re not conjured into existence by New Age gurus or neo-pagan covens. They’re created by scientists and engineers. They’re created by people who think it’s important to know if their observations about the world are accurate, and who take the time to make sure that their theories work. They’re created by people who think and work more carefully, more patiently, more rigorously, with more respect for reality and more willingness to be proven wrong, than I could ever imagine being capable of myself.

Have a little respect for them.

Sincerely,
Greta Christina

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Love the Inventions, Hate the Inventors: Smacking Around Mark Morford, Round 2
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7 thoughts on “Love the Inventions, Hate the Inventors: Smacking Around Mark Morford, Round 2

  1. 1

    Nice reply to Mark Morford.
    I haven’t read any of Morford above and beyond the columns you’ve presented, so I don’t know what he normally writes about, but his mentality toward science is highly frustrating.
    As a scientist (studying the taxonomy of Psilocybe mushrooms, no less) living in the Bay Area, I run into this “New Age” mentality a lot.
    I remember talking to somebody a year back about medicinal and toxic plants – she expressed quite matter-of-factly that for any poisonous plant or mushroom, there will be another plant growing nearby that is its specific antidote. When I said I thought this idea was nonsense and could think of plenty of examples to the contrary, she seemed a bit offended. She defended the idea not on its merits, but on the fact that she’d learned it from a medicinal plant guru (forgot his name) who was supposed to be incredibly knowledgeable. When I come across this kind of “fashionable nonsense” among apparently educated people here, I think that perhaps the “progressive” parts of the country like the Bay Area really aren’t that far ahead of supposed bastions of ignorance like Kansas. People here just pick different anti-intellectual poisons.
    They seem to think that somehow science, and reason and logic in general, are in some way detrimental to an appreciation of the wonder of the universe or some kind of sense of holism. These people really seems to want shortcuts to knowledge, and seem to think there can be an understanding of the whole without understanding of the parts. In fact, they dismiss understanding of the parts as “reductionism”, without understanding that both reductionism and holism are vital parts of science.
    Daniel Dennet calls this a “skyhook” mentality, a kind of “greedy holism” that demands a grand understanding of the whole without building on an understanding of the parts. Admittedly, its opposite, “greedy reductionism”, the idea that you completely understand a phenomenon when you really only understand a small part of it, is a real problem with some scientists. The “gay gene” hypothesis and much of evolutionary psychology are examples of this.
    Of course the error that “new age” types make is that they reduce all of science to the caricature of greedy reductionism and use this straw man to defend their own deeply problematic greedy holism.

  2. 2

    Yes to everything “curiousblue” said! (and to Greta’s letter, of course) My personal favorite idiotic moment in Morford’s column (and I am ordinarily a huge Morford fan) is when he uses the example of a study that showed meditation lowered blood pressure, as an example of a “no, duh” study. Is he kidding??? Doesn’t he know how much the proponents of so-called “alternative treatments” are HELPED by studies like that? There is a hell of a lot of snake oil out there, and a lot of assholes making a lot of money off the desperation of sick people. As a health care provider who cares for patients with potentially terminal illnesses I am sure not going to recommend any of it unless there is some evidence that it works and isn’t harmful. I am all for meditation and glucosamine and acupuncture, because there is some evidence to support their use. But don’t talk to me about crystals, or faith healing, or rhinoceros horn extract or whatever, unless you are prepared to show me some controlled, peer-reviewed, replicable data. Sheesh!!

  3. 3

    Yeah, sheesh!!
    Do I think that science sometimes attempts to prove things that are already obvious to the common throng? Yes.
    Do I think this is a waste of money and time? Sometimes, maybe.
    But, as Greta points out, there’s danger in saying, ”Well, everybody KNOWS that already.” Because maybe ”everybody’s” so-called knowledge is really just a set of assumptions that can be debunked (with science OR psychedelics — and why not both?), or perhaps explained with greater insight and accuracy as true, by someone with an inquiring mind.
    And boy, do I think we need more of those.
    Anyhow, speaking of the common throng, here’s one of the best pieces of wisdom I’ve ever received:
    ”Practically every problem I’ve ever had can be traced to an assumption.”
    — the window cleaner
    Maybe Morford just needs to have his windows cleaned.
    –Bill

  4. 4

    Greta,
    I have nothing to add. Excellent, excellent.
    These quotes:
    >>And since you seem to think this study somehow proves the objective reality of mystical experience, I feel compelled to point out that it does nothing of the kind. In fact, it could easily be argued that this study does the exact opposite — it demonstrates that mystical experience is a mental process, a function of the nervous system that can be induced by the consumption of a chemical compound. I’m not sure I would make that argument — but it’s not an unreasonable one.
    >>I am particularly puzzled by the fact that you accept on its face the validity of the Johns Hopkins study — and yet at the same time you mock it for being redundant and pointless.
    Yes, yes, yes.
    Thank you, on behalf of the advancement of human intelligence. Don’t ever stop.
    D. B. Howard

  5. 5

    I think “South Park” said it most succinctly, “San Francisco – the leading cause of smug.” I think the writers must have read Mark Morford.
    I often agree with him and used to enjoy his column, but pretty much had to give it up. I don’t like being preached to, even when I agree with the preacher. You are absolutely right, Greta, he’s a pagan fundimentalist – and that’s more than a little creepy.

  6. 6

    The beautiful thing about science is that it has a built-in self-correction mechanism. You certainly can’t say that about religion.
    There’s no such thing as “heresy” in science. If a theory turns out to be bunk, it’s thrown out and we start over. Religion. . . we’re not supposed to question it, period.
    Science does not claim to have ALL the answers to EVERYTHING. It’s RELIGION that makes THAT claim !!!

  7. 7

    Meditation can really help you in physical and mental well being. Scientific studies and researched proved it. Besides that personal experiences like mine fortify the claim. I am using various meditation techniques for quite a long time. The benefits are prominent and visible today.
    It takes time but the results are sure to come by. Have patience and try it for your own sake. Who knows, you may not need to see a doctor tomorrow. But remember own thing- learn it from the experts. Try websites like (URL deleted, commercial content – GC) which teaches about meditation.

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