Consilience: Unity of Knowledge by Edward O. Wilson by Alfred A. Knopf
(CNN) -- In "Consilience", Edward Wilson aims to establish that all knowledge and understanding is bound together by some as yet unknown common theory. He argues that there is one grand scheme to explain and unite all that we know and can know.
CHAPTER ONE
The Ionian Enchantment
I remember very well the time I was captured by the dream of unified
learning. It was in the early fall of 1947, when at eighteen I came up from
Mobile to Tuscaloosa to enter my sophomore year at the University of Alabama. A
beginning biologist, fired by adolescent enthusiasm but short on theory and
vision, I had schooled myself in natural history with field guides carried in a
satchel during solitary excursions into the woodlands and along the freshwater
streams of my native state. I saw science, by which I meant (and in my heart I
still mean) the study of ants, frogs, and snakes, as a wonderful way to stay
outdoors.
My intellectual world was framed by Linnaeus, the eighteenth-century Swedish
naturalist who invented modern biological classification. The Linnaean system is
deceptively easy. You start by separating specimens of plants and animals into
species. Then you sort species resembling one another into groups, the genera.
Examples of such groups are all the crows and all the oaks. Next you label each
species with a two-part Latinized name, such as Corvus ossifragus for the
fish crow, where Corvus stands for the genus -- all the species of
crows -- and ossifragus for the fish crow in particular. Then on to higher
classification, where similar genera are grouped into families, families into
orders, and so on up to phyla and finally, at the very summit, the six
kingdoms -- plants, animals, fungi, protists, monerans, and archaea. It is like
the army: men (plus women, nowadays) into squads, squads into platoons, platoons
into companies, and in the final aggregate, the armed services headed by the
joint chiefs of staff. It is, in other words, a conceptual world made for the
mind of an eighteen-year-old.
I had reached the level of the Carolus Linnaeus of 1735 or, more accurately
(since at that time I knew little of the Swedish master), the Roger Tory
Peterson of 1934, when the great naturalist published the first edition of A
Field Guide to the Birds. My Linnaean period was nonetheless a good start
for a scientific career. The first step to wisdom, as the Chinese say, is
getting things by their right names.
Then I discovered evolution. Suddenly -- that is not too strong a word -- I saw
the world in a wholly new way. This epiphany I owed to my mentor Ralph Chermock,
an intense, chain-smoking young assistant professor newly arrived in the
provinces with a Ph.D. in entomology from Cornell University. After listening to
me natter for a while about my lofty goal of classifying all the ants of
Alabama, he handed me a copy of Ernst Mayr's 1942 Systematics and the Origin
of Species. Read it, he said, if you want to become a real biologist.
The thin volume in the plain blue cover was one of the New Synthesis works,
uniting the nineteenth-century Darwinian theory of evolution and modern
genetics. By giving a theoretical structure to natural history, it vastly
expanded the Linnaean enterprise. A tumbler fell somewhere in my mind, and a
door opened to a new world. I was enthralled, couldn't stop thinking about the
implications evolution has for classification and for the rest of biology. And
for philosophy. And for just about everything. Static pattern slid into fluid
process. My thoughts, embryonically those of a modern biologist, traveled along
a chain of causal events, from mutations that alter genes to evolution that
multiplies species, to species that assemble into faunas and floras. Scale
expanded, and turned continuous. By inwardly manipulating time and space, I
found I could climb the steps in biological organization from microscopic
particles in cells to the forests that clothe mountain slopes. A new enthusiasm
surged through me. The animals and plants I loved so dearly reentered the stage
as lead players in a grand drama. Natural history was validated as a real
science.
I had experienced the Ionian Enchantment. That recently coined expression I
borrow from the physicist and historian Gerald Holton. It means a belief in the
unity of the sciences -- a conviction, far deeper than a mere working proposition,
that the world is orderly and can be explained by a small number of natural
laws. Its roots go back to Thales of Miletus, in Ionia, in the sixth century
B.C. The legendary philosopher was considered by Aristotle two centuries later
to be the founder of the physical sciences. He is of course remembered more
concretely for his belief that all matter consists ultimately of water. Although
the notion is often cited as an example of how far astray early Greek
speculation could wander, its real significance is the metaphysics it expressed
about the material basis of the world and the unity of nature.
The Enchantment, growing steadily more sophisticated, has dominated
scientific thought ever since. In modern physics its focus has been the
unification of all the forces of nature -- electroweak, strong, and
gravitation -- the hoped-for consolidation of theory so tight as to turn the
science into a "perfect" system of thought, which by sheer weight of evidence
and logic is made resistant to revision. But the spell of the Enchantment
extends to other fields of science as well, and in the minds of a few it reaches
beyond into the social sciences, and still further, as I will explain later, to
touch the humanities. The idea of the unity of science is not idle. It has been
tested in acid baths of experiment and logic and enjoyed repeated vindication.
It has suffered no decisive defeats. At least not yet, even though at its
center, by the very nature of the scientific method, it must be thought always
vulnerable. On this weakness I will also expand in due course.
Einstein, the architect of grand unification in physics, was Ionian to the
core. That vision was perhaps his greatest strength. In an early letter to his
friend Marcel Grossmann he said, "It is a wonderful feeling to recognize the
unity of a complex of phenomena that to direct observation appear to be quite
separate things." He was referring to his successful alignment of the
microscopic physics of capillaries with the macroscopic, universe-wide physics
of gravity. In later life he aimed to weld everything else into a single
parsimonious system, space with time and motion, gravity with electromagnetism
and cosmology. He approached but never captured that grail. All scientists,
Einstein not excepted, are children of Tantalus, frustrated by the failure to
grasp that which seems within reach. They are typified by those
thermodynamicists who for decades have drawn ever closer to the temperature of
absolute zero, when atoms cease all motion. In 1995, pushing down to within a
few billionths of a degree above absolute zero, they created a Bose-Einstein
condensate, a fundamental form of matter beyond the familiar gases, liquids, and
solids, in which many atoms act as a single atom in one quantum state. As
temperature drops and pressure is increased, a gas condenses into a liquid, then
a solid; then appears the Bose-Einstein condensate. But absolute, entirely
absolute zero, a temperature that exists in imagination, has still not been
attained.
On a far more modest scale, I found it a wonderful feeling not just to taste
the unification metaphysics but also to be released from the confinement of
fundamentalist religion. I had been raised a Southern Baptist, laid backward
under the water on the sturdy arm of a pastor, been born again. I knew the
healing power of redemption. Faith, hope, and charity were in my bones, and with
millions of others I knew that my savior Jesus Christ would grant me eternal
life. More pious than the average teenager, I read the Bible cover to cover,
twice. But now at college, steroid-driven into moods of adolescent rebellion, I
chose to doubt. I found it hard to accept that our deepest beliefs were set in
stone by agricultural societies of the eastern Mediterranean more than two
thousand years ago. I suffered cognitive dissonance between the cheerfully
reported genocidal wars of these people and Christian civilization in 1940s
Alabama. It seemed to me that the Book of Revelation might be black magic
hallucinated by an ancient primitive. And I thought, surely a loving personal
God, if He is paying attention, will not abandon those who reject the literal
interpretation of the biblical cosmology. It is only fair to award points for
intellectual courage. Better damned with Plato and Bacon, Shelley said, than go
to heaven with Paley and Malthus. But most of all, Baptist theology made no
provision for evolution. The biblical authors had missed the most
important revelation of all! Could it be that they were not really privy to the
thoughts of God? Might the pastors of my childhood, good and loving men though
they were, be mistaken? It was all too much, and freedom was ever so sweet. I
drifted away from the church, not definitively agnostic or atheistic, just
Baptist no more.
Still, I had no desire to purge religious feelings. They were bred in me;
they suffused the wellsprings of my creative life. I also retained a small
measure of common sense. To wit, people must belong to a tribe; they yearn to
have a purpose larger than themselves. We are obliged by the deepest drives of
the human spirit to make ourselves more than animated dust, and we must have a
story to tell about where we came from, and why we are here. Could Holy Writ be
just the first literate attempt to explain the universe and make ourselves
significant within it? Perhaps science is a continuation on new and
better-tested ground to attain the same end. If so, then in that sense science
is religion liberated and writ large.
Such, I believe, is the source of the Ionian Enchantment: Preferring a search
for objective reality over revelation is another way of satisfying religious
hunger. It is an endeavor almost as old as civilization and intertwined with
traditional religion, but it follows a very different course -- a stoic's creed,
an acquired taste, a guidebook to adventure plotted across rough terrain. It
aims to save the spirit, not by surrender but by liberation of the human mind.
Its central tenet, as Einstein knew, is the unification of knowledge. When we
have unified enough certain knowledge, we will understand who we are and why we
are here.
If those committed to the quest fail, they will be forgiven. When lost, they
will find another way. The moral imperative of humanism is the endeavor alone,
whether successful or not, provided the effort is honorable and failure
memorable. The ancient Greeks expressed the idea in a myth of vaulting ambition.
Daedalus escapes from Crete with his son Icarus on wings he has fashioned from
feathers and wax. Ignoring the warnings of his father, Icarus flies toward the
sun, whereupon his wings come apart and he falls into the sea. That is the end
of Icarus in the myth. But we are left to wonder: Was he just a foolish boy? Did
he pay the price for hubris, for pride in sight of the gods? I like to think
that on the contrary his daring represents a saving human grace. And so the
great astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar could pay tribute to the spirit
of his mentor, Sir Arthur Eddington, by saying: Let us see how high we can fly
before the sun melts the wax in our wings.
© 1998 Edward O. Wilson. All rights reserved
ISBN:0679450777
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