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The Scientist as Rebel
by Freeman Dyson
Where Science and Ethics Meet
A review by Gregory M. Lamb
Throughout history scientists from Galileo to Andrei Sakharov have been
persecuted for challenging the orthodoxy of their societies. But in The Scientist as Rebel, Freeman Dyson advocates rebellion of a broader kind.
Science, the theoretical physicist writes, should rebel "against
poverty and ugliness and militarism and economic injustice." Benjamin
Franklin is Dyson's ideal of the scientific rebel, one who embodied
"thoughtful rebellion, driven by reason and calculation more than by
passion and hatred." If science ever stops rebelling against authority,
Dyson insists, it won't deserve to be pursued by our brightest children.
In this highly readable compilation of previously published essays
and book reviews written over nearly four decades, Dyson also rebels
against the idea that scientists should only concern themselves with
the problems of the laboratory.
In one chapter he asks "can science be ethical?" In another he
explores the uneasy relationship between science and religion ("Is God
in the lab?"). He considers the qualities of mind expressed by the
great scientists of the past in essays such as "In Praise of Amateurs"
and "Seeing the Unseen."
What is science? Dyson quotes from biologist J.B.S. Haldane: "It is
man's gradual conquest, first of space and time, then of matter as
such, then of his own body and those of other living beings, and
finally the subjugation of the dark and evil elements in his own soul."
Dyson, a professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study at
Princeton University, has made his own share of contributions to the
advancement of scientific knowledge, in fields from nuclear physics to
quantum electrodynamics. But here he also proves himself an adept
essayist on ethical issues less obviously connected with science.
In "Generals," for example, he questions the motives and actions of
warriors: Why were "two good men working for a bad cause" -- Nazi Gen.
Alfred Jodl and German tank commander Hermann Balck -- treated so
differently after World War II? (Jodl was convicted and executed for
war crimes at Nuremberg while Balck was not prosecuted.) The Allies, it
appears, saw a moral difference between a personally honorable man who
planned a horrifying war (Jodl) and one who merely carried it out
efficiently on the battlefield (Balck).
Warriors are necessary, Dyson concludes, but shouldn't be idealized.
Echoing Robert Louis Stevenson, he compares a successful general or
admiral to "a successful boxer."
Dyson also stands opposed to the "reductionist" view of science, the
concept that all knowledge, whether history, the arts, or ethics, "can
be reduced to science." Dyson argues for a wider definition of
knowledge that comes from a broader array of sources, including
artistic values and religion, "parts of a human heritage that is older
than science and perhaps more enduring."
Science and religion need not be seen as foes, argues Dyson, who
finds the roots of modern science, with its demand for logical thinking
and "scientific method," in a millennium of Christian theological
disputes in Europe that had the effect of sharpening minds. The
contentiousness sometimes felt between Christianity and modern science
actually springs from their common roots, he says.
"Science is a particular bunch of tools that have been conspicuously
successful for understanding and manipulating the material universe,"
Dyson concludes. "Religion is another bunch of tools, giving us hints
of a mental or spiritual universe that transcends the material
universe."
To those who see the world evolving toward a post-religious era,
Dyson offers the words of his mother, whom he describes as "a skeptical
Christian, like me." She used to tell him, "You can throw religion out
of the door, but it will always come back through the window."
For Dyson, scientists are neither secular saints who have an answer
for every human need nor irresponsible devils without regard for human
values. Science, for example, doesn't have solutions to the great
issues of war and peace. But scientists can be advocates for
international understanding and cooperation by serving as models of
those values themselves, he says.
Science needs both its revolutionaries and conservatives, Dyson
explains -- those eager to abandon past views and those who defend them.
It also needs both hedgehogs and foxes, scientists who dig deeply at a
few fundamental problems (hedgehogs include Albert Einstein) and those
who have wide interests and move quickly from problem to problem (foxes
include Dyson's mentor, Richard Feynman).
The Scientist as Rebel does not include a single equation or
technical diagram. When scientific concepts do arise, as in an essay on
the wonders of string theory, they are described in clear layman's
language. What really fills this book is wisdom -- wisdom that helps us
understand how scientists think and work and how science, properly
understood, can help us make better sense of our world.
Gregory M. Lamb is a Monitor staff writer.
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