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(Queensland, Australia)
Eternal Search For Wisdom Generates Laws
Unto Themselves
By Michael Duffy
January 31, 2004
JOHN Brockman
is a New York literary agent specialising in those who practise and
write about cutting-edge science and how it is changing the world. His
website, www.edge.org, has a cult following and is a combination of
magazine and online community.
Late last
year he asked several hundred thinkers to propose laws about how the
world works, some bit of wisdom, some rule of nature, some law-like
pattern, either grand or small, that they had noticed in the universe
that might be named after them. The results are coming in and they're
fascinating.
They're
not all about science. Yale University professor of psychology Daniel
Gilbert proposed Gilbert's Law: "Happy people are those who do
not pass up on an opportunity to laugh at themselves or to make love
with someone else. Unhappy people are those who get this backwards."
Think about it.
Brian
Eno, former member of Roxy Music, music producer and techno-artist,
opined that: "Culture is everything we don't have to do."
As an explanation, he noted: "We have to clothe ourselves but we
didn't have to invent platform shoes or polka-dot bikinis." How
true.
But it
was science that inspired the most new laws, some distinctly cynical,
such as this offering from Kai Kraus, a philosopher and software designer:
"93.8127 per cent of all statistics are useless."
Some of
the law makers were hard on their chosen profession. "Science can
produce knowledge but it cannot produce wisdom," suggested New
Scientist editor-in-chief Alun Anderson.
As for
science and communication, according to Anderson, who should know: "A
scientist who can speak without jargon is either an idiot or a genius."
Yale University
professor of computer science David Gelerntier observed: "Scientists
know all the right answers and none of the right questions." Gelerntier's
other laws are: "Computers make people stupid," and "One
expert is worth a million intellectuals."
Many of
us might feel it would be stimulating to be at a dinner party with these
people, provided you didn't have to contribute. But one man from Australia
who'd feel at home would be Allan Snyder, professor of several things
at the Australian National University. He has suggested: "Most
creative science is wrong, but the deception ultimately leads to the
benefit of mankind." Think Freud. Another of Snyder's laws is:
"Everyone steals from everyone else, but they do so unconsciously.
This has evolved for our very survival. It maximises the innovative
power of society." He obviously doesn't teach undergraduates.
Leo Chapula
is a professor of ophthalmology and neurobiology and has served on many
research funding panels. He noted something that will surprise many
lay people: "Don't underestimate the importance of fashion in doing
science. There is a price to pay for originality, and every working
scientist knows this."
There
were more thoughtful comments on life outside science, including this
one from University of California, Berkeley, associate professor Marti
Hearst: "A public figure is often condemned for an action that
is taken unfairly out of context but nevertheless reflects, in a compelling
and encapsulated manner, an underlying truth about that person."
Take that, Tony Blair.
Artist
and lecturer Art Kleiner has noticed that: "Every organisation
operates on behalf of the perceived needs and priorities of some core
group of key people. This purpose will trump every other loyalty, including
those to shareholders, employees, customers and other constituents."
Philosopher
Daniel C. Dennett has perhaps explained the enormous sales of Mike Moore's
books with this observation: "On any important topic we tend to
have a dim idea of what we hope to be true, and when an author writes
the words we want to read, we tend to fall for it, no matter how shoddy
the arguments."
Author
Mike Godwin noted the great truth that: "As an online discussion
grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler
approaches one (that is, becomes certain)."
Brockman's
project is a lot of fun, although if you tried to live by some of the
laws thrown up by it you'd go mad.
As philanthropist
Chris Anderson said: "Humans are engineered to seek for laws, whether
or not they're actually there."
Copyright
2004 Nationwide News Pty Limited
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