DYNAMIC-SCIENTIFIC PHILOSOPHY

Interdialogging with MARIA :

ON PARADOXES

MARIA, on Mar 18 1998 you wrote,

I am happy to discover that my reflections and yours are in the same direction. In just a month, I found many answers about myself (my self ), and have realized that I am able to continue doing so. Now, as I have more confidence in myself, I am willing to discover many more answers in the future. I think that my efforts and work --four years of very deep and intensive psycho-therapy)-- begin to bear fruit. I agree completely with you when you say (if I have understood your words properly) that Nature acts naturally --meaning, WITHOUT PURPOSE--. One of the answers that MYSELF gives me is related to this idea. I need to enjoy doing "things" without afunctional purpose.
"Things" (to write tales, e.g.) guided by my own sensibility, and which I do, not for money, responsibility... but only for my own ENJOYMENT. Your Dialogue Method is wonderful.

It's a coincidence, but my last tale is about someone condemned to live in a cave... I'm not able to render it into English, but if you can read Spanish (and if you are interested), I will send you my story. Have you written other dialogues? I will be here to read the next one.

Maria, you have been very honest in your posts, and perhaps you are on the verge of being fully rewarded by your efforts. It would appear that there is no more place for interdialoguing. However, in view of your significant contribution to this site and of your continued interest, I have developed a new idea based on your correct understanding of Nature acting without purpose. It might be argued that it is paradoxical that organisms --who act teleologically, doing things for their own benefit and survival-- should spring up from 'blind' Nature.

Let me first explain about paradoxes. Those of Zeno, as told by Plato, were meant just for the benefit of mind sharpening. The argument that Achilles couldn't overcome a tortoise that was already ahead of him because he had to traverse the infinite halves of the distance, is defeated by just saying that Achilles was running 'digitally' and not 'analogically.' Also, the tortoise could not have advanced, as it also had to traverse infinite half distances. Again, we have paradoxical statements, such as, "less is more," where sober architectural lines add to natural beauty, as contrasted with kitsch. Also, one could say, "saving is wasting," when not spending money rationally results in wasting the pleasurable use of it.
This type of paradoxes are explained by saying that the contrasting terms do not refer to the same values. Paradoxes based on just two words are called 'oxymorons.' "Sweet pain," "the burning ice in your eyes" --as described by lovers-- are examples. Sometimes oxymorons are used for comic effect, with the two paradoxical words separated, like in, "he is not a perfect idiot because nobody is perfect."

Let us enter now the subject of what appear to be serious paradoxical propositions. But firstly, we must begin by assuming that there are no contradictions in Nature, and by taking a look at absurd propositions, such as, "Nature acts intelligently: if there were no rivers or other nearby sources of water, city dwellers would die of thirst." That the city was built around a water source is somewhat sophistically inverted in this statement.
Also, "Eyes were created for seeing." There are cave-dweller fish which have only slit marks where the eyes should be. Obviously, an extremely long period of time in the cave suppressed the determining influence of light in eye development, a process physically dictated by pure "trial and error" in the course of eons. Should Nature act teleologically, it would have "created" very fast the perfect "creatures" and conditions. The preceding are not examples of paradoxes but of faulty thinking. Truly apparent paradoxes, as dealt with by me in this post, I explain as follows.

Matter obeys laws created just moments after the Big-Bang, when the primal energy of infinitely compacted 'proto-electrons' and 'proto-positrons' was transformed into Hydrogen and the subsequent atoms. By dint of those laws, living organisms came into existence. Until recently, we believed that viruses have been created as separate live forms. Now we know that there is a class of wasp that creates a virus! It is formed in the wasp's genome, serving to defeat immune mechanisms of a moth caterpillar into which the parasitic wasp injects its fertilized eggs.
All the particularities of evolution are determined by physico-chemical laws and by circumstances. Therefore, there is no "planned" teleology in the resulting developments of evolution giving rise to teleologically oriented organisms. There is no paradox here at all. Even the most impressive type of energy found in nature --direct-current electricity, carried in electrons-- is not the one we utilize at large, but the alternating-current type created by man!

We humans, are the vertex of evolution, no doubt, yet there is no reason for feeling ourselves excessively proud for that. Life in this planet is very imperfect, and none of us should pretend to really know what is essentially good or bad at a given moment. We create our own values in order to live in society, because Nature "determined" that we be social animals.
I propose that there is no "Nature" at all. We have become accustomed to apply that term to the sum total of the results we detect from the interplay of energy-matter according to physical laws. We were used to talk about the matter states solid, liquid and gaseous. A long time ago we added the absolutely ionized matter state which was named "physical plasma." The past year added the "Bose-Einstein condensate state."

I propose that humans are intelligent, as distinct from non-existent Nature, which is just a result of immutable physical laws. Condensate matter probably does not exist except under extreme laboratory conditions (perhaps in comets?), while the stars have plasma in their superhot parts. Humans have discovered this, as well as the mysterious world of subatomic particles in the quantum mechanics reality. Should it be surprising that we are amazingly intelligent? And are we to be despised for manifesting the supposed hubris of pretending that we surpass dumb Nature?
Well, think of man's creations: can we run faster than a car? Can we fly as an airplane? Can we calculate and program ourselves as a simple PC? Isn't it true that we perfect Nature's bungling, lazy evolutionary grappling ? And that our own creations behave much better than ourselves, their creators, in their respective capabilities? No paradox here.
Even worse, as far as "inconsiderate" Nature acts: She did not "take in consideration" that an animal would be developed who would be able to challenge her. And I am going to be specific. I accuse Nature of being selfish, inconsiderate, interested only in the young and procreative. My absolutely clear arguments are as follows. 1. Men are allowed to procreate up to any age, while women suffer an age limitation.
2. Natural estrogen has two separate functions, which are fine in young, procreative women. But just let women become "useless" for Nature, and estrogen will be dangerous for their uteri and breasts. Enter hubris-drunk man, and he develops a form of estrogen selective for the benefit of those women!
3. Did "wise" Nature prepare our planet for the appearance of an animal who would poison the atmosphere?

The same animal called man has developed so many technical novelties, that the mind of a significant segment of the world population has been unable to adapt itself to such revolutionary changes. The result? Consumerist society with crime-prone members being unable to adjust and react for the benefit of society as a whole. More crime, more Police and more confusion. Is man to blame? No! Just "Nature"!

Do I believe that I'm revolutionary with my New Philosophy reasoning? I plan to show that the Paradise legend already knew that people are divided in two camps, the Evolutionists and the Creationists. I only claim the merit of having detected such component in the legend, and of challenging Nature as just a convenient name for phenomena that are not intelligent and yet resulted in a highly intelligent non-planned product which is truly intelligent. And that there is no paradox in this phenomenon.

This will do for now. Many questions may arise from this post. I believe I'll be able to answer some of them. This is a basic purpose of the Dynamic-Scientific philosophy: leisurely disrobing life on our planet off some of its ambiguous wardrobe.

ADDENDUM: I have been able to really explain the paradox on Achilles and the tortoise. It is expounded in my List at


Click to subscribe to ghitis

Here is the specific part:

*Then came the law of inverse squares: The degree of electric attraction between two oppositely charged elements, and also of gravitationally attracted bodies, varies inversely with the square of their distance. If the distance decreases by half, from 8 to 4, the attraction is incresed not by two, but by four. Keep decreasing by halfs, and the attraction keeps increasing, yet never reaching a finite number. Meaning that there will never be a complete approach. This is an example of 'Zeno's paradoxes.' (See PARADOXES.) Yet, infinite does not exist in physics, but only in numbers, because numbers do not exist, as letters don't either. Therefore, in physics, in contrast with mathematics, the possibility of keeping the halving of distance forever is inexistent: there is a physical limit to that halving. And that limit has a mathematical expression. Zeno's trick was to apply a law valid for mutual attraction, to a situation where Achilles had to overrun the turtle. Had he been attractd to its center of gravity, then he would have been stuck to its carapace...*

What this means is that Achilles was not attempting to reach the tortoise: he was just running, and would overcome it.

1