The
obvious truth is that the moment any matter has passed through the human mind
it is finally and forever spoilt for all purposes of science. It has become a
thing incurably mysterious and infinite; this mortal has put on immortality.
Even what we call our material desires
are spiritual, because they are human. Science can analyze a pork chop, and say
how much of it is phosphorus and how much is protein; but science cannot
analyze any man’s wish for a pork chop, and say how much of it is hunger, how
much custom, how much nervous fancy, how much a haunting love for the
beautiful.
The man’s desire for the pork chop
remains literally as mystical and ethereal as his desire for heaven. All
attempts, therefore, at a science of any human things, at a science of history,
a science of folklore, a science of sociology, are by their nature not merely
hopeless, but crazy.
You can no more be certain in economic
history that a man’s desire for money was merely a desire for money than you
can be certain in hagiology that a saint’s desire for God was merely a desire
for God. And this kind of vagueness in the primary phenomena of the study is an
absolutely final blow to anything in the nature of a science.
Men can construct a science with very
few instruments, or with very plain instruments; but no one on earth could
construct a science with unreliable instruments. A man might work out the whole
of mathematics with a handful of pebbles, but not with a handful of clay which
was always falling apart into new fragments, and falling together into new
combinations. A man might measure heaven and earth with a reed, but not with a
growing reed.
GK Chesterton, Heretics
Reflection –
Another fine chapter
from the man, worthy of the price
of the book. He is specifically responding here to the kind of anthropology
of folk lore fashionable in his day, which indeed tended to treat human beings
(and especially, not to emphasize this aspect too much, human beings of darker
skin tone and southern latitudes) as strange alien subjects to be studied under
strict laboratory conditions.
The idea that the scientist can possibly distance
himself, dehumanize himself, in the study of man and his ways, and that this
would actually be a movement towards deeper insight and understanding of man
and his ways—this is what GKC is critiquing.
And I am firmly and utterly in agreement
with him on this matter. The specific kind of anthropology he critiques has had
its day, more or less, in part because of the precise criticisms Chesterton
made of it, in part because there was in fact quite a bit of genuinely nasty
racist sub-text at least implied if not always exactly intended in this kind of
‘scholarship’.
But the attempt to put man and woman
under the microscope and treat humanity as a subject of scientific research
continues. Perhaps it is needless to say that we are not talking here about
medical science and all that: of course the workings of the human body are as
much a matter of scientific research as the study of any other body, living or
dead.
It is the workings of the human mind and
its mysteries—this is not a matter for science, properly speaking. I realize
that Chesterton’s position (which is mine, too) is unconventional, but I think
it is true. And it think it can be borne out simply by studying the history of
anthropology/sociology/ history/psychology. Theory has succeeded upon theory in
each and all of these fields. Each theory has been advanced and argued upon
rigorous scientific grounds. Arguments and research and the most scientific
tests have been exercised in producing the latest theory about… oh, education,
or sexuality, or economic behavior, or the causes of revolution, or... name it.
And ten years later, another bunch of
scientists come up with a completely contradictory theory, bolstered by all the
same type of research and scientific tests and studies and… well, something is
very wrong with this picture, isn’t it? If I boil water one day under strict
laboratory conditions and it boils at 100 degrees Celsius, and the next day
using the same methodology it boils at 78 degrees, then either something is
badly wrong with me, with the instruments, or with the water.
Yet this is exactly what has happened
over and over again in all the attempts to ‘scientifically’ study humanity, and
yet we remain inclined to uncritically accept whatever the latest batch of
theories are that come from these (admittedly) brilliant men and women and
their (granted) hard work.
The truth is, the best way to study what
a human being is and why we do what we do is to attain the best possible
knowledge of the one human being who is available to you for intense study at
all hours of the day. In other words, look to your own heart and know what is
going on inside yourself, and why. ‘Know thyself’, the inscription on the
Delphic temple said, and you will know the mysteries of the universe. The
Greeks knew a thing or two, as did the wise monks of the desert and the
cloister of our Christian tradition, as did the common folk and the common
sense of humanity.
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