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Practice
A pragmatist statement
Applications are adaptations of pure science for some purpose.
The more applications a scientific truth has, the greater its power.
Power is as important as truth.
A
powerless truth with no applications should be suspected of
being without scientific value.
The
truths of pure sciences can be used as applications or apparatus by
other pure sciences (e.g. crystallography in biology), and also for
non-scientific applications.
Scientific applications of science are pure truths of one field
adapted as apparatus (i.e., for a practical and in that sense impure purpose) in a different
scientific field.
Thus, any pure science of any
power links one group of applications (its
own apparatus) with a different group of applications
(its uses as apparatus by other sciences).
Practical applications of science are pure scientific truths adapted for
some non-scientific purpose, e.g. in industry or medicine.
Engineering applications of science are applications of
pure science to fixed and given instrumental purposes: e.g. agronomy, forestry,
animal husbandry, or medicine.
Ethical applications of science (including esthetic and political
applications) are pure scientific truths adapted for the open-ended and
contested purposes which make up much of human life.
(It
is uncertain to me whether engineering applications should be
thought of as stereotyped practical applications under conditions of
ethical consensus -- a subset of ethical applications, perhaps under
a fixed power regime -- or whether engineering applications and
ethical applications should be thought of as the two species of
practical application.)
Application can be a kind of experimentation, and a field of pure
science can be driven by another pure science's need for
apparatus. Social science can also quite validly be
driven by public policy's need for tools, or by a political movement's
need for tools, or by more abstract goals such as peace or social
justice or prosperity, and often has been so driven.
Ethical applications are not routine, and scientists trying to
develop them will continually be faced with additional
non-scientific considerations. This uncertainty can only be avoided
by fiat stipulations of contested questions. For example, for a long
time forestry concerned itself almost entirely with maximizing the timber cut.
The stereotyping of goals is done by a power regime.
The part of a scientist's training which teaches him to bracket out
open-ended and contested ethical questions when doing his work often
makes him ill-suited to the reintroduction of these questions when
the truths are to be applied in a contested area.
In even the purest of the human sciences, instituted and
socially-embodied ethical principles are part of the data. When
scientifically examined, socially-embodied ethical principles are
found to be extremely slippery: erratically applied, inconsistently
understood, deceptively stated, and one-sidedly affirmed for
self-serving purposes. This is only to a small degree something
which can be made right -- it is really in the nature of the
essentially-contested ethical
beast. As a result, grave real-world practical decisions are
usually made upon inadequate and uncertain grounds.
The millennia-long attempt to find a way make all decisions
rigorously on logically-consistent, factual grounds has been only
partially successful and almost certainly will never be completely so.
(Indeed, we should probably hope that it never becomes completely so.)
Any attempt at finding applications of science in the greater world
will have to deal with the ethical questions somehow. In particular,
applications must deal with the ethical consensus already in place
(with all its ambiguities), either by altering the consensus, by
following it, or by a combination of the two. These adaptations
required may be compared to the adaptations required for the
application of the scientific truths of one field of science to
different conditions holding in some other field of science, but
are obviously much more extreme.
Promoting the idea that the ethical questions are undiscussible is
the crime of positivism. A rigid standard of truth derived from
science can be used to destroy any ethical consensus whatsoever, or
to postpone ethical decision-making to infinity. After WWII a
conventionalist, legal-technocratic, purportedly ethically-neutral
consensus was imposed in the belief that any attempt to discuss
goals inevitably lead to civil war and to nihilistic political
movements of the Fascist-Communist type. This was the power regime
of that time and place.
There are problems with
this compromise, especially when it is accepted as an unquestionable
truth or used to surreptitiously sneak particular ethical principles
in (as was actually, and probably inevitably, done). Proponents of
positivist ethical neutrality also ignored the degree to which
scientific rigorism and scientific debunking of ethics were among
the sources of political / ethical nihilism. (The positivists' dream of making
all decisions strictly scientific collapsed, leaving behind only the
wreckage left by their debunking of their hapless adversaries.)
A thick, experimental, practically- and ethically-driven social
science is what pragmatists were always talking about. They were
never talking about fudging the truth for self-serving goals. In the
second half of the twentieth century various schools
in various fields endeavored to destroy and supplant pragmatism, and they
were reasonably successful in this task.
I am emersonj at gmail dot com.
Original materials copyright John J
Emerson
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