Richard Dawkins on Why Science is Art

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You can be committed to science, but as soon as you're committed to a hypothesis, you've walked off the trail of objective truth, says Richard Dawkins. For him, that is the mission of science and the purpose of the scientific method: these truths exist-they are the foundations of innovations like vaccinations, antibiotics, and space travel, because they are built on something solid: evidence. Einstein is known for highly valuing the role of imagination in science, and Dawkins agrees: imagination and intuition are the springboards scientific progress depends on-but when evidence refutes a hypothesis or a feeling, that's the end of the line. Dogged persistence doesn't get you any closer to the truth, says Dawkins, only critical thinking can do that. Richard Dawkins' latest book is Science In The Soul: Selected Writings of a Passionate Rationalist.
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RICHARD DAWKINS
Richard Dawkins is an evolutionary biologist and the former Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University. He is the author of several of modern science's essential texts, including The Selfish Gene (1976) and The God Delusion (2006). Born in Nairobi, Kenya, Dawkins eventually graduated with a degree in zoology from Balliol College, Oxford, and then earned a masters degree and the doctorate from Oxford University. He has recently left his teaching duties to write and manage his foundation, The Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science, full-time.
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TRANSCRIPT:
Richard Dawkins: The first chapter of 'Science in the Soul' is called 'The Values of Science and the Science of Values'. And it does, of course, give prominence to objective truth. There is a kind of whispering campaign-more than a whispering campaign, sometimes a yelling campaign-against the value of objective truth. Science, I think, is committed to objective truth; we’re committed to the view that truth is independent of the cultural background of the scientist, for example. So as I said in the book, an experiment done in a lab in New York can be replicated in a lab in New Delhi, and if it’s all done correctly in the same way they’ll get the same result. Science’s belief in objective truth works. Engineering technology based upon the science of objective through achieves results: it manages to build planes that get off the ground, it manages to send people to the moon and explore Mars with robots, and land robotic vehicles on comets. Science works. Science produces antibiotics, it produces vaccines that work. So anybody who chooses to say, “Oh, there’s no such thing as objective truth, it’s all subjective, it’s all socially constructed,” tell that to a doctor, tell that to a space scientist.
Manifestly, science works and the view that “there is no such thing as objective truth” doesn’t. Science proceeds, I believe, in the sort of Popperian view that science proceeds by intuitive leaps of the imagination, building an idea of what might be true and then testing it by experiment, by observation, in the second phase. It’s a kind of Darwinian selection of mutation, which is provided by the imagination.
So intuition is very important, but it is important that scientists should not be so wedded to their intuition that they omit the very important testing phase, and if their hypothesis is disproved they should regard that as a reason to reject the hypothesis or modify it, not a reason to just carry on doggedly sticking to the hypothesis because they are intuitively committed to it.
The phrase 'critical thinking' is quite a cliché but it is immensely important. And so I think that I really could sum it up by saying what we need is critical thinking; we need to respect evidence, we need to respect the fact that the only reason to believe anything about the real world is evidence. The evidence must be assessed critically, preferably statistically and logically. You cannot derive truths about the real world by intuition alone, by feelings alone, by what feels good.
People who say things like, “All opinions are equally valid,” or, “Well, it’s true for me, it may not be true for you.” Never tolerate that kind of thing. The only reason to believe anything is true is that there’s evidence, and everybody should either look at the evidence for themselves or they should trust that the person they’re talking to has looked at the evidence in a scientific, logical, rational,...
For the full transcript, check out bigthink.com/videos/richard-d...

Пікірлер: 20

  • @goose1077
    @goose107711 жыл бұрын

    While the process of science might be tedious, the lessons of science and its application are often exciting. It is this excitement that drives people to put up with the tedious part.

  • @futurehistory2110
    @futurehistory211012 жыл бұрын

    Although science makes us conclude that existence is probably meaningless at least we know that our feeling that there is no meaning (that despair) is nothing meaningful its just a feeling which is not physically real therefore, you can choose to feel happy and not care whether the universe is meaningless or meaningful simply because its meaningless doesn't mean the Universe is saying to us "You must act depressed." There's nothing scientific saying "be sad", be happy or sad, you choose :)

  • @MIAfishing1
    @MIAfishing111 жыл бұрын

    Your point...

  • @goose1077
    @goose107712 жыл бұрын

    You guys could have taken all these 1.5 minute Richard Dawkins clips and put them into one video.

  • @Mustafa-cp8wc
    @Mustafa-cp8wc5 жыл бұрын

    Science may not be art, but scientists are artists

  • @Hooga89
    @Hooga8912 жыл бұрын

    This is very true. Scientists need to marvel and wonder about the world, in order to find out things, which we accept as knowledge. Scientists need the faculty of a writer, or painter, or musician. They just channel the power in a different approach. And people say scientists are barren, cold and hostile. Tis' a sad state of affairs.

  • @goose1077
    @goose107711 жыл бұрын

    Well, thank goodness that they now count duration of views.

  • @someperson2500
    @someperson25007 жыл бұрын

    Agreed!

  • @HitchinTheRide
    @HitchinTheRide12 жыл бұрын

    I believe I got far to excited when I heard Richard mention the Krebs cycle, simply because I knew what he was talking.

  • @VJWU
    @VJWU12 жыл бұрын

    Kind of ironic about him talking of imagination when he himself when it doesn't seem like he ever came up with innovative ideas.

  • @kristashayner1106
    @kristashayner11069 жыл бұрын

    Science is beautiful and noble, but i dont think it is art.

  • @vampirethespiderbatgod9740

    @vampirethespiderbatgod9740

    3 жыл бұрын

    It is art

  • @maskofscience
    @maskofscience Жыл бұрын

    “Darwin dreamed up ideas”… he was “imaginative”… yes.. but he wasn’t a scientist.

  • @IngensViator
    @IngensViator12 жыл бұрын

    Richard Dawkins explanation is tantalizing.

  • @MIAfishing1
    @MIAfishing111 жыл бұрын

    Lmao troll...

  • @MightyZorn79
    @MightyZorn7911 жыл бұрын

    Being uncultured is not so much a strength as it is a massive blindness. Go read a novel or some Shakespeare.

  • @ericclaey2243
    @ericclaey22434 жыл бұрын

    Science is knowledge. Someday, Dawkins will hopefully acquire some.

  • @MIAfishing1
    @MIAfishing111 жыл бұрын

    Its ok we all understand that reality is too complicated for you so you rather explain things by making fairy tales up... Science is interesting and if you don't agree then you can go flip burger at McDonald :)

  • @AbdullahMikalRodriguez
    @AbdullahMikalRodriguez3 жыл бұрын

    Great take by Dawkins, shitty click bait video title

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