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The Artist and the Scientist
By Beth WeinhouseBeth
Weinhouse is a writer specializing in health. She co-authored "Outrageous
Practices: How Gender Bias Threatens Women’s Health."
May
11, 2003THE HEDGEHOG, THE FOX AND THE MAGISTER'S
POX: Mending the Gap Between Science and the Humanities, by Stephen Jay Gould.
Harmony, 274 pp., $25.95.
Humans have a tendency to see
things as dichotomies: black and white, right and wrong, east and west, and the
more "primal" dualities of night and day, male and female.
But Stephen
Jay Gould, the eminent Harvard paleontologist and prolific author who died last
May at the age of 60, deplored this human tendency, and saw the world in
infinite shades of gray. His 23rd (and last) book tackles the troublesome
dichotomy by which our society has divided knowledge into one of two camps: the
sciences or the humanities. (A previous book of Gould's, "Rock of Ages," looked
at the divide between science and religion.)
According to Gould, the
dichotomy between science and the humanities - which he argues was never truly
real - has now outserved its purpose and actually hinders scholars in all fields
of knowledge. "I rather suspect that this innate propensity [to see things as
dichotomies] represents little more than 'baggage' from an evolutionary past of
much simpler brains built only to reach those quick decisions - fight or flight,
sleep or wake, mate or wait - that make all the difference in a Darwinian world
of nonconscious animals."
Looking at the current state of scholarly
research and academia, Gould argues that scientists and humanists need each
other's viewpoints to expand and understand their own fields better. Advocating
that there is "a time to break down, a time to build up," Gould urges the
disciplines to learn from each other and take what is useful. For instance,
Gould believes that scientists are not qualified to give moral interpretations
of their findings, which are better left to humanists.
As an example, he
poses the current controversy about when human life begins (and when and under
what circumstances abortion is morally acceptable). He states that one cannot
advocate any ethical definition of life's beginning until one understands the
biology of conception - the scientist's jurisdiction. "But no study of the
biology of conception and pregnancy can specify the ethical, theological or
merely political 'moment' of life's legal or moral inception." Science should
cede this territory, he says, and be the messenger, not the
moralizer.
The discussion of the converse - why the humanities need the
sciences - is more vague, and seems to consist mainly of urging humanists to
accept the power of the sciences to increase the storehouse of knowledge and
understanding of the universe. In particular, Gould praises scholarly
undertakings that easily merge the sciences and humanities - scientific drawings
that are also works of art, for instance, and great literature that is based on
scientific fact.
He cites the work of Vladimir Nabokov, whose references
to butterflies are not symbols - as many literary scholars have posited - but
accurate scientific descriptions, as Nabokov (who was a curator of
lepidopterology at Harvard) had always claimed. Nabokov, a scientist and a
humanist, recognized the folly of keeping the disciplines separate. "There can
be no science without fancy, and no art without facts," he said.