Today's scientific academia is centered around four unproven dogmas: the dogma of the accidental origin of life, the dogma of the accidental origin of species by “natural selection,” the dogma that brains are the source of minds or that mind activity is the same thing as brain activity, and the dogma that brains are the storage places of human memories. The average person has heard these claims so many times that he may think of one or more of them as "facts of science," but none of them are facts. There are actually strong reasons for doubting each one of these dogmas. In particular:
- Scientists discovered the genetic information in all cells around 1950, but it is now the year 2023, and no has ever used a microscope to discover any stored memory information in a brain of a human being, even through brain tissue has been examined at resolutions vastly greater than the resolutions sufficient to discover DNA in cells.
- Many humans (both children and adults) have had half of their brains removed to stop very bad and frequent epileptic seizures, but when such surgery is done, it has little effect on intelligence or memory, with learned knowledge being well preserved.
- Many humans can remember very well things they learned or experienced 50 years ago, but the average lifetime of the proteins in synapses (claimed to be the storage place of memories) is 1000 times shorter than 50 years (less than two weeks).
- Humans are able to form new memories instantly, in contradiction to all theories of brain memory storage, which typically postulate "synapse strengthening" that would take minutes.
- Even though the brain has no physical characteristics that might help allow any such thing as instant memory retrieval (something like an indexing system or a position notation system or coordinate system that might allow stored information to be quickly found), humans are able to retrieve learned information instantly upon hearing some person name or event name or place name, even if they haven't heard such a name in many years.
- Very many humans (as many as 10 percent or 20 percent of the population) report floating out of their bodies, and observing their bodies from above them in space.
- Inside brains there is very severe noise of several different types that should prevent humans from being able to reliably recall large bodies of information stored in a brain, but it is a fact that many people (such as actors playing the role of Hamlet) can recall very large bodies of textual information with perfect accuracy.
- There are hundreds of documented cases of people who saw an apparition of someone who died, but who they did not know was dead, only to soon learn that the person had died about the time when the apparition was seen.
- There are also very many cases of apparitions seen by more than one person at the same time, something we should expect to never or virtually happen if a mere brain hallucination was causing the sighting of the apparition.
- Instead of having some vastly greater brain connectivity that might help explain the superiority of the human mind, a study found that brain connectivity is about the same in all mammals; so we have the brain connectivity of mice.
- As discussed here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here, there is two hundred years of written evidence (often written by very weighty figures such as scientists and doctors) for the reality of clairvoyance, an ability that is not explicable under any theory that minds are created by brains.
- Quite a few people who have lost half of their brains due to disease or epilepsy surgery have average or above average intelligence; and the physician John Lorber showed that some people have above-average intelligence despite having the great majority of their brain tissue destroyed by disease.
- Besides a wealth of narrative evidence that some humans can have ESP (an ability inexplicable as a brain effect), there is abundant robust laboratory experimental evidence for ESP (discussed here, here and here).
- No one has any credible detailed theory of how a brain could ever store learned information (such as academic information) or episodic memories as neuron states or synapse states; and if such a thing were happening, it would require a whole host of very specialized memory-encoding proteins, which have never been discovered (along with some not-yet-discovered encoding scheme millions of times more complicated than the genetic code discovered around 1950).
- Brains show no signs of working harder during heavy thinking or memory recall, and brain scan attempts to find signs of such greater activity merely report variations such as half of one per cent, the kind of variations we would expect to get by chance, even if brains don't produce thinking or recall.
- Because of numerous severe slowing factors such as the cumulative slowing effect of synaptic delays and dendrites, signal transmission in the brain should be way too slow to account for the blazing fast thinking speed of some people able to do mathematical calculations at incredible speeds, and also the instant memory recall humans routinely show.
- People with dramatically higher recall of episodic memories or learned information seem to have no larger brains or brain superiority that could explain this.
- Contrary to the dogma that brains produce minds, ravens with tiny brains can do as well on quite a few mental tasks as apes with large brains; and also tiny mouse lemurs do just as well on quite a few cognitive tests as mammals with brains 200 times larger.
- As discussed here and here, scientists have very well documented inexplicable physical effects occurring around some people, suggesting they either have powers that cannot be explained in terms of brains and bodies, or are somehow in contact with others who have such powers.
- There are numerous reasons for suspecting some source of a human soul or spirit outside of the human body, including the sudden unexplained origin of the universe with just the right expansion rate to allow eventual planet formation, the very precise fine-tuning of fundamental physical constants and laws of nature needed for biological habitability, the origin of life so hard to credibly explain as an accidental chemical event, the extremely hierarchical organization of biological organisms, the great abundance of complex fine-tuned protein molecules in organisms (each seeming to involve a vast mathematical improbability), the great abundance of immensely organized biological forms that are not explained by genomes that merely specify low-level chemical information, and abundant photographic evidence for paranormal effects that seem to suggest some unfathomable intelligence beyond any human understanding (see here and here for examples).
- People (sometimes called autistic savants) with very serious brain defects sometimes have astonishing powers of memory almost no one else has.
- Dying people commonly report seeing apparitions of the dead (usually their relatives), as reported here, here, and here; people having near-death experiences very frequently report encountering their deceased relatives; and widows and widowers frequently report voices or apparitions corresponding to their deceased spouses -- all just exactly as we would expect if we have souls that survive death.
- Many decades ago Leonora Piper was studied at great length for many years by scientists and scholars, and for many years she reported information about deceased people that should have been unknown to her.
- Human beings have many subtle and refined mental abilities (such as philosophical imagination, artistic creativity, musical ability, and subtle spirituality) that are inexplicable as results of brain evolution, such things having no value in increasing survival or reproduction.
- Despite more than seventy years of experiments trying to reproduce a natural origin of life from non-life, all such experiments have failed to produce anything living, and have also failed to produce any of the main components of microscopic living things (functional protein molecules). In fact, all experiments realistically simulating the early Earth have produced neither the "building blocks" of microscopic life (functional protein molecules, things vastly more organized than mere building blocks) nor the building blocks of the building blocks of microscopic life (amino acids). There are multiple reasons why the famed Miller-Urey experiment (producing amino acids) was not a realistic simulation of early Earth conditions.
- Claims that we have an explanation for the physical origin of species tend to be made by those who have not paid adequate attention to two supremely important considerations: the matter of functional thresholds and the matter of interdependent components, as I discuss here.
Once we understand that the four main teachings of today's scientific academia are belief dogmas rather than scientific facts, we can start to understand how scientific academia acts today largely as a kind of stealth religion, pretty much as a kind of church-in-all-but-name. The table below gives some reasons why scientific academia is like Roman Catholicism.
|
Scientific Academia |
Roman Catholic Church |
Physical Bases |
University buildings, high schools, natural history museums |
Churches, monasteries, convents, seminaries, Catholic schools |
Old Revered Texts |
Books of Charles Darwin |
The Bible and works of the Church Fathers (Augustine, Aquinas, etc.) |
Sacred Dogmas |
Accidental origin of life, accidental origin of species by “natural selection,” brains as the source of minds, brains as storage places of memories |
The Trinity, the resurrection of Jesus, the divine inspiration of the Bible, papal infallibility, dogmas about Mary, mother of Jesus |
Lower Prestige Workers |
High school biology teachers, experimental subjects, paid lab workers |
Nuns, deacons |
Middle Prestige Workers |
PhD candidates, college instructors, assistant professors |
Priests |
High Prestige Workers |
Professors |
Bishops |
Highest Prestige Persons |
National Academy of Science members, Nobel Prize winners |
Cardinals, the Pope |
Arcane Speech |
Jargon-filled scientific papers |
Jargon-filled theology papers, Holy Mass language |
Indoctrination Meetings |
Biology classes, psychology classes |
Sunday sermons, Sunday school |
Financial Base |
Countless billions in old university endowments, tuition, government funding, with $800 billion in US university endowments alone |
Billions in old endowments, church property, Sunday donations, tithes |
Rituals
|
PhD dissertations, experiments (often poorly designed and implemented), science conferences, rituals of science paper writing, countless legend and dogma recitations |
Sunday Mass, baptisms, weddings, First Communion, funerals |
Speculations |
Abundant |
Abundant |
Persecution or Libeling of Heretics |
Frequent (currently non-physical, including gaslighting, slander, libel, accusatory insinuations, stereotyping and discrimination) |
Frequent in the past |
Censorship |
Massive “soft” censorship and repression of undesired observations such as witnessing of paranormal phenomena and successful ESP experiments (see postscript below for more examples) |
Once very frequent, such as Legion of Decency |
Speech Taboos |
Very many (including fair discussion of the paranormal or evidence for design in nature) |
Very many |
Miracle Stories |
Accidental origin of life, and accidental origin of billions of types of protein molecules in the animal kingdom, most having hundreds of well-arranged parts, requiring many miracles of accidental organization, like hundreds of falling logs forming into extensive log cabin hotels or a row of fifty tall sand castles forming from random wind and waves |
Miracle stories involving Jesus, Catholic saints and the Virgin Mary (Fatima, Lourdes, etc.) |
Officials in Fancy Robes? |
Yes (professors during graduation ceremonies) |
Yes |
Despised Deviants |
Witnesses of the paranormal, Darwinism critics, teleology theorists, those having spiritual experiences |
In previous years, Protestants and gays |
Chanting? |
Very much, such as “blind evolution explains it all” chant and “it's all just brain activity” chant |
Very much, such as Hail Mary prayers and the chants of monks |
Art Forms |
Materialist science fiction |
Sculpture, painting, sacred music, sacred architecture |
Saints |
Many science figures whose work is described reverently |
Many canonized saints |
Catechisms |
College textbooks and biased Wikipedia articles |
Official catechisms teaching Catholic dogma |
Legends |
Many “just so” legends such as the legend of trans-Atlantic rafting monkeys, and many achievement legends such as the legend Darwin explained biological origins |
Many legends about saints and their miracles or legends about miraculous healings or the Virgin Mary |
Helper Workers |
Unquestioning conformist science journalists |
Laymen volunteers |
Iconography |
Sparse iconography including endlessly repeated side-profile “Evolution of man” diagram with four or five figures facing right |
Vast iconography |
You do not successfully rebut such comparisons by referring us to the atheistic tendencies of scientific academia, because it is not true that a belief in God is a hallmark of all religions. World religions include various forms of Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Shintoism, Scientology and numerous other creeds, which have an extremely diverse set of beliefs, which may or may not involve a belief in a single deity. Definitions of the word "religion" vary greatly. Anthropologist Clifford Geertz defined a religion as " a system of symbols which acts to establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men by formulating conceptions of a general order of existence and clothing these conceptions with such an aura of factuality that the moods and motivations seem uniquely realistic." Here is another rather similar definition: we can define a religion as a set of beliefs about the fundamental nature of reality and life, or a recommended way of living, typically stemming from the teachings of an authority, along with norms, ethics, rituals, roles or social organizations that may arise from such beliefs. Under such a definition scientific academia may well qualify as a religion, seeing that it is centered around a set of beliefs handed down by authorities such as Darwin and biology professors, and seeing that it involves a set of norms, ethics, rituals, roles or social organizations that may arise from such beliefs.
The enormous current success of scientific academia in getting people to believe in its main dogmas comes from a failure of people to perceive that scientific academia is pretty much a kind of stealth religion, basically a kind of church-in-all-but-name that has infiltrated the halls and rooms of our universities. Once you recognize the strong similarities between scientific academia and an organized religion such as the Roman Catholic Church, there is a kind of "Toto pulling back the Wizard's curtain" effect in which we can suddenly see how much bluffing and bluster is going on when unproven belief community dogmas are marketed as scientific facts.
An expert existing in some "echo chamber" ideological enclave may be filled with dogmatic overconfidence about some opinion that is popular within his little ideological enclave. He may think something along the lines of: “No doubt it is true, because almost all my peers and teachers agree that it is true.” But the idea may seem senseless to someone who has not been long-conditioned inside this ideological enclave, this sheltered thought bubble.
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