Sunday, May 10, 2009

Cult of CHuB

Practitioners within the various branches of scientific endeavor have, with varying degrees of success, attempted to keep their assertions based on the empirical, tightly-woven argument, and rightly so – that’s the tedious and often fruitful task they have set themselves to. Orbiting the gravity of such arguments is a segment of society, particularly well-represented by the well-educated, that seeks to find whatever salvation is available within the realm of truth established by empirical fact separate from speculation. There is a nobility in their sincere efforts to circle hard evidence in their reasoning, but the bare facts are often confounded with the latest interpretation of facts and, despite their often formidable sophistication, they are not immune to the human propensity to preach – and preach they do. It can be heard in the authoritative tones of a PBS documentary, it is nested in the dialogues of TV dramas and motion pictures, and permeates much of the reporting done by our large news outlets. It can be recognized by its “as everyone in their right mind knows” quality.

This preaching would be better received if it weren’t for a spirit within us that instinctively knows to be more adventurous than the intellectual weight of our time and place. Yet the continuous suggestion that such adventurousness is ill founded – that there is but one truly sane way to see things – (as mentioned earlier) can trouble the soul.

Short of giving into the suggestion, is there a balm to relieve this chafing?

Humor, though it usually involves a degree of hyperbole and overgeneralization, is one thing that can help. In giving a name to this form of faith that presents itself as an alternative to faith, I choose to borrow in small measure from that nothing-is-sacred mind-set that many of its adherents should appreciate: It is the Cult of the Contemporary Human Brain or, for greater ease in reading and speech, the Cult of CHuB. For most in the Cult of CHuB, the mind is what the brain does and nothing more. Their tendency is to characterize themselves as being above the flightiness of faith yet their abiding faith is placed in what they believe can be measured and understood by the contemporary human brain. Their hard evidence and incontrovertible logic, by their own reasoning, can be no more than the hard evidence and incontrovertible logic of what they themselves have defined as a quasi-arbitrary biological formation.

Now, the next time that familiar tone of “as everyone knows” raises its head in print or over the airwaves – when you feel that chafing that comes from what are often tenets of faith being presented as accepted fact among clear-headed people– just say “Cult of CHuB” to yourself for a little relief and context.

1 comment:

rewing said...

Good words, Rich. What was the other acronym you used that I liked? Quasi...arbitrary... ape brain (I know I'm missing a couple of words)? Something that the faithful in the Cult of CHuB highly reverence and revere. Hopefully you have a blog with that acronym spelled out for my refreshment soon. Hope all is well...