This space takes inspiration from Gary Snyder's advice:
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Saturday 28 May 2016

Luther as a model of intolerance in social debate

Martin Luther, by Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1529
The debate over important issues in many communities these days are wracked by vicious personal attacks arising from a bitter intolerance of the opposition, and evident in an unwillingness to even listen to the views of others, let alone engage with the arguments offered.

This is has happened before during times when world views were at odds. One discussion of what it means for those trying to understand the world but have "hard faces to their right and the hysteria and mindless violence and demagoguery on their left" leads to the comparison of the argumentative styles of the violently out-spoken Luther and quietly rebellious Erasmus. The writers' examination gives rise to a question that is at the heart of any study of the spirit of public debate: Would church history as well as world history have been different if there had been more tolerance shown?

Luther's temperament and ingrained behaviour made it impossible for there to be calm reasoning over the contentious practices and beliefs that Luther attacked.  Erasmus was Luther's precursor in attacking the evils in church life of the time - the late 1400s and early 1500s.  After a considerable time ignoring the insistence that he weigh in against Luther, Erasmus produced a work, A Discourse on Free Will,  that provided a critique of Luther's central belief about predestination, where Luther denied the human capacity to exercise free will.

Already Luther had such an intolerant view of Europe's foremost scholar that "mention of the name Erasmus sent Luther into a paroxysm of loathing" (Richard Marius, Martin Luther, Belknap Press 1999), and Luther's treatise written in reply "is insulting, vehement, monstrously unfair, and utterly uncompromising - which is to say it shows Luther reacting in accordance with the character that temperament and experience had stamped upon him by 1525" (Marius, p456).
Of all his Catholic foes, only Erasmus sought to approach Luther gently. Luther responded with a blast that echoes with the cannonades and associated horrors of the coming religious wars (p456).
To make explicit how Luther's violence in his texts and in his speech debased the public debate on the church and the person's relationship with God, I want to quote at length from Marius:
Erasmus, c.1530, maybe by Hans Holbein Snr
To Erasmus's plea for peace, Luther replied that tumult is a sign of the gospel. It is a familiar theme of his but in this context a striking observation, given the smoke still rising from battlefields where peasants were being slaughtered in Germany. In Luther's flexible all-purpose theology, the tumult and fury of the times were part of the wrath of God, and in writing against the peasants he could deplore their rebellion [against land owners and princes] as satanic and at the same time see the gospel as an agent that provoked at once satanic opposition and God's visible anger against Satan. Here, too, was Luther's growing conviction that God had raised him up as a prophet. He was God's tool, and he mocked Erasmus for his desire for peace and an easy life. Luther believed he himself had been the tortured instrument whereby God had revealed the gospel after a long night, and to him his suffering and hardship became the seal of his divine calling as evangelist. Adolf von Harnack said he would concede to Catholic critics of Luther a self-estimation that might appear to be "an insane" pride (p458).
Luther's ongoing attacks on Erasmus the man and Erasmus's understanding of Christian life led to Erasmus's complaint of having been the victim, at the hand of Luther, of "so many wounds worse than fatal". However, the Catholic Erasmus was not the only target. Among many others who ventured further into the morass that the Luther's reform had become, Luther considered radical reformers Andreas Karlstadt and Ulrich Zwingli "blasphemers pure and simple" - "Luther's rhetoric against them was fierce and extreme"; when "Zwingli tried to answer him with mild language, Luther responded with unmitigated rage and railing"(p474).

Similarly, on on the wider scale, Luther's temperament destroyed the spiritual richness of the life of ordinary people of Europe. His reforms gutted the church of its rituals and beliefs that had warmed the hearts and minds of the people over centuries. The "contempt" which Luther had toward the "common people" drew a response where the Wittenbergers who accepted his gospel ignored his teachings and displayed moral standards that dismayed him.  His further view that the masses must "bow to control solely by princes" ensured his "doctrines never attracted a majority of the German people" (p424); The fact was that "people and pastors were alienated from each other" and:
When the Enlightenment came, with its impersonal religiosity devoted to order and obedience, it found the way prepared by Lutheran churches. The ruling class coldly professed their faith; the lower classes did not bother (p473).
It is true that this posting presents an onslaught against Martin Luther, but only as the model "enlightened" reformer. My theme has been that Luther shows that one individual, principally by means of their ugly temperament and their lack of a generous spirit of public debate, though with the support others, is able to destroy, to fragment, to debase what had been established by God's will and human insight and effort over centuries, notwithstanding whatever courage or eloquence they may have.

I repeat the question asked at the top: Would church history as well as world history have been different if there had been more tolerance shown in the religious debate? My answer is that with calmness and tolerance, the widespread rebellion within the Catholic culture of the time could have produced fruit by way of reforms to ecclesiastical abuses decades earlier than those that started to appear late in the century. Also, social reforms in society would likely have occurred earlier.


Sunday 22 May 2016

Science is rightly strewn with doubt

                                     Tina Zellmer for The Chronicle Review 'Big Brains, Small Minds'
Sean Carroll, a cosmologist at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), where his work focuses on dark matter and general relativity, has a new book, The Big Picture, that has been greeted with praise of this kind:
“Weaving the threads of astronomy, physics, chemistry, biology, and philosophy into a seamless narrative tapestry, Sean Carroll enthralls us with what we’ve figured out in the universe and humbles us with what we don’t yet understand.  Yet in the end, it’s the meaning of it all that feeds your soul of curiosity.”
—Neil deGrasse Tyson, host of Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey
Just as Tyson makes a key point about science when he points to the fact that there are some (not all) things "we’ve figured out in the universe",  Carroll is eloquent in his honesty about what is not yet understood. He points to this state of affairs in a subsequent interview with Phil Torres published on Salon.com: "Of course I’m not an expert in all of the fields I talk about in the book – nobody is [my emphasis]. But the different disciplines need to keep up a continual conversation, if we’re to fit the big picture together."

That "conversation', conducted in humility by all parties, must include philosophy, anthropology and theology because these delve into the nature of the human race just as much as areas of study regarded as hard science. The conversation is needed within the broad church of science, which is the search for knowledge,  because of the diversity of views about all kinds of reality. For example, Carroll calls himself a "poetic naturalist", just one of the divisions within the scientific community, who seem to find it hard to agree with each other:
On the one end of the spectrum you have the most hard-core variety, who claim that only the most deep-down fundamental description of nature can be said to describe something “real.” They might say that consciousness, or morality, or free will, are all just illusions. On the other end of the spectrum you have naturalists who believe in only the natural world, but are willing to ascribe objective reality to various extra properties it might have – moral judgments, for example, or inner states of conscious experience.
Following on from that portion of the interview, Carroll in fact makes the case which those who believe in God have been making to promote dialogue with atheists. Carroll declares:
There is only one world, but we have many ways of talking about that world. And if a particular way of talking gives us a useful handle on what the world is and how it behaves, it’s completely appropriate to consider the concepts it evokes as “real.” Air is really made of atoms, but its temperature and pressure are real, even though the individual atoms don’t have temperatures or pressures. Human consciousness and free will are real, even though they’re not present in the individual particles or cells of which we are made.
When it comes to meaning and morality, there are multiple allowed ways of talking, and the correctness of one or the other can’t be settled by doing experiments. That’s where naturalism becomes its most poetic – when we use our creative powers to attach judgment and significance to what goes on all around us.
Those last statements could have come from a Christian in the face of a dogmatic scientist who is arguing that only what can be measured can be regarded as real. The statements also draw a very pertinent question from Torres, an American biologist and scholar and the founder of a non-profit organisation, the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. The question relates to the projection that in 2050, despite the expected continued loss of adherence to organised religion in the materialistic West, Pew researchers expect 87% of the world's population to have a value system based on some form of religious belief. Torres leads up to his question this way:
I’ve often thought of science as a special kind of story-telling in “assertion mode.” And the story it tells — involving quivering atoms, swirling galaxies, and evolving organisms — is without a doubt the “greatest story ever told.” But what’s missing from the story is a transcendent source of meaning for our lives. Without such a source — usually said to be God — how can our lives have true meaning? If the ultimate fate of the universe is a state of infinite entropy [the decline in or lack of order or predictability - Brendan] then what makes life valuable and worth living?
Carroll's response highlights one of the intellectual weaknesses of New Atheists, and even the threat they pose to the common good. Carroll states:
The trick here is “true” meaning. My life has meaning without any supernatural guidance, no matter what anyone else might say about it. The meanings that we finite human beings attribute to our lives are the only kinds of true meanings, because those are the only kinds of meanings there are.
That response could only have come from someone thoroughly imbued with an utterly individualistic cultural mindset. "My life", Carroll declares, is the source of "true" meaning, "no matter what anyone else might say about it".  This blog has just previously featured one insightful description into how the culture we live in can be deterministic as to our beliefs and behaviour if we let it. The way such a value system can be a threat is that it denies the hard-won human rights victories of humanity, such as with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that "recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world", which closely echoes the American Declaration of Independence of 1776, which sources the origin of human dignity: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness".

Where does Carroll source his value system? In his own self. He has been fortunate that American society retains enough of its Christian credentials for him to feel secure in his atomistic world, but if the Christian (and mainstream religious) world view is lost, he would be far less sanguine about his situation. Of course, here I am creating somewhat of a straw-man, because Carroll may be bighearted, strong in defence of the poor and weak, and decidedly not self-centred.

But the fact remains, notwithstanding so much scandalous history to the negative, religious groups are more likely than those without a spiritual dimension in their lives to see the dignity of the person, the worth of nature in itself, and the obligation to uphold the rights of others, even to the point of death, all because they understand how God has makes clear this dignity in his own relationship with humankind.

However, Carroll's main point of the need for conversation about reality must be an ongoing one. His point of view is reinforced by an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education entitled "Big Brains, Small Minds", in which the authors decry the way those in the hard sciences have come to snub the contribution of the humanities, which the authors refer to as the "soft sciences". They find it disturbing in this way:
As the sciences rightly grow, a free society must ensure that criticism of the sciences grows apace. Effective criticism depends on distance, in this case on an unshakeable difference, between the humanities and the STEM fields. That is not to say that STEM researchers can’t or shouldn’t be experts in the humanities, but rather that the work that the humanities do should not be judged by the metrics of hard science. As Aristotle, Plato’s most famous student, suggests at the beginning of the Nicomachean Ethics, "precision is not to be sought for alike in all discussions." Similarly, we should not expect the humanities to be driven or dominated by the objectives of science. Plato teaches us that part of the liberal arts’ enduring mission is precisely to critique these objectives.
It ought to be obvious that the study of law, justice, and the arts is one of the best preparations for governing. This goes for governing our polis and equally for governing our technologies and ourselves. If you’re interested in learning about justice, you don’t go to the chemistry laboratory. You go to philosophy class and travel to Plato’s Republic.
But if you go to the Republic in search of concrete answers about justice (as do many of our students who are encouraged to search for the "right" answers in their labs), you will be disappointed. Plato is not famous for answering questions but for staking his life on the chance to ask them. He seems more interested in inviting his readers to ask their own questions and to finish the dialogue themselves, as if to say that it’s more important to learn to think than to memorize others’ dogmatic principles. The question about justice that motivates the Republic is posed in a lengthy series of dialogues, and it does not give rise to a fixed doctrine. Plato seems to be suggesting that part of being just is taking the time to think seriously about justice. 
Carroll would, I'm sure, agree with the authors' fears that the West is "on the verge of becoming the best trained, and least educated, society"  in 2000 years, given the historically recent demarcation by some of the totality of human experience of reality into spheres that are "clean" and "unclean", or "higher caste" or "lower caste" - even to the degree of there being "untouchables" - and based upon about the same degree of logic or reasonableness.

When it comes down to it, as to the important things of life, mainstream Christians don't care if there are multiple universes, for example. As we have seen, most people in the world care more about understanding their spiritual experience, especially to be in a closer relationship with the God who loves them.  Therefore, to interpolate a wider significance as to their conclusion, the authors of "Big Brains, Small Minds" see the only chance of rescuing the situation is if scientists of all shades, as with all seekers of knowledge, join together and "take it as their mission to pursue wisdom [so as to] guide political and technological ambition, and to stake their lives on the chance to help [us all] ask meaningful questions, rather than give half-baked answers, about the meaning of life".

God's guiding hand awaits our cooperation

We are afraid of losing what we have, whether it's our life or our possessions and property. But this fear evaporates when we understand that our life stories and the history of the world were written by the same hand.
― From The Alchemist by Paul Coelho, a Brazilian, writing in Portuguese; first published 1988.

Earlier in that novel:
The boy knew what [ a fellow traveller] was about to describe: the mysterious chain that links one thing to another, the same chain that had caused him to become a shepherd, that had caused his recurring dream [of the Pyramids as a key to finding treasure], that had brought him to a city in Spain near Africa, to find a king, and to be robbed in order to meet a crystal merchant and...

The Alchemist employs the concept of "maktub" meaning "It is written" - but Coelho is careful not to downplay our own agency in fulfilling our life's destiny. Coelho says this about fate and each one's personal story in life:
There’s an important difference between blind fate and the path of the personal legend. When we speak of fate, man’s free will is absent: we are merely puppets in the hands of a cold and distant puppeteer. In the case of personal legend, there’s the dimension of mission. This means that the person has to actively wish to tread down the path that will enable her to flourish. It is a difficult path, there are many obstacles, but it’s the person’s choice. There is always the possibility for us to turn our backs to our personal legend.
God has a plan, a goal, a purpose for each person, and pursuing that goal is our life's work, as Coelho describes  here:
“When you find your path, you must not be afraid. You need to have sufficient courage to make mistakes. Disappointment, defeat, and despair are the tools God uses to show us the way.” ― Brida
Rick Warren offers a useful insight into our personal story and God's will for our destiny:
God’s will is not automatic. He allows us to make choices. Many of the things that happen to you are not God’s perfect will. We all have to choose between God’s will and our will. We often choose our will.
If I got drunk, fell in a pool, and drowned, that wouldn’t be God’s will for my life. It would be my own stupid decision. God has a destiny for your life, but he won’t force it on you.
But you can have God’s will for your life. Even when you mess up, God can turn disaster into destiny. It’s never too late to have his perfect will in your life. Just pray, “God, I want your purpose for my life,” and you won’t miss it — no matter where you’ve been. He’ll get you in line with his purpose. He wants you to fulfill your destiny more than you do!
A postscript: In a 2008 interview , Coelho spoke about being a Catholic and his delight in the mystery of the Mass, where Christ, as both human and God, becomes present in a physical way. He went on to make this point:
God’s a verb. God is action. God is - is a verb, yes. You cannot define. When Moses asks who are you and He says, “I Am.” He does not say I am this or that or that. He just says, “I Am.” So, I think this is the best definition, you know? He is.

Saturday 14 May 2016

The dominating influence of the culture we live in

More and more people are becoming concerned at the human wreckage left as moral behaviour changes. One marker of the damage to individuals, and to the whole of society, is the way suicide rates have surged in the developed countries (see here and here) where the Christian insight into the value of each person has been lost most thoroughly under the onslaught of a mindset that puts the individual above all else, that puts things above the common good, and pleasure before social responsibility.

 That Western society has changed rapidly and without a deliberate decision by society to depart from the traditional Judeo-Christian pattern of life to one that opposes it shows how destructive the tyranny of profit alone, to take one example, can be when it becomes the guiding principle.

The way the societies and their individual members can be the victim of the reshaping of  a culture for business goals or because of neglect of the intangible riches society already possessed can be illustrated by means of this excerpt from Peter Block’s management book The Answer To How Is Yes. Block discusses how the pattern of life that is the culture we live in can unconsciously determine much of our beliefs and practices. And therein lies a vicious trap:
These patterns – personal, institutional, and societal – partially gain their power through their subtlety. As powerful as the culture is, we hardly notice its effects on us. It is the sea we swim in. The culture works on us and through us and even expresses us. In a literal sense, though, the culture does not really determine our actions or even explain why we do what we do. We are responsible for this. The culture is more like a presence in the shadows, ready to step in when we are not paying attention.
One useful way to think about it is as the default culture. In computer software, a whole host of default settings comes with every new program you buy. If you choose, you can change these settings to suit your preferences but if you don’t, the defaults create the rules.
Each time we turn our attention away from our own intentions, we operate, in a sense, by default. In the absence of our clear intention, our willingness to consciously change the settings of the world we are creating, the default culture is decisive. This is hard to see clearly because the culture is able to absorb the rhetoric of our individuality and freedom. It (we) allows space for our own desires, it just does not encourage acting on them. While no one argues against values and desires, we fear they might lead to anarchy and chaos. The result is that although every institution lists its human values on its mission statement, these are often operationally set aside, only to be resurrected during retreats or when public declarations are required.

Saturday 30 April 2016

Reasons to help unbelievers

A textbook for those entering the hospitality industry states: "Today, people have few moral absolutes; they decide situationally whether it is acceptable to steal, lie,or drink and drive. They seem to think that whatever is right is what works best for the individual. " This text was published in 2014.

The only source of hope for a world consumed with conflicting personal values, the author argues, is that everyone will agree that "all people's rights are important and should not be violated. This belief is central to all civilized societies; without it, chaos would reign". However, he offers no foundation for what is a "right" or for what he terms "basic moral values [namely] integrity, respect for human life, self-control, honesty, and courage", other than they are part of the human make-up. Others have explored further what they see as a troubling cultural decline in Western life.

What the textbook author (John R Walker/Pearson) fears is the lack of trust in business, the failure of those who consider themselves professionals to provide a consistently high level of service, and, within the industry a race to the bottom - in a word, chaos.

However, there is a light in the darkness, not a moral teacher of the ilk of  Buddha, Confucius, Aristotle or Shakespeare, but the supreme being who made us, but whom we can come to know as a personal friend and father. This is where those who believe that Jesus is our saviour from evil can be thankful for the insight and gift of spiritual support (grace) that enable them to live a life that has a higher quality even when it is attracts ridicule, rejection, and physical harm.

Our choice: Into the light or a life of darkness
When Paul says in Romans 6:23  says that the result of sin is death he means that a lack of moral behaviour leads to the death of relationships, death of our dreams, of opportunities, peace of mind, self-respect, and of the possibility of joy. This is the chaos rapidly making its presence felt in countries whose higher standard of living has allowed each individual within society to reject the restraint required when a nation is still struggling to provide better health care, education, and career opportunities. This year, there has been much comment about the surge in suicides in the United States because of the frustrations with what life has offered in a misdirected society and as a result of the individualistic mentality, toxic sexuality, and rampant consumerism that controls the lives of so many Americans.

This is not to say be a follower of Jesus because you will have a happy life in the way one might practise yoga or get involved in Transcendental Mediation to relieve stress. Rather, learn to know Jesus as a person who loves us and who guides us, and as someone we must give our thanks to for defeating the power of evil by dying on our behalf. As one piece describes it in golden terms:
"[Christians] should be the most thankful people on earth. Reflecting on the great salvation, eternal security and destiny Jesus purchased with his own blood produces humble gratitude. The living God will dwell face-to-face with his children. Believers will reign with him in the fullness of his kingdom [heaven]. We will live with God as the centre of our existence. There will be no more sorrow, no more tears, no more sin and no more darkness.
"Who else has what has been freely given us? Who else can face life with confidence, and the end of life anticipating God's smile? Who else can endure suffering and hardship in life with inner peace and contentment? [...] We need not wait for everything to go our way, for goals to be met, bills to be paid or happiness achieved before we whisper our thanks to God." 


Sunday 27 March 2016

Thank God rather than give in to despair

Some words of wisdom for times of trouble:


We can count on God knowing what we need, and when:
                                                Thanks to Kelli Mamadaliyev for these uplifting words


Monday 8 February 2016

Zika and why God allows suffering

Geovane Silva holds his son Gustavo Henrique,
 who has microcephaly, at the Oswaldo Cruz Hospital
 in Recife, Brazil. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Source: Independent 
The world is on the alert for the spread of the horrifying Zika virus that has babies being born with small heads and and a poor outlook for brain development.  Thousands of these babies have been born throughout Latin America and thousands more will be, with an immense impact on the children’s lives and on their families. That is one image of suffering that we have in front of us at present.

Another image of what is harsh in life is that of rape, with the report just out in Britain that attracted headlines like “Rapes linked to online dating up by more than 450% in five years”. Further: “Every 2 minutes somewhere in the United States a woman is sexually assaulted. 1 in 4 women is a victim  of rape or attempted rape, and 75% of rapes happen when on dates”, according to the Women’s Center and Shelter of Greater Pittsburgh. This draws attention to the pure evil that can surround us.

Both of these images of the suffering world come at a time when I was fortunate enough to read a thoughtful study of God’s place in a world where disasters, acts of individual or community evil, and death afflict us. The study gives a Biblical account of suffering and a powerful message is offered to help us understand and endure suffering.

Based on the experience of the people in the Old Testament era and the knowledge of God’s ways derived from the life of Jesus, one fundamental principle arises, namely, even if God does not remove the suffering or explain its purpose, He can be trusted. A second principle is that God made a world that was good. In contrast, the human rebellion against God gives rise to much of the suffering we encounter. Moreover, human willfulness and self-centredness can preclude the intelligent preparation of safety measures as precautions against natural disasters. We can see this when people build on what is known to be a flood area, or cut costs in construction in an earthquake zone.

Whatever the cause, suffering happens. For those who do trust God, suffering of whatever kind can be a time of learning and growth, a time to develop spiritual muscle or self-rule, even though that may entail a journey through hardship or anguish. Therefore, there is value in suffering. The Father allowed His own son to suffer to accomplish the saving of everyone, to secure their redemption from a damaged form of living,  a purpose Jesus’ companions did not comprehend when Jesus told them what was about to happen to him. They understood the big picture afterward.

First, though we want answers that are not shrouded in mystery we cannot reduce God and His ways to fit into our limited human understanding. So our starting point has to be that God’s character is unchanging. First and foremost God has power over all that is in creation. God’s power is absolute and He can bring good results out of evil and suffering. I think of Peter, Paul and Mary’s song Weave Me the Sunshine, which has the words: “The tree of love grows on the bank of the river of suffering”.

Second, God can and will put a stop to evil in His perfect time. Joseph was sold by his brothers to slavery in Egypt and it took a long time to understand why God had allowed such treatment. Of course, later he understood that God intended him to save the Egyptians and his own family from death by famine. God is always doing more than we think, whether for us it’s a serious illness or the inconvenience of missing the bus.

Charlie Keilar, son of slain lawyer Brendan Keilar,
 accepts  a bravery award for his father's heroic actions
 from Victoria Governor David de Kretser. 
Photo: Joe Armao, Sydney Morning Herald


Third, God does not let us suffer needlessly. We cannot know God’s specific purpose for each hurt, but we do know God uses every kind of suffering to makes us more like Him in strength of spirit, to make us more open to others and the world around us. The widespread influence of a person who does something for others is shown by one case that has stayed in my mind from 2007, where a lawyer going to work in central Melbourne, Australia, came across a Hell’s Angels member dragging a screaming woman towards a car. He intervened, as did another man, a tourist. The abductor pulled a gun and shot the lawyer, the father of three, killing him and wounding the tourist. The city erupted in an outpouring of praise for the two who went to help the woman. A medal was given to the family to honour the heroism their husband and father had shown. The newspaper report of the medal ceremony went on to background the 53 people who had been given medals for previous acts of heroism as a wonderful example to society at large:
 “Tales of tragedy and remarkable survival were illuminated by the recipients' acts of selfless courage in a bid to save relatives, friends, workmates and strangers.  An exploding car, burning homes, rough seas, a collapsed sand cave, sinking boats and gunmen were not enough to stop the people from rushing to the aid of others.”
Finally, although the Bible teaches otherwise, we equate a smooth path in life with God’s pleasure and see difficulties as bad.  It is clearly an erroneous idea that easy and comfortable are best. Parents provide a mix of challenge and comfort for their children. So does God: “God is treating you as His sons. Has there ever been any son whose father did not train him?” (Hebrews 12:5 and Revelation 3:19). Moreover, in this way, suffering drives us deep into God’s word.

The Lima family, from left: Ana Vitoria, Viviane,
 Carlos, Maria Luiza and Julia (Photo: Bruno Kelly)
To return to my opening, the spreading Zika scourge, among all the articles describing possible causes and the impact on the often poverty-stricken parents, there have been some descriptions that can be seen as examples of the way God does train us and deepen our spirit. we see something of the truth of Paul's insight in Romans 8 that"we know that all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose". God has a plan for those who love Him, consciously of in the depth of their heart and nothing can surmount that plan; His purpose is always accomplished, no matter the trials and difficulties we face.

Britain’s Independent reports on two cases of those who have been through a life under the weight of the effects of the Zika virus. The first tells us about Ana Carolina Caceres, a 24-year-old Brazilian who was born with  a smaller-than-normal head. Her parents were warned by doctors that “she would never walk or talk, and had a slim chance of survival”. However, Ms Caceres is able to exclaim, “But I’m still here and doing more than anyone predicted.” She graduated with a degree in journalism last year and has penned a book about her life. “I’ve been suffering on the side-lines all my life, but now I’m able to tell millions of people that microcephaly is not the end of your world.”

The same Independent report also introduces the Lima family:
 Viviane Lima, 34, a Brazilian mother of three, [has] two girls born with microcephaly within the space of two years. “For the past 17 years, I have struggled to cope. Ministers are promising to support hundreds of women with healthcare and money, but we constantly have to rely on ourselves”…. Both girls, Ana Vitoria, 16 and Maria Luiza, 14, suffer from speech and cognitive problems. “Doctors told me both my children wouldn’t walk, talk or laugh. Today, Ana rollerskates and we are one big happy family on an amazing journey,” Ms Lima said.
Ms Lima’s husband Carlos, 34, stepfather to the two elder girls, knows the Zika virus is causing havoc to many, but he offered hope for those affected. “Love and patience have pulled us through and every day being father to my daughters is a fantastic experience,” he said. “One that’s changed me for the better.”

Sunday 7 February 2016

Psychiatry condemned for over-reaching

Science and its associated intellectual pursuits have long been of interest to me because of the certainty that practitioners claim and the public mostly accept about “discoveries”.  Previous posts here and here have highlighted the dangers of unchallenged acceptance of what that may turn out to be an honest misreading of evidence, perhaps a limited account of the facts, even outrageous self-promotion.  The point is, investigate all that is in the natural world, try to find ways to cure diseases of the body and the mind, but recognise the breadth and depth of the human person.
Anthony Daniels, who writes as Theodore
Dalrymple. Photo Source: Wikipedia
This time my attention turns to the medical science of psychiatry. A new book has generated pathways to information about trends in this form of health care, and these are worth taking to explore how confident we can be at the pronouncements of those prominent in the field. The book is Admirable Evasions: How psychology undermines morality, by British journalist, doctor and psychiatrist, Anthony Daniels, who writes under the name Theodore Dalrymple. The title alludes to Edmund’s lament in King Lear: “ . . . an admirable evasion of whoremaster man, to lay his goatish disposition to the charge of a star.” The theme of the book is that psychiatry responds to, in fact fosters, the belief whereby people “find it easy to blame their actions on material forces in the way earlier generations blamed them on astrological forces”.
In other words, dissatisfaction with any manner of things in our life, the melancholy which may come upon us in the midst of a fruitful life, are forms of the unhappiness known through the ages, and should be faced up to as part of the demands of being a responsible person with a moral dimension. That unhappiness should not be labelled as depression, and its relief not sought on a psychiatrist's couch or by consuming drugs under the assumption that a faulty brain or its chemicals are the cause.
Condemnation - not too harsh a term -  of the present day practice of psychiatry arises, too, in an article in the New York Review of Books,  which sympathetically reports  that the authors of books under review offer “powerful indictments of the way psychiatry is now practiced. They document the ‘frenzy’ of diagnosis, the overuse of drugs with sometimes devastating side effects, and widespread conflicts of interest.” On top of that is that the benefits of the “best practice” treatment through the prescribing of psychoactive drugs, cannot be proved to be greater than the harm produced in the person seeking help.
Just as Freud has been shown to be wrong, as have behaviourists of the ilk of B F Skinner, Dalrymple vents his “own frustration with the intellectual over-reach and ‘damn lies’ told by the world of psychology”. His main point is that great literature has more to say about the suffering of the human mind and heart and soul than does the study of the brain, worthwhile though that is.  The reviewer stresses this point:
In searching the works of Shakespeare, Auden, Burgess, Blake and others, for signs of condition and predilection that psychology now calls its own, [Dalrymple] argues that the knowledge of melancholy or a dysmorphia of character can be no more informed by it than our great literary canon. Does Dr Johnson’s Rasselas,  he asks, not capture the ‘tragic dimension of human existence’ more so than modern neuroscience? 
To which the reviewer responds emphatically: “Quite!’, adding, “I have learned more about myself from Larkin, Orwell, Burke and Virgil for the simple reason that they promote self-examination, as opposed to self-obsession. A claim that psychology, our author agrees, can’t make for itself.”

Wednesday 27 January 2016

Science is not all it seems

Keeping the pronouncements and declarations of scientists in real-world perspective has been one of the aims of this blog. But in these columns A problem of science  was preceded by Dali and the beauty of science. So the need to keep the scientific endeavour on track has been posed as a challenge but science  has not been mocked.

The danger of pride within the scientific community is one element that gives rise to concern; another is the scourge of a highly competitive atmosphere enveloping practitioners, whether in academia or industry. Therefore is is worth noting a piece run in The Times in December 2015. It was picked up and carried in The Australian of December 18, 2015, under the headline The science of hyperbole is now exponential. In full, that piece states:
Some researchers might call it the most outrageous affront to their profession since the trial of Galileo. That is where the problem lies.The world of science appears to have a growing addiction to hyperbole, according to an analysis of article summaries published over the past four decades. Scientists at the University of Utrecht in The Netherlands found the proportion of abstracts using 25 adjectives such as "groundbreaking", "amazing" and "spectacular" has risen almost eight-fold since the mid-1970s. 
Today's abstracts are nearly 40 times as likely to mention the word "novel" as they were in 1974. "By extrapolating...over the past 40 years to the future, we predict the word `novel` will appear in every record by the year 2123," the academics say in the British Medical Journal. It is not clear whether this surge is more of a result of competition for funding or of a ratcheting-up of hype scientists need to go through to get their papers in journals.
While books published today are marginally more likely to use one of the 25 positive adjectives than they were 40 years ago, the rise of verbal embroidery in scientific papers has been, well, staggeringly exponential. "Scientists may assume that results and their implications have to be exaggerated and overstated to get published," the authors write.