The New York Times, Book Review, June 30, 1996, pp. 11, 12.
The Job Is Finished
Science has been so successful at describing the universe,
John Horgan claims, that further research may not yield
much.
THE END OF SCIENCE
Facing the Limits of Knowledge in the Twilight of the
Scientific Age.
By John Horgan. 308 pp. Reading, Mass.:
Helix Books/Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. $24.
By Natalie Angier
Anybody who habitually follows science, or has the
sweet-and-sour privilege of writing about it for general
consumption, will very likely resist the premise that the
end of science is nigh or that we are "facing the limits of
knowledge." The "twilight" of the scientific age? The first
feeble streak of dawn is more like it. After all, as most
science writers can affirm, one of the biggest challenges
of the craft is to come up with novel ways of saying that
scientists don't know something in a specific case.
Researchers find hundreds of new genes practically every
month, but they have no clue what the great bulk of those
genes do in the body. They know that the human
immunodeficiency virus causes AIDS, but they have only the
muddiest understanding of how the virus operates and none
at all of how to stop it. They know that 98 percent of the
DNA of chimpanzees is identical with that of humans. Why,
then, are the two species so different that one has the
capacity and sense of entitlement to keep the other in zoos
and laboratory cages? Even Lewis Thomas, for all his
extravagant literary skills, began to creak redundant in
his last years on the subject of our vast ignorance and the
need to kneel humbly before it.
Yet in this intellectually bracing, sweepingly reported,
often brilliant and sometimes bullying book, John Horgan
makes the powerful case that the best and most exciting
scientific discoveries are behind us. He argues that many
scientists today, particularly those he interviewed for
this book, are "gripped by a profound unease." Part of that
malaise results from all the sociopolitical irritants we've
heard about: the dwindling financial resources, the vicious
competition, the strident antipathy of animal rights
activists, religious fundamentalists, technophobes and the
like.
But a far more important source of despair, Mr. Horgan
insists, is that scientists are beginning to sense that
"the great era of scientific discovery is over." The big
truths, the primordial truths, the pure truths about "the
universe and our place in it" have already been mapped out.
Science has been so spectacularly successful at describing
the principal features of the universe, on a scale from
quarks to the superstructure of galaxies, that the entire
enterprise may well end up the paradoxical victim of its
own prosperity. "Further research may yield no more great
revelations or revolutions," he writes, "but only
incremental, diminishing returns."
In pursuing his thesis, Mr. Horgan, a senior writer for
Scientific American, interviews dozens of scientists and
scientific philosophers, many of them the celebrated big
thinkers and wild speculators -- and best-selling authors
-- of our day. Here you will meet Stephen Jay Gould, Roger
Penrose, Steven Weinberg, Daniel Dennett, Stuart Kauffman,
Marvin Minsky, John Wheeler, Frank Tipler and others. Mr.
Horgan has a strong grasp of a broad spectrum of
disciplines, and one of the best things about "The End of
Science" is that it is a wonderfully concise introduction
to the greatest scientific hits of the last 15 or 20 years.
It may make you feel you understand, at least colloquially,
superstring theory, mathematical topology and how to
distinguish chaos from complexity.
Scientists may not always consciously recognize that the
undertaker is waiting at the door; they may, and in fact
usually do, disagree with the premise throughout the book.
Yet Mr. Horgan takes pains to show how the scientists often
belie their confidence in the future with the stray
admission of fallibility, lapsed vision or undifferentiated
anxiety; if nothing else, the high-pitched and nearly
hysterical cackles that escape from the mouths of more than
one of his sources after they have scolded him for his
"pessimism" bring to mind the image of the mad scientist
who is totally out of touch with reality.
Mr. Horgan is a master thumbnail artist, introducing every
character with a few phrases that capture the person's
appearance and temperament with the dead-on wit of the
caricaturist David Levine. Of the astrophysicist Stephen
Hawking, he says, "His purple-lipped, Mick Jagger mouth
often curled up at one corner in a kind of smirk." Richard
Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist whom Mr. Horgan clearly
dislikes, is "an icily handsome man, with predatory eyes,
a knife-thin nose and incongruously rosy cheeks ... a
finely tuned, highperformance competitor in the war of
ideas: Darwin's greyhound."
Mr. Horgan is like an excessively clever and argumentative
colleague. He can get on your nerves; he can make you feel
as if you're coming down with a mental ulcer; you may not
even like him much of the time. Nevertheless, he is too
impressive and entertaining to ignore. He is right, after
all, when he says that science has constructed a
magnificent framework for comprehending our world. We know
that the universe exploded into being 15 billion years ago,
give or take a fistful of billions, and has been expanding
ever since. We know that all matter is governed by a few
basic forces -- gravity, electromagnetism, the strong force
and the weak force. We know that the earth was born about
4.5 billion years ago, that life arose a few hundred
million years later and has been evolving ever since
through the mechanism of natural selection. We have
deciphered the laws of heredity and the elegant structure
of DNA.
These are the highlights of a basal reality, a "modern myth
of creation" so profoundly and objectively true, Mr. Horgan
insists, that he wagers it will still be recognized as true
a thousand years from now by whatever sentient minds (or
machines) are around to do the recognizing. And he doubts
that there will be many, if any, new discoveries able to
match in sweep, potency and sheer shock value a theory like
relativity, which set the universal speed limit at the pace
of light and revealed the elasticity of space.
Certainly many big, succulent mysteries remain, Mr. Horgan
admits. But he proposes that most of those glorious
problems may well stay insoluble, in the scientific sense
of being able to put one's putative knowledge to the test
and use it to make subsequent predictions about reality.
For example, neuroscientists have almost no notion of how
consciousness arises. There are some very pretty
hypotheses, including Mr. Penrose's attempts to link the
powers of the mind to quantum mechanics, or Mr. Dennett's
contention that consciousness is an illusion "arising out
of the interaction of many different 'subprograms' run on
the brain's hardware," as Mr. Horgan synopsizes it. Yet
none of these artful ideas are verifiable, any more than
one can verify the meaning of a composition by Philip
Glass. Even Mr. Dennett says that if we could design a
computer program that accurately mimicked the human brain,
it would be as inscrutable as the brain itself.
The same might be said for knowing exactly how the universe
was created, how life began on this planet, whether there
is life elsewhere and whether that alien life adheres to
the dictum of natural selection. These questions are but
scientific sirens; you can hear their song, but you'll
never reach their source in one piece.
In other words, Mr. Horgan argues, the big problems that
can be solved have been solved, and the big ones that
haven't been solved can't be solved. Where does that leave
contemporary scientists? They can either pursue small,
manageable and vaguely boring science (sequencing the
complete complement of human DNA may fall into this
category), or they can turn to what Mr. Horgan calls
"ironic science." Such science is "speculative,
postempirical," resembling literary criticism "in that it
offers points of view, opinions, which are, at best,
interesting." Ironic science is provocative, he says, but
it fails to converge on the truth. " It cannot achieve
empirically verifiable surprises that force scientists to
make substantial revisions in their basic description of
reality," he writes.
I have some quarrels with this book. For one thing, it is
almost completely devoid of female voices. Of the scores of
scientists who show up to stroke their chins on these
pages, only one is a woman, Lynn Margulis, and she barely
lingers long enough to declare that she is not "a feminist"
(whatever that means). The lack of women is in part
attributable to the book's underrepresentation of genuinely
working scientists, the people who are doing the
experiments and keeping their hands -- and minds -- in the
muck of the world. Too many of the characters here have
entered the phase of their career that has been called "the
philosopause." They have retired from the university or
grown bored with lab work, and so have taken up
professional cogitation.
For another, Mr. Horgan, who is very much an active
character in his narrative, too often seems less intent on
getting at the truth than in engaging in intellectual
one-upmanship, triumphing when questions he asks fluster
his sources or catch them off guard. Finally, I do not buy
his central thesis of limits and twilights. I remain an
optimist who believes that many solid, empirically based
beauties await us, particularly in the biological sciences:
unifying insights that will illuminate pattern formation in
the developing embryo, or the outpouring of biological
diversity from comparative genetic monotony. But read this
ambitious book for yourself, pick it apart, snarl at it to
your heart's discontent. Whether you agree or disagree that
science is entering its senescence is not, after all, the
end of the world.
-----
Natalie Angier, a science reporter for The New York Times,
is the author, most recently, of "The Beauty of the
Beastly: New Views on the Nature of Life." She is working
on a book about women's bodies.
[End]