Consilience
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Average customer review:Product Description
In this work, the author argues for the fundamental unity of all knowledge and the need to search for what he calls "consilience", the composition of the principles governing every branch of learning. Edward O. Wilson, pioneer of sociobiology and biodiversity, breaks from the conventions of current thinking. He shows how our explosive rise in intellectual mastery of the truths of our universe has its roots in the ancient Greek concept of an intrinsic orderliness that governs our cosmos vision. This vision found its apogee in the Age of Enlightenment, then gradually was lost in the increasing fragmentation and specialization of knowledge in the last two centuries. Professor Wilson shows why the goals of the original Enlightenment are surging back to life, why they are reappearing on the very frontiers of science and humanisitc scholarship, and how they are beginning to sketch themselves as the blueprint of our world.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #163135 in Books
- Published on: 2003-09-04
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 374 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
The biologist Edward O. Wilson is a rare scientist: over a long career he has not only made signal contributions to population genetics, evolutionary biology, entomology and ethology, but also steeped himself in philosophy, the humanities and the social sciences. The result of his lifelong, wide-ranging investigations is Consilience (the word means "a jumping together", in this case of the many branches of human knowledge), a wonderfully broad study that encourages scholars to bridge the many gaps that yawn between and within the cultures of science and the arts. No such gaps should exist, Wilson maintains, for the sciences, humanities and arts have a common goal: to give understanding a purpose, to lend to us all "a conviction, far deeper than a mere working proposition, that the world is orderly and can be explained by a small number of natural laws." In making his synthetic argument, Wilson examines the ways (rightly and wrongly) in which science is done, puzzles over the postmodernist debates now sweeping academia, and proposes thought-provoking ideas about religion and human nature. He turns to the great evolutionary biologists and the scholars of the Enlightenment for case studies of science properly conducted, considers the life cycles of ants and mountain lions, and presses, again and again, for rigour and vigour to be brought to bear on our search for meaning. The time is right, he suggests, for us to understand more fully that quest for knowledge, for "Homo sapiens, the first truly free species, is about to decommission natural selection, the force that made us .... Soon we must look deep within ourselves and decide what we wish to become." Wilson's wisdom, eloquently expressed in the pages of this grand and lively summing-up, will be of much help in that search.
Review
"The first great ecologist, a pioneer in sociobiology and biodiversity.a giant among popularisers of science" - Bryan Appleyard on Edward O Wilson, in THE INDEPENDENT * "There's a new Darwin. His name is Edward O Wilson." - Tom Wolfe
Tom Wolfe
* "There's a new Darwin. His name is Edward O Wilson."
Customer Reviews
A million years ahead of its time or impossible?
In this ambitious work, Edward O. Wilson, one of the most distinguished scientists of our times, and a man I greatly admire, goes perhaps a bit beyond his area of expertise as he envisions a project that is perhaps beyond even the dreams of science fiction. "...[A]ll tangible phenomena," he writes on page 266, "from the birth of stars to the workings of social institutions, are based on material processes that are ultimately reducible, however long and tortuous the sequences, to the laws of physics."
This in a nutshell is his dream of "consilience." It is also the statement of a determinist. My problem with such a laudable endeavor (and with determinism in general) is this: even if he is right, that the arts and the humanities will ultimately yield to reduction, how do we, limited creatures that we are, do it? It seems to me that in the so-called soft sciences like sociology, economics, and psychology, for example, and even more so in the world of the humanities and the arts, reduction is so incredibly complex that such an attempt is comparable (in reverse order) of putting Humpty Dumpty back together again. It's ironic that Wilson uses almost exactly this metaphor on page 296 to explain why once the rain forests are chopped down, they're gone forever. He notes, "Collect all the species...Maintain them in zoos, gardens, and laboratory cultures...Then bring the species back together and resynthesize the community on new ground." Will this work? Wilson's answer is no. He writes, "...biologists cannot accomplish such a task, not if thousands of them came with a billion-dollar budget. They cannot even imagine how to do it." He adds, still on page 296, that even if biologists could sort and preserve cultures of all the species, "they could not then put the community back together again. Such a task...is like unscrambling an egg with a pair of spoons."
This is exactly how I feel about the consilience of human knowledge. I cannot even imagine how reductionism could help us to understand a poem. There is a dictum among poets that "nothing defines the poem but the poem itself." No amount of reduction will allow us to understand what makes the poem tick. This is because the poem is an experience, a human emotional, intellectual, sensual experience dependent upon not only the literal meaning of the words, but on their connotations, their sounds, their rhythm, their relationships to one another, their syntax, their allusions, their history, their use by other poets, etc., and also what the individual reader of the poem brings to the experience. Reduce the poem and you do not have an understanding of the poem. At best you have an essay on the poem, at worst something alien to the esthetic experience. In essence, I should say that the problem with consilience is that our experience is not reducible.
I have read a lot of what Professor Wilson has written, including On Human Nature (1978), the charming memoir, Naturalist (1994), parts of The Ants (1990) and his controversial, but ground-breaking and highly influential, Sociobiology (1975). And I have read some of his critics, most recently essayist Wendell Berry's Life Is a Miracle (2000) and Charles Jenck's piece in Alas, Poor Darwin (2000). What has struck me in these readings is the disconnection between what Wilson has written and what some critics have criticized him for writing! For example it is thought that Wilson is a strict biological determinist when it comes to human behavior. But here he writes, very clearly on page 126, "We know that virtually all of human behavior is transmitted by culture." Wilson has had to weather more than his share of unfair criticism because, as the father of sociobiology, which some mistakenly see as a furtherance of a rationale for eugenics, he has been made the target of the misinformed. Additionally, Wilson is not the lovable sort of genius we adored in Einstein, nor the heroic scientist overcoming a terrible handicap as in the case of Stephen Hawking, but a slightly nerdish genius from Alabama who spent much of his life crawling around on the ground and in trees looking at ants. Some people make it clear that such a man should not presume to tell them anything about human beings and how we should conduct our lives or how we should view ourselves. But I think they are wrong. Wilson brings unique insights into the human condition, and he has the courage of his convictions. I think he is a man we should listen to regardless of whether we agree with him or not.
Even if its central thesis is wrong, Consilience is nonetheless an exciting book, full of information and ideas, elegantly written, dense, at times brilliant, a book that cannot be ignored and should be read by anyone interested in the human condition regardless of their field of expertise.
From fundamental physics to art, in one easy paradigm
In some sense, Wilson's book is trivial -- it is the job of science to identify relationships between phenomena. If it is possible to generate chains of reasoning, cause and effect allowing a seamless transition from pure physics to pure art, then one might anticipate that science will eventually forge such a chain, and scientists may well view this as their greatest triumph. This idea is not new. The real success of Consilience is in elucidating a view of how such a chain might appear and giving some hint of how close we are to completing it. Again, this is not new, but Wilson presents a readable and thought-provoking version that I would happily recommend.
Beckoning beacon
If science is in need of a father figure, Ed Wilson is clearly the man best suited to the task. He has demonstrated his leading role in many works, but none reached the heights this book achieves. While his challenging 1975 work "Sociobiology" resulted in a storm of controversy, few books [excepting Darwin's "Origin"] have spurred more scientific effort. Wilson's autobiography, "Naturalist" conveyed how far-reaching his thinking can go. "Consilience" extends that reach beyond his own discipline of biology to encompass all the social sciences and into the arts and religion [but not theology!]. As with any work of his, this book exhibits his crisp narrative style. Wilson has an outstanding ability to cover the leading topics in science in combination with the humanities.
Unlike many of his noisy critics, Wilson is unwilling to exclude humanity from the forces of Darwinian evolution. Consilience seeks to expand thinking about evolution's impact on the entire human condition. He harks back to the ideas of the Enlightenment, particularly those of Condorcet, who he equates with Jefferson, in taking the broadest view of the world and the place of humanity within it. From here, Wilsion expounds on the process of science and how it has been validated. Even with its triumphs, science has not displaced the humanities, nor, in Wilson's view, should it. Various pressures separated the natural sciences and philosophy after the Enlightenment. In today's world, the breach has been widened by the "post-modernists" who flatly deny any universal aspect of human behaviour. Wilson is particularly harsh on the "deconstruction" movement of recent years. It must be noted here that any natural scientist who has read Derrida and comprehends him is worth rallying to and following. Wilson's call rejects post-modernism and urges a bridging of the abyss separating the natural sciences and the humanities.
Wilson's Bridge is constructed of known materials established in a new way. Rebutting the false critics who label him a "genetic determinist," Wilson calls for a new study field of "gene-culture coevolution," in which he sees culture created by a "communal mind made up of individual minds which are the product of the genetically structured human brain." The genetic structure permits flexible interaction with the other minds of the community, making the culture evolve along with the individuals. Once this concept is accepted within both the humanities and scientific disciplines, consilience will be successfully launched.
The arts and religions are not excepted from this programme. Wilson urges those in the arts to seek out the evolutionary roots of artistic expression and find new insights for artistic expression. Wilson eschews the organized religions as the final arbiters of ethics. Centuries of debate boil down to a duality: "Either ethical precepts . . . are independent of human experience or else they are human inventions." He further contends that empirical reasoning should look to his gene-culture coevolution concept to better understand what truly underlies ethical precepts. He sees "the current expansion of scientific inquiry into the deeper processes of human thought [will make] this venture feasible." It's an inquiry we should all follow with interest. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]




