I often bewail the fact that
I am not wise; that what I do not know/understand is to what I do
know/understand as one drop of water is to all the oceans on all the
planets in the universe. Quantum physics; mathematics beyond the “if
Billy has three apples and gives Sally two” level; the internet;
fire...all are things I do not and never will fully comprehend. But I
am comforted by the knowledge that even if I don't understand them,
they are all based on the irrefutable, immutable logic.
Yet the instant human beings
enter the equation, all laws of logic are up for grabs at best and
thrown out the window at worst. How...how...can people believe
so many of the things they do? How can they not question things which
do not stand up to the most elemental principles of logic?
So much of organized
religion, for example, relies on faith, which is largely devoid of
logic. Faith, to me, is basically a convenient buffer against
rational thought and, most definitely, against the need to ask
questions. I can see certain advantages to faith over logic, to a
degree. There are many things I would like to believe—a sentient
God and Santa Claus, for example—but logic simply will not allow me
to. So I am however reluctantly wary of those things based solely on
faith.
I've often related the story
of probably the final, scale-tipping incident that made organized
religion and me part ways. I was probably around twelve, attending,
under extreme duress, an evangelical Christian sunday school whose
teachings were of the “we are but dirt beneath God's feet”
variety. One day, while being regaled with the eternal happiness of
heaven and the fires of hell, I asked the teacher a question: If I
have a friend who does something terrible and is sent to hell while I
somehow managed to make it to heaven, wouldn't I be sad that he
wasn't with me? Well, that went over like a concrete dirigible, and
ended my church-going days.
I take comfort from the idea
that even when my intellectual limitations prevent me from following
the breadcrumb trail of logic leading from a question to its answer,
I know that the trail is there even if my befogged mind cannot see
the crumbs. I'd like to think logic and truth are synonymous, but of
course they are not; they are two completely separate and often
totally opposite things. Logic is objective, truth subjective. What
is the absolute truth for me—“a pizza is not a pizza without
anchovies”—may may not be the absolute truth for you. What is
accepted as absolute and unquestionable truth by a depressing number
of people—our president was not born in the United States; all
Muslims are terrorists; the only way to prevent gun violence by
having more guns, etc.—is, in fact, utterly antithetical to logic.
The wilder the conspiracy theory, the more people seem willing to
simply nod knowingly, eyes slitted in suspicion, and accept it. That
there is not one atom of logic behind this acceptance is irrelevant.
There are no breadcrumbs between statement and belief. One is the
other. Period.
One difficulty with logic is
that logic is built on the interpretation of facts, and people have a
tendency to look upon facts as a buffet, choosing the ones that suit
them and leaving the rest. And logic based on the wrong or weak facts
can leave the wrong trail of the wrong breadcrumbs, leading only
deeper into the forest.
Humans have the unfortunate
tendency to be, in effect, brainwashed to simply accept whatever they
are told. The advertising industry is built upon this assumption.
“Everyone is talking about Burp-O!” They are? Okay. “The
greatest sale in the history of the world.” Ok. And the fact is
that it never occurs to us to apply logic to those so many things
which really don't have any effect on us one way or the other. The
application of logic is like so many other things—we only pay
attention if it effects us directly, which puts us at risk of
absorbing illogic by some odd form of osmosis.
Logic requires reason, and
reason requires thought, and thought requires the willingness
to think. It is far, far easier not to think, especially when
there are so many people willing and eager to think for us. But logic
makes us owls; never using it makes us sheep.
Dorien's
blogs are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday. Please take a moment to visit his website
(http://www.doriengrey.com)
and, if you enjoy these blogs, you might want to check out Short
Circuits: a Life in Blogs (http://bit.ly/m8CSO1).
1 comment:
Well said, sir. I was never subjected to Sunday school and was left to my own devices to decide whether or not I believed in a higher power. As for humankind, it's sad to see that some people are simply out of their depth when it comes to reasoning in this day and age. I imagine it took a great deal of effort to get them that way, too, so we can only hope the rest of us don't follow along in the years to come.
Post a Comment