Metaviews 095. 2000.11.01. Approximately 1773 words.Below is another installment from the "Many Worlds" book (see Metaviews 092).
The chapter excerpt below is from Christian de Duve, who shared the
1974 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for pioneering work on
cell structure and function. De Duve has devoted his career to
studying the biochemistry of life. A native of Belgium, he studied
at the Catholic University of Louvain where he earned an M.D., Ph.D.,
and advanced master's degree in chemical sciences. After
postdoctoral fellowships at the Medical Nobel Institute in Stockholm
and Washington University in St. Louis, he was appointed a lecturer
in physiological chemistry on the Faculty of Medicine of the Catholic
University of Louvain in 1947, becoming emeritus professor in 1985.
Since 1962, he has shared time between his Belgian alma mater and the
Rockefeller University in New York, where he was named Andrew W.
Mellon professor in 1974, reaching emeritus status in 1988. De Duve
is the founder of the International Institute of Cellular and
Molecular Pathology in Brussels, served as its president director
from 1974 to 1991, and now is a member of the Institute's board of
directors. De Duve is a member of the U.S. National Academy of
Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Royal Society.
He holds sixteen honorary degrees from universities in Europe, South
America, Canada, and the United States. He is the author of some
375 scientific papers and three books; the most recent is "Vital
Dust: Life as a Cosmic Imperative." It is an honor to present
Christian De Duve on Meta.
In the book chapter, De Duve discusses the significance of the
consensus views in biology over the last century. In the excerpt
below he posits a universe that favors both life and intelligence and
wonders about evolutionary advances that will someday surpass humans
and may have already done so elsewhere in the universe. De Duve
writes:
"Contrary to what I call the 'gospel of contingency,' popularized by
a number of contemporary thinkers, the human species is not the
meaningless outcome of chance events in a pointless universe. For
the first time in the history of life, beings exist that have access,
albeit in a very primitive and rudimentary fashion, to the reality
behind the appearances... Although apprehended only dimly, these
abstractions are the closest we can get with our feeble means to the
ultimate reality to which many give the name of God."
Next week I'll run another excerpt from the MANY WORLDS book (ed. by
Steven Dick, 2000). If you like what you read, the book is available
for purchase online at <http://www.templetonpress.org/order.asp>.
-- Billy Grassie
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The Future of Life,
by Christian DeDuve
One last lesson of biology: evolution is far from over. According to
cosmologists, our planet should remain able to bear life for about
another five billion years before being engulfed in the fiery
expansion of the dying sun. What can happen in such an enormous
stretch of time is entirely beyond our imagination. Whatever the
future may bring, humankind is most unlikely to remain at a
standstill during all that time. It will either disappear or evolve.
In either case, we are not the ultimate achievement of evolution,
only a transient stage. The old anthropocentric view of a
human-focused universe must be abandoned, even in its recent
reformulation in the so-called "anthropic principle."
It would be surprising if in the future development of life on Earth,
vertical evolution toward greater complexity did not continue to take
place, perhaps leading to beings endowed with considerably sharper
means of apprehending reality than we possess. Such beings could
arise by further extension of the human twig, but they do not have
to. There is plenty of time for a humanlike adventure to start all
over again from another twig and perhaps go further than did the
human adventure.
Lessons of Life for Philosophy and Religion
Creationism, vitalism, finalism, dualism, and anthropocentrism have
all been left by the wayside by the progression of modern biology.
For scientists, the scenery is deeply gratifying in its austere and
coherent beauty. But to others, the message may seem disquietingly
bleak, because it questions a number of familiar notions, rooted in
the biblical tradition and still entertained and propagated in more
or less literal form by the major monotheistic religions. Aware of
the potential conflicts, many philosophers and theologians have begun
reflecting on how basic beliefs can be reconciled with the findings
of science. This necessary reappraisal will not be easy, considering
the intricate network of social structures that has been knit around
the churches by centuries of shared faith and aspirations. In this
exercise, the scientist can only point to what is now established
beyond reasonable doubt or at least highly probable. Such has been
the purpose of my brief survey. As to extrapolating from science to
philosophy, scientists are poorly trained for such a venture and
generally shy away from it. Here, for what they are worth, are a few
suggestions.
A first notion to be singled out is that we belong to a universe
capable of giving rise to life and mind. This affirmation would seem
like a mere statement of the obvious, were it not for the widely
publicized view that life and mind are freak products of a highly
improbable combination of chance circumstances most unlikely to occur
any time, anywhere. This attitude was summed up by Jacques Monod when
he wrote, "The Universe was not pregnant with life, nor the biosphere
with man."2 This statement challenges evidence. The facts are that
the Universe has given birth to life and the biosphere has given
birth to humans. To affirm that those two births took place without
pregnancies amounts to invoking miracles, which is certainly not what
the great French biologist had in mind.
Miracles, in the form of special creative acts of God, are what
religions traditionally invoke to account for the existence of life
and mind in the universe. The lesson of modern biology is that such
interventions were not needed and probably did not occur. Life and
mind most likely developed through purely natural events rendered
possible by the prevailing physical-chemical conditions or perhaps
even imposed by these conditions. As the defenders of the anthropic
principle have pointed out in great detail, these occurrences require
an extraordinary degree of fine tuning of many key properties of the
universe. The "pregnancy" that was erroneously negated by Monod is in
fact the outcome of very special features built into the natural
structure of the universe.
Some contemporary physicists, including Rees and Smolin, two other
contributors to this volume, minimize the significance of this fact
by assuming that our universe is not unique. They see it as a part or
as an evolutionary product of a large set of universes-a "multiverse"
in the suggestive terminology proposed by Rees-that display a wide
array of physical properties. Lost in this ocean of "nonpregnant"
universes, ours would be no more than the odd one that happened, by
chance, to have the right combination of properties for life and mind
to arise. Intriguing as they are, these theories do not in any way
diminish the overwhelming significance of our universe as it exists.
Whichever way they appeared, and whatever the probability of their
emergence, life and mind are such extraordinary manifestations that
their existence can only be a telling revelation of ultimate reality.
Even diluted by trillions of lifeless universes, ours remains
supremely meaningful. The anthropic principle is correct in this
respect, except for its anthropocentric connotation.
A second major lesson of modern biology concerns the humble status of
our species, which, far from being the ultimate goal of creation it
has long been thought to be, now appears as a transient link or
perhaps even a side branch in a long evolutionary process very likely
to give rise some day to beings much more advanced than we are. There
also is a real possibility that beings with mental attributes similar
or superior to ours exist elsewhere in the universe. Although these
possibilities have not been verified in reality, they deserve
sufficiently serious consideration to be incorporated into our new
world view. The resulting picture is not, however, as negative as is
maintained by those who see in the findings of science reasons for
denigrating the human species.
Even though we may not be the final product of evolution, our
emergence nevertheless represents a watershed. Contrary to what I
call the "gospel of contingency," popularized by a number of
contemporary thinkers, the human species is not the meaningless
outcome of chance events in a pointless universe. For the first time
in the history of life, beings exist that have access, albeit in a
very primitive and rudimentary fashion, to the reality behind the
appearances, including the nature of matter, the structure of the
universe, the basic mechanisms of life, the historical processes
through which these entities have arisen and evolved, and especially
abstract notions, such as truth, beauty, goodness, and love. Although
apprehended only dimly, these abstractions are the closest we can get
with our feeble means to the ultimate reality to which many give the
name of God. No doubt, the beings with expanded mental powers who are
likely to succeed us one day will see this reality more clearly. But
the glimpses we are afforded already are immensely rewarding.
Also important and unique to the human condition is the acquisition
of moral responsibility. Although disputed by some neurobiologists
and philosophers, the feeling we have of being in command of our own
actions and of being responsible for them is not likely to be
abandoned, even by those who question its authenticity. It is an
indispensable foundation of our societies. Far from yielding to the
advances of science, our responsibility is made increasingly
important by those advances, to the extent that they are giving us
increasingly effective means of shaping the future of our planet, of
the living world, and of our own species. To wield wisely the immense
powers with which science in the twentieth century has endowed
humankind will be the main concern of coming generations.
Conclusion
The advances of biology have revolutionized the view we have of
ourselves and our significance in the world. Many myths have had to
be abandoned. But mystery remains, more profound and more beautiful
than ever before, a reality almost inaccessible to our feeble human
means.
Notes
1. C. de Duve, Vital Dust (New York: Basic Books, 1995).
2. J. Monod, Chance and Necessity, trans. A. Wainhouse (New York:
Knopf, 1971), 145-146.
MANY WORLDS is available for purchase online at<http://www.templetonpress.org/order.asp>.
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