Super Sensitive?

As not infrequently happens, I take my reading cues from others. In general I am reading half a dozen books at any one time, so when I finish one I cast around for something of a similar genre. One book that I just finished I learned about from my cyber-friend Sabio Lantz’ Triangulations blog – Bruce M. Hood’s Supersense: Why We Believe in the Unbelievable. Hood is a respected psychology professor, and his writing style is engaging. The book itself, while fascinating in its ability to offer an overarching theory to explain why people believe in the supernatural, is deeply disturbing. I grew up in a family where the supernatural was taken for granted. Many of Hood’s explanations are cogent and logical, but that was not what I found to be distressing.

The overall premise of the book is that if science cannot measure a phenomenon, it is “super”-natural. If it exists in nature, science can define it. To me this seems far too limiting. It assumes that science has already probed the infinite aspects of an infinite universe. Yes, we understand (to a degree) matter. We have discovered the sub-atomic world with its quarks and other tiny bits. We understand a great deal about energy as well. Could there not be, however, an entirely natural aspect of either matter or (more likely) energy that science has not yet learned to measure? And could not this aspect be a piece of the larger universe that we inhabit? In other words, when all that is not defined by science is “supernatural” then we have already decided on the limits of our world.

From a psychological viewpoint, I find Hood’s analysis quite agreeable. The human psyche does have a need to find the supersense in the world. We do look for irrational causes. Not all unexplained phenomena are supernatural, however. It is a semantic trap. If we define “supernatural” as anything outside of current understanding, then his thesis stands. If, however, we define “supernatural” as that which violates physical laws not as they are currently understood but as they actually are, then who is to say whether there is anything supernatural at all? “Unexplained” and “supernatural” are not the same thing. Such a distinction would not be troubling were it not for the fact that Hood defines “reality” (another problematic concept) only in terms of “scientifically known.” If it has not been measured by science, a phenomenon is not real since our physical brains (measured by science) are the filters through which we experience the world. There is no room for what has not yet been found.

Far more distressing than that is his assertion that freedom is an illusion. One of the most distasteful theological travesties ever is the concept of predestination. The idea that a loving God would create most people to suffer eternal torment simply to fulfill his own arbitrary assignment of justice is something for which Presbyterianism can never be forgiven. It is about the most immoral God that can be imagined. The same goes for the psychological premise that we must react according to our biology. I found myself wondering why Hood wrote the book at all, if life is all predetermined. What if he had chosen not to write it, or to write it differently? You could argue that this too was predetermined, but does this not simply justify the income and fame of those who are “important people”? It runs a true danger of being terribly bourgeois, if not downright supportive of eugenics. Not that Hood would advocate such an action, but any time predetermination is raised, it presents the grandest of excuses for the most heinous of behaviors. Even the psychological observations that support it may have been misunderstood. Of course, if you disagree with me, don’t blame me; it was predestined that I should write this.

That having been said, I found Supersense overall to be a wonderfully fascinating book. At points Hood’s argument seems to consist of the post hoc, ergo propter hoc fallacy he rejects as unscientific, but if this can be irrationally forgiven, there is much useful material to be gleaned from this book.

3 thoughts on “Super Sensitive?

  1. Henk van der Gaast

    I’ve been described as a naturalist all my life. I have often stated that when I grew up, naturalism was the level of undress when folk holidayed at certain beaches in the former Yugoslavian Republic.

    Sorry to sound glib Steve, but his entire argument on nature-supernature as you present it, can be quickly bound.

    The universe occurred with all possibilities that the universe can have about 14 GY ago. There may be a remnant of the event that caused that and we do not know. It is being proposed by some scientists and looked for.

    What ever we think of the universe, its not a tunnel where matter and energy (and what ever interactions associated with it) is affected by something outside of the natural universe reaching in and do its good/dirty work. The universe is closed to such events as we have never seen them. Everything that is initially un-natural quickly gets analysed and found (sadly for us) to be perfectly explicable.

    This sorry state is not going to go on forever. I am sure we are going to run up a big wall that we cant analyse and the “supernatural” argument will hold some edifice.

    For the present situation;
    1) The universe is mind numbingly big, maybe even 150 GLY in diameter (yep, that confuses a lot of folk).
    2) Every little surprise we see is actually a mind numbing discovery when you think about it.
    3) the fact that we have discovered something apparently unique shows how clever we are to have come from primates hell bent on their genes being passed on through sexual selection 450kY ago.
    4) the fact that we have discovered something apparently unique shows only that its unique and most likely very explicable in the long run.

    5) Now here’s a view you’ll be hearing a bit of lately – If universes are created by one of the proposed (and unnervingly similar mechanisms) we appear to be arguing for universes that seed new universes with the same underlying charms (laws etc fail to capture the beauty of such a statement). Supernature then; is just nature transferred from one charming existence to another.

    The answer to why the mono theistic El, Baal or Yahweh having precedence in supernature is succinctly answered using dear old Occam.

    Nature never lets us down and frankly, we made up supernature to get on with walking long distances, crossing rivers and growing corn.

    Ask Jacob, I think he could be classed as getting the threepeat!

    I still have a good giggle when debaters say something cant come from nothing. That’s a perfectly natural thing to accept (see previous topics).

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  2. Steve Wiggins

    Interesting perspective, Henk. I’m just not sure we’ve found all the ramifications of the Big Bang yet. There are places in the US where it won’t be believed until the echoes are physically heard.

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