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By Massimo Pigliucci | June 2nd 2009 04:42 PM | 10 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Massimo Pigliucci

Massimo Pigliucci is Professor in the Departments of Ecology & Evolution and of Philosophy at Stony Brook University, NY.

His research is on the evolution of genotype-environment interactions


... Full Bio

As I’ve often mentioned in this blog, philosopher David Hume famously said that “No testimony is sufficient to establish a miracle, unless the testimony be of such a kind that its falsehood would be more miraculous than the fact which it endeavours to establish,” setting the bar for believing in miracles properly high.

Unfortunately, many people blatantly ignore Hume’s advice, moving that bar so low that banal coincidences suddenly count as “miracles,” reinforcing their preexisting supernaturalist view of the world. One such instance took place in the Q&A session after a nice talk I attended a few days ago at the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. The talk was by Lawrence Bush, author of Waiting for God: The Spiritual Reflections of a Reluctant Atheist.

Bush gave an eminently sensible talk, starting out with the common observation of coincidences to which human beings attribute special meaning (a secular version of Carl Jung’s discredited idea of “synchronicity”).   As Bush wryly commented at one point, while it is a good idea to pause and reflect on what happens to us in life, it is rather egomaniacal to imagine that the universe is sending us messages (often through catastrophes, personal or affecting others) just so that we can learn from our experiences.

Perhaps not unexpectedly, given the somewhat new-agey flavor of some (but by all means not all!) chapters of the Society for Ethical Culture, the Q&A was as irritating as Bush’s talk had been level headed.

One questioner in particular related a touching story of his adoptive grandmother being diagnosed with cancer and given six months life expectancy. The grandson reacted constructively to that abysmal prediction, using the remaining time to travel with his grandma to places where she had always wanted to go.   Turns out the woman lived three years, which allowed for more travel and what I’m sure are indelibly good memories.

But then the grandson went back to the doctor and pointedly asked: “You said six months, she lived three years. What are the chances of that?” To which the doctor apparently replied with a no-nonsense (if a bit insensitive, assuming things really went that way) “One in seven hundred.” The conclusion of the story is that the questioner asked “What is the difference between 1/700 and a miracle?” strongly implying that his grandmother had of course been the beneficiary of a miracle.

Besides the obvious question of why god (or the universal life force, or whatever) couldn’t be bothered to perform a bit more substantial miracle, say by curing the woman instead of simply prolonging her life by a few weeks, the question highlights how easily we are impressed by occurrences that are in fact perfectly ordinary. One in seven hundred, the odds indicated by the doctor, are the known probability of someone affected by that particular tumor to survive beyond the mean survival time, i.e. the six months of the original diagnosis. Medical research arrives at these numbers by statistical studies of large populations of patients, and surviving beyond average simply means that — for a variety of complex reasons, including age, general health, genetic makeup, and sheer luck — one’s position on the bell curve describing the mortality for that disease happens to be somewhat to the right of the population’s mean.

A miracle, on the other hand, is a suspension of the laws of nature, presumably actuated by a supernatural being. The odds of a miracle, as Hume hinted, are infinitesimally small (and cannot actually be calculated), because we see the laws of nature working just fine every minute of every day, and we have never reliably observed a suspension of such laws. Hume was careful enough not to say that miracles are impossible, just stating that if you want to claim one, the burden of proof is high indeed. Much higher than 1/700, I should think.

People find meaning in coincidences, as Bush pointed out in the lecture at Ethical Culture, because we are pattern-seeking animals. The discovery of patterns in nature is very important, because it can make the difference between life and death. Skeptical writer Michael Shermer recently wrote in Scientific American: “So we make two types of errors: a type I error, or false positive, is believing a pattern is real when it is not; a type II error, or false negative, is not believing a pattern is real when it is. If you believe that the rustle in the grass is a dangerous predator when it is just the wind (a type I error), you are more likely to survive than if you believe that the rustle in the grass is just the wind when it is a dangerous predator (a type II error).”

The second reason for people’s penchant for interpreting coincidences as personally significant messages emanating from the forces of the universe is what philosopher Daniel Dennett called “the intentional stance,” the tendency of projecting agency on phenomena, even though they may be the result of mindless forces.

As Dennett put it: “Here is how it works: first you decide to treat the object whose behavior is to be predicted as a rational agent; then you figure out what beliefs that agent ought to have, given its place in the world and its purpose.

Then you figure out what desires it ought to have, on the same considerations, and finally you predict that this rational agent will act to further its goals in the light of its beliefs. A little practical reasoning from the chosen set of beliefs and desires will in most instances yield a decision about what the agent ought to do; that is what you predict the agent will do.”

Just like pattern-seeking, adopting an intentional stance is useful: this is how we make educated guesses about what other human beings will do, an absolutely necessary skill for navigating complex social spaces. But again, like pattern-seeking, the intentional stance is often applied indiscriminately, and the combination of these two natural attributes of the human mind is probably chiefly responsible for superstition, mysticism and eventually the roots of organized religion.

If you or a loved one is diagnosed with a terminal disease, it is sensible and indeed a positive thing to reflect on how this affects your view of life and how you wish to spend your remaining days. But it is a sad random occurrence of existence, not a message in a bottle sent to you by a strangely interested and yet largely uncaring (or even callous) cosmic entity.

Life is what it is, not what we would like it to be, and it is the ethical duty of a reasonable person to accept things for what they are, trying to change what can be changed and enjoying the rest of the ride while it lasts.

Comments

excellent article.
We can still draw conclusions and learn from life's coincidences without having to believe that they are messages sent to us from some unseen intelligence.
Or perhaps, the messages are being sent to us from our own subconscious mental processes which we interpret as whatever supernatural force we believe in?

You certainly ought to repeat that quote from Hume repeatedly: it takes several readings. Actually I think he sets the bar way too high. What would he say (if he were around and knew) about the probability of DNA arising by a random arrangement of atoms in a mere 4 billion years (14 billion if you admit the possibility of DNA from space). Even if you consider an RNA molecule with say 2000 atoms (on the theory that RNA can lead to DNA), the probability even with the right set of atoms (i.e. ignoring how probable that is), is on the order of 2000! or well below 1 in 10^3000 thus the age of the universe is "merely" 14 billion years or 4.6 X 10^17 seconds. Even if you figure the age of the universe in nanoseconds it is only 10^26, a large number but an event that occurs once in 10^3000 nanoseconds is virtually impossible. It clearly meets Hume's test as a miracle.

Mind you, I'm on your side, but maybe we need a new definition of miracles (or admit the possibility of an infinite number of possible universes and we're in this one because it's the only one we're aware of -- the anthropic principle, which is not very convincing, is it?).

Gerhard Adam's picture
What would he say (if he were around and knew) about the probability of DNA arising by a random arrangement of atoms in a mere 4 billion years (14 billion if you admit the possibility of DNA from space).

Why would anyone say anything?  It's like asking what the probability is that water molecules will randomly arrange themselves to spell my name.

I don't know of anyone that claims that DNA arose from a random arrangement of atoms in that fashion or maybe I'm misunderstanding what you're trying to say.

I assume by "more miraculous" I assume Hume meant more improbable. Consider the RNA molecule that I used as an example: If it didn't come from a random arrangement of atoms, where did it come from?

Gerhard Adam's picture

It's the concept of "random arrangement" that is misleading.  These atoms don't behave "randomly", they behave according to the laws of chemistry and physics.  In addition, as molecules are formed, they don't need to be "randomly" reformed to produce a singular result.  This could represent cumulative results over a considerable period of time.

While a single coin toss is technically a random event of two possible outcomes, the question of tossing 500 heads can be asked.  However, unless there is a specific limit involved, the only variable of interest is how many total tosses occurs.  So if I have 10,000 coins, then the probability of 500 heads is a virtual certainty.  Similarly if I have 10,000 singular tosses, the probability of 500 heads is also a virtual certainty.  While they are all "random", this explanation creates an aura of improbability which isn't matched by the real world experience.

I also say that a coin toss is "technically" random, but in truth it is only unpredictable given that we don't know all the initial conditions that will influence the outcome.   This gives us the ability to use the mathematical concept of "randomness" without the event itself actually being random.

Similarly when we talk about RNA, we simply don't know all the conditions that can give rise to it, but we certainly can't argue that the laws of physics and chemistry were operating in any random fashion to have produced such a result.  It is simply "unpredictable" with respect to the existing conditions.


Since we know that RNA and DNA did occur, then we can only conclude that the event isn't nearly as "random" as we might think.  In fact, what it does tell us, is that the our knowledge of initial conditions is probably much more sparse than we realize and so it makes visualizing the events more difficult. 


If we presume that the laws of chemistry and physics operate today as they did in the past, then the "testimony" of such behaviors is NOT more miraculous and therefore the event we are postulating cannot be more miraculous.  It would be exceptional if we required a uniquely separate behavior of the laws of physics/chemistry to achieve our results, but that isn't being suggested. 



But the chance of exactly 500 heads is infinitesimal. And the chances of 500 heads in a row and then 9500 tails in a row is one in 2^10,000 and if I told you that I had thrown such a series of tosses, you would be justified in saying that I was lying. The laws of physics do not remove randomness. In fact the second law of thermodynamics (entropy increases) in its mathematical form -- dE=TdS, where S=k ln N -- incorporates randomness (N is the number of possible states a particular system can be in). On reflection, it is close to the quantization of Hume's statement. Thus all the air molecules in the room do not gather in one half (with a probability on the order of one in 2^10^26 depending on the size of the room!) leaving me to suffocate in a vacuum. To say that I don't believe in miracles (which I don't), and therefore there must be some mechanism reducing the improbability of the random creation of RNA (which I assume is true) is abandoning Hume's statement as a test for miracles and using it as an axiom.

OK, both you and I believe that is true, but we are concluding that there must be a natural cause because from the fact that we do not believe in miracles. Hume's test doesn't really work (and we haven't even gotten into the quantum mechanical conclusion that there is inherent randomness on a nanoscale or smaller). There will always be events that appear wildly unlikely and it is our conclusion (faith?) that there must be some natural explanation because we don't believe in miracles. Hume's test is ultimately circular.

Gerhard Adam's picture

I agree, however, my point is that the 500 heads being infinitesimal is only because we are not tracking the initial conditions.  If we could actually replicate all the initial conditions of the toss, then we would expect to see 500 heads in a row because our modification to this event would now be completely deterministic.

In the same way, I would argue that virtually all the chemical reactions are deterministic.  While we may not know all the initial conditions, they cannot be called "random".  The quantum improbabilities don't enter into it, because we're ultimately talking about chemistry here which follows a reasonably proscribed path, dependent on the atoms available, the amount of energy, and the time available for various reactions to occur.  Since we're not suggesting anything unusual with respect to quantum behaviors, then we don't need to examine them beyond what would be predicted for normal chemical reactions.



There will always be events that appear wildly unlikely and it is our conclusion (faith?) that there must be some natural explanation because we don't believe in miracles. Hume's test is ultimately circular.

The problem with this statement is that no one is making a claim for a miracle.  Hume's statement states that if one were to claim that RNA/DNA were created by a miraculous event, then the events describing such a miracle must be more "truthful" or likely than the miracle itself. 

In my view this is pretty much the same thing Sherlock Holmes said when he suggested that “When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.”



"The problem with this statement is that no one is making a claim for a miracle."

You say no one's making a claim for a miracle, but that is exactly what Hume's test would result in for RNA.

"In my view this is pretty much the same thing Sherlock Holmes said when he suggested that 'When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.'”

If you assume miracles are impossible, and therefore there must be some natural explanation, you are assuming the outcome: i..e. Miracles are impossible, because there must be a natural explanation, because miracles are "impossible," or: miracles are impossible because miracles are impossible. It's entirely circular. Scientific method would assume that miracles are possible and see if that assumption results in a contradiction. It doesn't. It's a matter of your underlying belief.

Nice chatting with you.

Gerhard Adam's picture

Miracles are impossible.  That's what defines a miracle. 

By definition, miracles cannot occur with the intervention of a divine agency that can suspend the laws of nature.  Therefore, there can be no such thing as a miracle without such intervention.

It isn't a matter of faith.  The scientific perspective says that there is no reason to postulate a divine being, therefore a miracle, by definition, is an impossible event, so I shouldn't go looking for one.


Belief would only allow that you're willing to accept the existence of the divine being without proof, but it doesn't change the logic.



...you call that logic Gerhard??? No one would long accept the existence of a devine being for very long without there "being" some kind of accepted proof.

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