Idols of the Mind Pt. 2 (Novum Organum Book 1: 53-68)

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/kpwgYj6EyqzEwNjDE/idols-of-the-mind-pt-2-novum-organum-book-1-53-68

This is the fifth post in the Novum Organum sequence. For context, see the sequence introduction. We have used Francis Bacon’s Novum Organum in the version presented at www.earlymoderntexts.com. Translated by and copyright to Jonathan Bennett. Prepared for LessWrong by Ruby. Ruby’s Reading Guide Novum Organum is organized as two books each containing numbered "aphorisms." These vary in length from three lines to sixteen pages. Titles of posts in this sequence, e.g. > Idols of the Mind Pt. 1, are my own and do not appear in the original.> While the translator, Bennett, encloses his editorial remarks in a single pair of [brackets], I have enclosed mine in a [[double pair of brackets]].Bennett’s Reading Guide

[Brackets] enclose editorial explanations. Small ·dots· enclose material that has been added, but can be read as though it were part of the original text. Occasional •bullets, and also indenting of passages that are not quotations, are meant as aids to grasping the structure of a sentence or a thought. Every four-point ellipsis . . . . indicates the omission of a brief passage that seems to present more difficulty than it is worth. Longer omissions are reported between brackets in normal-sized type.# Aphorism Concerning the Interpretation of Nature: Book 1: 53–68 by Francis Bacon 53. The idols of the cave—·my topic until the end of 58·— arise from the particular mental and physical make-up of the individual person, and also from upbringing, habits, and chance events. There are very many of these, of many different kinds; but I shall discuss only the ones we most need to be warned against—the ones that do most to disturb the clearness of the intellect. 54. A man will become attached to one particular science and field of investigation either because •he thinks he was its author and inventor or because •he has worked hard on it and become habituated to it. But when someone of this kind turns to general topics in philosophy ·and science· he wrecks them by bringing in distortions from his former fancies. This is especially visible in Aristotle, who made his natural science a mere bond-servant to his logic, rendering it contentious and nearly useless. The chemists have taken a few experiments with a furnace and made a fantastic science out of it, one that applies to hardly anything. . . . [In this work ‘chemists’ are alchemists. Nothing that we would recognize as chemistry existed.] [[We might see Bacon here as claiming that "seeing everything as a nail" can be very harmful.]] 55. When it comes to philosophy and the sciences, minds differ from one another in one principal and fairly radical way: some minds have more liking for and skill in •noting differences amongst things, others are adapted rather to •noting things’ resemblances. The •steady and acute mind can concentrate its thought, fixing on and sticking to the subtlest distinctions; the •lofty and discursive mind recognizes and puts together the thinnest and most general resemblances. But each kind easily goes too far: one by •grasping for ·unimportant· differences between things, the other by •snatching at shadows. 56. Some minds are given to an extreme admiration of antiquity, others to an extreme love and appetite for novelty. Not many have the temperament to steer a middle course, not pulling down sound work by the ancients and not despising good contributions by the moderns. The sciences and philosophy have suffered greatly from this, because these attitudes to antiquity and modernity are not judgments but mere enthusiasms. Truth is to be sought not in •what people like or enjoy in this or that age, but in •the light of nature and experience. The •former is variable, the •latter is eternal. So we should reject these enthusiasms, and take care that our intellect isn’t dragged into them. 57. When you think ·hard and long and uninterruptedly· about nature and about bodies in their simplicity—·i.e. think of topics like matter as such·—your intellect will be broken up and will fall to pieces. When on the other hand you think ·in the same way· about nature and bodies in all their complexity of structure, your intellect will be stunned and scattered. The difference between the two is best seen by comparing the school of Leucippus and Democritus with other philosophies. For the members of that school were so busy with the ·general theory of· particles that they hardly attended to the structure, while the others were so lost in admiration of the structure that they didn’t get through to the simplicity of nature. What we should do, therefore, is alternate between these two kinds of thinking, so that the intellect can become both penetrating and comprehensive, avoiding the disadvantages that I have mentioned, and the idols they lead to. 58. Let that kind of procedure be our prudent way of keeping off and dislodging the idols of the cave, which mostly come from

mutual contact, so that separations can’t occur that would break up the unity of nature and allow a vacuum to be made;or for resuming their natural dimensions. . . ., so that if they are compressed within or extended beyond those limits they immediately try to recover themselves and regain their previous size;or for gathering together with masses of their own kind—e.g. dense bodies ·moving· towards the earth, and light and rare bodies towards the dome of the sky.These and their like are truly physical kinds of motion; and comparison of them with the others that I mentioned makes clear that the others are entirely logical and scholastic. An equally bad feature of their philosophies and their ways of thinking is that all their work goes into investigating and theorizing about the

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/kpwgYj6EyqzEwNjDE/idols-of-the-mind-pt-2-novum-organum-book-1-53-68?commentId=tuEMRvxQeTEfyYtbj

I’ve read all of these so far, but may be you can post them a little less frequently?

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/kpwgYj6EyqzEwNjDE/idols-of-the-mind-pt-2-novum-organum-book-1-53-68?commentId=YD8MpNrE9W76ejzXf

Hmm, sure. Let’s space them out at like one a week.

Comment

Huh, I think we’re getting caught between the people who want them more frequently and less. I agree that every 2-days might be a bit much, so yeah, let’s go with less. For the enthusiastic, I can note that the full text is already online at www.earlymoderntexts.com