- #1
MirabileAuditu
"DEMON HAUNTED WORLD", SAGAN - a CRITIQUE
“The Demon Haunted World”, by Carl Sagan
A Critique by MirabileAuditu
The late Carl Sagan built a considerable reputation, and fortune, writing such books as “Cosmos”, “Pale Blue Dot”, and “The Demon Haunted World”. In each of them, he pretends to promote the ideals of the scientific method, which one might think was his most cherished belief. Or was left wing extremism his most cherished belief?
While his scientific efforts were generally commendable, he was inconsistent, and made numerous errors and oversights in science. Meanwhile he hatefully and scornfully mocked the deeply held religious views of others, as can be seen here. This is intolerant and inexcusable. It is anathema to the liberals' habit of calling themselves "moderates" and "compassionate (ha ha ha)."
The strange thing is this - he quotes the Bible often, and even provides numerous Scriptural references and admits his own “longing to believe” in “existence somewhere” after death. (My remarks follow parenthetically.)
Page 6 “Some 95% of Americans are ‘scientifically illiterate’ “.
(Professor Sagan was a teacher and scientist. Does he not bear an inordinate amount of responsibility for his own lamentation, along with those who emphasize not science, but “art”, as they say, “whatever THAT is”.)
P 13: “...the Bible is ‘inerrant’ “.
(A mockery of Christian and Jewish beliefs.)
P 19: “Nancy and Ronald Reagan relied on an astrologer in private and public matters - unknown to the voting public.”
(Vilifying Presidents Reagan and Nixon along with our Armed Forces was and is a favorite theme of Sagan’s and liberals everywhere. So too is referring to the “chauvinisms” of others.)
P 27: “Science has built-in error correcting machinery at its very heart.”
(Well then consider his own words on the very next page.)
P 28: “Except in pure mathematics, nothing is known for certain.”
(What is “error” if there is no certainty?)
Ibid: “But even laws of nature are not absolutely certain.”
(Professor Sagan seemed very certain of his opinions of Reagan, Nixon, and excessive military spending, to name just a few things.)
P 29: “Science is not only compatible with spirituality, it is a profound source of spirituality.”
(Why then did he mock religions so consistently?)
P 29-30: “The notion that science and spirituality are somehow mutually exclusive does a disservice to both.”
(Professor Sagan did disservices to both, as is here documented.)
P 30: “If you want to save your child from polio, you can pray or you can inoculate.”
(“Science is a profound source of spirituality”, P 29. Concordance on one page became mutual exclusivity on the next.)
P 32: “Valid criticism does you a favor.”
(As I hope to do for Sagan and his legions of “believers”.)
Ibid: “I maintain that science is part and parcel humility.”
(Demands, bordering on the militant, for more government funding hardly strikes me as “humility”. The mockery of religion does not indicate “humility”.)
P 35: “No contemporary religion and no New Age belief seems to me to take sufficient account of the grandeur, magnificence, subtlety, and intricacy of the universe revealed by science.”
(No contemporary science seems to me to take sufficient account of God’s hand in these intricacies. They are anything but random events.)
Ibid: “The fact that so little of the findings of modern science is prefigured in Scripture to my mind casts further doubt on its divine inspiration. But of course I might be wrong.”
(Such a popular and brilliant scientist - WRONG ? How could that possibly be? Two thousand years ago, the Scripture stated, “I am fearfully and wonderfully made”. And “The heavens proclaim the glory of God.” To this day, there has been no end of discoveries elucidating these and other profound Biblical truths and wisdom. Ironically science has underscored and emphasized their reality. This he calls “doubt” of divine inspiration, and concludes with what appears to be a snide remark.)
P 38: “...abandoning science is the road back into poverty and backwardness.”
(What is abandoning God?)
Ibid: “The values of science and the values of democracy are concordant, in many cases indistinguishable.”
(So have the costs. P 396: “ . . .science has been growing exponentially for centuries.” What of spiritual values?)
P 140: “Mr. Reagan told an epic story of World War II .. . . .only it never happened. Many other instances of this sort can be found in Reagan’s public statements. . . It is not hard to imagine serious public dangers emerging out of instances in which political, military, scientific, or religious leaders are unable to distinguish fact from vivid fiction.”
(Like the cold fusion hoax?)
P 153: “A scientist of my acquaintance says, ‘If the aliens would only keep all the folks they abduct, our world would be a little saner.’ But her judgement is too harsh.”
(Unless it is impugning Reagan, or Nixon, or our Military, to name but a few.)
P 178: “How is (SETI, the Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence) different from fantasy and pseudoscience?”
(A good question, never answered.)
P 180: “I would be very happy if flying saucer advocates and alien abduction proponents were right. . . . They do not ask us, though, to believe on faith.”
(Another mockery of religious “faith” - a faith which he longingly but reluctantly expresses on Page 203.)
P 191-199: (Bizarre letters from many people, none of which can compare with Sagan’s remark, “We will spread through the Milky Way”, P 394,, or “So much Milky Way, so little time”, P 400, Pale Blue Dot.)
P 203: “I long to believe that (my parents) essence, their personalities, what I loved so much about them - are really and truly still in existence somewhere. . . . Plainly there’s something within me that’s ready to believe in life after death. And it is not the least bit interested in whether there’s any sober evidence for it.”
P 208: “As Tom Paine warned, inuring us to lies lays the groundwork for many other evils.
(“Evil” is a term more appropriately discussed within the context of religion. What is a “lie” when “Nothing is known for certain”, P 28. Contemporary liberalism, which like Carl Sagan, abhors Reagan, Nixon, and the US Military, finds it convenient to dismiss the countless lies of President Clinton because of his charm, appearance, and political party. Most critically, how does “science” define “evil”?)
P 218: (Professor Sagan attacks the cigarette industry - a politically correct target of contemporary liberalism. Why does he not attack the greater killer, fat and cholesterol laden foods, contributing to obesity/indolence? Or the more certain, more contagious killer, IV drug use and homosexuality, leading to AIDS?)
P 254: “Scientists make mistakes. A few cheat and steal.”
(But enough about OUR extremely few and very small imperfections.)
P 260: “Who among us is wise enough to know which information and insights we can safely dispense with, and which will be necessary ten or a hundred or a thousand years into the future?”
(Or tomorrow, at the moment of death . . .)
P 261: “Fervid ideologues and authoritarian regimes find it easy and natural to impose their views and suppress the alternatives. Aldoph Hitler: ‘There is no truth, in either the moral or the scientific sense.’ “
(This sounds a great deal like Dr. Sagan, P 28: “Nothing is known for certain.” Does he not try to suppress religious views with authoritarian science and militant “separation of church and state/school”?)
P 273: “We could have lived in a Universe with different laws in every province, but we do not. This fact cannot but elicit feelings of reverence and awe.”
(Again and again, he intones the concept of reverence or spirituality for all that is around us. Yet his statement of “consistency” can be little more than scientific presumption, as he contradicts himself. “Even laws of nature are not absolutely certain”, P 28.)
P 274: “A small number of comparatively simple laws of Nature is one of the chief triumphs of science. And, it seems to me, its findings are perfectly consonant with many religions.”
(Few?? The equations describing the laws of nature are many and complex. Please refer to university texts in physics, and chemistry. Review a Handbook of Physics and Chemistry. Then tell me of the “simplicity” of neutrinos and dark matter. Also, why did he continue to mock religious beliefs?)
P 277: “There is no necessary conflict between science and religion. On one level, they share similar and consonant roles, and each needs the other.”
(P 13: “The Bible is ‘inerrant’.” P 30: “You can pray, or you can inoculate”. P 180: “Alien abduction proponents do not ask us to believe on faith.” Unlike Believers.)
P 278: “Indeed, this (an infinitely old Universe) is the one conceivable finding of science that could disprove a Creator - because an infinitely old Universe would never have been created.”
(Alas, the Big Bang Theory was, if you will pardon the pun, “created” long, long after the Biblical creation of the Universe was described in Genesis. Coincidence?)
End of Part I of II
“The Demon Haunted World”, by Carl Sagan
A Critique by MirabileAuditu
The late Carl Sagan built a considerable reputation, and fortune, writing such books as “Cosmos”, “Pale Blue Dot”, and “The Demon Haunted World”. In each of them, he pretends to promote the ideals of the scientific method, which one might think was his most cherished belief. Or was left wing extremism his most cherished belief?
While his scientific efforts were generally commendable, he was inconsistent, and made numerous errors and oversights in science. Meanwhile he hatefully and scornfully mocked the deeply held religious views of others, as can be seen here. This is intolerant and inexcusable. It is anathema to the liberals' habit of calling themselves "moderates" and "compassionate (ha ha ha)."
The strange thing is this - he quotes the Bible often, and even provides numerous Scriptural references and admits his own “longing to believe” in “existence somewhere” after death. (My remarks follow parenthetically.)
Page 6 “Some 95% of Americans are ‘scientifically illiterate’ “.
(Professor Sagan was a teacher and scientist. Does he not bear an inordinate amount of responsibility for his own lamentation, along with those who emphasize not science, but “art”, as they say, “whatever THAT is”.)
P 13: “...the Bible is ‘inerrant’ “.
(A mockery of Christian and Jewish beliefs.)
P 19: “Nancy and Ronald Reagan relied on an astrologer in private and public matters - unknown to the voting public.”
(Vilifying Presidents Reagan and Nixon along with our Armed Forces was and is a favorite theme of Sagan’s and liberals everywhere. So too is referring to the “chauvinisms” of others.)
P 27: “Science has built-in error correcting machinery at its very heart.”
(Well then consider his own words on the very next page.)
P 28: “Except in pure mathematics, nothing is known for certain.”
(What is “error” if there is no certainty?)
Ibid: “But even laws of nature are not absolutely certain.”
(Professor Sagan seemed very certain of his opinions of Reagan, Nixon, and excessive military spending, to name just a few things.)
P 29: “Science is not only compatible with spirituality, it is a profound source of spirituality.”
(Why then did he mock religions so consistently?)
P 29-30: “The notion that science and spirituality are somehow mutually exclusive does a disservice to both.”
(Professor Sagan did disservices to both, as is here documented.)
P 30: “If you want to save your child from polio, you can pray or you can inoculate.”
(“Science is a profound source of spirituality”, P 29. Concordance on one page became mutual exclusivity on the next.)
P 32: “Valid criticism does you a favor.”
(As I hope to do for Sagan and his legions of “believers”.)
Ibid: “I maintain that science is part and parcel humility.”
(Demands, bordering on the militant, for more government funding hardly strikes me as “humility”. The mockery of religion does not indicate “humility”.)
P 35: “No contemporary religion and no New Age belief seems to me to take sufficient account of the grandeur, magnificence, subtlety, and intricacy of the universe revealed by science.”
(No contemporary science seems to me to take sufficient account of God’s hand in these intricacies. They are anything but random events.)
Ibid: “The fact that so little of the findings of modern science is prefigured in Scripture to my mind casts further doubt on its divine inspiration. But of course I might be wrong.”
(Such a popular and brilliant scientist - WRONG ? How could that possibly be? Two thousand years ago, the Scripture stated, “I am fearfully and wonderfully made”. And “The heavens proclaim the glory of God.” To this day, there has been no end of discoveries elucidating these and other profound Biblical truths and wisdom. Ironically science has underscored and emphasized their reality. This he calls “doubt” of divine inspiration, and concludes with what appears to be a snide remark.)
P 38: “...abandoning science is the road back into poverty and backwardness.”
(What is abandoning God?)
Ibid: “The values of science and the values of democracy are concordant, in many cases indistinguishable.”
(So have the costs. P 396: “ . . .science has been growing exponentially for centuries.” What of spiritual values?)
P 140: “Mr. Reagan told an epic story of World War II .. . . .only it never happened. Many other instances of this sort can be found in Reagan’s public statements. . . It is not hard to imagine serious public dangers emerging out of instances in which political, military, scientific, or religious leaders are unable to distinguish fact from vivid fiction.”
(Like the cold fusion hoax?)
P 153: “A scientist of my acquaintance says, ‘If the aliens would only keep all the folks they abduct, our world would be a little saner.’ But her judgement is too harsh.”
(Unless it is impugning Reagan, or Nixon, or our Military, to name but a few.)
P 178: “How is (SETI, the Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence) different from fantasy and pseudoscience?”
(A good question, never answered.)
P 180: “I would be very happy if flying saucer advocates and alien abduction proponents were right. . . . They do not ask us, though, to believe on faith.”
(Another mockery of religious “faith” - a faith which he longingly but reluctantly expresses on Page 203.)
P 191-199: (Bizarre letters from many people, none of which can compare with Sagan’s remark, “We will spread through the Milky Way”, P 394,, or “So much Milky Way, so little time”, P 400, Pale Blue Dot.)
P 203: “I long to believe that (my parents) essence, their personalities, what I loved so much about them - are really and truly still in existence somewhere. . . . Plainly there’s something within me that’s ready to believe in life after death. And it is not the least bit interested in whether there’s any sober evidence for it.”
P 208: “As Tom Paine warned, inuring us to lies lays the groundwork for many other evils.
(“Evil” is a term more appropriately discussed within the context of religion. What is a “lie” when “Nothing is known for certain”, P 28. Contemporary liberalism, which like Carl Sagan, abhors Reagan, Nixon, and the US Military, finds it convenient to dismiss the countless lies of President Clinton because of his charm, appearance, and political party. Most critically, how does “science” define “evil”?)
P 218: (Professor Sagan attacks the cigarette industry - a politically correct target of contemporary liberalism. Why does he not attack the greater killer, fat and cholesterol laden foods, contributing to obesity/indolence? Or the more certain, more contagious killer, IV drug use and homosexuality, leading to AIDS?)
P 254: “Scientists make mistakes. A few cheat and steal.”
(But enough about OUR extremely few and very small imperfections.)
P 260: “Who among us is wise enough to know which information and insights we can safely dispense with, and which will be necessary ten or a hundred or a thousand years into the future?”
(Or tomorrow, at the moment of death . . .)
P 261: “Fervid ideologues and authoritarian regimes find it easy and natural to impose their views and suppress the alternatives. Aldoph Hitler: ‘There is no truth, in either the moral or the scientific sense.’ “
(This sounds a great deal like Dr. Sagan, P 28: “Nothing is known for certain.” Does he not try to suppress religious views with authoritarian science and militant “separation of church and state/school”?)
P 273: “We could have lived in a Universe with different laws in every province, but we do not. This fact cannot but elicit feelings of reverence and awe.”
(Again and again, he intones the concept of reverence or spirituality for all that is around us. Yet his statement of “consistency” can be little more than scientific presumption, as he contradicts himself. “Even laws of nature are not absolutely certain”, P 28.)
P 274: “A small number of comparatively simple laws of Nature is one of the chief triumphs of science. And, it seems to me, its findings are perfectly consonant with many religions.”
(Few?? The equations describing the laws of nature are many and complex. Please refer to university texts in physics, and chemistry. Review a Handbook of Physics and Chemistry. Then tell me of the “simplicity” of neutrinos and dark matter. Also, why did he continue to mock religious beliefs?)
P 277: “There is no necessary conflict between science and religion. On one level, they share similar and consonant roles, and each needs the other.”
(P 13: “The Bible is ‘inerrant’.” P 30: “You can pray, or you can inoculate”. P 180: “Alien abduction proponents do not ask us to believe on faith.” Unlike Believers.)
P 278: “Indeed, this (an infinitely old Universe) is the one conceivable finding of science that could disprove a Creator - because an infinitely old Universe would never have been created.”
(Alas, the Big Bang Theory was, if you will pardon the pun, “created” long, long after the Biblical creation of the Universe was described in Genesis. Coincidence?)
End of Part I of II