Has science strayed too far into philosophy? Reading back over this discussion, I am led to remark on what I see as the hierarchical nature of the scientific disciplines; for, mr. Banno, for example, assumes that no knowledge of man can be had unless it be reductionist, by which I assume he means, unless it be explained by knowledge gained from studying the orders of nature beneath it.
My knowledge of mathematics and physics is rather outdated: I studied them 40 yrs or so ago in high school and university, and much more progress may have been achieved in these fields since then; but I have never heard that we have, starting with only the postulates of these two sciences either separately or combined, been able to predict, as Maxwell did electro-magnetic waves, the periodic table, which, to my mind, suggests that there is a distinction to be made b/w the disciplines of mathematics, physics and chemistry, and that the phenomena of the “higher” science, that of chemistry, cannot be understood simply or solely by the postulates of it’s two lower sisters.
Similarly, I have never heard (correct me if I’m wrong!) that chemists, working from the postulates of their peculiar science, have ever been able to predict that that new thing in nature, based on the carbon atom, called “life”, must emerge, much less that it would take on the infinite variety of form that it has, nor substitute for the science we call biology, with its own postulates that describe its own peculiar phenomena...
Finally, I see that this new object of science, man, emerges as something distinct and superior to the the things that merely live, the objects of biology, with his own peculiar characteristics irreducible to those of that inferior science, and I am convinced that nature is arranged in a hierarchy, from things lower to higher, each governed by its own peculiar laws...
...and, having studied, in a rudimentary fashion, the systems of gov he has established and how each sort influences general thought, have concluded that those who condemn me for being “arrogant” in thinking this way are simply blinded by democratic ideology, which asserts that, to put it bluntly, “nothing is better than anything else”.
I once had a discussion with a man who I finally forced to confess that he believed a human being was not, essentially, any better than a rock; so I asked him, “so you don’t mind if I kick you around in the argument a little?”,...and he was offended!