And the third old post, unedited. I think this audience might still be interested. From December 2006.
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Scientist and novelist CP Snow declared fifty years ago that the educated classes were becoming two cultures, literary and scientific.
A good many times I have been present at gatherings of people who, by the standards of the traditional culture, are thought highly educated and who have with considerable gusto been expressing their incredulity at the illiteracy of scientists. Once or twice I have been provoked and have asked the company how many of them could describe the Second Law of Thermodynamics, law of entropy. The response was cold: it was also negative. Yet I was asking something which is about the scientific equivalent of: 'Have you read a work of Shakespeare's?'I now believe that if I had asked an even simpler question — such as, What do you mean by mass or acceleration, which is the scientific equivalent of saying, 'Can you read?' — not more than one in ten of the highly educated would have felt that I was speaking the same language. So the great edifice of modern physics goes up, and the majority of the cleverest people in the western world have about as much insight into it as their Neolithic ancestors would have had.
This was controversial, not least because literary people felt put down and insulted. Criticism fell into four broad categories: Snow had overstated the case; the divide was not new; a third culture was developing even as he had spoken; and Snow had helped worsen the divide by building fences. Snow came to partially agree with all these, while retaining his original view as essentially correct.
The cultural landscape has changed in the last fifty years, but there remains a core truth in Snow’s proposition. I have been writing much about the Arts & Humanities Tribe over the last few months which bears directly on the issue. For any new readers, a quick review. I was raised in the Arts & Humanities Tribe which is now so anti-Bush, anti-conservative, anti-neocon. Many groups might criticise this administration for other reasons. There are conservative and libertarian criticisms of the current administration, but the critical groups generally consitute the Democrat coalition: government unions, African-Americans, and liberals. The A&H Tribe constitutes much of the proud-to-be-blue-state liberals. I have criticised their position as being founded on emotion and tribalism more than reason. Their criticism of Bush and the red-state voters is often ill-concealed social criticism and cultural disdain.
I am not completely satisfied with my own choice of words in designating this group as the Arts and Humanities Tribe. Those in the social sciences are overwhelmingly in this group, yet many of those have little actual knowledge of arts and letters. Their philosophies are watered-down from A&H originals, and they adopt the language and attitudes of that tribe. Flowing in the other direction, the liberal arts have become suffused with the social sciences: much of history and literature are now warmed-over sociology, anthropology, and bad economics.
Confusing the terms further is the strong grounding many conservatives have in the traditional arts and humanities of Western Intellectual thought. They read history and literature, they know art and music. To exclude William F. Buckley or Victor Davis Hanson from the A&H designation would seem to dissolve the entire construct. In knowledge of literature and history before 1900, in fact, conservatives perhaps exceed liberals.
The enormous tectonic shifts over the last fifty years, and especially the last twenty, have come from the science and technical side of the culture. Science geeks read a lot of science fiction, a much-despised genre that has provided most of the original thought of the second half of the 20th Century. Certainly, it has provided enormous amounts of crap in the form of half-baked philosophy, formulaic adventure stories with science accessories, and ill-disguised fantasies of omnipotence. But in a world in which technical marvels are increasingly invading the cultural environment and changing behavior, science fiction often provides the only examples of near-future problems even being addressed.
Early on, science fiction was also called “speculative fiction,” and I wish that name had caught on better, as it retains a good deal of what is important. It is science fiction to imagine a mechanism by which someone could read minds and create an adventure about it. It is speculative fiction to try and work through the real consequences in a culture. How would friends and family react? What balances of power would be upset? Could a human personality endure the knowledge? It is one thing to imagine what fun people would have if machines did all our work; quite another to to imagine what this would do to the human character and what we might attempt in response. It is this speculative aspect that makes science fiction important intellectually. It is the lack of this that makes alienation in chicana fiction, or irony in Queer Studies barely worth mentioning. Speculative fiction has wildly explored the alienation of sentient beings which are different life-forms from each other, and societies where there are four distinct sexes, or parthenogenesis. Modern literature and high art seem tepid and timid in comparison, which is why they have needed to rely increasingly on sexual shock, predictably leftist sentiments, and social transgression to attract any attention at all.
Science fiction is predominantly Anglospheric, especially American, as well. The Europhilic and oriental fascination of the A&H crowd derives directly from the transnational nature of their studies. This is much less evident in science fiction, or science in general.
The science and technology crowd has made another enormous inroad into the arts & letters as well. The production of art for audience has become increasingly technical. Music, film, and theater have increasingly required not only technicians, but artists who understand the technology, and technicians who understand the art. It is still possible to carve out a career in the arts with little technical knowledge, but those opportunities are increasingly local. Technology has always driven the arts, but the changes were always slow enough that a person could absorb the necessary technical aspects early on and adapt very little over a career. The changes in acoustics or piano construction over Bach’s long lifetime were incremental, but the Moog synthesizers which were gloriously cutting-edge in the 1970’s are laughable antiques now. You might think that all one has to do is get up and sing, but microphones, lights, synthesizers, monitors, and editing effects are all part of the package. If you the performer do not understand these things, then you are dependent on those who do.
One of the earlier science/speculative fiction books that was not Anglo is "WE", by Russian writer, Eugene Zamiatin. It was written around 1920. "1984" is very similar to it in its basic premise. A good read.
ReplyDeleteThe Arts and Humanities tribe could probaly be restated by the terms "humanist tribe" or perhaps even "post-modernist tribe".
Those terms are much more closely related to the general philosophy of the tribe you are trying to describe.(in my opinion anyway)
Very interesting. Part of the divide occurs in college, which is attended universally by both educated groups, science and humanities.
ReplyDeleteA broad liberal education is no longer required in most schools to obtain a degree. The science crowd can focus from the second semester of freshman year, and avoid contact with icky philosophy or literature courses. Similarly the Arts and Humanities tribe can continue to be just as flummoxed in college as they were in high school by simple Newtonian physics, without reprisal.
How do you become a truly educated man/woman?
We've made a lot of progress since Snow's time. Today, we graduate people from college who are familiar with *neither* the Second Law of Thermodynamics *nor* with Shakespeare.
ReplyDeleteIt is not two cultures it is THREE. The Sci/tech people, the arts/humanities people and the MASSES or Great Unwashed or whatever you want to call them.
ReplyDeleteBut there are lots of pseudo-intellectual phonies in both of the first two groups pretending what they know is more difficult than it really is. Just because someone has a science degree does not mean they can have an original thought. But they aren't about to admit they are second or third rate.
Now computers and the internet make it possible to short circuit the educational system. What are we going to do with that ability?
psikeyhackr
I'm kind of an oddball. I majored in History (although, to be fair, I specialized in quantitative analysis of historical data, using the UNIX mainframe, statistical analysis software, and a JPL-based relational database language). I only minored in Science because I found the field fascinating (after a period when I avoided Science because of bad experiences in earlier grades).
ReplyDeleteI also was attending college just as the PC revolution came in - I helped others to learn how to use computers in my part-time job at school, and later got drafted to help put together a network.
So, between that, and a programming course that sucked up all my free time (which I did NOT mind - I had to be dragged away from the lab), I had a toe in both worlds. For years, as a computer specialist, and later, as a science teacher, I served as a go-between the two tribes. Few could, or would, do that, so I was always in high demand.
What is true is that, today, the STEM people snipe at the A & H people, and vice versa. Neither thinks the other to be well educated. Both may be partially correct. But, they're talking different languages, and operating from different premises, so are not likely to come to agreement. They simply haven't the communication tools.
"Their criticism of Bush and the red-state voters is often ill-concealed social criticism and cultural disdain." They KNOW they're "smarter than everybody else".
ReplyDeleteScience Fiction: To which I say, rah, RAH, R.A.H.! (Robert Anson Heinlein)
A good example of the blending of science and art is modern computer video games. Massive works of art in fact, and they employ a good percentage of the modern graphic artists.
ReplyDeleteI taught myself to code and enjoyed many many hours, making stuff out of nothing basically. Wrote a primitive youtube back when we had 28.8 modems, a bit ahead of my time. ;) The blending of Perl and PHP to produce a backend, that utilized my Linux machines to rip apart and reprocess the incoming videos, so they had a chance on our very limited bandwidth, was some of the most fun I have even had.