Absolutely Frank
Member
No matter how people spin it, science isn't just about studying nature and its phenomena. It's also fundamentally about control. The drive to know everything stems from a deep-seated fear of an uncontrollable and chaotic natural world that threatens us with extinction at every turn. Some so-called geniuses in the transhumanist wing of the cult of scientific progress even aspire to conquer death by turning themselves into immortal mega-robots. And astonishingly, some people actually cheer for these delusional and unhinged prophets of modern technology, failing to see the truth—science has become like Harry Potter. That’s right. Science now dreams of the irrational and claims that anything is possible. Some science enthusiasts don't even recognize the absurdity of flying cars and warp drives—they genuinely believe in them because, to them, SCIENCE IS MAGIC!
They actually buy into Arthur C. Clarke's misguided and obviously problematic quip, "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic," as if it were a serious truth. But this kind of magical thinking is nothing new to science—its roots are deeply entwined with the irrational. Science didn’t descend from the heavens like some alien Prometheus bringing us the Fire of Knowledge. The dirty little secret is that science was nurtured at the breast of the irrational. Science’s roots are in magic, and the fruit doesn’t fall far from the tree. Consider these examples:
They actually buy into Arthur C. Clarke's misguided and obviously problematic quip, "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic," as if it were a serious truth. But this kind of magical thinking is nothing new to science—its roots are deeply entwined with the irrational. Science didn’t descend from the heavens like some alien Prometheus bringing us the Fire of Knowledge. The dirty little secret is that science was nurtured at the breast of the irrational. Science’s roots are in magic, and the fruit doesn’t fall far from the tree. Consider these examples:
- Alchemy birthed chemistry.
- Pythagorean mathematics laid the foundation for modern mathematics.
- Hermeticism heavily influenced Newton and other early scientists' views on the universe.
- Astrology evolved into modern astronomy.
- Sympathetic magic and theurgy focused on classifying, quantifying, and taxonomy.