The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle within the Darkish
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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the famend astronomer and creator of Cosmos comes a “highly effective [and] stirring protection of knowledgeable rationality” (The Washington Submit Guide World) in a world the place pretend information tales and Web conspiracy theories play to a disaffected American populace.
LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK PRIZE WINNER • “Wonderful . . . A spirited protection of science . . . From the primary web page to the final, this e book is a manifesto for clear thought.”—Los Angeles Occasions
How can we make clever selections about our more and more technology-driven lives if we don’t perceive the distinction between the myths of pseudoscience, New Age pondering, and fundamentalist zealotry and the testable hypotheses of science?
Casting a large internet by historical past and tradition, Pulitzer Prize–profitable creator and distinguished astronomer Carl Sagan argues that scientific pondering is crucial not solely to the pursuit of reality however to the very well-being of our democratic establishments. He examines and authoritatively debunks such celebrated fallacies as witchcraft, religion healings, demons, and UFOs. And but, disturbingly, in at the moment’s so-called data age, pseudoscience is burgeoning, with tales of alien abduction, “channeling” previous lives, and communal hallucinations commanding rising consideration and respect.
As Sagan demonstrates with lucid eloquence, the siren track of unreason isn’t just a cultural incorrect flip however a harmful plunge into darkness that threatens our most elementary freedoms.
Writer : Ballantine Books; Reprint version (February 25, 1997)
Language : English
Paperback : 457 pages
ISBN-10 : 0345409469
ISBN-13 : 978-0345409461
Merchandise Weight : 2.31 kilos
Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.8 x 8.15 inches
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9 reviews for The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle within the Darkish
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Original price was: $18.99.$9.49Current price is: $9.49.
Almodather Awad –
Excellent Defense of Science
Although he departed our world in 1997, Carl Sagan remains one of the most relevant authors today in my view. That is due to the fact that his writings concern topics that were and remain important for our short- and long-term survival as a species. At the heart of all his books is a passionate love for science that he tries to infect the reader with. And he does a great job.This is one of the last books he wrote. It is also one of the best. It tackles the spread of pseudoscience and superstition in modern society, with a special focus on the US in the late 1990s. Although he gives examples of various things people believe for no reason, he goes beyond those examples by giving us a toolkit to judge whether other common beliefs and practices belong in the same category or not.When I finished this book, I felt different. Sagan managed to change my view of a lot of things. His scrutinizing look at commonly-held beliefs in things like astrology made me reconsider the source of my views on other topics. Changing your opinions is tough. But knowing your views are based on fact, not authority or emotion, makes it a lot easier.
Janet C. –
Important book to read again as many Americans are unmoored from reality.
The US is being bamboozled by politicians on the Right.Carl Sagan pointed out nearly THREE decades ago that those in power often abuse their power and promote disinformation to serve their purposes.Excerpt>>”One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We’re no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It’s simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back”.
Daniel Bastian –
A Rallying Call For Science and Skepticism
“We’ve arranged a global civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology. We have also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology. This is a prescription for disaster. We might get away with it for a while, but sooner or later this combustible mixture of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces.” (p. 26)The omen above was put to print in 1995 and echoed throughout Carl Sagan’s prolific career as both practitioner and communicator of science. Swathed in a world so joined at the hip to science and technology, Sagan saw denial and ignorance of science as the greatest risks to human well-being and continuity. Is the past here to stay?In the US at least, conditions are none too sunny. Nearly 7 in 10 believe that angels and demons are active in the world. 61% and 48% believe in ghosts and UFOs of extraterrestrial origin, respectively. More than half doubt the scientific consensus on climate change, while one third of the public still waffles on evolution. And over half believe that God influences the outcome of sporting events. Dr. Sagan passed away just one year after the publication of The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, and in the decades that have come and gone since his oracular swan song, the American electorate seems as awash as ever in pseudoscience and superstition. As momentous, relevant, and urgent though Sagan’s message was, its infiltration remains woefully incomplete.The venerated astronomer, astrophysicist, and cosmologist regularly popularized his lifelong passion for replacing delusion with fact-sensitive grandeur. His 1980 docuseries Cosmos: A Personal Voyage was such a groundbreaking moment in broadcasting because it showcased the degree to which science, presented properly, could warm hearts and inspire minds. In The Demon-Haunted World, Sagan continued this saga, with his inimitable style intact and with a dire focus on communicating how science undergirds the modern world, its co-dependent relationship with democracy, and, amid the tenured struggle for progress and survival, how it’s so often overshadowed by uncritical thinking and politicized agenda.The MethodThe uninitiated often maintain a warped view of science, that of an arcane discipline requiring superheroic intellect out to devour devout beliefs. But as Sagan spent a lifetime making clear, science isn’t just for scientists. Every one of us can revel in its fruits, be won over by its infectious appetite for discovery. Most important, we can all benefit from applying the philosophical principles on which it rests to our everyday life.What are those principles? The twinship of skepticism and trained observation fueled by an overarching preference for the truth, however inconvenient, over the psychologically comfortable. Science is far more than cold collection of data and interpretation; it is a way of thinking, an approach to the world that values the questions as much as the answers and has built-in tools for prioritizing both.”Some may consider this an overbroad characterization, but to me every time we exercise self-criticism, every time we test our ideas against the outside world, we are doing science. When we are self-indulgent and uncritical, when we confuse hopes and facts, we slide into pseudoscience and superstition.” (p. 27)Donning this intellectual apparatus full-tilt may occasion us to revisit ideas we once accepted without any skeptical filter. It may require that we discard some beliefs long held dear. But in taking the plunge, Sagan reassures us, we often find that nature is far more clever, subtle, and adept at inspiring wonder than our fallible pattern-seeking devices can imagine. “Better the hard truth than the comforting fantasy. And in the final tolling it often turns out that the facts are more comforting than the fantasy…There are wonders enough out there without our inventing any.” (pp. 59, 204) While this may be new cognitive territory for some of us, the benefits are too vast to pass up. A sharp mind keeps the charlatans at bay.Key to how science delivers the goods has been its unmasking of natural processes to arrive at natural explanation. We may recall how our ancestors ascribed various features and bugs of our existence to supernatural causality: witches inflicted sickness with their spells; rain was a divine reward, drought a divine punishment; earthquakes were just the local god(s) stomping around in fits of rage; the “rising” and “setting” of the sun was controlled by the whims of the neighborhood deity; short-period comets presaged the fall of state empires.The advent of science severed this agency-focused paradigm. We learned that the ebbs and flows of celestial bodies mind predictable, calculable patterns. We discovered that weather events are beholden to entirely terrestrial phenomena. We found that transmissible disease is carried by microbes and other agents in our environment. We learned that the right medicine can cure an illness.The implications were radical, for if an illness was caused by the spell of a witch there is no reason to think we should find a natural cause for it, nor is there any reason to think we should find a natural cure. But in fact, it turned out that the right remedy could always overcome the power of âmagic spells.â Per a unidirectional phase shift, super- and non-natural explanations were gradually rendered obsolete, buoyed by an acute awareness of our propensity to overinterpret reality.”For much of our history, we were so fearful of the outside world, with its unpredictable dangers, that we gladly embraced anything that promised to soften or explain away the terror. Science is an attempt largely successful, to understand the world, to get a grip on things, to get hold of ourselves, to steer a safe course. Microbiology and meteorology now explain what only a few centuries ago was considered sufficient cause to burn women to death.” (p. 26)IrrationaliaRespect for this approach has not been universal, as a handful of minutes with mainstream media will avouch. In a world overflowing with pseudoscientific madness, Sagan divides his time between conveying the method and blitzing specific manifestations of the irrational. He casts his gaze on a whole armamentarium of woo, including creationism, crop circles, faith healing, astrology, psychics, UFOs, and alien encounters. Is there anything at all behind these claims to connect them to reality? Not if skeptical inquiry has anything to say; such notions find a vacuum of support inside, as Sagan wittily remarks, “any universe burdened by rules of evidence.” (p. 58)We learn of how two enterprising hoaxsters from Southampton fooled millions of credulants into believing that patterns in cornfields were cryptic messages from off-world. We listen in on the exploits of James Randi, who once outfoxed Australian media with video documentation of a “channeler.” Our talent for deceiving ourselves is on full display as Sagan recounts the initial frisson of seeing “faces” on Mars and assesses the merits of UFO claims from perhaps every conceivable angle. (As a pioneer of exobiological research, it’s no surprise Sagan devoted such sizable chunks to debunking UFO conspiracy tales, but he could have toggled it down a notch or two.)In turn, astrology and biblical creationism sport the same empirical garb as alchemy and witchcraft. (Quickly! Someone get Answers in Genesis on the phone.) From séance mediumship to `spirit photography’, the counterfeit carousel requires similar ingredients to survive: “what they need is darkness and gullibility.” (p. 241)Democracy and the FutureWhy haven’t the contrails of science seeped into the inner recesses of society and taken hold of our discourse and policy, Sagan asks? A look to the past tells us that commitment to these ideals has waxed and waned over time, surfacing first and most clearly in ancient Greece in the form of natural philosophy. Greek antiquity’s mental preoccupation with nature was distinguished by an express concern with natural cause and effect explanation, checked against their homegrown rules of logic and deduction.This marriage of reasoning and observation nourished some extraordinarily precocious activities. Sagan charts the achievements of early polymaths like Eratosthenesâwho measured the circumference of the earth, its axial tilt, as well as its distance from both the sun and the moon all with peculiar accuracy in the 2nd century BCE, Aristarchusâwho presented the first known model of a sun-centered cosmos, and Democritusâwho was the first to offer an atomic theory of the universe and often considered the “father of modern science.”Later societies yielded intermittent deviation from the systematic acme of Athens as triumphs gave way to enshrined overindulgence of superstition, and nationalistic fervor billowed to abnormally toxic levels. Beyond our undersized prefrontal cortex and the diversiform predispositions underwritten by our evolutionary heritage, at the heart of these setbacks lay the institution and its doctrinaire approach to knowledge. Both religious and secular governance can boast of choking free inquiry, stamping out critical investigation of the cosmos, and cultivating an infrastructural incapacity for nurturing the open exchange of ideas. Whenever and wherever this happens, humanity falters, the mind capsized under the crushing weight of tyranny. And like a derailed traincar, we inevitably throw ourselves headlong into state-sanctioned superstition and unreason.Science cannot prosper under these conditions. It stultifies and stagnates. Democracy ensures the efficacy of science insofar as it ensures all voices are heard. Science and democracy reinforce one another in this way: science depends on democratic values to function, while democracy depends sensitively on science to maintain its selected way of lifeâin everything from informing policy to keeping infrastructure in motion.After spending ample time surveying the overwhelming science illiteracy and innumeracy in the States, again and again Sagan returns to the point that democracy is unworkable in this environment. Uninformed citizens cannot cast informed votes. The shrieks of the ignorant become the shrieks of the next generation, who often adhere to the ideological persuasions impressed by their sheltered upbringing. Those who would charge that beliefs in pseudoscience are harmless should consider the extent to which they can be emblematic of a larger infirmity. We need open-minded, critically thinking, intellectually equipped individuals exercising their constitutional duty and voting on the policies that will give shape to the parameters under which future generations may thrive or fall.”A proclivity for science is embedded deeply within us, in all times, places and cultures. It has been the means for our survival. It is our birthright. When, through indifference, inattention, incompetence, or fear of skepticism, we discourage children from science, we are disenfranchising them, taking from them the tools needed to manage their future.” (p. 317)Closing ThoughtsSaganâs penultimate work is packed with diverse subject matter. Much more than an impassioned defense of science, The Demon-Haunted World meanders through philosophy, history, politics, religion, and grin-inducing exposés on claims to reality that just arenât so. While acknowledging the imperfections of science that come with all human endeavors, Sagan urges that when it comes to understanding how the world works and why nature is the way that it is, science seizes the epistemological crown. It is also a siren call to the coming generations: that we stifle its advance and deflect its discoveries at our own peril. With mounting concerns over a warming planet, overpopulation, and sustainability, and the most forward-focused way to preserve our pale blue dot, we cannot afford to treat with insouciance its revelations. Every human should read this book.On a more personal note, Sagan holds a special place in my own intellectual journey, reviving a pulse which continues to reverberate throughout my life. His books unshackled my imagination. His words spoke for me. He gave me a voice. A man of great passion and fierce intellect, he had the uncanny ability to ambush the heart with an equal measure of poetry and humble curiosity. His words can be understood by anyone who takes the time to read them. Carl synthesized my deepest thoughts and pointed me toward new horizons. He opened my eyes to a post-religious ethos and, more than anyone else, inspired me to abandon the intellectual celibacy of my youth and secure a personal relationship with reality and the cosmos. If Sagan communicated anything, it’s that science is a unification measure, something in which all of us can partake. Together with reason it is among the greatest tools in our survival kit. Let’s keep them burning brightly.”I worry that, especially as the Millennium edges nearer, pseudoscience and superstition will seem year by year more tempting, the siren song of unreason more sonorous and attractive. Where have we heard it before? Whenever our ethnic or national prejudices are aroused, in times of scarcity, during challenges to national self-esteem or nerve, when we agonize about our diminished cosmic place and purpose, or when fanaticism is bubbling up around us – then, habits of thought familiar from ages past reach for the controls.The candle flame gutters. Its little pool of light trembles. Darkness gathers. The demons begin to stir.”
Kevin Currie-Knight –
A Classic About How Science Does (and Does Not) Work!
Carl Sagan will most surely go down as one of the most poetic, and prolific, science popularizers of all time. This book, the last of his published before his death, is a brilliant enconium to science, and warning against pseudoscience.The book can be divided into three seperate “sections”: the first part of the book focuses on exploring all types of pseudoscience and showing how its proclomations are sloppy when compared with the scientific method. the second section focuses more on explaining how science works, and how we can use its method in our everyday lives. The third section is a warning against the “anti-intellectual” trend in schools, and cautions us to teach students from an early age the virtue of asking questions, being skeptical, and being innovative.If the first “section” of the book – that debunking pseudoscience – had been written in the past five years, it most surely would have concentrated on psychics and clairvoyants. This pseudoscience has witnessed a great popularity of late. As it was written in 1995/96, however, Sagan’s focus is primarily on the then-in-vogue pseudoscience of UFO’s and belief in extra-terrestrial existence. While this makes the book feel somewhat dated (as beilef in ET is far less prevalent today), Sagan does a GREAT job walking us through the sloppy thinking involved, and why ET is not a sceince.Sagan’s focus on debunking psueodscientific belief in ET is also an interesting choice because Sagan was somewhat of a sympathizer with belief in ET. He certainly thought it was possible, and spent a large part of his career advocating the search for life on other planets. He is not railing against belief in ET, but hasty belief in ET without good evidence.The section “section” of the book consists of one of the best explanations of the scientific process and how sceince works that I have ever seen outside of the abstruse philosophy of science texts. This is where the real “money is made,” and one criticism I have of the book is that, as strong as this section is, it may have made more sense to put this section first and the excoriation of pseudoscience after.Two chapters stand out from this section of the book. First, there is “The fine art of baloney detection,” where Sagan lays down the “rules” of science – rules that, when followed, make it near impossible for bad “science” to make it through the steps of the scientific method. The second stand-out chapter is, “The marriage of skepticism and wonder,” a philosophical reflection on the seeming conflict between sceintists’ needs to be creative and accepting of new ideas, and scientists’ need to stay conservative and skeptical. The best they can do, it seems, is to remind themselves of the necessity of both mindsets, so that if they find themselves favoring the one too much, they can quickly temper it. (Sagan does suggest, though, that a scientist is better off too skeptical than too gullible.)Teh third “section,” about the “anti-intellectual” trend in education and culture – is somewhat lackluster, probably because we have heard it so many times since 1996. It is hard to disagree with many of Sagan’s conclusions, but as an astronomer, one does feel that Sagan steps far outside of his specialty. (I am a high school educator, and while I agree with many of Sagan’s points, one cannot see some of them as completely unworkable. A science class relying exclsuively on lab experiments CAN lead to “hands on, minds off.” I have seen it. One needs ot memorize facts in order to know waht to extract from labs.)There are only a few criticisms I have of this book. First, as I mention earlier, the book may have done better by explaining what science is before excoriating things that are not sceince. Second, the book is quite meandering at times, and while Sagan may start a chapter talking about x, he often ends talking about z. This gets annoying over several hundred pages, and leads to an unfocused approach. Lastly, there are so many chapters dealing with the same or similar themes (many chapters on belief in UFO’s, a few on belief in first-hand testimony), that the book suffers from a bit of redundancy at times.Other than these, I whole-heartedly reccomend this book to anyone who wants to read a sparkling explanation of what science is, why it is important (albeit imperfect, like anything else), and why straying from it is always a risk.
Darren Hennig –
Dr. Sagan’s book is bang on! He foresaw the “dumbing down” of society and discusses not only what and why these events happen, what the ramifications are to a society if not careful, and what may be done to put us back on “track”.I have only gotten through 1/2 the book, but it is a nice read, chalk full of insight and excellent topics on how we are steering away from utilizing the scientific approach which has brought us much technology and universal insight into our place in the cosmos. If we do not look more skeptically at the mass misinformation out there, we may get lost.His book offers a compass to find our way back to the “candle in the dark”. :)Thanks! Highly recommended reading.
Sophia Diesel –
Loved it. Sagan is such a sensible person. He cares so much about us, about the world and the lives on it. Lessons that are never enough in times in which empathy seems scarcer.
L Garcia –
Lo recomiendo para regalarlo a personas que viven en el realismo mágico, pensando que las cosas caen del cielo.
mahesh –
A good read for person who wants to understand how science works…not by miracles and not by claiming to have answers for everything.
Dodo –
Das Buch habe ich das erste Mal schon vor Jahren gelesen, damals war es für mich ein wahrer “Augenöffner”. Sagan erklärt sachlich versiert, was tatsächlich dahinter steckt, wenn Menschen an Dinge glauben, die man freundlich als “paranormal” oder “übersinnlich” beschreiben oder auch einfach weniger euphemistisch Spinnereien nennen kann.Meistens steht tatsächlich eine Art Selbstbetrug dahinter. Dieser kann ganz traurige Hintergründe haben, wenn ein Mensch z.B. nicht akzeptieren kann oder will, dass er/sie ein psychisches Problem hat, das leider gewisse Wahnvorstellungen hervorruft. Oder wenn man einen geliebten Menschen verloren hat, dessen Verlust so schmerzhaft ist, dass man jedem “Medium” gern Glauben schenkt, das einem vorgaukelt, mit den Toten Kontakt aufnehmen zu können (das gleiche gilt für eigene “Geistersichtungen”, die eigentlich Illusionen sind, wie man sie durch verschiedene, rational vorhandene Phänomene wie z.B. Trance durch Autosuggestion in Phasen groÃer seelischer Anspannung haben kann. Ebenso kann man sich selbst leicht eine falsche Erinnerung einreden, indem man etwas wirklich Erlebtes in der eigenen “Erzählung” entsprechend ausschmückt.Vor Jahren noch war diese Neigung, der Wissenschaft zu misstrauen und stattdessen lieber eigene, wenn auch völlig laienhafte bis abstruse Theorien zu entwickeln, in Deutschland noch nicht so verbreitet während man in den USA schon länger gegen Scharlatane wie “Geistheiler” kämpfte. Mittlerweile aber scheint Sagans Mahnung, die positiven Errungenschaften moderner Forschung positiv zu sehen, und sich dagegen zu wehren, zurück ins Mittelalter zu fallen, auch hier sehr wichtig und aktuell.