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Plotbot
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September 2017
The Bastard Sister of Science
“The principles of association are excellent in themselves,
and indeed absolutely essential to the working of the human mind.
Legitimately applied they yield science; illegitimately applied
they yield magic, the bastard sister of science.”
-Sir James George Frazer, The Golden Bough (1922), ch. 4
I started out as a
comic book geek. Superheroes were my childhood drug of choice. Prose
reading was mostly mystery novels and nonfiction. I started reading
SF and fantasy in high school, partly through Wendy & Richard
Pini's Elfquest
comics, which spun off a couple of shared-world prose anthologies
that eased the transition. The comics community had by that time been
infected with a collecting mindset that discouraged free trades,
which meant I had to budget my monthly reading more carefully than I
liked. It also meant that used comics (at least the popular ones)
tended to be more expensive than new ones. Thankfully, neither
of those phenomena held with used books.
Comics have always
mixed scientific and fantastic elements,
sometimes in clever
ways and sometimes not. When I made my jump to prose, I tended to
like books
that did the same, like Elfquest. Poul Anderson's Three
Hearts and Three Lions was a particular
favorite, with its radioactive giants and ultraviolet-sensitive
denizens of Faerie. I never read Gordon R. Dickson's Dragon
Knight series, but if I remember the
cartoon
correctly, it had a similar flavor.
Sir James Frazer was
famous in Victorian England, though academics these days tend to
dismiss
him as an armchair anthropologist, one who never visited any of the
tribes or cultures he wrote about, but only culled from the writings
of those who had. He wrote several
versions of his masterwork, The Golden Bough, of varying
length. Quite a few SF writers were inspired by Frazer's work over
the course of the twentieth century, as detailed in this article.
One author Clute leaves out is Lyndon Hardy, whose Magic
by the Numbers trilogy, like Randall
Garrett's Lord Darcy stories, explicitly referred to Frazer's
laws—and then added some more. I read the first one in college
and rather liked it.
Sir Arthur C. Clarke's
Third Law may be more famous (few things are
more often quoted
by nerds), but given his influence on authors,
Sir James G. Frazer's quote from the opening of this column may be
equally important in the history of SF. Clarke defined magic as
mystery; Frazer took the opposite point of view, that magic could be
understood in a rigorous scientific way. In Frazer's view, magic is a
mechanical, deterministic process, not a social negotiation with a
spirit or a god. Instead, the magician imagines that s/he is taking
advantage of the correlations between worldly phenomena, just
different ones, more intuitively obvious than those that experimental
science has shown to be important. Two of these correlations were
central:
The Law of
Sympathy: “the magician infers that he can produce any
effect he desires merely by imitating it.”
The Law of
Contagion: “whatever he does to a material object will
affect equally the person with whom the object was once in contact,
whether it formed part of his body or not.”
Inflamed wounds are
hot, red, and swollen (thus the word inflamed). Given that,
the practice of heating the weapon that inflicted a wound to cause
further inflammation of that wound makes some sense. Where our
current science blames invisible microbes for inflammation and
disease, cultures without microscopes usually blamed other invisible
things, like bad smells or magical operations by distant or hidden
sorcerers.
Frazer also described a
simple linear model for the gradual historical sophistication of
human models of reality.
Magic → Religion → Science
Although he placed
religion as the transition between magic and science, Frazer appears
to me to have thought of religion as more of a detour. While magic's
laws of Contagion and Sympathy were mistaken models of reality, to
Frazer they were only minor errors, fixable by experimental data and
practice. He seems to have considered the invention of supernatural
intelligent entities, whose decisions might be influenced like those
of humans, as a whole other category of error, one that required its
own phase in the development of society.
His model was too
simple, of course. The real world is nothing if not messy. But the
value of a model is to make one's thinking explicit enough to be
tested, and while Frazer did no experiments himself, his model was
clear enough for other people to test it. That was valuable.
Modern neuroscience
might actually kind of agree with Frazer about one thing, that there
are categories of error. There have been many
studies of the human tendency to project—especially
socially. We tend to create agents
like ourselves to explain natural processes. This tendency has even
been somewhat localized
in the brain. Our dedicated primate social circuitry's normal
function includes making inferences about known people who are not
physically present at the moment, because they're in another
location. It makes perfect sense to us to say, “What would
this person want, if s/he were here?”—even if that
person is dead, as we regularly do in making funeral arrangements,
for instance. This same highly developed neural network reflexively
looks for someone to blame whenever anything goes wrong. Accidents
don't just happen; they have to be caused by some
agent. Under this intuitive viewpoint, even atheists will blame
natural disasters and mechanical failures on people. They just choose
different people to blame.
The growth of computer
malware that can affect the physical world, like StuxNet,
will muddy these conceptual waters even further, as at this
industrial accident in Russia,
which was at one point suspected of being caused by electronic
sabotage. Just wait until somebody remotely hacks a moving robot car
in
the wild. People will go nuts. We may be moving
from a techno-logical world into a techno-magical one, although to be
fair it's experiments and humility, not logic, that distinguish
science from magic. As Frazer so eloquently showed, magic can be very
logical.
In a 2003 review
paper, Pascal Boyer extended the idea that
social circuits propose social causes for everything into a framework
for a neuroscience of religion, in which every magical or
supernatural idea is a perfectly logical possibility that just
happens to defy common experience (and its distillation, experimental
evidence). Then he tried to map those possibilities onto the brain
networks that generate common experience. Here's the abstract:
“Religious
concepts activate various functionally distinct mental systems,
present also in non-religious contexts, and ‘tweak’ the
usual inferences of these systems. They deal with detection and
representation of animacy and agency, social exchange, moral
intuitions, precaution against
natural hazards and understanding of misfortune. Each of these
activates distinct neural resources or families of networks. What
makes notions of supernatural agency intuitively plausible? This
article reviews evidence suggesting that it is the joint, coordinated
activation of these diverse systems, a supposition that opens up the
prospect of a cognitive neuroscience of religious beliefs.”
Boyer has since written
a lot more about this model of religion as an orchestra (or more
accurately, a jam band), and I hope to return to it at some
point, but for now I will just recommend his website
as a resource. I can also recommend Frazer's book to any writer of SF
or fantasy, despite its theoretical shortcomings, both because of the
quality of his writing and because of the sheer number of obscure
customs he listed. The Golden Bough is indeed full of gold,
mostly in nuggets of raw informational ore, waiting to be smelted
into shining, clever stories.
Randall Hayes,
Ph.D., has been waiting a long time for the opportunity to use the
word “smelted” in a sentence, and it feels pretty good.
In between columns, keep up with SF/science news at the PlotBot
Facebook page, and read book reviews by following @PlotBot2015
on Steemit.com.
REFERENCES
http://3investigators.homestead.com/files/t3ihome.htm
A fan page about my favorite juvenile detective series—after Scooby Doo, of course.
http://elfquest.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Elfquest_publications
http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/science_and_sorcery
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFjMG5u0PzE
26:30: “Captain Marvel was the first superhero comic to just throw out the notion of realism.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Hearts_and_Three_Lions
Crap! I had forgotten all about Hugi the dwarf. Clearly, I need to read it again.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dragon_and_the_George
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flight_of_Dragons
https://tinyurl.com/lqp5k77
New Makers of Modern Culture, pages 518-20.
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/author/1241
I think this is the same version I have in print.
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3623?msg=welcome_stranger#chapter3
http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/magic
http://alodar.com/blog/after-nearly-thirty-years-the-magic-by-the-numbers-trilogy-is-again-available/
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ClarkesThirdLaw
http://at.blogs.wm.edu/is-technology-indistinguishable-from-magic-the-dangers-of-clarkes-third-law/
https://malariajournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1475-2875-12-232
With rare exceptions like Marcus Terentius Varro: “Precautions
must also be taken in the neighbourhood of swamps, both for the reasons given, and because there are bred certain minute creatures
which cannot be seen by the eyes, which float in the air and enter the body through the mouth and nose and there cause serious diseases.”
https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/ech9x/
This review has 19 pages of references.
http://nautil.us/issue/19/illusions/how-your-brain-decides-without-you
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00609/full
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2014.00265/full
http://spectrum.ieee.org/telecom/security/the-real-story-of-stuxnet
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/military/cyberwar-threat.html
https://www.wired.com/2015/07/hackers-remotely-kill-jeep-highway/
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.180.1463&rep=rep1&type=pdf
Pascal Boyer offers up one recent framework for the study of religion, formerly a taboo subject for cognitive neuroscientists.
https://www.facebook.com/PlotBot-Column-562920973855007/
https://steemit.com/@plotbot2015
Read more by Randall Hayes