The Magician’s Twin: C.S. Lewis on Science, Scientism, and
Society.
Edited by John G. West
(Discovery Institute Press, 350 pages, $24.95)
We normally associate C.S. Lewis with Christian apologetics,
English literature, and the Narnia stories; less so with science
and questions about evolution. But as the Discovery Institute’s
John G. West points out in The Magician’s Twin, throughout
his life Lewis was concerned about the abject submission of culture
and politics to the growing authority of science. Lewis respected
science, but he rejected the idea that it is the only reliable
method of knowledge about the world. He called that error
scientism. As for evolution, his skepticism about it increased over
the years.
In this anthology, John West and his co-authors gather material
primarily from four books by Lewis: Miracles, The
Abolition of Man, That Hideous Strength and The
Discarded Image. Their findings are enhanced by West’s
research into Lewis’s papers and correspondence, now at Wheaton
College in Illinois. He also made good use of unpublished
annotations and underlined passages in books preserved from Lewis’s
own library.
Lewis well understood the cultural dominance of the theory of
evolution in his day and was at first reluctant to criticize the
theory. He also tended to assume, as so many others have since,
that Darwinism was better confirmed than it really was (or is). In
fact, since Lewis’s death in 1963, the new findings of molecular
biology have made the theory look a good deal less plausible than
it did 50 years ago.
In the past, some evolutionists claimed Lewis as an ally.
National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, a Christian
who admired Lewis and was influenced by him, believed that Lewis
accepted that “Christians should accept the animal ancestry of
humans.” But he neglected to study Lewis’s published comments.
Others have openly misrepresented what he believed on the
subject.
Lewis was “a thoroughgoing skeptic of the creative power of
unguided natural selection,” John West points out, and as the years
passed he became increasingly critical.
Lewis further argued (in Miracles) that the human
faculty of reason is itself supernatural and that it is impossible
to rely on our mental processes if they are the product of the
random motion of molecular particles. Belief in materialism is
therefore self-defeating. On that point, at least, C.S. Lewis and
the British biologist J.B.S. Haldane were in agreement.
Of particular interest are Lewis’s comments in his posthumously
published book, The Discarded Image. He notes the shift in
recent centuries “from a devolutionary to an evolutionary scheme”;
from a cosmology in which it was once considered axiomatic that
“all perfect things precede all imperfect things.” That is a
quotation from the sixth century philosopher Boethius, who wrote
the Consolation of Philosophy, a work widely read in the
Middle Ages. Today, in biology at least, “the starting point is
always lower than what is developed,” Lewis commented.
The modern intelligent design movement has raised a related
question: How did we ever acquire the information that is essential
for an organism to develop in stages from amoeba to Man? No such
progression has ever been observed, experimentally, and the
question raised by the advocates of intelligent design has never
been answered.
Lewis anticipated that our own “model” is also likely to change.
We can see why, and perhaps it is already doing so. One big social
change in the 150 years since The Origin of Species was
published is that the old faith in progress has been lost. At the
end of The Origin Charles Darwin wrote: “As natural
selection works solely by and for the good of each being, all
corporeal and mental endowments will tend to progress toward
perfection.”
Improvement was thought of as having been built into the Cosmos.
That faith endured throughout the 19th century and for the first
half of the 20th. But we no longer believe in the doctrine of
progress. The Holocaust, the Gulag, and two world wars didn’t help,
of course. But for their own reasons, often inexplicit,
intellectuals now see the world in a much more pessimistic way than
they formerly did.
Environmentalists in particular view humans as little more
than polluters who should reproduce less frequently — or perhaps
stop entirely. Nature might then be restored to its pure and
unsullied state. A surprise best seller in 2007 was The
World Without Us, from which human beings have disappeared,
for unexplained reasons. The book was greeted as a new vision of
Utopia.
But absent a robust faith in progress, I suspect, people will
not easily believe in evolution either. Evolution is a theory that
arose with the Enlightenment, when change came to be equated with
progress. But that vision is remote from our own world and there
have been other such U-turns. For example, who in C.S. Lewis’s day
would have predicted the abrupt return of Islam within four decades
of his death?
The idea that progress can no longer be relied upon has seeped
into corners of the academy, where we are finding calls for the
renewal of eugenics. If Man will not improve on his own, then he
must be remade, willy-nilly. A chapter in The Magician’s
Twin tells us about Julian Savulescu, the head of something
called the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at Oxford University.
He was a student of the Princeton bioethicist Peter Singer, who
earlier called for the extension of human rights to animals.
“Bioethics” may be on its way to becoming the polite new word for
eugenics.
Darwin became uncomfortable later in life because he believed
that social reformers in England were undermining natural selection
(the “survival of the fittest”) by introducing what we would call
welfare programs. Darwin’s cousin Francis Galton launched eugenics
as a corrective and it was later adopted by National Socialists in
Germany. That discredited eugenics, but Julian Huxley (the grandson
of Darwin’s strongest supporter) was still backing the movement as
late as 1960.
Today, Julian Savulescu is called a trans-humanist. According to
The Magician’s Twin chapter, written by James Herrick,
Savulescu
“is a leading proponent of human enhancement, the school of
thought that promotes the progressive use of biotechnologies to
improve human intellect, moral reasoning and other traits such as
physical strength. Savulescu has argued that deep moral flaws and
destructive behaviors point to the need to employ technology and
education to change human nature; either we take this path or we
face extinction as a species.”
There are striking similarities between the goals of today’s
trans-humanists and the technological future envisioned by C.S.
Lewis, both in The Abolition of Man and in his
novel That Hideous Strength. (Both were written in the
1940s.) As with other writers such as Aldous Huxley in Brave
New World, Lewis assumed that progressive opinion would try to
incorporate the latest technology into society. Whatever seemed old
fashioned would be displaced by something more up-to-date and
scientific. Some developments such as the recent enthusiasm for
stem cell research have indeed borne that out. (But embryonic stem
cell research, which was initially and misleadingly sold to the
public by the New York Times as an immortality project,
has gone almost nowhere because no one has been able to master the
science; it seems to have been mainly a fantasy to begin with.)
In other ways, however, progressive opinion has headed in an
unanticipated direction. Consider the global warming scare. Today’s
Greens, who are driving this debate, yearn for an old
fashioned world with windmills and warmth collected directly from
the sun; not a world of big power stations and oil companies. Every
excuse to eliminate or postpone nuclear power is seized upon,
however low its carbon emissions. Germany is now heading down that
self-destructive path and Japan will possibly follow suit. (China,
not!)
The new direction of the intelligentsia is elitist to be sure,
as it was in Lewis’s day, but it also harbors these
anti-technological sentiments. Progressive characters in That
Hideous Strength disparage an old fashioned village pub in
England and plan to eliminate such anachronisms when they come to
power. Today’s intellectuals would be shocked by that. “Ye olde”
things appeal to us, we admire old structures and consistently try
to preserve them. C.S. Lewis would have been pleased.
The great thrust of the new technology today has been in the
making of ever smaller personal computers and the development of a
digital world — the world wide web in particular. This momentous
development was of course unforeseen, and it has no particular
ideology. But its effect is to decentralize power and
decision-making and that will continue for years to come (perhaps
eventually rendering print obsolete). This direction, too, is
inimical to the world planned by experts that Lewis envisioned (and
dreaded) in his critique of scientism.
One could say a lot more about this outstanding new book. It is
valuable precisely because so little attention has been paid to
C.S. Lewis’s views about science and society. It will be of
interest not just to students of C.S. Lewis but to anyone following
the controversies surrounding intelligent design, the faculty of
reason, and the mysterious history of human life.