superstition as science konrad talmont-kaminski umcs & kli

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Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

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Page 1: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as ScienceKonrad Talmont-Kaminski

UMCS & KLI

Page 2: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

First-footing• It is lucky when a tall man walks into a

house first in the New Year• Is this a scientific hypothesis?• Why not?• Is it something about the hypothesis?• Is it something about

our attitudes?• Is it something about

how it was reached?

Page 3: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Outline• Elements of superstitions

• Superstition, magic & religion

• 3 different views of superstition

• Superstition as science

• What is the difference?

• Empirical limits

• Conclusions

Page 4: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Elements of superstitions

• Superstitious beliefs

• Superstitious practices

• The link between them

Page 5: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Elements of a superstition• Superstitious belief– ‘Action’• Crossing fingers• Can be just an event – Friday 13th

– ‘Effect’• Potentially desirable or undesirable event

– Connection• Causation/conjuration or

prediction/divination

– Explanation• Luck• No natural explanation• Supernatural explanation

Page 6: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Elements of a superstition• Superstitious practice– Taking or avoiding the ‘action’• Avoiding black cats

– Success uncertain– Function• Manifest

– To avoid or bringabout the ‘effect’

• Latent– Can be very different

– First-footing again• Predicting or causing?

Page 7: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Elements of a superstition• The link between beliefs and

practices– Generally problematic– Focussing on practices• Skinner’s behaviourism• Beliefs secondary

– Focussing on beliefs• Superstition satisfying internal needs• Practices secondary

Page 8: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition, magic & religion

•Magic & religion•Magic & superstition•Religion & superstition

Page 9: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition, magic & religion• Magic & religion– E. Durkheim 1912• Sacred vs. profane• Religion

– Social function

• Magic– Individual function

– D. S. Wilson 2002• Evolutionary explanation of

religion• Social function as group-selection

Page 10: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition, magic & religion• Magic & superstition–Magic• Traditional societies

– Superstition• Modern society

– Relation?• Different phenomena• Same phenomenon / different contexts

– Education and superstition (Jahoda 1969)– Jumper example

Page 11: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition, magic & religion• Religion & superstition– Deisidaimonia• Misplaced fear of daimons• Theophrastus, circa 300 BC

– Superstition is false religion• Worship of demons• Aquinas, circa 1250 AD

– Atheist generalisation• All religion is false• Therefore, superstition is all religion

– Can differentiate religion & superstition– Some religious practices superstitious• Intercessory prayer

Page 12: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

3 views of superstition

• Superstition as fantasy

• Superstition as rhetoric

• Superstition as science

Page 13: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

3 views of superstition• Superstition as fantasy– Attempted retreat from threatening/

uncontrollable reality– Anxiety-reduction (Malinowski 1925)– Retaining feeling of control (Case et all 2004)– “The man under the sway of impotent fury or

dominated by thwarted hate spontaneously clenches his fists and carries out imaginary thrusts at his enemy, muttering imprecations, casting words of hatred and anger against him.” – Malinowski “Magic, Science, and Religion”

Page 14: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

3 views of superstition• Superstition as rhetoric–Attempted communication–Use of language to induce motion in

things (Burke 1969)–Costly signalling (Tambiah 1990)–Accepting authority (Palmer 1989)– “By communicating acceptance of a

supernatural claim one is communicating a willingness to accept the speaker’s influence unskeptically.” - Palmer “The ritual taboos of fishermen”

Page 15: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

3 views of superstition• Superstition as science– Attempt to understand/control

the world– Primitive science (Frazer 1890)– Adventitious reinforcement

(Skinner 1947)– Biased cognitive heuristics

(Rozin & Nemeroff 1980)– “Magic is a spurious system of natural

law as well as a fallacious guide of conduct; it is a false science as well as an abortive art.” - Frazer, Golden Bough

Page 16: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as science?

•Question of focus•Primitive science•Adventitious reinforcement•Biased cognitive heuristics

Page 17: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as science?• Question of focus– Superstitious beliefs vs. scientific

beliefs– Superstitious methods vs. scientific

methods

• Both options incomplete–Would ‘superstitious’ beliefs be

scientific if arrived at scientifically?– Could they be arrived at scientifically?– Is there such a thing as ‘magical

thinking’?– Or is it that thinking sometimes leads to

magical beliefs?

Page 18: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as science?• Primitive science– Tylor 1871, Frazer 1890, Levy-Bruhl

1910– Superstition identified with primitive

societies/minds– Science identified with modern

societies/minds– Progress seen as directed

‘evolution’– Enlightenment / Intellectualist

position– Rationality expels superstition

Page 19: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as science?• Adventitious reinforcement– B.F. Skinner 1947, S. Vyse 1997– Superstition in a pigeon• Skinner box• Operant conditioning• Independent reinforcement schedule• ‘Superstitious behaviour’• “Operant conditioning is

not just for rats and pigeons” - Vyse

Page 20: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as science?• Adventitious reinforcement–Matrix task• 4 x 4 matrix• Move dot from top left to

bottom right• Task: Find out when points are gained• Points awarded randomly• Numerous theories put forward

–Similar situations• Malfunctioning light switch

–Conditioning as basis for understanding science?

Page 21: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Superstition as science?• Biased cognitive heuristics– Domain-specific– Generally effective– Systematically biased– Heuristics and biases (Kahneman &

Tversky 1974)– Bounded rationality (H. Simon 1972)– Scientific methods as heuristics

(W. Wimsatt 2007)– Contagion heuristic• Rozin & Nemeroff 1980

Page 22: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

What is the difference?

•Truth & empirical adequacy•Natural vs. supernatural•Sacred vs. profane

Page 23: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

What is the difference? • Truth & empirical adequacy– Superstitions as false causal beliefs• Often used definition• Many false causal beliefs, some scientific

– Superstitions not just false but (known to be) empirically inadequate• Scientific beliefs rejected due to empirical

inadequacy• Can not equate Newton’s physics with his

astrology

– Is ‘onto something’– But superstitious beliefs ‘look different’

Page 24: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

What is the difference?• Natural vs. supernatural– Superstitions as supernatural claims– Problems• Vague concept• Circularity?• Distinction much later than category• Correlation between superstitious and

pseudoscientific beliefs• Succubi become aliens• Post hoc explanations

– Is ‘onto something’

Page 25: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

What is the difference?• Sacred vs. profane– Durkheim– Explaining a cognitive category in terms

of a social phenomenon?– Is ‘onto something’– But, again, superstitions ‘look different’

Page 26: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Empirical limits

•van Fraassen•Observability & superstitions•Observability & functions•Agnosticism about explanations

Page 27: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Empirical limits• B. van Fraassen– The Scientific Image 1980– Limits of observability• Actual empirical limitations• Ability to discern small objects• Limits change over time• Agnosticism about unobservable

claims• Challenging scientific attitudes

– Observable/detectable distinction• Distinction generally rejected• Is anything unobservable?• Significance of social attitudes

Page 28: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Empirical limits• Observability & superstitions

• How observable are superstitious claims?– Connections between ‘actions’ and

‘events’• Observable as correlations

– Explanations for the connections• The claims hard to observe• Attitudes object to observation• Render superstitious explanations

effectively unobservable• ‘Superempirical’ rather than supernatural

Page 29: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Empirical limits• Observability and functions

• Manifest and latent function–Manifest function requires observability– Religious connections unobservable• Latent (social) function more important

– In superstitions only explanations unobservable

– Scientists aim to make explanations observable

– A vital difference

Page 30: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Empirical limits• Agnosticism about explanations • Scientific explanations?– Scientists take realist view of explanations– Pursue evidence for their truth– Agnosticism not justified

• Superstitious explanations– Explanations in practically untestable terms– Testing of explanations discouraged– Agnosticism is not enough

• Agnosticism about explanations is not scientific

Page 31: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Conclusions•Similarities–Methods: Use of heuristics–Beliefs: Often hard to test explanations put forward

•Differences–Methods: Development of new heuristics–Beliefs: A realist attitude to explanations leading to pursuit of testing

Page 32: Superstition as Science Konrad Talmont-Kaminski UMCS & KLI

Thank [email protected]

http://deisidaimon.wordpress.com