'Which end is nearer to God?'
As we go up in this hierarchy of complexity, we get to things like
muscle twitch, or nerve impulse, which is an enormously complicated
thing in the physical world, involving an organization of matter in a
very elaborate complexity. Then come things like 'frog'.
And then we go on, and we come to words and concepts like 'man', and
'history', or 'political expediency', and so forth, a series of concepts
which we use to understand things at an ever higher level.
And going on, we come to things like evil, and beauty, and hope...
Which end is nearer to God; if I may use a religious metaphor. Beauty
and hope, or the fundamental laws ? I think that the right way, of
course, is to say that what we have to look at is the whole structural
interconnection of the thing; and that all the sciences, and not just
the sciences but all the efforts of intellectual kinds, are an endeavour
to see the connections of the hierarchies, to connect beauty to
history, to connect history to man's psychology, man's psychology to the
working of the brain, the brain to the neural impulse, the neural
impulse to the chemistry, and so forth, up and down, both ways. And
today we cannot, and it is no use making believe that we can, draw
carefully a line all the way from one end of this thing to the other,
because we have only just begun to see that there is this relative
hierarchy.
And I do not think either end is nearer to God. To stand at either end,
and to walk off that end of the pier only, hoping that out in that
direction is the complete understanding, is a mistake. And to stand with
evil and beauty and hope, or to stand with the fundamental laws, hoping
that way to get a deep understanding of the whole world, with that
aspect alone, is a mistake. It is not sensible for the ones who
specialize at one end, and the ones who specialize at the other end, to
have such disregard for each other. (They don't actually, but people say
they do.) The great mass of workers in between, connecting one step to
another, are improving all the time our understanding of the world, both
from working at the ends and working in the middle, and in that way we
are gradually understanding this tremendous world of interconnecting
hierarchies.
--
Richard Feynman
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