This is a book with the purpose of putting the human species back at the centre of the universe, where the author seems to believe we clearly belong.
I selected this book as part of this year's Reading Journey specifically to challenge my preconceptions. Controversy is good for making you think and rexamine what you think you know. Going in, the idea of Biocentrism seemed like just another restatement of the Anthropic Principle to me, albeit in grander, more scientific-sounding terms.
As an aside, the Anthropic Principle is basically a philosophical statement, sometimes dressed up with some science-y words, that the universe is too fine-tuned for life and this means it has to be compatible with not just life, but conscious, sapient life to observe it. In other words, the universe is tailor made to produce us or at least the parts of it that we can observe are. It’s had a number of different statements and restatements from reasonable-sounding to ridiculous.
I’m not fond of the anthropic principle. It seems to smack of human arrogance to me. The universe is how it is because it has eventually to produce us, or any observers, really. So the universe exists just to produce us. We’re the centre of and the reason for everything. Sorry, doesn’t work for me. While I agree that abiogenesis (life arising from non-living matter) is not currently understood, and probably incredibly rare, Star Trek notwithstanding, even the visible universe is a pretty damned big place. Very improbable things will eventually happen.
Back to the book. The first six chapters of the book seem to be written to illustrate that, “See? You’ve got no way to know that something is happening or even exists unless you’re there to observe it. Therefore, if no one observes it, that thing doesn’t happen, doesn’t even exist.”
Then the author starts trying to pull science in, starting with Quantum Theory. Apparently no one in the world actually understands QT, at least in his opinion, but it doesn’t seem to occur to the author that maybe that’s because it’s not complete yet, even if that is true. We obviously have some understanding as a species, since we use it for advanced lasers and we’re working towards quantum computing, but that’s just playing in the sandbox, after all. And he does admit that.
At the beginning of chapter 8, the author actually admits that Quantum Theory has become a pat phrase for people “proving” new age nonsense. But don’t let that fool you. It supports Biocentrism. We never find out why the author, a biologist, has the expertise in QT to tell us no one else understands it either. The presentation of it he gives is less comprehensive than the bits and pieces I got in high school or in first year university physics. I feel like he’s taken a bare surface understanding of some basic Quantum principles and shaken them until they say what he wants them to.
You may guess I have a lot of problems with this book. You guess right. I’m not going to list them all, but I think it’s worth pointing out the big ones, at least.
After the first section, a large part of the book seems dedicated to holding things up and saying, “See this thing/experiment/result? It’s weird and Science can’t explain it completely. Therefore, Biocentrism!” He’s basically pulling a page from the young earth creationist playbook: science can’t explain it (yet), therefore God. So now we have Biocentrism of the Gaps to hold hands with God of the Gaps.
Remember how I mentioned the Anthropic Principle at the beginning of this? The author actually introduces it in chapter 9, but doesn’t really provide an explanation, much less a convincing one, of how Biocentrism is anything other than a restatement of it with additional “scientific” trappings and wishful thinking. The author does admit his preferred version of the AP is the Participatory Anthropic Principle, which requires observers for the universe to exist. So the universe didn’t actually exist until someone was around to observe it. How perfect for Biocentrism.
We get what seems to be a deliberate misrepresentation or misstatement of certain aspects of Relativity to support the author’s view.
He discusses peculiarities of language, particularly when it comes to expressions of logic, as support to his argument that physics is obviously the wrong tool for the job to explain the universe. Therefore, Biocentrism. Because you know we (the human species) are mostly too lazy to go looking for the right tool, anyway, so here it is laid out for you.
And if you get to the point where your mind reaches “a blank wall beyond which lie contradictions or – worse – nothingness”, don’t worry. That doesn’t mean Biocentrism is false, it’s just a mystery and Biocentrism still offers the best explanation of why things are the way they are. This reminds me a lot of George Carlin telling stories of how the priests used to answer hard questions about God when he was young (and probably still do): “Well, it’s a mystery.” It’s an easy answer that skilfully allows the person answering to avoid thinking.
I spent a big chunk of the book waiting for the author to tell me that Biocentrism would make it possible for me to live forever because, just like space, time, reality, and everything else, death is just a perceptual flaw on my part. I’m still disappointed when he finally asks if consciousness can ever truly be extinguished. And even more so when he tells us that consciousness is eternal without any reason or justification, even under biocentrism.
And I’m not really going to address the limited view and analysis he has of Science Fiction, since it seems to be based purely on blockbuster movies and huge budget television shows, and not always good ones, with a few authors’ names someone has thrown at him mixed in. It seems unlikely he watches or reads the genres himself, but that’s speculation on my part.
And, in spite of being a career biologist, the author seems to have a problem with conventional science, mainly its failure to explain consciousness. Somehow, and it’s never made clear how, biocentrism explains it, or at least supports it, or something. But, you know, Biocentrism.
There are seven principles of Biocentrism. They take a whole page of text to state, and most of a book to not explain very well (or at all) but they boil down to a fairly simple statement: nothing is real unless someone is looking at it.
How Zen.
Well no, actually. Not only did the tree not make a sound because no one heard it fall, it didn’t actually fall, at least not until someone sees it lying on the ground. Then, obviously it did fall and the observation altered the past to make it match the fallen tree in the present.
Right.
Overall rating: 1 star.
I’ve had to re-categorize the subject area for this book. I can’t call it cosmology, which is how it was originally represented. Honestly, the only subject area I think I can place this is in is new age philosophy, and it bothers me to use “philosophy” as part of that description. Sure, it has some bits of cherry-picked science that with sufficient obfuscation or misrepresentation seem to support the author’s view that we’re the centre of the universe, but this is an opinion book, not a science book.
I like things that challenge my preconceptions and make me think. This book tried to challenge my preconceptions, but not by making me think. Instead, it dressed up some mystical woo with a science-y mask and cloak and asked me to believe that the universe didn’t exist until we were around to look at it.
To my reading, this book represents the height of human arrogance outside of religion. Don’t waste your time.