"Owing to the waywardness of human nature, it is difficult to find
out why people join a given group, but observation of how people speak and
write clearly suggests that, when the brain is slowing down, a desire to
achieve often gives rise to a need to bamboozle. (Andreski, 1972, p. 68)."
Andreski wrote this mess in support of his pessimistic view of the
social sciences. Most all agreed that group membership had nothing to do with
how fast or slow our brains work. The idea that achievement gives rise to
bamboozlement (to take in by elaborate methods of deceit; hoodwink) as we age
is especially silly. Similarly, human nature is certainly not wayward, for it
is resistance to change that keeps a paradigm on track.
In fact, the neurological pathways in our brains form a sort of
railroad track that becomes evermore embedded the more we use that track.
This is why it is increasingly difficult to get "sidetracked" or
"think outside the box" as we age. It is why it is so difficult to
give up old habits and to establish new ones. It is why companies trying to be
innovative hire young workers. It is why those who have believed for many
decades that the universe exploded out of nothing are likely to continue
along that track. It is why those who have repeated conventional mantras such
as “there is no aether,” “there is no aether,” “there is no aether” for 10,000
times are not likely to utter or believe that its opposite could be true.
It is also why those who never believed in the BBT in the first place
are unlikely to start believing in it no matter how long they live. The
critical juncture for these two tracks occurs at an early age, when one is
considered to have an "open mind." The selection will be determined
univironmentally, that is, by the microcosm of the individuals and the macrocosm
in which they exist. Because no truly "open minds" can exist, each of
us is predisposed toward certain decisions based on the presuppositions we
learned still earlier in life. The macrocosm contains peer pressure and
financial pressure that helps to guide us along one track or another.
To make a decision, we need to have closure. Thus, once we have chosen
an auto or a spouse, we must “close our minds” to other possibilities. Closure
reduces cognitive dissonance and makes our lives simpler. For most of us, life would
be impossibly inefficient if we had to choose an auto or a spouse each morning.
Like Newton’s object once in motion, we favor least motion, which allows us to
go humming down life’s track with least effort. We will still have millions of
decisions to make, but the ones that have already experienced closure will not need
to be among them.
Although it may seem that way, belief in the BBT, like the belief in
the 72 virgins, has little to do with bamboozlement. It has everything to do
with the reiteration of fundamental presuppositions of which the tracked individual
is unaware. That is why "The Ten Assumptions of Science" are so
revealing. Even though there are numerous paradoxes and contradictions along the
track, the belief in the BBT is purely logical. In addition to subconsciously favoring
the indeterministic opposites of "The Ten Assumptions of Science,"
these derivative assumptions must be ingrained within believers:
1.
Aether does not exist. Aether does not exist. Aether
does not exist.
2.
Space is perfectly empty. Space is perfectly empty.
3.
There is a finite particle. There is a finite
particle.
4.
The universe is finite. The universe is finite. The
universe is finite.
5.
The universe had a beginning. The universe had a
beginning.
6.
Time is a dimension. Time is a dimension. Time is a dimension.
7.
There are four dimensions. There are four
dimensions.
8.
Space-time exists. Space-time exists. Space-time
exists.
9.
Curved space exists. Curved space exists. Curved
space exists.
10.
Gravity is a pull. Gravity is a pull. Gravity is a
pull.
11.
Fields do not contain matter. Fields do not contain
matter.
12.
Light is a particle. Light is a particle. Light is a
particle.
13.
Photons contain waves. Photons contain waves. Photons
contain waves.
14.
The universe is expanding. The universe is
expanding.
15.
Forces exist. Forces exist. Forces exist.
17.
And many, many more…
Voicing any statement that contradicts any one of these assumptions is
sufficient to get one banned from the track to regressive physics and Big Bang
nirvana. Within regressive physics, sidetracks cannot use more than tiny
modifications of these derivative assumptions. As I have maintained throughout our
books and throughout this Blog, each of these derivative assumptions is false.
The BBT is the product of a long-standing logical evolution among honest folks
who grew up believing that contradictions are a necessary ingredient in philosophy.
To true believers, the BBT paradigm is not absurd and certainly not some kind
of conspiracy or bamboozlement. It is an outgrowth of what they already know to
be true. Replacing the BBT with the IUT (Infinite Universe Theory) will not be
easy. We can do the math, but we will not get on the right track without first starting
with the correct assumptions.
References
Andreski, Stanislav
(1972). The social sciences as sorcery. Penguin Books. As quoted in: E. J.
Pedhazur and L. P. Schmelkin (1991) Measurement, Design, and Analysis: An
Integrated Approach.
Borchardt, Glenn (2004). The ten
assumptions of science: Toward a new scientific worldview: Lincoln, NE,
iUniverse, 125 p.