I summon:
The Sons of Martha by Rudyard Kipling!
To these from birth is Belief forbidden; from these till death is Relief afar.
They are concerned with matters hidden - under the earthline their altars are-
The secret fountains to follow up, waters withdrawn to restore to the mouth,
And gather the floods as in a cup, and pour them again at a city's drouth.They do not preach that their God will rouse them a little before the nuts work loose.
They do not teach that His Pity allows them to drop their job when they dam'-well choose.
As in the thronged and the lighted ways, so in the dark and the desert they stand,
Wary and watchful all their days that their brethren's day may be long in the land.Raise ye the stone or cleave the wood to make a path more fair or flat -
Lo, it is black already with blood some Son of Martha spilled for that!
Not as a ladder from earth to Heaven, not as a witness to any creed,
But simple service simply given to his own kind in their common need.
And of course, how can we forget Tennyson's Ulysses?
How dull it is to pause, to make an end,
To rust unburnished, not to shine in use!
As though to breathe were life. Life piled on life
Were all too little, and of one to me
Little remains: but every hour is saved
From that eternal silence, something more,
A bringer of new things; and vile it were
For some three suns to store and hoard myself,
And this grey spirit yearning in desire
To follow knowledge like a sinking star,
Beyond the utmost bound of human thought.... -- you and I are old;
Old age hath yet his honour and his toil;
Death closes all: but something ere the end,
Some work of noble note, may yet be done,
Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods.Tho' much is taken, much abides; and though
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
EDIT: dang it, what is up with this lesswrong markdown? br tags don't work, and I need to add some non-quoted text between quoted fragments? And I thought normal markdown was messed up for ignoring newlines in quoted text!
I came here just to post "Ulysses"!
And the accompanying song: "Untraveled Worlds" by Paul Halley. The song has lots of sentimental value to me because I sang it in choir when I was in sixth grade. Out of ten years' worth of songs, I chose to have the choir sing it again during my last year of high school.
I would also quote:
Come, my friends,
'T is not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
Reminds me of the prophecy from HPMOR: "the one who will tear apart the very stars in heaven". It's just so utterly epic. And I'm not even the space-travel type!
I think given an hour to talk to him and set him straight I could've convinced him there is no loss of beauty in accepting Newton's optics. It is true, after all.
I've often felt the same about C.S. Lewis. It is a peculiarity of the rationalist mode of thought that this is an expression of respect.
Mm. If you say so. I don't view it that way:
'I used to say to our audiences: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!"'
(Or to put it another way, I've read a number of his apologetic works, and they didn't hold water to me at all; I was particularly offended by his weak arguments in The Problem of Pain, and by his trilemma. So I don't think he would argue honestly in good faith etc.)
Giving weak arguments does not demonstrate that one is not arguing honestly and in good faith; only that one has cognitive limitations, or blind spots, or something of the sort. Which, alas, we all have here and there, and it's hardly astonishing if a religious person has them in areas closely related to his religion.
(That might, for present purposes, be functionally equivalent to not arguing honestly and in good faith, and I share the suspicion that CSL wouldn't be likely to be deconverted after an hour's discussion. But it's not the same thing, and in particular doesn't have the same implications for the person's character generally.)
Indeed - and by the principle of charity, if we're to bother to discuss his work, we must assume that he's arguing honestly and in good faith with cognitive limitations, rather than the converse.
If you're following the view of debate as competition, as combat, it seems like the equivalent of saying "give me five minutes with that wimp, I'd have him on the ropes"
ETA: I imagine my Christian friends being offended if I stood up and said "I think I could deconvert C.S. Lewis, were he living, and willing to give me some of his time".
ETA2: When what I would mean by the comment would be something along the lines of "from what I've read of his writings I would imagine Lewis arguing with me in good faith, with an open and active mind, and with a primary concern for the truth," some of the highest compliments a(n epistemic) rationalist can pay.
Two influential contemporary poets:
Christian Bök: "We are probably the first generation of poets who can reasonably expect to write literature for a machinic audience of artificially intellectual peers." (from "The Piecemeal Bard Is Deconstructed: Notes Toward a Potential Robopoetics" - http://www.ubu.com/papers/object/03_bok.pdf )
Kenneth Goldsmith: "[Barry] Bonds just points to the fact that being human has ceased to be enough: we demand the precision and complexity of machines, in athletes, in politicians, in business and in the arts. And what we demand, we now have." (from "In Barry Bonds I See The Future of Poetry" - http://poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/11/repost_in_barry_bonds_i_see_th.html)
Sample their stuff: http://www.ubu.com/sound/bok.html http://www.ubu.com/contemp/goldsmith/index.html
I don't have a big personal interest in poetry, but to add someone to the list of scientists who were also part-time poets, I'd like to submit J. Robert Oppenheimer.
I'm currently reading his biography (the Sherwin & Kai one, 2/3 of the way through and it's great so far) and they often mention his interest in poetry and literature, and also that he wrote some poetry himself (though not many examples are given in the book).
Thus John Keats, in the same year he wrote Lamia, also penned perhaps the greatest statement of the Joy in the Merely Real ideal ever, writing: "Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty, that is all / Ye know on Earth, and all ye need to know."
Maybe I'm interpreting it wrong, but I've never liked that couplet (likewise Dickinson's expression of the same sentiment). Truth is not beauty! We're the products of billions of years of bloody blind natural selection, clinging desperately to what scraps of value we've managed to achieve in this cold, uncaring universe! Everything you care about, everything you believe in (in the comforting, nonrationalist sense) means shit to the Price equation! It's this sentiment that makes me like the poem preceding Greg Egan's Distress, which ends:
And there must be room for all at the celebration of understanding
for there is a truth which cannot be bought or sold
imposed by force, resisted
or escaped.
That's more like it. By all means, appreciate the beauty of the natural world---but not so much that it doesn't scare you. Rationality is beautiful, but the truth is just the truth.
Other nominations ... maybe Sir Walter Raleigh's "The Lie"? (Note that "give them the lie" here is an idiom for "Tell them that they're lying.") My favorite poem is Stephen Spender's "I Think Continually of Those Who Were Truly Great," but it might be stretching the evidence to call it rationality-related---and of course stretching the evidence is something we must not do.
Beauty is not always nice or friendly. There is greater beauty in the strike of a cobra than...
...sorry, I'm still thinking in poetry mode. Yes, in any reasonable interpretation, "truth is beauty" is completely false (counterexample: New Jersey exists and Minas Tirith doesn't). This is one of those cases where I am tempted to join the Dark Side and start saying things like "It's not true on a merely factual level, but..."
I think of those lines sort of the same way I think of Buckminster Fuller saying "When I am working on a problem I never think about beauty. I only think about how to solve the problem. But when I have finished, if the solution is not beautiful, I know it is wrong." Or Pablo Picasso saying "Art is the lie that reveals the truth".
That there is a beauty to the structure of reality, and that bringing my beliefs closer to the truth makes me better able to partake in and increase that beauty, is one of the reasons this whole rationalism thing seems worth it to me. That's how I interpret Keats, at least. Who knows what he was thinking? Evidently not enough to abandon his grudge against science for proving there were no gnomes in mines.
...but I promise I won't start trying to use "Beauty is truth, therefore..." in any deductive arguments or anything.
Went down the rabbit hole reading all of Hein's poetry, found this gem:
Original thought
is a straightforward process.
It's easy enough
when you know what to do.
You simply combine
in appropriate doses
the blatantly false
and the patently true.
“I have a commonplace book for facts, and another for poetry, but I find it difficult always to preserve the vague distinction which I had in mind, for the most interesting and beautiful facts are so much the more poetry and that is their success. They are translated from earth to heaven. I see that if my facts were sufficiently vital and significant---perhaps transmuted into the substance of the human mind—I should need but one book of poetry to contain them all.”
A couple of quotes on poetry:
Poetry is what gets lost in translation. ~Robert Frost
"Therefore" is a word the poet must not know. ~André Gide
The Gide quote bothers me a little. I think cause and effect relationships are very important, so I'm concerned if he wants to exclude them from poetry.
Poetry's relationship to language seems analogous to atonal jazz's relationship to music, and abstract art's relationship to art. I'm not a fan of any of those (although I do enjoy the occasional weird progressive rock song), but it would be interesting to see how well liking one predicts liking another, or how well intelligence in a domain predicts interest in its more esoteric works.
I like poetry but dislike jazz and abstract art.
I agree with Michael that you may be confusing poetry with modernist poetry. In particular, poetry is a more constrained, more beauty-focused form of language, whereas abstract art and jazz and atonal jazz are less constrained, less beauty-focused forms of art and music.
My analogy would be modernist poetry: poetry :: abstract art: art.
In particular, poetry is a more constrained, more beauty-focused form of language, whereas abstract art and jazz and atonal jazz are less constrained, less beauty-focused forms of art and music.
Ouch. I'm generally a fan of your posts, Yvain, but this remark makes me wince.
To quote Milton Babbitt (regarding composers who claimed not to be "using a system"), ignorance of constraint does not imply absence of constraint. The particular constraints that are operative in jazz or abstract art may not be immediately apparent to the outsider, but that doesn't mean they're not there.
Also, to say that certain art forms are "less beauty-focused" comes dangerously close to a rhetorical shot. There are exceptions, but as a general rule it's safe to say that the practitioners of any art are seeking to create beautiful works. To a first approximation, art:beauty::rationality:truth.
Finally, let me caution everyone that "atonal" is a technical term that really ought not to be bandied around by people without a background in music. In particular, it does not mean "unfamiliar-sounding music I don't like", as it sometimes seems to in some quarters. (I'm not accusing anyone in particular of doing this, just a general warning.)
You've figured me out. I have no musical background whatsoever and am making judgments solely based on my superficial untrained perception. I should probably stop that.
I have heard many abstract artists condemn art that is too focused on beauty as naive and unworthy of a true artist, and support art that makes philosophical or political points instead, but I don't know for sure that all abstract artists are like this.
Poetry is ancient. You sure you don't mean modern (or rather, postmodern) poetry?
Anyway, I like abstract visual art, poetry, and modern prose literature, but I'm fairly unsophisticated musically despite my professional interest in it. From a neuropsychological perspective all arts are very interesting but abstract visual art seems to have made the most progress.
I like abstract visual art, poetry, and modern prose literature, but I'm fairly unsophisticated musically
This is an all too common pattern. Music appears to be the most difficult, most abstract art form (evidently that is part of its attraction for me). This is evidenced not only by the numerous cases I have encountered of otherwise intellectually sophisticated people being musically unsophisticated, but also by the historical development of music, which has tended to lag behind the other arts. (For example, for musicians the "Romantic period" refers to the period from about 1820 to 1910; I remember being shocked to learn that the early 19th century was the tail end of romanticism in other arts, such as literature.)
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, one of our age's most prominent rationalists, is a big poetry fan if I recall correctly.
Re: way to wisdom:)
Дорогу к знанию избрав, Я иногда неправ. Неправ сегодня и вчера... Но меньше, чем вчера. (too free for a true translation.) Edit: and in Ukrainian: Так, шлях до мудрості легкий І ти по ньому йдеш, Коли наступні помилки Від попередніх менші.
BTW, my old web page here http://personalrationality.blogspot.com/ was basically an essay on agreement and a poem.
Other than the misspelling, absolutely - Lucretius (Titus Lucretius Carus)
A highlight:
This terror, then, this darkness of the mind, Not sunrise with its flaring spokes of light, Nor glittering arrows of morning can disperse, But only Nature's aspect and her law, Which, teaching us, hath this exordium: Nothing from nothing ever yet was born.
Related to: Little Johnny Bayesian, Savanna Poets
There are certain stereotypes about what rationalists can talk about versus what's really beyond the pale. So far, Less Wrong has pretty consistently exploded those stereotypes. In the past three weeks, we've discussed everything from Atlantis to chaos magick to "9-11 Truth". But I don't think anything surprised me quite as much as learning that there are a couple of rationalists here with a genuine interest in poetry.
Poetry has not been very friendly to the rational worldview over the past few centuries. What with all the 19th century's talk of unweaving rainbows and the 20th century's talk of quadrupeds swooning into billiard balls, it's tempting to think it reflects some natural order of things, some eternal conflict between Art and Science.
But for most of human history, science and art were considered natural allies. Lucretius' De Rerum Natura, an argument for atheism and atomic theory famous for being the ancient Roman equivalent of The God Delusion, was written in poetry. All through the Middle Ages, artists worked to a philosophy of trying to depict and celebrate natural truth. And the eighteenth century saw a golden age of what was sometimes called "rationalist poetry", a versified celebration of Enlightenment principles.
When William Wordsworth launched his poetic jihad against rationalism, he called his declaration of war The Tables Turned. On a mundane level, the title referred to an argument he was having with his friend, but on a grander scale he was consciously inverting the previous order of Reason as the virtue of poetry. Thus:
Over the next few years, he and fellow jihadis John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley were wildly successful in completely changing the poetic ideal. I can't begrudge them their little movement; their poetry ranks among the greatest art ever produced by humankind. But it bears repeating that there was a strong rationalist tradition in poetry before, during, and after the Romantic Era. In its honor, I thought I would share some of my favorite rationalist poems. I make no claims that this is exhaustive, representative, or anything else besides my personal choices.
The most famous rationalist poet is probably Alexander Pope (1688-1744), perhaps best known for writing Isaac Newton's epitaph:
Indeed, Pope spent much of his career praising science and human reason, while also simultaneously lampooning human stupidity:
I can't claim this as a complete victory for rationalism, since it was in the context of Essay on Man, a mysterianist work declaring that humans should never overreach their pathetic mental powers and question God's supremacy. Even the quoted passage is a little ironic, intended to convey that humankind, with such amazing science, had a tendency to shoot itself in the foot when it tried to overstep its bounds.
But Pope's appreciation for scientific progress was genuine, and he was also deeply interested in overcoming bias (which he, in his pre-Samuel Johnson way, called "byass"). His Essay on Criticism sometimes reads like a strangely spelled, classical-allusion-laden rationalists' manual:
He exhorts us to think for ourselves, rather than take things on faith or blindly accept authority:
But equally he reminds us that reversed stupidity is not intelligence:
And tells us to admit our errors, learn from them, and move on:
At the end, he describes the person he wants judging his poetry: someone who sounds rather like the ideal rationalist.
Pope came from a time when any person of good breeding was expected to be learned and able to converse about the scientific discoveries going on around them; an age when reason was actually trendy. There have been few such ages, and hence few such poets as Pope. But other rationalist poetry has come from people who were mathematicians or scientists in their day jobs, and poets only in their spare time.
Such a man was Omar Khayyam, the eleventh century Persian mathematician and astronomer. He did some work on cubic equations, wrote the Islamic world's most influential treatise on algebra, reformed the Persian calendar, and developed a partial heliocentric theory centuries before Copernicus. But he is most beloved for his rubaiyat, or quatrains, which recommend ignoring religion, accepting the deterministic material universe, and abandoning moral prudery in favor of having fun.
There are some beautiful translations and some accurate translations of Khayyam's works, but the rumor among those who speak Persian is that the beautiful translations are not accurate and the accurate translations are not beautiful, and that capturing the true spirit of the original may be hopeless. FitzGerald in particular, the most famous English translator, is accused of playing up the hedonism and playing down the rationalism. I've tried to select from a few different translations for this essay.
On determinism:
On atheism:
On Joy in the Merely Real:
And unlike Alexander Pope, who is horrified, HORRIFIED at the thought that mankind might challenge God's divine plan, Omar Khayyam thinks he could do better:
Needless to say, his contemporaries shunned him for such blasphemies. What would he say, they ask, when called before the throne of Allah to account for his beliefs? Well, he told them, he would say this:
Compare the clarity of Khayyam, who is prepared to stand before God and justify himself without fear, to Pascal, who insists that we abandon our own intellectual integrity on the imperceptibly tiny chance that we might accrue some material gain. I find this quatrain - "in thy eternal justice I confide, as one who ever sought to follow Truth" - the only fully satisfying answer to Pascal's Wager.
Piet Hein (whom I've quoted here before) was another scientist who turned to poetry. During his career as a theoretical physicist and mathematician, he developed the superellipse and the game Hex (later studied by John Nash). His career as a poet began when the Nazis invaded his native Denmark. The censors would have prohibited any obviously rebellious literature, so he turned to writing odd little poems that seemed innocuous until you thought about them long enough, at which point they became obvious critiques of dictatorship. He continued writing after the war, usually on the theme of keeping things simple and avoiding stupidity.
This, for example, seems appropriate to a site called Less Wrong:
If you've read Are You A Solar Deity or Schools Proliferating Without Evidence, you may see the humor in this quatrain about fitting the data to the theory:
On the first virtue:
On the fifth virtue:
On making an extraordinary effort:
On fake justifications:
Appropriate to the Singularity or to any of a number of fields:
On reversed stupidity:
On shutting up and doing the impossible:
And even some poets who had no such formal acquaintance with science considered their poetry allied with its goals: an attempt to explore the universe and celebrate its wonders. This one's from Don Juan by Lord Byron, commonly (but, according to his own protestations, erroneously) classed with Wordsworth as a Romantic. I won't say there's not sarcasm in there, but Byron has a way of being sarcastic even when saying things he believes:
There's no sarcasm at all in this next declaration of Byron's, where he vows hostility to everything from despotism to religion to mob rule to fuzzy thinking to the Blue vs. Green two-party swindle:
Byron on the progress of science, and on rejecting disproven theories:
Again on the same topic (and some thoughts on the "wisdom of crowds"):
This is Byron at his sarcastic best on the value accorded truth in society:
I can't help ending this by saying a word in praise of the Romantics. Yes, they may have gotten their rainbows in a tangle, and they may have hurled every curse they could at "Reason", but I think they were less opposed than they let on. Consider as anecdotal evidence Percy Shelley, who was expelled from Oxford after refusing to recant his atheism. What the Romantics hated was anyone telling them how to think, and their quarrel with a science they did not understand was less with its methods and more that it seemed an authority. Thus John Keats, in the same year he wrote Lamia, also penned perhaps the greatest statement of the Joy in the Merely Real ideal ever, writing:
I think given an hour to talk to him and set him straight I could've convinced him there is no loss of beauty in accepting Newton's optics. It is true, after all.
I end with Shelley's description from Mont Blanc of the godless yet ordered essence of the universe that he worshipped:
The laws that govern our own thought processes are the same laws that bind the infinite dome of Heaven. What better statement of the rationalist worldview could you ask for?
Now, what are your favorite rationalist poems?
Footnotes:
1: I have since spotted the following addition to Pope's couplet: