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Michael Polyani the Great Scientist Philosopher

Writer's picture: Dan JusterDan Juster

Updated: Oct 22, 2021


I am at a stage in life where I am motivated to read books that have been in my bookcases for years but have not yet been read. One of those books is by Michael Polanyi, one of the greatest scientists in the last generation (physical chemistry) who branched off into philosophy and art. His 1958 book, Personal Knowledge, is based on the Gifford Lectures given at Aberdeen in Scotland during 1951-52. The Gifford lectures are lectures on natural theology and have produced some amazing classics. My professor of Epistemology, Dr. Arthur Holmes of Wheaton College, did present some of his thoughts in that class. Recently I read, in the truly great book by Fr. Thomas Dubai, The Evidential Power of Beauty, that he mentioned that Polanyi argued for the beauty of a scientific theory as evidence for his truth. So after more than 50 years on my shelf, the book was opened and read carefully. Here are a few thoughts on this amazing book.


First the book is a what is called in philosophy, a descriptive phenomenology of science. It does a masterful job of describing how science works. It draws on the history of science and on more contemporary advances. It also gives a description of the nature of mathematics, pure science and applied science. The book is brilliant, convincing and very difficult. I can never get Alzheimer’s disease after exercising my brain at this level. Here are few choice conclusions form this great thinker.

  1. Science itself cannot be understood properly in mechanistic materialistic terms. The very nature of science shows a background of intuitive grasp, heuristic experience, and a tacit (assumed pre-theoretical) knowledge that can not be proved by the scientific method. The personal dimension and commitments pervade science.

  2. Though Polanyi is an evolutionist, he shows again and again that evolution itself cannot be explained by mere chance exercised on a material physical base.  Not every advance in life can be anticipated by the scientific description of what existed at the earlier stage. The advances are unspecifiable in earlier stages. The attempt to reduce life to physics and chemistry makes biology impossible.

  3. The mind is real and cannot be reduced or explained in terms of brain states.

  4. The scientific establishment usually resists the creative innovations that lead to advancement unless it is forced and can no longer resist the new innovations.

  5. Great advances in science are akin to creative art and are not just a product of engaging the scientist in mechanical processes of experimentation leading to conclusions. The great scientist provides insights that are hard to predict leading to whole new paradigms of seeing.

  6. Polanyi’s description of learning in animals shows a higher level of consciousness than we usually embrace. This was a fascinating aspect of his book.

When I was a student, I took the course Concepts of Biology under the noted biologist Dr. Russell Mixter. I found that it was impossible to describe biological systems and processes without recourse to personalistic language. The attempt to reduce biological law to the laws of physics and chemistry was impossible and led to absurdity. For me, this was an argument for Theism, the mark of God’s personal creation was manifest in everything.

Polanyi opens our minds to the mystery of existence and shatters the illusion that a materialistic explanation for biological and human life is possible. The book Mind and Cosmos by Thomas Nagel, one of the leading American philosophers does the same.

There was much more that I could bring out from reading this book, but it would be beyond the scope of this article.

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