This is a critical sojourning alien
insight—that Scientism's stories express the
emotionlessness that is the scientist's personal goal. As odd as it
sounds, it is an emotionality of emotionlessness.
The upshot of these Scientism
stories and themes (Big Bang, Primordial Soup, Evolution, militarized
Starship Earth, Mushroom Cloud, man as computer, genetics determine
everything, etc.) is that life on earth—especially
human life—is not worth living.
Humans are doomed because the End Time is coming either through the
inevitable process of evolution wherein species eventually
perish or through human nuclear self-annihilation
or some cosmic accident, such as asteroids crashing
into earth. (Where do Earthfolk get off proclaiming that they are living
peacefully and comfortably at-home on—What? A living?!—Earth?)
This quest for
emotionlessness can be discerned by observing the overall movement
within science towards modelling humans on nonhuman
models, envisioning them as bionic creatures or clones, and developing
plans to leave the Earth to find a new home among the stars. These themes
are fodder for stirring Scientism stories—many of which end up
being sci-fi movies such as 2001, Star Trek, Star Wars, Outer Limits,
Twilight Zone and Stargate.
Earthfolk contend that Scientism's
danger is that it is creatively imagining and so bringing to
fruition a self-fulfilling prophecy of global self-annihilation.
And, that it is doing so because the vision it forwards
does not include the feminine—and without
the feminine, humans simply
cannot be human.
Male-only energy is unbalanced
and it's inhumanity has already been demonstrated
by the suicidal act of atom bombing.
Continue—Scientism