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- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Subject: On God and Science
- Message-ID: <V1XuVB1w165w@kalki33>
- Date: Tue, 15 Dec 92 23:22:54 EST
- Reply-To: kalki33!system@lakes.trenton.sc.us
- Organization: Kalki's Infoline BBS, Aiken, SC, USA
- Lines: 226
-
- From Back to Godhead magazine, November/December 1992
-
- ON GOD AND SCIENCE
-
- by Sadaputa Dasa
-
- (c) 1992 The Bhaktivedanta Book Trust
- Used by permission.
-
- In a recent book review in Scientific American, Harvard evolutionist
- Stephen Jay Gould points out that many scientists see no contradiction
- between traditional religious beliefs and the world view of modern
- science. Noting that many evolutionists have been devout Christians, he
- concludes, "Either half my colleagues are enormously stupid, or else the
- science of Darwinism is fully compatible with conventional religious
- beliefs -- and equally compatible with atheism, thus proving that the
- two great realms of nature's factuality and the source of human morality
- do not strongly overlap."[1]
-
- The question of whether or not science and religion are compatible
- frequently comes up, and Gould himself points out that he is dealing
- with it for the "umpteenth millionth time." It is a question to which
- people are prone to give muddled answers. Definitions of God and God's
- modes of action in the world seem highly elastic, and the desire to
- combine scientific theories with religious doctrines has impelled many
- sophisticated people to stretch both to the limit. In the end, something
- has to give.
-
- To help us locate the snapping point, let's look at what a few
- scientists have said about God.
-
- Dr. John A. O'Keefe, a NASA astronomer and a practicing Catholic, has
- said, "Among biologists, the feeling has been since Darwin that all of
- the intricate craftsmanship of life is an accident, which arose because
- of the operations of natural selection on the chemicals of the earth's
- shell. This is quite true...."[2]
-
- O'Keefe accepts that life developed on earth entirely through physical
- processes of the kind envisioned by Darwin. He stresses, however, that
- many features of the laws of physics have just the right values to allow
- for life as we know it. He concludes from this that God created the
- universe for man to live in -- more precisely, God did this at the
- moment of the Big Bang, when the universe and its physical laws sprang
- out of nothing.
-
- To support this idea, O'Keefe quotes Pope Pius XII, who said in his
- address to the Pontifical Academy of Science in 1951:
-
- In fact, it would seem that present-day science, with one
- sweeping step back across millions of centuries, has succeeded
- in bearing witness to the primordial Fiat lux ["Let there be
- light"] uttered at the moment when, along with matter, there
- burst forth from nothing a sea of light and radiation, while the
- particles of chemical elements split and formed into millions of
- galaxies.[3]
-
- Now this might seem a reasonable union of religion and science. God
- creates the universe in a brief moment; then everything runs according
- to accepted scientific principles. Of the universe's
- fifteen-billion-year history, the first tiny fraction of a second is to
- be kept aside as sacred ground, roped off from scientific scrutiny. Will
- scientists agree not to trespass on this sacred territory?
-
- Certainly not. Stephen Hawking, holder of Issac Newton's chair at
- Cambridge University, once attended a conference on cosmology organized
- by Jesuits in the Vatican. The conference ended with an audience with
- the Pope. Hawking recalls:
-
- He told us that it was all right to study the evolution of the
- universe after the big bang, but we should not inquire into the
- big bang itself because that was the moment of creation and
- therefore the work of God. I was glad then that he did not know
- the subject of the talk I had just given at the conference --
- the possibility that space-time was finite but had no boundary,
- which means that it had no beginning, no moment of creation.[4]
-
- Whether or not Hawking's theory wins acceptance, this episode shows that
- science cannot allow any aspect of objective reality to lie outside its
- domain. We can get further insight into this by considering the views of
- Owen Gingerich of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. In a
- lecture on modern cosmogony and Biblical creation, Gingerich also
- interpreted the Big Bang as God's act of creation. He went on to say
- that we are created in the image of God and that within us lies a
- "divine creative spark, a touch of the infinite consciousness, and
- conscience."[5]
-
- What is this "divine spark"? Gingerich's words suggest that it is
- spiritual and gives rise to objectively observable behavior involving
- conscience. But mainstream science rejects the idea of a nonphysical
- conscious entity that influences matter. Could "divine spark" be just
- another name for the brain, with its behavioral programming wired in by
- genetic and cultural evolution? If this is what Gingerich meant, he
- certainly chose misleading words to express it.
-
- Freeman Dyson of Princeton's Institute for Advanced Studies arrived at
- ideas similar to those of Gingerich, but from a non-Christian
- perspective.
-
- I do not claim that the architecture of the universe proves the
- existence of God. I claim only that the architecture of the
- universe is consistent with the hypothesis that mind plays an
- essential role in its functioning....Some of us may be willing
- to entertain the hypothesis that there exists a universal mind
- or world soul which underlies the manifestations of mind that we
- observe.... The existence of a world soul is a question that
- belongs to religion and not to science.[6]
-
- Dyson fully accepts Darwin's theory of chance variation and natural
- selection. But he also explicitly grants mind an active role in the
- universe: "Our consciousness is not just a passive epiphenomenon carried
- along by chemical events in our brains, but an active agent forcing the
- molecular complexes to make choices between one quantum state and
- another."[7] He also feels that the universe may, in a sense, have known
- we were coming and made preparations for our arrival.[8]
-
- Dyson is verging on scientific heresy, and he cannot escape from this
- charge simply by saying he is talking about religion and not science.
- Quantum mechanics ties together chance and the conscious observer. Dyson
- uses this as a loophole through which to introduce mind into the
- phenomena of nature. But if random quantum events follow quantum
- statistics as calculated by the laws of physics, then mind has no choice
- but to go along with the flow as a passive epiphenomenon. And if mind
- can make quantum events follow different statistics, then mind violates
- the laws of physics. Such violations are rejected not only by physicists
- but also by evolutionists, who definitely do not envision mind-generated
- happenings playing any significant role in the origin of species.
-
- It would seem that O'Keefe, Gingerich, and Dyson are advancing religious
- ideas that are scientifically unacceptable. Unacceptable because they
- propose an extra-scientific story for events that fall in the chosen
- domain of science: the domain of all real phenomena.
-
- To see what is scientifically acceptable, let us return to the remarks
- of Stephen Jay Gould. In his review in Scientific American, Gould says,
- "Science treats factual reality, while religion struggles with human
- morality."[9] We can compare this to a statement by the eminent
- theologian Rudolph Bultmann: "The idea of God is imperative, not
- indicative; ethical and not factual."[10]
-
- The point Gould and Bultmann make is that God has nothing to do with
- facts in the real world. God is involved not with what is but what ought
- to be, not with the phenomena of the world but people's ethical and
- moral values.
-
- Of course, a spoken or written statement of what ought to be is part of
- what is. So if God is out of what is, He cannot be the source of
- statements about what ought to be. These must simply be human
- statements, and so must all statements about God. As it's put by Don
- Cupitt, Cambridge philosopher of religion, "There is no longer anything
- out there for faith to correspond to, so the only test of faith now is
- the way it works out in life. The objects of faith, such as God, are
- seen as guiding spiritual ideals we live by, and not as beings."[11]
-
- This may sound like atheism, and so it is. But we shouldn't stop here.
- Human religious activity is part of the factual world, and so it also
- lies within the domain of science. While religious people "struggle with
- morality," inquisitive scientists struggle to explain man's religious
- behavior --unique in the animal kingdom-- in terms of the Darwinian
- theory of evolution. This was foreshadowed by a remark made by Darwin
- himself in his early notes: "Love of the deity effect of organization,
- oh you materialist!"[12] Religious ideas, including love of God, must
- arise from the structure and conditioning of the brain, and these in
- turn must arise through genetic and cultural evolution. Darwin himself
- never tried to develop these ideas extensively, but in recent years
- sociobiologists such as Edward O. Wilson have.[13]
-
- So is the science of Darwinism fully compatible with conventional
- religious beliefs? That depends on one's conventions. If by God you mean
- a real spiritual being who controls natural phenomena, even to a slight
- degree, then Darwinism utterly rejects your idea -- not because science
- empirically disproves it, but because the idea goes against the
- fundamental scientific program of explaining all phenomena through the
- laws of physics. Religious beliefs are compatible with Darwinism only if
- they hold that God is simply a human idea having something to do with
- moral imperatives. But if this is what you believe, then instead of
- having religious beliefs, you have "scientific" beliefs about religion.
-
- Judging from the theistic ideas of O'Keefe, Gingerich, and Dyson, many
- far-from-stupid scientists do believe in God and Darwinism. But in their
- efforts to combine truly incompatible ideas, they succumb to enormously
- muddled thinking. And so they commit scientific heresy in spite of
- themselves. If one is at all interested in knowledge of God, one should
- recognize that such knowledge is not compatible with mainstream science,
- and in particular not with Darwinism.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- [1] Gould, Stephen Jay, "Impeaching a Self-Appointed Judge," Scientific
- American, July 1992, p. 119.
- [2] Jastrow, Robert, God and the Astronomer, NY: Warner Books, Inc.,
- 1978, p. 138.
- [3] Jastrow, Ibid., pp. 141-2.
- [4] Hawking, Stephen, A Brief History of Time, NY: Bantam Books, 1988,
- p. 116.
- [5] Gingerich, Owen, "Let There Be Light: Modern Cosmogony and Biblical
- Creation," an abridgement of the Dwight Lecture given at the
- University of Penna. in 1982, pp. 9-10.
- [6] Dyson, Freeman, Disturbing the Universe, NY: Harper & Row, 1979, pp.
- 251-52.
- [7] Dyson, Ibid., p. 249.
- [8] Dyson, Ibid., p. 250.
- [9] Gould, Ibid., p. 120
- [10] Cupitt, Don, Only Human, London: SCM Press, Ltd., 1985, p. 212.
- [11] Cupitt, Ibid., p. 202.
- [12] Paul H. Barrett, et al., eds., Charles Darwin's Notebooks,
- 1836-1844, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1987, p. 291.
- [13] Wilson, Edward O., On Human Nature, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
- University Press, 1978.
-
- END OF ARTICLE
-
- Sadaputa Dasa (Richard L. Thompson) earned his Ph.D. in mathematics from
- Cornell University. He is the author of several books, of which the most
- recent is Vedic Cosmography and Astronomy.
-
- Posted by Kalki Dasa for Back to Godhead
-
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