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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.jewish
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!spool.mu.edu!torn!nott!cunews!dfs
- From: dfs@doe.carleton.ca (David F. Skoll)
- Subject: Re: How do Jews reconcile science and philosophy with their faith?
- Message-ID: <dfs.728076667@kmpec>
- Sender: news@cunews.carleton.ca (News Administrator)
- Organization: Dept. of Electronics, Carleton University
- References: <44049@sdcc12.ucsd.edu>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 19:31:07 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- In <44049@sdcc12.ucsd.edu> ph600fcy@sdcc14.ucsd.edu (Matthew Harrington) writes:
-
- >There seem to be many Jews (perhaps non-practising) in the sciences
- >and mathematics. Perhaps some of them even read this newsgroup. It
- >seems to me that it is difficult to reconcile various scientific
- >accomplishments with religion in general. For example, evolution
- >and the big-bang theory run contrary to the account given in the
- >Bible. In the philosophical realm, I haven't heard any defenses of
- >free will vs. determinism or other dilemmas given by people of a
- >Jewish background. So, how do you people do it? "It" refers to
- >reconciling your fundamental religious beliefs with the scientific
- >and philosophic theories (&c.) of the day.
-
- Well, some (a few) Jews do not reconcile science with religion, and
- view science as wrong or incomplete. But most, even the Orthodox, do
- not insist on interpreting the Bible literally as, say, fundamentalist
- Christians would.
-
- Judaism in general is a practical religion, and perhaps doesn't care
- very much about the dilemmas over free will vs determinism. At least,
- those issues are very interesting, and certainly have a place in
- religious discussion, but they are not the overriding concerns of
- Judaism, and settling them one way or the other is not really a major
- goal.
-
- Judaism also is a much less "organized" religion than many others -
- there is no universally accepted dogma (Maimonides 13 principles are
- about the closest we have), and no religious body even attempts to
- impose one.
-
- (Actually, a couple of years ago, I did enter into the free
- will/determinism debate on the UseNet, but found it frustrating and
- pointless, because most authors simply were using it as a forum to
- either bash or push religion rather than talk about the subject
- dispassionately.)
-
- --
- David F. Skoll
-