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Science More Reliable Than Religion?

Hardly, Science is Religion

By Steve Waterman, published May 17, 2005
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Shortly after the December tsunamis, I caught a cable news talk show debating God's role in the disaster. All of the various representatives of faith were present -- Christian, Muslim, and Jew -- to explain why or why not their particular God had chosen to “punish” this area of the world. But like a good episode of "Which of These Things Doesn't Belong" on "Sesame Street" they added one other point of view which was seemingly out of place: the scientific viewpoint. This view was expressed by an atheist who was there to confirm the tsunami as simply a natural disaster and quickly dismiss the notion that a spiritual entity had anything to do with it. But the more I watched their exchanges, the clearer it became to me: The scientific point of view wasn't really the "alternative view that didn't belong," but a religious one that fit right in. Upon further examination, this discovery begins to make more sense. We remember that thousands of years ago the world was primarily polytheistic ("The worship of or belief in more than one god”). For the Greeks, Romans, Egyptians and others, there were many Gods with various functions. As the world's societies progressed, so too, did their religious beliefs. The belief in many Gods was often replaced with the belief in one. So it should come as no surprise now that the belief in one God is evolving into a belief in none. Today, there is a growing arrogance among those in the atheist community. They perceive their disassociation from deities and reliance on science as some sort of intellectual high ground. They consider themselves “above religion.” But what many atheists do not realize is that they themselves are actively participating in religion. Just as the color black is known as the "absence of color," yet is still considered a color, so, too, should atheism be known as an "absence of religion," though still be considered a religion. For black it is the lack of lightness that gives it its distinction; in atheism, the lack of gods. And just like any other religion, science has its own prophets and heroes from the past: Aristotle replaces Adam; Newton over Moses; Einstein over Jesus. In science, if you feel confused, you consult the books of the past to clear up any confusion. In religion, if you are confused -- um, you consult the books of the past to clear up any confusion. A scientist will explain to you that we are all made up of tiny little microscopic parts called atoms that we cannot see, but we know are there, because, well, science says so. You can become a scientist and see for yourself. A priest will explain to you that the Holy Spirit is within you and though we cannot see it, we know it is there, because, well, religion says so. You can become a Christian and feel it for yourself. What credibility does science hold that it can be its own defense? None, really. In fact, when one truly examines science, you'll find it actually exists in a logical fallacy. The one single principle of science is supposed to be that “everything comes from something” though this principle itself means that it could never explain the first thing. At least with some sort of religious deity you can simply claim magic. How did God create the universe? He said it should be done and it was done. Well, where did God come from? He's magic. It's beyond our understanding. If the beginning, as determined by science, is also “beyond our understanding” and requires our faith, how is it superior to any religion? In schools today, the debate is often whether or not we should be teaching creationism as science, when in reality it should be the other way around. We need to be asking if we should be teaching science as religion. Many in the U.S. are outraged by the thought of judges and others in government office displaying the Ten Commandments or representing their faith at the workplace. They feel that this represents a government endorsement of religion and demand that only science and the “non-religious” atheist view be represented by our government officials. But forcing them to do so is to refuse them their right to religious freedom and essentially endorses atheism as the official religion of the nation. Clearly each individual should be allowed to subscribe to and proudly display whatever paraphernalia from whichever religion he wishes -- whether that be Christianity, Hinduism, Judaism, or atheism -- as long as it doesn't interfere with his duties. In the end, all these theories rely on our faith alone and it's up to us to decide which parts of each we agree with most. But do not simply assume that science is infallible and has your answers because the world would have you believe it. Is E=mc² really any more palatable than “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son”? Why? Does the Pope have a better understanding of existence than Stephen Hawking? Why? Religion and science are one and the same, only separated by a willingness or reticence to place the unexplainable on the shoulders of a magical deity; both trying to give you explanations for things that you will never truly be able to understand in your lifetime. To place science above religion is a mockery, and a growing one at that. It deserves no more respect, recognition, or appreciation than any other religion -- oh, and of course, no more sympathy.

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If evidence arises that absolutely cannot be fitted into the relevant theory, no matter how important or revered a theory is (take Newtonian mechanics for example), the theory is accepted to be wrong and new explanation is required. Religions cannot do this, because their doctrines are fixed forever by the contents of their holy books, like frozen snapshots in time. And they do not need to do this, because they do not base their belief on evidence anyway. There is a difference, in principle, between belief in science and belief in supernaturalism of any kind. Just because you aren't able to understand the evidence for scientific ideas doesn't mean those beliefs are dogmatic like your faith is.

Posted on 08/20/2008 at 2:08:20 PM

 
There is at least one huge difference between the mysteries of science and the "mystery" of the will of deities, as interpreted by priests or rabbis or imams or whatever: there is NOTHING that prevents any person from fully and completely understanding what any scientist knows if they want to badly enough. The fact that "science says so" means that scientists have done a lot of work that nonscientists cannot understand, because science is COMPLICATED and requires mathematics far beyond what most people ever learn. However, if you really wanted to understand any science fully, the only limit on your grasp is time - and your willingness to struggle thru learning WHY the answers science offers are correct. The other huge difference is that scientific beliefs are not based on private revelation or holy books, but on evidence.

Posted on 08/20/2008 at 2:08:57 PM

 
Your opinion seems a little skewed, science is the long and difficult path to the truth, while religion is simply the path of least resistance or thought. I wonder what Galileo would say about the subject?

Posted on 01/28/2008 at 9:01:21 AM

 
I have seen a lot of articles lately about faith in God being inherent and the "limitations" of science and the theory of evolution. I have written something of a response. http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/358886/the_human_quest_for_explanations_is.html

Posted on 08/30/2007 at 1:08:00 PM

 
Good article. The whole "science versus God" crap is getting tired though. If all the intellectually superior "science good/God bad" people were honest with themselves, they would do their homework and see the evidence isn't in conflict with the claims of those who adhere to theism, particularly the Christian version of it. Read some Johnathon Wells, Gerald Schroeder, or Stephen Meyer, Paul Maier etc. All respected and learned scientists who also happen not to be secularists. As closed-minded and judgemental as Christians have the propensity for being, let's not forget how similar the views of the arrogant intellectual set tend to be.

Posted on 04/14/2007 at 12:04:00 PM

 
Maybe some of you should read the bible prior to ranting about your expert testimony on science. You might realize a book written prior to many of these science foundations actually predicts much of the science we use today!

Posted on 04/01/2007 at 7:04:00 PM

 
A lot of questions with few answers, but I do agree that some areas of so-called science, such as metaphysics and neuroscience may have a link to religious theory.

Posted on 03/24/2007 at 4:03:00 PM

 
I thought this article was very good and well spoken. If you put siciece and the Bible, it all fits together like a glove. My grandchildren received an encyclepedia for christmas, a few years ago, and the way it is explained fits right into what God created. God's timetable is different than ours, and everything on this earth evolves around God. Including science. He is the unspoken host in every science book. Thanks ginny1

Posted on 02/14/2007 at 8:02:00 PM

 
My comment was directed to the previous commentor, but I just realized he left a comment in August :(

Posted on 02/02/2007 at 10:02:00 AM

 
I agree that science in its purest form is opposite religion, but I don't think that medical science fits into the category of science based on competing interests and corporate greed. Much of what medical science has to offer (vaccinations, for example) is unfairly promoted due to the potential profits not because scientific inquiry has determined such interventions to be beneficial, or in some cases, even safe. When you refer to science, I didn't know if you only meant truly pure, hard sciences such as physics.

Posted on 02/02/2007 at 10:02:00 AM

 
To infer that religion and science are even close to the same indicates a lack of knowledge that has become far too common in America today. Science and religion are opposites. Reality versus mythology. Real observations versus feely good superstitions.

Posted on 08/18/2006 at 8:08:00 PM

 
Faith, which religion celebrates/mourns, requires one to abandon reason and verifiable action. Science has methodology and discoverable processes.

Posted on 08/09/2006 at 8:08:00 PM

 
Most of your article is incredibly superficial and just a long winded rant with no facts to back it up. If you're going to write about something as important, to just about everyone, as science and religion melding (which I don't think is possible, since most religions rely on a god or gods to worship, and there are too many contributers to science to pick out just one...), try doing a spot of research. It'll shine in the article, and make you seem less pompous and fool hardy. I put alot more scrutiny into reading this the second and third time around than I had the first time, and I'm glad I did. I would have missed the flaws. your friend in Christ ;)

Posted on 06/13/2005 at 2:06:00 AM

 
You are only suppose to post original content on Associated Content.

Posted on 05/28/2005 at 10:05:00 PM

 
This is one of the most warmed-over, incomplete feel-good arguments ever. It's right up there with, "We should have White Entertainment Television." This author's analogies are ALL false, his reasoning not reasoning at all, and his facts woefully incomplete.

Posted on 05/27/2005 at 7:05:00 PM

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