This was on my friend CJ Cherryh's FB feed.
It speaks to two myths we commonly see on these boards:
As the article points out, both views of refuted by modern secular historians and that actions based of these view hurt the practice of science more than it does the practice of religion.
I agree the first one is truly a myth. No matter how socially encompassing science becomes in society, there will always be religion. There are always weak minds who prefer to be told rather than asking the hard questions and questioning eatliercheld paradigms.
However, science and religion are not compatible if one is operating at any level that is consistent and true to either paradigm. They are mutually exclusive from one another.
You are well aware of the scientific paradigm given your background. You know the reliance upon measure data and replicability within the science paradigm.
Yes there is a certain degree of faith in science. I cannot split the atom in my classroom. I do not have the equipment or actual skill to perform the a credible experiment to demonstrate appropriately. However, I can go into the scientific literature, read the experiments check their methodology, look over their data, and read the peer reviewed professional reviews. Given that, I can begin to except their conclusion with the understanding new technology and data may necessitate the need for a alteration to our previous understandings.
Religion on the otherhand depends a top down explanation, with an emphasis upon not asking questions or challenging authority (that is you are practicing tradionslly). You depend upon miracles to prove the existence of the belief system. Miracles are not open to repetition, peer review (if it occurs, usually takes place in places like the Vatican and not generally shared with the lay public).
Now my final point. They are mutually exclusive paradigms. Any attempt to meld the two ends in an unacceptable compromise. To use a religious metaphor, one can not serve two masters and do justice to either one. One dominates, and the other is slighted. Too many exceptions need to be rationalized in order to serve both, rendering both essrntially ineffectual.
I hate equivocation.
Elegantly stated. Thank you.
I still disagree. Your are splitting between two very different Masters, even if not in the same location. You will never be totally true to either. It's different than wearing two hats. Hats are passive, paradigms are not.
Culture is a difficult thing to overcome. When you are born into a culture that has a strong religious tradition its is difficult to deny and overcome. From the time you are born to the time you die you are bombarded by symbolism, imagery, and messages that insist you believe. If becomes difficult to consider other alternatives. Your peers believe, your family believes, your friends believe, and the institutions you are beholding to wrap themselves in these beliefs. The exoectations are that you believe. It's a rare few that can fight against and overcome this type of pressure and take a different path.
Nobel prize winners are no exception. In fact they often tend to somewhat timid and undercongident when they are not In their academic environment and among their peers. I suspect that many are believers in word only, just to protect themselves. Furthermore. I suspect that their competing paradigms got in their way on more than one occasion. I also suspect that their religious beliefs suffered on more occasion as they had give in to their scientific paradigm.
I hate equivocation.
Given the total number of Nobel Prize winners and scientists extant, this is a significantly insignificant number. The fact that these scientists felt brave enough or held strong enough convictions to come forward is laudable.
The danger to them comes from the fear that publically acknowledging their atheism could be used as a criterion for denying them advancement, or funding for a project. There is no easy accessible empirical evidence, but substantial anecdotal evidence to the fact that this operates in society. Just read the corpus of posts on this site, denial or discrimination due to proclaiming atheism brings repercussions.
My first degree was in Anthropology. One of the things that Anthroplogy makes evident is that culture is a very powerful force. Denying or bucking the culture is too uncomfortable for many. Having been in Academia, I am also aware how assiduously academicians protect their potential financial sources. Such simple things as an ill thought out comment in a bio can lose one a funding source.
I have no way of empirically knowing if a "theist" scientist compromised their science by being a believer. I'm not sure they would be aware of any such decision or compromise themselves. I still contend that you cannot serve two masters without some compromise in either or both. In the big picture or long run, the same results may eventually arise, perhaps not. I for one am tired of people trying to meld the two and diluting both, eg. "The Zen of Physics" or "Dancing Wu Li Master". If you generalize too far anything is related, but nothing is said.
The danger is like white privilige or women's unequal pay issues.. It exists, is subtle and never spoken of directly, only alluded to. No funding source, department, or entity is going to come out directly and say, " we are denying you this grant, or this money, or this position because you are atheist". That would lead to a civil suit for discrimination, yet those judgements get made.
Departments, Agencies, Staffs begin meetings with prayers assuming everybody is Christian and on the same page. Ftom the highest levels of government, to Academia, to Elementary School. Many atheists make it look like they are participating, but rather biding their time until the prayer is over so they can begin the meeting. All you have do is pay attention to the numerous posts on this site for examples.
You are lucky you never experienced, or didnt recognize it if you encountered it. I still contend I'm not fond of equivocation.
There is a form of belief that resembles spiritualism. In this you hold a high respect for the mechanisms that govern and run a system. Like Nature and Scince, you can appreciate then for both their complexity, their simplicity, and their interconnectedness. But it's not religion, it's not spiritualism in the traditional sense, it respect and appreciation. Perhaps that's what you are searching for?
Who's Fern? Like I said you are fortunate to not have experienced in your world. However, I'm not sure your experience is consistent with many others.
Its apparent that we are not going to agree, as we haven't in the past. As I have stated before, I am not a fan of Pascal's wager applied to Science and Religion.
I've been in the science world for 40 years, and I admit my evidence at this stage is anecdotally based. I could go to the case law and literature to find cases, but I'm not sure I could still convince you. So I will agree to disagree, even if you don't.
Middle, it sounds like perhaps you work in an insular environment of very likeminded individuals. Physics, like other technical fields, tends to draw and attract people who are extremely focused in their field but not necessarily attentive to what goes on around them beyond their field. You may be a little naive regarding what other academicians around you are experiencing. I have screenshot front pages of four articles related to anti-atheist discrimination. They do not specifically mention science per se, as that specific research may not exist. You asked that I provide evidence. Here is some.
@TheMiddleWay
This got deleted by accident
@TheMiddleWay
Experience working in marginalized communities where discrimination is an everyday occurence. It becomes easy to recognize when present, whether its weaponized against minorities, women, or atheists.
The christian religion is slowly going away. Science is not in the business of disproving religion.
I definitely agree, however science is in the realms of uncovering evidence that disproves particular religious claims or undermines some religious belief, as well as exposing charlatans and attempting to protect the vulnerable..
Unfortunately the Muslim religion appears to be growing.
Men will never be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest.
Bull.
Last sentence:
"Its advocates would be well advised to stop fabricating an enemy out of religion, or insisting that the only path to a secure future lies in a marriage of science and secularism. "
Only a liar would claim that advocates of science are fabricating that religion is its enemy. No fabrication is needed; Creationism is still religious nonsense. As for insisting that science and secularism not be married, just what non-secular (religious) system should be married to science??? Yikes. Is that like Sharia Law?
Elsewhere the author weaves in the cowardly insecurity of a religious believer. It's textbook cognitive dissonance.
And yes, the US is a hold-out in terms of a majority of citizens identifying with established religion, but that majority is moving towards minority status at a good clip. We are approaching the maximum slope of the hysteresis curve right now.
@TheMiddleWay Religions, Christianity in particular, see anything that does not encompass it or its beliefs as either Persecuting it or being at 'War' with it.
After all, is not the hymn " Onward Christian Soldiers" one of their 'mainstay' hymns?
Religions the world over have at war with each since time immemorial BUT they cannot and will not admit to that,they simply pass the blame on to the nearest available and most innocent scapegoats that they can find.
E.G. The Christians declared war on the Muslims which started the First and all other Crusades, Catholics declared war on the Lutherans, Protestants, etc, and even their own, the Cathars, Muslims have declared war on the various sects, etc, of Islam YET it is ALWAYS blamed upon the convenient Scape-goats such as Atheists, etc, that they are the War-mongers and NOT the Churches, etc.
Sadly, in my honest opinion, 'tunnel vision' is a very limiting thing but a boon to those who choose to living with it.
@TheMiddleWay To your 'assertion' and that of Rational (???) Wikipaedia I say Crap, Crap, Crap.
The War between Christianity and other beliefs and science has been going since before the Early Christian Sect destroyed over 60% of the Great Library of Alexandria in Egypt,murdered possibly hundreds of Non-Christians including numerous Scholars and ALL in the name of their God and Jesus.
That , SIR, is a well known and documented FACT.
For centuries Christians have relished in screaming words like ' persecution,' 'discrimination, ' etc, etc, when in truth they have been perpetrators thenselves all along But HEY, if they can't scream 'persecution,' etc, then how can they expected to 'share' in the presecutions and sufferings of their great, mythological Idol, Jesus?
If they did not take part in the wholsale massacresw of Jews and Muslims during the Crusades then how on earth would the Roman Catholic Church and Empire have been able to accumulate so much land from the Estates of the Dead Warriors who fought and died during those very Crusades.
The very same Warriors who were given ( sold actually) Papal 'Free Passes to Heaven and total Absolution for their sins and crimes both prior to the Crusades and DURING the Crusades?
How would Catholicism have gained the foothold it has in countries like Brazil, Peru, Mexico, Argentina, etc, etc, WITHOUT declaring a 'Holy War' on those native inhabitants to whom they referred to as being Pagans/Heathens, etc, etc, and either enslaving them or killing them by the hundreds and thousands?
Christianity and Christians particularly have for centuries been extremely vocal in shouting down science and sciences BUT they have never short on accepting and embracing the advances and advantages that these very 'enemies' they oppose so strongly and vehemently have brought foward for them to embrace with open arms, have they?
A very PRIME example of Christianity SCREAMING about 'persecution is the ages ld myth of Christians being either put to death or slaughtered by the Romans in the Arenas such as the Flavian Arena ( Colusseum), a total myth btw.
The truth being, and histirically recorded btw, is that the victims in places such as the Flavian Arena were mainly either Slaves, Thieves, Murderers, etc, and on very RARE occassions the odd Gladiator or two.
Yet another created myth perpetrated by Christians and Hollywood Movie Producers alike just as is the myth of Hebrews being enslaves in Ancient Egypt as per the book of Exodus in the bible, the Plagues of Egypt, the part of the Red Sea, etc, etc.
Ergo, IF youare trying to play the part of the 'Devil's Advocate' then, imo, you are falling somewhatv short of the mark, but if you are being deliberately obtuse then, imo, you are succeeding well above your own expectations.
@Triphid 'Deliberately obtuse' ? Yeah, that's a tough one. Middleway's posts are notoriously shallow and/or absurd. He seems sincere, but the content could just as easily come from a patent troll. Does it matter which? It it hard to resist responding to inflammatory comments, sincere or otherwise. I thank you for your replies which I've found interesting. The claim that religion isn't at war against science flies in the face of current events where the evangelical champion had badly damaged the country. Plainly he derives significant motivation from his own anti-science hatred, though some of that is probably red meat for his base. That's the point; his base loves every instance where science is disrespected, even if it means losing a loved one. That's eff'd up. But claiming Christians aren't at war against science is also eff'd up. Have you seen the figures on how much they spend on anti-science campaigns? Science certainly has no such war chest. Scientists can only rely on their valid arguments.
@TheMiddleWay Friend, I have no fewer that 3 Degrees in both Modern and Ancient History, a ThD and 2 Phd's and am studying to gain ever more knowledge, what do you hav to offer?
@TheMiddleWay The Christian 'sacking' of the Great Library of Alexandria occurred in the period A.D. NOT in the period B.C.E.
There were NO 'books' stored/held in the library at that time since 'books' were totally unknown then , they were ALL scrolls,either papyrus scrolls or vellum scrolls as were the norms of that era.
The Serapeum (Library) was estimated to have housed approx. 11,000 scrolls written by some of the Greatest minds of the times both prior to the A.D. era and before the Christians destroyed it.
THAT, Mr. Middleway, IS historical FACT and not the propanga as per issued by the Christian Sects.
I agree that religion isn't going away anytime soon, especially if you take into account so-called "spiritual" beliefs as also being religious. There is much of that. But... it's not science itself that is lessening religiosity or even advances in science by society collectively that is lessening religiosity. What I think is lessening religiosity is UNDERSTANDING science. We can have all the science done by scientists and all the scientific advancements we want, but if the people don't GET IT, then, yes, there will be no effect on the amount of religiosity. But, I think there is good evidence that among the people who actually GET science there is a good effect toward more secularization.
"If we look at those societies where religion remains vibrant, their key common features are less to do with science, and more to do with feelings of existential security and protection from some of the basic uncertainties of life in the form of public goods."
I agree with this.
I think it's based on a false premise. The idea that superstitions or religions, that have been around for, literally 10s of thousands of years is going to miraculously disappear after a few hundred years of utilizing the scientific methods is as naive as believing six months of therapy would cure someone who has been physically and mentally abused for 30 years.
The religion ver. science, so called conflict, is a straw-man argument anyway. Religion is not directly anti-science, and many religions have meshed well with many parts of science. What religion is, for the greater part, is anti -education, not merely science, but history, philosophy, economics, medicine, secular morality, global culture, and even physical geography sometimes, as well as science.
And it is inevitable, that those people in power, who gain their power from being anti-education, ( Which is most people in power, since nothing frees and empowers the individual like education, from the Pope, to the commercial enterprise selling shoddy products, to the abusive husband telling his wife lies about the police, most power depends on ignorance. ) will put up a long hard fight to preserve ignorance. There will be many bounce-backs reverses, and regains, and there is no certainty that reason and education will win in the end. A century is not long.
@TheMiddleWay Now perhaps I would go back and drop the 'for the greater part' bit and say that religions is simply another word for anti-education. It is a little like the common saying about alternative medicine. "There is no alternative medicine, because if it works it is just called medicine." If it is education it is just called education, the fact that it is called something else, 'religion' simply means that it is not education but anti-education.
Yes of course religions love to claim that they had a role in founding universities, but what better way is there to promote the cause of anti-education, than to fill the world with fake educational establishments pedaling anti-education as hard as they can, to suppress real learning, by squeezing it out with just the size and volume of their output. And certainly for a thousand years until at least the middle of the last century, and still to a degree today, few things have so successfully stood in the way of education than the clergy dominated universities.
@TheMiddleWay I am tempted to say that. Well of course they would say that, most of them have and do work in those universities, so if anyone had a vested interest in promoting that lie, they would. But that is a cheap shot even if true.
But the more important point, which you seem to have overlooked, I hope not deliberately, is that I said "until the middle of the last century," by which time genuine academic study and even science was begining to dominate the universities indeed. Even though most of those you list still have subjects such as theology on the lists, and still to to this day promote anti-education to a degree, while there is no doubt that in their origins, there was little intention to do anything else.
The only area available to religion now is the dark. Religion lives by providing an alternative to the mainstream secular education and thought. In the dark ages when mainstream culture meant, the culture of vicious warlords, no doubt the alternative did seem like a wonder of light and joy. But in the renaissance secular culture chose to follow the path of light and truth, and later of humanity and human rights. What does that leave to religion, and what is the alternative to truth, light and humanity ? As with a game of chess if one player takes the white, then the other can only take the black.
Religion can now only turn into the dark, because that is the only territory available to an alternative now, apart from a few nebullus areas around issues of meaning etc. only of interest to the privileged few who often find what they need elsewhere anyway, without the costs of religion. And that is what we observe, the only growth area for religion, is on the dark far right. There is a lot of religious growth in some areas, such as islamic states and the evangelical Christianity of the west, but they are only on the far and inhuman fascist right, while moderate religion fades fast, because the fascist right is now the main alternative to mainstream culture, and therefore it is the only place that religion being an alternative can go. Like it or not the future of religion is to become increasingly the champion of evil, simple because the is no other place for it to go, and even the most superficial observer will see that happening.
@TheMiddleWay Maybe, to some degree all institutions are anti-education, and that is why I hated it. Certainly the main reason I did hate it was because, I felt that in a Church of England dominated, school, and being a child addicted to reading books, I did feel that I was being cheated.
The high point of which was when I was told by a teacher, not to read the classical authors, since they had been completely supperceeded by modern and Christian thinking. He then made several remarks about the classics, from which it became obvious later that he had not read any of them himself and was only parroting what he had been taught to say by others.
So naturally, being twelve years old, and being told not to do something, I went out and read Plato, Aristotle and some others, and found much in them that was good and useful, even if I agree with little of it now.
I love this though.
"Ummmm.... science was dominating in the university since the time of Newton. Maxwell, Joule, Celcius, and others were all members of religious universities (and religious men themselves) way before the 20th century"
Can you not see that there is a complete contradiction in that, or like all apologists are you so lost in Cognitive dissonance that contradition has become meaningless.
Science certainly did not come to dominate in the universities before at least the middle of the twentieth century, except perhaps in the minds of revisionist historians with hidden agendas.
Here is a direct quote from a person, H.G. Wells, who was a science professor, at just such a university in the first half of the 20th century.
"The early developement of British science went on , therefore, in spite of the formal educational organization, and in the teeth of of the bitter hosility of the teaching and clerical professions." "after the Refformation the English universities ceased to be organs of the general intellectual life, and shrank to be merely the educational preserves of the arisocracy and the church. Jews, Roman Catholics, Disenters, Sceptics, and all forms of interllectual activity were carefully barred out from those almost extinguished lamps of learning. Their mathmatical work was poor, a series of exercises in mere patience games and forulae-writing of lower mathematics; science they despised and excluded, "
Even Darwin had to take a degree in theology, due to the simple fact that apart for medicine there was no science based course availlable to him.
A prime example is one of the ones you quoted, Newton. Whose scientific work would never have been published and would have been completely lost, had not Halley and one or two others, and a dispute with Leibniz, rescued it and Newtons thinking, even to a degree Newton himself, from the strangle hold of Cambridge University. So that even Newton, would probably only be known today as anything but a minor theologian, with an interest in finding hidden codes in the bible and alchemy.
@TheMiddleWay Darwin did not have to take a class in religion, he had to study religion, total, because that was all that was on offer. Science was only a part time activety for an interested few. That is the whole point. With very few scientific seats, even by Darwins time let alone in Newtons day.
Newton did not have any publishing woes, the whole technical story of the publication is irrelievant. The point is, that without Halley there would have most likely been no attempt to even publish, because in the intellectual culture of the time, generated by the universities, such things were not seen as valuable as possible publications even by Newton himself.
@TheMiddleWay I learn for anyone I can, even science fiction authors, though if you think that Wells was only a science fiction author, then you are badly misinformed. Diversity of learning from many sources is generally better than living in an apologists echo chamber with as small group of revisionist historians pedaling a narrow predetermined agenda.
Yes, you could argue that science was deeply entrenched in European university life, though I think that would be a subjective, but universities and the church were the only grounds available for intellectual life at the time, and that fact that Darwin and many scientists of the Newton, Darwin era were clergy, (Buckland, Maskelyne etc.) only justifies the point. Science was seen as a fringe activety. My point about anti-education is not merely that it disputes with genuine education, the overworked science/ religion debate, but that it works by bulk, filling up the space and time, wasting resources and creating an illusion of education where there is none.
But it hardly matters just exactly what the ratio between science and religion was, because the point is that religion was dominant, and even more importantly that that dominance has declined. That is the trend, and my whole point was, that as religions dominance in the world of mainstream thought has declined so has its role as the champion of extremism and fascism grown. That is its direction and its destiny.
Thank you for informing me that you are going to leave the conversation to me, but it was hardly needful, since it was expected. Having met you on this site on several times before, I am well familiar with your habit of running away. I therefore make these last two comments for the unlikely benefit of anyone else.
An interesting take on this is found in "Lord of the World" a 1907 dystopian speculative science fiction novel by Robert Hugh Benson that centers upon the reign of the church perceived Antichrist Julian Felsenburgh, who is in actuality a charismatic political leader and propagandist who founds a "church" of reason, that usurps traditional religion in preference for the worship of science personified as the queen and mother of all a godess like statue of a Madonna and child symbolizing reason as the mother of technology.
The systematic demonisation of religion culminates in a war on "god" and the last pope being smuggled away from the Vatican as volor-bombers (a cross between Zeplins and flying warships) wipe the city off the face of the earth, symbolically showing science eradicating religion.
I would be satisfied if we could water down religion over time the way we bred dogs from wolves, and eventually to tea-cup poodles. (This reminds me of the recent post of someone here about a religious person asking him if he was sleeping with his ex-wife during their temporary living arrangement because, apparently, that would be a no-no. But not so many decades ago, DIVORCE would have been the first thing frowned upon, NOT the possibility of having sex with someone out of wedlock--and in this case, a wedlock that was negated by the state, not by god, in any case.)
Religion will not go away but, science can change dogma. The creation of New Thought religions (even New Thought Christianity) for example coincided with advancements in psychology. Jung was highly influential. Half of my seminary classes are psychology classes of some form and the other half are either bible history with a sociological emphasis or bible interpretation based on a psycho-analytics
Watching my facebook feed for the past month leads me to believe a large portion of the human population is so irrational that religion will always find a place to lurk.
Multiple people are posting "Wearing masks does not work" and attempting to defend that position despite the fact that masks have been worn during surgery since 1900 to prevent the spread of infection.
As long as people choose to be willfully and stubbornly ignorant, they will always be religion.
Not sure people choose to be ignorant. I think it is human nature. In the genes. The ignorant are unaware of their ignorance
@Healthydoc70 I think a lot of this ignorance is due to the FEAR of the unknown country.
I went to the link and this is as far as I got: "Why Religion Is Not Going Away and Science Will Not Destroy It
Social scientists predicted that belief in the supernatural would drift away as modern science advanced. They were wrong."
Well, of course they were wrong. Science is the study of nature, not supernature. Religion is about helping widows and orphans while avoiding worldly corruption.
Super - some kind of a thing that is superior to another kind of a thing.
Super - something that is superior with in it's own kind.
Just for hypothetical speculation: Something with a superior cognition capability to that of people-monkeys decided to influence just a few of the people-monkeys to experiment with how things would go for people-monkey societies as word got around that there were a few that had such a purported interaction with a superior cognition thing.
But Secularism and Non-belief are still growing steadily, though mostly in the more ENLIGHTENED countries and societies as the most and more recent figures and statistics show clearly.
It is NOT due to Science and the Sciences as much as it IS due to the facts that people, for the most part, are awakening to and acting upon the doubts that they have long had and held about the efficacy/efficacies of religions and religious ideologies.
Though there are many who choose to follow the path of the 'Middle of the Road' on a 'just in case basis' ( my take and opinion on this of course) there are even more who arising to find that the 'Middle of the Road' path is as barren as it looks and the grass is truly greener, so to speak, on either side of the road.
What makes a country more ENLIGHTENED? Will you please share examples of countries that are indeed ENLIGHTENED and those that are not?
@TheMiddleWay And
IF you note, almost every country listed is or has been led by a Governmemt or Political Party with a more than obvious leaning towards a religious belief of one kind or another in the last 7-10 years.
E.g. The U.S. with Trump, Aust. with the Liberal Party and its heavy Catholicism, etc, leanings, Arabian Countries with Islamic Leaders and so on and so forth.
Here in Australia we had a Full-on, Up-Front Atheist Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, but the Faithfools in her party and the LNP Coallition consorted quickly and got rid of her, that is one of methods REligion and the Religious employ these days to try to maintain their grip, as shakey as it is getting, on society.
And, in my opinion, that is why your 'vaunted' Trump went 'full-on' religious because he knew full well that without the Faithfools and their support he'd be looking down the barrel of becoming a One Term President .
Science has and will continue to change religious belief radically. The reverse could also be true if (as it seems in quantum theory), we may all be living in our own solipistic universes created by abstract information, causality, and meaning. Indeed, if the later is the case, then the world of dreams and our waking life may be equivalent and whose to really say about a hereafter or beforetime. My own personal feeling is that in this of the "more rational" realities that happen to exist, that many of the questions asked by religion can be absorbed meaninginfully into the physical sciences. For example, when we think about death of a material individual, even in the physical sense this does not have the same meaning we think, since even during one liftetime, every atom is replaced several times over so that in the material sense, "you" are only an imperfect copy of previous selves. If, scientifically, however, we broaden the definition of what constiutes your identity to being abstract thoughts and feelings, then since the most improtant of those are more or less shared with other human beings past, present, and future, we already have a very real and tangible immortality "in this world" which hasn't been well quantitified, or appreciated...but with the coming technologies that allow us to link our brains together, and a greater understanding of neuroscience, this may in fact be the case. I think the motivations that ground religious thought will find their way into the sciences, and perhaps vice versa.
Nah, science is doing a good job replacing religious thinking with scientific thinking.
I know several people whom I would consider Christian in name only. It's more of an origin staus than a lifestyle.
Its may surprise you that a lot of scientists in the south are Christian. But again if you observe their behavior, apart from actually stating that they are Christian, and attend church, they have behave just like anyone else.
Heck, my own advisor held a private Bible study at my university, and I didn't know until several years into my program.
That said, when dating, I do encounter the "Jesus is first in my life" profiles...I have avoided them, but I'd be curious to know if that's just "keeping up appearance, lol.
The battle is between faith based belief and evidence based reality. People can compartmentalise both ways of thinking and always will. Hence, many scientists are religious.
Religions are little more than flimsy constructs to support superstitions and contrived systems of social conduct and morality. It takes a lot of science to build a 'high rise' with lots of engineering, plumbing, electricity, central heating and cooling and elevators. Oh yeah, elevators, those things that will let you off at any floor you want except 13. Those things.
If religion did go away some idiot would bring it back. Maybe it would just take another form. Everybody knows that 2 aspirin will work for a headache but some people have to take 3, 4, or 6. What does this mean? It means that people just keep lying. I want you to know that the juju helped me and I know it personally. My juju is stronger than your juju.
Unfortunately, since the time of Galileo, both 1) and 2) are true.
If religion is the revealed and infallible word of a god, and science then contradicts that word, then one or the other must be false. Since science is testable and subject to repeated experiment and peer review, we can determine whether its conclusions are truth or not. Religion depends on the blind belief of its followers. And so, religious authorities are put in the position of ordering their followers to believe only in what religion teaches, not in what science discovers; and when religion was able to enforce its wishes, they ordered scientists to desist from discovering things that contradicted religion, as well.
Galileo was put under house arrest and ordered not even to think of the Copernican theory any more. If the fundamentalist churches had the power, scientists would be banned from testing DNA and conducting other experiments that further prove evolution is true (not "just a theory" as they love to repeat, which might turn out to be falsified any day now, but a theory in the sense of gravitational theory, part of the way the universe works). Why? Because it contradicts the story that God created the Universe, the Earth, and all the animals and humans in 6 days.
Science isn't in conflict with religion, it just contradicts it. And religion can't tolerate that. That's why it's religion that is in conflict with science, and is in a continuing conflict with it. Religion constantly tries to control science, just as it tries to control every field of human endeavor (art, sex, work, even food). Because that's the nature of religion. And when science introduces doubt- when the stories are proven wrong- people naturally question what is true about religion, and if there's even anything up there giving these priests their authority.
It's not a deliberate campaign by scientists to destroy religion, just a natural side-effect of people thinking for themselves. And that's something religion absolutely, positively, unquestionably can't tolerate. That's why religion is in an eternal conflict with science, unless the day comes when religion gives up and admits that all the stories are.... just stories.
@TheMiddleWay I'm an historian myself, not specializing in the history of science, but in social science, which means I look especially at "the popular mind", as the article terms it. And 85 pecent of religions may very well accept science as helpful, but that's like saying 85 percent of Republicans aren't enthusiastic about Trump; they're the quiet ones. It's the loudest voices that result in the public's perception, so when, for example, the state of Kansas wants to teach "Intelligent Design" (Creationism in a three-piece suit) in the classrooms on equal footing with real science, that's what people see; fundamentalist Christians rejecting science and insisting that it's all just a matter of opinion. The public understanding of science worldwide is woefully inadequate, due in large part to the efforts of fundamentalist religion to keep it there.
It’s a good article, and I agree that religion is here to stay as long as there are humans. It is tempting to hope that religions will evolve toward liberality and intelligence, but that kind of hope doesn’t take into account the variety of humans and their various levels of awareness.
My policy is to observe the world and try to understand it. Destroying religion is not in the cards.
But Sir, any religious belief system/dogma/tenet, et, etc, both requires and demands Faith without Questioning whereas Science, on the other hand, requires Questioning, Research, Evidence, Examination, Re-examination, Discussion, re-discussion and Questioning over and over until it is proven or disproven, is that not so?
To 'borrow' your 'cards analogy, even ghe most amateur of Poker players know that youcan ONLY bluff your way through a hand for just so long UNTIL someone eventually calls you out and you either have to show your hand or fold up, i.e.either you PROVE that you do have the Winning hand or you merely shut up and takeyour losses on the chin like a man.
@Triphid I think there are religions that do not required unquestioning faith, or even any kind of belief. A few come to mind: The Society of Friends, Unitarianism, New Thought Churches. Buddhism is not founded on belief. In some Hindu schools doubt is perfectly acceptable. Of course with any undertaking some level of faith is needed or you would never start. Most religions are not in conflict with the findings of science, but some of the largest ones are in some ways.
You seem to have absolute faith and belief in the pronouncements of science, with your proof and disproof analogy. For myself I don’t think of truth as absolute, though some of the findings of science are relatively true. Science in its current form can never replace our reverence and awe for the mysterious and inexplicable foundation of reality. Mystery to me is why anyone would think that it should or that there is any inverse relationship between religion and science. We need both.
“Try and penetrate with our limited means the secrets of nature and you will find that, behind all the discernible concatenations, there remains something subtle, intangible and inexplicable. Veneration for this force beyond anything that we can comprehend is my religion. To that extent I am, in point of fact, religious.” Albert Einstein
@WilliamFleming I TRUST in science to tell the truth whether or NOT it is right or wrong on any subject.
I do NOT have any kind of "Faith " as per the meaning you appear to be using.
I know that, for example, the ground beneath my feet is solid and has been around for well over millions of years, the Earth orbits the Sun over a period of 365.25 each year approximately and that the Earth, the Sun and the other planets, etc, in this Solar System came into being, not by the magical 'waving' of some mystical God, by the accretion effects of particles in a massive cloud od dust and gases over a very long time.
I know that the Sun does NOT rise above the Easter Horizon but that the Earth turns from West to East instead thus GIVING, to the unenlightened mind, the impression that the Sun rotates around the Earth.
Science has never gone about trying to disprove religion nor replace it, it just goes about thinking, theorizing, researching, finding facts and evidences then proving or disproving those very thoughts and theories.
Religion has for countless generations cried "woo-woo" at the things science has proven, for example, Evolution, but has always resisted vehemently ALL calls to show any definable, tangible, irrefutable, peer tested and PROVEN evidences that IT is 100% correct, WHY is that I ask you?
@Triphid Saying that religion does this or that is stereotyping. Some people involved with religious organizations resist science and espouse belief in literally interpreted church dogma, but that’s not all there is to religion. How do you interpret or explain Einstein’s statement above?
The planetary model is a good one for many purposes and I’m glad that you derive such solace from your trust, which is the exact same thing as faith . However, the planetary model is just that—a useful model which offers no insight into ultimate reality. Those clumps of particles doing the orbiting—they are not concrete “things” or objects. They are quantum events. Time and space do not exist except as a mode of thinking, and therefore such concepts as speed, distance, place, causation and even existence itself are pure imagination.
Religion is not in the business of showing “definable, tangible, irrefutable, peer-tested and proven evidences that it is 100% correct“. All those attributes are shallow and superficial qualities of the imaginary world of our senses and from a cosmic perspective are absolutely meaningless.
What religion does, or ought to do, is foster deep awareness, awe and reverence for the staggering implications of the mystery of existence, thereby imparting great value and appreciation for existence as a consciously aware being.
Your 100% correctness is sitting on quicksand. The correct reaction is 100% bewilderment.
@WilliamFleming AGAIN with the 'circular reasoning.'
Do you ever tire of having your mind and thoughts merely traveling around in circles?
In your comment/question re-Einstein and his 'being religious about the "subtle, intangible, inexplicable force" you read, imo, the word RELIGION and take its meaning literally, is that not so?
I tske it as meaning ' seeking that very force with diligence in a very religious manner, in other words diligently and with a very strict system of controls, recording of results both for and against, testing and retesting, that is what Scientists do and it clasified as a Regimen towhich they adhere in a very religious ( STRICT) manner.
Almost everyone has a Regimen to which they adhere in their daily lives, no less 'religiously' than anyone else, I for one, have such a regimen in that I, as a part of my Oath to my teenaged daughter, that I would shave my head EVERY day, without fail before sunset, firstly due to the fact that the Chemotherapy she had to undertake caused her to lose her and hence mine would be shaved off in support AND that I gave my Oath to her on her deathbed that " since her hair had NOT regrown then neither would mine be permitted to do so and remain shaved every day that I am able to honour both her memory and to homour both ALL other children who have died from cancers, etc, and those in the future as well.
By adhering 'religiously' to a Regimen it does NOT mean anything akin to praying to it, etc, etc, it simply means that one abides by it in a strict and regular manner, ergo your 'concept'of Einstein being 'religious' in his scientific researches is quite unfounded.
@Triphid What Einstein was talking about was not strict diligence in using the scientific method to learn about nature, and if you are actually reading it that way you are deluding yourself. Read it again, and more carefully this time. Please note the words “inexplicable”, “veneration”, “intangible”, etc. Take note of our limited means of comprehending the force beyond.
Maybe my arguments just appear as circular. From earth the sun appears to go around, but it is actually we who are orbiting. I don’t know about circular, but your arguments are very repetitive and you refuse to address the points that I make.I feel like I am talking to a rock.
I am sorry that you lost your daughter. That must have been very painful
@WilliamFleming I was waiting for you to reply with yet more 'circular reasoning' what took you so long, running out ideas or something were you?
Yes, I have probably know for as long or if not longer thanyou that the Earth ORBITS the Sun and not vice versa, we were taught that in Primary School when I was about 6 or 7 years old.
As to our 'limited means, etc,' the limits are lessening as time passes by and we learn more and more thanks to the religious diligences of Scientists, etc, so TRY not to always read the word religious/religiousness, etc, as solely meaning a belieffaith in some mystic higher power/God like figure/being or the Mystical All-Powerful Spirit, etc, etc.
Tell me, and be 100% honest IF you can that is, what strict personal type regimens to you adhere either daily, weekly or whatever and MUST do without fail?
I have already told you and anyone reading my earlier response openly and unashamedly of my regimen every day and the reason why, to me, it is so important and needs to done in a diligent 'religious' kind of manner/routine, so don't be shy.
I always get up around six and make coffee and eat a small amount of raw oatmeal with sugar, peanut butter, raisins, almonds and milk.
While drinking the coffee I always read the news and come to this forum. I find this forum to be stimulating, and rewarding. It is a chance for me to speak from the heart.
I always walk along woodland trails for about an hour, followed by a half hour of meditation. Generally I do some sort of physical work such as gardening, getting firewood, etc.
I always make bread in a frying pan using freshly ground corn or feed wheat. Generally lunch consists of cooked greens and some meat or fish, along with the bread. I then lie down for an hour or so and do games on my iPhone such as Sudoku. Usually I doze off for awhile.
I like to read about science and history. I am currently reading about Hindu religious philosophy. Sometimes in the afternoons I do lathe work, turning wooden bowls and such. Dinner consists of a light snack of whatever is handy.
In the evenings I watch YouTube videos and listen to music, mainly classical. I go to bed at 10:30.
I have settled into a very routine life, but every second of conscious awareness is a miracle beyond all miracles, full of wonder, awe and reverence.
@WilliamFleming Ergo, one can easily say that your morning regimen is quite religiously adhere to then, since, as you have stated, that IS always your regimen and you stick to it as you seem to do with everything else in your day.
Now, perhaps and that is ONE Huge, almost Cosmos sized PERHAPS imho, you may chance upon seeing that the terminology of one being 'religious' in nature/manner about a regimen is NOT used in sole reference to a System of Religious belief but to the adherence to a set routine as well.
@Triphid Of course I am familiar with that usage of the word “religious”, and I can tell you with absolute certainty that that was not the kind of religion Einstein was talking about. How you could think such a thing is beyond me.
Speaking of routines, it’s nearly my bedtime. I suppose you just got up. What day is it down there in Australia? I hope you have an enjoyable day.
@WilliamFleming Ah so you HAVE an intimate insight into the workings of the mind of such a great man as Albert Einstein do you, wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles.
Perhaps you also have such an insight into the minds of other great men and women such as Da Vinci, etc, can you enlighten us as to exactly what their thoughts were as well please.
FYI, it IS Monday, May the Fourth here in Australia, the time is 1.05 pm the sun is shining, the birds are singing and I arose from bed a little later than usual but my day is looking good as do most every other days thanks to living in reality and without woo-woo.
@Triphid Yes, I do have that intimate insight. I can read and understand his words and they resonate with me on a deep level. You could do the same if you tried.
BTW, woo is real.