CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Though science sometimes has the trappings of
religious fervor, modern science cannot be considered religious in
nature. A better word for the “mystic feeling” scientists sometimes
experience, according to biologist Richard Dawkins, should be
“Einsteinian wonder.”
“Much unfortunate misunderstanding is caused by failure to distinguish
what might be called Einsteinian religion from supernatural religion,”
Dawkins said during his Nov. 20 lecture, “The Science of Religion and
the Religion of Science.”
Dawkins, the Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of
Science at Oxford University, spoke about the differences between
science and religion and what he calls their “supposed convergence” to
more than 400 audience members during the Tanner Lectures on Human
Values at Harvard University last month.
“A huge number of scientists who give the impression they’re religious
turn out to be religious only in the Einsteinian sense,” he
continued.
Though Einstein is often quoted as being a religious person — “Science
without religion is lame; religion without science is blind.” — he was
in fact a profound atheist, said Dawkins. “Einstein must have been quite
annoyed at the way religious apologists continually misused his name in
their support,” he said.
Dawkins went on to list many other scientists who, despite their
exuberant descriptions of the universe, claim no religious affiliation,
like biologist Ursula Goodenough, cosmologist Stephen Hawking and
astronomer Sir Martin Rees.
Dawkins said he could consider himself religious in the Einsteinian
sense, but prefers not to, calling it “destructively misleading” to use
the word in that way. He encouraged other scientists to “refrain from
using the word ‘God’ in their special physicist, metaphorical
sense.”
“The metaphorical god of the physicist is light-years away from the
interventionist, miracle-wreaking, thought-reading, sin-punishing,
prayer-answering God of the theists and of ordinary language,” he said.
“Deliberately to confuse the two is, in my opinion, an act of
intellectual high treason.”
Dawkins continued his staunch defense of scientific inquiry as separate
from religious revelation, quoting heavily from his new book, A
Devil’s Chaplain.
Dawkins spoke about the differences in the ways religion and science
understand the world, saying the division is often reductively posited
with science asking “How?” questions and religion asking “Why?” about
the universe.
“Scientists tell us the way the universe is and how things work;
religion has nothing to say on this, but it has its own equally
important domains: morals, values and ultimate questions,” Dawkins
said.
The problem lies, Dawkins said, in how religious questions supersede
scientific ones. “There’s something maddeningly silly about the
complacent assumption without further discussion that ‘Why?’ questions
have some sort of universal, ultimate legitimacy,” he said.
Dawkins told a story he related in the chapter, “The Great Convergence,”
about an astronomy colleague who explained the big-bang theory to him,
but conceded his explanation of physics’ origins to the realm of the
chaplain.
“But why the chaplain?” Dawkins shouted from the podium. “Why not the
gardener or the chef?”
Dawkins listed revelation as one among the five attributes comprising
religion, including tradition, faith, authority and evidence. Though
Dawkins spoke at length about how each of the five aspects were present
in some form in science — hence the confusion with Einsteinian wonder —
he said none of these aspects is greater than evidence.
“Experiments with evidence ultimately trumps mathematical beauty, in
what T.H. Huxley lamented as, ‘the Great Tragedy of Science: the slaying
of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact,’” Dawkins said.
After Dawkins’ presentation, Keith DeRose, a professor of philosophy at
Yale University, responded to the lecture. “If we’re trying to explain
religious beliefs, faith’s role shouldn’t be overplayed,” said
DeRose.
Some in the audience also found a lack of depth to Dawkins’ treatment of
religion. Jerry Crystal, a teacher at the Learning Corridor school in
Hartford, Conn., wondered, “Why is it that conservative religious
theological belief is much more prevalent if in reality the one that’s
‘truer’ is the scientific belief?”
Though Dawkins had no direct answer to these questions, he did summarize
his position about the nexus of science and religion.
“I am not expressing confidence that humanity will succeed in answering
the deep questions of existence. But in the possibly unlikely event that
we do succeed, I am very confident that it is more likely to be through
scientific than religious ways of thinking,” said Dawkins. “However
unlikely it may be that science will one day understand everything about
the cosmos and the nature of life, it is even less likely that religion
will.”
Julia C. Keller is a freelance writer living in Boston.
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