Up@dawn 2.0

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Science + Religion

This article appeared in a tab on my computer. I had sometime previously been working on chapter two of Ruse, dealing with science and religion. I have no memory of opening it. I have searched the blog for it, thinking that I opened it while reading someone's post, to no avail. So it must be there as a result of divine intervention. Thus I am compelled to pass it on.

To riff on the opening lines of Steven Shapin’s book The Scientific Revolution (1996), there is no such thing as a science-religion conflict, and this is an essay about it. It is not, however, another rebuttal of the ‘conflict narrative’ – there is already an abundance of good, recent writing in that vein from historians, sociologists and philosophers as well as scientists themselves. Readers still under the misapprehension that the history of science can be accurately characterised by a continuous struggle to escape from the shackles of religious oppression into a sunny secular upland of free thought (loudly expressed by a few scientists but no historians) can consult Peter Harrison’s masterly book The Territories of Science and Religion (2015), or dip into Ronald Numbers’s delightful edited volume Galileo Goes to Jail and Other Myths about Science and Religion (2009).
Likewise, assumptions that theological and scientific methodologies and truth-claims are necessarily in philosophical or rational conflict might be challenged by Alister McGrath’s book The Territories of Human Reason (2019) or Andrew Torrance and Thomas McCall’s edited Knowing Creation (2018). The late-Victorian origin of the ‘alternative history’ of unavoidable conflict is fascinating in its own right, but also damaging in that it has multiplied through so much public and educational discourse in the 20th century in both secular and religious communities. That is the topic of a new and fascinating study by the historian James Ungureanu, Science, Religion, and the Protestant Tradition (2019). Finally, the concomitant assumption that scientists must, by logical force, adopt non-theistic worldviews is roundly rebutted by recent and global social science, such as Elaine Eklund’s major survey, also published in a new bookSecularity and Science (2019).
All well and good – so the history, philosophy and sociology of science and religion are richer and more interesting than the media-tales and high-school stories of opposition we were all brought up on. It seems a good time to ask the ‘so what?’ questions, however, especially since there has been less work in that direction. If Islamic, Jewish and Christian theologies were demonstrably central in the construction of our current scientific methodologies, for example, then what might such a reassessment imply for fruitful development of the role that science plays in our modern world? In what ways might religious communities support science especially under the shadow of a ‘post-truth’ political order? What implications and resources might a rethink of science and religion offer for the anguished science-educational discussion on both sides of the Atlantic, and for the emerging international discussions on ‘science-literacy’? https://aeon.co/essays/its-not-science-vs-religion-but-each-one-via-the-other

6 comments:

  1. "Compelled"? So god didn't grant you free will, after all?

    But seriously, it's true that there's no monolithic science-religion conflict, but there are lots of local and specific conflicts -- particularly in localities like ours, where so many religionists are fundamentalist young-Earthers and the like. Any bridges connecting science and religion in a deep way are going to have to detour to other outposts, for now anyway. But I'll keep trying.

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  2. In Bedford County, on 4/10, there were 15 people who had tested positive for COVID-19. After 4 days, on 4/14, there were 25, and after 5 more days, 71. I’m no epidemiologist, but it doesn’t take more than common sense to see that one’s chances of being infected get greater every day. But we are a community of young-Earthers, so I won’t be surprised to see “Jesus is my vaccine” on a truck if I go out in the world. If Darwinism were a religion, it wouldn’t have a large congregation here. There may be plenty of Darwin awards though. Bless their hearts. They have a disease, probably genetic, named SFB. I know about it because my mother had it. A local businessman loves to tell a story about my mother. He had known her since he was a small child, and had a great affection for her. My mother was quite the lady, and a bit of a character. One day she was in his store, and he asked her if she was okay, because she seemed to him to be a little down. She told him she’d just come from the doctor, and that she had SFB. He immediately expressed his concern for her health, but said he didn’t know what SFB was. She replied, “shit for brains.”

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    1. BREAKING NEWS: Bedford County leads state in coronavirus increase. As of Wednesday, positive tests up to 117. It's not often we're on top down here.

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  3. I've always found this struggle between religion and science to be fascinating. In ancient times, the tools weren't there to explain everything, so what couldn't be explained must be by God. This practice has continued all the way till now. Religious folk understand that they need science but only so long as the answer can't be found within their holy book. Only issue now that we can explain most everything by science so now the struggle is convincing God-fearing people that fearing a God isn't going to help them.

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  4. I believe science explains creation, science doesn't create, but God creates. Thats it... thats the tweet. Science only goes as far as the Big Boom as the thing that caused creation , but I ask what created the BOOM? From the articles that I've read and knowledge I've come into contact with say it's crazy/irrational to think that a mystical being just created the world in seven day. However in the same breath they say all creation was created by the Big Boom. What?

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