Faith vs Fact
Science/Faith
Faith vs. Fact:
Why Science and Religion are Incompatible
Jerry A. Coyne
For long I harboured a view that science is good at answering ‘what
and how’ questions on life and universe, while the most vital ‘why’ questions
belong to the realm of religion. In last decade I read some books on the nature
and origin of universe. Many of these were written by thinkers and scientists
who have been in the forefront of this quest. This reading informs me, with as
conclusive evidence as human mind is at the present moment capable of
propounding, that though some ‘why’ questions still remain unanswered,
scientists all over the world are doggedly working at the frontiers of
knowledge and claiming inch by inch, the land of ignorance. To attribute all
that science cannot explain to a nebulous concept of God: whose nature is
unknowable, whose methods are inscrutable and whose mind is beyond human
comprehension; is nothing short of intellectual indolence. I now understand that
rigorous application of scientific tools to these queries has opened a world of
knowledge that, merely two-three centuries back was inaccessible to human
beings. Organised religion has been in this world for more than two millennia,
yet other than some ludicrous stories about creation of universe, laughable
accounts of God first creating and then meddling ham-handedly with life every
moment of the day and such infantile fantasies, religion could not come up with
a single explanation that was consistent with the observed facts. In the
absence of modern scientific methods, religion had a heyday spinning these
yarns about universe and life. Beginning with Galileo in mid-sixteenth century,
church saw science gradually but steadily providing logical, testable and
falsifiable explanations for natural phenomena, a role over which religion had
enjoyed unchallenged monopoly for almost two millennia.
Thus, religion witnessed, waxed and petulant, its authority dwindling
to the extent that it was evoked only to explain those facts which science had
yet not explained. A pale shadow of its glorious past, it effectively became ‘the
religion of gaps’ i.e. its authority was invoked only to explain gaps in
scientific knowledge. Science’s universal acceptance, its consistent
principles, its ease of accessibility and its openness in accepting, rather
encouraging dissent with the accepted viewpoints, gave it a respectability that
religion has always coveted. Consequently, many religious pundits and
religiously minded science apologists now look for reconciliation between
science and religion. They propound many theories to aver why science and
religion must co-exist. This book of Jerry A. Coyne, who is an evolutionary
biologist of repute, is a superb effort to explain why the ways of science and
religion can never meet. There are many books on this theme and many of them
are very convincing. But most of them are in way of being polemics against
Religion. Religion has been inhumanly harsh and cruel on people of science, to
safeguard its fiefdom. A scathing critique of religion by scientists does not
require an apology but is essential for the unhindered blooming of human mind.
But Coyne does not criticize every facet of religion in this book. He confines
his arguments only to the subject of incompatibility between science and
religion. And this he does with an enviable width of arguments. He first
defines this incompatibility in unambiguous language. He explains what Religion
is and what is Science. He contrasts their diametrically opposite ways of
acquiring knowledge. Science’s foundation is laid on the doubting mind of its
apostles, on their relentless search for recurring pattern in natural
phenomena, formulation of hypothesis, devising experiments to test this theory
and predicting more facts about nature through this theory. Science thus
encourages critical enquiry, an inquisitive mind that is forever restless for newer
truths. There is no self-righteousness in science. All theories are open for
most rigorous appraisal and are unceremoniously abandoned if found lacking in
proof in the light of newly acquired knowledge. Religion thrives on dogma. Its
knowledge is revealed and hence beyond pale of doubt by human mind. It demands
unstinting faith in its teachings from its followers and ruthlessly quells
spirit of enquiry and doubt. These reasons alone should be enough to convince
even a child as to the completely incongruous ways of science and religion.
Coyne cites and explains many more. At length he takes up the arguments offered
by accommodationists -science apologists and liberal believers- and clearly
enunciates the reason why such arguments fail. He cautions rationally thinking
people of the ways in which religion is trying to acquire a patina of
rationality. The foremost of these is ‘Natural Theology’ an attempt to answer
questions for which science has no clear answer at present, allegedly by
observing nature, rather than relying on revealed theology. The second such
ruse being played by religion is propping up religion as another way of
acquiring knowledge about essential truths of nature. And the third method for
revival of religion is accusing scientists of spreading ‘scientism’, a term
only of derogatory connotations that accuses science of overstepping its
boundaries and trying to usurp the domain of all other forms of knowledge like
philosophy, humanities, ethics and theology. Coyne systematically, convincingly
and resoundingly debunks all these claims. He ends the book by citing various
reasons why it is important to understand the stark and unbridgeable
incompatibility between science and religion. Faith as substitute for medicine,
suppression of scientific research and tools of proven efficacy like
vaccination, opposition to assisted dying and denial of global warming are some
of the ramifications of religious thinking that he discusses.
Coyne has written a highly engrossing and finely argued account on why
science and religion must part ways permanently. His arguments can be easily
understood by a layman. His prose is elegant and has the beauty that engages
mind, focussing it acutely on the subject being discussed. This is a book a
rationalist will miss on his own peril.
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