Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Science and Religious Dogmatism

Matías Cabello writes in a new paper:
The greatest myth in the history of science and religion holds that they have been in a state of constant conflict. — Numbers (2009, p.1)

Is the science-based world we live in today the result of rationalism displacing religious dogmatism— the triumph of reason over faith, the victory of science over religion? This interpretation took root during the Enlightenment and remains popular among many in secular society, who see clear paral- lels between current evangelical resistance to Darwinism and Galileo’s condemnation by the Roman Inquisition in 1633 for holding that the Earth revolves around the Sun.

Today’s leading experts on the subject, however, tend to either strongly qualify or outright deny the notion that religion and science were historically in conflict. Neither did science undermine religion (Brooke, 2009), experts claim, nor has religion typically impeded scientific growth (Harrison, 2015). The rise of Christianity did not cause the demise of classical philosophy (Lindberg, 2009); the Medieval Church did not suppress the growth of science (Shank, 2009); and there was “no such thing as a [systematic] conflict between science and religion” in the times of Galileo (Shapin, 1998). His trial by the Inquisition is instead seen as a rare exception to an otherwise constructive relationship between the Church and science, evidenced by countless cases of scientists who were deeply religious, who were religiously inspired to do science, who were directly funded by the Church, or who owe their scientific productivity to the vast network of early modern cultivated clergymen (Brooke, 1991, Shapin, 1998, Harrison, 1998, Osler, 2001, Feingold, 2003, and Hannam, 2011, among many others). ...

The consensus is clear: “as a theory believed by working historians, the conflict hypothesis is dead” (Hannam, 2009); it “has now been thoroughly debunked,” as a “mixture of exaggerations, dishonest emphases, misunderstandings, and outright lies” (Hutchings and Ungureanu, 2022, p. 15); “erected on insubstantial foundations” (Russell, 2000, p. 15), it is nothing but “the greatest myth in the history of science” (Numbers, 2009, p.1).1

He goes on to argue that Europe had a Christian revival in 1520-1720, and this stalled the progress of science somewhat.

Evolutionist-atheist Jerry Coyne is unconvinced, but has some similar views:

Instead, I’d say that people like Numbers and Ruse adopt the “no conflict” hypothesis because it is more or less a “woke” point of view: it goes along with the virtue-flaunting idea that you can have your Jesus and Darwin, too. You don’t get popular by touting a conflict, as I’ve learned, but people love to hear that you can be religious and also embrace modern science.
Numbers and Ruse are dead, so I don't know about them. But it is bizarre to say European science was held back by Christianity during 1520-1720. That was the time of Copernicus, Tycho, Kepler, Galileo, Boyle, Hooke, Newton, Leibniz, etc. The first great anatomy book was written. Europe lept ahead of the whole world in science.

While people like to point on a dispute between Galileo and the Pope, it did not hurt the progress of science. Galileo continued to get Church sponsorship, and to publish scientific works. No other religion wsa sponsoring scientific works.

2 comments:

CFT said...

If I want to stir cake mix, I don't use a chainsaw.
If I want to look at the stars, I don't use a microscope.
If I want to talk to a girl and start a family someday or comfort the grieving or raise a child, I don't read treaties on higher dimensional mathematical manifolds, or diddle with useless speculation about one dimensional point masses warping four dimensional math models that cheat on their own time definitions.

Science is a useful tool, but it is only appropriate for the right task at hand, just like every other tool ever created by man. It can't help you be a better person, but it can help you cure diseases, or in Anthony Fauci's case, help create a plague to kill millions of people...in the name of 'I was just curious what would happen... even though everyone with half a brain warned me not to'.

Science has no moral or ethical restraints in its design or foundation. It isn't supposed to, for the same reason spoons and forks don't come with warning signs about them being able to cause obesity. Science is a tool to find out how something works, not tell you why you shouldn't do something terrible (or incredibly stupid) with it.

I also note that science has no ability whatsoever to instill virtue or promote moral and ethical restraint and behavior, Christianity does.
Science denigrates the concepts of the individual such as responsibility, self awareness and conscious choice, while Christianity promotes those concepts highly so the individual might control themselves instead of requiring a bloated government to micromanage their lives by force at incredible expense and misery.

Roger said...

Well put.