Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Boston Globe:Faith-based science an oxymoron

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Boston Globe:Faith-based science an oxymoron

SCIENCE MUSINGS

ANOTHER IGNORANT ARTICLEFROM THE BOSTON GLOBE

Faith-based science is not really science

 

"There is no such thing, however, as Protestant science, Catholic

science, Islamic science, Jewish science, or Hindu science."

 

By Chet Raymo, 7/15/2003

 

ow that we have been introduced to the idea of faith-based social

programs and faith-based public-education (vouchers), surely it is

time for the administration in Washington to make its move on faith-

based science. Let's get the government out of science. Shut down the

National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

Close shop at the national labs and observatories. Stop federal

funding of research in our universities.

 

 

Let faith communities sponsor science. Provide tax support for faith-

based ''scientific'' groups such as California's Institute for

Creation Research. Let local school boards decide what gets taught in

the science classroom without interference from the federal courts.

 

Nearly half of Americans believe the Earth was created sometime in

the past 10,000 years; why isn't that view taught in public school

science? Almost half of Americans profess faith in astrology; why

doesn't astrology get equal time with astronomy?

 

I'm being facetious, of course. Few things could be more reckless or

dangerous to our nation's health, wealth and well-being than

shattering the traditional barrier between science and faith. Yet

more and more Americans urge just that, and they are an important

part of the present administration's constituency.

 

The secularization of science is one of the glories of civilization.

Read any research report in any science journal and you will not be

able to guess the religion, if any, of the authors. Walk into the

research labs of any of the great faith-based universities -- Boston

College, say, or Brandeis University -- and the science you encounter

will be indistinguishable from that of any other university of

stature anywhere in the world.

 

The scientific community has evolved ways to arrive at consensus

based on reproducible empirical evidence, not faith. The science

traditionally taught in our schools is consensus science, an evolving

body of knowledge that makes no claim to infallibility. It does,

however, claim an unprecedented degree of reliability.

 

Make no mistake: A 10,000-year-old Earth has no more empirical claim

on the science classroom than astrology, ESP, or a belief in alien

abductions. When the companies that supply textbooks to our public

schools start editing the scientific consensus so as not to offend

certain faith sensitivities, we begin our descent into ignorance and

superstition.

 

When faith becomes a criteria for deciding the public school science

curriculum, you can be sure that what is being taught is not science.

Faith-based science is an oxymoron.

 

None of this is to put down religion or deny its importance in

American life. Indeed, scientifically acquired knowledge of the world

can give depth and meaning to the religious experience.

 

Microbiologist Ursula Goodenough in her book, ''The Sacred Depths of

Nature,'' reminds us that the word religion derives from the Latin

religio, to bind together again. She writes: ''We have throughout the

ages sought connection with higher powers in the sky or beneath the

earth, or with ancestors living in some other realm. We have also

sought, and found, religious fellowship with one another. And now we

realize that we are connected to all creatures. Not just in food

chains or ecological equilibria. We share a common ancestor. . . . We

share evolutionary constraints and possibilities. We are connected

all the way down.''

 

Religious faith is deeply ingrained in human culture, and has

inspired great works of art, music, literature and architecture, as

well as stupendous works of charity. It has also been a source of

pogroms, crusades, jihads and intolerance: Witness faith-based

confrontations in Northern Ireland, Palestine, Kashmir, Kosovo, and

East Timor.

 

There is no such thing, however, as Protestant science, Catholic

science, Islamic science, Jewish science, or Hindu science. A Moslem

chemist and a Hindu chemist see eye to eye as chemists. With so much

havoc wreaked in God's name, all the more reason we should preserve

intact those few secular institutions that unite us in global

solidarity.

 

Chet Raymo teaches at Stonehill College. His most recent book

is ''The Path: A One-Mile Walk Through the Universe.''

 

http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/196/science/Faith_based_science_is_n

ot_really_science+.shtml

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...