I listened to Weekend Edition on NPR radio one day in January, 2012 and thought for a moment I was tuned to the wrong station. Rachel Martin’s interview with Alvin Plantinga was such a pile of softball pandering to Christian mythology I found myself smacking my forehead in disbelief.
Plantinga, a self-proclaimed Christian, begins by professing his discomfort with science being at odds with his religion – essentially admitting his goal is to find some way to defend his faith by contriving an accomodation of its preposterous contentions within a discipline of factual knowledge. He then proceeds with a straw man argument that it is ‘naturalism’ as a philosophy, rather than ‘science’, per se, that is in conflict with religion. He proceeds to argue that scientific theories can address only ‘closed systems’ and how, if you consider ‘open systems’, it is entirely conceivable for some ‘god’ to create a horse out of thin air in the middle of Times Square. Sorry, but the last time I checked, open systems were not only well within the realm of scientific analysis, but also subject to physical laws.
So as a professional scientist (and, full disclosure, an avowed atheist) let me set a few things straight. In fact, the multiple incarnations of religion have done more to stifle the intellectual advancement of humanity than any other cultural force in recorded human history. Science, by comparison, provides the best available means of approximating the truth because it is testable – it has proven religious contentions to be false on countless occasions. We can start with earth not being the center of the universe, but the examples are endless. The inverse is clearly invalid. No religion has ever proven science to be false on any matter – ever – not even once. Furthermore, science is infinitely more influential than any religion because it is useful and has predictive power, hence the anguish and discomfort of the pious. The creation myth generates no mechanism for understanding life processes, whereas evolutionary biology provides a unifying famework for comprehending the infinite variety of living things, and their logical analysis.
So here are four basic reasons why religion is completely irreconcilable with science, and always will be.
In summary, whereas the existence of religion is competely superfluous and inconsequential to the enterprise of science, religion cannot afford to be oblivious to the obvious intellectual power of science. Thus, proponents of religious beliefs have always sought, and will always continue to seek, validation for their mythological delusions within the realm of science.
Comment
Thanks! Great!
Comment by Ruth Anthony-Gardner on February 26, 2012 at 4:17pm Concise and impressive, thanks!
Comment by thewoodenwand on February 26, 2012 at 4:09pm Have you seen my video Science proves there is a God?
I put limitless restrictions of God and there is only one way he could exist, in a dimension that would be well beyond ours and he would in no way disturb ours, if he created us he would have no reason to fix us, he would not have made an errors in the first place
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