Science vs. Religion (I)

Raymo, Chet

SCIENCE VS. RELIGION (I) CHET RAYMO SOME TOUGH QUESTIONS It was a moment of consequence. Galileo Galilei, seventy-years-old, blind and feeble, knelt on the marble floor of a Roman palace before...

...Already, computers mimic human intelligence with remarkable fidelity...
...is talking us into abandoning our true selves...
...If to have a soul means anything at all, it means to be confident in our specialness, our uniqueness, our individual significance in the cosmos...
...What about consciousness...
...If there has been a failure, it is on the part of theologians and philosophers to define our "true selves" in a way that is consistent with the scientific way of knowing...
...The self comes into existence slowly as cells divide, multiply, and specialize, guided by the DNA, organized by experience...
...What they meant, of course, was take no one's word but ours...
...We admit that Galileo was right about the respective places of Earth and sun, but we still insist upon the cosmic centrality of self...
...The "mechanisms" of molecular biology astonished with their generative magic...
...This idea of an immaterial, immortal self is among the most cherished of human beliefs...
...Soon, genetic engineers will be able to add or subtract features both benign and deleterious from our physical selves...
...We are earth, air, and water made conscious...
...Who is prepared to turn over our medical and technological establishments to revivalists, crystal-gazers, or astrologers...
...Research suggests that the difference between animal and human intelligence is a matter of degree rather than kind...
...The vast majority of Americans believe in an immaterial self that comes into being whole and entire at conception and survives the physical disintegration of the body...
...But body-soul dualism resides as a hard kernel at the heart of our culture...
...adults can be called scientifically literate, and only 13 percent have a minimum understanding of scientific processes...
...We cling to it...
...In retrospect, the church admits it made a mistake in condemning Galileo, although it took 350 years to acknowledge doing so...
...The study of the history of science in recent decades has made abundantly clear that our dream of objectivity was an illusion...
...it is too useful...
...And rightly so...
...Scientists have plumbed the human machine and found no ghost, no thing that lingers when the body' s substance turns to dust...
...Historians debate how Galileo's conflict with papal authorities came to this sorry pass...
...From the time of Isaac Newton (1642-1727), mathematical deduction and experimentation became the sole arbiters of scientific truth, administrated by a secular establishment anchored in local scientific societies...
...We have indeed lost a compelling vision of what might be our "true selves," and science does not provide the moral guidance we desperately seek...
...We must bring what we believe into harmony with what we know...
...But Galileo's misfortune worked to the advantage of science...
...Or so say the scientists...
...It will not be enough to simply assert the old dualism of body and spirit...
...Science is not going to go away...
...As we approach the end of the millennium, our ambiguous feelings about science appear to be deepening...
...We were taught that the self is there at the beginning, fully formed, in the fertilized egg, and that it survives the body's death and lives forever...
...And the "quantification" of mathematical physics swept me away with its lofty elegance...
...What we know of the world may be limited, partial, even subjective, but it is firmly held...
...Neurobiologists have convincingly demonstrated that memories arc webs of electrochemical connections in the brain...
...There is little chance that science will be suppressed by the dominant culture...
...Then where resides the disembodied soul...
...The soul as a thing separate from the body has been hunted to its lair...
...Niches have a way of becoming filled...
...A new Copernican revolution is under way in science—a revolution in our understanding of the self—and once again the medievalists are shoring up their defenses and wishing the scientific upstarts would go away...
...We now understand that our genetic self is determined by a chemical code that can be read and amended...
...We are hardware and software...
...The myth is consistent with our current understanding of the nature of life...
...The idea is unthinkable...
...However, the latter is not likely to happen...
...And so we live in a state of intellectual schizophrenia, with our way of knowing contradicted by our way of believing...
...In the fertilized human egg there is an arm's length of DNA, some from each parent...
...Astrology, parapsychology, and other New Age superstitions are more popular than ever...
...here is truth to these critiques...
...We are thinking meat...
...The result was a conflict between theology and science that proved devilishly difficult to resolve...
...Consciousness can be turned on, turned off, altered chemically...
...thus, the tension between our way of knowing and our way of believing...
...Theological concepts such as immortality and resurrection need to be reexamined in the light of the new science...
...Even such confirmed positivists as Albert Einstein created theories that embody personal, institutional, and cultural influences...
...When the organization of cells disintegrates, the self is gone...
...But the world described by my philosophy and theology teachers bore little resemblance to the world I discovered in chemistry, biology, and physics...
...Surveys show that fewer than 7 percent of U.S...
...The more I have learned about the biological machinery of life and consciousness, the more profoundly miraculous the self has seemed...
...Our minds are electrical circuits firing like the chips of computers...
...This was the natural philosophy that I learned in Catholic schools in the 1950s and '60s, even as I studied chemistry, biology, and physics...
...We desperately want it to be true...
...In coming years, biological science will present us with staggering moral dilemmas...
...This much is certain: We will learn more and more about the biological bases of life and consciousness...
...If the churches are to provide us with desperately-needed moral guidance, they must offer a vision of our "true selves" which is consistent with—and relevant to—the emerging biology of self...
...The Hebrew and Christian Scriptures tell us that God created the first man and woman out of the slime of the earth, breathed life into those creatures, and pronounced creation good...
...Even the most recalcitrant medievalist now admits that the Earth revolves around the sun...
...More important, science made no use of irreconcilable polarities...
...I was impressed by the impetus toward conceptual unity in science, and by the ability of science to achieve consensus across barriers of religion, class, politics, ethnic origin, and gender...
...Our bodies are a mess of chemicals...
...We were weary of the seemingly endless squabbles of metaphysicians, and dreamed of objectivity, even if it meant focusing our attention on the small part of human experience that is amenable to logical analysis...
...Nevertheless, many of us who were influenced by positivist principles remain impressed by the ability of the sciences to achieve consensus...
...When machine intelligence becomes functionally indistinguishable from human intelligence, will we concede that machines are conscious...
...We sought clarity at the cost of completeness...
...The lair is empty...
...A self that is a speck of cosmic dust in a meaningless void—accidental, impermanent, inconsequential to the gods...
...Or, for that matter, to the likes of Appleyard and Havel...
...All that is wonderful in this world," said Augustine, "is included in that miracle of miracles, the world itself...
...The treads of the staircase are pairs of chemical units called nucleotides...
...Havel singles out "rational, cognitive thinking" and "depersonalized objectivity" as the abiding sins of our century...
...Science seeks clarity at the cost of completeness...
...According to the best scientific theories, we are literally animated slime...
...Fundamentalist religions grow stronger at the expense of what used to be called mainstream faiths...
...n 13...
...Not only is science unnecessary to our happiness, he argues, it is positively inimical to it: "Science, quietly and inexplicitly...
...All that was missing was the seventyyear-old man on his knees...
...DNA is a molecule with the form of a 12 spiral staircase...
...Machines are intelligent, and are becoming smarter every day...
...The source of our end-of-century intellectual malaise is not science but our lingering commitment to a philosophical dualism that has proven to be scientifically bankrupt...
...But we can't hanker back to a discredited medieval dualism, nor should we lodge our nostalgia for the disembodied soul in the remaining niches of scientific ignorance...
...And fair enough...
...But where do we find this disembodied self...
...It means to believe that the human self is undefilable and capable of ennobling the universe...
...Memories...
...Do chimps have souls...
...There are four kinds of treads— designated A-T, T-A, G-C, and C-G by biologists—altogether 3 billion steps in the human DNA, a coded recipe fur making a person...
...Pride, foolishness, simple misunderstanding...
...Matter" and "spirit," "body" and "soul," "natural" and "supernatural" denoted meaningless distinctions...
...The agenda for reinterpretation is considerable...
...I am not optimistic about the short haul...
...The task may seem insurmountable...
...The new authority was international, nonsectarian, and fiercely independent...
...Will machines have souls...
...We tolerate, even grudgingly admire science as the source of our health, wealth, and well-being, but we refuse to commit ourselves to the truths of science...
...It is far too fruitful a way of knowing to be denied by human curiosity...
...It is decidedly pleasant to believe that we reside at the nexus of a chain of being—lords of material creation, with one foot up on the immaterial rungs of the ladder...
...Soon, biologists will have a complete step-by-step transcription of the code—and the power to change it...
...If our way of knowing is not to be divided against our ways of believing, philosophers and theologians must face the challenge of redefining the self in a way that is consistent with twenty-first-century science, respectful of religious traditions, and elevating of the human spirit...
...What had changed was the standard by which a segment of society decides what is true, and not everyone embraced the new standard, certainly not the Roman church, which went its own way, advocating in place of the new learning a medieval natural philosophy based on polarities—immanent and transcendent, body and soul, natural and supernatural...
...The motto of Britain's Royal Society, established in 1662, was "Take no one's word...
...The photograph is symbolic: In spite of the pope's cautious and carefully worded proclamation to the contrary, orthodox theology and science remain essentially at odds...
...Even if driven underground from its established position, it will survive...
...What does science offer instead...
...Chimpanzees can be taught the use of language and mathematical abstraction...
...Appleyard is a knowledgeable historian and critic of culture...
...In Britain, Bryan Appleyard's book Understanding the Present (1992) has stirred up a storm of antiscience sentiment...
...Writing in the prestigious journal Nature, Dai Rees, the secretary and chief executive of Britain's Medical Research Council, claims science has "contributed massively to human misery" by undermining traditional stable societies and beliefs without offering any compensating vision of what human life might be...
...Within a century of his recantation, science had severed its ties with ecclesiastical tradition and scriptural authority...
...We must come to terms with this scientific truth: There is no such thing as a disembodied self...
...We resist...
...Science, according to the church of my youth, was "materialistic," "mechanistic," and "quantitative," and these terms were meant pejoratively, implying a partial and paltry view of rcalCHKT RAYMO teaches science at Sttmehill College in North Easton, Massachusetts, writes a science column for the Boston Globe, and is a novelist...
...If 11 we were not able to define the soul in scientific terms, then we were willing to wait until it became practical to do so...
...As for myself, 1 look at the trillions of interacting cells that are my body, the webs and flickering neurons that are my consciousness, and see a self vastly more majestic than the paltry soul illustrated in my grade-school catechism as a circle besmirched with sin...
...We assert belief in a self that is more than the mere sum of its parts...
...Even secular intellectuals that scientists used to count on as friends have begun to express doubts about the value of the scientific enterprise...
...Now we must relearn how to think ourselves "good...
...Galileo Galilei, seventy-years-old, blind and feeble, knelt on the marble floor of a Roman palace before assembled princes of the church and renounced his life work, affirming, against the evidence of reason and his own senses, that the Earth was the fixed center of the universe...
...ity...
...Most of us were raised to believe in a self that only temporarily resides in a physical frame...
...The world of my science classes seemed grander, more marvelously contrived, and infinitely richer than the anthropomorphic and anthropocentric cosmos I studied in Natural Philosophy 101...
...But so must the new cosmology of Galileo have seemed intractable to theologians and philosophers of the seventeenth century...
...Genetic engineering, cloning, reproductive technologies, consciousness-modifying drugs and surgeries: The possibilities for mischief are frightening...
...The photograph that accompanied the newspaper story about the church's admission of error in the condemnation of Galileo showed John Paul II dressed in Renaissance garb sitting on a Renaissance throne in a Renaissance palace, surrounded by other men also dressed in Renaissance clothes...
...Nothing we have learned would suggest the need to revive the old polarities...
...The "materialism" of modern quantum chemistry seemed more like a kind of cosmic music...
...Many of us who came of scientific age during the '50s and '60s were deeply influenced by positivist philosophers such as Carnap, Frank, Hempel, Langer, Lindsay, Margenau, Nagel, Northrop, Quine, Rcichenbach, and Skinner...
...Memories can be jogged electrically, not surgically...
...But science is not the culprit...
...Most damaging of all is the address of Czech poet, playwright, and statesman Vaclav Havel, delivered before the World Economic Forum and published with the title "The End of the Modern Era...
...It does not pretend to offer the kind of integrative human vision that has traditionally been the province of theologians and philosophers...
...Against all the evidence of science, we cling to a medieval notion of the soul...
...All may have played a part...
...He says: "Traditional science with its usual coolness, can describe the different ways we might destroy ourselves, but it cannot offer us truly effective and practicable instructions on how to avert them...

Vol. 121 • September 1994 • No. 16


 
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