Tuesday, November 14, 2006

What Was God Thinking? Science Can't Tell

This is an essay that caught my eye at work last year, so I photocopied and saved it. Coincidentally I randomly pulled it out from a stack of papers on my table this morning. It appeared in Time magazine, in the November 14, 2005 issue. The essay, written by Eric Cornell, is adapted from a speech tht he gave for his induction into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Cornell won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2001.

Scientists, this is a call to action. But also one to inaction. Why am I the messenger? Because my years of scientific research have made me a renowned expert on my topic: God. Just kidding. You'll soon see what I mean. Let me pose you a question, not about God but about the heavens: "Why is the sky blue?" I offer two answers: 1) The sky is blue because of the wavelength dependence of Rayleigh scattering; 2) The sky is blue because blue is the color God wants it to be.

My scientific research has been in areas connected to optical phenomena, and I can tell you a lot about the Rayleigh-scattering answer. Neither I nor any other scientist, however, has anything scientific to say about answer No. 2, the God answer. Not to say that the God answer is unscientific, just that the methods of science don't speak to that answer.

Before we understood Rayleigh scattering, there was no scientifically satisfactory explanation for the sky's blueness. The idea that the sky is blue because God wants it to be blue existed before scientists came to understand Rayleigh scattering, and it continues to exist today, not in the least undermined by our advance in scientific understanding. The religious explanation has been supplemented--but not supplanted--by advances in scientific knowledge. We now may, if we care to, think of Rayleigh scattering as the method God has chosen to implement his color scheme.

Right now (2005) there is a federal trial under way in Dover, Pa., over a school policy requiring teachers to tell students about "intelligent design" before teaching evolution. The central idea of intelligent design is that nature is the way it is because God wants it to be that way. This is not an assertion that can be tested in a scientific way, but studied in the right context, it is an interesting notion. As a theological idea, intelligent design is exciting. Listen: If nature is the way it is because God wants it to be that way, then, by looking at nature, one can learn what it is that God wants! The microscope and the telescope are no longer merely scientific instruments; they are windows into the mind of God.

But as exciting as intelligent design is in theology, it is a boring idea in science. Science isn't about knowing the mind of God; it's about understanding nature and the reasons for things. The thrill is that our ignorance exceeds our knowledge; the exciting part is what we don't understand yet. If you want to recruit the future generation of scientists, you don't draw a box around all our scientific understanding to date and say, "Everything outside this box we can explain only by invoking God's will." Back in 1855, no one told the future Lord Rayleigh that the scientific reason for the sky's blueness is that God wants it that way. Or if someone did tell him that, we can all be happy that the youth was plucky enough to ignore them. For science, intelligent design is a dead-end idea.

My call to action for scientists is, Work to ensure that the intelligent-design hypothesis is taught where it can contribute to the vitality of a field (as it could perhaps in theology class) and not taught in science class, where it would suck the excitement out of one of humankind's great ongoing adventures.

Now for my call to inaction: most scientists will concede that as powerful as science is, it can teach us nothing about values, ethics, morals or, for that matter, God. Don't go about pretending otherwise! For example, science can try to predict how human activity may change the climate, but science can't tell us whether those changes would be good or bad.

Should scientists, as humans, make judgments on ethics, morals, values and religion? Absolutely. Should we act on these judgments, in an effort to do good? You bet. Should we make use of the goodwill we may have accumulated through our scientific achievements to help us do good? Why not? Just don't claim that your science tells you "what is good" ... or "what is God."

Act: fight to keep intelligent design out of science classrooms! Don't act: don't say science disproves intelligent design. Stick with the plainest truth: science says nothing about intelligent design, and intelligent design brings nothing to science, and should be taught in theology, not science classes.

My value judgment is that further progress in science will be good for humanity. My argument here is offered in the spirit of trying to preserve science from its foes--but also from its friends.



My only addition to this essay would be this:

Science, in its most basic definition can only tell us about phenomena that we observe today. Science tells us how things work, not how they got here. Since evolution offers only speculation (and false speculation at that
) regarding the origin of life, evolution should not be taught in science classrooms, either.

Comments:
Evolution is a piece of crap.
Why fill our heads with this nonsense, and not the theory of creation?
You prefer a supposed "big bang"?
What exactly does this bang say about your existance?
You were a random accident, that's what.
What I know about the Universe, it is no accident.
 
Evolution is crap. It really annoys me that this nonsense is taught as "science" in our schools & universities.
Since no humans were around for the first five days of creation, why not take God's word for it?
There is simply too much order and precision in the universe to say that it came about by cosmic chance, accident or whatever.
So once again we are in agreeement...
 
in that case kayla, i'd have to say you don't know much about the universe.
 
My comments are not directed at you, AG
I will not debate/argue with you.
This is a forum for me to express my opinions, period.
 
The fact that the vast majority of lifeforms on this planet have come and gone with no definable reason for their existence should be proof enough that intelligent design is implausible.

However...

The idea that a theory based on actual observation and (admittedly flawed) testing should not be discussed in a SCIENCE class on the same level with a story from one of many religious works is insane. Religion belongs in church, science belongs in the classroom. Trying to combine the two will result in little more than an expeditious demise for the human race.
 
I'll just repeat the obvious TRUTH => EVOLUTION IS A PIECE OF CRAP!

It takes MORE faith to believe that we came into existence after a "big bang", then oozed up from primordial slime through a massive series of random chance mutations over a period of billions and billions of years, than it does to believe we were divinely created in the image of God. Why is Creation such an unreasonable concept to grasp?

Atheists & Evolutionists are such FOOLS!

"The FOOL has said in his heart, there is no God." - Psalm 14:1

------------------

Green - I like your new idea with this blog. If it's alright, I am going to add you to my sidebar under "TRUTH Blogs".

Stop by sometime ==>> GENERATION X-POSE


There is always some controversy and great debates going on with Atheists, Evolutionists, Free-Thinkers, Pro-Choice Femi-Nazis, Homosexuals, Flaming Liberals or just plain Ignorant Christians – It’s tons of fun!!! Plus - We could always use some intelligent, likeminded, sharp and witty believers on the "TRUTH" Team to put these FOOLS in their place.

Talk to You Soon - Take Care!

~ Dani
 
dani:

feel free to add a link to this blog wherever you like. The more traffic it gets the better (more fun) it will be.
 
Cool - Thanks Green!

One other thought...

The concepts of Evolution vs. Creation are easy enough for toddlers to understand => ABC’s of CHRISTIANITY.

How simple is that?
 
green - i would never for a minute lump you in the same category as dani.

You may or may not be wrong in your opinions, but at least you occasionally listen to the other side.

Dani is just (and i say this with all the kindness she deserves) a psychopath who screams at people that have different views.

I'd be weary of taking too much praise from her.
 
and kayla - express your views away.

I'll do the same. And one of my views is that from the evidence you presented, you don't know much about the universe.

Feel free to not call it a debate if that makes you feel better.
 
look, green, your friend dani is a raging neo-con. you keep such good company LOL
 
Scribe - You say, I'm a "raging neo-con"? What does that mean exactly?

I suppose I could take that as a compliment.

-------------------------

Melbourne man says - "Dani is just (and i say this with all the kindness she deserves) a psychopath who screams at people that have different views."

Thanks - Is that the kind of "love" and "acceptance" the homosexual community claims to embrace and demands from others?

Well, I certainly don't march down a street professing to be out and proud with "gay pride" while demanding tolerance and acceptance, but at the same time fiercely opposing the views of fundamental Christianity.

HYPOCRITES!
 
AG, scribe: Get into your corners, there's no need start the name caling (psychopath, neo-con, etc.)Everyone's comments are welcome here, even Dani's. While she and I don't see eye to eye on everything, I do agree with her literal interpretation of the Bible, and if her linking this site to hers helps the readership grow, well that's fine.

Dani: Please discontinue ranting about homosexuals and the like, comments which came out of nowhere and are really uncalled for. Your comments are welcome, but please keep them relevant to the post that you are commenting on. Tangents are fine but not when it resorts to retaliation name calling.

Now back to our regularly scheduled programming.
 
dani,

I can't believe I have to define the term raging neo-con, but ehre goes:

A person whose strict and dogmatic adherence to supposed "traditional values" and belief systems causes them to rant and rave in an attempt to override any dissenting points of view.
 
hey it's your show - invite who you want.

I'm just saying, just as there are some atheists whose endorsements I wouldn't like, you might want to consider what it means if people think you and dani are in the same camp.

And dani - I would never presume to speak on behalf of a whole community, but if i were, what makes you think my views are on behalf of the gay community? I could be speaking for all bike riders. Or cheese lovers.
 
you cheese lovers are all the same! Immoral anal-sex loving thugs ruining our society!!!
 
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