Thursday, March 16, 2006

Is Science True? II

Is our exploration of the natural world a reliable avenue towards uncovering truth?

Judging by our success at explaining the world around us (eclipses are natural events), the root of diseases (viral, bacterial, mental and genetic), and the fabric of the universe (matter breaks down into verified components of fantastical properties), I'd have to say that science is, indeed, a reliable avenue towards truth.

And so would everyone who does not still fear that elementals cause storms, earthquakes and eclipses, everyone who does not live in fear of spirits, and pray that they spare their children, their crops, themselves from sickness and disease, everyone who knows that the world is a reliable place, and not at the command of alchemists, sorcerers, magicians and capricious spirits, who can bend the very earth to their will.

The reason that we face the world with confidence is because of the work of science. It was science who discovered the roots of disease, the regular motions of the stars and planets, and the physical laws governing matter.

Of course, many of us do leave in fear – fear of the stars, of god's wrath, of bad luck. But even this is within the context of an implicit trust in technology – like cars and planes and telephones – that are founded on faith in the truths we have discovered about the natural world.

Are there any limitations to this amazing tool?

Yes, and they strike at the heart of who we are, why we are here, and what other forces inhabit the universe with us. If we cannot formulate an explanation for what we see happening, predict (in both a negative and positive sense) what should happen based on those expectations, and then carry out experiments (and not just us, but anyone who wants to verify the results), then the tool fails us.

So no proofs about the existence or lack of gods, the supernatural, the afterlife. Not because science is hostile to faith, but because God is invisible to science - by definition.

So when you look at science and ask only, "Does it support my religious faith?" you may wonder why science does not endorse religion - this is why; it can't. When you look at the complexity of the universe, you may wonder why scientists don't just give up and admit that God did it - this is why; it isn't that it is a wrong answer; but it isn't the RIGHT KIND of answer.

When you look at science from the perspective of the quest for understanding the universe, "God did it" is an unsatisfactory answer - because the scientist is asking a different question - "How did it happen?" And as an answer, "God did it" is not nearly specific enough.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

You want specific?

Big Bang? Nobody knows what it is.

Gravity? We don't know what that is for sure either.

Life? Who knows how it started?

Is that specific enough?

Greg Myers said...

Specific enough for what? Of course there are areas of uncertainty. That does not mean that we have no ideas, and it does not mean that what we have figured out is in doubt. Science is a great tool (you benefited from it when you posted your message), but it is not of any use at all for studying God - God is invisible to science.

Anonymous said...

Thats quite a claim.

Proof please.

Greg Myers said...

Proof of what, that God is invisible to science? It is axiomatic. Science is the study of natural causes. God is not a natural cause. Can't be the subject of an experiment. If you do have a theometer, please explain how it works.

Anonymous said...

That is true. God and Science are two completely different things. God is simply there to explain an after life. The bible tells you not to fear death, and why? because you don't really die. the end. science can't explain what happens to you when you die. science is simply here to explain the now.

Greg Myers said...

The difficulty is that we have no proof at all that God exists. At the very least, there should be measurable impacts in the natural world that would point to some supernatural agent. We find no such impacts. As far as what happens after death, again, we have no evidence that anything happens after death, except decomposition.