Moern physicists no longer understand laws of physics as prescriptive injunctions that determine what the universe does. Now they see them as just descriptions of how the universe seems to behave. Is their rejection of law just a desire to get the law maker (God) out of the picture? That is abundantly clear, at least for some scientists. Paul Davies, a major physicist, thinks so:
Many scientists who are struggling to construct a fully comprehensive theory of the physical universe openly admit that part of the motivation is to finally get rid of God, whom they view as a dangerous and infantile delusion, And not only God but any vestige of God-talk, such as 'meaning,' 'purpose,' or 'design' in nature. These scientists see religion as so fraudulent and sinister that nothing less than total theological cleansing will do. [1]
The concept of law was formed
in a time when scientists inextricably linked God with science.
Robert Boyle purposely appealed to dive command in creation, as did
Newton.
[2] These were devout believers, and it was also expedient in the
confessional English state. The English dealt with heretics by not
inviting them to weekend at Westmoreland or by passing them over for
honors. After the time of Newton the field of scientific acuity
shifted to France. The French put heretics in jail. The Catholic
church was much more in charge in France, enjoying the support of the
monarchy, than in Protestant England.[ [3] Thus the French Philosophs rebelled with great ferocity against the
Church and religious belief. The French rebellion carried over into
all areas of modern letters, not the least in science.
Modern scientists since the
enlightenment have sought to take God out of the picture.
Philosophers are honest enough to admit there is a problem calling
the law-like regularity “description.” After Chalmers explains
that Boyle's “stark ontology” made nature passive and left God to
do all the work, he writes:
I assume that, from the modern point of view, placing such a heavy, or indeed any, burden on the constant and willful intervention of God is not acceptable. But eliminating God from the account leaves us with the problem. How can activity and law like behavior be introduced into a world characterized in terms of passive or categorical properties only?[4]
At least the scientific
realists, such as Calmers know there is a problem in the tension
between unalterable regularity, and description. Many scientists
either don't see the problem, or refuse to acknowledge it. Some
assert a confidence in science's ability to one day answer all
questions.
In recent years, under the
influence of the new atheism, some physicists have began to compete
with God. They claim not only to
offer the better explaination, but to learn enough so as to one day
erase the God concept from any serious consideration. ,
(in answer to a question for discussion posed by the Tempelton
foundation, “does science make belief in God obsolete?”): “Yes
'science' we mean the entire enterprise of secular reason and
knowledge (including history and philosophy), not just people with
test tubes and white lab coats. Traditionally, a belief in God was
attractive because it promised to explain the deepest puzzles about
origins. Where did the world come from? What is the basis of life?
How can the mind arise from the body? Why should anyone be moral?"[5] Of course he offers no evidence that science can answer such things
(notice he expanded the definition of science to include disciplines
many scientists seek to get rid of (philosophy)vi
that is an area that could answer the questions that science can't.
He also offers no evidence that religion still can't answer them, but
he goes on to say, “Yet over the millennia, there has been an
inexorable trend: the deeper we probe these questions, and the more
we learn about the world in which we live, the less reason there is
to believe in God.” So he's made two fallacious moves here, the
classic bait and switch and straw man argument. He says science makes
God obsolete but then only if we expand science to include
non-science. We could just include modern theology instead of
nineteenth century theology and bring religion into science. Sorry,
but belief in God does not rest with young earth creationism.
Pinker is not just using young
Earth creationism to debunck all religion, even though that is a
straw man argument. He's really making the same kind of answer that
physicist Sean Carroll is making. He's saying “since we now have
the capacity to learn everything (someday) we don't need to appeal to
God to answer what we don't know thus he asserts that the only reason
to believe is the God of the gaps argument). Carroll puts it a bit
differently:
Modern cosmology attempts to come up with the most powerful and economical possible understanding of the universe that is consistent with observational data. It's certainly conceivable that the methods of science could lead us to a self-contained picture of the universe that doesn't involve God in any way. If so, would we be correct to conclude that cosmology has undermined the reasons for believing in God, or at least a certain kind of reason?vii[7]
Of
course this is the standard wrong assumption often made by those
whose skepticism is scientifically based. Explaining nature is not
the only reason to believe in God. Moreover, they are nowhere near
explaining nature in it's
entirety, the TS argument is the best answer to the questions posed
by
the transcendental signifiers.
It's pretty clear that for Carroll, and those who share his outlook
the signifier “science” replaces the signifier “God” in their
metaphysical hierarchy. They still have a TS and that speaks to the
all pervasive nature of the TS. I've
discussed in the previous chapter how the best answer to questions of
origin have to be philosophical. That is confirmed by Pinker when he
argues philosophy as part of science. The TS argument is
philosophical. Science is not the only form of knowledge. Carroll
admits there is not as of yet a theory that explains it all. He
admits, “We
are trying to predict the future: will there ever be a time when a
conventional scientific model provides a complete understanding of
the origin of the universe?”[8] He asserts that most
modern cosmologists already feel we know enough to write off God and
that there are good enough reasons. In
his
2005
article he says, as the title proclaims, “almost all cosmologists
are atheists.”[9]
That
may be true of cosmologists but I doubt it, and I have good reason
to. First, I don't see
any poll of physicists in the article. He only argues anecdotally by
quoting a few people. If there was a poll it would be at least as old
as 2005. A More
extensive study from
2007 (two years after publication of Carroll's article)
don't back
up those findings. This study was done by Harvard professors who find
the majority of
science professors believe in God.[10]
They present a bar
graph that show about 35% professor's ar elite research universities
believe in God with no doubt. About 27% believe but sometimes
have doubts. About 38% are atheists. That actually means that 60% are
not atheists. True that's not cosmologists but there is good reason
to think the majority of cosmologists
are not atheists. The most atheistic groups in the study were
psychologists (61%),
biologists (about 61%),
and mechanical
engineers (50%), not
physicists (among whose ranks cosmologists number). [11]
“Contrary
to popular Opinion, atheists and agnostics do not comprise a majority
of professors even at elite schools, but
they are present in larger numbers than in other types of
institutions.”[12] No group has “almost all” as atheist. Even if cosmologists are
mostly atheists (not studied because they are a handful and highly
specialized) it's still appeal to authority and could be based upon
hubris. They do not have any empirical data at all to prove the
universe could spring from nothing. I will will demonstrate the
problems with this view much more clearly in the next chapter. Let's
just remember the atheist position on this point is an
appeal to faith.
[1] Paul
Davies, Jackpot...op. Cit.,15.
[2] Alan
Chalmers, “Making sense of laws of physics,” Causation and Laws
Of Nature, Dordrecht, Netherlands : Kluwer Academic Publishers,
(Howard Sankey, ed.), 1999, 3-4.
[3] Joseph
Hinman, God, Science, and Ideology. Chapter 2.
[4] Chalmers,
op., cit.
[5] Stephen
Pinker, quoted on website, John
Tempelton Foundation, “A Tempelton conversation, “Does Science
Make Belief in God
Obsolete?” The third in a series of conversations among leading
scientists...Onlne resource, website. URL:
http://www.templeton.org/belief/
accessed 9/4/15.
Tempelton
bio for Pinker: Steven
Pinker is the Johnstone Family Professor in the department of
psychology at Harvard University. He is the author of seven books,
including The
Language Instinct, How the Mind Works, The Blank Slate, and most
recently, The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human
Nature.
[6] Anthany
Mills, "Why Does Neil deGrasse Tyson Hate Philosophy,"
Real Clear Science. (May 22, 2014) OnLine
resource, URL:
href="http://www.realclearscience.com/articles/2014/05/22/why_does_neil_degrasse_tyson_hate_philosophy.html
accessed 10/7/15.
"In a controversial interview, Neil
deGrasse Tyson dismissed philosophy as “distracting.” The host
of the television series Cosmos even suggested that philosophy could
inhibit scientific progress by encouraging “a little too much
question asking.” He thus follows a growing secular trend that
cordons Science off from all other forms of inquiry, denigrating
whatever falls outside science’s purported boundaries –
especially the more “speculative” pursuits such as philosophy."
[7] Sean
Corroll, ”Does
The Universe Need God?” on
Sean Carroll's website,
Perposterous Universe.com, online resource, URL:
http://preposterousuniverse.com/writings/dtung/
accessed 9/4/2015
Carroll
is an astrophysicist
and a theoretical physicist, Moore Center for Theoretical Physics
and Cosmology, California Institute of Technology. He's
authored many books.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Sean Carroll,"Why (Almost All) Cosmologists Are Atheists,"
Faith and Philosophy, 22,
(2005) p.
622.
[10] Neil
Gross and Solon Simmons, “How Religious Are America's College and
University Professors.”
SSRC, (published feb. 2007), PDF URL, accessed 9/4/15 The Author
2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the
http://religion.ssrc.org/reforum/Gross_Simmons.pdf
Association for the Sociology of Religion. All rights reserved. For
permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.
sample was 1,417,
representing over 300,000 professors.
Neil
Gross is assistant professor of sociology at Harvard University. He
works on classical and contemporary sociological
theory, the sociology of culture, and the sociology of
intellectuals. His first book, tentatively titled Richard Rorty's
Pragmatism: The Social Origins of a Philosophy, 1931-1982, is
forthcoming.
Solon
Simmons is assistant professor of conflict analysis and sociology at
George Mason University’s Institute for Conflict Analysis and
Resolution. His recent work has focused on values talk in
congressional speeches, third party
political
candidates, industrial reorganization and the ongoing conservative
critique of American higher education
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid.
"Why Cosmologists are bad statisticians"
ReplyDeleteDoes he deal with the correlation problem here? Possibly, if what he clams is true, it's because atheists are drawn to cosmology,not the other way around. And if that's not considered, then there's nothing more you need to say.
Btw, Rubenstein gets into this trend a bit - science as religion replacement - in her multiverse book, and elsewhere. Old story, according to her....
those are both excellent points. Darn I meant to say that. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteMy mother worked as a pychologist in the school system for many years.
ReplyDeleteOnce, she told me about a teacher who claimed to her that counselling was proven to be ineffectual because, statistically, those children in counselling were having demonstably more trouble than those who weren't.....
ROTFLOL! that's funny Anon I am reminded of Bob Dylan's line (the premise of the song is he dreams of WWIII) went to psychiatrist and told him the dream, "said it was a bad dream. those old dreams are only in your head."
ReplyDeleteHello Metacrock,
ReplyDeleteI was asked to give commentary on an article. I wondered what you thought of this:
https://answersingenesis.org/creation-vs-evolution/evidence-for-young-earth-creation/
learn to make links like this link to your thing above
ReplyDeleteare yo seriously arguing for YEC? That is a real mistake, you are only going to ruin your credibility.
ReplyDeleteNo, I'm not. Notice what I did not say. I did not say I was a young earth creationist. You already know that I am an old earth guy. It is just that I wondered what you thought of that article. I was asked to comment on it and it was given to me via email.
ReplyDeleteYou shouldn't read things into a person's comment that are simply not there.
ReplyDeleteYEC is unscientific. The vast majority of scientific commemorators oppose YEC. That is for a reason. it's not credible.
ReplyDeleteJesse said...
ReplyDeleteNo, I'm not. Notice what I did not say. I did not say I was a young earth creationist. You already know that I am an old earth guy. It is just that I wondered what you thought of that article. I was asked to comment on it and it was given to me via email.
5:38 PM
Jesse said...
You shouldn't read things into a person's comment that are simply not there.
hey you are right, I apologize!
The earth is only a few thousand years old. That’s a fact, plainly revealed in God’s Word. So we should expect to find plenty of evidence for a young earth. And that’s what we find — in the earth’s geology, biology, paleontology, and even astronomy.
ReplyDeleteNothing in Bible says the age of the earth they have to infur that from the begats. But we know there are gaps in all of that material. Even Fransics Shafer admitted that
Literally hundreds of dating methods could be used to attempt an estimate of the earth’s age, and the vast majority of them point to a much younger earth than the 4.5 billion years claimed by secularists. The following series of articles presents what Answers in Genesis researchers picked as the ten best scientific evidences that contradict billions of years and confirm a relatively young earth and universe.
those are not the most valid methods. All the major methods science uses show different