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Wednesday, October 24, 2007 | Reason : Debate Points | print version Print | Comments |

Document Religion is not incompatible with Science: 'Non-Overlapping Magisteria'

by RichardDawkins.net

Thanks to Kell for bringing this one up.

Religion is not incompatible with science; "non-overlapping magisteria."

Use the comment space below to present your rebuttal. Let's try and be clear and concise, as if this were to be used in a debate.

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1. Comment #81279 by Jolly Bloger on October 24, 2007 at 2:27 pm

 avatarAs Dawkins himself says, a universe with a god will look very different from a universe without one. Science is concerned with explaining what exists, so the truth claims of religion are directly in conflict with empirical science. Those elements of religion divorced from testable truth claims are often no different from secular philosophy.

Other Comments by Jolly Bloger

2. Comment #81325 by gingerhawk on October 24, 2007 at 3:37 pm

Science is concerned with examining what exists (in whatever form) and how it works. If one proposes that God exists (in whatever form), then by definition God falls within the remit of science.

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3. Comment #81375 by stereoroid on October 24, 2007 at 4:25 pm

 avatarI suppose science and religion could, in theory, be NOMA, but only if religion withdrew entirely from the universe we all live in. In its current form, its practitioners can't avoid making statements about the universe: there goes the "non-overlapping" part, out the window.

Other Comments by stereoroid

4. Comment #81379 by DV82XL on October 24, 2007 at 4:31 pm

"Non-overlapping magisteria" was Gould's attempt at a cease-fire agreement between the two, not as a working theory. The whole point being that they could not speak to each others ideas.

The deists broke that to bits with 'Intelligent Design', in essence trying to force an overlap.

Other Comments by DV82XL

5. Comment #81467 by maton100 on October 24, 2007 at 7:15 pm

 avatarDawkins has the best line concerning this one: Why not ask the gardner or the chef what he thinks?

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6. Comment #81572 by kurtdenke on October 24, 2007 at 11:07 pm

I always want to say:

Does your religion make ANY assertion about the world? About how it got here, why it's here, how something in it works or has worked, how it interacts with supernatural entities or processes, what happens to people when they die? Any assertions about any of that at all? If yes, then there's an overlap.

And if no: why should I, or anyone, care about anything your religion asserts? Lunar politics, all of it.

Other Comments by kurtdenke

7. Comment #81576 by Quine on October 24, 2007 at 11:16 pm

 avatarScience and Harry Potter do NOMA rather well. Religion should take a hint.




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8. Comment #81664 by dinamo02 on October 25, 2007 at 2:32 am

 avatarFrom kurtdenke:

Does your religion make ANY assertion about the world? About how it got here, why it's here, how something in it works or has worked, how it interacts with supernatural entities or processes, what happens to people when they die? Any assertions about any of that at all? If yes, then there's an overlap.

I think this best sums up the counter argument here. And it should be pointed out that such assertions are SCIENTIFIC claims subject to scientific testing.

Other Comments by dinamo02

9. Comment #81665 by Ajuydog on October 25, 2007 at 2:34 am

 avatarI do think that NOM is a valid concept but not in the sense that Gould meant it. It exists in the mind of the theist who accepts the validity of the scientific method. In order to avoid cognitive dissonance (tension that may result from having two conflicting thoughts at the same time, wikipedia) arising from the contradictory world views of science and theism; theism as revealed "truth" and science as a successful explanation of how the world works, a psychological strategy for resolving that tension is required. Hey presto! NOM which avoids implosion of deeply held convictions and in a "puff of logic" (apologies to Douglas Adams).

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10. Comment #81741 by Aaron on October 25, 2007 at 5:49 am

 avatarThe typical response:
Religion does make scientific claims that can be tested, such as the power of prayer, etc.

My response:
If this were true all religious beliefs, past and present, would be able to be maintained untouched by science. Looking at the history of religious beliefs we can test this hypothesis and clearly see it is false. Take Christianity as only one example. The bible makes several claims that have been disproven by science. The universe and everything in it was not created in 7 days nearly 6,000 years ago, the earth was not created before the sun, the moon does not cast its own light, there was no global flood, humans are not unique from other animals as a result of being specially ensouled, etc.

A true example of non-overlapping magesteria would be a chef trying to use his or her culinary knowledge to describe why the Saint Louis Rams football team hasn't won a game yet this year.

The snarky response:
I agree science and religion maintain non-overlapping magisteria: Science deals with reality and religion deals with everything else.

or

I agree, science deals with what we can postively show to be true and religion deals with what we are biased to hope is true.

Other Comments by Aaron

11. Comment #81778 by SilentMike on October 25, 2007 at 7:00 am

I have to agree with most of what the people above said. The main point here is that science is the study of the real world (wonder where I first read that...), and if religion has anything to say about the nature of that world, then that's an overlap. As I mentioned this has been said by almost everybody.

But if my opponent said that his religiosity is really and truely not like that, and concede that most people's religiosity is, I still would not let up. In such a situation I would say the following: Even in the areas outside of science's magisteria religion is still a poor option. There are more rational attempts at moral philosophy, there are less confusing and mind-fettering attempts at inspiring proze, there are better ways to live your life.

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12. Comment #81779 by Chris Bell on October 25, 2007 at 7:01 am

I agree, science and religion are NOMA. However, I don't think that is as comforting as the religious think.

Science starts by only observing natural phenomena. I suppose it could accidentally observe a non-natural phenomena, but the experiment would be repeated and the regular result would be obtained.

Another way of saying this is that science starts with an assumption of naturalism. Science de facto rules out supernaturalism. Even if science were to come up with results completely opposing religious claims science could never - as a matter of logic - rule out those claims.

- Assume there is no supernatural explanation
- We find that X is the best explanation
- X directly contradicts supernatural claim Y
- Therefore, Y is wrong

I think the problem is obvious.

So I agree about NOMA. However, I am incredibly convinced that science is better because it is so useful. The premise of science is either wrong or right, and a person must choose.

I always think of Hitchens' debate with a pastor who said that "As a Christian he does believe [an absurd fact], though as a historian he has his doubts. Hitchens responded, "I can usually think myself into an opponent's position, but this is something I can't imagine myself saying, let alone thinking."

That's exactly right, which is why no one is comforted by NOMA. Nearly everyone realizes that they must choose, even though NOMA may be a logically sustainable position.

Other Comments by Chris Bell

13. Comment #81861 by sidfaiwu on October 25, 2007 at 10:06 am

 avatar" Religion is not incompatible with Science: 'Non-Overlapping Magisteria'"

There are definitely claims of some religions that are in conflict with scientific claims. The age of the earth is an obvious example.

Can they be made compatible? Of course, but in their current states, science and religion are sometimes incompatible.

Other Comments by sidfaiwu

14. Comment #81951 by Vadjong on October 25, 2007 at 12:46 pm

 avatarThe only overlap I see is where science explains the occurence and history of religious people, from archeology to cognition.

Axiom :
In the entire Gamut of religious/spiritual experience, from pre-Alpha to post-Omega, not one Iota is above or beyond natural (human) fabrication.

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15. Comment #81976 by msl on October 25, 2007 at 1:18 pm

NOMA is just a fancy way of saying one isn't allowed to think about religion, and it's absurd on its face. Everybody thinks about religion. People who think about it scientifically do so better than those who don't.

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16. Comment #82066 by Mewtwo_X on October 25, 2007 at 3:59 pm

Can't argue against this one, as I accept it.

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17. Comment #82321 by stag on October 26, 2007 at 3:58 am

 avatarThe NOMA argument works -- at least in theory.

Providing religion doesn't attempt to impinge upon the scientific magisteria in making claims about objective reality, NOMA works just fine.

Followed through to its logical conclusion (and avoiding cognitive dissonance), NOMA finds science perfectly compatible with Deism, Pantheism, certain forms of Buddhism, "Progressive" Christianity (ref: J. S. Spong) etc. (not to mention secular "religions", such as Humanism).

Unfortunately, many theists are willing to violate the principles of NOMA in making bold claims regarding the age of the universe, the origins of life, the occurance of miracles, etc., whilst (ironically) still hiding the NOMA flag.

So, ultimately I guess it depends on your definition of the word "religion".



Other Comments by stag

18. Comment #84210 by Blue Lithium on November 1, 2007 at 12:26 pm

http://passionateskeptic.blogspot.com/2007/08/meaning-of-propositions-and-existence.html

This is an article I wrote a while ago that addresses NOMA in parts.

Meraning of Propositions and The Existence of God.

"Meaningful propositions claim to say something about the way the world is. They make predictions about how things are. Take the proposition "I own a guitar." That proposition suggests that you could find a guitar in my house, perhaps a receipt for one or tablature or chord books, you could ask the guy in the music shop and he would tell you I'd bought one, etc. These pieces of evidence would suggest that the proposition "I own a guitar" is true. On the contrary, if you failed to find any evidence for the fact that I owned a guitar, you'd probably conclude the proposition to be false.

What of meaningless propositions? A meaningless proposition is a proposition that does not make a prediction about the way things are. If there is no way at all to provide any evidence for or against a proposition, then it is effectively a meaningless one, because it makes no difference whether it is true or false. A famous philosophical example of this is the "parable", if you like, of the "Invisible Gardener." It goes rather like this:
Two men are sitting, watching a garden. They have been watching it for a while, and have seen no gardener tending the plants. One man says to the other, "That would suggest that there is no gardener who tends this garden." The other man replies, "Ah, but it could be an invisible, intangible gardener."
The point of this demonstration is to show that the idea of an invisible, intangible gardener is not any different from no gardener at all, because the idea of an invisible gardener fails to make any predictions about reality. Thus, it doesn't actually matter if there is no gardener or an invisible one, because there is no difference.

What then, of God? The proposition "God Exists", what does that predict about reality? Here are some things that one would expect to observe if theism was true:


* Miracles happening only to believers that cannot be explained in any other manner, like amputees regrowing limbs, or Mount Everest moving 2000 miles away spontaneously, "Jesus lives" or "Muhammad is the true prophet" written in the sky, nonburnable or undefacable Bibles or Torahs etc.
* Prayer being effective.
* Good things happening to good people; bad things happening to bad people(ie. accurate smiting, rather than just indiscriminate viruses or natural disasters).
* No unnecessary suffering.
* An anthropocentric universe, with a spontaneous creation.
* Perfect and wonderfully inspiring holy book(s).
These are just a few things we might expect to see if God(in any theistic sense, at least) exists.

However, we actually see:

* The only miracles that happen are ambiguous, rare and can be accounted for [b]y nature.
*Prayer doesn't work unless it is a coincidence.
*So-called examples of God's wrath are indiscriminate, and many good people suffer horribly.
* Unnecessary suffering occurs, such as victims of an incurable disease, or children dying because there wasn't enough water in a village etc.
* The universe is huge and has very little to do with humanity, who came about through the messy process of evolution over millions of years.
* Holy books are often littered with things like racism and violence. It would be unfair to say there is nothing good or inspiring in them(eg. Ecclesiastes is a great Biblical book) but one gets the impression that an omnipotent deity could have done better. Not to mention the factual inaccuracy of certain claims made in holy books.
This lack of evidence for God's existence suggests that he doesn't exist. It leads many religious people to either:

1. Say that science can say nothing about the divine; or

2. That, in fact, we don't have to observe any of those things to believe God exists; or

3. Define God in some Theological way, such as "God is the power of all Being", or "God is the spirit of love" or something equally vague.

But don't all these "options" lead into the trap of claiming that God is a meaningless proposition? 1, otherwise known as N[on]O[verlapping]MA[gisteria], claims that we can never say anything about God's exists using science. I believe this to be misguided, because if we can ask questions about what we would expect to observe if something is true that is some form of science. And obviously, with the existence of the theistic God, we can do this. I just did it above. Of course, you may want to claim that science cannot prove or disprove the divine--but that is a different claim altogether from the claim that science can say nothing about the existence of God. I would agree with the person who says science cannot disprove the divine. This is because the next observation we make on any scientific theory could technically disprove the theory--the next ball we drop could refuse to fall to the ground. The same with God; the next observation we make could be a Bible that refuses to be defaced when some atheist tries to write sarcastic comments in the margins. Moving back to the idea of a meaningless proposition, if no evidence can be used either way to decide the question of God, if the idea of a God can make no predictions about the universe, as NOMA would have it, "God exists" doesn't mean anything.

2 is better known as the method of faith. Of course, the method of believing without evidence is not considered to be a good idea. Believing with evidence to the contrary, like the observations I made above, is even worse. It may be acceptable to tentatively accept a scientific claim over another before the evidence is completely in. But when the evidence has ruled against you, it is irrational to continue to hold to that position. 2 is saying that observations about the universe aren't important in deciding what is true. But if we cannot observe effects of something, it may as well not exist.

3 is the obfuscations of theologians, rather than a claim made by average religious believers. This is just a way of accounting for the observations I made above. How exactly, though, to we show that "the power of being" exists? What effects does that have on reality, and how can we observe them?

Thus, my conclusion is thus: either you refuse to let your proposition of "God exists" make predictions about reality, and thus make it rather meaningless to believe; or you are open to evidence and let your proposition be confirmed or disconfirmed by the evidence.

Other Comments by Blue Lithium

19. Comment #84212 by phil rimmer on November 1, 2007 at 12:30 pm

 avatarMiracles overlap.

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20. Comment #84226 by RecoveringTheist on November 1, 2007 at 12:51 pm

The first step in getting Religion and Science to coexist.

1. Religious people need to stop trying to kill us every time science and those that study it shake corner stones to holy books, articles, and such. I am mean come on people! As we discover that the holy texts are mistaken isn't this something to be excited about? I mean how would you feel living your whole life practicing something that wasn't really true? I pretty sure that I grew out of pretend play as a young child.

As my mother lamented when I went off to the University of my choice and not theirs (Temple University)I was doomed to Hell as higher education would not permit me the glories of heaven. Funny thing is that I went to a Lutheran School, but of course because it wasn't strict enough in doctrine I would be corrupted, but my retort after graduation was that my "corruption" began when I bought my first copy of Darwin and hide it under my pillow at home.

I severely doubt that we could have non-overlapping religious and scientific beliefs as those religious beliefs always dictate and govern how are to view the universe around us, and a purely scientific approach would be to try and explain things around us without such prejudice.

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21. Comment #84289 by Russell Blackford on November 1, 2007 at 4:09 pm

Concise version:

Three important points must be made:

1. Religion has never confined itself to making claims about morality and how we should live our lives - historically, religions have provided encyclopedic explanations of the world and our place in it, and they typically continue to do so. When religion does that, it invariably ends up making claims that are incompatible with science.

2. But yes, religion can insulate itself from any refutation by science. All it has to do is retreat to making unfalsifiable claims about a timeless, metaphysical god, existing somewhere beyond the universe. But once religion retreats that far, making no claims that could clash with any scientific evidence, we have every reason to dismiss it as irrelevant. Nothing can count for or against it, and it is of no earthly use.

3. To the extent that religion makes moral claims, it does so with no authority - and the morality it offers is typically miserable, cruel, and barbaric: the product of times and ways of thinking that have no relevance for the modern world. We are better off investigating morality in a rational way, which is the job of secular moral philosophy. Morality is not an area where religion exercises some kind of "magisterium". Its claim to be able to teach us moral wisdom is a sham.

Long version: Go here

http://www.users.bigpond.com/russellblackford/gould.htm

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22. Comment #84396 by anonquick on November 2, 2007 at 1:39 am

The Gist: Not true, here are some examples of how science treads on the tuft of religion.


meat inspectors - not done by priests.

morality - moral psychology.

witch doctors vs real doctors.

Darwinism.

counsellors vs priests.

marriage celebrants vs priests.


Lateral thought - take the next step, stop interpreting the bible, and start interpreting, LIFE.

Other Comments by anonquick

23. Comment #84786 by BigginHillbilly on November 3, 2007 at 3:18 pm

I think the topic of this thread misses the point, because it implies that an atheist worldview is necessarily that of a scientist and that they are one and the same thing, rather than another example of overlapping magisteria themselves. If the idea of a non-divinely inspired universe is to be convincing, it must appeal to the cavernous irrationality lurking within every human, our sense of wonderment, and intimations of belonging to the totality of things, and the immensities of time and space within which this totality has unfurled. Build up the wall with science by all means, but get the poets, painters, sculptors, novelists and especially the musicians to pitch in too. The problem with this thread's premise is that within human experience the impulses that give rise to science and religion are most definitely overlapping.

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24. Comment #86023 by Asta Kask on November 7, 2007 at 10:04 pm

All miracles are incompatible with a God who intervenes. Apart from that, the biblical God has a number of problematical properties. For one thing, he introduces a privileged perspective and frame of reference, thus contradicting the Special and General Theories of Relativity. It's certainly possible that he contradicts the uncertainty principle - it depends on whether you believe that there are "hidden variables" or not. His ability to create matter and energy from matter would lead him into conflict with the First Law of Thermodynamics. And so on...

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25. Comment #90669 by BorisCvek on November 26, 2007 at 4:59 am

I am a scientis and a Catholic (Old-Catholic). There is no problem. Neither religion nor science should be taken literally and dogmatically... a humanism (common sense) can join religion and science each other to make a liberal society.

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26. Comment #90671 by Peacebeuponme on November 26, 2007 at 5:03 am

Neither religion nor science should be taken literally and dogmatically
Actually, I think literally is pretty much the only way you can take science.

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27. Comment #90672 by Rtambree on November 26, 2007 at 5:22 am

If religion makes any difference in the universe (i.e. if a supernatural agent moves even a single atom) then it falls into the realm of scientific observation and testing and can be falsified.

Religious claims can be tested (and are always found wanting) and even the neurology of religous belief can be tested (why are some people immune to superstition and others lap up all sorts of mumbo jumbo?). Anthropologists can compare and contrast religions and the development of religions over time and geography.

Only people that shrink religion down to a mere discussion of abstract ideas can claim N.O.M. - but who among the faithful think of religion as just a philosophical discussion?

Claiming N.O.M. is just an artificial way to prevent criticism... "Oh no, those scientists want to snatch away my invisible teddy bear"

Other Comments by Rtambree

28. Comment #90680 by Flagellant on November 26, 2007 at 5:44 am

 avatarWhile on the subject of teddy bears, have a look at this!
A British primary school teacher has been arrested in Sudan accused of blasphemy for allowing her pupils to name a teddy bear Muhammad, it emerged today… …Twenty out of the 23 children chose Muhammad.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sudan/story/0,,2217259,00.html

It gets worse...



Truly, god is incredibly grott, merdeiful.
[Edited to add a bit more detail, and to try to find my avatar.]

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29. Comment #90691 by BorisCvek on November 26, 2007 at 6:39 am

To Peacebeuponme:

I mean that science is a still flowing river of interpretations and revolutions. The scientist should - e.g. from popperian point of view - falsify scientific theories and replace them by better ones.

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30. Comment #90696 by Peacebeuponme on November 26, 2007 at 6:56 am

I mean that science is a still flowing river of interpretations and revolutions. The scientist should - e.g. from popperian point of view - falsify scientific theories and replace them by better ones.
Yes, to a point. But we have to be careful here. We stand by currently accepted theories due to their explanatory power. We do not say, like the creationists, that evolution is "just a theory".

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31. Comment #90716 by BorisCvek on November 26, 2007 at 7:46 am

We do not say, like the creationists, that evolution is "just a theory".


Boris: Of course. I agree. On the other hand, there are so many interesting projects linking Creation with Evolution (for example Teilhards one) that - because they are not scientific - we can enjoy this fascinating diversity of opinions without nervousness. Entire western philosophy is "just a theory" - often "abuseable" for bad purposes, but always intelectually nice and incentive. The only reason (if any) for fight against creationist is not, in my view, creationism itself, but the political influence of the dogmatic religion.

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32. Comment #90955 by prettygoodformonkeys on November 26, 2007 at 7:27 pm

 avatar27. Comment #90672 by Rtambree on November 26, 2007 at 5:22 am:

Excellent assessment; thanks. Happy to rate it that way!

Tell me what you're taking and I'll have some. And I'll buy the next round.

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33. Comment #93583 by Riley on December 3, 2007 at 2:42 pm

 avatarI agree in principle with arguments and statements made by Richard Feynman and Stephen Jay Gould that religion and science should be able to co-exist, the problem is that most religions violate this "non-overlapping magisteria" principle by making science claims.

Other Comments by Riley

34. Comment #116526 by Alyosha on January 26, 2008 at 5:36 pm

The rule of non-overlapping magisteria might work as long as your God doesn't ever do anything that might affect the physical world. As soon as He does then that phenomenon, being physical, falls within the magisterium of science.

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35. Comment #116528 by Alyosha on January 26, 2008 at 5:40 pm

Here's a question that concerns me:

If science can show religion to be absurd, might science education in public schools be construed as a state sponsored attack on religion?

I wonder if I'm tempted by the rule of non-overlapping magisteria partly because it allows me to avoid debating that question.

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36. Comment #130272 by martino on February 20, 2008 at 7:57 am

If religion makes a falsifiable claim and science tests it and it is false, then religion is at fault for holding onto such claim. Historically where there has been overlap science has shown religion wrong 100% of the time. If religion wants to stop interfering with the way and means of conduct in society and this world then NOMA could apply, otherwise no.

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37. Comment #139918 by busket on March 6, 2008 at 6:07 pm

I think that the counterargument presumes that science has some sort of potential for omniscience, which is ironic in the sense that it is a purely nonscientific way of looking at science.

Science has limitations, and always will. That being the case there will always be the possibility of "NOMA"

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38. Comment #244947 by old dusty on September 10, 2008 at 12:26 am

Religion is not incompatable with science....

Religion makes certain claims as to the way the world runs. Central to the theist religions is the notion that a god is running things who can be influenced to some extent by human behaviour, sacrifices, chants, rituals etc and above all by prayer. It is possible to examine the evidence for the efficacy of prayer and in fact there have been many studies doing just that. The largest prayer experiment ever must have been duting the attack on the twin towers. While the world watched the fires there must have been hundreds of millions of people of all faiths praying for the people trapped by the fires.

Sadly there was not one instance of people emulating Shadrack Mechak and Abendigo and walking unharmed through the flames. Not one instance of peple emulating St Theresa and flying to safety. Why not???

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39. Comment #339158 by Usefuldebate on February 12, 2009 at 3:59 am

I have recently come across two quotes which I find very thought provoking on this topic - one by a scientist we all know of, and one by a religious leader called 'Abdu'l-Baha who was the son of the founder of the Baha'i faith (which now has about 6 million followers worldwide) stated nearly 30 years earlier.

"Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind".
(Albert Einstein, "Science, Philosophy and Religion: a Symposium", 1941)

“If religious beliefs and opinions are found contrary to the standards of science, they are mere superstitions and imaginations; for the antithesis of knowledge is ignorance, and the child of ignorance is superstition. Unquestionably there must be agreement between true religion and science. If a question be found contrary to reason, faith and belief in it are impossible, and there is no outcome but wavering and vacillation”.

(Abdu'l-Baha, “The Promulgation of Universal Peace”, 1912, p. 181: www.bahai.org)

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40. Comment #339163 by Russell Blackford on February 12, 2009 at 4:06 am

Whoa! This thread is a blast from the past.

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41. Comment #343284 by irritable on February 19, 2009 at 6:35 am

As Lisa Randall pointed out not long ago at the Edge, empirically baseless religious beliefs and scientific beliefs can and do co-exist in modern human minds. That occurs when a person decides not to apply logic, or is blind to the contradiction.

To heighten the comedic effect of his sarcastic response to her observation, Sam Harris disingenuously pretended that Professor Randall somehow endorsed that sort of abandonment of logic. He evidently sought to buttress his argument that the concept of "Non-Overlapping Magisteria" was a pompous cop-out.

It may seem remarkable to some, but the world is full of people who are able to compartmentalize their thinking in this way with perfect equanimity. They may apply rigorous logic in the course of their employment. They use and apparently understand (in principle) quite advanced technology in their daily lives, yet they hold beliefs entirely incompatible with the physical laws which make that technology work.

It's logically inconsistent, it's rationally unjustifiable, and it seems to be almost universal amongst believers in deities. Should something be done about that?

Atheists could well make much less fuss about the idiosyncratic private thoughts of believers (which are their own business) and instead direct their vigilance and diligence to the enactment and maintenance of laws which impose potent sanctions upon people who act upon superstitious beliefs to harm others - whether by mis-education, personal coercion, social pressure or otherwise. There's also plenty of scope to vigorously rebut those who publicly proselytize superstition and to thwart those who agitate for implementation of irrational programs.

It's another thing entirely to insist that others think as you do. Or to berate others for failing to be consistently logical in their private mental processes. That sort of intrusion into the Private Magisterium (if I may extend Gould's earnestly pretentious concept) seems unwisely counter-productive.

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42. Comment #346198 by Eric Blair on February 24, 2009 at 10:40 pm

I tend to agree with BorisCvek
on "not taking science (or religion) literally," though he may not mean it in the same way.

Few of us take science literally, or at least not all the time. Instead, we "compartmentalize."

I know "scientifically" that this desk I'm seated at is a collection of molecules and untapped energy, yet I persist in calling a "desk." I never think of it as anything but a desk, unless I physically destroyed it.

I "know" the red ruler before me has some surface properties that reflect certain wave-lengths of light that over time have been identified as red. Yet I think of it only as red. I can't imagine "seeing" its redness in any other way.

I'm listening to music that I find beautiful, even though I know that - well, I don't know but I speculate in a scientific understanding of my reaction that for some reason the sound patterns stimulate certain chemical reactions in my brain that I'm genetically programmed to find pleasurable because at some point back in the mists of time there was an advantage to finding similar sounds pleasurable.

Am I just being pedantic. I don't think so.

I will never "internalize" these explanations or accept them "literally' just as I will never "live in" a scientific explanation of why I love my wife or daughter...

Yet tomorrow I could go to work as a scientist (I'm not one) and suspend my "everyday" sense of living for the scientific one, the "real" one, the "truth" that I would pretty much leave inside the lab.

What's so different about religious scientists living their sense of "the life of faith" outside their lab?

EB

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43. Comment #350358 by edulike on March 9, 2009 at 9:38 am

 avatarThere are several eminent Christian Scientists, some of whom rely on evolution for their research.

(e.g. Francis S. Collins http://www.genome.gov/10000779,

Denis Alexander, http://www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk/faraday/Biography.php?ID=9 and

Paul S Dyer http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/genetics/people/dyer/index.php) to name but 3.


These are not crazy IDiots, but real scientists doing real science. Therefore, Religion is not incompatible with Science.

QED.

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44. Comment #350361 by Peacebeuponme on March 9, 2009 at 9:41 am

edulike
Therefore, Religion is not incompatible with Science.
That's a non-sequitur. Just because some scientists are religious it does not make science and faith compatible.

Have you read Collins' book? When he talks about his faith he gets remarkably unscientific.

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45. Comment #350364 by irate_atheist on March 9, 2009 at 9:57 am

 avatar43. Comment #350358 by edulike -

Your 'argument' such as it is, can be summarised thus:

a. Science is practiced by scientists.

a. Some scientists are also religious.

b. So science and religion are compatible.

Applying the same level of logic to a specific instance:

a.Isaac Newton was a scientist.

b Isaac Newton was an alchemist.

c. Therefore alchemy is compatible with science.

Or to better illustrate the failing of this:

a. Dogs have four legs.

b. My cat has four legs.

c. Therefore my cat is a dog.

Flawed logic from start to finish.

Your move.

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46. Comment #350365 by CaptainMandate on March 9, 2009 at 10:03 am

 avatarThanks for this quote, it sums up why NOMA does not apply

Neither religion nor science should be taken literally


Science must be taken literally, end of. using this argument is dragging science down to the level of religion, suggesting that what applies to one can apply to another.

Only religion ever takes this viewpoint and only then when it suits.

Science can set in motion a method for investigating the answer to any question that can be asked. Religion may claim to only answer spiritual questions but unless they have absolutley no impact on the material world, it's people and social issues, it's overlapping

Anything outside the imagination of an individual is capable of testing and measuring. to suggest divine magisteria can exist without overlapping into the real world is delusional.

NOMA is religion trying to have its cake and eat it, it is a circular, self-defeating argument.

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47. Comment #350367 by YakobusRO on March 9, 2009 at 10:07 am

 avatarIf Non-Overlapping Magisteria means not allowing science to assess the truth value and the methodological value of theologic claims, then NOMA is quite an anti-scientific approach, because it unadvertedly reduces the scope of science in order to give religion roles other than giving quaint metaphores for the phenomena of reality and human life. Anyway NOMA works just fine with the idea of the God of the Gaps, who will remain ever and ever wandering around in the domains science has not been able to scrutinise yet. All in all, NOMA is political correctess at its best.

I totally agree with the ones who have mentioned the highly developed ability that religious scientists and liberal religious people have to compartimentalize their knowledge, and I should add that doublethink could as well have a lot to do with their way to reconcile a priori faith and empirical rational science.

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48. Comment #350368 by hungarianelephant on March 9, 2009 at 10:07 am

 avatarWhat sort of English is "not incompatible" anyway? It is a ludicrous, redundant formation.

Please memorise the following sentence to be cured of it:
A not unblack dog was chasing a not unsmall rabbit across a not ungreen field.

(With thanks to George Orwell)

I have nothing to add to the debate at hand. Just needed to get that off my chest on seeing the title on the front page. Carry on.

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49. Comment #350371 by edulike on March 9, 2009 at 10:19 am

 avatarComment #350364 by irate_atheist

"
a. Dogs have four legs.
b. My cat has four legs.
c. Therefore my cat is a dog."



Yes Prime Minister?

OK, so the logic is not unassailable. However, the fact that these eminent scientists are Christians and have no issues with evolution is a powerful argument that religion and science are not incompatible.

Your logic should be

a. Science is practiced by scientists.

a. Some scientists are also religious.

b. it is possible to be a religious and a scientist.


Applying the same level of logic to a specific instance:

a.Isaac Newton was a scientist.

b Isaac Newton was an alchemist.

c. Therefore it is possible to be both an alchemist and a scientist...


Works for me...

Comment #350361 by Peacebeuponme

That's a non-sequitur. Just because some scientists are religious it does not make science and faith compatible.


I don't follow you. I know of no scientific discovery that would lead me to drastically question my faith. It is possible to be a Christian and an evolutionary biologist. These people are intelligent, mainstream scientists, AND Christians. Surely that's OK?

Ed.

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50. Comment #350372 by Peacebeuponme on March 9, 2009 at 10:19 am

hungarian

Your ire is misplaced I fear. The sentence is a refutation of the position that science and religion and science are incompatible.

Theists do not start by stating "religion and science are compatible" as a positive defence of their position. What happens is this:

Theist: Christianity is true.
Atheist: Religious claims are incompatible with science.
Theist: No they are not.

I think "not incompatible" works better here.

(and in some cases the "not in..." is absolutely necessary: think about the sentence "Your misstated valuation of your computer equipment has not invalidated your household insurance claim".)

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