When Science Meets Religion: Enemies, Strangers, or Partners?

When Science Meets Religion: Enemies, Strangers, or Partners?

by Ian G. Barbour
When Science Meets Religion: Enemies, Strangers, or Partners?

When Science Meets Religion: Enemies, Strangers, or Partners?

by Ian G. Barbour

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Overview

The Definitive Introduction To

The Relationship Between

Religion And Science

∗ In The Beginning: Why Did the Big Bang Occur?

∗ Quantum Physics: A Challenge to Our Assumptions About Reality?

∗ Darwin And Genesis: Is Evolution God's Way of Creating?

∗ Human Nature: Are We Determined by Our Genes?

∗ God And Nature: Can God Act in a Law-Bound World?

Over the centuries and into the new millennium, scientists, theologians, and the general public have shared many questions about the implications of scientific discoveries for religious faith. Nuclear physicist and theologian Ian Barbour, winner of the 1999 Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion for his pioneering role in advancing the study of religion and science, presents a clear, contemporary introduction to the essential issues, ideas, and solutions in the relationship between religion and science. In simple, straightforward language, Barbour explores the fascinating topics that illuminate the critical encounter of the spiritual and quantitative dimensions of life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780060603816
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 05/16/2000
Edition description: 1 ED
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 641,612
Product dimensions: 5.31(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Ian G. Barbour has retired from Carleton College where he was professor of physics, professor of religion, and Bean Professor of Science, Technology, and Society. The "preeminent synthetic in the field" (Cross Currents,) he is the author of several influential books, including Ethics in an Age of Technology and Myths Models, and Paradigms, which was nominated for the National Book Award. He gave the world-renowned Gifford Lectures, 1989-1991.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

Four Views ofScience and Religion

This chapter describes four types of relationship between science and religion: Conflict, Independence, Dialogue, and Integration. Each type has several variants that differ significantly, but the variants have features in common that allow them to be grouped together. The applicability of this fourfold typology to particular scientific disciplines is explored in subsequent chapters.

Let me first describe two historical cases often cited as examples of Conflict. In both cases the historical record reveals a more complex relationship. The first is the trial of Galileo in 1633. Galileo advocated the new Copernican theory in which the earth and the planets revolve in orbits around the sun, rather than the accepted Ptolemaic theory in which the sun and planets revolve in orbits around the earth. One factor that contributed to the condemnation of Galileo was the authority of Aristotle, whose scientific writings, including those supporting Ptolemaic astronomy, had been greatly admired in Europe since the twelfth century. Another issue was the authority of scripture, especially the passages that implied that the earth is the center of the cosmos. But in the end the crucial factor was his challenge to the authority of the church.

In the centuries before Galileo a variety of views of scripture had been advanced. In the fourth century, Augustine (whom Galileo quoted) had said that when there appears to be a conflict between demonstrated knowledge and a literal reading of the Bible, scripture should be interpreted metaphorically. In commenting on the first chapter of Genesis, Augustinehad said that the Holy Spirit was not concerned about "the form and shape of the heavens" and "did not wish to teach men things not relevant to their salvation." Medieval writers acknowledged diverse literary forms and levels of truth in scripture, and they offered symbolic or allegorical interpretations of many problematic passages. Galileo himself quoted a cardinal of his own day: "The intention of the Holy Ghost is to teach us how one goes to heaven, not how heaven goes." This aspect of Galileo's thought could be taken as an example of the Independence thesis, which distinguishes scientific from theological assertions. On astronomical questions, he said, the writers of the Bible had to "accommodate themselves to the capacity of the common people" by using "the common mode of speech" of their times. He held that we can learn from two sources, the Book of Nature and the Book of Scripture-both of which come from God and therefore cannot conflict with each other.

But Galileo introduced a qualification that opened the door to Conflict. He said that we should accept a literal interpretation of scripture unless a scientific theory that conflicts with it can be irrefutably demonstrated. He overstated the scientific certainty he could provide at a time when there was still considerable disagreement among astronomers. Moreover, the Catholic hierarchy felt under threat from the Protestant Reformation and was eager to reassert its authority. Some of the cardinals were sympathetic to Galileo's views, but the pope and several politically powerful cardinals were not. So he was finally condemned as much for disobeying the church as for questioning biblical literalism.

The second case often cited as an example of Conflict is the debate over Darwin's theory of evolution in the nineteenth century. Some scientists and some religious leaders did indeed hold that evolution and religious beliefs are incompatible, but many in both groups did not. Three issues were at stake.

  1. A Challenge to Biblical Literalism. A long period of evolutionary change conflicts with the seven days of creation in Genesis. Some theologians of Darwin's day defended biblical inerrancy and rejected all forms of evolution, but they were in the minority. Most theological conservatives accepted symbolic rather than literal interpretations of these biblical passages and reluctantly accepted evolution, though they often insisted on the special creation of the human soul. The liberals, on the other hand, welcomed the advance of science and said that evolution was consistent with their optimistic view of historical progress. They were soon speaking of evolution as God's way of creating, which could be considered a version of what I have called Integration. They were also sympathetic to the work of biblical scholars who were studying evidence of the influence of the cultural and cosmological assumptions of the ancient Near East in the writings of biblical authors.
  2. A Challenge to Human Dignity. In classical Christian thought, human beings were set apart from all other creatures, their unique status guaranteed by the immortality of the soul and the distinctiveness of human rationality and moral capacity. But in evolutionary theory humanity was treated as part of nature. No sharp line separated human and animal life, either in historical development or in present characteristics. Darwin and many of his successors stressed the similarities of human and animal behavior, though other biologists insisted on the distinctiveness of human language and culture. Copernican astronomy had demoted humanity from the center of the universe, and now Darwinian biology threatened human uniqueness in the order of nature. In Victorian England, many people saw the claim that we are "descended from apes" as a denial of the value of persons. "The survival of the fittest" seemed to undercut morality, especially when it was extrapolated into the social order to justify ruthless economic competition and colonialism.
  3. A Challenge to Design. Within a static universe, the complex functioning of organisms and their harmonious adaptation to their surroundings offered a persuasive argument for an intelligent Designer. But Darwin showed that adaptation could be accounted for by an impersonal process of variation and natural selection. Darwin himself believed that God had designed the whole evolutionary process but not the detailed structures of particular organisms...

Table of Contents

Prefacexi
Introduction1
Chapter 1Four Views of Science and Religion7
Conflict
1.Scientific Materialism11
2.Biblical Literalism15
Independence
1.Separate Domains17
2.Differing Languages and Functions19
Dialogue
1.Presuppositions and Limit-Questions23
2.Methodological and Conceptual Parallels24
Integration
1.Natural Theology28
2.Theology of Nature31
3.Systematic Synthesis34
Chapter 2Astronomy and Creation39
Conflict
1.A Universe by Chance42
2.Harmonizing Genesis and the Big Bang45
Independence
1.The Religious Meaning of Creation48
2.The Function of Creation Stories50
Dialogue
1.The Intelligibility of the Cosmos52
2.The Contingency of the Cosmos54
Integration
1.Design: The Anthropic Principle57
2.Models of God as Creator59
3.The Significance of Humanity61
Chapter 3The Implications of Quantum Physics65
Conflict
1.God in a Deterministic World70
2.God and Chance72
Independence
1.Instrumentalist Views of Quantum Theory74
2.The Lesson of Complementarity76
Dialogue
1.The Role of the Observer78
2.Holism in the Quantum World81
Integration
1.Eastern Mysticism and Quantum Holism84
2.God and Quantum Indeterminacy86
Chapter 4Evolution and Continuing Creation90
Conflict
1.Evolutionary Materialism93
2.Theistic Critics of Neo-Darwinism96
Independence
1.Contrasting Domains and Methods99
2.Primary and Secondary Causality101
Dialogue
1.Complexity and Self-Organization104
2.The Concept of Information105
3.A Hierarchy of Levels108
Integration
1.Evolutionary Design111
2.God and Continuing Creation114
3.Process Philosophy115
Chapter 5Genetics, Neuroscience, and Human Nature119
Conflict
1.Reductive Materialism122
2.Sociobiology and Human Morality124
3.Genetic Determinism and Human Freedom126
Independence
1.Body/Soul Dualism129
2.Body and Soul: Complementary Perspectives132
3.Sin and Redemption133
Dialogue
1.Neuroscience and the Embodied Self135
2.Anthropology and the Social Self137
3.The Computer and the Brain139
Integration
1.Biological Organism and Responsible Self143
2.Mind and Brain: Two Aspects of One Process144
3.Process Philosophy146
Chapter 6God and Nature150
Conflict
1.Naturalistic Critiques of Theism154
2.Religious Naturalism157
Independence
1.Primary and Secondary Causality159
2.Complementary Languages162
Dialogue
1.God as Designer of a Self-Organizing Process164
2.God as Communicator of Information166
3.God's Self-Limitation167
Integration
1.God as Determiner of Indeterminacies170
2.God as Top-Down Cause172
3.Process Theology174
Notes181
Index of Names197
Index of Selected Topics203
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