Charles Darwin |
In his
celebrated 1837 Phi Beta Kappa Oration at Harvard, titled "The American
Scholar," Ralph Waldo Emerson predicted that a day would come when
Emerson was
hardly orthodox—according to Herman Melville, he felt "that had he lived
in those days when the world was made, he might have offered some valuable
suggestions"—but he was for a while a Unitarian minister, and he usually
found it possible to speak favorably of the Almighty. Emerson grieved over what
he saw in his own time as a weakening of belief, as opposed to mere piety and
churchgoing, in
The idea of a
conflict between science and religion has a long pedigree. According to Edward
Gibbon, it was the view of the Byzantine church that "the study of nature
was the surest symptom of an unbelieving mind." Perhaps the best-known
portrayal of this conflict is a book published in 1896 by Cornell's first
president, Andrew Dickson White, with the titleA
History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom.
In recent times
there has been a reaction against talk of warfare between science and religion.
White's "conflict thesis" was attacked in a 1986 paper by Bruce
Lindberg and Ronald Numbers, both well-known historians of science, who pointed
out many flaws in White's scholarship. The Templeton Foundation offers a large
prize to those who argue that there is no conflict between science and
religion. Some scientists take this line because they want to protect science
education from religious fundamentalists. Stephen Jay Gould argued that there
could be no conflict between science and religion, because science deals only
with facts and religion only with values. This certainly was not the view held
in the past by most adherents of religion, and it is a sign of the decay of
belief in the supernatural that many today who call themselves religious would
agree with Gould.
Let's grant
that science and religion are not incompatible—there are after all some (though
not many) excellent scientists, like Charles Townes
and Francis Collins, who have strong religious beliefs. Still, I think that
between science and religion there is, if not an incompatibility, at least what
the philosopher Susan Haack has called a tension, that has been gradually weakening serious religious
belief, especially in the West, where science has been most advanced. Here I
would like to trace out some of the sources of this tension, and then offer a
few remarks about the very difficult question raised by the consequent decline
of belief, the question of how it will be possible to live without God.
I do not think
that the tension between science and religion is primarily a result of
contradictions between scientific discoveries and specific religious doctrines.
This is what chiefly concerned White, but I think he was looking in the wrong
direction. Galileo remarked in his famous letter to Grand Duchess Christina
that "the intention of the Holy Ghost is to teach us how to go to heaven,
not how heaven goes," and this was not just his opinion; he was quoting a
prince of the Church, Cardinal Baronius, the Vatican
librarian. Contradictions between scripture and scientific knowledge have
occurred again and again, and have generally been accommodated by the more
enlightened among the religious. For instance, there are verses in both the Old
and New Testament that seem to show that the earth is flat, and as noted by
Copernicus (quoted by Galileo in the same letter to Christina) these verses led
some early Church fathers like Lactantius to reject
the Greek understanding that the earth is a sphere, but educated Christians
long before the voyages of Columbus and Magellan had come to accept the
spherical shape of the earth. Dante found the interior of the spherical earth a
convenient place to store sinners.
What was
briefly a serious issue in the early Church has today become a parody. The
astrophysicist Adrian Melott of the University of
Kansas, in a fight with zealots who wanted equal time for creationism in the
Kansas public schools, founded an organization called FLAT (Families for
Learning Accurate Theories). His society parodied creationists by demanding
equal time for flat earth geography, arguing that children should be exposed to
both sides of the controversy over the shape of the earth.
But if the
direct conflict between scientific knowledge and specific religious beliefs has
not been so important in itself, there are at least four sources of tension
between science and religion that have been important.
The first
source of tension arises from the fact that religion originally gained much of
its strength from the observation of mysterious phenomena—thunder, earthquakes,
disease—that seemed to require the intervention of some divine being. There was
a nymph in every brook, and a dryad in every tree. But as time passed more and
more of these mysteries have been explained in purely natural ways. Explaining
this or that about the natural world does not of course rule out religious
belief. But if people believe in God because no other explanation seems
possible for a whole host of mysteries, and then over the years these mysteries
were one by one resolved naturalistically, then a certain weakening of belief
can be expected. It is no accident that the advent of widespread atheism and
agnosticism among the educated in the eighteenth century followed hard upon the
birth of modern science in the previous century.
From
the beginning, the explanatory power of science worried those who valued
religion. Plato was so horrified at the attempt of Democritus and Leucippus to
explain nature in terms of atoms without reference to the gods (even though
they did not get very far with this) that in Book Ten of the Laws he urged five
years of solitary confinement for those who deny that the gods exist or that
they care about humans, with death to follow if the prisoner is not reformed.
Isaac Newton, offended by the naturalism of Descartes, also rejected the idea
that the world could be explained without God. He argued for instance in a
letter to Richard Bentley that no explanation but God could be given for the
distinction we observe between bright matter, the sun and stars, and dark
matter, like the earth. This is ironic, because of course it was
Of course, not
everything has been explained, nor will it ever be. The important thing is that
we have not observed anything that seems to require supernatural intervention
for its explanation. There are some today who cling to the remaining gaps in
our understanding (such as our ignorance about the origin of life) as evidence
for God. But as time passes and more and more of these gaps are filled in,
their position gives an impression of people desperately holding on to outmoded
opinions.
The problem for
religious belief is not just that science has explained a lot of odds and ends
about the world. There is a second source of tension: that these explanations
have cast increasing doubt on the special role of man, as an actor created by
God to play a starring part in a great cosmic drama of sin and salvation. We
have had to accept that our home, the earth, is just another planet circling
the sun; our sun is just one of a hundred billion stars in a galaxy that is
just one of billions of visible galaxies; and it may be that the whole
expanding cloud of galaxies is just a small part of a much larger multiverse, most of whose parts are utterly inhospitable to
life. As Richard Feynman has said, "The theory that it's all arranged as a
stage for God to watch man's struggle for good and evil seems inadequate."
Most important
so far has been the discovery by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel
Wallace that humans arose from earlier animals through natural selection acting
on random heritable variations, with no need for a divine plan to explain the
advent of humanity. This discovery led some, including
Note that I
refer here tobehavior, not consciousness.
Something purely subjective, like how we feel when we see the color red or
discover a physical theory, seems so different from the objective world
described by science that it is difficult to see how they can ever come
together. As Colin McGinn has said in these pages:
The
problem is how to integrate the conscious mind with the physical brain—how to
reveal a unity beneath this apparent diversity. That problem is very hard, and
I do not believe anyone has any good ideas about how to solve it.[2]
On the other
hand, both brain activity and behavior (including what we say about our
feelings) are in the same world of objective phenomena, and I know of no
intrinsic obstacle to their being integrated in a scientific theory, though it
is clearly not going to be easy. This does not mean that we can or should
forget about consciousness, and like B.F. Skinner with his pigeons concern
ourselves only with behavior. We know, as well as we know anything, that our
behavior is partly governed by our consciousness, so understanding behavior
will necessarily require working out a detailed correspondence between the
objective and subjective. This may not tell us how one arises from the other,
but at least it will confirm that there is nothing supernatural about the mind.
Some
nonscientists seize on certain developments in modern physics that suggest the
unpredictability of natural phenomena, such as the advent of quantum mechanics
or chaos theory, as signs of a turn away from determinism, of the sort that
would make an opening for divine intervention or an incorporeal soul. These
theories have forced us to refine our view of determinism, but not I think in
any way that has implications for human life.
A
third source of tension between science and religious belief has been more
important in Islam than in Christianity. Around 1100, the Sufi philosopher Abu Hamid al-Ghazzali argued against
the very idea of laws of nature, on the grounds that any such law would put
God's hands in chains. According to al-Ghazzali, a
piece of cotton placed in a flame does not darken and smolder because of the
heat of the flame, but because God wants it to darken and smolder. Laws of
nature could have been reconciled with Islam, as a summary of what God usually
wants to happen, but al-Ghazzali did not take that
path.
Al-Ghazzali is often described as the most influential Islamic
philosopher. I wish I knew enough to judge how great was the
impact on Islam of his rejection of science. At any rate, science in
Muslim countries, which had led the world in the ninth and tenth centuries,
went into a decline in the century or two after al-Ghazzali.
As a portent of this decline, in 1194 the Ulama of Córdoba burned all scientific and medical texts.
Nor has science
revived in the Islamic world. There are talented scientists who have come to
the West from Islamic countries and do work of great value here, among them the
Pakistani Muslim physicist Abdus Mohammed Salam, who in 1979 became the first Muslim scientist to be
awarded a Nobel Prize, for work he did in
Something like
al-Ghazzali's concern for God's freedom surfaced for
a while in Christian Europe, but with very different results. In Paris and
Canterbury in the thirteenth century there was a wave of condemnations of those
teachings of Aristotle that seemed to limit the freedom of God to do things
like create a vacuum or make several worlds or move the heavens in straight
lines. The influence of Thomas Aquinas and Albertus
Magnus saved the philosophy of Aristotle for
There
is a fourth source of tension between science and religion that may be the most
important of all. Traditional religions generally rely on authority, whether
the authority is an infallible leader, such as a prophet or a pope or an imam,
or a body of sacred writings, a Bible or a Koran. Perhaps Galileo did not get
into trouble solely because he was expressing views contrary to scripture, but
because he was doing so independently, rather than as a theologian acting
within the Church.
Of course,
scientists rely on authorities, but of a very different sort. If I want to understand
some fine point about the general theory of relativity, I might look up a
recent paper by an expert in the field. But I would know that the expert might
be wrong. One thing I probably would not do is to look up the original papers
of Einstein, because today any good graduate student understands general
relativity better than Einstein did. We progress. Indeed, in the form in which
Einstein described his theory it is today generally regarded as only what is
known in the trade as an effective field theory; that is, it is an
approximation, valid for the large scales of distance for which it has been
tested, but not under very cramped conditions, as in the early big bang.
We have our
heroes in science, like Einstein, who was certainly the greatest physicist of
the past century, but for us they are not infallible prophets. For those who in
everyday life respect independence of mind and openness to contradiction,
traits that Emerson admired—especially when it came to religion—the example of
science casts an unfavorable light on the deference to authority of traditional
religion. The world can always use heroes, but could do with fewer prophets.
The weakening
of religious belief is obvious in
Though I can't
prove it, I suspect that when Americans are asked in polls whether they believe
in God or angels or heaven or hell they feel that it is a religious duty to say
that they do, whatever they actually believe. And of
course hardly anyone today in the West seems to have even the slightest
interest in the great controversies—Arians vs. Athanasians,
monophysites vs. monothelites,
justification by faith or by works—that used to be taken so seriously that they
set Christians at each other's throats.
I have been
emphasizing religious belief here, the belief in facts about God or the
afterlife, though I am well aware that this is only one aspect of the religious
life, and for many not the most important part. Perhaps I emphasize belief
because as a physicist I am professionally concerned with finding out what is
true, not what makes us happy or good. For many people, the important thing
about their religion is not a set of beliefs but a host of other things: a set
of moral principles; rules about sexual behavior, diet, observance of holy
days, and so on; rituals of marriage and mourning; and the comfort of
affiliation with fellow believers, which in extreme cases allows the pleasure
of killing those who have different religious affiliations.
For some there
is also a sort of spirituality that Emerson wrote about, and which I don't
understand, often described as a sense of union with nature or with all
humanity, that doesn't involve any specific beliefs about the supernatural.
Spirituality is central to Buddhism, which does not call for belief in God.
Even so, Buddhism has historically relied on belief in the supernatural,
specifically in reincarnation. It is the desire to escape the wheel of rebirth
that drives the search for enlightenment. The heroes of Buddhism are the
bodhisattvas, who, having attained enlightenment, nevertheless return to life
in order to show the way to a world shrouded in darkness. Perhaps in Buddhism
too there has been a decline of belief. A recent book by the Dalai Lama barely
mentions reincarnation, and Buddhism is now in decline in
The various
uses of religion may keep it going for a few centuries even after the
disappearance of belief in anything supernatural, but I wonder how long
religion can last without a core of belief in the supernatural, when it isn't
about anything external to human beings. To compare great things with small,
people may go to college football games mostly because they enjoy the
cheerleading and marching bands, but I doubt if they would keep going to the
stadium on Saturday afternoons if the only things happening there were cheerleading
and marching bands, without any actual football, so that the cheerleading and
the band music were no longer about anything.
It is not my
purpose here to argue that the decline of religious belief is a good thing
(although I think it is), or to try to talk anyone out of their religion, as
eloquent recent books by Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Christopher Hitchens have. So far in my life, in arguing for spending
more money on scientific research and higher education, or against spending on
ballistic missile defense or sending people to Mars, I think I have achieved a
perfect record of never having changed anyone's mind. Rather, I want just to
offer a few opinions, on the basis of no expertise whatever, for those who have
already lost their religious beliefs, or who may be losing them, or fear that
they will lose their beliefs, about how it is possible to live without God.
First, a
warning: we had better beware of substitutes. It has often been noted that the
greatest horrors of the twentieth century were perpetrated by regimes—Hitler's
Germany, Stalin's Russia, Mao's China—that while rejecting some or all of the
teachings of religion, copied characteristics of religion at its worst:
infallible leaders, sacred writings, mass rituals, the execution of apostates,
and a sense of community that justified exterminating those outside the
community.
When I was an
undergraduate I knew a rabbi, Will Herberg, who
worried about my lack of religious faith. He warned me that we must worship
God, because otherwise we would start worshiping each other. He was right about
the danger, but I would suggest a different cure: we should get out of the
habit of worshiping anything.
I'm not going
to say that it's easy to live without God, that science is all you need. For a
physicist, it is indeed a great joy to learn how we can use beautiful
mathematics to understand the real world. We struggle to understand nature,
building a great chain of research institutes, from the
Worse, the
worldview of science is rather chilling. Not only do we not find any point to
life laid out for us in nature, no objective basis for our moral principles, no
correspondence between what we think is the moral law and the laws of nature,
of the sort imagined by philosophers from Anaximander
and Plato to Emerson. We even learn that the emotions that we most treasure,
our love for our wives and husbands and children, are made possible by chemical
processes in our brains that are what they are as a result of natural selection
acting on chance mutations over millions of years. And yet we must not sink
into nihilism or stifle our emotions. At our best we live on a knife-edge,
between wishful thinking on one hand and, on the other, despair.
What,
then, can we do? One thing that helps is humor, a quality not abundant in
Emerson. Just as we laugh with sympathy but not scorn when we see a
one-year-old struggling to stay erect when she takes her first steps, we can
feel a sympathetic merriment at ourselves, trying to live balanced on a
knife-edge. In some of Shakespeare's greatest tragedies, just when the action
is about to reach an unbearable climax, the tragic heroes are confronted with
some "rude mechanical" offering comic observations: a gravedigger, or
a doorkeeper, or a pair of gardeners, or a man with a basket of figs. The
tragedy is not lessened, but the humor puts it in perspective.
Then there are
the ordinary pleasures of life, which have been despised by religious zealots,
from Christian anchorites in the Egyptian deserts to today's Taliban and Mahdi Army. Visiting
There are also
the pleasures brought to us by the high arts. Here I think we are going to lose
something with the decline of religious belief. Much great art has arisen in
the past from religious inspiration. For instance, I can't imagine the poetry
of George Herbert or Henry Vaughn or Gerard Manley Hopkins being written
without sincere religious belief. But nothing prevents those of us who have no
religious belief from enjoying religious poetry, any
more than not being English prevents Americans from enjoying the patriotic
speeches inRichard IIorHenry V.
We may be sad
that no more great religious poetry will be written in the future. We see
already that little English-language poetry written in the past few decades
owes anything to belief in God, and in some cases where religion does enter, as
with poets like Stevie Smith or Philip Larkin, it is
the rejection of religion that provides their inspiration. But of course very
great poetry can be written without religion. Shakespeare provides an example;
none of his work seems to me to show the slightest hint of serious religious
inspiration. Given Ariel and Prospero, we see that poets can do without angels
and prophets.
I do not think
we have to worry that giving up religion will lead to a moral decline. There
are plenty of people without religious faith who live exemplary moral lives (as
for example, me), and though religion has sometimes inspired admirable ethical
standards, it has also often fostered the most hideous crimes. Anyway, belief
in an omnipotent omniscient creator of the world does not in itself have any
moral implications—it's still up to you to decide whether it is right to obey
His commands. For instance, even someone who believes in God can feel that
Abraham in the Old Testament was wrong to obey God in agreeing to sacrifice
Isaac, and that Adam inParadise Lostwas right to
disobey God and follow Eve in eating the apple, so that he could stay with her
when she was driven from
The more we
reflect on the pleasures of life, the more we miss the greatest consolation
that used to be provided by religious belief: the promise that our lives will
continue after death, and that in the afterlife we will
meet the people we have loved. As religious belief weakens, more and more of us
know that after death there is nothing. This is the thing that makes cowards of
us all.
This
is a special way of being afraid
No trick dispels. Religion used to try,
That vast moth-eaten musical brocade
Created to pretend we never die,
And specious stuff that says No
rational being
Can fear a thing it will not feel, not seeing
That this is what we fear—no sight, no sound,
No touch or taste or smell, nothing to think with,
Nothing to love or link with,
The anaesthetic from which none come round.
Living without
God isn't easy. But its very difficulty offers one other consolation—that there
is a certain honor, or perhaps just a grim satisfaction, in facing up to our
condition without despair and without wishful thinking—with good humor, but
without God.
[1] This essay is based on the Phi Beta Kappa Oration
given at
[2] "Can We Ever Understand Consciousness?,"The
The most recent New York Review of Books features one of the
most heartfelt, sensitive, open-minded and thought-provoking pieces I have seen
on the possibility/advisability of meaningful atheism, of what the author
describes as living without God. I
happen to think that Professor Steven Weinberg comes to the wrong conclusion,
but he has much to teach us and the article is not to be missed.
Weinberg's insight about humor and beauty, especially in so-called mundane
places and experiences is crucial. Of course, for me, to be aware of God means
being aware that no place or experience is mundane. But that's just another way
of saying that the piece demonstrates how deeply religious one can be without
believing in God.
I wonder, since religiosity is not his concern, why then he needs to
jettison God. Unless he is simply getting rid of the God invoked by those who
believe in a small-minded, ethnocentric, power-grabbing old man in the sky. In
which case, Weinberg is a modern-day Abraham shattering the idolatry of his own
era, much as Abraham shattered those of his. If that is so, then he should
argue not against the existence of God, but for a better definition of God.
Or he may just be as deeply committed to God's non-existence, as some of us
are to God's actually existing. Some of his words point in this direction.
I do not think
we have to worry that giving up religion will lead to a moral decline. There
are plenty of people without religious faith who live exemplary moral lives (as
for example, me), and though religion has sometimes inspired
admirable ethical standards, it has also often fostered the most hideous crimes.
Precisely the same could be said for science, Professor Weinberg!
Or this one:
Living without God isn't easy. But its very
difficulty offers one other consolation--that there is a certain honor, or
perhaps just a grim satisfaction, in facing up to our condition without despair
and without wishful thinking--with good humor, but without God.
Again, the same words are regularly said by honest believers who wrestle
with their own faith and the world in which we find ourselves. They would
simply change his "without" to "with", and substitute an
"and" where he puts "but".
I guess the real challenge is living with whatever you believe and doing so
in a way that provides both smart questions and meaningful comfort -- that nurtures
hope, without making us naïve. Whatever we call that, I'm in favor of it.