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Defining Philosophy

Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett and Sam Harris asserted in various best-selling books that science in general (evolutionary science in particular) has disproven a belief in God. Dawkins famously asserted that “although atheism might be logically tenable before Darwin, Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.” (Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker – WW Norton, 1986, page 6). Pointing to a 1998 survey of National Academy of Sciences members he noted that only 7 percent of American scientists believe in a personal God. From Dawkins’ point of view, this proves that science has essentially disproven Christian beliefs and that the more intelligent, rational and scientifically minded you are, the less you are able to believe in God.

 

Scratch the surface of most modern thinkers today and you will find a rejection of miracles. Miracles are an important part of Christian belief. Christians annually celebrate the incarnation and resurrection of Jesus. The New Testament is filled with accounts of miracles performed by Jesus and the disciples. Scientific mistrust of the Bible began with the Enlightenment belief that miracles cannot be reconciled to a modern, rational view of the world. Armed with this presupposition, scientists turned to the Bible and said “These accounts cannot be reliable because they contain descriptions of miracles and science cannot quantify miracles, therefore these accounts cannot be reliable.”

 

Of course, this is a leap of faith. Science is only equipped to test for natural causes; it cannot speak for supernatural events. Science proceeds on the assumption that whatever happens has a natural cause; it can be accounted for by other events. Miracles are outside the scope of science. While science cannot explain miracles, it cannot claim they don’t exist. Just because my blind friend cannot see the color green does not mean that the color green does not exist. It simply means that my friend is unable to perceive the color.  The existence of God cannot be demonstrably proven or disproven by science, because science, by design, cannot quantify the supernatural.

 

The media often reports news events concerning controversy between secular and religious people over the teaching of – for example, evolution (this is by no means the only controversial subject, it just gets the most press) – as a war between science and religion. This treatment lends to the picture that you are either scientific and rational or religious and therefore, irrational.

 

Evolutionary science assumes that more complex life-forms evolved from less complex life-forms through a process of natural selection.  It surprises many to hear that many Christians believe that God brought about life in this way. We do not reject evolution per se, but we do not embrace philosophical naturalism, which is a view that everything has a natural cause and that organic life is solely the product of random forces guided by no one and nothing. When evolution is presented as an all-encompassing theory of everything we believe, feel and do, we are no longer in the arena of science, but of philosophy. Evolution as an all-encompassing theory of existence has insurmountable difficulties as a worldview.

 

Dawkins insists that if you believe in evolution as a biological mechanism you must believe in philosophical naturalism. Why? I read Dawkins The God Delusion just weeks after I read Francis Collins The Language of God. Collins is the Head of the Humane Genome Project. He believes in evolutionary science. However, Collins believes that the fine-tuning, beauty and order of nature points to a divine Creator. Dawkins would claim that Collins cannot exist, for it is impossible to hold a firm belief in evolutionary biology, but reject philosophical naturalism. Obviously, since Collins does exist and has written a book explaining his view, Dawkins is wrong about the incompatibility of belief in evolutionary biology and Christianity.

 

Dawkins is a brilliant evolutionary scientist, but he steps out of his realm of expertise when he starts making philosophical claims. His scheme is simplistic. There are many different models proposed about how God relates to the development of the life-forms we see today. Not all Biblical Christians are hostile to evolutionary science in its entirety. The conflict model of the relationship between religion and science was a deliberate exaggeration used by scientists and educational leaders at the end of the 19th century to undermine the church’s control of their institutions and increase their own cultural power. It was a product not so much of intellectual necessity but of cultural strategy. Many scientists see no incompatibility between faith in God and their work. Studies in 1916 and 1997 showed this. In 1916, 40 percent of scientists said they believed in a God Who actively communicates with humanity through prayer. In 1997, those numbers had not significantly changed. Dawkins cited a much narrower study of National Academy of Science members which was designed to screen out all scientists who do not ascribe to conservative traditional beliefs. Those with a more general belief in God were screened out.  Dawkins also gives readers the impression that all atheistic scientists would agree with him that no rational, scientific mind could believe in God. Stephen Jay Gould, the late Harvard scientist and evolutionist, was an atheist who wrote “Either half my colleagues are enormously stupid, or else the science of Darwin is fully compatible with conventional religious beliefs – and equally compatible with atheism” (Stephen Jay Gould, “Impeaching a Self-Appointed Judge”, Scientific American 267, no 1, 1992. quoted in Alister McGrath, The Dawkins Delusion? Intervarsity Press, 2007, p. 34.) In other words, Gould was unwilling to assume stupidity on the part of his colleagues just because they did not agree with him religiously. He was willing to admit they might see evidence that he was not seeing.

 

While Dawkins might be perfectly content to believe that physical science can explain the whole of human reality, there are other atheists, often scientists themselves, who disagree, or at least doubt, his premise. Science cannot explain everything. Despite popular appeal, we should disabuse ourselves of the notion that we must choose between science and faith. A majority of scientists admit some degree of religious belief of their own and survey evidence shows that number statistically increasing in recent decades. There is no necessary disjunction between science and devout faith.

 

Doesn’t evolutionary science disprove Genesis 1 and therefore call all of Christianity into question? Not necessarily. The relationship of science to the Bible hinges not just on how we interpret scientific data, but also on how we interpret key Biblical passages. Christianity does not rise or fall upon Genesis 1. The skeptic should consider the central claims of Christianity, revolving around the person of Christ, the resurrection and the central tenets of the Christian message rather than the side issues of creation and evolution. It is my experience that once you have the guidance of the Holy Spirit, some forms of evidence that previously seemed suspect become less so, up to and including full acceptance of them.

 

Yes, Christians disagree on the concept of God’s intervention in the natural order. Miracles are sometimes hard to believe. The apostles didn’t necessarily believe in Jesus’ resurrection the moment they heard of it. Thomas had to see Jesus for himself in order to believe. Miracles were never given to prove belief, but to stimulate worship. We think of miracles as suspension of the natural order, but Jesus meant them to be restoration of the natural order. He healed the blind and the lame, after all, which are disruptions of the natural order. God did not originally make the world to have disease, hunger and death in it. Jesus has come to redeem and repair what is wrong and broken in the world. His miracles are not just proof that He has power, but wonderful foretastes of what He will one day do with that power. Jesus’ miracles don’t just challenge our minds. They promise our hearts that the world we all want will one day be proven reality.

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