Is Science a Religion?
by Richard Dawkins
The 1996 Humanist of the Year asked this question in a speech accepting the
honor from the American Humanist Association.
It is fashionable to wax apocalyptic about the threat to humanity
posed by the AIDS virus, "mad cow" disease, and many others, but I think a case
can be made that faith is one of the world's great evils, comparable to the
smallpox virus but harder to eradicate.
Faith, being belief that isn't based on evidence, is the principal
vice of any religion. And who, looking at Northern Ireland or the Middle East, can be
confident that the brain virus of faith is not exceedingly dangerous? One of the stories
told to the young Muslim suicide bombers is that martyrdom is the quickest way to heaven
-- and not just heaven but a special part of heaven where they will receive their special
reward of 72 virgin brides. It occurs to me that our best hope may be to provide a kind of
"spiritual arms control": send in specially trained theologians to deescalate
the going rate in virgins.
Given the dangers of faith -- and considering the accomplishments of
reason and observation in the activity called science -- I find it ironic that, whenever I
lecture publicly, there always seems to be someone who comes forward and says, "Of
course, your science is just a religion like ours. Fundamentally, science just comes down
to faith, doesn't it?"
Well, science is not religion and it doesn't just come down to faith.
Although it has many of religion's virtues, it has none of its vices. Science is based
upon verifiable evidence. Religious faith not only lacks evidence, its independence from
evidence is its pride and joy, shouted from the rooftops. Why else would Christians wax
critical of doubting Thomas? The other apostles are held up to us as exemplars of virtue
because faith was enough for them. Doubting Thomas, on the other hand, required evidence.
Perhaps he should be the patron saint of scientists.
One reason I receive the comment about science being a religion is
because I believe in the fact of evolution. I even believe in it with passionate
conviction. To some, this may superficially look like faith. But the evidence that makes
me believe in evolution is not only overwhelmingly strong; it is freely available to
anyone who takes the trouble to read up on it. Anyone can study the same evidence that I
have and presumably come to the same conclusion. But if you have a belief that is based
solely on faith, I can't examine your reasons. You can retreat behind the private wall of
faith where I can't reach you.
Now in practice, of course, individual scientists do sometimes slip
back into the vice of faith, and a few may believe so single-mindedly in a favorite theory
that they occasionally falsify evidence. However, the fact that this sometimes happens
doesn't alter the principle that, when they do so, they do it with shame and not with
pride. The method of science is so designed that it usually finds them out in the end.
Science is actually one of the most moral, one of the most honest
disciplines around -- because science would completely collapse if it weren't for a
scrupulous adherence to honesty in the reporting of evidence. (As James Randi has pointed
out, this is one reason why scientists are so often fooled by paranormal tricksters and
why the debunking role is better played by professional conjurors; scientists just don't
anticipate deliberate dishonesty as well.) There are other professions (no need to mention
lawyers specifically) in which falsifying evidence or at least twisting it is precisely
what people are paid for and get brownie points for doing.
Science, then, is free of the main vice of religion, which is faith.
But, as I pointed out, science does have some of religion's virtues. Religion may aspire
to provide its followers with various benefits -- among them explanation, consolation, and
uplift. Science, too, has something to offer in these areas.
Humans have a great hunger for explanation. It may be one of the main
reasons why humanity so universally has religion, since religions do aspire to provide
explanations. We come to our individual consciousness in a mysterious universe and long to
understand it. Most religions offer a cosmology and a biology, a theory of life, a theory
of origins, and reasons for existence. In doing so, they demonstrate that religion is, in
a sense, science; it's just bad science. Don't fall for the argument that religion and
science operate on separate dimensions and are concerned with quite separate sorts of
questions. Religions have historically always attempted to answer the questions that
properly belong to science. Thus religions should not be allowed now to retreat away from
the ground upon which they have traditionally attempted to fight. They do offer both a
cosmology and a biology; however, in both cases it is false.
Consolation is harder for science to provide. Unlike religion,
science cannot offer the bereaved a glorious reunion with their loved ones in the
hereafter. Those wronged on this earth cannot, on a scientific view, anticipate a sweet
comeuppance for their tormentors in a life to come. It could be argued that, if the idea
of an afterlife is an illusion (as I believe it is), the consolation it offers is hollow.
But that's not necessarily so; a false belief can be just as comforting as a true one,
provided the believer never discovers its falsity. But if consolation comes that cheap,
science can weigh in with other cheap palliatives, such as pain-killing drugs, whose
comfort may or may not be illusory, but they do work.
Uplift, however, is where science really comes into its own. All the
great religions have a place for awe, for ecstatic transport at the wonder and beauty of
creation. And it's exactly this feeling of spine-shivering, breath-catching awe -- almost
worship -- this flooding of the chest with ecstatic wonder, that modern science can
provide. And it does so beyond the wildest dreams of saints and mystics. The fact that the
supernatural has no place in our explanations, in our understanding of so much about the
universe and life, doesn't diminish the awe. Quite the contrary. The merest glance through
a microscope at the brain of an ant or through a telescope at a long-ago galaxy of a
billion worlds is enough to render poky and parochial the very psalms of praise.
Now, as I say, when it is put to me that science or some particular
part of science, like evolutionary theory, is just a religion like any other, I usually
deny it with indignation. But I've begun to wonder whether perhaps that's the wrong
tactic. Perhaps the right tactic is to accept the charge gratefully and demand equal time
for science in religious education classes. And the more I think about it, the more I
realize that an excellent case could be made for this. So I want to talk a little bit
about religious education and the place that science might play in it.
I do feel very strongly about the way children are brought up. I'm
not entirely familiar with the way things are in the United States, and what I say may
have more relevance to the United Kingdom, where there is state-obliged, legally-enforced
religious instruction for all children. That's unconstitutional in the United States, but
I presume that children are nevertheless given religious instruction in whatever
particular religion their parents deem suitable.
Which brings me to my point about mental child abuse. In a 1995 issue
of the Independent, one of London's leading newspapers, there was a photograph of a
rather sweet and touching scene. It was Christmas time, and the picture showed three
children dressed up as the three wise men for a nativity play. The accompanying story
described one child as a Muslim, one as a Hindu, and one as a Christian. The supposedly
sweet and touching point of the story was that they were all taking part in this Nativity
play.
What is not sweet and touching is that these children were all four
years old. How can you possibly describe a child of four as a Muslim or a Christian or a
Hindu or a Jew? Would you talk about a four-year-old economic monetarist? Would you talk
about a four-year-old neo-isolationist or a four-year-old liberal Republican? There are
opinions about the cosmos and the world that children, once grown, will presumably be in a
position to evaluate for themselves. Religion is the one field in our culture about which
it is absolutely accepted, without question -- without even noticing how bizarre it is --
that parents have a total and absolute say in what their children are going to be, how
their children are going to be raised, what opinions their children are going to have
about the cosmos, about life, about existence. Do you see what I mean about mental child
abuse?
Looking now at the various things that religious education might be
expected to accomplish, one of its aims could be to encourage children to reflect upon the
deep questions of existence, to invite them to rise above the humdrum preoccupations of
ordinary life and think sub specie aeternitatis.
Science can offer a vision of life and the universe which, as I've
already remarked, for humbling poetic inspiration far outclasses any of the mutually
contradictory faiths and disappointingly recent traditions of the world's religions.
For example, how could children in religious education classes fail
to be inspired if we could get across to them some inkling of the age of the universe?
Suppose that, at the moment of Christ's death, the news of it had started traveling at the
maximum possible speed around the universe outwards from the earth. How far would the
terrible tidings have traveled by now? Following the theory of special relativity, the
answer is that the news could not, under any circumstances whatever, have reached more
that one-fiftieth of the way across one galaxy -- not one- thousandth of the way to our
nearest neighboring galaxy in the 100-million-galaxy-strong universe. The universe at
large couldn't possibly be anything other than indifferent to Christ, his birth, his
passion, and his death. Even such momentous news as the origin of life on Earth could have
traveled only across our little local cluster of galaxies. Yet so ancient was that event
on our earthly time-scale that, if you span its age with your open arms, the whole of
human history, the whole of human culture, would fall in the dust from your fingertip at a
single stroke of a nail file.
The argument from design, an important part of the history of
religion, wouldn't be ignored in my religious education classes, needless to say. The
children would look at the spellbinding wonders of the living kingdoms and would consider
Darwinism alongside the creationist alternatives and make up their own minds. I think the
children would have no difficulty in making up their minds the right way if presented with
the evidence. What worries me is not the question of equal time but that, as far as I can
see, children in the United Kingdom and the United States are essentially given no
time with evolution yet are taught creationism (whether at school, in church, or at home).
It would also be interesting to teach more than one theory of
creation. The dominant one in this culture happens to be the Jewish creation myth, which
is taken over from the Babylonian creation myth. There are, of course, lots and lots of
others, and perhaps they should all be given equal time (except that wouldn't leave much
time for studying anything else). I understand that there are Hindus who believe that the
world was created in a cosmic butter churn and Nigerian peoples who believe that the world
was created by God from the excrement of ants. Surely these stories have as much right to
equal time as the Judeo-Christian myth of Adam and Eve.
So much for Genesis; now let's move on to the prophets. Halley's
Comet will return without fail in the year 2062. Biblical or Delphic prophecies don't
begin to aspire to such accuracy; astrologers and Nostradamians dare not commit themselves
to factual prognostications but, rather, disguise their charlatanry in a smokescreen of
vagueness. When comets have appeared in the past, they've often been taken as portents of
disaster. Astrology has played an important part in various religious traditions,
including Hinduism. The three wise men I mentioned earlier were said to have been led to
the cradle of Jesus by a star. We might ask the children by what physical route do they
imagine the alleged stellar influence on human affairs could travel.
Incidentally, there was a shocking program on the BBC radio around
Christmas 1995 featuring an astronomer, a bishop, and a journalist who were sent off on an
assignment to retrace the steps of the three wise men. Well, you could understand the
participation of the bishop and the journalist (who happened to be a religious writer),
but the astronomer was a supposedly respectable astronomy writer, and yet she went along
with this! All along the route, she talked about the portents of when Saturn and Jupiter
were in the ascendant up Uranus or whatever it was. She doesn't actually believe in
astrology, but one of the problems is that our culture has been taught to become tolerant
of it, vaguely amused by it -- so much so that even scientific people who don't believe in
astrology sort of think it's a bit of harmless fun. I take astrology very seriously
indeed: I think it's deeply pernicious because it undermines rationality, and I should
like to see campaigns against it.
When the religious education class turns to ethics, I don't think
science actually has a lot to say, and I would replace it with rational moral philosophy.
Do the children think there are absolute standards of right and wrong? And if so, where do
they come from? Can you make up good working principles of right and wrong, like "do
as you would be done by" and "the greatest good for the greatest number"
(whatever that is supposed to mean)? It's a rewarding question, whatever your personal
morality, to ask as an evolutionist where morals come from; by what route has the human
brain gained its tendency to have ethics and morals, a feeling of right and wrong?
Should we value human life above all other life? Is there a rigid
wall to be built around the species Homo sapiens, or should we talk about whether
there are other species which are entitled to our humanistic sympathies? Should we, for
example, follow the right-to-life lobby, which is wholly preoccupied with human
life, and value the life of a human fetus with the faculties of a worm over the life of a
thinking and feeling chimpanzee? What is the basis of this fence that we erect around Homo
sapiens -- even around a small piece of fetal tissue? (Not a very sound evolutionary
idea when you think about it.) When, in our evolutionary descent from our common ancestor
with chimpanzees, did the fence suddenly rear itself up?
Well, moving on, then, from morals to last things, to eschatology, we
know from the second law of thermodynamics that all complexity, all life, all laughter,
all sorrow, is hell bent on leveling itself out into cold nothingness in the end. They --
and we -- can never be more then temporary, local buckings of the great universal slide
into the abyss of uniformity.
We know that the universe is expanding and will probably expand
forever, although it's possible it may contract again. We know that, whatever happens to
the universe, the sun will engulf the earth in about 60 million centuries from now.
Time itself began at a certain moment, and time may end at a certain
moment -- or it may not. Time may come locally to an end in miniature crunches called
black holes. The laws of the universe seem to be true all over the universe. Why is this?
Might the laws change in these crunches? To be really speculative, time could begin again
with new laws of physics, new physical constants. And it has even been suggested that
there could be many universes, each one isolated so completely that, for it, the others
don't exist. Then again, there might be a Darwinian selection among universes.
So science could give a good account of itself in religious
education. But it wouldn't be enough. I believe that some familiarity with the King James
version of the Bible is important for anyone wanting to understand the allusions that
appear in English literature. Together with the Book of Common Prayer, the Bible gets 58
pages in the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations. Only Shakespeare has more. I do think
that not having any kind of biblical education is unfortunate if children want to read
English literature and understand the provenance of phrases like "through a glass
darkly," "all flesh is as grass," "the race is not to the swift,"
"crying in the wilderness," "reaping the whirlwind," "amid the
alien corn," "Eyeless in Gaza," "Job's comforters," and "the
widow's mite."
I want to return now to the charge that science is just a faith. The
more extreme version of that charge -- and one that I often encounter as both a scientist
and a rationalist -- is an accusation of zealotry and bigotry in scientists themselves as
great as that found in religious people. Sometimes there may be a little bit of justice in
this accusation; but as zealous bigots, we scientists are mere amateurs at the game. We're
content to argue with those who disagree with us. We don't kill them.
But I would want to deny even the lesser charge of purely verbal
zealotry. There is a very, very important difference between feeling strongly, even
passionately, about something because we have thought about and examined the evidence for
it on the one hand, and feeling strongly about something because it has been internally
revealed to us, or internally revealed to somebody else in history and subsequently
hallowed by tradition. There's all the difference in the world between a belief that one
is prepared to defend by quoting evidence and logic and a belief that is supported by
nothing more than tradition, authority, or revelation.
Richard Dawkins is Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at
Oxford University. His books include The Selfish Gene, The Blind Watchmaker, River Out
of Eden, and, most recently, Climbing Mount Improbable. This article is adapted
from his speech in acceptance of the 1996 Humanist of the Year Award from the American
Humanist Association.
The above article was first published in the January/February 1997 issue of The
Humanist (Vol. 57, No. 1).
(c) Copyright 1996, 1997 by Richard Dawkins
Permission to republish this in electronic, print, microform, CD-ROM, or other form
should be sought from the author through the American Humanist Association, which can be
contacted in the following ways:
AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION PO BOX 1188 AMHERST NY 14226-7188 USA
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