The Science
God:
Theism by Reason Alone
by Dwight Wendell
Preface
Faith and reason are not enemies. But nor can they really
be called friends. They are different aspects of the same thing. Science is
simply the form that religion has taken in the modern world, and Science has
both faith and reason embedded in it. That is the message of this book. But I
know I will have to make my case well if I am to get readers to see that what I
am asserting is so.
We live in an age that we like to think of as an
age of reason par excellence. We
assume Science and the methods of Science are increasing in influence in our
world with every day that passes. We celebrate that fact because we have seen
over and over that the majority of the cruel and stupid abuses of the past can
be traced directly to the unscientific superstitions of the societies in which
they occurred.
But at the same time, the moral codes we need
simply to move through our daily lives, from the personal level to the global,
have suffered serious damage in the last four centuries, largely because these
moral codes haven’t held up under the scrutiny of Science. Most people today know
this on some level. We are bolstered and encouraged by the material progress Science
has brought us, but we are also frightened by the amorality of its world view.
Science has made wonders. It just can’t tell us how or if we should use them.
From the old codes of right and wrong, we keep
getting directions that we can see are obsolete. Executing murderers, for
example, is entirely counterproductive. In the meantime, the new gurus of
Western society, namely the scientists, when they are asked to define right and
wrong, say that Science cannot comment on morality or, worse yet, they flatly
assert that all moral values are no more than fantasy concoctions, about as
empirically real as Santa Claus.1
Science has given us the capacity to do harm on a
planetary scale. Because of that, we need guidance; we need answers and not
just piecemeal ones. We need a moral system that can tell us which of our
actions are tending toward right and which are not. We can’t go on building nuclear
weapons and polluting our planet without, sooner or later, having to face
consequences. Environmentalists
from Rachel Carson to David Suzuki have said we must stop the madness.2,3
Beijing air
pollution (credit: Kentaro Iemoto, Wikimedia Commons)
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Beijing_Air_Pollution..._(12691254574).jpg
The nuclear physicist’s nightmare is even more
horrifying, so much so that Einstein himself said the unleashing of the power
of the atom had set us drifting toward “unparalleled catastrophe.”4
Hiroshima after atom bombing
(credit: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2c/AtomicEffects-Hiroshima.jpg)
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