Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog
(credit: Caspar David Friedrich [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons)
This
book is about what I call reasoned faith:
a set of ideas that connects Science to morality and then to faith. I have
worked out a system that integrates all that we know and all that is justified,
as Science is, by reasoning and evidence alone. This system is consistent with
my deepest instincts, with all the theories used in Science, and with all the
sense data and memories of sense data that lie between these poles of intuition
and reason.
In
this book, I will construct an argument in everyday language proving that the
current belief about the incompatibility of science and faith is wrong. My hope
is that all readers who have struggled or are still struggling with this
dilemma, the biggest dilemma of our time, and even those who claim to have
committed themselves to one side of the debate or the other and to have stopped
thinking about the matter, will find resolution by the end of the book.
I
believe that all decisions to stop thinking about this dilemma are deluded and
unsustainable. Few of the jingoists, atheist or theist, and even fewer of the
discouraged ones in the middle—ever truly stop thinking about the dilemma.
Instead, they live in anxiety and return to it via the pathways of daily
experience again and again. I want to provide them all with a way to solve it,
not permanently but repeatedly, every time doubt assails them, to work their
way through doubts as they crop up in the flow of living and to do so with
growing confidence in a comprehensive system of thought that enables them to do
that work.
In
philosophical terms, my main thesis is called "deriving ought from is” which
means finding a strong logical base for moral values (the "ought" part)
in the factual evidence of real life (the "is" part). I will prove
that a code of right and wrong exists, embedded in the processes of the real
world, and that we can figure out that code simply by looking at the evidence
in Science, in History, and in our daily lives.
Further, I will show that once
we recognize there is such a code—and we see what that code is telling us about
how a human life can and should be lived—we are gradually and inescapably led
to the conclusion that a God does exist in this universe. A “sort of a God,” if
you like. I’m content with the term “sort of a God.” The more unique and
personal the view of God that each reader arrives at by time he or she has
finished reading this book, the happier I’ll be. That concept has to be
personal, or in the end, it is nothing at all.
Boat-building Near Flatford Mill 1815
(credit: John Constable [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons)
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