Nicholas Beale
Richard Dawkins has a tremendous gift for finding a catchy metaphor. He is associated above all with two titles: The Selfish Gene (1976) and The God Delusion (2006). In the former he characterises humans as “lumbering robots” controlled by our genes: “they created us, body and mind; and their preservation is the ultimate rationale for our existence.” This cluster of ideas, and his eloquent expression of them, attracted many rich admirers: one became CEO of Enron and another paid Oxford to make Dawkins a Professor for the Public Understanding of Science. In this post, Dawkins was freed to communicate without the need for research or peer review. In 2006 he launched his broadside against religion and became the UK’s most famous living scientist. Whatever the success of the specific arguments he attempted, the smoke and noise increased the public perception of a serious conflict between “science” and “religion.”
But now that the smoke of his guns is clearing and HMS Dawkins has retired from his professorship, it is also becoming clear that we are moving into a post-Dawkins phase in terms of the public discussion of science and religion. The reasons for this are partly religious and philosophical, partly purely scientific. Here are three:
1. The claim that religious belief is harmful from an evolutionary point of view is simply false. Whether or not the tenets of (say) Christianity are true, there is overwhelming evidence that Christians have, on average, more children than atheists (surviving fertile grandchildren is really the acid test, but I don’t know of any data on this). They also live longer, are healthier, and so on. The fact that there are individual counter-examples to this is beside the point: evolution works on populations and not on individuals. Such practical effects of practicing the Christian faith are at best only weak evidence for the truth of Christianity. But it is dishonest for evolutionary biologists to say “Christian belief is harmful” unless they make it crystal clear that what they mean is: Christian belief is beneficial from an evolutionary point of view, but I consider it harmful for other reasons.
2. The idea that evolution acts exclusively at the level of the gene is also false. Not only is there increasing evidence for a vast array of biological inheritance that is not based on changes to the genome (so-called epigenetic inheritance), the idea that genes are the “programs” of life turns out to be fundamentally misleading. Biology operates at many levels: genes, cells, organisms, populations, and ecosystems, to name just five. All these levels are interdependent and none of them functions at all on their own: cells require genes but genes require cells—and indeed ecosystems. Furthermore they interact in complex nondeterministic ways: at no stage can an outcome be predicted with certainty. The great systems biologist Denis Noble is wonderful on this, both in his masterly book The Music of Life and in subsequent writings; see also, for example, Evolution in Four Dimensions by Jalbonka and Lamb). In humans and other social animals the social group is clearly a fundamental unit of evolution, especially where most parents are members of the same social group, and from a biological point of view much of the function of religion is to regulate behavior within social groups. In a strange way, a denial of the fundamental biological importance of the social group lies at the heart of the fallacies of both The Selfish Gene and The God Delusion.
3. In The God Delusion Dawkins went well outside his area of competence, wading with gusto into areas of philosophy, cosmology, and theology without taking expert advice. This, combined with its aggressive tone, caused all but the most partisan reviewers to find it a deeply disappointing book. Nature illustrated its review with a cartoon depicting Dawkins as a sandwich-board man. Some of the politer comments about his forays into philosophy suggested that they were “sophomoric.” The idea that the truth of all statements can be decided scientifically is also palpably absurd: not only is this idea self-refuting (for its truth clearly cannot be decided scientifically), Kurt Gödel proved that even mathematics cannot be shown to be complete and consistent.
It is a remarkable fact about the intellectual atmosphere at the time that someone could write a book that is largely about theology whilst professing total ignorance of the subject. After all, there was (almost certainly) no historical Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, but no-one would be taken seriously if they wrote a book about Hamlet without having read Shakespeare’s play and at least some of the key literature. String Theory is even more “obviously absurd” than the most abstruse Trinitarian theology, but no-one would take a book like Peter Woit’s Not Even Wrong seriously if it were not written by a competent mathematical physicist who has studied the topic in depth.
I hope, and expect, that the Obama era, and the retirement of Dawkins, will mark a move to a more constructive phase of the dialogue between science and religion. Certainly the atmosphere amongst leading scientists on both sides of the Atlantic is much more favourable than the impression given by Dawkins and his followers. The leadership of the AAAS has been for a while in active dialogue with the leaders of the National Association of Evangelicals, greatly encouraged by E. O. Wilson, and I have heard AAAS President Jim McCarthy speak movingly of the value of this for both sides. John Polkinghorne and I hope that our little book
Questions of Truth will help advance this dialogue as well, and it is interesting that we readily received permission to launch the book at this year’s AAAS Meeting in the U.S. and at the Royal Society in the UK.
Another case in point is a letter to the Daily Telegraph on 9 February 2009 signed by several scientists and Christian leaders (including Trinity Forum Senior Fellow Francis Collins and Nobel Laureate Sir Martin Evans) on the 200th anniversary of Darwin’s birth. “Evolution,” they write, “has become caught in the crossfire of a religious battle in which Darwin had little interest. Despite his own loss of Christian faith, he wrote shortly before his death: ‘It seems to me absurd to doubt that a man may be an ardent Theist and an evolutionist.’”
Religion is not the same as science, but nor is philosophy or, for that matter, art. Science principally involves complex interactions between theoretical ideas and objects which can be manipulated by experiment. Religion involves an equally complex but very different set of interactions between ideas and persons, and real personal relationships are inevitably faith-based. But both explore questions of truth, and religion—at least in Judeo-Christian forms, is also significantly based on evidentially motivated beliefs, carefully assessed.
However, knowledge without action is impotent. The world faces many serious problems and to achieve real progress in addressing them we need to engage both the deep values of large numbers of people and use suitably reliable “factual” information. This fundamentally requires engagement between the scientific and religious approaches to understanding of reality, and is perhaps one aspect of Einstein’s famous dictum that “Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.”
Nicholas Beale is a strategic consultant and social philosopher. He is a long-time collaborator with scientist-priest John Polkinghorne on the web site Polkinghorne.net. The web site for their new book, Questions of Truth, is questionsoftruth.org.
A sample from the book, “Are Thoughts Material?” is also available on Provocations.
Features, Faiths and Worldviews, Public Square, Science and Technology, Mon 23 Feb 2009
There are few things sadder in this universe than a well-dressed man sitting in his well appointed house with a prime cut of beef in his belly and an $18 glass of wine in his hand, studying a magazine article about the joys of titanium tennis rackets. That . . . is futility writ large.
Dave Shiflett, 2003
A bundle of all six narrated Trinity Forum Readings on CD at a discounted price.
Decoding the Language of Faith
Forgiving Enemies in Northern Ireland
President Obama’s Proposals for a Second Fiscal Stimulus: Senior Fellow Prabhu Guptara: “Is there anything short of divine miracles which will be good for job creation, good for the small business sector, good for the economy as a whole, and good for President Obama?” (Renaissance: Insights for Action in Today’s World • 2010 02 09)
How the Victoria and Albert Museum dealt with the dying of Christianity: “This situation is unprecedented in western civilisation: even 50 years ago, when these galleries of one of the richest collections in the world were last displayed in the V&A, they could assume that everyone was familiar with the rudiments of Christianity. Now, in a twinkling of an eye, 2,000 years of culture in the profoundest meaning of the word have been largely forgotten.” (Anna Somers Cocks, The Art Newspaper, December 2009 • 2010 01 05)
The God that Fails: David Brooks: “Many people seem to be in the middle of a religious crisis of faith. All the gods they believe in — technology, technocracy, centralized government control — have failed them in this instance.” (New York Times, December 31, 2009 • 2010 01 05)
From Winchester to Westminster: Jonathan Aitken discusses Sir John Templeton recently in the American Spectator; here’s a quote from the late philanthropist on gratitude: “Thanksgiving opens the door to spiritual growth. If there is any day in our life which is not thanksgiving day, then we are not fully alive. Counting our blessing attracts blessings. Counting our blessings each morning starts a day full of blessings. Thanksgiving brings God’s bounty. From gratitude comes riches—from complaints, poverty. Thankfulness opens the door to happiness. Thanksgiving causes giving. Thanksgiving puts our mind in tune with the Infinite. Continual gratitude dissolves our worries.” (The American Spectator • 2009 09 11)
• Welcome, National Affairs (2009 09 08)
• Looking for an Honest Man (2009 09 08)
• Why AI is a dangerous dream (2009 09 08)
• Restoring the Fresco of Progress (2009 08 28)
• The Case for Working With Your Hands (2009 06 04)
Inheriting Paradise: Meditations on Gardening by Vigen Guroian.