ASTRONOMY Magazine Contributing editor Bob Berman, in an article in the latest issue (August, p. 11, God and Astronomy) , literally steps into a cultural quagmire almost as treacherous as lax pundits have done in the political minefield of the JFK assassination. That is, he interjected the issue of God in trying to literally tone down empirical and observational science and its claims for confident knowledge, while seeking some kind of putative accommodation with America's vast population of God believers. (And creationist know-nothings.)
Let me say ahead of time this is about like trying to square a circle, especially given that this nation's believers along with their religiosity, are outliers in terms of their peers in other industrial nations. The graphic below shows this:
Showing successful societies in relation to degree of religious beliefs (from Free Inquiry, Vol. 29, No. 1 Jan. 2009). Basically, for 18 out of 19 of the most prosperous democracies, the share of population reporting absolute belief in a god or gods ranges from between as little as a few percent to at most one-half. In some of these nations, mainly in western Europe, two-thirds proclaim to be either atheists or agnostics. Compare this to the outlier U.S. (U) where 83 percent express solid belief- and this is for the patriarchal, personal version of a hyper-engaged deity.
Hence the stage is set already for strife and much debate, argument. He starts out by describing how the very first COSMOS episode, with the animated segment on Giordano Bruno, irritated hordes of believers (mostly devout Christians) when Bruno - while being tortured - turned his head away from a crucifix in disgust. Well, uh duh! You are getting some delicate parts roasted and broasted with assorted fiery implements and what do you expect him to do? Smile and shout, 'Thank ye, Jeezus!" Come on!
He then notes that "it's not lost on them that the original COSMOS was hosted by a proclaimed agnostic, Carl Sagan". Which of course, is a common misperception - since Sagan was as much an atheist as I am. He just didn't want to disclose it for a very sensible reason: he knew by the time he'd become a famous popularizer that he had a very successful enterprise going with all his books. He didn't want to foul it up by spooking too many of his countrymen by saying the A-word. So he played it coy, much like Einstein before him (with his "God of Spinoza") and didn't let on - though if you parse his words it's clear he's an implicit or agnostic atheist.
At other times, and in assorted other interviews, it seems Sagan himself isn't clear what he is. For example, on one occasion he stated:
"My view is that if there is no evidence for it, then forget about it. An
agnostic is somebody who doesn't believe in something until there is evidence
for it, so I'm agnostic."
Also:
"An
atheist has to know more than I know. An atheist is someone who knows there is
no God."
Which suggests Sagan wasn't really au fait with either atheism or agnosticism. In fact, an agnostic atheist is exactly someone who withholds belief until there is evidence for a claim. A pure agnostic is one who asserts there is an impossibility of ever knowing enough to confer belief. He subscribes to the tenet that our brains are simply not up to the capacity to ever be in such an ultimately knowing position.
Moreover, Sagan is wrong that an "atheist is someone who knows there is no God." This is the cartoon version of atheism. What we atheists actually say is that the whole idea of God is redundant – logically unnecessary – because it doesn’t help us to model any physical systems or make verifiable, empirical predictions. (The closest to what Sagan identified as atheism relates to the explicit atheist who maintains there can never be any evidence for a God because the natural sciences can have nothing to do with the supernatural.)
Moreover, Sagan is wrong that an "atheist is someone who knows there is no God." This is the cartoon version of atheism. What we atheists actually say is that the whole idea of God is redundant – logically unnecessary – because it doesn’t help us to model any physical systems or make verifiable, empirical predictions. (The closest to what Sagan identified as atheism relates to the explicit atheist who maintains there can never be any evidence for a God because the natural sciences can have nothing to do with the supernatural.)
The gist of it is that the atheist maintains the probability is very high that there is no ultimate force out there, and we are on our own. Which is precisely the point Carl Sagan makes in the last segment shown of the final new COSMOS episode ('Unafraid of the Dark'), with the focus on the 'pale blue dot' of Earth.
Anyway, Berman also misfires on a number of
other levels. He writes, for example, that the new COSMOS’ series “continues the series’
conviction that a belief in God is a superstition anathema to science”. But
as I noted in my own ASTRONOMY magazine article: ‘The God Factor’ (Astronomy Forum,
March, 1990), science selectively excludes problems for which no practical
method of inquiry exists. The supernatural, which is neither measurable or
verifiable, falls into this category and that includes ‘God’. More to the
point, we tend to regard such entities held by virtue of belief alone – as
opposed to evidence - as evocative of superstition. The latter encompasses such beliefs, especially when the supernatural realm is populated by invisible beings which can supposedly affect and interact with our world. To the empirical scientist this is the very epitome of superstition.
This is reinforced by the
fact that astronomy, like most physical sciences, still operates on the
principle of materialist reductionism. Thus, our job and duty is to remorselessly cull all dross or irrelevant issues that clutter as opposed to expose, what our objects of inquiry are about. This means all invisible, unapproachable entities must go into the dumpster.
Berman is more or less aghast at this, as when he remarks: "The advocacy segments in shows like COSMOS may be well intentioned but I fear they may merely harden those who think science is a 'position' or 'view' of the world rather than an impartial portal to truth."
But Berman doesn't seem to grasp here that science DOES take a position or view (naturalistic or materialistic) which undergirds its naturalistic approach to inquiry - in order to take an impartial approach to the natural world. If it allowed subjective beliefs to hold sway, or adopt any openness to supernaturalism, the impartial search for natural truth would be destroyed.
Berman also seems not to grasp that the
invocation of God in any domain is laden with peril because even if we did
agree some ultimate power started at all (as I pointed out in my 1990 Astronomy
article) there’d still be no agreement on the entity’s attributes, nature or powers.
Even Berman acknowledges this observing that some see a ‘creator’ that stands
apart from the universe, while others see an underlying intelligence in nature.( Sagan, for his part, equated 'God' to the physical principles and laws that govern the universe, which let's be clear, is more a physical God.) The point here is that it makes more sense not to interject the issue of 'God' at all, because no two people can even agree on what the noun means.
Berman makes the further statement that: “some astrophysicists are agnostics or atheists” (implying the numbers are too small for believers to worry over) but this misses
the larger point: that while 83 percent of Americans believe in God, only 33
percent of physical scientists do (according to a 2006 NY Times study).
This bifurcation of belief is what we ought to be most concerned about. It sets
the stage for an ongoing tension between scientists and the bulk of the
American populace (which let us also recall, as I showed above, is an outlier compared to the rest
of the advanced industrial world in terms of God belief and religiosity)
As for Bob Berman's claim that “the majority of the world regards the universe as suffused with intelligence” let’s bear in mind that popularity alone has never led to objective truth. At one time, the majority of the world also believed that the world was flat and that the Earth was actually the center of the universe. I am not saying here that the cosmos is not imbued with intelligence, it well might be (as I indicate in my book, 'Beyond Atheism, Beyond God'). What I am saying is that you cannot arrive at objective truth by means of assessing a poll or a vote then saying a "majority" decided it. This also means the IAU Pluto vote - to dethrone that small orb from proper planethood - was off base and wrong-headed.
The sooner Bob Berman and other popularizers understand that, the quicker we can allow scientific inquiry to proceed without fretting over public alienation or loss of funding because a certain segment of the populace will go ballistic if their magic realms are marginalized. Look at it this way: an advancing nation on the road of progress embraces the REAL. A backward, declining nation - one heading toward oblivion and collapse- embraces the UNREAL.
That's the choice we have, and it ought to be easy, though after the Supreme Court's Hobby Lobby decision, I am not sure it can be. Those five Justices have clearly shown not even they can discern the real from the unreal. And if they can't, how many millions of others (many clapping and cheering the decision) are in the same unreal boat?
"America's vast population of God believers. (And creationist know-nothings.)"
ReplyDeleteIf that isn't a narrow-minded, bigoted, uneducated statement, I never heard one.
Some people think you have to drop your brain in the toilet to believe in God. Ironically, at the same time, there is a total consensus among fish that there is no such thing as a higher life form on dry land.
Sorry, 'Joe', total false analogy. Your fish example invokes a purely natural basis, given 'dry land' is still of the natural order. However, good believers endow their entity with a supernatural order and special attributes, i.e. omniscience and omnipotence, that are found to contradict each other on further inspection. Here is a test for your claim: Provide the necessary and sufficient conditions for a supernatural deity to exist. Just bear in mind from a scientific and objective standpoint, there is simply no way that any purportedly supernatural entity or order can be demonstrated or proven.
ReplyDeleteNo scientific methodologies for such exist, nor any credible instruments or measuring techniques. The rejoinder that those things can't be measured merely reinforces the argument that they are no more fit for scientific inquiry than the astrologer’s claim of “malefic” influences of Mars at an infant’s birth.
Because a supernatural domain cannot be approached in any scientific or objective way, then by any rational reckoning it doesn't exist. One need not even deny its existence because to all intents the supernatural entity becomes logically unnecessary or redundant. It doesn't help us make scientific predictions or explain natural phenomena—say, coronal mass ejections or auroral substorms. Any doubt about the possibility of knowing something must be vastly multiplied for the supernatural domain.
Cheers!