倍可親

回復: 2

Science and religion aren't friends

[複製鏈接]

209

主題

1487

帖子

488

積分

貝殼網友三級

Rank: 3Rank: 3

積分
488
也和話 發表於 2010-10-15 13:52 | 顯示全部樓層 |閱讀模式
from USA Today Oct 11, 2010

By Jerry A. Coyne

Religion in America is on the defensive.

Atheist books such as The God Delusion and The End of Faith have, by exposing the dangers of faith and the lack of evidence for the God of Abraham, become best-sellers. Science nibbles at religion from the other end, relentlessly consuming divine explanations and replacing them with material ones. Evolution took a huge bite a while back, and recent work on the brain has shown no evidence for souls, spirits, or any part of our personality or behavior distinct from the lump of jelly in our head. We now know that the universe did not require a creator. Science is even studying the origin of morality. So religious claims retreat into the ever-shrinking gaps not yet filled by science. And, although to be an atheist in America is still to be an outcast, America's fastest-growing brand of belief is non-belief.

But faith will not go gentle. For each book by a "New Atheist," there are many others attacking the "movement" and demonizing atheists as arrogant, theologically ignorant, and strident. The biggest area of religious push-back involves science. Rather than being enemies, or even competitors, the argument goes, science and religion are completely compatible friends, each devoted to finding its own species of truth while yearning for a mutually improving dialogue.

As a scientist and a former believer, I see this as bunk. Science and faith are fundamentally incompatible, and for precisely the same reason that irrationality and rationality are incompatible. They are different forms of inquiry, with only one, science, equipped to find real truth. And while they may have a dialogue, it's not a constructive one. Science helps religion only by disproving its claims, while religion has nothing to add to science.

Irreconcilable

"But surely," you might argue, "science and religion must be compatible. After all, some scientists are religious." One is Francis Collins, head of the National Institutes of Health and an evangelical Christian. But the existence of religious scientists, or religious people who accept science, doesn't prove that the two areas are compatible. It shows only that people can hold two conflicting notions in their heads at the same time. If that meant compatibility, we could make a good case, based on the commonness of marital infidelity, that monogamy and adultery are perfectly compatible. No, the incompatibility between science and faith is more fundamental: Their ways of understanding the universe are irreconcilable.

Science operates by using evidence and reason. Doubt is prized, authority rejected. No finding is deemed "true" — a notion that's always provisional — unless it's repeated and verified by others. We scientists are always asking ourselves, "How can I find out whether I'm wrong?" I can think of dozens of potential observations, for instance — one is a billion-year-old ape fossil — that would convince me that evolution didn't happen.

Physicist Richard Feynman observed that the methods of science help us distinguish real truth from what we only want to be true: "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool."

Science can, of course, be wrong. Continental drift, for example, was laughed off for years. But in the end the method is justified by its success. Without science, we'd all live short, miserable and disease-ridden lives, without the amenities of medicine or technology. As Stephen Hawking proclaimed, science wins because it works.

Does religion work? It brings some of us solace, impels some to do good (and others to fly planes into buildings), and buttresses the same moral truths embraced by atheists, but does it help us better understand our world or our universe? Hardly. Note that almost all religions make specific claims about the world involving matters such as the existence of miracles, answered prayers wonder-working saints and divine cures, virgin births, annunciations and resurrections. These factual claims, whose truth is a bedrock of belief, bring religion within the realm of scientific study. But rather than relying on reason and evidence to support them, faith relies on revelation, dogma and authority. Hebrews 11:1 states, with complete accuracy, "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen." Indeed, a doubting-Thomas demand for evidence is often considered rude.

And this leads to the biggest problem with religious "truth": There's no way of knowing whether it's true. I've never met a Christian, for instance, who has been able to tell me what observations about the universe would make him abandon his beliefs in God and Jesus. (I would have thought that the Holocaust could do it, but apparently not.) There is no horror, no amount of evil in the world, that a true believer can't rationalize as consistent with a loving God. It's the ultimate way of fooling yourself. But how can you be sure you're right if you can't tell whether you're wrong?

The religious approach to understanding inevitably results in different faiths holding incompatible "truths" about the world. Many Christians believe that if you don't accept Jesus as savior, you'll burn in hell for eternity. Muslims hold the exact opposite: Those who see Jesus as God's son are the ones who will roast. Jews see Jesus as a prophet, but not the messiah. Which belief, if any, is right? Because there's no way to decide, religions have duked it out for centuries, spawning humanity's miserable history of religious warfare and persecution.

In contrast, scientists don't kill each other over matters such as continental drift. We have better ways to settle our differences. There is no Catholic science, no Hindu science, no Muslim science — just science, a multicultural search for truth. The difference between science and faith, then, can be summed up simply: In religion faith is a virtue; in science it's a vice.

But don't just take my word for the incompatibility of science and faith — it's amply demonstrated by the high rate of atheism among scientists. While only 6% of Americans are atheists or agnostics, the figure for American scientists is 64%, according to Rice professor Elaine Howard Ecklund's book, Science vs. Religion. Further proof: Among countries of the world, there is a strong negative relationship between their religiosity and their acceptance of evolution. Countries like Denmark and Sweden, with low belief in God, have high acceptance of evolution, while religious countries are evolution-intolerant. Out of 34 countries surveyed in a study published in Science magazine, the U.S., among the most religious, is at the bottom in accepting Darwinism: We're No. 33, with only Turkey below us. Finally, in a 2006 Time poll a staggering 64% of Americans declared that if science disproved one of their religious beliefs, they'd reject that science in favor of their faith.

'Venerable superstition'

In the end, science is no more compatible with religion than with other superstitions, such as leprechauns. Yet we don't talk about reconciling science with leprechauns. We worry about religion simply because it's the most venerable superstition — and the most politically and financially powerful.

Why does this matter? Because pretending that faith and science are equally valid ways of finding truth not only weakens our concept of truth, it also gives religion an undeserved authority that does the world no good. For it is faith's certainty that it has a grasp on truth, combined with its inability to actually find it, that produces things such as the oppression of women and gays, opposition to stem cell research and euthanasia, attacks on science, denial of contraception for birth control and AIDS prevention, sexual repression, and of course all those wars, suicide bombings and religious persecutions.

And any progress — not just scientific progress — is easier when we're not yoked to religious dogma. Of course, using reason and evidence won't magically make us all agree, but how much clearer our spectacles would be without the fog of superstition!

Jerry A. Coyne is a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolution at The University of Chicago. His latest book is Why Evolution is True, and his website is www.whyevolutionistrue.com.
神害世人,甚至將他的獨生子也害了,叫一切不信他的人,不得永生, 反得永世被燒烤。

319

主題

2萬

帖子

9284

積分

五級貝殼核心

Rank: 5Rank: 5

積分
9284
在美一方 發表於 2010-10-15 21:06 | 顯示全部樓層
the lump of jelly 耶和華cooked a lump of jelly in Adam's head
回復 支持 反對

使用道具 舉報

319

主題

2萬

帖子

9284

積分

五級貝殼核心

Rank: 5Rank: 5

積分
9284
在美一方 發表於 2010-10-16 09:16 | 顯示全部樓層
我翻譯了全文,請指正:

科學和宗教不是朋友
Jerry A. Coyne
芝加哥大學,生態學與進化學系,教授

美國的宗教處於守勢

無神論書籍比如《上帝的錯覺》和《信仰的終結》,通過揭露信仰的危險並指出亞伯拉罕的神缺乏證據,而成為暢銷書。科學從另一端在蠶食宗教,無情地廢除神性的解釋並用物質的理論來替代。之前,進化論已經咬掉了宗教巨大的一塊,而在最近對腦的研究工作表明,沒有證據支持靈魂、精神、或人的個性或行為的哪一部分,可以脫離我們腦殼內的那堆膠凍。我們現在知道,宇宙並不需要一個創造者,科學甚至正在研究道德的起源。因此,宗教的主張已經撤退進那些科學尚未填補的並正在不斷縮小的空白。而且,雖然在美國選擇做一個無神論者仍然是選擇做一個(社會)棄兒,美國增長最快的信仰品牌是非信仰。

但是,(宗教)信仰不會以溫柔相對。對於每一本「新無神論者」的書,都會有很多的書攻擊「(無神論)運動」並妖魔化無神論者是傲慢、對神學無知、刺耳的等等。引發宗教最大撤退的領域涉及到科學。有觀點認為,科學和宗教不是敵人更不是競爭對手,而是完全相容的朋友,二者在各自的範疇里致力於尋找真理的同時試圖改善相互間的對話。

作為一名科學家和前信徒,我認為這是無稽之談。科學與信仰是根本不相容的,與非理性與理性不相容是同樣的原因。兩者是不同形式的探尋,但其中只有一個,就是科學,才具有尋找真理的手段。即使雙方有可能對話,也不會是建設性的。科學對宗教的幫助只能是駁斥其主張,而宗教不能為科學添加任何內容。

不可調和

「但可以肯定,」你也許會說,「科學與宗教必須是相容的,畢竟有些科學家是宗教徒」。一個是弗朗西斯柯林斯,是美國國立衛生研究院的頭兒也是一個福音派基督徒。但是,科學家宗教徒或接受科學的宗教人士的存在,並不能證明這兩個領域是相容的。它僅僅表明人能在他們的頭腦里讓兩個相互矛盾的概念並存。如果這就意味著相容性,那麼我們根據基於婚姻不忠的普遍存在,就可以論證一夫一妻制和通姦是完美相容的。不是這樣的,科學與信仰之間的不相容是更根本的:二者認識宇宙的方式是不可調和的。

科學利用證據和推理來運作。懷疑被尊重,權威被拒絕。沒有任何發現會被認為是「真」 - 一個總是暫時的概念 - 除非被其他人所重複並證實。我們科學家總是問自己,「我怎樣才能知道我是否錯了?」 我能想到幾打可能的觀測,例子之一是一億歲的猿化石, 能說服我進化沒有發生。

物理學家理查德費曼指出,科學方法幫助我們區分什麼是真正的真理和那些只是我們想讓其成為真理的東西:「首要原則是,你不能欺騙自己,而你自己是最容易被愚弄的。」

科學當然可能犯錯。例如大陸漂移就被嘲笑了很多年。但最後其成功證明了自己。如果沒有科學,我們就都短命、過著痛苦和疾病纏身的生活,享受不到醫學或技術的舒適。正像斯蒂芬霍金所稱,科學獲勝是因為它發揮了作用。

宗教是否有用?它帶給我們一些安慰、激勵一些人行善(也激勵另一些人開飛機撞大樓)、也支持無神論者同樣接受的道德真理,但它有助於我們更好地了解我們的世界或我們的宇宙嗎?幾乎沒有。請注意,幾乎所有的宗教都聲稱有涉及到世間的具體的奇迹,比如應許了的祈禱、創造奇迹的聖人和神的醫治、處女生子、天使報喜和復活。這些聲稱的「事實」如果為真就是信仰的基礎,而這些聲稱使宗教落入了科學可研究的範疇。然而,宗教不是以理性和證據為依託,而是依靠啟示、教條和權威。希伯來書11:1非常準確地說道,「信就是所望之事的實底,是未見之事的確據。」 事實上,一個索求證據的「起疑的托馬斯」的通常被認為是粗魯的。(在美註:a doubting Thomas是西方的一個類似於成語的說法,形容拒絕相信缺乏具體證據說法的人,此成語來源於約翰福音20章24-29節使徒托馬斯懷疑耶穌復活的故事)

這樣就導致宗教的「真理」的最大難點:完全沒有辦法知道其是真是假。比如,我從來沒有見過一個基督徒能夠告訴我看到世界上什麼樣的事情可以讓他放棄他對上帝和耶穌的信仰。 (我本來以為二戰大屠殺足夠了,但顯然不是。)世界上沒有任何恐怖事件、任何程度的邪惡能讓一個真正的信徒無法使之合理地與慈愛的上帝統一起來。這正是愚弄自己的終極手段。但如果你沒有分辨你是否錯了的方法,你又如何能肯定自己是對的?

以宗教的方法論來明理,其必然結果就是不同的宗教信仰對世界持有不相容的「真理」。許多基督教徒認為,如果你不接受耶穌為救主,你會在永恆的地獄中被燒烤。穆斯林則截然相反:誰認為耶穌是神的兒子誰就會被燒烤。猶太人認為耶穌是個先知,而不是救世主。如果有正確的,那麼哪一個信仰是正確的呢?因為沒辦法來決定,各宗教拳腳相加了若干個世紀,滋生出人類的悲慘的戰爭和宗教迫害史。

與此相反,科學家們針對如大陸漂移這樣的事情不相互殘殺。我們有更好的方法來解決分歧。沒有什麼天主教科學、沒有印度教科學、沒有穆斯林科學,只有科學這個對真理的多元文化的探尋。那麼,科學與信仰之間的差異,可以簡單地概括為:在宗教里,信仰是一種美德,而在科學里,信仰是一種墮落。

但是,不要以為對科學與信仰不相容僅僅是我的觀點,它為科學家中無神論者的高比例所充分證明。雖然只有6%的美國人是無神論者或不可知論者,而據Rice大學伊萊恩霍華德埃克倫德教授的書《科學迎戰宗教》,美國科學家的這個數字是64%。進一步的證明:在世界各國,宗教虔誠性和對進化論的接受程度之間存在強烈的負相關關係。像丹麥和瑞典,對上帝的信仰程度低,對進化論的接受程度就高,而宗教國家不接受進化論。發表在《科學》雜誌的一項對34個國家的調查中,美國處於接受達爾文進化論的末尾,排名第33,僅僅在土耳其之前。這還不算完,2006年《時代》周刊的調查發現,令人驚愕的有64%的美國人宣稱,如果科學否定哪項他們的宗教信念,他們會忠於信仰而拒絕那項科學。

德高望重的迷信

最後要說,科學與宗教不比科學和其它如妖精等迷信更相容。然而,我們不會討論科學和妖精和解。我們關注宗教,只是因為它是最德高望重的迷信 – 而且在政治和財力上最強大。

為什麼這很重要?因為如果我們假裝信仰和科學是發現真理的同樣有效的方式,這不僅削弱我們對真理的認識,也會給宗教以其不配擁有的權威來給這個世界不做什麼好事。因為正是信仰對它擁有真理的這種確信,加上它尋找真理上的無能,製造了諸如壓迫婦女和同性戀、反對幹細胞研究和安樂死、攻擊科學、拒絕使用避孕手段來避孕並預防艾滋病、性壓抑,當然,還有所有的戰爭、自殺性爆炸和宗教迫害。

任何進展 - 不僅僅是科學的進步 - 當我們不宗教教條束縛的時候就更容易。當然,使用理性和證據不會奇迹般地使我們大家都意見一致,但沒有迷信的霧靄,我們面前的景象會多麼的清晰!
回復 支持 反對

使用道具 舉報

您需要登錄后才可以回帖 登錄 | 註冊

本版積分規則

關於本站 | 隱私權政策 | 免責條款 | 版權聲明 | 聯絡我們

Copyright © 2001-2013 海外華人中文門戶:倍可親 (http://big5.backchina.com) All Rights Reserved.

程序系統基於 Discuz! X3.1 商業版 優化 Discuz! © 2001-2013 Comsenz Inc.

本站時間採用京港台時間 GMT+8, 2025-8-6 22:10

快速回復 返回頂部 返回列表