Be Ready!

Apologetics Tools are now available!

Here are concise summaries of several recent posts to joshualetter, designed to be easily remembered so as to equip believers to be ready to address many of the concerns often raised by those who are seeking the truth.

Suggestions welcome!

SEVEN PRACTICAL APOLOGETICS TOOLS

1. The pioneers of modern science were virtually all Christians and were scientists specifically because of their religious beliefs.  In particular, they were scientists because they believed in a rational God who created an intelligible universe and man as a rational being capable of comprehending that universe.  For more information, see Thomas Alderman, Science and Religion: Exploding the Myth of Conflict, (a five-part series)(go to www.joshualetter.com and search for “exploding”).

2. The universe had a beginning and must therefore have had a cause outside itself.  That cause had to be timeless, immaterial, and inconceivably powerful.  More info: joshualetter.com, subject index: The Cosmological Argument for God.

3. The laws of physics are incomprehensibly fine-tuned for life.  The most plausible explanation (if not the only plausible explanation) is that they were intended to be that way by a cosmic designer.  More info: joshualetter.com, subject index: The Fine-Tuning of the Universe.

4. Objective moral values exist.  The most plausible explanation is that they are rooted in the character of a good Creator.  More info: joshualetter.com, subject index: The Moral Argument for God.

5. Jesus’ disciples were transformed by His post-Resurrection appearances from cowering fugitives to fearless evangelists.  Many of them died for their proclamation; none recanted.  The best explanation is that they truly encountered the risen Christ.  More info: joshualetter.com, search field, “minimal facts.”

6. The authors of the New Testament were honest and had ready access to the eyewitnesses of the events in the life of Jesus.  More info: joshualetter.com, search for “honesty.”

7. While it is true that many errors were introduced into the New Testament in the course of being manually copied, scholars have succeeded in identifying and correcting virtually all of those errors – as even skeptical New Testament scholars have acknowledged.  More info: joshualetter.com, search for “recovery.”

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Science and religion: Exploding the Myth of Conflict

A Five-Part Series

Part Five: Twentieth Century Physics and the Recovery of Theistic Science

In the beginning, God created the heavens and the Earth.

– Genesis 1:1

The author of the Book of Genesis was very clear about it: there was an absolute beginning.  But Aristotle (384 BC – 322 BC) didn’t get the news.  He taught that the universe was eternal, and that view prevailed in Europe until the early 20th Century.  What happened then is one of the most fascinating stories in the history of science, and one of the most important.  What is most significant about the story for our immediate purposes, is that it demonstrates that science and religion are allies in the search for truth, and not adversaries.

In 1915 Albert Einstein published his General Theory of Relativity (GTR), by which he explained gravity as a distortion in the fabric of space-time under the influence of massive objects.  How this happens is beyond the scope of this paper (which is fortunate, seeing that it is beyond my comprehension too).  What concerns us is that Einstein’s GTR mathematical equations implied that the universe is not static (and hence not eternal), but is either expanding or contracting.  Einstein himself found that idea repugnant, and he eliminated it by introducing a “fudge factor,” or rather a “cosmological constant” into his equations.

In 1922 Alexander Friedmann showed that Einstein’s original equations were correct, and Einstein acknowledged the fudge factor to be his “biggest blunder.”  Then in 1929 Edwin Hubble produced the first empirical confirmation of GTR by observing that the distant galaxies are moving away from us; indeed, he saw that the farther away the galaxies are, the faster they are receding.  Thus Hubble showed that as between a contracting or an expanding universe, we definitely occupy an expanding one.

Then in 1931 Georges Lemaitre showed that by extrapolating the expansion of the universe backward in time, it could be shown that the universe began from a “singularity” in which all the material of the universe was concentrated into an infinitely dense and hot, infinitesimal mathematical point, strongly suggesting an absolute beginning.

Not everyone was convinced; and it was not until 1965 that Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson found the radiation (the “cosmic microwave background radiation,” or CMBR) that was left over from the creation event, confirming Big Bang theory.  For this they were awarded the Nobel Prize.

The fact that many scientists did not immediately embrace what has become known as “Big Bang” cosmology illustrates beautifully the unavoidable interrelatedness of science and religion.  An absolute beginning has obvious theistic implications.  Since the universe began to exist, it must have had a cause.1  The cause must have been spaceless, timeless, and inconceivably powerful and intelligent.  This would not necessarily be a personal God, but it does indicate a Creator of some kind.  Many scientists were slow to acknowledge this.  William Lane Craig states that the history of twentieth-century theory is a long series of failed attempts to falsify Big Bang cosmology:

With each successive failure of alternative . . . theories to avoid the absolute beginning of the universe predicted by the Standard Model, that prediction has been corroborated. It can be confidently said that no cosmogonic model has been as repeatedly verified in its predictions and as corroborated by attempts at its falsification . . . as the Standard Big Bang Model.

Moreover, leading theorists have pronounced the matter closed.  Craig puts it this way:

A watershed of sorts appears to have been reached in 2003 with Borde, Guth, and Vilenkin’s formulation of their theorem establishing that any universe which has on average over its past history been in a state of cosmic expansion cannot be eternal in the past but must have a spacetime boundary. . . . [T]he Borde-Guth-Vilenkin theorem . . . single-handedly sweeps away the most important attempts to avoid the absolute beginning of the universe, especially the darling of current cosmologists, the eternal inflationary multiverse.  Vilenkin pulls no punches: “It is said that an argument is what convinces reasonable men and a proof is what it takes to convince even an unreasonable man.  With the proof now in place, cosmologists can no longer hide behind the possibility of a past-eternal universe. There is no escape, they have to face the problem of a cosmic beginning.”2

Why, then, has a segment of the scientific community struggled so mightily to avoid the beginning?  It seems sufficiently apparent that they are bringing their prior metaphysical (i.e., religious) commitments to bear upon their science, which confirms again the interrelatedness of science and religion.

Atheism is as much a religious viewpoint as is theism.  Both address the perennial religious questions: Who am I, Where did I come from, Where am I going, Why are people so selfish, and What can we do about it?  It is the questions themselves which qualify a viewpoint as religious.3

It is impossible to separate completely science and religion from each other.  What matters is that when we practice science, we do it well, and when we practice religion, we do it well.  That entails avoidance of doing religion and calling it science.

The Fine-Tuning of the Laws of Physics

The Twentieth Century produced two more blockbuster scientific discoveries that re-establish the plausibility of theism and of theistic science: the discovery that the laws of physics have been “fine-tuned” to an astonishing degree so as to produce a universe hospitable to life; and the elucidation of the DNA molecule.

In 1961 Robert H. Dicke discovered that gravity and electromagnetism must be fine-tuned for life – that is, that they have very precise values, and that if they did not have exactly those very values, there would be no life anywhere in the universe.  Hawking has stated, “It would be very difficult to explain why the universe should have begun in just this way, except as the act of a God who intended to create beings like us.”4  In the ensuing decades, scientists have learned that almost everything about the physical cosmos is fine-tuned.5 Suffice it to say, anyone who is not flabbergasted at the astonishing fine-tuning of the cosmos, is not paying attention.  

DNA

In addition to the Big Bang and the Fine-Tuning, Twentieth Century science has made one more discovery having sweeping implications, and that is the discovery of the mind-boggling complexity of living things.

The human body has roughly 30 trillion cells and twenty thousand different kinds of proteins.  Proteins carry out all of the life functions of the organism, from respiration to metabolism to digestion to the immune system, to name a few.  Proteins also build and maintain the system in which the instructions for fabricating all of these proteins are contained in the three billion base pairs of DNA, not to mention the system for communicating those instructions to the ribosomes, where all the proteins that the body needs are manufactured.  The complexity is overwhelming.  One way to gain a deep appreciation of this would be to read Fazale Rana’s Fit For a Purpose.6  The impression of design is unavoidable.  Rana shows that cellular functions take place at the atomic and the subatomic levels, one proton at a time, one electron at a time, performing precisely their instructions from DNA.

Conclusion

It makes my head spin when I consider that until 1929 scientists believed that the universe was static and eternal.  It spins faster when I recall that the Big Bang was presented to me in high school in 1965 as a commonplace fact, as if we had always known the universe had an absolute beginning.

Did I mention that until 1924 we thought the Milky Way was the only galaxy?  Do you remember when you first learned there are billions of galaxies, each containing billions of stars?  I don’t.  People weren’t talking about it much when I was growing up.  We’re still not talking about it.

Listen.  If there was a beginning, then there is a Creator.  If there is a Creator, naturalism is false.  This is news!  The whole project of investigating nature needs thoroughgoing reform.

But there is much more than that.  There was a beginning, and there is a Creator.  Who cares about naturalism?  There is a Creator!  Who is this person?  Did he, as the Bible teaches, take human form, walk the planet, and promise me eternal life?

I know that He did.

Thomas Alderman

December 3, 2024

ENDNOTES

1I have previously demonstrated this necessary causal relationship.  See Part Four, fn 2.

2William Lane Craig, Reasonable Faith (Crossway 2008), 139-140.

3I have also addressed this question in a previous post.  See joshualetter.com June 13, 2015 blog post, “The Definition of Religion.”

4Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time (New York: Bantam Books, 1 1998, 1996), 129-131.

5I have discussed this topic at length also.  See joshualetter.com June 28, 2018 blog post, “The Existence of God: Four Philosophical Arguments,” pp 18-27 at https://joshualetter.com/2018/06/28/the-existence-of-god/

And see joshualetter.com January 27, 2023 blog post, “The Heavens Declare the Glory” at https://joshualetter.com/category/philosophy/the-existence-of-god/

And see joshualetter.com July 26, 2022 blog post, “Water: Designed for Life,” at https://joshualetter.com/?s=water.

And see reasons.org Design Compendium at https://reasons.org/explore/publications/articles/rtb-design-compendium-2009.

6Fazale Rana, Fit For a Purpose (Reasons to Believe Press, 2021).  Rana is the Executive Director of Reasons to Believe.

Science and religion: Exploding the Myth of Conflict

A Five-Part Series


Part Four: Whatever Happened to Theistic Science?

The 1633 trial of Galileo occurred right in the middle of the Thirty Years religious wars between Catholics and Protestants, which lasted from 1618 to 1648.  The causes of the wars were complex, but they started when Ferdinand II, the future Holy Roman Emperor, attempted to enforce Catholic orthodoxy on Protestant Bohemia.  The wars then proceeded with complex and shifting sets of alliances.  Eventually, Europe was exhausted after decades of sectarian conflict, and was receptive to new ways of ordering relations among the state, the church, and religious minorities.  Partly in reaction against efforts to impose religious orthodoxy by the use of force, there arose in the 17th and 18th centuries an intellectual movement which became known, somewhat ironically, as “the Age of Enlightenment.”  The intellectuals of that era thought they could end such strife by finding a source of moral authority independent of the Bible, and they thought they had found it in the power of human reason.

Human reason did not prove equal to the task.  Scholars were enticed into a number of intellectual blunders which set the stage for the embrace of Darwinism and the eventual outright rejection of the former synthesis based on the biblical doctrine of Creation, wherein a rational God had created man a rational being in God’s own image, capable of comprehending an ordered cosmos.

Continue reading “Science and religion: Exploding the Myth of Conflict”

Science and religion: Exploding the Myth of Conflict

A Five-Part Series

Part Three: There is Conflict, but it is Between Naturalism and Science

Naturalism is the view that nature is all that exists.  That is, the matter and energy which constitute the physical world exist, but nothing else does.  The immediate corollaries of this view, of course, are that the cosmos and everything in it is a single interconnected system of physical causation, and that spirits do not exist, and that includes God.  

It may still safely be said, perhaps, that most contemporary scientists are naturalists – although that is changing, since naturalism has been under siege for decades and is showing signs of strain.  Certainly most scientists in the fields of paleontology and biology are naturalists.  This is in stark contrast to those in the fields of physics and astronomy, many of whom have exclaimed the theistic implications of Big Bang cosmology and the fine-tuning of the laws of physics.  The difference is attributable, no doubt, to the fact that astronomers and physicists are not as constrained as biologists are by the dictates of neo-Darwinian orthodoxy.

Here is a representative sample of the views of many astronomers and physicists:

Albert Einstein (1879–1955):

In response to the evidence for the Big Bang, he acknowledged “the necessity for a beginning”1 and “the presence of a superior reasoning power.”2.

Stephen Hawking (1942-2018): 

Commenting on the Fine-Tuning of the Universe, he stated that “It would be very difficult to explain why the universe should have begun in just this way, except as the act of a God who intended to create beings like us.”3.

Cambridge astronomer and atheist Fred Hoyle (1915-2001) (who never accepted Big Bang cosmology): 

A “superintellect has monkeyed with physics, as well as with chemistry and biology. . . .”4.

Physicist Paul Davies (1946- ): 

He once promoted atheism5 and is still opposed to Intelligent Design theory,6 but has conceded that “the laws [of physics] . . . seem themselves to be the product of exceedingly ingenious design.”7  He further states: “[There] is for me powerful evidence that there is ‘something going on’ behind it all. The impression of design is overwhelming.”8

Design is an activity of mindMind is a capacity of persons.  The Creator is a person (or rather, three persons).  Science is the study of the Creation.  All truth is God’s truth.

Clearly, then, a commitment to naturalism is unnecessary for the conduct of good science.  But we want to claim much more than that: we want to claim that naturalism actually impedes the progress of science.

Naturalism posits that human consciousness arises out of purely impersonal, mechanistic processes.  Somehow (they don’t tell us how, since they don’t know how), it is said, the motions of the atoms in my brain produce the thoughts, beliefs, and intentions which form my mental experience.  But thoughts, beliefs, and intentions are mental events, not physical events.  Mental events occur only in minds.  A mind is not a physical thing.

The naturalist will interject that mental events are embodied in neuro-physiological structures.  That may be the case; yet the properties of brain events and the properties of mental events are mutually exclusive.  The properties of brain events are physical: magnitude, valence, location, connections among neurons.  Mental events have none of those physical properties and possess one property which brain events lack, namely, “aboutness.”  Mental events – thoughts, beliefs, intentions – are always about something else.

Thus the mind and the brain, having entirely disparate sets of properties, cannot be the same thing.

A careful distinction must here be made.  Naturalism and evolution are not the same thing; yet they are almost always conflated.  The reason is readily apparent.  Consciousness is something that requires an explanation, and evolution is the only naturalistic explanation for the rise of consciousness which anyone has ever proposed.  If you are a naturalist, therefore, your choice is between evolution, as thinly supported by evidence as it is, and no explanation at all.  It is thus naturalism, not evidence, which drives naturalists into Darwin’s embrace.

We saw that theism provides an intelligible justification for our confidence in the reliability of the human cognitive capability: our having been created in the image of a rational deity.  What is naturalism’s justification?  Far from positing a rational source for the human mind, naturalism posits a cognitive faculty formed by undirected, purposeless, mechanistic, impersonal processes.  What basis is there for confidence that such processes could result in the formation of a reliable mind?

J. B. S. Haldane, a leading evolutionary theorist of the mid-twentieth century, may have been the first to notice that 

If my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain, I have no reason to suppose my beliefs are true . . . and hence no reason for supposing my brain to be made of atoms.

And no reason to believe that my awareness evolved.  Darwin himself worried about this.

There is more.  According to naturalism, theism is false; yet belief in God is widespread.  According to the Pew Research Center, 84% of the world’s population are religiously affiliated.  But theism is false, according to neo-Darwinists.  Do false beliefs then have survival value?  If not, how can evolutionary theory account for our species’ religiosity, how can we trust our cognitive capacity, and how can we be sure that naturalism is true?  Naturalism is thus seen to be not only self-refuting, but an obstacle to the progress of science.9

NEXT WEEK: Part Four: What Happened to Theistic Science?

ENDNOTES

1A. Vibert Douglas, “Forty Minutes with Einstein,” Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 50 (1956), 100.

2Lincoln Barnett, The Universe and Dr. Einstein (New York: William Sloane Associates, 1948), 106.

3Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time (New York: Bantam Books, 1998, 1996), 129-131.

4Hoyle, “The Universe,” 16. 

5Paul Davies, God and the New Physics (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1983), viii, 3–42, 142–143.

6https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/jun/26/ spaceexploration.comment.  (Page unavailable 12.2.24.)

7Paul Davies, Superforce (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984), 243. 

8Paul Davies, The Cosmic Blueprint (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988), 203; Paul Davies, “The Anthropic Principle,” Science Digest 191, no. 10 (October 1983), 24.

9I have Kenneth Samples of Reasons to Believe to thank for this argument.

Science and religion: Exploding the Myth of Conflict

A Five-Part Series

Introduction

The myth that there is some inherent conflict between faith and reason, or between religion and science, dies hard; but for at least twenty years, philosophers of science have attacked the myth so many times and so effectively that we now happily see it gasping for breath.  So it may seem like piling on, but it is important that the truth of the matter be discoverable in these pages.

Perhaps the most important reason for the myth’s tenacity is that while there is no inherent conflict between science and religion – indeed, they are, on the contrary, close allies in the search for truth – there is conflict between science and religion as practiced, in two very important ways.  First, many scientists impose a metaphysical naturalism upon their research.  The essence of naturalism is the presupposition that reality consists of matter and energy and nothing else – the immediate corollary being that any imagined spiritual or supernatural entity (such as God) is just that: imaginary, unreal.  Thus naturalism is the equivalent of atheism.  In such a view, the causes of all natural phenomena must themselves be physical, which is to say, impersonal.  What other sorts of causation might there be?  Personal causation: design.

Accordingly, it must be emphasized that this scientific naturalism, as it is often called, constitutes a religious idea.  Any assertion as to the ultimate nature of reality is, by definition, religious.  The mere fact that naturalism answers the question, Is there a creator? in the negative does not make it any less religious.1

Please note also that naturalism does not arrive at this doctrine by any scientific or empirical means; rather, it does so a priori – that is, rather than make an effort to establish the truth or falsity of its atheism by observation, naturalists simply declare the matter in the negative, and pronounce it closed.  This places it in direct conflict with science, which, properly conceived, seeks evidence of the causes for natural phenomena, and follows that evidence to its conclusion, whether it leads to the personal or to the impersonal.

This is well-illustrated by the methods employed in the sciences of archaeology, forensic science, and the search for extra-terrestrial intelligence.  In each of these, researchers seek to determine whether an ancient artifact, or a fatal injury, or a signal from space, may be the result of the activity of a conscious agent acting purposefully.  If the data indicate that the artifact, or the death, or the signal, bear the hallmarks of design, then the activity of a conscious agent is inferred.  So is design a meaningful category in astronomy but not in biology?  Why or why not?

There is, of course, a difference between the inference to personal causation in archeology, on the one hand, and the inference to personal causation in biology, on the other hand.  In practice, such an inference in archeology generally invokes a human agent, whereas such an inference in biology obviously invokes a non-human agent; and there are very few candidates for the non-human agent– most people can think of only one, that being a divine creator.  But for the naturalist, the only permissible inference is to the impersonal, because to the naturalist only the impersonal exists; and this is how naturalism comes into conflict with science.  Is it even possible that a personal creator exists?  Big Bang cosmology powerfully says that it is possible.  Does science, then, not wish to know about this creator?  Wouldn’t that be anti-scientific?  The term science comes from the Latin for “to know.”  Thus, there is indeed conflict between science and religion, but it is not between science and biblical religion: it is between science and naturalistic religion.

The scientist who imposes his naturalism onto the data may be correct some of the time, just as the theist who imposes his theism onto the data may be right part of the time.  But the naturalist who rushes to an atheistic conclusion is just as unscientific as the theist who rushes to a theistic conclusion.  The solution, obviously, is to make oneself conscious of one’s biases, guard against them by remaining open to either type of causation, and to follow the data wherever they lead.

The other source of conflict arises out of the insistence on the part of many Christians on a wooden exegesis of the Book of Genesis.  Their commitment to a literal understanding of the six days of creation places them in direct conflict with many recent and seemingly solid scientific findings.  How can we see light from stars millions of light years away if the universe is only 6,000 years old?  Why do radiometric dating and Antarctic ice cores reflect an ancient Earth?  Ken Ham, a leading Young Earth proponent, himself acknowledges that Young Earth Creationism has no answers to such questions.2  Young Earth Creationism then becomes the straw man ripe for attack by the advocates of naturalism who find it convenient to ignore the existence of the other major exegetical school, namely, Old Earth Creationism, which makes a much more robust (and successful) effort to reconcile the science and the biblical text in ways that are faithful to both.3

Leaving those matters to one side, I propose, in a five-part series, to comment on a more pertinent question, namely, whether science and religion are necessarily at odds when practiced rightly.  In this connection I wish to emphasize four simple truths.

First, it was theists who invented modern science.  That is, it was Christian and Jewish scientists who did so, and they did so not merely as an expression of their religious faith but as affirmations of particular biblical doctrines as to the nature of God, the nature of the Creation, and the nature of man.  It was their belief in those doctrines which incited their inquiries.

Second, there is a reason why modern science gained no foothold in areas of the globe where non-biblical religions were observed: namely, their religious doctrines were not conducive to the systematic investigation of the cosmos.  Indeed, some of their beliefs actively discouraged scientific inquiry.  

Third, the precepts of atheism/materialism4 likewise provide no warrant for expecting the study of nature to be fruitful.  Indeed, if the scientific community were to apply its metaphysical assumptions consistently to the scientific enterprise, the latter would come to a screeching halt.  It is only by borrowing from the earlier, theistic consensus that the project continues at all.

Fourth, while it is true that the church badly mishandled the Galileo affair, that dispute had almost nothing to do with cosmology and everything to do with the politics of the time.  Only decades later was it re-interpreted as evidencing enmity between science and religion.  That reinterpretation, together with a long series of ideological blunders on the part of leading intellectuals, resulted in the widespread embrace of scientific materialism which now causes so much confusion.

Fifth, monumental discoveries in 20th-Century physics – the Big Bang, the fine-tuning of the laws of physics, and DNA – have resoundingly restored the scientific plausibility of theistic science.

Part One: The Biblical Basis for the Scientific Revolution

It is no surprise, of course, that the founders of modern science were predominantly Christian, since in the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries almost everyone in the West was a Christian or a Jew.  If one searches the web for lists of Christians who were important in the development of the sciences, one finds the names of hundreds who lived from the 16th century forward.  For example, if one goes to the web page

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Christians_in_science_and_technology

and searches the page for the word “father,” it appears 17 times, and we learn that Christians were considered the “fathers” of the following fields of science:

Empiricism and the scientific method

Botony

Parasitology

Chemistry

Microbiology

Physiology

Taxonomy

Paleontology

Genetics

Surgery

Special mention is merited in the following instances, with whose names and accomplishments many readers will also be familiar:

Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543), showed that the Earth orbits the sun (heliocentrism), rather than the sun orbiting the Earth as previously believed.

Francis Bacon (1561–1626), “Considered among the fathers of empiricism and is credited with establishing the inductive method of experimental science via what is called the scientific method today.”5

Galileo Galilei (1564–1642)

Johannes Kepler (1564–1642)

Blaise Pascal (1623–1662)

Robert Boyle (1627–1691), father of modern chemistry

Isaac Newton (1642-1726), discoverer of gravity, classical mechanics, and the calculus

Michael Faraday (1791–1867)

James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879)

Louis Pasteur (1822–1895)

Lord Kelvin (1824–1907)

Arthur Eddington (1882–1944)

Georges Lemaitre (1894–1966)

Werner Heisenberg (1901–1976)

Wernher von Braun (1912–1977)

Alan Sandage (1926–2010)

Freeman Dyson (1923–2020)

John Polkinghorne (1930–2021)

Owen Gingerich (1930–2023)

Francis Collins (b. 1950)

Paul R. McHugh (b. 1931)

Kenneth R. Miller (b. 1948)

Hugh Ross (b. 1945)

Pat Gelsinger (b. 1962)

James Tour (b. 1959)

Christians, all.

The same web page informs us that:

According to 100 Years of Nobel Prizes, a review of Nobel prizes awarded between 1901 and 2000, 65.4% of Nobel Prizes Laureates have identified Christianity in its various forms as their religious preference.  Overall, 72.5% of all the Nobel Prizes in Chemistry,65.3% in Physics, 62% in Medicine, 54% in Economics were either Christians or had a Christian background.

What’s more, among the early founders, it was their theology which inspired their science.  They considered their scientific endeavors to be expressions of their faith.  According to Stephen C. Meyer, Robert Boyle, the founder of modern chemistry, regarded devotion to the study of nature, like devotion to the study of scripture, as “an act of Piety,” especially since he thought God desired “to have his Works regarded and taken Notice of.”6

Their belief in a rational God and in an orderly, purposeful universe was conducive to scientific inquiry.  The divine logos creates an orderly universe – intelligible and sacred, but disenchanted (not magical).  Humans, likewise, having been created in the image of a rational God, are also rational creatures who therefore have the mental capacity to apprehend the order which God has implanted in nature.  Thus the astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571–1630), for example, could say that “God wanted us to recognize natural laws, and God made this possible by creating us after his own image so that we could share in his own thoughts.”7

Isaac Newton wrote, “This most beautiful system of the sun, planets and comets, could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being.”8  According to Oxford University historian of science John Hedley Brooke, “For Newton, as for Boyle and Descartes, there were laws of nature only because there had been a [divine] Legislator.”9

British philosopher Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947) argued that “There can be no living science unless there is a widespread instinctive conviction in the existence of an Order of Things.  And, in particular, of an Order of Nature.”10  Whitehead particularly attributed this conviction among the founders of modern science to the “medieval insistence upon the rationality of God.”11  Meyer comments:

Other scholars have amplified this observation.  They insist that modern science was specifically inspired by the conviction that the universe is the product of a rational mind who designed the universe to be understood and who also designed the human mind to understand it.  As historian and philosopher of science Steve Fuller notes, Western science is grounded in the belief that “the natural order is the product of a single intelligence from which our own intelligence descends.”  Philosopher Holmes Rolston III puts the point this way: “It was monotheism that launched the coming of physical science, for it premised an intelligible world, sacred but disenchanted, a world with a blueprint, which was therefore open to the searches of the scientists.  The great pioneers in physics – Newton, Galileo, Kepler, Copernicus – devoutly believed themselves called to find evidences of God in the physical world.”  The astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) exclaimed that “God wanted us to recognize” natural laws and that God made this possible “by creating us after his own image so that we could share in his own thoughts.”12

The “Two Books” metaphor reinforced this view.  The idea is that scripture is one book and nature another book.  Both books having the same author, there can be no contradiction between them.  If they seem incompatible, it is because we have not yet understood one or the other or both.  Galileo specifically affirmed that in some cases it might be our interpretation of scripture which must give way.  (The Pope was prepared to do exactly that in Galileo’s case, until Galileo offended the Pope.)  “The metaphor of the book of nature . . . implied the legitimacy of scientific endeavor, since it affirmed that nature supplied a secondary source of authoritative revelation about the character and wisdom of the creator.”13  

These ideas were not made up out of whole cloth, but were based on clear scriptural warrant.  Thus, in his letter to the Roman Christians, the Apostle Paul wrote:

. . . [W]hat may be known about God is plain . . because God  has made it plain. . . .  For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities – his eternal power and divine nature – have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.

And in Psalm 19, David writes:

The heavens declare the glory of God,

the skies proclaim the work of his hands,

Day after day they pour forth speech;

night after night they display knowledge.

There is no speech or language

where their voice is not heard.

Their voice goes out into all the earth,

their words to the ends of the world.

And in Psalm 104, the Psalmist writes:

O Lord my God, you are very great;

you are clothed with splendor and majesty.

He wraps himself in light as with a garment;

he stretches out the heavens like a tent

and lays the beams of his upper chambers on their 

waters.

The idea of divine sovereignty and freedom further justified interest in nature.  The understanding of God’s freedom to create or not, or, creating, to create whatever He will, spurs inquiry into what He may actually have done.  This is another way in which biblical teaching encouraged an empirical epistemology, which relies on observation and experiment, in contrast to the Aristotelian tradition of relatively abstract speculation.

Finally, the belief in human fallibility and depravity “engendered caution about trusting human conjectures and hypotheses unless they were carefully tested by experiment and observation.”14

NEXT WEEK: The Scientific Revolution Arose only in the West for a Reason

ENDNOTES

1For a fuller discussion of the religious character of non-theistic belief systems, see Joshualetter, “The Definition of Religion, June 13, 2015 blog post, https://joshualetter.com/2015/06/13/the-definition-of-religion/.

2Ken Ham, “Young Earth Creationism,” in Four Views on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design (J. B. Stump ed., Zondervan 2017), 17-48, 41-42.

3The reader is encouraged to visit the website, reasons.org.

4I use the terms naturalism and materialism interchangeably.  Naturalism, again, is the view that nature is all there is; materialism is the view that matter and energy are all there is.  Naturalism is the term which one encounters more often.

5https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Christians_in_science_and_technology.  (Last visited 12.2.24.)

6Stephen C. Meyer, Return of the God Hypothesis (Harper Collins 2021), 48.

7Meyer, 36.

8”General Scholium,” in Mathematical Priciples of Natural Philosophy (1687) in Great Books of the Western World, Robert M. Hutchins, ed. (Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, n.d.), 369.

9Brooke, “Science and Theology in the Enlightenment,” 9.

10Whitehead, Science and the Modern World, 3-4, emphasis in original.

11Id, 12.

12Meyer, 36.

13Meyer, 48.

14Meyer, 38.