Science: Theists Need Not Apply

Ken Connor, Chairman, Center for a Just Society in Washington, DC

Ken Connor, Chairman, Center for a Just Society in Washington, DC

Religious bigotry is alive and well in the scientific community, as evidenced by its response to President Obama’s decision to appoint Dr. Francis Collins as the head of the National Institutes of Health. Though renowned for leading the team of scientists that successfully mapped the human genome, Dr. Collins is making headlines for something else: his faith. In spite of his professional qualifications and accomplishments, many in the scientific community are less than enthusiastic about the President’s decision to appoint a self-described evangelical Christian to lead the world’s leading organization for scientific research.

This skepticism results from a prejudice against a theistic worldview that has become entrenched in the scientific community—an irrational attitude born of historical ignorance and intellectual myopathy that is increasingly dismissive of moral questions and ethical concerns.

The idea that a tension exists between science and theism is relatively new. The most brilliant philosophical minds of the western intellectual tradition—dating all the way back to the time of Plato and Aristotle—operated on the assumption that our existence came into being through the actions of a divine creator, described as the First Cause or Unmoved Mover. For centuries after, theology reigned as queen of the sciences, and scientific inquiry was animated by the belief that human reason was a gift imparted by God so that man might gain knowledge about Him, His attributes, and the laws which govern His creation.

Without this belief that the physical world is the result of an intentional design governed by fixed laws—laws which we discover through reason and experience—there would have been little cause to engage in scientific pursuits. Faith in the goodness of God’s creation and the intelligibility of its design inspired history’s great minds to forge ahead into new worlds of knowledge and discovery.

j0178689Indeed, many of the great heroes of science pioneered their discoveries under the auspices of this inspiration. Groundbreaking advances in astronomy, chemistry, physics, mathematics, genetics, and other fields of knowledge were made by men dedicated to systematically investigating God’s creation—men like Copernicus, Kepler, Pascal, Boyle, Kelvin, Mendel, and Faraday.

Over time, however, the scientific community came to question whether the advancement of human knowledge might be better served by separating itself from ethical constraints arising out of religious beliefs. The idea that man should be guided by transcendent moral principles in his quest for answers to life’s mysteries, the idea that some boundaries should not be crossed, was an intolerable thought. Scientists wanted to answer the question “can I?” without having to ask “should I?”

Hence today, when a man who professes faith in the Risen Christ is given the reigns of America’s preeminent scientific organization, eyebrows raise in skepticism. Prominent atheists like Richard Dawkins go on late-night TV talk shows to denounce the ridiculous notion that any intelligent person, let alone a scientist, could actually embrace the fantastic teachings of the Bible. Believing that the world is the result of an intentional act of creation on the part of a benevolent and loving God is likened to believing in unicorns or the tooth fairy—Peter Pan fantasies embraced by those too young or too dumb to cope with the cold hard facts of reality.

Regardless of the specifics of Dr. Collins’s Christian identity, the idea that his faith impedes his fitness to serve as the head of the NIH operates on the absurd premise that only atheists and agnostics are capable of being good scientists. One might argue the precise opposite of this. If, as previously stated, the origin of scientific inquiry was based upon the belief that the physical world operates according to fixed and intelligible laws, one might ask what kind of foundation underlies a scientific worldview which denies an intelligent design or an ultimate purpose? If there’s no designer, no fixed laws, no first principles, then there is no real meaning—no context in which to evaluate the value and significance of newly acquired knowledge. When there is no acknowledged moral source to draw a clear line between the permissible and the forbidden, then human curiosity and ambition are left as the only arbiters of science’s use.

Those who profess a commitment to science while rejecting a belief in God want to expand the breadth of scientific inquiry without being subject to ethical constraints. Inevitably, this kind of thinking leads to manipulating or destroying the weaker among us in order to empower the stronger. This is the philosophy that has animated some of our history’s most gruesome acts of scientific “experimentation,” and it is espoused today by none other than President Obama’s “science czar,” John Holdren, who has advocated forced abortion and mass sterilization in the name of environmental responsibility.

If this is the kind of ideology that results when the age-old relationship between faith and science is destroyed, then Dr. Collins’s “embrace” of religion is the least of America’s troubles.

Attorney Ken Connor is the Chairman of the Center for a Just Society in Washington, DC, and the former President of the Family Research Council. He served as counsel to Governor Jeb Bush in Bush v. Schiavo during the Terri Schiavo case, and is co-author of “Sinful Silence: When Christians Neglect Their Civic Duty.

Note: Reader comments are reviewed before publishing, and only salient comments that add to the topic will be published. Profanity is absolutely not allowed and will be summarily deleted. Spam, copied statements and other material not comprised of the reader’s own opinion will also be deleted.

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  • Brian Rutledge
    dr theo Absolute truth. Philosophers, Religion, Science, Math have wrestled with that for all of mankind. I believe we have to live our lives according to a belief in absolute truths. But we are merely humans and greatly limited in our thought, intellect, knowledge, senses, perception and all things that help us with what is absolute truth or not. Could there possibly be a truth that we cant conceive of ? Is there even a possibility of that ? I think we would have to say there is a possiblity of that, because otherwise we would be saying that we are not limited. That's why I said 99.9999999... %. To say we have 100% knowledge of something is saying we are ourselves perfect in knowledge of certain things and I don't believe that a human is perfect in anything.
  • Are you absolutely sure, Dr. Rutledge? You see, only if one believes that everything is the result of random processes and without purpose can one be absolutely certain that there are no absolutes, in which case the question and answer are completely irrelevant. Someone that truly believes that way would be an absolute fool to waste his time on such ridiculous things.
  • Brian Rutledge
    The person who says he/she absolutely knows that there is no purpose or no creator ( a pure, 100% atheist ) can not be taken seriously and might be considered delusional. Even our good friend Dawkins says that it is possible that there is a creator. All I am suggesting is that humans-who are inherently limited- can never say they absolutely, !00% KNOW something to be true. If would be saying that the human itself is error free when it comes to certain things. I say our inherent limits prevent us from making such absolute statements.

    I don't know if you ever went through a period when you didnt believe in God, but if you did you would now consider your idea wrong. You could someday return to that belief, you dont know. It is possible is it not ? That's why i use the 99.9999999...% certainty analogy. Any fallible, limited human that says they know 100% that something is right, is completely in denial or ignorant of their own limitations. That also could be considered a delusion.
  • I understand your point, Dr. R., but I'm not sure you are following mine. I believe, with 100% confidence, that it is wrong to sexually abuse innocent children. No, I won't give even .000001...% of doubt. It is wrong. Period. Yes, there are moral absolutes in this universe and to claim otherwise puts one in a very odd position of being unable to assert anything without qualifying it, just in case, however small the chances, one is incorrect.

    I was raised in a Catholic house and community where we went to church every Sunday and followed all the outward displays of piety, but lived the rest of our lives as though God and Jesus didn’t exist. I saw the hypocrisy in this when I was about 16 and fell away from the Church and became a committed, arrogant and hateful atheist. I joined Madeline Murray-O’Hare’s “American Atheists” back in the seventies.

    My position began to weaken in med school when I first began to consider that the incredible complexity of the human body was simply impossible to account for by the materialistic mechanisms I had so fervently embraced. It wasn't until after the birth of my first child that I began to re-consider the Catholic Church and went back to mass from time to time, but never really took it seriously. I was searching, but hadn’t found the ultimate truth. It was during the time of my heart problems and a protracted hospitalization that I came to know Jesus in a personal way and began to read the Word regularly. I wish I had been brave enough to read the Bible earlier; besides the spiritual benefits, I might have been spared some of the degradation and heartache and even physical problems that I brought on myself and my family. So yes, I know the way the other side thinks and I am pretty well-versed in the arguments of the infidel.
  • Steven Riley
    Well, I must agree that any type of abuse of any child is wrong. You may want to claim it is some sort of absolute truth and that is fine. But if you tell that to a child abuser, will that in itself change the behavior of that person ? Probably not.My guess would be is that you feel these predators commit these acts because they are fallen, but I feel some are born with aberrant behavior, like the psychopathic killer. Looking at the mammal species in general, you will find most adhere to societal norms, but a certain small percentage exhibit antisocial, deviant behavior.

    I can only ask why do you feel most female lions will fight to the death to save their cubs from abuse. They certainly have no concept of absolute truth.

    Do you think Charles Manson really had a choice in his behavior pattern.
  • tm61
    Consider this question:

    "Why do children resemble their parents?"

    Here's some possible responses:

    1. "Who else would they resemble?"
    2. "Because that's part of the way God designed the universe."
    3. "Because each parent contributes DNA to the child that carries information that determines the characteristics of the child."

    #1 is not really an answer.
    #2 is an answer, but isn't really useful, and can't be tested. That's why it isn't science.
    #3 is useful, and has been repeatedly tested, and found to be true. That's what makes it science.

    Note that #3 provides no information about response #2 - it doesn't invalidate it, and it doesn't confirm it. It says nothing about God. This is where Dawkins, et al. go off the rails - there's nothing in science that provides any information about "God".
  • DCM
    "there's nothing in science that provides any information about 'God'."

    Not only is that not entirely true (as Dr. Theo points out), but even if it was, why do so many claim that science proves there is no God?

    It's a ridiculous logic leap to go from "science can't study God" to "it must be absolutely assumed that God does not exist," but that's exactly the logic used by so many supposedly intelligent people.
  • tm61
    "..why do so many claim that science proves there is no God?"
    Because, like Dawkins, et al, they've gone of the rails - this is my point!

    "
    It's a ridiculous logic leap to go from "science can't study God" to "it must be absolutely assumed that God does not exist," but that's exactly the logic used by so many supposedly intelligent people."
    And I'm saying that logic is wrong. Similarly, other people say "I can't understand this" or "no-one has figured this out yet" and therefore God exists. This is also a ridiculous leap of logic.
  • #2 and #3 are not mutually exclusive. I believe that science can indeed tell us something about the Creator. That DNA that each parent contributes cannot be accounted for by any known materialistic mechanisms. Someone might argue that we simply haven't discovered the mechanisms yet but surely will someday; but that is faith, not science.

    Paul wrote to the Romans on this very subject almost 2000 years ago:
    " [W]hat can be known about God is evident among them, because God has shown it to them. From the creation of the world His invisible attributes, that is, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what He has made [created]. As a result, people are without excuse."
  • Steven Riley
    The comment above about Paul's writing is simply Paul's belief in a specific faith. That has no bearing on whether it's true or not. After all, wasn't he just a man like you and I ?

    Also stating that someday we might find the mechanism that explains how DNA can be accounted materialistically,is not a statement of faith. It is a factual statement. Just like the statement that someday we might not find that mechanism, is alternately true. Both are factual and not faith at all.
  • I believe, along with millions of others, that the things that Paul wrote are Scripture from God and thus true and faithful.

    "...is not a statement of faith. It is a factual statement."
    Mr. Riley, you have demonstrated in previous comments that you are thoughtful and intelligent, so I am surprised at this comment from you. How can a matter of hope and faith be "a factual statement?" You cannot have alternate opposing claims and assert that they are "Both factual and not faith at all."

    I believe that science will never be able to fully explain how DNA, both the molecule and the vast amount of information that it contains, came from random, undirected processes. That's because it came from a supernatural event beyond our capacity to understand. Granted, that is a faith system. Conversely, for someone to claim the alternate view, without proposing a plausible mechanism, is equally a faith system. I just wish those on the other side would be intellectually honest and admit it.
  • Steven Riley
    Certainly respect your beliefs about Paul. Needs no further discussion

    I am curious why so many creationists are always bringing up DNA as the latest example of why there must be a creator. Why not just look at a grain of salt and see that the sodium and chloride are bonded in a particular manner and claim it must be the work of a designer. The subatomic particles that hold these atoms together are as complexed and not understood as DNA. In essence, isn't the argument really " if something exists,anything, it must be created-period". A creator could make anything as simple or as complexed as It wants to. Complexity in and of itself should be no surprise from an all powerful entity

    I guess what I am saying is that it seems disingenuous and naive of man making a new discovery, like the DNA molecule, and declaring it's complexity must be the work of a creator. Why not just hold up the one grain of salt and make the same claim.

    It seems like the complexity argument is more of a justification argument that conflates the simple statement that one simply believes that because we are here, there must be a creator. It just seems superfluous. Why would anyone not think the creator could create such complexity? Not a difficult thing for a creator to do.I know that sounds snippy and I really dont mean it to.I just don't understand the thinking behind it. Let's be honest, DNA and its replicative properties are simple for a creator.Nothing more special about DNA than one grain of sand.
  • You are correct, Mr. Riley. Everything in God's creation in cause to marvel. That some things affect us more is strictly due to an aesthetic prejudice. Certainly, the details of decay and recycling of components via maggots, bacteria, fungi, etc are no less amazing and awe-inspiring than, say, the blossoming of the cacti that magically turns the Sonoran desert into a fragrant and colorful meadow for a few days each year. Some things are more appealing to our senses than others.

    Sodium chloride molecular structure and crystal formation is really quite amazing and indeed provides evidence of God's design in nature: it's just that DNA, being more complex and carrying huge amounts of information gives us more to wonder and admire in God's handiwork.

    And yes, the existence of anything is evidence enough for creation. By the laws of nature something cannot come from nothing and science has determined with near certainty that there was a beginning. If there was a beginning then there was a cause, and if a cause, then there was something or someone that set that into motion. Even time, space, logic and the laws of nature had to have had a beginning and science has no explanation for these intangibles.

    So DNA, while not the only example of what can only be intelligent design, is a good case study for making our point about complexity, specificity, information content and ordering of physical laws.

    I don't know why you would object to the DNA argument except that it is such a powerful and compelling example that even the most learned and clever of scientist are at a complete loss for explaining its origin. Actually, I agree with you, Steven, in that an equally powerful example could also be made of a grain of salt or a hydrogen atom, or a second of time or Planck's constant or a 1 millimeter cube or the fact that water reaches maximum density at 4 degrees Centigrade!
  • Steven Riley
    Eloquent answer and poetic. Certainly appeals to the emotions. But, you believe that a creator has always been present and that IT is responsible for all things. I can't rationally or scientifically argue against that statement.


    I believe equally that mass and energy were similarly always here and were responsible for all things.You say that statement is a faith statement and I believe it is a scientific hypothesis, based on many physical laws of which we are aware.I never state that everything came from nothing. Prior to the Big Bang, there were physical laws that we just can't explain yet, but there was never nothing and I don't know of a credible scientist who claims that.

    But my question is which is more likely-a God or no God. We are both making the almost impossible to grasp statement that whichever it was, it has always been here.Neither can be disproved today which is all we can say. Doesn't it all boil down to some humans feel that their life has no meaning or purpose at all unless there is something else. Isn't that lone human sentiment the real driving force for belief

    I bet the female black widow spider, could she talk to us, would rear up on her back four legs and scream " I have purpose too "
  • She is right, the female black widow that is. Everything has a purpose in God's creation.

    There is not time or space enough here to go into it in any depth, but an eternal material universe is a logical contradiction, given the laws of nature that we know. In an eternity there could be only a diffuse, homogeneous gaseous (or who knows what) "ether" that is inert, static and unchanging, not the dynamic, wondrous cosmos that we actually can see and measure.

    Contemplate what eternity means and then consider the Second Law of Thermodynamics. The universe could only exist is a state of maximum entropy or disorganization--no atomic or subatomic structures, no mass as we know it, no energy as we know it. No time, no space, no dimensions. Every physicist knows this and that is why they need a "Big Bang" to account for the dynamic, organized universe that we see--another belief without much evidence and contrary to physical laws that are fixed eternally for all we know. I guess you could speculate that some humans, determined to deny their Creator, feel they have to grasp onto any theory, no matter how tenuous and unlikely, so as to put some meaning in their otherwise empty and desperate lives.
  • Steven Riley
    There well may be some humans who grasp to certain theories to put meaning in their empty and desperate lives. I know some and also know people who have turned to Christianity because of that same emptiness and desperation. Both have their share.

    But I hope your not saying that physicists, like Einstein and those that followed, developed their theories because of ulterior motives--- for the purpose of trying to prove people, who believe as you do, wrong. That sounds quite petty, if someone were to suggest it.
  • tm61
    I didn't say #2 and #3 are mutually exclusive - I said #3 provides no information about #2.

    You said:"Someone might argue that we simply haven't discovered the mechanisms yet but surely will someday; but that is faith, not science." Some might say "we haven't figured it out, so it must be the work of God". But that's really quite arrogant - it says "no-one will ever be more intelligent than we are, so it can't be understood". It's also arbitrary - what's so special about this time in history? Even if no-one ever understands some aspect of the universe (DNA is poor example) at this point in time, maybe they will tomorrow, or 100 years or 10000 years from now.
  • "I didn't say #2 and #3 are mutually exclusive - I said #3 provides no information about #2."
    That's a matter of opinion, tm61. You have every right to your opinion, but that doesn't make it necessarily true.

    "Even if no-one ever understands some aspect of the universe (DNA is poor example) at this point in time, maybe they will tomorrow, or 100 years or 10000 years from now."
    Maybe. But a belief system that depends upon that hope is as much a faith as is my belief in a Creator. The point is, each side has chosen a world-view and built a philosophical model that best comports with their prior assumptions. I am OK with that but find it disingenuous when the other side denies it and claims devotion to only scientific fact.
  • tm61
    "..a matter of opinion"? No, it isn't. There is no information in #3 regarding #2.

    Consider this question:"Why does the shed look like that?"
    Answer #1: "Why not?"
    Answer #2: "Because that's how Bob planned it."
    Answer #3: "Because the nails are holding the pieces together that way."

    # 3 provides no information about #2.

    There is nothing in #3 that indicates who planned the shed, or even if the shed was planned. If you have a preconceived notion that all sheds are planned, and that only Bob can plan a shed, then maybe you can make that leap, but that information is not in answer #3.
  • Let's try this \:
    Question: Why does an airplane have two wings and a tail?
    #1 Because it wouldn't be an airplane otherwise.
    #2 Because an engineer found it to be an efficient design.
    #3 Because sheet metal and rivets just came together that way.

    You are claiming that the airplane parts organized themselves, #3, or, at least, that we can make no deductions about who or why the airplane was designed that way, #2. That's just absurd. You cannot look at something that was obviously built for a purpose and presume that it did not have a designer. It is ridiculous to assert otherwise.
  • tm61
    Ummm...I didn't say anything about airplanes, and it's obvious you have misunderstood my analogy. My answer #3 did *not* imply that the the nails and pieces came together on their own. The point is that #3 makes no statement about how the pieces came together - maybe it was Bob, or some one else, or several people who made the shed. The point is that their is no information in #3 about who built the shed.
  • The arrogance of atheists and agnostics always amazes me. No matter how educated, erudite and accomplished, anyone that believes other than they on the subject of Creation is de facto "ignorant, stupid or worse" (Dawkins). Their own uncertainty about their beliefs compels them to deride others that don't subscribe to their particular world-view.
  • Brian Rutledge
    dr theo " The arrogance of atheists and agnostics always amazes me " Does that include all, most, some or the very verbal,angry minority that are constantly clogging up the news, internet etc. Like most of the 'believers' I know, most non-believers go about their daily lives without trying to impose their will on others nor deride anyone. Also, like most believers I know, the non-believers have looked and looked hard at both sides of the issue and made a choice. I find them neither ignorant or stupid, just as I find the believers neither ignorant or stupid. That's not to say that both sides don't have members that could fall into that category.

    I agree that Dawkins, Harris etc. fall into the 'worse' category.Not completely sure what their pathology is and I ignore them as I do the extremists in the believer group.I think if a line of derision is drawn in the sand between the two groups, then nothing but trouble will prevail. They need to accept each others differences( as Dr. Collins proved is possible with the genome project) and move on.

    Dr. Collins is a great choice to me, not because of his beliefs or even his scientific acumen, but because he has proven beyond a doubt that he can manage ( which was his major role ) a large scientific body with varying beliefs, and no friction, using his enormous skills. That is his strength.
  • You're right, Dr. R. I should have said 'some' or even 'most' atheists and agnostics. At least I didn't say 'all.'

    The people who have appointed themselves the high priests of Darwinism, secularism and anti-Christianism, and their many acolytes, are the people I am referring to. If you do not include yourself in that company, then I apologise for painting with too broad of a brush.
  • Brian Rutledge
    The ' self-appointed ' ones are charlatans, no matter their beliefs. Anyone who claims that they know that something is 100%, absolutely, irrefutably true is suspect in my mind. 99 % okay
  • Surely, you are not saying that there are no absolute truths are you, Brian?
  • DCM
    I was never a "science" person per se, but hearing the common claim that "science has disproven God" drove me to learn about science. And what I've found is that said claim is utterly, absolutely false. Unfortunately, intelligent people can make scientific evidence fit whatever belief they cling to; they could "prove" geocentrism "scientifically" if they were motivated to.

    If evidence alone were enough to convince people of the Creator, the whole we-were-created-by-nothing myth would have been tossed out of the labs decades ago.
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