Science Versus Religion: Conflict Or Harmony
Since the earliest period of man, humans have been trying to understand the mysteries of the universe. They have also been attempting to find an explanation for their state of being in it. Through this trip of self-understanding, several points of view on human existence have been developed and united into a complicated and theoretical expression, called religion. As humans expanded and developed themselves, many concepts developed by religion became invalid; progress in science brought new discoveries that came against the support structures of religious doctrine. After that, some people decided to change their beliefs; listen to scientists and follow their teachings, while others decided to keep listening to priests and follow their religion’s rules. This paper compares and contrasts the two means humans have been using in order to acquire knowledge; the revelations coming from different religions and the discoveries made by scientists throughout the years of human existence. It also considers whether or not there is enough scientific proof for us to get rid of religion altogether.
The resolution of the conflict between religion and science is impossible, as the affirmations made by religion and the facts provided by science are very different. Revelation religions get their knowledge directly from divine figures, whether it is through mystical insights, historical events, or spiritual experiences, and then, they write down the information in order to pass it on. Scientific knowledge is gained through human experience; it is knowledge that we acquire on our own. One would think that, since God is omniscient and knows everything, the knowledge that He gives us should necessarily be more legitimate than the knowledge we provide ourselves. However, science has obliged countless theologians to expose religious beliefs in order to ease scientific proof. This shows that scientific research is more reliable than the explanations made available by religion. An example of this is displayed in the question of our planet’s age. According to the Bible, the Earth is less than ten thousand years old. However, scientific evidence demonstrates that the Earth is in realty billions of years old. In response to this, religious philosophers said that the process used to discover the Earth’s age is unreliable; they argue that radioactive dating, a way of determining the age of rocks, must be faulty, since there isn’t any particular rock sample which the method can be checked to. This argument is not acceptable though, because the only test needed to discover the age of a rock is the measure of its decay rate. Because of the proof supplied by scientific research, many religious philosophers have compromised their views and have tried to combine scientific evidence with biblical history about our Earth’s age. Theologians also argue that the words of the Bible are written metaphorically and could be understood in a way that merges the biblical history of the Earth’s age with scientific truth. In reference to Genesis, the first book of the Old Testament, our planet was formed in six days: “And God saw everything that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day”. Theologians assert that this and other passages in the book of Genesis could be understood metaphorically; a day to God could be up to millions of years for humanity, which means that the Earth could have been brought into existence over a much lengthier duration than six days, and can therefore be as old as science determines it to be. However, doubting the cogency of the Bible as literal text introduces the small potential of religion being wrong. When religious philosophers consider scientific evidence and attempt to balance it with the Bible, the truth of the whole religion can be questioned. Another dilemma sought to be solved by both science and religion, is the determination of human origin.
Science has supplied many explanations regarding the origin of humans, which oppose the religious thought of creation. The most widely familiar of those interpretive explanations is biological evolution. Biological evolution embraces the changes to a specific species over thousands of generations as it produces variations of descendants, more of which are usually better adapted to survive in their environment than the previous generation. Proof for biological evolution can be viewed in the diversity of the life that encompasses us. It is approximately calculated that out of the potential two million species on Earth, all have alike defining features. Every organism on Earth is made up of basic functional and structural units called cells. This fact alone is proof that all species on Earth have a mutual lineage. In addition, the history of life recorded by fossils shows driving evidence of evolution. The fossil history displays that the first complex life, jellyfish and worms, were born on Earth about 680 million years ago. As the fossil record is further examined, it can be displayed that these life forms transformed into more complex life forms, and those life forms into even more complex ones, etc. Since evolution can be unquestionably seen in fossil records, it is likely that evolution is responsible for the human species formation. Despite the overpowering proof towards evolution, theologians still fight for the idea of creationism.
Creationism explains that God developed the Earth and all of the living things on it. Creationism also states that the Book of Genesis provides a factual history of existence. There are various schools of thought regarding creationism. Biblical creationists think that the scientific statements of the creation of the universe oppose the words of the Bible. Despite this, scientific creationism explains that scientific statements of the beginning of the universe do not inevitably deny the words of the Bible. Creation science combines religion with science, and makes use of scientific knowledge as a resource in an argument. An excellent example of this can be interpreted in the Genesis’ explanation of the beginning of time. According to the book of Genesis, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, ‘Let there be light’, and there was light”. Creation science assumes that this can be a biblical statement leaning in the direction of the Big Bang Theory. The Big Bang Theory states that the universe came to being as the consequence of an explosion roughly 15 to 20 billion years ago. Shortly after the “big bang”, the universe was composed mostly of powerful radiation, which gave shape to an inflated ball of fire. After an unspecified time, some of the energy from the ball of fire was transformed into matter, mostly hydrogen. From that enormous ball of fire, particles of light rose for the first time. Creation science argues that the Big Bang Theory has dramatic similarity to the Genesis account. I think that this point of view does not hold true, because the words of the Bible are being taken as pure metaphor. The words of Genesis are being extended to fit into the scientific model of the initiation of time. Receiving scientific knowledge and using the Bible to explain it sabotages the validity of the entire religion. Creation science has also attempted to supply a Biblical history for the Earth’s Geology. It reasons that the Earth’s Geology is a consequence of the world-wide flood, as represented by the book of Genesis. This claim simply does not hold up as empirical science. William Overton, in his take of the case McLean vs. Arkansas Board of Education, “any kind of Genesis Flood depends upon supernatural intervention. A world-wide flood as an explanation of the world’s Geology is not the product of natural law, nor can its occurrence be explained by natural law. ” Other evidence of the deficiency of creation science can be seen in its assertions that the likelihood of a combination of chemicals resulting in life from nothingness is unlikely. Creation science states life is the consequence of a creator. According to Overton, “While the statistical figures may be impressive evidence against the theory of chance chemical combinations as an explanation of origins, it requires a leap of faith to interpret those figures so as to support a complex doctrine which includes a sudden creation from nothing, a world-wide flood, separate ancestry of man and apes, and a young earth. ” Even though creation science does a great job of expanding the Bible’s text so that it could keep up with the rapid discoveries of science, I find it difficult to accept creationism. The overpowering amount of proof defending evolution makes it a more valid explanation for the beginning of species.
An additional issue between religion and science is the existence of God. The disciple of physics reports the universe in proportionally simple concepts. Even though the clarification of the mechanical system of the universe, as provided by physics, may not seem to be simple, as we learn more from physics, the infinite structure of the universe does start to look less and less complicated. However, theologians contend that an infinitely complex God is required in the interpretation of the simply structured universe. Descartes claims that God is a very complicated being, having the qualities of both omnipotence (unlimited power) and omniscience (infinite knowledge). The theologian position replaces the question of how our simple universe got here, with the harder question of how God got here. Ockham Razor’s principle states that less complicated interpretations will more likely be accurate than complicated explanations. This scientific principle takes God out of the picture. According to Albert Einstein, “the more a man is imbued with the ordered regularity of all events the firmer becomes his conviction that there is no room left by the side of this ordered regularity for causes of a different nature. ” Basically, the more someone knows about the function of the universe, the more he/she becomes aware of nature’s simplicity, and then he/she becomes less likely to believe in God. This is the why roughly ninety percent of the members of the National Academy of Sciences are atheists. However, theologians claim that the being of God can be revealed through scientific fact. In his book, Natural Theology, Reverend Paley states that, “an artifact exhibiting a complexity of parts that collaborate to create a purposeful function requires a designer. ” Paley states that if we see proof for a similar plan in the initiation of nature, then the object also needs a cosmic designer, or God. I find this view difficult to accept. Everything in nature can be viewed or measured. However, God is not perceivable, and to believe in God is an act of faith. Theologians also point out that some features of nature are also not visible, such as magnetic and gravitational fields. On the other hand, there is no direct similarity which can be correlated between the invisibility of those natural phenomenons and the invisibility of God. This is because those features of nature can actually be measured. However, God’s existence simply cannot be shown to exist through empirical proof.
If scientific proof exists and truly overthrows the doctrine teachings of the Bible, then why do humans accept religion? It is mostly because Religion gives us a feeling of security, an awareness of purpose, and it brings people from all over the world together. Possibly the most significant features of any well-grounded religion are its belief in a leader and a set of moral doctrine teachings that specify how people should act towards others. Religion is one of the ways people are enabled to easily pass down their morals and values to the future generations. Some may argue that Religion is also a way to control the masses. Even though scientific arguments question the teachings of religion, it will most probably stay an established organization in our society forever.