… and, needless to say, against religion.
At the end of the book The
Quantum Universe: Everything that Can Happen Does Happen (Allen Lane, ISBN:
978-1-846-14432-5) by Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw, professors of particle and
theoretical physics respectively at the University of Manchester and science writers,
I read the following:
“There is something
absolutely fundamental that we do not yet understand.
With that sentence, we
come to the end of our story [the book narrative] because we have reached the edge of our knowledge.”
I am not going to claim that I have read a lot of popular science books, be they in physics, evolution, biology, mathematics (including biographies of scientists), but can and do claim that I am not completely illiterate in this regard. I have also read a few books of the so-called spiritual genre, but all of them translated into current language and not in the original (I do not know Sanskrit, Latin, Hebrew/Yiddish, Arabic, Aramaic, languages of the Inuits, Mayans, Aztecs and all others that have hoary spiritual traditions). This, I believe, should not matter, because it is spirituality’s claim that its teachings retain their validity across eons. This necessarily implies that translations into the current languages do not dilute spiritual teaching.
More importantly, my reading of science is also in a translation,
from mathematics to English, giving the go by to the deep mathematics in which
the spirituality of science is indeed written. Therefore, I am justified in weighing
my understanding of science and religion within the context I am restricting
myself to – of limited scope and as an outsider to both – and pronounce a
judgment on the same.
Over the years I have come to rate popular science books on
one scale and only one scale – how and how much they explicitly admit to the
ignorance that has driven what they have explained. What I mean is, do they
say, “We do not know” in a sense of resignation or one of excitement, like “WE
DON’T KNOW! SO FANTASTIC!”? The arrogance of science comes not from knowing,
but from comprehending that much is unknown and the Rumsfeldian, “I may or may
not even know what I do not know!”
I can tell you that the author(s) of every popular science
book I have read, and I mean EVERY book, has expressed a sense of wonder at
what she does not know, not a sense of fear. NEVER. The lines quoted above carry
exactly that mood. Oh, you could argue that I have been fortunate to have read
only those kinds of popular science books. Having read not a single book of a
different mien, I can neither accept nor dispute that line of argument.
This mood becomes endemic to the human mind only through
scientific temper, not being afraid of the unknown.
And, that precisely is the point of departure between
science and religion. Among the books on spirituality that I have read, I have
not come across the phrase, “I do not know” in any unadulterated form. The fear
of exposing one’s ignorance comes through. The best accommodation that religion
makes to ignorance is the unctuous, “Who knows the ways of God?”
Indeed, it is to anchor one’s ignorance in an analytical
statement*, God had to be invented and His actions had to be circumscribed by
the rules and regulations of religion. It should be very easy to prove that
religion appeared in human societies before God did, the latter driven by the
need to hide why religion came about in the first place – to keep people
ignorant, fearing the unknown, for the advantage of a few.
If religion desires to score points with me, it has to do no
more than assert in a crystal clear manner that “Religion does not know whether
God exists!” I dare religion to do that.
Science, as of now, does not know if the God Particle (Higg’s
Boson) exists, but it does not claim that, “Only God’s Particle knows why it
imbues matter with mass!” It is only scientists who will know first how matter
gets its mass, but only in the sense of predicting the consequences of such a
putative mechanism, leaving aside the philosophical question of what mass
really is. Religion on the other hand, it is claimed, knows that it is only God
who knows what mass is and why His particle imbues matter with it.
Well, that is the difference between science and religion
and that is the clinching statement for science and against religion.
More from the book to end this post:
“A cascade of
inexplicable results caused excitement and confusion [in the context of
what led to the discovery of quantum theory] …
The domain of the known
is not the arena of the research scientist …
[S]cience isn’t simply
another point of view – it reveals a reality that would be impossible to
imagine …
Science is the
investigation of the real, and if the real seems surreal then so be it.”
Raghuram Ekambaram
* - To assume what is to be
proved, or a statement that cannot be disproved, like “an existing white
elephant exists.”
4 comments:
I do not remember who said it
" as the shore of knowledge expands, the shore of ignorance also goes up as both the shores are the same" or something to that effect
ignorance follows knowledge... and there is a wonder associated with it.
Religion is a trick. Most human beings need some kind of a fantasy or hallucination to live by. Religion provides that fantasy, that hallucination. God is a mere ploy. All your logic will fail in that world of hallucination.
Science works in the real world. Religion works in the escapist world. And people love to live in an escapist world.
DS sir, as far as I am concerned it is this wonder that you talk about that is stripped off life by religion - no one can wonder at the actions of God who is after all all powerful :) Religion does not allow you to celebrate ignorance and science does.
RE
But the problem Matheikal is that those who live in that fantasy world insist their's is the true world and there is no way they can be cleared of their delusion. That is the tragedy.
RE
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