When
I read that the Nobel Laureate (Chemistry) Dan Shechtman said, “…in the
frontiers of science there is not much of a difference between science and
religion,” at the start of an article [1] my interest to read fully was stoked.
It
is an anecdotal thesis that undergirds the comparison the Nobel Laureate makes.
His discovery of quasi crystals through an investigation aided by a Transmission
Electron Microscope (TEM) was not readily accepted. The discovery had to be
sent through the millstone of the established procedures of X-ray crystallography
and confirmed before it could be accepted as a paradigm, shifting from the old that
denied the existence of quasi-crystals and X-ray crystallography. It took ten long
years and hence the comparison to religion, as I understood from the article. I
can understand the frustrations the Laureate must have felt and he evokes the
greatest admiration in me.
Science
is at best a layman pursuit for me. Yet I can give similar anecdotes.
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar was pilloried for suggesting that sufficiently
massive stars can keep collapsing, leading to black hole formation (though
Chandrasekhar did not explore the possibility to that stage; the redoubtable
scientist Eddington was not enamored of the pressure of degeneracy). He was taken
apart, in front of his peers, by Eddington. Now, that was science working as
was the case with Dan Shechtman. Both Chandrasekhar and Shechtman were duly
recognized as peerless in their fields. This too is an example of science
working. Yes, it took time but science works on extended timescales.
For
example, the theory of evolution by natural selection was expounded by Darwin
in 1859 and it gained credibility even within science only in the early decades
of the twentieth century.
Another
one. Fred Hoyle stuck to his theory of steady state universe despite mounting
evidence against it. This is a question of a scientist attached to his formulation
for explaining a phenomenon, perhaps just a tad too strongly – normal human behavior,
scientist or non-scientist.
Therefore,
Shechtman’s experience, a delayed acceptance of his insights, is not a one-off.
It recurs often enough. And, scientists must be happy that is does; that
science allows these speed breakers.
Having
said that, I want to see how valid the parallel Shechtman discerns between science
and religion is. To be generous, he may refer to the gap between Galileo’s argument
and the Roman Catholic Church accepting that geo-centric view of the universe
is nonsense – a full three centuries!
Or,
his words, “People have their beliefs and they would not listen,” that does appear
to have some validity.
Yet,
I will throw some spanner in such thinking. Scientists work on beliefs and religion promotes
beliefs. And, there lies the difference, unacknowledged by the Nobel Laureate.
A scientist working on a theory, based on a belief, is resigned to his theory
being proven right or wrong over the long haul. But religionists, besides
promoting beliefs, work assiduously against being proven wrong. More
importantly, the tenets any religion carries are safe guarded from analysis as
they are so self-serving and unctuous. Name one religion that has said that its
tenets are wrong based on its own
thinking / rethinking of the concerned issues.
Scientists
believed in X-ray crystallography after having had years of evidence and
experience. When the new technique appeared in the neighborhood, they were
wary. But, they eventually welcomed the new kid. If something like this happened
in religion, it would create a schism. The old one retains its hold and more
importantly, will try to woo back the deserters. Check how Christianity began.
There
is no schism between X–ray crystallography and TEM. X-ray crystallography finds
its use in its domain leaving TEM to its. But, Jews and Christians fight and
kill each other. Why did this difference skip the obviously brilliant Nobel Laureate?
1964
is the year Prof. Higgs, along with others, propounded the Higgs Field and the
associated particle, Higgs Boson. And, its existence has been proved only in
2012, because the required technology had not been developed. Scientists do not
yet know whether the particle observed is the original “garden variety” Higgs
as proposed in 1964 or some “exotic” variation. “To many physicists an exotic
Higgs would be good news.” [2]
Further,
“The discovery of the boson … is rightly hailed as the crowning achievement of
one of history’s most successful scientific theories. But it is almost
certainly the beginning of that theory’s undoing, and its replacement by
something better. In science, with its constant [never ending] search for the
truth, this is something to celebrate
[my emphasis].”
When
Dan Shechtman can point to a similar statement about religion, then, I would
agree to his comparison. And, that, in my opinion will be a search far longer
than the ten years that he spent in wilderness with his TEM results for quasi
crystals.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
References
1.
A
thin line separates religion and science: Dan Shechtman,
R Prasad, The Hindu, July 4, 2012. [http://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/article3599458.ece]
2. Gotcha!, The Economist, July 7, 2012 [http://www.economist.com/node/21558248]
(possibly behind a paywall)
4 comments:
all scientists end up as philosophers
all philosophers wait fro science to prove them right.
And scientists are heard more as philosophers than as scientists! And, that is the irony DS sir!
RE
The more I read articles like this, the more confused I become by what religion actually means to people.
Therefore Matheikal, I am contributing to your ultimate "enlightenment", about science and religion. For once, I can use the "and" conjunction validly for these two!
RE
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