07/12/2014

The Futility of the ‘Science(-tism)’ vs Religion Debate

2014-02-02


In this essay I try to give my view on the science vs religion debate. However, it would be more appropriate to call it the scientism vs religion debate as most scientists are usually too busy with ‘doing science’ and therefore refrain from the debate. The people involved in the debate are often (self-proclaimed) defenders of science in the (perceived) threat of religion, a popular example would Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris or Neil deGrasse Tyson, among others. However, the account I want to make here touches upon more general points concerning the futility, challenges and implications of this debate. Already in 1975 Paul Feyerabend wrote in his book ‘Against method’:

“[S]cience can stand on its own feet and does not need any help from rationalists, secular humanists, Marxists and similar religious movements; and... non-scientific cultures, procedures and assumptions can also stand on their own feet and should be allowed to do so... Science must be protected from ideologies; and societies, especially democratic societies, must be protected from science... In a democracy scientific institutions, research programmes, and suggestions must therefore be subjected to public control, there must be a separation of state and science just as there is a separation between state and religious institutions, and science should be taught as one view among many and not as the one and only road to truth and reality.”
Now many of the things Feyerabend claimed can, and should be, challenged. But this quote touches upon some points I want to make here in this essay, e.g. that science represents one form of knowledge among many.  The general argument in this essay is that scientism, as exemplified in the science vs. religion, is a problem for society in general. As scientism elevates science to a level it cannot possibly match, undermining the authority of science. 
Let me try to break down this general argument into three different reasons, why this is so. The first reasons touches upon the ability of science to “stand on its own feet”, explaining why science and religion are separate incommensurable spheres. The second reason addresses the “help [of] rationalists, secular humanists [and atheists]”, arguing that the’ help’ they provide is more damaging to science than attacks from religious groups. And lastly, building on the previous points and reiterating that “science should be taught as one view among many and not as the one and only road to truth and reality”.

The Ability to Stand Alone
One common assumption that religious defenders and atheists alike, make in the ‘science’ vs. religion debate is that these two different belief systems are comparable (and yes, science is a belief system, and I will return to this point!). Superficially, they give the impression that they are comparable, because they address the same subjects, e.g. creation of the earth, human morale, or human nature etc. However, in religion there is the notion of absolute ‘Truth’ capital T, meanwhile in science, there might exist such a thing but it certainly is unobtainable by its human practitioners. In addition to this, they also differ how truth and knowledge are validated and obtained. Let’s take the aforementioned example of the creation of the earth, to elaborate this difference in how truth is accessed and validated. 
The religious argument claims: "The earth is X years old"
The scientific argument claims: "The earth is Y years old"
Now because X does not equal Y, the assumption is that one has to be wrong. However, this is only the case if these two statements are comparable, which they are not. By investigating the premises that lead to these different conclusions this becomes obvious. 
Religious premise: "This particular holy text states the earth is X years old."
Scientific premise: "This particular scientific theory postulates that the earth is Y years old."
The religious premise is absolute and allows for revelation of truth trough scripture. On the other hand, the scientific premise is a ‘best model approach’ and denies revelation through scripture, while basing conclusion on ‘observable facts’. Without having to go into the problems that can arise from revelation of scripture (e.g. multiple interpretations) or ‘observable facts’ (e.g. theory laden bias) it should be quite clear now that these are NOT comparable approaches, in fact they are mutually exclusive. However, inside their respective frame of reference they are true and valid points. As such, only by comparing these two different approaches do they become ‘false’. Now this deconstruction might appear silly and petty, however, its implication is from it. Because, as each different belief system ascribes to different approaches how truth is accessed and validated, using the other system as a counterargument will obviously fail. This basic difference is a prime reason why it is futile to explain scientific facts to religious people as arguments for atheism, as they adhere to different frameworks. 
Bruno Latour discusses this point in his book ‘On Modern Cult of the Factish Gods’ from a science studies point of view, he deconstructs both science and religion into human belief system based upon artefacts, rituals and trust.  If you start to claiming that one is superior to the other (as is done when they are directly compared) you are contradicting the function and form of both science or religion. To deny the rituals, materialisties, social conventions in either form of belief system is to treat it them as a black box, making the error of simplification. The next part deals with this simplification error.

The Unhelpful Helper
The common ground that resurfaces in the science vs. religion debate is that each side has a definition of ‘what science is’. Now these obviously differ from individual to individual, but the general representation of science from its defenders is that; Science is an empirical based practice that builds on evidence, creating objective truths. This definition is totally removed from the actual practice of science.
First of all, the sheer notion that objectivity is a possible outcome of science is false. In philosophical terms science builds upon two general methods, induction and falsification. Both forms cannot produce objective truths, and as such human interpretation is paramount to their application, i.e. subjective interpretation. In addition to this grave philosophical error two further mistake are inherent in this definition. Firstly, it assumes that there is a definition for science at all and secondly, that there is a clear ‘demarcation criteria’ that separates scientific forms of knowledge from non-scientific forms of knowledge. The definition of science and the pursuit to find a ‘demarcation criteria’ has been the holy grail of the philosophy of science since its inception. However, what they found is that neither exits and that science is strongly shaped by its practitioners, i.e. there is no ‘science’ only the ‘practice of science’. As a reaction to this the discipline of the sociology of scientific knowledge and subsequently science and technology studies was created to study the ‘practice of science’, in order to better understand what ‘science is’. These inquires uniformly showed that science is a belief system with its own customs, rituals and artefacts. This claim was initially perceived as a ‘attack’ upon the authority of science. Similarly today any claims that science represents a belief system are also rigorously attacked by advocates of scientism. The first wave of attacking this insight culminated into the so called ‘Science Wars’ spanning the 1990s. This initial conflict of sociologist of science and scientists (e.g. Steve Weinberg) has now largely been resolved; the consensus accepts that science is a human construction dependent upon its practitioners. An important point to make here is that claiming science is a human construction is not the same as saying science is useless. On the contrary science is the best approximation of nature that is currently available to us. However, it is just that, an approximation, depending on humans creating this approximation. 
Now, when science gets thrown into the ‘science vs. religion debate’ it is often done from a Scientism view of science. Scientism according to ‘The New Fontana Dictionary of Modern Thought’ sees science as “characteristic inductive methods of the natural sciences [that] are the only source of genuine factual knowledge and, in particular, that they alone can yield true knowledge about man and society.” The first part of this belief simplifies the scientific process, removing the multiplicity of interpretation, conflicts and contradictions involved in the construction, i.e. creating a black box. However, the personal interests of its practitioners, conflicting data in its measurements or the politics of society, that often are presented as ‘impurities’, are a central part of science. As such, arguing for a more 'logical' 'rational' or less 'biased' science that would be able to transcend these aspects is actually non-nonsensical, as these aspects are not only inherent to the practice of science; they are central parts of it. Now when genuine controversies arise within science, e.g. the finer details of anthropomorphic global climate (see Paul N. Edward’s ‘A vast Machine’) these are perceived as ‘failures of science’ instead of being a natural part of it. The oversimplified presentation of science creates the illusion that science can achieve objective truths, transcending these influences, something that is simply not true. This Scientism version of science does not help defend scientific authority; to the contrary it undermines it. Because, it elevates science to a standard it cannot possibly meet and thereby setting it up for certain failure.  This presentation of science is naive at best and dis-ingeniousness at worst
The following section deals with second part of the definition of Scientism “that [science] alone can yield true knowledge about man and society”.

Multiplicity of ‘Truth’
If science really would be the only achievable way to obtain “true knowledge”, than we first have to agree upon what ‘truth’ actually is. So let’s for a second set aside the science vs religion debate, and turn our focus upon 'truth'. Well what is truth? Here are short (by no means extensive) lists of different versions that have been suggested by different sources. 
A.     Truth is an abstract quality of the universe that is 'true' regardless of human opinion that occupies a separate realm (e.g. Platonism) 
B.     Truth is combination of material factors (although unreachable to human experience) that combine with conceptual functions and social convention to form a reinforcing network that is regarded as true (e.g. actor-network theory) 
C.     There no such thing as Truth and we are all deceiving ourselves and living in our own fantasy (e.g. extreme forms of nihilism)

Well depending on your version of truth, the answer for the science religion debate is going to differ. Because for A, neither science nor religion can claim this, B is true for science, but also for religion and in C the whole concept of truth is suspended. Now I am not saying that these versions of truth (A, B or C) are the definite ones, these are only a few examples. However, my point being, if you make a statement such as ‘science alone can yield true knowledge’, which form of truth are you referring to?
Let us further deconstruct the notion of ‘true knowledge’ as produced by science. Well first of all that point isn't entirely true. There have been plenty of cases where implementations of science have caused more harm than good, as it turned out the science was ‘wrong’. Implementations of science are often mobilised by people adhering to Scientism when defending science (e.g. computers, non-stick frying pans or solar power). However, when criticised on this ground the counterargument that is raised builds upon the aforementioned simplistic view of science and usually sound something like this: 

"But it’s the implementation, that are wrong not science! Science is pure, for example it is political influences that complicate pure scientific implementation“

Answering this point has to be done in two parts. First of all yes, there have been plenty of cases where political interference complicated the implementation of science. But, secondly and more important for the here presented account, there also have been cases where science implementations have been simply wrong (e.g. racial discrimination, persecution of homosexuality and sterilisation of people with mental disorder etc.). Yes, there has been change and progress in the scientific view concerning these subjects, but that’s just the point: it changes! At the time of their implementation these practices were supported by ‘scientific evidence’ of the time. If the advocate of Scientism is still not convinced, one last counterargument is put forth, that builds on the same simplified view of science, usually it sound something like this 

“But this is the implementation of science, not science itself”

This is true on a trivial level, but in the practice of science these are interconnected, as implementations of science secures funding and leads to more science. This is one reason why scientists try to be ‘socially relevant’. Furthermore, if you do not measure science success by its implementation, than what do you measure is it by? If you do not acknowledge the 'bad' implementations and only count the good ones, this is very … unscientific?

If ‘science’ really is the only way to achieve true knowledge, than not only is religion discounted as form of knowledge but also; feminism, philosophy or literature to only mention a few, as these are not 'sciences'. The English word science as the peculiar trait that it’s meaning is only reserved for the 'natural sciences' ("Naturwissenschafften" in German or “naturvetenskap” in Swedish). Yet, other forms of knowledge are certainly sources of insightful and usable knowledge, even if they have different mechanism of achieving ‘true knowledge’. 

And lastly, with everything we have learned so far, the definition of science from the Scientism point of view is a very arrogant claim. Science is done by people; it is a human project. People are not perfect, hence science is not perfect. This point alone should suffice to show the futility in the scientism position. I want to conclude with the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

“Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and miss-guided men.”

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