The Sad Condition of Science and Religion
The professor flunked the student and the student appealed on the grounds that his answer was indisputably correct. The university appointed an independent arbiter to settle the case. The arbiter judged the answer was indeed correct, but told the student that he was to provide an answer that showed familiarity with the basic principles of physics. The student's response was to give several physics possibilities as follows:
"Take the barometer to the roof of the skyscraper, drop it over the
edge, and measure the time it takes to hit the ground. Use the familiar
physics equation X = 1/2(g)T(T) to get the distance. That would
destroy the barometer, so a better way might be to measure the
height of the barometer and on a sunny
day measure the length of its shadow and the length of the building's
shadow and calculate the height by using similar triangles. If you want
to really do a physics calculation, tie a piece of string to the
barometer and swing it like a pendulum--first at ground level and then
on the roof of the skyscraper. The height can be calculated by using
the difference in gravity from the equation g = 4¹2L/T2).
If the skyscraper has an emergency staircase, you could walk up it and
mark off the height of the skyscraper in barometer lengths and then add
them up. If you want to be really boring and orthodox about it, of
course, you could use the barometer to measure air pressure on the roof
of the skyscraper and on the ground and convert the difference in
millibars to feet to give the height of the building. But since we are
constantly being exhorted to exercise independence of mind and apply
scientific methods, undoubtedly the best way would be to knock on the
janitor's door and say to him, `If you would like a nice new barometer,
I will give you this one if you will tell me the height of this
skyscraper.'" The student was Niels Bohr, the first person from Denmark
to win a Nobel Prize for Physics.
I always loved this story because it shows one of the problems that exists in science and especially in science education. I have always maintained when I speak to science teachers that our job as science teachers is not that we tell our students what to think, but that we teach them how to think. Physics is one of the easiest subjects in the world, but students who have never been taught how to solve problems and how to think through investigative techniques have a terrible time with physics. I always hated to have a valedictorian or a Merit Scholarship winner in my physics class, because those students were masters of memory and regurgitation of information, but were usually terrible in problem solving. They became incensed that I would allow students to write the equations and algebraic rules like the quadratic equation down on a card to be used during exams. When I heard them say, "This isn't fair," I would ask them why they could not also write down the equations and algebraic rules. One of my favorite Merit Scholar students who was having a terrible time with my class yelled at me, "Because I have memorized all that stuff, and they didn't," pointing to the rest of the class. My response was, but I am not testing memorization, we have computers which can handle memorization of facts, I want you to think. She burst into tears at that response and accused me of being impossible.
Much of the
scientific community of the twenty-first century is like this young
lady. Instead of being open to evidence, new approaches, and new ways
of doing things that are valid scientific methods, science is being
held hostage by the media, grants, politics, and humanist
organizations. The classic example of this problem has been the battle
over stem cells. When the issue of abortion and embryonic stem cells
erupted over five years ago, grandiose claims about embryonic stem
cells were made by those who had grants to do that work. Their battle
went all the way to the White House and the issue became a political
football. Christopher Reeves and Nancy Reagan got into the battle and
the push for the use of embryonic stem cells was championed emotionally
by the media using Reeves and Ronald Reagan as emotional ploys to
promote that agenda. In the process of all of this, other diseases'
victims were brought on board by promises that their problems would
also be solved if embryonic stem cells were used freely--so
Parkinson's, Diabetes, and Alzheimer's were added to the flood of
voices suggesting that all that was stopping the solving of all of
these terrible diseases were religious fundamentalists who were
blocking the use of embryonic stem cells. Now the issue was enlarged so
that the evolution/creation battle was added to the mix polarizing
things to an even greater degree. All of this emotionalism and
political manipulation was far removed from the real scientific
evidence.
Before going any further with this discussion, let me stop and state very clearly that I am as touched by the problems of all of these human diseases as anyone else and want a cure for these things as much as anyone else. I have family members and best friends with Parkinson's. My wife is a diabetic of nearly 60 years of insulin dependency. I do not want this discussion to sound uncaring or unsympathetic, for I would give almost anything to see these diseases eliminated and their pain and trauma removed from my loved ones--and from the human condition at large. The fact is, however, that embryonic stem cells and what they are claimed to be leading to, as far as cures are concerned, are a false hope and bad science. It is emotionalism and political maneuvering that has kept the push for embryonic stem cells alive--not good science.
Let us talk about good science and the evidence. The very thing that
causes promoters of embryonic stem cells to call for their use is
what makes embryonic stem cells unusable. Because they
are a blank slate, they are virtually uncontrollable. Dr. Edward Scott
of Florida's Shands Cancer Center and director of stem cell biology at
the University of Florida's College of Medicine says, "The cells that
we're going to use for therapy are most likely going to be adult stem
cells just because we know that you can transplant them and they will
behave. With embryonic stem cells, if you transplant too many, you end
up with a tumor." Bone marrow transplant is essentially adult stem cell
therapy that has been used for decades. Dr. William Hurlbut of Stanford
University's program in human biology says, "Adult stem cells are like
the adults themselves. They've been acculturated somewhat, and they've
been trained to behave." Scientists working with adult stem cells have
already had success with the big diseases. Dr. David Prentice of the
President's Council on Bioethics says, "We're seeing complete reversal
of symptoms for MS, Lupus, and things like Crohn's disease. Stem cells
have been used to treat spinal cord injuries, heart attacks,
Parkinson's disease and diabetes in clinical trials around the world."
The political and media distortion of science by
championing
embryonic stem cells to the exclusion of everything else has also made
other scientific research that might actually solve the debate get
minimal or nonexistent attention. Dr. Robert Lanza, for example, has
developed cells that have all of the properties of embryonic stem cells
by using skin cells and doing therapeutic cloning where the cells are
manipulated so they have all the properties of embryonic stem cells
called a parthenode. The point of all of this is that science is being
driven by the wrong thing--by political agendas, media hype, celebrity
endorsement, and not by the
evidence or the data. This is bad science and unfortunately it is very
common in all of science, not just in the area that we have discussed
here. Cosmology has been driven in recent years by philosophical
agendas rather than by questions of evidence and scientific method
applied to questions raised by what has been observed. Evolutionary
theories have been driven by controversy about the religious or
philosophical validity of Darwinism rather than what scientific
investigation shows. The fact that National
Geographic felt compelled to devote the major part of a recent
issue (November 2004) to defend Darwinism is a demonstration of how
emphasis has shifted in this area. A number of frauds have been exposed
in recent years where someone faked scientific data in order to have
funding to continue their research.
The other side of this situation in which apologetic material
is affected is the condition of religion in the world. If you read
articles about religion in the media these days, it is highly likely
that what you will be reading about is material dealing
with political
issues or social issues involving human rights. The war in Iraq has
shifted the focus of the world on what is perceived as religious
fundamentalism verses American aggression and attempts at control. In
America today there is massive debate about human rights and what is
seen as religious attempts to violate the rights of others with whom
people differ religiously--whether it be homosexuality, abortion,
euthanasia, birth control, abstinence, or women's rights. Before we go
any further in this discussion, let me emphasize that the question is
not about whether there is an absolute Truth involved in each of these
issues, because the Bible clearly teaches that there is. We have had
numerous articles in this journal over the years on every subject
listed above. The point needs to be made, however, that what
Christianity is about is the changing of people's hearts and the
winning of their souls and minds to the principles of life that Jesus
gave us, not to the production of and financial and emotional support
of political machines to force Christian views on the world. Jesus and
His followers won people over not by pressuring the Roman government to
pass and enforce laws that promoted what Jesus taught, but by loving,
serving, and teaching the people about how God would have them live.
Much of the hostility to Christianity today stems from the militant political control that some have attempted to develop in the name of Christianity. Instead of trying to win people over by love, support, and service, many religious leaders are crusading for political and financial power to force the agendas they believe in. When politics and money are the driving forces behind religious change, it will fail. The fruits of the Spirit are what will change the world--not religiously acceptable laws. Christianity will change the world by changing the hearts and minds of people including those who make and enforce the laws.
The world needs good
science--science that addresses human problems and which functions in
terms of evidence and observation, not political and financial agendas.
The world needs pure and undefiled religion "to visit the widows and
the orphans in their affliction" (James 1:27).
The world needs to hear the Gospel--that God has sent His Son to redeem
mankind and to bring man back to God. The world needs to "know that
there is a God through the things He has made." It is our hope that the
people (you and me) will pressure our leaders in all aspects of life to
focus on what science and Christianity are all about and by working
together we can bring positive change that will ultimately resolve the
issues and bring peace and understanding to all people. If political
and financial issues continue to be the driving force on the planet, we
can only expect to have more conflict and more violence as each agenda
tries to force itself upon all humanity.
Jesus said "By their fruit you will recognize them" (Matthew 7:16).
Paul tells us that "the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace,
patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self
control." Let us do it God's way, not man's way.
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