The Fundamental Assumptions of Science
As mankind stretches their understanding of the universe,
both on the macroscopic and microscopic levels, a strange thing happens: people
talk themselves out of religion using the theories of men. This isn't to say that everyone does this. I am personally very comfortable with being a
member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and with learning
science; they fit together quite nicely and science tends to confirm my
faith. So what’s the difference? Why are
some people moved to agnosticism and atheism while others become firmer in
their faith?
Of course there can be a conscious choice there, but I want
to focus on a more subtle choice; or maybe it’s more like an unconscious awareness
of a specific fact about science, namely, the scientific method is based upon
several fundamental philosophical assumptions.
There are three of these assumptions, any of which needs consideration
on a deeper enough level that is not given a thought. More astounding is that the implication of
all three taken together may garner little or no consideration at all.
The first assumption is that reality is objective and
consistent. In other words, how we see
it or how we feel about it doesn't change it and it always acts according to
the same laws. This is one that may not
be thought about deeply enough. Yes it
may operate according to consistent laws, but I believe that the laws we
observe are themselves subject to higher—and perhaps simpler—laws which we may
never be able to observe. Taking these
into consideration may mean that “reality” is a little less consistent on our
level than we want to think. Thus some “supernatural”
occurrences defy explanation in the context of secular science, but become
clear within religious contexts. I can’t
really say more about this first assumption without giving away the next two
assumptions, so let’s move one.
The second assumption is that we can perceive reality accurately. I tend to think that there are parts of
reality beyond our perception. Also, our
perceptions are only half the story of science; the other half is the
assumptions and hypotheses we make based on our perceptions. In a way the scientific method is good at
regulating, refining, and/or refuting erroneous assumptions because of its use
of every observation, but the trend toward militating science against religion
smells like a systemic bias to me. Once
again we may need some deeper thinking on this one. If you always remember that there are alternate
explanations for everything, that religion and science both have a lot of unknowns,
and that scientific laws are not reality itself but rather a model of what
happens in reality, then we may be on the right track to letting science and
religion get along. In perceiving
reality we tend to extrapolate why things happen. This tends to come about by the discovery of
a more fundamental mechanism behind some known part of the universe. This mechanism, instead of being viewed as a
smaller cog in the clockwork of things, is instead thought of as the motive
force of the timepiece itself. But a cog
is never a motive force, simply a transferrer or translator of some other force. These cogs are used to build a model that
looks like the universe on the face (and sometimes even in many of the details)
but which is missing the driving force behind it all: the “Why.” Thus whenever
very fine details of a system are put in the place of the “why” of a system, we
lose the accuracy of our perceptions of reality. When we realize that the why is still unknown
and that we've simply uncovered more details, then we remember that what we
have is simply a model and may be the most inaccurate model possible on the
inside despite returning exact, real results on the face.
By now I’ve already started talking about the third
assumption: rational explanations exist for elements of the real world. These
rational explanations are the models we build.
But perhaps on a deeper level these rational explanations should include
the “why” of things working. If so,
science cannot supply these explanations, because science cannot supply the “why.”
So what is the implication when all of these are taken
together? I seem to recall that when I first
heard these fundamental assumptions explained to me, they were rolled into a
single statement. It was something along
the lines of “anything that can be known can be learned through the
observations of science.” Hopefully you’ve
got a sense that perhaps there are things that can be known beyond the
scientific method, that the way the fundamental assumptions are generally
thought about limits what science accepts as truth, distorting it along the
way. So what if we broaden and deepen
the assumptions as I've tried to show?
Then the very nature of science has to change and the scientific method
has to be reworked. Alternately science
could retain its current habits and methods, but change its tone of voice to be
more allowing and less cynical of the “whys” provided by religion.
While this article may seem to come down pretty hard on
science itself, it is really aimed at those who understand and use science in
the narrow way I've described. It’s also
aimed at the masses who are increasingly educated at the hands of mass media
and cynical, secular society. There is a
broader way of thinking, one that takes everything science has to offer then
adds the fortitude, understanding, and resilience of faith. This way of thinking waits patiently for
further discoveries and understanding, not jumping to unnecessary conclusions
but rather withholding judgment on apparent contradictions until sufficient knowledge
is obtained. The man who thinks this way sees every remarkable coincidence of
life as a carefully planned gift to mankind.
He looks at the mystery, majesty, and beauty of the universe with awe
and wonder, seeing the art and the science interwoven down to the deepest
fibers and wonders “How close is God?” because these are His handiwork.
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