Abstract

Religion is presented as a family of religions, identified by a cluster of religion-making features, most but not all of which must be present, involving beliefs and practices which are diverse and often in conflict. Because of differences in scope, application of scientific method, and vocabulary, science can also be regarded as a family—this time a family of sciences. The universality of the physical sciences contrasts with the more restricted scope of the earth sciences and the human sciences. Their relationship can be shown by a three-tiered pyramid, with the physical sciences at the base, the human sciences at the top, and the earth sciences in the middle. Despite three notable differences between science and religion, science and religion are not, as popularly believed, in conflict. The contrary view, espoused by the “new atheists,” is shown to be based on oversimplified views of religion and science. There are nontheistic religions and science is committed, not to metaphysical naturalism (“scientism”), but only to methodological naturalism. Stephen Jay Gould escapes the conflict view by proposing that science and religion are independent “magisteria”, science being occupied with facts and religion with values. In divorcing the realm of facts from the realm of values, he too distorts their complex nature, for science is not devoid of values and religion makes claims about the facts. As Hume long ago suggested, facts and values are interconnected. While a fact is not the same as a value, a fact cannot support a value without presupposing another value in turn. Interaction between facts and values is here to stay.

Highlights

  • Thanks to the popular writings of the “new atheists”, many people have come to think of science and religion as two monoliths between which we have to choose, or at best as two “magisteria” standing in lordly independence from one another, in the manner suggested by Stephen Jay Gould.I will argue that both views are mistaken and spring from an impoverished understanding of their subject-matter

  • The universality of the physical sciences contrasts with the more restricted scope of the earth sciences and the human sciences. Their relationship can be shown by a three-tiered pyramid, with the physical sciences at the base, the human sciences at the top, and the earth sciences in the middle

  • Stephen Jay Gould escapes the conflict view by proposing that science and religion are independent “magisteria”, science being occupied with facts and religion with values

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Summary

Introduction

Thanks to the popular writings of the “new atheists”, many people have come to think of science and religion as two monoliths between which we have to choose, or at best as two “magisteria” standing in lordly independence from one another, in the manner suggested by Stephen Jay Gould. It suggests a simplistic view of science. While Gould’s view removes the conflict, it attaches to religion the idea that its exclusive concern is with values and optimizing the meaning of life. This idea is faulty on two scores. Important as values are in religion, they have long been the concern of other disciplines, including normative ethics and moral psychology. As its literature shows, religion is no less concerned with the nature of reality than it is with the nature of morality, and for understandable reasons. For human life to be meaningful it is imperative to develop a coherent set of values within the constraint of the best available information about the world

Religion: A Family-Resemblance Model
A New Perspective on Science
Science and the New Atheism
NOMA to the Rescue?
Conclusion

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