Week of September 15, 2008


Science and religion have co-existed throughout the ages


Opinion

By AUSTIN MARDON
Special to the WCR


Various fields of organized science such as biology, medicine, geography and engineering go back in the western world to antiquity and even earlier in Oriental cultures. At the time of Christ, they had institutions of higher learning such as those around the library of Alexandria and the academies in Greece.

We forget that religion is not set within a vacuum, but exists within its time as far as world views and technology. What is science? As we know it today it is a system of predicting future events based on a system of understanding past events through predicting probability. A series of experiments using controls and variables is the experimental basis of science.

Development of models

Other sciences such as astronomy and geography are based on the development of models based on observation of whatever phenomena are being observed.

Is this intrinsically opposed to religion and our Catholic faith? Did God not give us our cognitive abilities to make our way through life in the best way that we can.

Our lives have been transformed on the outside by scientific discoveries and their myriad of applications and yet that which is inside and the motivations by which we act have not changed in 2,000 years.

Christian template

Does not Christianity give us a template to give a basic meaning to our lives? Science cannot answer those questions because ultimately it does not answer why or for what purpose but it tries to answer how.

Religion is not set within a vacuum, but exists within its time as far as world views and technology.

In the past, many men and women of science were persons of faith and in the Western world were even clergy. Modern genetics is based on the pea experiments that were done by Gregor Mendel, a member of the clergy. Before him, we did not have a modern understanding of how genetics worked in a systematic way. He lived in Europe (France in the 19th century).

St. Albert the Great, the teacher and defender of Thomas Aquinas, was a well-known scholar and in the modern context could easily be seen as not just a scholar but also a scientist.

Galileo never gave up his faith in being a Christian or a Roman Catholic all through his trials for preaching a heliocentric - sun-centred solar system.

Modern universities in Europe and some in North America started out as colleges of higher learning with a large religious element if not a sole source. Science is an attempt to understand the world using probability and our minds. This comes out of a Christian desire to understand the world as created by God.

Ancient science and scholarship was preserved in the West by monasteries for a thousand years until the advent of the Renaissance in the 15th century. Science is a tool - as is technology - that can be used for good or for evil.

Complimentary existance

Modern scientists and theologians such as Pierre Teilhard de Chardin showed even in the modern world these two worlds can exist together and complement each other.

Our personal ongoing health is dependent on modern medicine. Without whose advances due to science, many of us would be sick or dead.

Finally ironically both ethical science and Christianity both aspire to improve the human condition. It is sad that they can be so at odds even centuries after the trial of Galileo.

(Austin Mardon recently received the Order of Canada for humanitarian works. He has authored a series of books and 169 scholarly peer reviewed communications, including pieces in Science and Nature.)