Posts Tagged ‘Science’

What does an atheist and a fundamentalist have in common?

Monday, February 8th, 2010

They both believe that evolution disproves the existence of God. This is interesting to me because it also reveals that they have something even deeper in common: they both subscribe to a very bad theology. The atheist will struggle to maintain a very weak and immature concept of God in order to “prove” this God doesn’t exist; while a fundamentalist will have a very literal and simplistic reading of scripture that undergirds a very weak and immature concept of God, albeit in the guise of an “all powerful” God that in the end becomes self-contradictory or absurd, yet is meant to sustain a rejection of evolution. That both the atheist and fundamentalist are both confused in the same way about what science actually does say, goes without saying… but maybe not.

Science actually says nothing about the existence or non-existence of God. The method of science intentionally excludes anything approaching theological language in its task of explaining phenomenon. The scientific method wasn’t developed in a vacuum. The people who struggled to articulate the scientific method included people who believed that God existed. They understood that God is not something that can be measured, is not something open to the empirical sense, and is not something that is observable. Therefore, when one uses a method of explaining phenomenon that entails observation, measurement, and reproduction of results for all to see and duplicate through empirical senses, then one isn’t going to be able to say a word about God within that method. To talk about God requires theology… not science.

OMG Charlie Darwin

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

I’ve discovered the musical group The Low Anthem, thanks to Letterman.  They played a song on his show the other night from their second album, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin.  I’ve embedded the official video for it from YouTube below.

It’s an intriguing, as well as hauntingly beautiful, song.  Theologians take note:  I believe this captures the spirit of the Intelligentsia regarding the cultural aftershocks left by Darwin’s theory of evolution.  I think evolution is well established and efforts to disprove it are in vain… mainly because these efforts are mostly non-scientific.  If there were scientific arguments against evolution that would be one thing… but so-called challenges to evolution such as Intelligent Design are not scientific… they are religious objections that, very awkwardly, try and use science to bolster a conclusion already held: evolution is anti-God and therefore must be wrong.

Theologians, I say take note because I think the sadness of this video comes from the loss of God that evolution brings to most.  I myself don’t think God is lost as a result, but I would agree that it takes a real bit of effort to get to this understanding.  I also agree there are plenty of folks out there that are all too happy to conclude that atheism is the only response.  I don’t fault them for their atheism, but I do fault them if they insist that we all be atheists… that’s just fundamentalism and intolerance of it’s own kind.

But we do, as theists, face a real loss of God for most people.  I like this video and song because it states this fact poignantly.  If theologians are to do their job aright, then this is where we start.

L.H.C.

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

Vanity Fair has an excellent article on the Large Hedron Collider… lots of spiffy photos too.

Here is an excerpt from the article, just to give you a taste:

The believe-it-or-not superlatives are so extreme and Tom Swiftian they make you smile. The L.H.C. is not merely the world’s largest particle accelerator but the largest machine ever built. At the center of just one of the four main experimental stations installed around its circumference, and not even the biggest of the four, is a magnet that generates a magnetic field 100,000 times as strong as Earth’s. And because the super-conducting, super-colliding guts of the collider must be cooled by 120 tons of liquid helium, inside the machine it’s one degree colder than outer space, thus making the L.H.C. the coldest place in the universe.

Read the rest here

The Church and the Cosmological Revolution

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

In order to understand why the cosmological revolution in early modern Europe was first met with resistance by the Catholic Church we can take a closer look at the most famous example of this resistance: the confrontation with Galileo over the heliocentric view of the universe.  To place it all into context, recall that the accepted view of the world and the cosmos at that time was of an orderly hierarchy of sorts, where the earth sat at the middle of it all.  As one ascended into the heavens one encountered perfect spheres within which the heavenly bodies were embedded.  God was located beyond the outermost sphere.  This realm where God was located was a realm of pure perfection and as you descended from this realm you became further removed from perfection, until the lowest realm, the material realm, was reached. That is where we were located on Earth.

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Magnetic Movie

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Ok, this is a lot of fun.  Magnetic fields illustrated for our viewing pleasure, thanks to Semiconductor.  See it here and read about it here… Hat tip to The Loom.

Magnetic Movie from Semiconductor on Vimeo.

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