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This
article was originally published in The Huffington Post; used
here with permission.
Science Must Destroy Religion
by Sam Harris
Most people believe that the Creator of the
universe wrote (or dictated) one of their books. Unfortunately,
there are many books that pretend to divine authorship, and
each makes incompatible claims about how we all must live.
Despite
the ecumenical efforts of many well-intentioned people, these
irreconcilable religious commitments still inspire an appalling
amount of human conflict. In response to this situation,
most sensible people advocate something called "religious tolerance." While
religious tolerance is surely better than religious war, tolerance
is not without its liabilities. Our fear of provoking religious
hatred has rendered us incapable of criticizing ideas that are
now patently absurd and increasingly maladaptive. It has also
obliged us to lie to ourselves – repeatedly and at the
highest levels – about the compatibility between religious
faith and scientific rationality.
The conflict between religion
and science is inherent and (very nearly) zero-sum. The success
of science often comes at the expense
of religious dogma; the maintenance of religious dogma always
comes at the expense of science. It is time we conceded a basic
fact of human discourse: either a person has good reasons for
what he believes, or he does not. When a person has good reasons,
his beliefs contribute to our growing understanding of the
world. We need not distinguish between "hard" and "soft" science
here, or between science and other evidence-based disciplines
like history. There happen to be very good reasons to believe
that the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941.
Consequently, the idea that the Egyptians actually did it lacks
credibility. Every sane human being recognizes that to rely
merely upon "faith" to decide specific questions of historical
fact would be both idiotic and grotesque – that is, until
the conversation turns to the origin of books like the bible
and the Koran, to the resurrection of Jesus, to Muhammad's
conversation with the angel Gabriel, or to any of the other
hallowed travesties
that still crowd the altar of human ignorance.
Science, in the
broadest sense, includes all reasonable claims to knowledge
about ourselves and the world. If there were good
reasons to believe that Jesus was born of a virgin, or that
Muhammad flew to heaven on a winged horse, these beliefs
would necessarily
form part of our rational description of the universe. Faith
is nothing more than the license that religious people give
one another to believe such propositions when reasons fail.
The difference
between science and religion is the difference between a
willingness to dispassionately consider new evidence and new arguments,
and a passionate unwillingness to do so. The distinction
could
not
be more obvious, or more consequential, and yet it is everywhere
elided, even in the ivory tower.
Religion is fast growing
incompatible with the emergence of a global, civil society. Religious
faith – faith that there
is a God who cares what name he is called, that one of
our books is infallible, that Jesus is coming back to earth to
judge
the
living and the dead, that Muslim martyrs go straight to
Paradise, etc. – is on the wrong side of an escalating war
of ideas. The difference between science and religion is the
difference
between a genuine openness to fruits of human inquiry in
the 21st century, and a premature closure to such inquiry
as a matter
of principle. I believe that the antagonism between reason
and faith will only grow more pervasive and intractable
in the coming
years. Iron Age beliefs – about God, the soul, sin,
free will, etc. – continue to impede medical research
and distort public policy. The possibility that we could
elect a U.S. President
who takes biblical prophesy seriously is real and terrifying;
the likelihood that we will one day confront Islamists
armed with nuclear or biological weapons is also terrifying,
and
it is increasing by the day. We are doing very little,
at the level
of our intellectual discourse, to prevent such possibilities.
In the spirit of religious tolerance,
most scientists are keeping silent when they should be blasting
the hideous
fantasies of
a prior age with all the facts at their disposal.
To win
this war of ideas, scientists and other rational people will
need to find new ways of talking about ethics
and spiritual
experience. The distinction between science and religion
is not a matter of excluding our ethical intuitions
and non-ordinary states of consciousness from our conversation
about the world;
it is a matter of our being rigorous about what is
reasonable to conclude on their basis. We must find ways of meeting
our
emotional needs that do not require the abject embrace
of the preposterous. We must learn to invoke the power
of ritual
and
to mark those transitions in every human life that
demand
profundity – birth,
marriage, death, etc. – without lying to ourselves
about the nature of reality.
I am hopeful that the necessary
transformation in our thinking will come about as our scientific
understanding
of ourselves
matures. When we find reliable ways to make human
beings more loving, less fearful, and genuinely enraptured
by the fact
of our appearance in the cosmos, we will have no
need for divisive religious myths. Only then will the practice
of
raising our
children
to believe that they are Christian, Jewish, Muslim,
or Hindu be broadly recognized as the ludicrous obscenity
that it
is. And only then will we stand a chance of healing
the
deepest and most dangerous fractures in our world. Top of page
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