Monday, February 23, 2015

Religion & Science ARE Opposed

“Religion and science are opposed . . . but only in the same sense as that in which my thumb and forefinger are opposed - and between the two, one can grasp everything.”
- Sir William Bragg
 
 
Faith & reason together is what helps us to “grasp everything”. Saying “everything” may be akin to saying “all of reality” and we can think of reality as having two parts, material or physical reality and immaterial or spiritual reality.

Physical reality has certain laws like…
  • Laws of motion
  • Laws of matter
  • Laws of energy
These laws are universal and unchangeable. Not knowing, not understanding or ignoring these laws will hurt our bodies. The more we learn about, understand and adapt our life to these laws the more we can live in harmony with the world around us and be happier. In a certain sense we never really break physical laws, they break us!

Spiritual reality has certain laws like…
  • Divine Law
  • Moral Law
  • Natural Law
These laws are universal and unchangeable. Not knowing, not understanding or ignoring these laws will hurt our souls. The more we learn about, understand and adapt our life to these laws the more we can live in harmony with the world around us and be happier. In a certain sense we never really break spiritual laws, they break us!

For the strict materialist, spiritual realities do not exist, at least not like physical laws. Things like morality, justice or goodness can only exist as concepts that evolve over time and different people have different concepts about how the world ought to be. With this logic of moral relativism one cannot grasp the most important parts of reality just like one cannot grasp a football without an opposing thumb. Our concepts of right vs. wrong are tied up in something that ought to be or ought not to be. For that concept to make any sense, you actually need an “ought”!

In a worldview with no spiritual reality, we may say that a group like ISIS has a certain concept of how the world ought to be that is likely different than yours or mine or Mother Teresa’s. Their concept cannot be objectively wrong because there is nothing to make it wrong (no outside system). A compass points north because an outside system (the earth’s magnetic field) makes it point north and there is only one north, not many “norths”. It does not matter what direction a group of travelers believes is north because the magnetic field is completely independent of the minds of the travelers.

What happens if a large group of interdependent travelers refuse to use the compass? They will go “somewhere” based on their beliefs and experience about traveling.  They may split up into smaller groups, but even the smaller groups need to decide what to do. The strongest will rule eventually, whether by physical force or via other kinds of peer-pressure, coaxing or bullying. It’s the same in societies. Even for the most stubborn and independent of individuals, the strongest will rule eventually, whether it’s a dictator by physical force or just a majority via laws and lawyers.

If we convince ourselves that spiritual laws do not really exist, we will live life on our own terms as much as we can get away with. This means we cease to be truly free and alive which is how we “ought” to be. We become small souls, locked in the prison of our ego and victims of a great lie.

 This post started with a notable quote and so it will end with another:
"Growth in faith is growth in the right perception of all reality."
– Thomas Keating


 

4 comments:

  1. Nice work. Screen hi -5! Arguments for moral relativism are self-refuting.

    And the bit about North on a compass- I was just remarking that the same silliness pertains to certain relativists I read about. I literally said, "These (particular) people cannot get together and agree as a whole where 'North' is on a compass but they would like to dictate how society should behave". No immovable standard, no anchor, no yardstick. Nothing to measure against for a reality check. It actually forces people into group-think, which is supposedly one of the very things from which moral relativists wish to escape. Ironic.

    Sharp blog.

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    1. Thanks Nubby and yes, any discussion of what is actually right or wrong, good or bad, can be not only ironic, but often maddening.

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  2. There are two norths: true north and magnetic north, but I know what you mean.

    http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/declination.shtml

    Rita

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    1. Good point. That did cross my mind, but I let pass on by.

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