Science and religion don't have to be enemies
Richard Dawkins called him a "compliant quisling" for accepting the Templeton Prize. Here, Martin Re
By Martin Rees Published 23 April 2011
It was a surprise to me to be awarded the Templeton Prize, joining an eclectic roll-call of scientists, philosophers, theologians and public figures among the previous winners. I feel I tick only one of the relevant boxes: like other scientists who have won it in recent years, I focus on "big questions" (in my case, cosmology) and have made efforts to communicate the essence of my work to a wide public.
I don't do this well, but that skilled expositors such as the physicists Brian Cox and Jim al-Khalili attract such large television audiences indicates the broad fascination with questions about our origins, life in space, our long-range destiny and the laws of nature.
Most practising scientists focus on "bite-sized" problems that are timely and tractable. The occupational risk is then to lose sight of the big picture. The words of A N Whitehead are as true today as ever: "Philosophy begins in wonder. And, at the end, when philosophic thought has done its best, the wonder remains."
Darwinist discontents
It is astonishing that human brains, which evolved to cope with the everyday world, have been able to grasp the counterintuitive mysteries of the cosmos and the quantum. But there seems no reason why they should be matched to every intellectual quest - we could easily be as unaware of crucial aspects of reality as a monkey is of the theory of relativity.
This seems to have been Charles Darwin's attitude to religion, at least at some stage in his life. In a letter to the Swiss-American biologist Louis Agassiz, he said: "The whole subject is too profound for the human intellect. A dog might as well speculate on the mind of Newton. Let each man hope and believe as he can."
This is a glaringly different stance from that adopted by some of Darwinism's high-profile proponents today. We should all oppose - as Darwin did - views manifestly in conflict with the evidence, such as creationism. (Last year's Templeton winner, Francisco Ayala, has been in the forefront of that campaign in the US.) But we shouldn't set up this debate as "religion v science"; instead, we should strive for peaceful coexistence with at least the less dogmatic strands of mainstream religions, which number many excellent scientists among their adherents.
This, at least, is my view - a pallid and boring one, both for those who wish to promote constructive engagement between science and religion, and for those who prefer antagonistic debate. I am, I suppose, an "accommodationist" - a disparaging epithet used by anti-religion campaigners to describe those who don't share their fervour. Richard Dawkins described me as a "compliant quisling".
But I am a sceptic. If we learn anything from the pursuit of science, it is that even something as basic as an atom is quite hard to understand. We should be unsurprised that many phenomena remain unexplained, and dubious of any claim to have achieved more than a very incomplete and metaphorical insight into any profound aspect of our existence - and, especially, we should be sceptical of dogma. This is certainly why I have no religious belief.
Despite this, I continue to be nourished by the music and liturgy of the Church in which I was brought up. Just as there are many Jews who keep the Friday ritual in their home despite describing themselves as atheists, I am a "tribal Christian", happy to attend church services.
Campaigning against religion can be socially counterproductive. If teachers take the uncompromising line that God and Darwinism are irreconcilable, many young people raised in a faith-based culture will stick with their religion and be lost to science. Moreover, we need all the allies we can muster against fundamentalism - a palpable, perhaps growing concern.
Mainstream religions - such as the Anglican Church - should be welcomed as being on our side in any such confrontation. (Indeed, one reason I would like to see them stronger is that the archbishops who lead the Church of England, Rowan Williams and John Sentamu, two remarkable but utterly different personalities, both elevate the tone of our public life.)
Pale blue dot
And not even the most secular among us can fail to be uplifted by Christianity's architectural legacy - the great cathedrals. These immense and glorious buildings were erected in an era of constricted horizons, both in time and in space. Even the most educated knew of essentially nothing beyond Europe; they thought the world was a few thousand years old, and that it might not last another thousand.
Unlike the cathedral-builders, we know a great deal about our world - and, indeed, about what lies beyond. Technologies that our ancestors couldn't have conceived of enrich our lives and our understanding. Many phenomena still make us fearful, but the advance of science spares us from irrational dread.
Some might think that intellectual immersion in vast expanses of space and time would render cosmologists serene and uncaring about what happens next year, next week, or tomorrow. For me, however, the opposite is the case. We know we are stewards of a precious "pale blue dot", a planet with a future measured in billions of years, whose fate depends on humanity's collective actions this century.
In today's fast-changing world, we can't aspire to leave a monument lasting 1,000 years, but it would be shameful if our focus remained short term and parochial, and we thereby denied future generations a fair inheritance. Wise choices will require the effective efforts of natural scientists, environmentalists, social scientists and humanists. All must be guided by the knowledge that 21st-century science can offer - but inspired by an idealism, vision and commitment that science alone can't provide.
Martin Rees is Astronomer Royal and Master of Trinity College, Cambridge
Latest tweets
More from New Statesman
- Online writers:
- Steven Baxter
- Rowenna Davis
- David Allen Green
- Mehdi Hasan
- Nelson Jones
- Gavin Kelly
- Helen Lewis
- Laurie Penny
- The V Spot
- Alex Hern
- Martha Gill
- Alan White
- Samira Shackle
- Alex Andreou
- Nicky Woolf in America
- Bim Adewunmi
- Glosswitch
- Kate Mossman on pop
- Ryan Gilbey on Film
- Martin Robbins
- Rafael Behr
- Eleanor Margolis
- Tools and services:
- Polls
- Predictions
- Archive
- Magazine
- PDF edition
- RSS feeds
- Advertising
- Subscribe
- Special supplements
- Stockists


96 comments
How does someone win a million pounds for "spiritual progress", when they have absolutely nothing to say about spiritual progress at all?
Rees doesn't appear to know why he won. I certainly don't know. Templeton aren't saying, other than that they like his books about cosmology. Can anyone else help?
blimey - us men are well madder than women, on the whole of things. We hunt and kill more, traditionally, by necessity, and have to be mad enough to be able to fight and get the required lady.
It is all definition. Live with it!
Darwin's line about dogs and Newton comes from a letter to Asa Gray, not Agassiz.
Martin Rees has been bought and paid for by the Templeton Foundation. He has thereby lost any credibility he might have had outside his specific area of scientific expertise.
Martin Reese is making a political argument - science needs all the help it can get. Perhaps science does need help, but not at the expense of violating its most fundamental principles. Science is dedicated to finding the truth based upon experimental testing of hypotheses. The supernatural beliefs of religions are incompatible with science. These supernatural beliefs are based on no evidence whatsoever and all posit violations of natural laws.
'Most of the above comments are based on the assumption that religion means christianity and is equated with irrational beliefs.'
Begin with bigotry.
Why don't we all become circus clowns, eh. The laws of science make no difference to anything. The people who, allegedly, witnessed the miracles of Jesus did not need any science to know that water does not turn into wine. They did not need it to know that people can't walk on water. Yet, apparently, pompous idiots who are so pleased that they know something about science think that their laws somehow must make miracles impossible. The whole point is that they are impossible- unless, of course, the divinity who made those laws, who can break them if he chooses, is at work.
That was the idea, wasn't it. Letting on that this person, who looked just like an average Joe, who could forgive sins, had authority to do so. Now don't tell me that you lot are as profoundly, idiotically dense as not to be unaware of that. You're bluffing. You have an ulterior motive.
whenever I visit a cathedral, what blows me away is the technology
Atheism is actually as bad as religion - and the reason I say this is because it can be as intolerant, tries to brainwash people, and atheists are often just as bad as religious people, in that they're sanctimonious and hypocritical.
1) The only thing we can prove is that we can never prove whether or not there is a God. Yet a lot of atheists are 100% sure that there is not a God.
2) Atheism simplifies things - it "stops" people from thinking. So, concepts such as "simulated reality" or an infinite number of universes which resulted in intelligent life that ended up creating our universe (and hence there being a "God" for our universe) are dismissed by atheists.
3) Atheists lie to fit their agenda. So many times we have heard nonsense that "religion has caused more death that anything else"!
4) Atheists are hypocritical - they accuse people of religion of being blind followers, but the vast majority of secular people are also blind followers - they have not thought about or pondered on philosophical questions.
5) Atheists like to say they are intelligent and use logic and reasoning, and they patronise religious people as have blind faith whose belief is like "believing in unicorns". That is simply not true. Religious people have FAITH that a "Prophet" was actually receiving words from God. And so they believe in "absurd things" because they have faith that the person was not lying. I mean, if Einstein had said that on more than one occasion he was walking in a park, and he saw a horse with a horn on his head, and he swore he was not hallucinating and that he saw it up close and personal, some of us would actually start believing in unicorns. It is no longer absurd, because we're putting faith in the person telling us the story to not be lying and to not be hallucinating.
6) Atheists say that humanists can do everything "good" that religious people can do, and so we should not have religion. But the fact is, if you're a religious person and believe in an afterlife, you are more likely to give up your life if need be to help someone than someone who does not believe in an afterlife. In this sense, it makes you a little less selfish. Of course, it works both ways - believing in an afterlife can also have negative effects, in the sense that you can have less respect for life. The point I am trying to make is, atheists will only ever cite the negative aspects of being religious, and not the positive ones.
7) There are a lot of dumb atheists who are followed as if they're "really intelligent" when they're not - look no further than Hitchens. This guy is no scientist and has a very simplistic view of things, yet he is revered by so many atheists!
As a scientist myself, I love Martin Rees - he is logical, and has an agnostic view on life, and that is why he is "disliked" by the likes of Dawkins - because, just like any other "religion", atheism fears people that follow another belief.
Tom - you're right, I don't understand exactly where science has proven God does not exist. Remember, it's still the "theory of evolution", not "the 100% proven facts of evolution".
and as such, anyone who believes in evolution has exactly the same amount of faith as I have (although perhaps a bit less. I think most people believe in evolution simply because they want to believe there is no God rather than any great belief evolution is true)
gerry - sure, a few christians and muslims have acted terribly in the past (although surely the worst must be Hitler, and he was neither Christian nor Muslim), but you are looking for a simple scapegoat if you think that represents both faiths. The Catholic Church doesnot represent religion, it represents power, greed and is a business. Always has been, always will be.
By your theory, the fact the US and UK governments slaughtered possibly more than 1 million Iraqis this represents all Americans and Brits? And all Americans and Brits should be held responsible, not just those in power?
I am a Christian, and am appalled that I am lumped in with the Catholics by the general media. It shows a complete ignorance of Christianity, or perhaps a compliance in keeping up the charade.