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
If anyone is interested how greed and fight for power by Christian priests exist in today modern world I recommend to study a case of today's Poland. It's all there: money fraud, sex abuse, abuse of power and the church as the governing body... Christianity? No, thank you...
All concerned might just get a more balanced view of these matters if they were prepared to read my recent book "Who made God?" which I wrote as a scientist to demonstrate the compatibility of science with "the hypothesis of God". And, yes, I do believe in the biblical God and in creation. How else did we all get here? By the universe creating itself out of nothing? I know Stephen Hawking now believes that but his recent book (The Grand Design) is riddled with inconsistencies (see review on www.whomadegod.com).
Thanks Steven for your rational inputs. I said earlier I am an atheist - but I am really also an agnostic (technically).
On a rational basis one cannot be more than an agnostic - those radical atheists who do not like agnostics are practicing "politics" and are themselves most likely only agnostics.
We are making progress regarding the debate. In a debate between Dawkins and John Lennox, Dawkins significantly admitted that a strong argument can be made for the existence of a deistic God. It seems that even Dawkins is moving closer to agnosticism again.
The moment you are prepared to acknowledge the exisence of a deistic God, the possibility exists that it can intervene with the so-called "laws of science" on an ad-hoc basis.
One point where I differ with you is your statement that atheists generally reject the multiverse idea. I think that many, if not most, embrace the idea as a possibility for explaining why our universe is so "fine-tuned" to support life etc.
To me, Martin Rees appears to be an honest scientist who have empathy with people who look to (non-dogmatic) religion in respect of emotional needs that are not addressed by science.
It is clearly not Rees who moved away from science, but rather the Templeton Foundation that is moving closer towards science.
Andy, I am not a Christian, but some of what you say is correct. One of my criticisms of atheism is its hypocrisy - it claims to be based on logic and reasoning only, and not on "believing what you want to believe", but this is simply not true in many cases. Imagine if Hitler had been a practising Christian or Muslim. We'd be hearing all the time from atheists that it was his religion that caused him to act like this. But when it is the other way around, you will never hear from atheists that had Hitler been a religious person who felt he could have some form of accountability for his actions after he died, he might not have acted in this way.
Of course, I am just giving an example, I am not saying that Hitler's "lack of belief in a religion" caused him to do what he did.
The fact of the matter is, there do exist human beings who might do terrible things if they did not believe that a God will hold them accountable. The fear of being punished is the only thing that stops some people from doing bad things - we might like to pretend otherwise, and say that it is only "the good in people" that can stop them from doing bad things, but that is simply not true. So this is one example of where believing in a God and afterlife can actually cause "lack of evil" in some human beings - but atheists will not admit this. Why, because they're really the same as religious people - hypocritical, sanctimonious, and believe what they want to believe!
religion is for those who fear hell, spirituality is for those who have been there...
science still refuses to accept the most vital aspect of existence (fire cannot burn it, water cannot wet it, it cannot be divided or added to... etc...) yet particle physics begins to detect the results of a small section of the cause... it was the "devil" that the church had to invent and pevert one of the names of venus in the process...
'Christian priests'
A contradiction in terms. A priest is someone who offers sacrifices. A Christian is someone who needs no sacrifice. A Catholic declares "I am no Christian" as he goes to Mass- because a Mass is a sacrifice, as imagined. A Catholic needs his righteousness continuously 'topping up'. In medieval times, the rich had their own chapels and attended Mass several times a day, for fear of losing salvation (or to give the impression that they feared losing it). Henry VIII went to Mass eight times a day, five on hunting days.
A Christian, otoh, is with the Ethiopian who went on his way, rejoicing, because of the sacrifice, once and for all, that gives him the righteousness of Christ himself. That gives him the gratitude to live for Christ, loving all, doing the right thing for all.
Over the ages, it was usually religion having a problem with science, flat/round Earth and other heretic blasphomous accusations.
But saying that, Islam though advanced sciences quite a way in the first half of the last millennia. Algebra and medicine comes to mind.
'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.'
Catholics claim to be Christians. Why are they mistaken?
Keir - because the Catholic Church is nothing more than a politically-driven, money-making machine.
On the thoelogy side of it: the idea that 1 man (voted for by his mates) is the mouth piece of God goes against what the Bible teaches.
As does the idea you just turn up and confess a few sins to your preist every few weeks and you're all good to go again.
Quite frankly anyone who can twist God's message of love and forgivness to justify something like the Inquisition cannot be taken as seriously representing that belief. Much like Hitler and his mates can't be taken as representing all Germans.
I'm not entirely into the whole conspiracy theory of the Church having some great secret that mankind must not know about, but they have a hell of a lot of influence behind the scenes.
Science is culturally progressive, religion is regressive and based on unknowns such as "faith". In 1,000 years time, if we are still here, the population will either be believing in some other flavour of God, as per trends of the day, or science and evolution will have won.
The very human age of religion is ending.