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The Truth About Physics And Religion Essay

, Research Paper


The Truth About Physics and Religion


Many people believe that physics and religion are separate entities.


They claim that physics deals only with the objective, material world, while


religion deals only with the world of values. It is obvious, from these, and


from many other comparisons, that conflicts have arisen between physics and


religion. Many are convinced that the two fields completely oppose each other,


and are not related in any ways. Many people, who follow a particular religion,


feel offended by the claims that physicists have made, while physicists believe


that religion has no basis in reality. I will show, however, that these


conflicts are founded on a misunderstanding, and that there is no division


between physics and religion. I will also prove that the misunderstanding lies


in the parables of religion and in the statements made by physicists.


Furthermore, I will show that only physicists can really know the truth of


physics, and only religious followers can know the truth of that religion;


everyone else has to take it on faith.


Many people believe that physics and religion are entirely separate.


They claim that physics is only concerned with discovering what is true or false,


while religion is concerned with what is good or evil. Scientists appear to


agree that ?physics is the manner in which we argue about the objective side of


reality.? Religious followers, on the other hand, agree that ?religion is the


way we express the subjective decisions that help us choose the standards by


which we live.? Although these definitions seem to be contrasting, an important


element remains absent, an element that must first be considered before religion


and physics can be compared.


Those who think that religion has no basis in reality also believe that


there is an ?obvious? separation between the two fields. They think that


religion is a jumble of false assertions, with no basis in reality. Paul Dirac,


a physicist, once said:


The very idea of God is a product of the human


imagination. It is quite understandable why primitive


people, who were so much more exposed to the


overpowering forces of nature than we are today,


should have personified these forces in fear and


trembling. But nowadays, when we understand so


many natural processes, we have no need for such


solutions.


Dirac, and those who think the same way, however, fails to consider the


essential element that has caused many to misunderstand the relationship between


physics and religion. What they fail to realize is that religion uses language


in quite a different way from science. The language of religion is more closely


related to the language of poetry than to the language of science. The fact


that religions have, throughout the ages, spoken in parables and images, simply


means that there is no other way of understanding the reality to which they


refer. But I strongly believe, however, that religion is a genuine reality.


Neils Bohr once said:


The relationship between critical thought about the


spiritual content of a given religion and action based


on the deliberate acceptance of that content is


complementary. And such acceptance fills the


individual with strength of purpose, helps him to


overcome doubts and, if he has to suffer, provides him


with the kind of solace that only a sense of being


sheltered under an all-embracing roof can grant.


In this sense, religion helps to make social life more harmonious; its most


important task is to remind us, in the language of parables and images, of the


wider picture that we live our lives.


Dirac, like many others who share his thoughts, thinks that religion is


entirely based on faith. But, because of his ignorance to the meaning of the


word ?faith?, he has developed

many incorrect beliefs and assumptions. Faith is


defined as ?the belief in something, with strong conviction and confidence.?


What many fail to realize, however, is that faith is just as essential an


element of physics as it is of religion. The reason why many fail to realize


this, is because of the common misconception that physics is a self-regulating


machine which automatically produces information when the crank of scientific


method is turned. Very little faith would be required, of course, for the


operation of such a machine. But physics, as many of us have experienced


through experiments, is not at all like that. The experimenter usually finds


nothing resembling the smooth, ordered, lawful behavior depicted by the


textbooks. What he finds instead are error-filled and highly questionable


results. William Pollard, a physicist, once wrote:


Scientific research is a tough and unrelenting business.


Only those who enjoy a firm and unshakable faith that


the universal principles will always hold true can


become successful. Without such an abiding faith, it is


simply not possible to become a part of the physics


community.


Consider. for example, this common claim: ?anyone can demonstrate the truths of


physics for himself, but the tenets of religion have to be accepted blindly on


faith.? How many people, for example, can demonstrate to their own satisfaction


that the mass of the earth is 5.98 x 1024 kilograms, or that the charge on a


proton is + 1.60 x 10-19 coulombs. A long, hard educational process is required


during which a person must freely submit himself to a rigorous discipline, and


strongly desire and believe in its outcome. Consequently, the truth follows


that only by becoming a physicist can he possess the capacity to demonstrate the


truths of physics to his own satisfaction. Likewise, only those who become


serious followers of a religion can know the truths of that religion. In both


cases, everyone else must take it all on faith.


Another way in which science and religion are frequently contrasted is


in terms of the personal and impersonal. This contrast is based on the belief


that science is a dispassionate, completely detached activity in which the


process of knowing is independent of the involvement or participation of the


knower. In contrast to this, religious knowledge is thought to be deeply


personal, since it comes only through the passionate involvement and commitment


of the believer in that which he knows. Many believe that religion affects both,


our actions and our emotions, as opposed to physics, which does not. The fact


is, none of these statements can be validated unless the person saying it has


endured and committed himself to both physics and religion. A sincere and hard-


working physicist will feel the personal affects of physics on him, whereas


others will not. Similarly, a dedicated and determined follower of a religion


will feel the personal affects of that religion on him. Others, again, will not.


A number of the contrasts which are frequently made between physics and


religion are seen to be either wrong or irrelevant through careful analysis.


Einstein, himself, believed that God was somehow involved in the immutable laws


of nature, and that there is no split between physics and religion. What is and


always has been our mainspring is faith. To have faith always means: ?I decide


to do it, I stake my existence on it.? When Columbus started on his first


voyage into the West, he believed that the earth was round and small enough to


be circumnavigated. He did not merely think this was right in theory?he staked


his whole existence on it. There’s an old saying: “I believe in order that I


may act; I act in order that I may understand.” This saying is relevant not


only to the concepts of physics and religion, but also to the entire life we


live.

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