Articulating science
and theology: presuppositions and implications of
science
Mariano Artigas
Communication presented in the Sixth European
Conference on Science and Theology (ESSSAT VI),
Cracovia (Poland), March 26-31, 1996
Unpublished text.
Science and theology are two
different realms separated by a methodological gap.
Nevertheless, they can be connected by some bridges
(Barbour 1990). I will refer here to one of them, namely
the general presuppositions and implications of science
(Artigas 1992).
General presuppositions are
necessary conditions of the whole scientific enterprise.
There are, at least, four of them. The first is the
existence of a natural world with a consistency which is
independent of our will. The second is the orderly
character of this world. The third is the contingency of
the natural order. And the fourth is the human ability to
know this natural contingent order. The entire scientific
enterprise would be impossible without these
presuppositions, which cannot be proved within science
itself.
On the other hand, the
progress of science exercises some kind of feedback on
those presuppositions: it retrojustifies, enlarges and
refines them. Actually, the more the sciences progress,
the more we can be sure that we are grasping in some way
a natural order which is independent of us.
What contemporary science
shows is that nature is not only ordered, but organized.
The concept of order is relative, as it always depends on
some particular framework; organization is a particular
kind of order: it supposses a multiplicity of elements
which cooperate in forming a single system.
Our world consists of
different levels of organization, from the subatomic
particles to the stars and the living beings. It is not
necessary to accept an extreme kind of holism in order to
recognize that there are many holistic dimensions in
nature: the analytical perspective is extremely effective
because it allows us to know the specific details, but
now it has become evident that, within science itself,
this should be combined with a synthetical perspective in
which the wholes, and not only the parts, are
relevant.
Natural order includes
patterns, systems, holism. But it also includes
information. Genetic information is perhaps the most
striking example of this kind of materialized
rationality, as it represents a set of instructions
stored in material structures. But every law can be
considered as a pattern of information. Laws do not exist
by themselves: they represent in an abstract way the
behaviour and the possibilities inherent to matter. And,
what is more striking, every natural system seems to
possess, in some way, an entire set of information about
all possible natural processes. For instance, using
metaphorical language, any electron knows how it should
behave in any particular circumstance, in combination
with a potentially infinite set of arrangements with
other material entities.
We live in a very specific
world which is characterized by synergy. Nature is
already organized at its most elementary levels. For
instance, the behaviour of fermions according to the
principle of exclusion shows that every single atom is
organized following specific patterns. Generally
speaking, the ability to build up patterns is one main
characteristic of the natural world. Speaking about the
microphysic world, Paul Davies has written: «It is
one of the universal miracles of nature that huge
assemblages of particles, subject only to the blind
forces of nature, are nevertheless capable of organising
themselves into patterns of cooperative activity»
(P. Davies 1989, 4).
Besides, natural behaviour is
also very subtle. Indeed, information is stored, coded
and decoded, displayed through the activity of messengers
which transmit their messages. Although we already know
many features of this kind of activities, we are only at
the beginnings, but it is enough to be astonished about
the subtleties of nature. What is amazing is not only the
activity of living beings, but also the physical and
chemical basis that makes possible the existence of these
beings and of their activity.
If we combine all this with
the image of a universe which has evolved from much
simpler states to its present state, it is easy to
recognize that we are the witnesses of some kind of
paradigm shift in science. The ancient organistic
paradigm was substituted by mechanicism during the
scientific revolution of the seventeenth century, but
mechanicism began to colapse long ago and now a new
picture is emerging which is centered, precisely, around
emergence and self-organization.
The relevance of this shift is
perhaps much bigger than what is usually thought. Paul
Davies and John Gribbin describe it in this way:
«The movement towards a 'post-mechanistic'
paradigm, a paradigm suitable for 21st-century science,
is taking place across a broad front: in cosmology, in
the chemistry of self-organizing systems, in the new
physics of chaos, in quantum mechanics and particle
physics, in the information sciences and (more
reluctantly) at the interface of biology with physics. In
all these areas scientists have found it fruitful, or
even essential, to regard the portion of the Universe
they are studying in entirely new terms, terms that bear
little relation to the old ideas of materialism and the
cosmic machine. This monumental paradigm shift is
bringing with it a new perspective on human beings and
their role in the great drama of nature (...) We have no
doubt that the revolution which we are immensely
privileged and fortunate to be witnessing at first hand
will for ever alter humankind's view of the
universe» (P. Davies-J. Gribbin 1991, 2-3).
Scientific progress also
enlarges our views about the human ability of knowing.
Science would be impossible were it not because we have
some characteristics which should be considered as
another kind of necessary conditions of the entire
scientific enterprise, such as the descriptive and
argumentative functions of our language, which include
creativity and hermeneutics. Natural science is a kind of
dialogue with nature, and this is possible because we
have designed a language which allows us to pose
questions and to interpret the answers. This way,
scientific progress is one of the better proofs we have
today in order to study the singularity of human beings
when compared with the rest of natural beings.
Natural order, and its
manifestation as a specific kind of multi-level
organization, is an ontological presupposition of
science. Our ability of knowing this order is an
epistemological presupposition. We can also speak of an
anthropological presupposition, if we consider empirical
science as a goal-directed enterprise directed to obtain
a knowledge of nature which may be submitted to empirical
control. This is an essential part of science, because
science is, above all, a human enterprise and its
products can be aptly valued only when they are
considered in the context of this specific human
activity. Today, scientists are aware of the existence of
these presuppositions (Hodgson 1979).
If we reflect about science,
putting it on the background of these presuppositions, we
can immediately realize that scientism is nonsense. Of
course, empirical science has its own autonomy and its
products cannot be judged by using standards other than
the scientific ones. But the existence of presuppositions
which are a necessary condition for the scientific
enterprise and the feedback of scientific progress on
these presuppositions clearly show that empirical science
should be considered as a human activity integrated
within a broader context. In other words: empirical
science is rooted on some ontological, epistemological
and anthropological presuppositions which are a necessary
condition for the very existence of science but,
nevertheless, they cannot be studied by using specific
scientific methods.
The study of these
presuppositions is, therefore, a task which corresponds
to the philosophical and theological perspectives. From
the historical point of view, some greek and christian
ideas furnished the framework necessary for the
development of modern empirical science. Putting aside
some particular points which are not really so important,
the alledged conflicts between science on the one side,
and philosophy and theology on the other, belong almost
entirely to the nineteenth century, and were the outcome
of such bad philosophies as hegelianism (at least, in his
natural philosophy part), materialism and positivism.
Now, the conditions are most favourable for an
integration which, respecting the autonomy of the three
realms (science, philosophy and theology), relates them
in a kind of a new humanism which is not only desirable,
but also a real need of our age.
I think that it is easy to
agree with this general perspective about science and
nature. What is more difficult is to determine exactly
its philosophical and theological import. Using this
basis to argue from science to divinity requires a long
journey. Indeed, it is difficult to prove that some
specific ideas about the divine may be seen as necessary
conditions of scientific reasoning or as implications of
particular achievements. And, even if we could conclude
that there are some general metaphysical ideas related to
science, this could be connected with different views
about their ultimate foundations.
Nevertheless, if our
reflections can serve to build a real bridge between the
sciences on the one hand, and the philosophical and
theological reflection on the other, this would already
be extremely important. And I think that this is the
case. As I have referred here especially to the
ontological presuppositions and implications of science
(and therefore to the new paradigm about natural order
and self-organization), I will conclude with a hint about
the philosophical and theological import of this new
paradigm. Paradoxically, I will use a text which is
already seven centuries old.
This text belongs to the
commentary of Thomas Aquinas to the Physics of Aristotle,
when the topic considered is the existence of finality in
nature. After an examination of the aristotelian
arguments in favour of teleology, Aquinas ends his
lecture with a kind of solemn definition of nature, which
runs this way: «Nature is nothing but the reason of
some art, namely the divine one, interior to the things,
by which those things move towards a concrete end: as if
the man who builds a ship could give to the pieces of
wood that they could move by themselves to produce the
form of the ship» (Aquinas 1954, book 2, chapter 8:
lectio 14, n. 268).
This kind of definition shows
that the idea of self-organization is very old. Indeed,
it is easy to conceive it on the basis of the development
and activity of living beings. What is new is the
detailed knowledge of it in the physical and chemical
levels, and also in molecular and developmental biology.
We know now many accurate details that furnish a very
interesting background for the old idea.
Also, what can be disputed
about that idea is the explicit reference to natural
teleology. Nevertheless, we can certainly say that, in
some way, teleology should be considered today as a fact,
as far as we find in nature many systems whose
organization is very stable and whose constituents behave
in a functional way. We can even say that the whole
system of nature, as we know it, is the condition of
possibility of our own existence and, therefore, that if
we consider it under the light of the human existence and
values, everything makes sense.
We find in nature some
characteristics, such as consistency, rationality,
harmony, intelligibility, effectiveness, beauty, which
are rooted in ordinary experience but are also underlined
by the new developments of science. This is generally
recognized now, although it is interpreted in different
ways (Davies 1992; Gilkey 1993). What is most mysterious
is the specific way followed by natural creativity, from
the simplest elements until the living beings and, above
all, human beings.
To look at nature as a
pre-condition for our existence and, therefore, for the
existence of human values, should not be considered as
any kind of antropomorphism or antropocentrism, but as
the plain truth: it is, indeed, a fact. We can proceed
further and think about the meaning of this fact, but the
progress of science does not preclude a metaphysical or
theological interpretation of it. In this context, it is
important to realize that we face today a new scientific
paradigm, a new way of thinking about science and
nature.
The systematic birth of modern
physics was accompanied, in the seventeenth century, by a
mechanistic philosophy which was thought to be the right
interpretation of nature. In that context, until the end
of the nineteenth century, concepts like substance, form
and finality were forbidden in science as well as in
natural philosophy. This situation was partly due to the
fact that physics, and specifically mechanics, was
considered as the paradigmatic branch of any scientific
explanation. However, further developments within
physics, and also in chemistry and biology, have restored
living beings to their central place in nature.
Mechanicism conceived them as machines; now, on the
contrary, physical systems are partly studied through
qualitative approaches which include patterns,
information, propensities, powers, and other related
concepts.
I do not mean to say that
empirical science has ceased to be quantitative in any
real sense. Only, it has become apparent that nature as
well as science have both quantitative and qualitative
dimensions, and it has become fashionable again to work
on natural philosophy, i. e., to study those dimensions
of nature which are presupposed by the scientific
enterprise and are, in their turn, affected by the
progress of science.
In the field of natural
philosophy, we meet the ideas of patterns in space and
time, systems, natural order and organization,
information, and teleology, which play an important role
as bridges between the sciences and the metaphysical
perspective (including both metaphysics and
theology).
As I see it, the articulation
between science and theology is not some kind of mixture
or combination of both: it is impossible to add factors
which are not homogeneous. The articulation should rather
be achieved at the philosophical level, namely through a
reflection on the presuppositions and implications both
of science and theology. In this level we can find a real
dialogue. My reflections here have been centered around
science, but they could also be extended to the
presuppositions and implications of theology: a part of
them can be conceptualized philosophically, so that there
is a real common rational ground which can be the subject
of dialogue and mutual complementarity (Barbour 1990).
And could also be complemented by a reflection centered
on ordinary life, ethics and faith, rather than on
science and theology.
References
Aquinas, T. 1954,
Commentary to Aristotle's Physics (ca. 1269-1270),
Torino-Roma. The English version of the quoted text is
mine.
Artigas, M. 1992: "Three
Levels of Interaction between Science and Philosophy",
Intelligibility in Science (ed. C. Dilworth),
Amsterdam, 123-144.
Barbour, I. 1990: Religion
in an Age of Science, Volume 1, San Francisco.
Davies, P. 1989: "The New
Physics: a synthesis", The New Physics, (ed. P.
Davies), Cambridge.
Davies, P.-Gribbin, J. 1991:
The Matter Myth, London.
Davies, P. 1992: The Mind
of God, London.
Gilkey, L. 1993: Nature,
Reality and the Sacred. The Nexus of Science and
Religion, Minneapolis.
Hodgson, P. 1979:
"Presuppositions and Limits of Science", The Structure
and Development of Science (eds. G. Radnitzky - G.
Andersson), Dordrecht, 133-147.
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