An Interaction Model of Theology and Science.
Still
a major challenge exists for the constructive conversations between theology
and science: Can theology and science be genuinely interactive, each offering something of intellectual value to the
other, or is the only role for theology that of critically integrating the results
of science into its own conceptual sphere?
In order to answer this key question, let me suggest a new diagram which
makes more explicit not only the ways in which science can influence theology but also the ways in which theology has
been, and can now more explicitly be, an influence on science (see Figure
3). In one sense I am merely
summarizing what has already been discussed by Barbour, Murphy, Clayton and
many others. In another sense I am
offering a constructive proposal which could make the theology and science
interaction much more explicit and, even more importantly, help us assess its
true value to both communities.
The
diagram consists of eight ways in which science might influence theology and
theology, science. More ways could, and
probably should, be added upon further reflection. Individual theologians or scientists typically use one path in
particular, often without acknowledging the existence of the other paths. Some shift between them depending on the
topic being addressed. My suggestion,
though, is to consider what looking at the set of paths as a whole might tell
us about the state of discussions in theology and science and what it might
suggest for improving the conversations.
The eight paths divide into two sets: those now routine
ones which describe the movement from science to theology, highlighting the
differences in these ways, and those more controversial ones which describe the
movement from theology to science, again highlighting their differences.
Figure
3: Method of creative mutual interaction
A. From Science to Theology
As Figure 3 suggests, there
are at least five ways or paths by which the natural sciences can affect
constructive theology. (I will focus on
physics and cosmology for specificity, but my comments would apply to the other
natural sciences as well.) In the first
four, theories in physics, including the key empirical data they interpret, can
act as data for theology both in a
direct sense ((1) and (2)) and indirectly via philosophy ((3) and (4)). (1) Theories in physics can act directly as
data which places constraints on theology.
So, for example, a theological
theory about divine action should not violate special relativity. (2) Theories can act directly as data either
to be explained by theology or as the basis for a theological constructive
argument. Appropriate to our conference
is the issue of t=0 in standard Big
Bang cosmology; t=0 was often explained theologically via creation ex nihilo, as we shall see below. Note: the theological explanation should be
considered a part of theology, and not as an explanation lying within the
domain of science. (3) Theories in physics, after philosophical analysis, can
act indirectly as data for theology. For
example, the contingency of the Big Bang universe, as a philosophical claim
based on science and given concrete expression by such issues as t=0, can serve
within natural theology as evidence for the existence of God. Similarly an indeterministic interpretation
of quantum mechanics can function within theological anthropology as providing
a precondition at the level of physics for the bodily enactment of free
will. (4) Theories in physics can also
act indirectly as the data for theology when they are incorporated into a
fully-articulated philosophy of nature (e.g., that of Alfred North
Whitehead). Finally, (5) theories in
physics can function heuristically in the theological context of discovery, by
providing conceptual inspiration, experiential inspiration, practical/moral
inspiration, or aesthetic inspiration. So Big Bang cosmology may inspire a
sense of Gods immanence in nature.
To
see the genuinely interactive, but asymmetrical, nature of the relations I am proposing,
I will suggest at least three paths by which theology can influence
science. First, though I want to stress
at the outset that by influence I am in no way appealing to, or assuming
that, theologians speak with some special kind of authority, whether based on
the bible, church dogma, magisterial pronouncements, or whatever. Quite the contrary; the overall context
should be an open intellectual exchange between scholars based on mutual
respect and the fallibility of hypotheses proposed by either side and based on
scientific or theological evidence.
Instead the case I wish to make is that such influences have occurred
historically and that they continue to occur in the contemporary scientific
research. It is first of all, then, a
descriptive claim, but it has a mildly prescriptive component as well: I believe a more intentional exploration of
such influences could be fruitful for science as they have been theology, and
that they could be particularly fruitful for the theology and science interaction. That said, lets turn to three paths from
theology to physics:
(6):
As mentioned above, theological theories provide some of the philosophical
assumptions which underlie scientific methodology. Historians and philosophers of science have shown in detail how
the doctrine of creation ex nihilo
played an important role in the rise of modern science by combining the Greek
assumption of the rationality of the world with the theological assumption that
the world is contingent. Together these
helped give birth to the empirical method and the use of mathematics to
represent natural processes. Other assumptions grounded in the ex nihilo tradition, however, were not
carried over into the scientific conception of nature, including goodness and
purpose. It would be interesting to
reopen the question of the value of these assumptions for contemporary
science. Is there a sense, for example,
in which neo-Darwinian evolutionary biology includes teleonomy? Do values have a partial, evolutionary
grounding in nature? Would scientific
theories which incorporate such ideas be more fruitful than those which do not,
or are they hopeless ventures today?
(7)
Theological theories can act as sources of inspiration in the scientific
context of discovery, i.e., in the construction of new scientific
theories. An interesting example can be
found in the variety of theologies and philosophies which, to a varying degree,
apparently influenced many of the pioneers of quantum theory in the period
1900-1930, including Vedanta for Schroedinger, Spinoza for Einstein,
Kierkegaard for Bohr. Another example is the subtle influence of
atheism on Hoyles search for a steady state cosmology. Still others include a Whiteheadian approach
to science, in which experience or prehension is posited at every level of
reality, including those treated by physics and biology.
Another example would be to search for temporal irreversibility in fundamental
physics.
Finally
(8), theological theories can lead to selection rules within the criteria of
theory choice in physics. For example, if one wants to consider a
theological theory as true, then one can delineate what conditions must obtain
within physics for the possibility of its being true. These conditions in turn can serve as reasons for an individual research
scientist or group of colleagues to choose to pursue a particular
scientific theory. The asymmetry
between theology and science should now be quite apparent: theological theories
do not act as data for science, placing constraints on which theories can be
constructed as scientific theories do for theology. This, again, reflects the prior assumption that the sciences are
structured in an epistemic hierarchy of constraints and irreducibility. It also safeguards science from any
normative claims by theology. It does
not, though, mean that theology cannot act to provide criteria for theory
choice or inspiration for the construction of new scientific theories, as the
older unidirectional relation between theology and science described (i.e., in
which the sole task is the theological interpretation of scientific
results).
Together
these eight paths portray science and theology in a much more interactive,
though still asymmetric, mode. I
suggest calling this the method of creative mutual interaction. Given this method, we can begin to delineate
the conditions needed for real progress in theology and science. First, scholars in each field would need to
find that such an interaction was fruitful according to the criteria of their
own research field. So, would
scientists feel that their research was more fruitful by having engaged with
theology and philosophy in these ways?
Would theologians consider their research to have benefited by engaging
with science? Secondly, as major
changes occur in one field and these changes are taken seriously by the other,
would the corresponding effect of these changes be considered fruitful by
scholars in that field? Ideally, a
process such as this, once set in motion, could continue indefinitely. Finally, it might be possible to compare
these results with those of scientists and theologians who have chosen not to
engage in mutual interaction. It might
also provide a useful typology for comparing and evaluating the ways that
various scholars allow science to influence their theology - and vice
versa! In any case, even accomplishing
the first step would be a major event of enormous significance not only for
theology and for science, but I believe more generally for our contemporary
culture which is frequently skeptical
(even bitter) towards religion (and sometimes towards science).
Contributed by: Dr. Robert Russell
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