TAKING
SCIENCE ON FAITH
SCIENCE,
we are repeatedly told, is the most reliable form of knowledge
about the world because it is based on testable hypotheses. Religion,
by contrast, is based on faith. The term "doubting Thomas" well
illustrates the difference. In science, a healthy skepticism is a
professional necessity, whereas in religion, having belief without
evidence is regarded as a virtue.
The
problem with this neat separation into "non-overlapping
magisteria," as Stephen Jay Gould described science and religion,
is that science has its own faith-based belief system. All science
proceeds on the assumption that nature is ordered in a rational and
intelligible way. You couldn't be a scientist if you thought
the universe was a meaningless jumble of odds and ends haphazardly
juxtaposed. When physicists probe to a deeper level of subatomic
structure, or astronomers extend the reach of their instruments,
they expect to encounter additional elegant mathematical order. And
so far this faith has been justified.
The
most refined expression of the rational intelligibility of the
cosmos is found in the laws of physics, the fundamental rules on
which nature runs. The laws of gravitation and electromagnetism,
the laws that regulate the world within the atom, the laws of motion — all
are expressed as tidy mathematical relationships. But where do these
laws come from? And why do they have the form that they do?
When
I was a student, the laws of physics were regarded as completely
off limits. The job of the scientist, we were told, is to discover
the laws and apply them, not inquire into their provenance. The
laws were treated as "given" — imprinted on the universe
like a maker's mark at the moment of cosmic birth — and
fixed forevermore. Therefore, to be a scientist, you had to have
faith that the universe is governed by dependable, immutable, absolute,
universal, mathematical laws of an unspecified origin. You've
got to believe that these laws won't fail, that we won't
wake up tomorrow to find heat flowing from cold to hot, or the speed
of light changing by the hour.
Over
the years I have often asked my physicist colleagues why the laws
of physics are what they are. The answers vary from "that's
not a scientific question" to "nobody knows." The
favorite reply is, "There is no reason they are what they are — they
just are." The idea that the laws exist reasonlessly is deeply
anti-rational. After all, the very essence of a scientific explanation
of some phenomenon is that the world is ordered logically and that
there are reasons things are as they are. If one traces these reasons
all the way down to the bedrock of reality — the laws of physics — only
to find that reason then deserts us, it makes a mockery of science.
Can the mighty edifice of physical order we perceive in the world
about us ultimately be rooted in reasonless absurdity? If so, then
nature is a fiendishly clever bit of trickery: meaninglessness and
absurdity somehow masquerading as ingenious order and rationality.
Although scientists have long had an inclination to shrug aside
such questions concerning the source of the laws of physics, the
mood has now shifted considerably. Part of the reason is the growing
acceptance that the emergence of life in the universe, and hence
the existence of observers like ourselves, depends rather sensitively
on the form of the laws. If the laws of physics were just any old
ragbag of rules, life would almost certainly not exist.
A second
reason that the laws of physics have now been brought within the
scope of scientific inquiry is the realization that what we long
regarded as absolute and universal laws might not be truly fundamental
at all, but more like local bylaws. They could vary from place
to place on a mega-cosmic scale. A God's-eye view might reveal
a vast patchwork quilt of universes, each with its own distinctive
set of bylaws. In this "multiverse," life will arise
only in those patches with bio-friendly bylaws, so it is no surprise
that we find ourselves in a Goldilocks universe — one that
is just right for life. We have selected it by our very existence.
The
multiverse theory is increasingly popular, but it doesn't
so much explain the laws of physics as dodge the whole issue. There
has to be a physical mechanism to make all those universes and bestow
bylaws on them. This process will require its own laws, or meta-laws.
Where do they come from? The problem has simply been shifted up a
level from the laws of the universe to the meta-laws of the multiverse.
Clearly,
then, both religion and science are founded on faith — namely,
on belief in the existence of something outside the universe, like
an unexplained God or an unexplained set of physical laws, maybe
even a huge ensemble of unseen universes, too. For that reason, both
monotheistic religion and orthodox science fail to provide a complete
account of physical existence.
This shared failing is no surprise, because the very notion of physical
law is a theological one in the first place, a fact that makes many
scientists squirm. Isaac Newton first got the idea of absolute, universal,
perfect, immutable laws from the Christian doctrine that God created
the world and ordered it in a rational way. Christians envisage God
as upholding the natural order from beyond the universe, while physicists
think of their laws as inhabiting an abstract transcendent realm
of perfect mathematical relationships.
And just as Christians claim that the world depends utterly on God
for its existence, while the converse is not the case, so physicists
declare a similar asymmetry: the universe is governed by eternal
laws (or meta-laws), but the laws are completely impervious to what
happens in the universe.
It seems to me there is no hope of ever explaining why the physical
universe is as it is so long as we are fixated on immutable laws
or meta-laws that exist reasonlessly or are imposed by divine providence.
The alternative is to regard the laws of physics and the universe
they govern as part and parcel of a unitary system, and to be incorporated
together within a common explanatory scheme.
In other words, the laws should have an explanation from within
the universe and not involve appealing to an external agency. The
specifics of that explanation are a matter for future research. But
until science comes up with a testable theory of the laws of the
universe, its claim to be free of faith is manifestly bogus.
[First
published as an OpEd piece by The New York Times, November 24,
2007]
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