Exploring the Intersection of Science and Religion: The Beliefs of Physicists

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In summary: It is, however, possible to suggest lines of research which may lead to a more definitive understanding of the issues."In other words, the authors were acknowledging that science cannot provide a definitive answer to the question of what happens to the universe after we die, but they were hopeful that future research might shed light on the matter.So, in summary, even though scientists cannot provide a definitive answer to the question of what happens to the universe after we die, they are still hopeful that future research will provide a more definitive understanding of the issue.
  • #1
DMuitW
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Physicists 'on duty' ofcourse investigate science objectively and without religious beliefs, trying to explain 'what is' .
But could physicists in their deepest personal and private beliefs be more religious than others? This due to the fact they encounter so many complex things and understandings... ? I know Newton was.
 
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  • #2
Well...in some sense scientists are building sects...following precise beliefs which were given by a certain education with certain leaders (either it's possible to go faster than light or it's not...choose your party)...How could it be other way ?

Why should else be several theories or experiment confronting ? This is just the dynamic of anykind of activity...
 
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  • #3
kleinwolf said:
Well...in some sense scientists are building sects...following precise beliefs which were given by a certain education with certain leaders (either it's possible to go faster than light or it's not...choose your party)...How could it be other way ?

Why should else be several theories or experiment confronting ? This is just the dynamic of anykind of activity...

I don't think this is valid. Having had personal contact with both religious people solving "moral issues" and scientists investigating contentious claims, I am aware of vastly different attitudes and methods. There are scholars who pursue things like the historical Jesus objectively, but I don't think most religious Christians woud call them religious.
 
  • #4
Well let see if you agree with one of the scientific doctrine present at our time or not :

For example do you range yourself on the side

a) There are things that can go faster than light in vacuum
b) There is nothing that can go faster than light in vacuum

?

In fact why do we care about this ? Think about Newton's time : which scientist cared about that question ?
 
  • #5
I vote b. Our current knowledge doesn't permit FTL communication. Even quantum entanglement does not happen FTL.

PS: In Newton's time (1665) it wasn't possible to make such predictions because the hydrogen atom was discovered only in 1900.
 
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  • #6
hi ..i am new here and i like philosophy section ...
well...
the Physicists of course working and looking for knowledge without thinking in religion , but he may become more religious and that depend on his background , but in the end if god exist, science will guide us and that gradually will lead to more religious
so physicists could be more religious than others...
 
  • #7
golran said:
hi ..i am new here and i like philosophy section ...
well...
the Physicists of course working and looking for knowledge without thinking in religion , but he may become more religious and that depend on his background , but in the end if god exist, science will guide us and that gradually will lead to more religious
so physicists could be more religious than others...

Good point. If God (or whatever) DOES exist, then it will be the scientists who establish that fact and make contact.
 
  • #8
kleinwolf said:
Well let see if you agree with one of the scientific doctrine present at our time or not :

For example do you range yourself on the side

a) There are things that can go faster than light in vacuum
b) There is nothing that can go faster than light in vacuum

?
Ummm...the two points above do not form opposing (mutually exclusive) views on any established scientific theory known to me.

And your previous post makes even less sense to me than this one (but that could just be me). :confused:
 
  • #9
Physics and Religion

From personal experience Physicists can be religeous. I am not a "Physicist" yet, but I am working on it. I have received a diploma in Christian theology and an currently working on a Honours Physics degree with a minor in world religions, focusing on death and concepts of the future and evil in world religions along with science and religion. I plan to be a "Physicist" an already have plenty of lab experience. So yes, you can study science and religion, the two do not neccessarily conterdict each other.

ps, don't mind the spelling, i am not an english major
 
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  • #10
CQ, congrats on your diploma in Christian Theology :smile:

I do believe it is possible for scientists to be religious, even deeply religous, as they try to unravel the world to explain it. Einstein, a very religious Jew, developed soem of the most influential theories of physics of our time. Yet when he attempted to disprove one theory, I don't remember whose but it had something to do with everything not existing until you physically see it, I think it was this theory caused him to state: "My God does not play dice."
 
  • #11
When I took a few theology courses the topic of science and religion came forth quickly. I soon found myself in my attic with my old thermodynamics textbook looking up the second law of thermodynamics and entropy. On one page the authors stated the following:

"Quite obviously it is impossible to give conclusive answers to these questions (philisophical implications of increase in entropy) on the basis of the second law of thermodynmanics alone. However, the authors see the second law of thermodynamics as man's description of the prior and continuing work of a creator, who also holds the answer to the future destiny of man and the universe"

This text was a mainstream text (Fundamentals of Classical thermodynamics: Van Wylen and Sonntag)

I got in touch with one of the authors and inquired about his religious beliefs. My personal view of science and religion has expanded but has become no more defined. Definitiveness can lead to a closed mind ! I do believe that these authors are scientists and that they believe religiously. Yes, the two can exist and perhaps the religious conviction can be even stronger for scientists than for plain folk.

My thermo book is no longer in tha attic !
 
  • #12
selfAdjoint said:
Good point. If God (or whatever) DOES exist, then it will be the scientists who establish that fact and make contact.

Maybe, but not if God (or whatever) is unavailable to sense perception.

I'd say those successful with consciousness development methods, such as the deepest meditators, have a shot at it too. :cool:
 
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  • #13
misskitty said:
Einstein, a very religious Jew, developed soem of the most influential theories of physics of our time.
He wasn't really a "very religious Jew"--he was Jewish by birth and culture, but he didn't believe in the Jewish religion. He had his own philosophical ideas about a non-personal version of "God" which was quite unlike the God of Judeo-Christian beliefs.
 
  • #14
selfAdjoint said:
Good point. If God (or whatever) DOES exist, then it will be the scientists who establish that fact and make contact.

Are you assuming we, humans, have the ability and responsibility to contact God? What makes you think he won't contact us? Not only that, what makes you think if contact is to be made that it won't have to be initiated by God?
 
  • #15
Personally, I share the ideas of Steven Weinberg concerning the relevance of religion to science (as I understand them at least..). Historically, religion has never aided science much, quite to the contrary! As he (Weinberg) states it, there is a remarkable evolution in different scientific areas in that they tend to converge to one set of fundamental laws of nature. In contrast, religion throughout the world seems to diverge on their basic principles (there are for example an enormous amount of different churches in christianism, as well as for the other 'big' religions). As he states it: if God exists, he has done a remarkable effort in hiding his existence. Our search for spiritualism and religion is in my opinion the consequence of our conscious nature: we would very much like not to be mortal, we would also very much like to have some sort of Father looking over our shoulder, aiding us during difficult times and forgiving our frequent mistakes. As a physicisthowever, we try not to concern ourselves with who we are and how we cope with existence, but with how the universe is build and evolves. In doing this, we frequently realize how small and insignificant humankind is. Maybe this encourages some physicists to be more religious, but in general (and I think I also read this somewhere; I'll try to find the source) physicists are statistically less religious than an average population.

This are of course just my personal opinions (some of which I share with Weinberg), so I'd be glad to hear about other points of view!
 
  • #16
I agree that science is more or less useless in any search for God. But strangely a fairly recent survey of working scientists in the USA established that a majority of them believed in some sort of personal God. Presumably this is only at the weekend.

As for contacting God, whose to say that we are not in contact with 'God' all the time, did we but know it? Scrodinger argued that he was God, and many people would agree, me included. Clearly though we do not all mean the same thing by 'God'.
 
  • #17
selfAdjoint said:
Good point. If God (or whatever) DOES exist, then it will be the scientists who establish that fact and make contact.


How about this?


If God DOES exist, then it's HIS prerogative who can MAKE CONTACT with him.
 
  • #18
Canute said:
I agree that science is more or less useless in any search for God. But strangely a fairly recent survey of working scientists in the USA established that a majority of them believed in some sort of personal God. Presumably this is only at the weekend.
The only poll I've heard about showed that over 60% of scientists surveyed expressed disbelief or doubt in the idea of a personal God, and among the more "eminent" scientists that were members of the National Academy of Scientists, this was up to 93% (with 72.2% expressing complete disbelief, and 20.8% expressing doubt or agnosticism). See this article for more info.
 
  • #19
CaptainQuaser said:
I have received a diploma in Christian theology and an currently working on a Honours Physics degree with a minor in world religions, focusing on death and concepts of the future and evil in world religions along with science and religion. I plan to be a "Physicist" an already have plenty of lab experience. So yes, you can study science and religion, the two do not neccessarily conterdict each other.

For sure an interesting combination :-)

I think that religion and science can coexist because of the flexible fuzzyness of the former, and the rational doubt of the latter.
Religion hides in non-falsifiable statements. Many religions made the error of having stated falsifiable statements which were falsified, which usually resulted in some bad treatment (like burning in public) of the poor soul who did the falsifying.
 
  • #20
misskitty said:
Einstein, a very religious Jew, developed soem of the most influential theories of physics of our time. Yet when he attempted to disprove one theory, I don't remember whose but it had something to do with everything not existing until you physically see it, I think it was this theory caused him to state: "My God does not play dice."
This is one of the poorest characterizations I've seen recently, of Einstein's religiosity. Einstein's spirituality has been discussed more than once in these forums, quoting his own attempts at explaining his philosophy and his disappointment that his words can be used to terribly out of context. Please do an internal search for this.

And isn't it ironic that most people choose to quote the one remark by Einstein that we know he was most wrong about. Experiments that agree with theory to several decimal places prove that if "God" exists, he sure as hell plays dice. :wink:
 
  • #21
But science can only be created by those who are thoroughly imbued with the aspiration toward truth and understanding. This source of feeling, however, springs from the sphere of religion. To this there also belongs the faith in the possibility that the regulations valid for the world of existence are rational, that is, comprehensible to reason. I cannot conceive of a genuine scientist without that profound faith. The situation may be expressed by an image: science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind. (Albert Einstein, 1941)

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=82370
 
  • #22
I've always thought of religions as cruse scientific theories. Simply attempts to explain that which we can not yet explain. It would seem to me that a real objective researcher would not be so lazy to accept the notion of an allmighty one that "just happened to do things this way".
 
  • #23
Nusc said:
To this there also belongs the faith in the possibility that the regulations valid for the world of existence are rational, that is, comprehensible to reason.

How is that a religion? (where 'religion' is a formalized system of worship of the supernatural)
 
  • #24
The categories of: atheists; agnostics; and theists apply to scientists, as well as everyone else. As JesseM has already documented, the list of atheistic scientists is very long and includes such luminaries as Steven Weinberg, Stephen Hawking, and Richard Dawkins. AikenDrum has already talked about Weinberg.

I know of no specific examples of well-known scientists who are agnostic, but I'm sure there must be quite a few. The agnostic category can be split into at least 2 subcategories: scientists who haven't taken the time to think deeply about such matters; scientists who, after thinking deeply, have come to the conclusion that not enough information exits to form a conclusion.

A more detailed account of Weinberg's (atheistic/agnostic?) views can be found in the chapter What about God? from his book Dreams of a Final Theory: The Search for the Fundamental Laws of Nature. In this chapter, after giving a few specific (but unnamed) examples of devoutly religious physicists, Weinberg writes "But, as far as I can tell from my own observations, most physicists today are not sufficiently interested in religion even to qualify as practicing atheists."

In spite of this, there are examples of first-rate physicists who are theists. These include Paul Davies (?), Chris Isham (a leading expert in the conceptual problems associated with quantizing gravity), G. F. R. Ellis (of Hawking and Ellis fame), John Polkinghorne (a former head of the particle physics group at Cambridge turned Anglican priest), and Nobel laureate Abdus Salam (of the Weinberg-Salam model).

Theists also can be divided into 2 groups: theists that believe that God got the ball rolling and then stepped back to admire his handiwork; theists that believe in divine intervention.

Ellis, Polkinghorne and Salam fall into the second group. In order to avoid miracles, as defined by David Hume, as much as possible, Polkinghorne and Ellis have both written speculatively about how this might be accomplished without noticeable violations of the laws of physics. I thing that many physicists will find their ideas to be quite repugnant.

Chris Isham's views are given http://www.metanexus.net/archives/printerfriendly.asp?ARCHIVEID=7500 .

Those interested can listen to Paul Davies, author Kitty Ferguson, John Polkinghorne, and Steven Weinberg discuss their views on the relationship between science and religion. This discussion aired for the first 17 minutes of the CBC Radio science program Quirks and Quarks on Dec. 21, 1996.

On this program, Davies seemed to adopt a somewhat more cautious tone than he did in his book The Mind of God (fascinating reading even for atheistic physicists), which he ends with "Through conscious beings the universe has generated self-awareness. This can be no trivial detail, no minor by-product of mindless, purposeless forces. We are truly meant to be here." In the radio program, Davies does say "Weinberg and I look at the same set of physical laws, and we draw our own conclusions. He looks at those laws and he waxes lyrical about their beauty and harmony and indeed their ingenuity, and but comes to the conclusion that at the end of the day it is all ultimately absurd. I would say that I look at that set of laws and for me it is overwhelmingly suggestive that there is a point to it. But, you know, science can never prove or disprove the existence of something which is beyond science ... All it can do is give circumstantial evidence ..."

Regards,
George
 
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  • #25
Phobos said:
How is that a religion? (where 'religion' is a formalized system of worship of the supernatural)

Next time use the corresponding name when you quote someone else's words.

In Einstein's context of religion:

I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it. (Albert Einstein, 1954)

Where religion is defined as according to dictionary.com as either:

1.
a) Belief in and reverence for a supernatural power or powers regarded as creator and governor of the universe.
b) A personal or institutionalized system grounded in such belief and worship.

2. The life or condition of a person in a religious order.
3. A set of beliefs, values, and practices based on the teachings of a spiritual leader.
4. A cause, principle, or activity pursued with zeal or conscientious devotion.
 
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  • #26
There would be a higher percentage of atheists among scientists than among the general population since scientific fields select for both high IQ and some rationality. But the religion brain module is very strong, so even a significant amount of scientists with their high IQ and some rationality cannot override the their religious inclinations. A recent survey showed that most American physicians believe in a deity.
 
  • #27
Whenever anyone says (or writes or thinks) "random," he or she is making reference to a process beyond human cognition. Who or what generates "random draws"? Isn't "God does" the obvious answer? How is this not religious?
 
  • #28
EnumaElish said:
Whenever anyone says (or writes or thinks) "random," he or she is making reference to a process beyond human cognition. Who or what generates "random draws"? Isn't "God does" the obvious answer? How is this not religious?

Why on Earth would we need a god to generate random events, if we don't need one to generate deterministic ones? Just because WE can't generate truly random events doesn't mean that a godless universe can't.
 
  • #29
selfAdjoint said:
Why on Earth would we need a god to generate random events, if we don't need one to generate deterministic ones?
Even when science can answer "how," it cannot answer "why."
 
  • #30
selfAdjoint said:
Why on Earth would we need a god to generate random events, if we don't need one to generate deterministic ones? Just because WE can't generate truly random events doesn't mean that a godless universe can't.
This seems strange to me. To me, it seems that generation requires a generator, even if the output is only random events.
 
  • #31
Math Is Hard said:
This seems strange to me. To me, it seems that generation requires a generator, even if the output is only random events.

With that attitude, you are stuck with a prime mover, a la Aristotle. This may not be a god in the religious sense, but it sure looks like one.
 

1. What is the intersection of science and religion?

The intersection of science and religion refers to the overlap and potential conflicts between the two fields. It involves examining how scientific discoveries and theories can impact religious beliefs and vice versa.

2. How do physicists' beliefs differ from those of other scientists?

Physicists, like all scientists, rely on evidence and experimentation to form their beliefs. However, they may have different perspectives on the role of a higher power or the origin of the universe compared to other scientists.

3. Can someone be both religious and a scientist?

Yes, many people are both religious and scientists. While some may see a conflict between the two, others believe that science and religion can coexist and complement each other.

4. How do physicists reconcile their beliefs with scientific evidence?

Many physicists view their beliefs and scientific knowledge as separate but equally important aspects of their lives. They may see science as a way to understand the physical world, while religion helps them make sense of the spiritual or moral aspects of life.

5. Are there any common beliefs among physicists regarding religion?

There is no one belief that all physicists hold regarding religion, as individuals may have different perspectives and interpretations. However, some may share a belief in a higher power or a sense of wonder and awe about the universe.

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