Religion
Related: About this forumBook review: ‘Why Science Does Not Disprove God’ by Amir D. Aczel
Alan Lightman is a physicist, novelist and professor of the practice of the humanities at MIT. His latest book is The Accidental Universe.
By Alan Lightman, Thursday, April 10, 4:33 PM
In Einstein, God, and the Big Bang, a colorful chapter of his new book, Amir D. Aczel maintains that Albert Einstein truly believed in God. He points out that Einstein attended synagogue during his year in Prague (1913). He repeats several famous Einstein utterances mentioning the Deity: Subtle is the Lord, but malicious he is not and I want to know Gods thoughts the rest are details. And he quotes from a letter the great physicist wrote to a little girl in January 1936: Everyone who is seriously interested in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that some spirit is manifest in the laws of the universe, one that is vastly superior to that of man.
Aczel goes on to express strong displeasure with such people as physicist Lawrence Krauss and evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins (who, in his bestseller The God Delusion, says that Einstein didnt really mean it) when they cast Einstein as an atheist in support of their diatribes against religious belief.
Dawkins; Krauss, with his bestseller A Universe From Nothing; and Sam Harris, with his bestseller The End of Faith, are prominent New Atheists, who use modern science to argue that God is not only unnecessary but unlikely to exist at all, even behind the curtains. Theres a certain religious fervor in all these books. Atheists, unite.
Aczel, trained as a mathematician, currently a research fellow in the history of science at Boston University and the author of Fermats Last Theorem, takes aim at the New Atheists in his intelligent and stimulating book Why Science Does Not Disprove God. He attempts to show that the New Atheists analyses fall far short of disproving the existence of God. In fact, he accuses these folks of staining the scientific enterprise by bending it to their dark mission. (The purpose of this book is to defend the integrity of science, he writes in his introduction.) Yet Aczel has a sly mission of his own. Invoking various physical phenomena that do not (yet) have convincing scientific explanations, he sets out not only to debunk the arguments of the New Atheists but also to gently suggest that the findings of science actually point to the existence of God.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/book-review-why-science-does-not-disprove-god-by-amir-d-aczel/2014/04/10/4ee476ec-a49e-11e3-a5fa-55f0c77bf39c_story.html
djean111
(14,255 posts)honestly - why bother? Believe, or don't believe. I understand that my complete non-belief does not mean there is no god, and all the religious belief in the world does not mean there actually is one.
I do think it silly to suggest that science points to the existence of a god, though. That, IMO, is just wishful thinking, not to mention starting with the intent to prove something and finding "clues" to fit the hypothesis. Like detectives trying to prove a certain person committed a crime, and skewing their investigation. All fine and dandy, but nothing to debunk disbelief with, at all.
rug
(82,333 posts)djean111
(14,255 posts)each other, really. Maybe I just have no need to make sense of things? I would rather celebrate.
rug
(82,333 posts)I don't have it. If I did, I'd probably be a Buddhist. Can't win.