Is science doing real work while
people who posit a creator are being intellectually lazy? That's what atheists
like Richard Dawkins would have you believe. In an interview with the Dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Connecticut, Dawkins
claimed pointing to an intelligent designer is "a cowardly evasion, it's lazy.
What we should be doing as scientists is rolling up our sleeves and saying,
right, Darwin solved the big problem. Now let's take that as encouragement to
solve the other big problems, like the origin of life and the origin of the
cosmos."
1
Is Dawkins right? In fact, he has the
whole thing backwards. Darwin had the easier time constructing his
evolutionary model because he didn't have the details to worry about. Scientists
in Darwin's day didn't know about the complex structures of DNA or how the
telltale evidence of the Big Bang proves the universe must've come into
existence at a specific point in the past. Darwin could sluff over the
biology. However atheists today don't have that luxury.
1. What Started the Universe?
The first problem is the most fundamental. Why
does our universe exit? Why should it be here at all? Usually when bringing up
this issue, you will hear people retreat to talk of the Big Bangs and quantum
vacuums. But both of those things assume what is being asked.
You cannot
have a bang unless there is something to go bang and something else to trigger
the bang. If before the Big Bang there is nothing, then nothing cannot bang.
Quantum vacuums, which have become the easy excuse in trying to solve this
problem, are not nothing either. As I've explained before, these fluctuations
have attributes and potentials. The fact that they fluctuate means they
are in time and they have energy states. Just as an idea isn't nothing, to
define quantum states as nothing is to misunderstand what nothing is. Out of
nothing nothing comes is foundational to all scientific studies. If you
give up on that, you're not doing science any more.
So, instead of starting
with nothing, maybe we assume the thing that banged is the eternal thing. But if
the singularity that banged existed from all eternity, then why didn't it bang
earlier than when it did? We know the universe is using up its energy, so we
know that it's only been around a limited amount of time. Why? What was
that thing that changed to make the singularity explode into the universe we
see? What ever it was that changed, it certainly wasn't nothing, because if
nothing changed, then the universe would never have come to be.
2.
What Started Life?
In 2011, John Horgan
wrote an article for the Scientific American web site entitled "Pssst! Don't
tell the creationists, but scientists don't have a clue how life began." There,
Horgan explains how the search to understand the origin of life from nonliving
chemicals has given science exactly zero answers.
2 The
problems are legion: the speed at which microorganisms emerged from the time
that earth was capable of supporting any life is pretty fast. It really doesn't
give the incredibly complex chains of molecules like DNA or RNA much time to
"stumble" into the right configurations to start replicating, especially given
the harsh environment and the capacity for destruction even after a fortuitous
assembly.
Just what those things were that first came together is
problematic, too. As David Berlinkski pointed out, there is a real
chicken and the egg problem, given the need for proteins to assemble DNA or
RNA and the need for DNA or RNA to carry the blueprint for those very proteins.
Even the RNA Word hypotheses Horgan mentions are not immune to monstrous
problems, such as the
astronomical odds it would take to assemble any kind of self-replicating
chain of RNA. That's why there is no functional model at all for how life
came to be; there's merely a bunch of speculation containing an incredible
number of holes.
3. Where Did Consciousness Come From?
Even if one were to get chemicals to self-replicate,
that wouldn't be the end of the difficulty to explain how beings like us got
here. While reproduction is a defining feature of life, life has different
levels. A plant is a living being, but it isn't conscious; it cannot think.
Human beings are known as thinking creatures. But, just how does this
consciousness arise from non-conscious material? What model is there for this?
Again, there isn't one.
Consciousness is an incredibly tricky thing. A lot of
materialists want to redefine consciousness as the electro-chemical reactions
happening in the brain, but that makes no sense. Consciousness is something
qualitatively different than electrical connections, otherwise we would have to
consider that our tablets and smart phones are conscious right now.
Consciousness is qualitatively different from physical processes, which means
that it cannot be grounded in only the physical. It requires a completely
different explanation, one that science cannot offer.
In his article, John
Horgan is honest in reporting that science is completely in the dark concerning
the beginning of life. Yet, he balks at one workable explanation available to
him, the idea of a creator. At the end of the article he writes that
creationists' "explanations suffer from the same flaw: What created the divine
Creator? And at least scientists are making an honest effort to solve life's
mystery instead of blaming it all on God." Of course, this is as old as it is
uninformed. Asking what created the creator is like asking which golfer is going
to win the Daytona 500. It's a clear category error and is really Horgan's way
of ignoring the only other option out there.
These three problems should
offer clear signs that there is more to the world than matter in motion. Science
is a field that relies upon observation to draw conclusions. In our entire
history, no human has ever seen a thing come from nothing, seen life emerge
spontaneously from non-life, or seen consciousness emerge from unconscious
matter. It just doesn't happen. So why would anyone think all three happened,
and happened without the guidance of any intelligent entity? If you're a golfer
in Daytona, you can pull your driver from your bag, but it won't do you much
good in this competition. Scientists can continue to talk about these problems,
but they won't get any closer to the answer.
References
1. Teitelbaum, Jeremy. "The Dean and Richard
Dawkins."
UConn Today. University of Connecticut, 10 Apr. 2014. Web. 16
Nov. 2015.
http://today.uconn.edu/2014/04/the-dean-and-richard-dawkins/
2. Horgan, John. "Pssst! Don't Tell the Creationists,
but Scientists Don't Have a Clue How Life Began."
Scientific American.
Scientific American, a Division of Nature America, Inc., 28 Feb. 2011. Web. 16
Nov. 2015.
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/pssst-dont-tell-the-creationists-but-scientists-dont-have-a-clue-how-life-began/.
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