The Personal Blog of Stephen Sekula

Cardinal Essay

I had a chance tonight to read through the contents of Cardinal Schönborn’s essay from the New York Times Op-Ed page (July 7, 2005). Reading it gave me an opportunity to refine my thoughts on this particular issue. The essay itself is at the bottom.

First, I am beginning to wonder if what the Catholic Church actually thinks about evolution even matters. As a scientist, the Catholic Church has no say (and no right to say) anything about the conclusions of my research. This research is subject only to the rigorous scrutiny of my colleagues, guided by the tenets of the scientific method. Have I clearly stated my hypothesis? Have I designed an experiment to test this hypothesis? Did I conduct the experiment carefully, with reckoning of the uncertainties from the size of the data sample, as well as of the inherent, systematic experimental uncertainties? Have I verfied or contradicted the hypothesis?

An institution that founds itself on faith and not reason cannot, by definition, offer criticism of the method or the result. Faith is incompatible with the accounting of evidence. One must also remember that a person of faith cannot have it both ways: you cannot decry the evidence which contradicts the tenets of your beliefs, while upholding the evidence that supports your beliefs. For instance, the Shroud of Turin is often touted as proof of the story of Christ’s death. However, all scientific evidence absolutely contradicts the assumed age of the relic, and therefore proves that it cannot be used to support the original hypothesis. If a believer denies this evidence, they cannot then selectively choose to accept evidence that upholds other assumptions.

Second, the Catholic Church has not specifically behaved as it did in the case of Galileo. Then, church and government were wedded in a terrible way, enabling an inquisition that created heretics of learned men. There was no line between a secular government of the People creating and defending their rights and a particular religion that defined the rights of man as given from a deity. Now, we have such a government here in the U.S. Contitutionally forbidden from applying a religious test specifically in the case of holding office, and by definition does not admit a marriage of church and state. Certainly, members of our government can hold their beliefs, and their beliefs will inform their decisions and their policy, but they cannot take their guidance from a religion in an organized way. This is unlike the Italian government in the time of Galileo, when the ruling class and the Vatican shared much in common.

All of this makes me worry a bit. I worry about three scientists feeling so concerned about the opinion of the Catholic Church on matters left to reason. I worry that by making a formal inquiry, these scientists are somehow suggesting that science rises and falls on the shoulders of theologians.

I also worry about the lack of understanding exhibited by the Cardinal. For such a man to say that “the Catholic Church will again defend human reason by proclaiming that the immanent design evident in nature is real”, he denies reason itself. Reason created the scientific method, and no better method for separating fact from fiction has ever been designed by humans. To say that scientists who do not assume the guiding hand of a Father Creator in all their investigations are operating outside reason is to also say that a Cardinal who bends faith to suit fact is a model of dogma.

Let me be frank. It is the easy way out to get to the end of a long chain of hard intellectual work, only to proclaim that because you do not understand a thing it must be the design of Providence and cannot be understood. A true practitioner of reason would apply their intellect harder, and harder, until the mystery is solved or until they admit it cannot be explained by them. To fall back on the assumption that all mysteries are the realm of divinity is to abandon reason and the hard work needed to bear out its demanding labor.

There is no evidence that a designer laid out the path of evolution. Their is no evidence against it. There is no experiment ever proposed that can discriminate between these two possibilities. Such a hypothesis is therefore not science.

Beware, scientists. Beware, theologians. Once you start down the path of mutual affirmation you couple two things which are by their nature orthogonal. The Church must learn that investigations of the natural world cannot be bent to suit doctrine. Scientists must learn to educate the public, and the Church, to distinguish between propositions of faith and propositions of reason. Both of these groups must learn to understand the scientific method, its purpose, and its applications. On questions where no experiment can be proposed to disprove the hypothesis, that is not science. That doesn’t mean the proposition is correct, and it doesn’t mean it is incorrect. It DOES mean that the question is irrelevant, and therefore cannot and **should not** inform the policy or government of the People, nor be wielded as a blunt edge meant to cripple science.


Finding Design in Nature

By CHRISTOPH SCHÖNBORN

Published: July 7, 2005

Vienna

EVER since 1996, when Pope John Paul II said that evolution (a term he did not define) was “more than just a hypothesis,” defenders of neo-Darwinian dogma have often invoked the supposed acceptance – or at least acquiescence – of the Roman Catholic Church when they defend their theory as somehow compatible with Christian faith.

But this is not true. The Catholic Church, while leaving to science many details about the history of life on earth, proclaims that by the light of reason the human intellect can readily and clearly discern purpose and design in the natural world, including the world of living things.

Evolution in the sense of common ancestry might be true, but evolution in the neo-Darwinian sense – an unguided, unplanned process of random variation and natural selection – is not. Any system of thought that denies or seeks to explain away the overwhelming evidence for design in biology is ideology, not science.

Consider the real teaching of our beloved John Paul. While his rather vague and unimportant 1996 letter about evolution is always and everywhere cited, we see no one discussing these comments from a 1985 general audience that represents his robust teaching on nature:

“All the observations concerning the development of life lead to a similar conclusion. The evolution of living beings, of which science seeks to determine the stages and to discern the mechanism, presents an internal finality which arouses admiration. This finality which directs beings in a direction for which they are not responsible or in charge, obliges one to suppose a Mind which is its inventor, its creator.”

He went on: “To all these indications of the existence of God the Creator, some oppose the power of chance or of the proper mechanisms of matter. To speak of chance for a universe which presents such a complex organization in its elements and such marvelous finality in its life would be equivalent to giving up the search for an explanation of the world as it appears to us. In fact, this would be equivalent to admitting effects without a cause. It would be to abdicate human intelligence, which would thus refuse to think and to seek a solution for its problems.”

Note that in this quotation the word “finality” is a philosophical term synonymous with final cause, purpose or design. In comments at another general audience a year later, John Paul concludes, “It is clear that the truth of faith about creation is radically opposed to the theories of materialistic philosophy. These view the cosmos as the result of an evolution of matter reducible to pure chance and necessity.”

Naturally, the authoritative Catechism of the Catholic Church agrees: “Human intelligence is surely already capable of finding a response to the question of origins. The existence of God the Creator can be known with certainty through his works, by the light of human reason.” It adds: “We believe that God created the world according to his wisdom. It is not the product of any necessity whatever, nor of blind fate or chance.”

In an unfortunate new twist on this old controversy, neo-Darwinists recently have sought to portray our new pope, Benedict XVI, as a satisfied evolutionist. They have quoted a sentence about common ancestry from a 2004 document of the International Theological Commission, pointed out that Benedict was at the time head of the commission, and concluded that the Catholic Church has no problem with the notion of “evolution” as used by mainstream biologists – that is, synonymous with neo-Darwinism.

The commission’s document, however, reaffirms the perennial teaching of the Catholic Church about the reality of design in nature. Commenting on the widespread abuse of John Paul’s 1996 letter on evolution, the commission cautions that “the letter cannot be read as a blanket approbation of all theories of evolution, including those of a neo-Darwinian provenance which explicitly deny to divine providence any truly causal role in the development of life in the universe.”

Furthermore, according to the commission, “An unguided evolutionary process – one that falls outside the bounds of divine providence – simply cannot exist.”

Indeed, in the homily at his installation just a few weeks ago, Benedict proclaimed: “We are not some casual and meaningless product of evolution. Each of us is the result of a thought of God. Each of us is willed, each of us is loved, each of us is necessary.”

Throughout history the church has defended the truths of faith given by Jesus Christ. But in the modern era, the Catholic Church is in the odd position of standing in firm defense of reason as well. In the 19th century, the First Vatican Council taught a world newly enthralled by the “death of God” that by the use of reason alone mankind could come to know the reality of the Uncaused Cause, the First Mover, the God of the philosophers.

Now at the beginning of the 21st century, faced with scientific claims like neo-Darwinism and the multiverse hypothesis in cosmology invented to avoid the overwhelming evidence for purpose and design found in modern science, the Catholic Church will again defend human reason by proclaiming that the immanent design evident in nature is real. Scientific theories that try to explain away the appearance of design as the result of “chance and necessity” are not scientific at all, but, as John Paul put it, an abdication of human intelligence.

Christoph Schönborn, the Roman Catholic cardinal archbishop of Vienna, was the lead editor of the official 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church.