IMG_-os7cg1‘Atheism,’ writes John Lennox, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford, ‘is on the march in the Western world. Noisily. A concerted attempt is being made to marshal the atheist faithful, to encourage them not to be ashamed of their atheism but to stand up and fight as a united army. The enemy is God.’1

If New Atheists are to be believed, science has dispensed with [belief in] God. Atheism is, its high priests and sermonisers tell us, the only viable intellectual position for the modern thinking person. Science and religion cannot be reconciled, they say. In fact, the following has become part and parcel of New Atheism’s central dogma: ‘Whatever knowledge is attainable, must be attained by scientific methods; and what science cannot discover, mankind cannot know.’2

Indeed, the above claim (that science is the only way to the truth and that it can, in principle, explain everything) is the third of three core arguments in New Atheism’s march against God. The first one being: that science explains how things work, so we don’t need to invoke God as an explanation. The second one: that there is nothing but nature. It’s a closed system of cause and effect. There isn’t a realm of the divine or the supernatural. There is no ‘outside’. And the third one is that science, ultimately, is able to explain everything. This, in a nutshell, is the crux of the science versus religion debate.

Richard Dawkins, who continues to lead New Atheism’s assault on theism or belief in God, has a rather appropriate maxim in this regard. He states: ‘Next time somebody tells you that something is true, why not say to them: “what kind of evidence is there for that?” And if they can’t give you a good answer, I hope you’ll think carefully before you believe a word they say.’3 So let’s take each of these three beliefs of New Atheism and explore just how grounded in evidence or proof they really are:

1. Science explains how things work, we don’t need God as an explanation: Undoubtedly, the achievements of science have been remarkable; utterly astounding, even. Science has improved lives and living conditions, eliminated countless diseases and unveiled the mechanics behind how our universe works. It has also helped put to rest a lot of superstitious fears. For example, people need no longer fear that an eclipse is caused by a terrible demon, or is a bad omen of sorts. Interestingly, during the lifetime of the Prophet ﷺ an eclipse occurred, coinciding with the death of his infant son, Ibrahim. To waylay peoples’ superstitions, the Prophet ﷺ announced: ‘Indeed, the sun and the moon are two of God’s signs. They do not eclipse for the death or birth of anyone. If you see an eclipse, hasten to remember God and to prayer.’4 My overall point being is that we have so much to be grateful to science for and to its wonderful conversations and conclusions.

Unfortunately, the very success of science has led many to believe that merely because we know the mechanisms of how the universe works without needing to bring God into the equation, they can confidently conclude there is no God. Now it’s true theists have often been intellectually lazy and invoked God as an explanation for all sorts of phenomena they couldn’t understand or explain. The upshot of this ‘God of the gaps’ strategy is that, as science uncovered the inner workings of these natural phenomena, it pushed belief in God further into the background. And yet, just because science has revealed a mechanism for how the cosmos or any other natural phenomenon works, it doesn’t rationally disprove or deny God’s agency in those natural phenomena. Let me elaborate with the following example:

Take, for instance, an iPod. Now just because one deciphers the inner workings of an iPod, iPhone or iPad, does not mean that it is impossible to believe in the existence of Steve Jobs as the designer of such culturally altering tech. This would be a failure to distinguish between mechanism and agency. ‘Because we know the mechanism that explains a phenomenon, there is therefore no agent that designed the mechanism’ is a logical fallacy; in philosophy, an elemental category mistake. Lennox writes that when Newton discovered the laws of gravity, he didn’t say: ‘I’ve discovered the mechanism that describes the motion of planetary bodies, therefore there is no agent God who designed it.’ In fact, it was quite the opposite. Precisely because he had fathomed the mechanics behind planetary motion, he was moved to even greater admiration for the God who had designed it that way.5 In fact, what animated many towering figures of science, like Newton and Galileo, was that they expected laws in nature because they believed in God the lawgiver.

For Muslims, as with Jews and Christians, we do not believe that God is an alternative to a scientific explanation – as Dawkins et al. wants people to believe. He is not just a God of the gaps. On the contrary, He is the very ground of all explanation; indeed, of all existence. He is the agent behind every single act, occurrence or phenomena in the universe – the ones we know the mechanics of, and the ones we do not. The Qur’an says: God is the Creator of everything. [39:62] For the faithful who believe God’s hand is behind all things and that all things bear the mark of His handiwork, and who know not to confuse mechanism with agency, explanations and conversations of science are to be welcomed, pondered over and celebrated; not nervously anticipated or narrow-mindedly ignored.

2. There is nothing but nature, there is no realm of the divine; there is no “outside”: All well and good as a claim. Now let us apply the Dawkins litmus test: ‘Next time somebody tells you that something is true, why not say to them: “what kind of evidence is there for that?” And if they can’t give you a good answer, I hope you’ll think carefully before you believe a word they say.’

So what’s the evidence for the claim? As it turns out, there really isn’t any! It might be an atheistic hope. It might be an anti-theistic conviction. But it isn’t grounded in any scientific proof. Naturalism – the view that nature is all that there is, and that there is no transcendence or divine realm – is a philosophy that is brought to science. It is not the outcome of science, nor something science necessarily entails. Given that science proceeds by inference from observed data, how can anyone be so scientifically certain that the natural order is all that there is?6

In 1980, in my mid-teens, I was one of millions of viewers utterly enthralled by Carl Sagan’s breathtaking and ground-breaking TV series, Cosmos. The series opened with Sagan saying: ‘The cosmos is all there is, or was, or ever will be.’ These words of this charismatic astrophysicist and populariser of science were, undoubtedly, the words of a scientist. But they were not the words of science. Sagan’s naturalistic/materialistic worldview was not derived from his science. It was a priori; an assumption about the cosmos that he presupposed. Whether Sagan in his personal beliefs was an agnostic, atheist, or deist is beside the point. The point is that if scientists commit themselves a priori to a materialistic worldview, then the old proverb is likely to apply: ‘To the man who only has a hammer, everything looks like a nail.’

Of course, there is another reason to keep it all materialistic – as the geneticist and atheist, Richard Lewontin candidly wrote: ‘It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept material explanations of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is an absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door.’7

This frank admission has sort of let the cat out of the bag. What Lewontin is saying is that scientists cannot, must not allow room for anything other than purely natural, materialistic explanations. For to do otherwise would run the risk that God might get a look in. This is the blind faith in materialism that so typifies New Atheism, as well as feeds into the fiction that science is the only tool to understand life and its deepest questions (as opposed to being a tool that works wonders in some places and not so well in others). And this brings us nicely on to the third and final belief:

3. Science is the only way to the truth and can, in principle, explain everything: Evidence? In many ways, this fails the litmus test more pitifully than does the above. Again, this is more a statement of faith and hope than it is hard science. The belief that science is the only path to know the truth objectively and that it can, in theory, deal with every aspect of existence, is also known (pejoratively) as ‘scientism’. Richard Dawkins claims that: ‘Scientists [are] the specialists in discovering what is true about the world and the universe.’8 While Steven Hawking states that ‘philosophy is dead. Philosophy has not kept up with science, particularly physics. Scientists have become the bearers of the torch of discovery in our quest for knowledge.’9 Ironically, the degree of faith now placed in science is uncannily religion-like.

Be that as it may, it’s been pointed out often enough that scientism is actually a self-refuting belief. The assertion that only science can deliver true knowledge hasn’t been arrived at by scientific methods. Instead, it’s a personal conviction-cum-dogma. Thus, if the assertion is true, then it is false; if false, then true.10

Between Hawking and Dawkins, not only has today’s philosophy been denigrated, but at a single stroke they’ve disparaged many other disciplines of knowledge too. For the evaluation of philosophy, art, literature, music, or even ethics lies beyond the scope of science. How can science tell us when a piece of music or art is a masterpiece, or just a cacophony of sounds or colours? How can science determine what is morally right or wrong? As the biologist and Noble Laureate, Sir Peter Medawar, has so deftly written: ‘There is no quicker way for a scientist to bring discredit upon himself and upon his profession than roundly to declare – particularly when no declaration of any kind is called for – that science knows, or soon will know, the answers to all questions worth asking, and that questions that do not admit a scientific answer are in some way non-questions or pseudo-questions that only simpletons ask and only the gullible profess to be able to answer.’ He then states: ‘The existence of a limit to science is, however, made clear by its inability to answer childlike elementary questions having to do with first and last things – questions such as: “How did everything begin?”; “What are we all here for?”; What is the point of living?”.’11

Francis Collins, geneticist and Head of the Human Genome Project, hits the bullseye when he writes: ‘Science is the only legitimate way to investigate the natural world. Whether probing the structure of the atom, the nature of the cosmos, or the DNA sequence of the human genome, the scientific method is the only reliable way to seek out the truth of natural events … Nevertheless, science alone is not enough to answer all the important questions … The meaning of human existence, the reality of God, the possibility of an afterlife, and many other spiritual questions lie outside the reach of the scientific method.’12

In 1988, Hawking announced to an entire generation in his best-selling A Brief History of Time that our universe was describable and explainable by a single unified theory in physics – a Theory of Everything. It was a dream Einstein had hoped to achieve or see come to fruition in his own lifetime. On the back of this hopefulness, Dawkins wrote: ‘I am optimistic that the physicists of our species will complete Einstein’s dream and discover the final theory of everything before superior creatures, evolved on another world, make contact and tell us the answer.’ He concludes by pushing the triumphant mood even further, declaring: ‘I am optimistic that this final scientific enlightenment will deal an overdue deathblow to religion and other juvenile superstitions.’13 The last fall of Religion, as signalled by a Theory of Everything, would soon became the gospel of New Atheism.

Professor Hawking, meanwhile, pondering over the implications of Gödel’s Theorem in mathematics, wrote a paper in 2002 where he retracted his view about a Theory of Everything, saying it was unattainable: ‘Some people will be very disappointed if there is not an ultimate theory, that can be formulated as a finite number of principles. I used to belong to that camp, but I have changed my mind.’14 In his latest book, The Grand Design (2010), he seems to have gravitated to a grand unified theory once again, this time offering the highly controversial “M-theory” as the most likeliest candidate; as ‘the unified theory Einstein was hoping to find.’15

To conclude: We saw how the three key proofs New Atheism employs to attack belief in God are nowhere near as robust or as categorical as they’re made out to be. Indeed, two of them have no evidence from science whatsoever to support their conclusions: merely aspiration, hope and dogma. So as Dawkins aptly put it: ‘Next time somebody tells you that something is true, why not say to them: “what kind of evidence is there for that?” And if they can’t give you a good answer, I hope you’ll think carefully before you believe a word they say.’

Atheists insist, and New Atheism does so far more pugnaciously, that naturalism and science are joined at the hip. But as we’ve seen, that’s not based on evidence. Instead, it’s a philosophical commitment individual scientists bring to bear upon science. And whilst it’s true naturalistic or materialistic assumptions don’t really figure at all when scientists are studying how things work, they have a more bullish role when studying why things are as they are or how things came to be in the first place. Science, rather than “bury” God, has actually given theists further reasons to deepen confidence and conviction in Him. The universe had a beginning that begs explaining, is one of them. Another is the Fine Tuning of the universe; of just how suited to the emergence of life our cosmos actually is. There’s also the question of why there’s something rather than nothing? Or why the universe is so highly intelligible to us, in terms of mathematical and physical laws? All of these point, not to naturalistic causes, but to a Divine Cause. Yet, due to the bias that shows itself in an entrenched pre-commitment to naturalism, the theistic voice is routinely undermined or muffled in today’s scientific circles.

As Professor Lennox says, it shouldn’t really be a case of science vs. religion. Rather it boils down to this: which assumption does science support – atheism or theism?. Do the findings of science best square with the belief that consciousness and rationality arose via unguided, random natural processes working upon the basic materials of the universe? Or does the theistic belief best fit the evidence – that we were put here by an intelligent Creator-God, who created an intelligible universe, finely-tuned, that we might discover His laws, marvel at His handiwork, and bend our will to His purpose for us? That’s the real issue at stake.

As said before, science on the how questions has done tremendously well. It’s when it attempts to do the why questions that it steps beyond its remit and enters the highly dogmatic zone of scientism. In a delightful illustration to help clarify the distinction, Lennox gives us the example of his Aunt Matilda’s cake. He asks us to imagine that his Aunt Matilda has baked a delicious cake, which the world’s leading scientists wish to analyse. The nutritionists start by telling us about the number of calories in the cake; the biochemists inform us about the structures of proteins and fats in it; the chemists about the elements and compounds used in its formation; the physicists analyse it in terms of its fundamental particles; and the mathematicians offer up an elegant set of equations to describe its composition and the behaviour of the particles in it. Having offered their thorough analysis of his Aunt’s cake, Lennox then asks, ‘[C]an we say the cake is completely explained?’  He says that we have certainly been given knowledge of how the cake was made, but not why it was made. In fact, he insists that no amount of scientific analysis will shed light on the purpose behind the cake; in other words, the why question. The only way we’ll ever know the answer is if Aunt Matilda herself reveals it to us.16 The point, as Francis Collins made earlier, is that science deals with the material aspects of life; religion, the meaning aspects. Science takes things apart to see how they work; religion puts things together to see what they mean.

Must science and religion arm wrestle each other? Or can they clasp hands as partners in understanding man’s material reality and meaning? There’s no intrinsic reason why the latter shouldn’t be the case.

1. Gunning for God: Why the New Atheists Are Missing the Target (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2011), 9.

2. Bertrand Russel, Religion and Science (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 243.

3. Dawkins, A Devil’s Chaplain (London: Phoenix, 2004), 291.

4. Al-Bukhari, no.1041; Muslim, no.911.

5. Lennox, God’s Undertaker: Has Science Buried God? (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2009), 45. Much of the material for this article has been quarried and adapted from the first four chapters of this book.

6. Close to this is the philosophy of Materialism – the view that all existence is matter, that only matter is real, and that all occurrences are reducible to material processes. The difference between the two philosophies is that materialism makes a claim about the ontology of the universe, while naturalism takes that ontological premise to make an argument about how science should function.

7. Lewontin, ‘Billions and Billions of Demons: A Review of Carl Sagan’s “The Demon-Haunted World: Science is a Candle in the Dark”‘, New York Review of Books, 9 January 1997 – cited in Lennox, God’s Undertaker, 35-6.

8. A Devil’s Chaplain, 242.

9. Hawking & Mlodinow, The Grand Design (London: Bantam Books, 2011), 13.

10. A similar, though simpler self-refuting statement is the following: ‘This statement is false.’ So if the statement is true, then it is false. But if the statement is false, if it is untrue, then it is actually true.

11. Medawar, Advice to a Young Scientist (London: Harper and Row, 1979), 31.

12. Collins, The Language of God (Great Britain: Pocket Books, 2007), 228.

13. Contribution to the online magazine Edge – as quoted in John Cornwell, Darwin’s Angel (Great Britain: Profile Books, 2007), 63.

14. Stephen Hawking, Gödel and the end of physics, July 20, 2002.

15. The Grand Design, 228.

16. God’s Undertaker, 41.

16 thoughts on “Does Science Point towards God or Atheism?

  1. Salam Alaykum,

    Seems that for all their protestations, the atheist speakers mentioned above are indeed using ‘Religious’ language when presenting their worldview. If they follow the Usool of their naturalistic atheism fully (especially evolutionary theory) then all of this would be mere squabbling over trivialities, since at the end the conclusion would be: “If religion does lead the human race to survive and adapt better than other species in the long run, that is mildly interesting but ‘so what?’, it is only a description of what took place; and if it eventually leads to their maladaptaion due to inter-human violence, bad use of resources, etc. again it is a mildly interesting reality, but again ‘so what?’, it is again only a description of what transpired”.

    I think we as Muslims should really look to flesh out statements of Naturalist Atheists fully consistent with Naturalistic Atheism and those statements that are superadded but in fact inconsistent or irrelevant to this cosmology.

    1. Wa alaykum as-salam wa rahmatullah. The way you suggested is certainly one way of engaging the issue. But perhaps the emphasis should be more upon questioning the notion: Does science really best square with naturalistic assumptions?

      1. Salam Alaykum,

        Maybe it is better dealt with by others, but it seems this has to do with something Dr. Umar Farooq Abdullah mentioned in one of his talks, that Islam asserts to the effect that as a first principle, reality exists and knowledge of this reality is possible for the human being to attain – we maintain that Allah exists and He ennobles the human being with rational faculties towards this end.

        You can correct me on this, but I doubt naturalism can assert such a thing, since ‘rationality’ is merely a convenient name for a certain arrangement of molecules, and there is no way to know whether human beings’ concepts of ‘true knowledge’ are in fact so, even for the most basic of propositions; according to this naturalistic model, our knowledge may in fact be totally false as these molecules are ‘rearranged’ and we figure out the silliness of what we held as “basic axioms” as we undergo a series of endless ‘future evolutions’; thus, this model would undermine not only religious quest but also scientific ones as well.

  2. I have always found scientism and naturalistic philosophy fascinating.

    It’s surprising whole segments of society resort to smearing the acknowledgement of the existence of an uncreated cause who necessarily breaks our comprehension and the laws He created.

    These folk; some of whom are just regurgitating after hearing or reading very little on the topic; or after simply reading the arguments against God and not for. They may jump to conclusions without deeply thinking about the topic or the consequences of the decision.

    We hope people revert to sitting down, stopping and thinking about this especially after this great article.

    1. Thank you for your comment Andrew. I agree with what you’ve said wholeheartedly. But I think there’s a significant failure of theists in this regard, in that we haven’t put across our ideas enough; or even well-enough. We need to recover the art of persuasion and push out theistic replies to the rather shakey assertions of atheism.

  3. Wow, that quote from Lewontin immediately made me think of wave-particle duality and all things quantum. It’s so weird and counterintuitive only because it’s being forced into the framework of materialism. Thinking about it in conjunction with wahdat al-wujood makes perfect sense.

    1. It’s true that the mystifying conclusions of science, as per Lewontin, are best seen in the quantum world – at the heart of which lies the wave-particle duality of light. If you haven’t already, the following article I wrote a while back – Look! And You Shall See! – will probably be of some interest to you.

      Finally, I’d be interested to hear what you mean by wahdat al-wujud – a phrase that, as I’m sure you know, can have a sound meaning and a blasphemous one too. And while I’m sure you mean the sound understanding of it (and we can argue about the appropriateness of the term at a later time), I’d be interested in how you tie such things together.

      1. Yes, I saw that piece as well, great work as always.

        And by wahdat al-wujood, I of course mean simply that the waajib al-wujood is the One True Reality, Allah; none of this pantheism/panentheism/et cetera heresy.

        I’m a complete novice to the fields of hard science, I’ll admit, but as far as my own limited understsnding goes, everything at the quantum lebel basically breaks down into unintelligibility. That might mystify and perhaps even scare a hardcore materialist believer in Sciencism, but for a Muslim who understands that the fabric of reality isn’t fundamentally “real” in and of itself, such revelations and considerations merely cause a shrug of the shoulders (or a sincere “subhanAllah” at best).

        I touch on this a bit in my poem “Absolute Relativity.”

        https://understandingstandingunder.wordpress.com/2014/10/27/absolute-relativity-نسبية-غير-نسبي/

        1. Thank you for that clarification; may Allah bless you. You’re so right that the quantum world is so counter intuitive and ‘unintelligible’, except at a mathematical probability level. Again, I agree that a shrug of the shoulders, along with a deep sigh and an exclamation of God’s glory and transcendence is probably the only sane faith-based reaction to it all.

          The mind boggles at even the thought of Allah’s wajib al-wujud – His necessary existence, and that nothing else has any ontological existence except through Him and His command: ‘Be!’

          Subhanallah. His will and word alone holds our existence.

          As for your poem: mashallah, it was deep; superb. It strikes the soul. May Allah increase you in tawfiq and khayr.

          Finally, a possible typo on the second from last line of the poem. It says, “us”; though I’m sure it’s meant to read “is”.

  4. ​السلام عليكم و رحمة الله و بركاته

    Such a great article, mash’Allah. One that needs to be read over and over again and fully understood. I have long argued that simply because we understand ‘how’ something works does not mean we can do away with the creator of that something. Your analogy of the iPod is spot on. Please arrange to discuss this at the family youth circle when we restart in September, I think it will prove very beneficial.

    1. Praise be to Allah, by Whom all good deeds come to fruition. I will arrange to discuss it in the circle when it gets restarted in September, inshallah.

  5. Abu Aaliyah, thank you again for another thoughtful piece on this often shrill debate (shrill from all sides sometimes).

    I want to ask first what you think of Sye Ten Bruggencate’s Presuppositionalism.

    That approach seems to fit into your fitra-based argument for theism, no?

    By the way you never answered my question on a previous post on whether there is any independent proofs for the fitra beyond the claims of Islamic sources.

    1. As-salamu alaykum Haris. I pray things are well with you.

      I’m not quite sure if Presuppositionalism is akin to the Quranic idea of fitrah. The first is rooted in the presuppositions of God and Revelation to explain the question: How do we know what we know is true? Presuppositionalists will reply: ‘Only if that truth is confirmed by God in Revelation.’ In other words, one needs an ultimate, absolute standard by which to measure truths and untruths.

      As for the fitrah, it refers to an innate, predisposition in a person, by which they can intuit the existence of God and His divinity (and a few other matters). This fitrah in no way forbids a person to reason out why God must exist. Nor does it deny that we can only know the ontological nature or value of things just through Revelation.

      I’m not aware of any independent proof for the fitrah, other than Revelation and human collective experience. Evolutionary biology does speak about certain behavioural traits, dispositions and values being hard wired into us over the millions of years of evolution. At first glance, the two ideas look pretty similar.

      And Allah knows best.

  6. Ustadh – karramakallah – You can dismiss naturalism upon the manhaj of Dawkins (“Where’s your evidence?”), but surely naturalism proceeds from the principle of the burden of proof being upon the claimant. The one who claims the world is more than the material we observe has to prove that.

    A belief in God is “reasonable” but as I think you say yourself, there is no “proof” as such; just an acculumation of evidence which adds weight to the case. I think you would say that it is sufficient to observe the universe to find evidence of his handiwork. If indeed our demands of having daily reports from angels came true, we too would find ways to dismiss them too as not being true. Yet we can’t all be highly educated scientists. Why is it not fair to say that God leaves finding him a very difficult task?

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