This conveniently arrived in my e-mail last night.
Stephen Hawking Challenges God
Rabbi Slifkin
The relationship of science to religion is always a hot topic, but it became
especially fiery in the last few days with the announcement of a new book
co-authored by legendary physicist Stephen Hawking. "Stephen Hawking Says
God Did Not Create The Universe" is the incendiary headline in many news
outlets. His new work, The Grand Design, co-authored with Caltech physicist
Leonard Mlodinow, seeks to give a scientific explanation for our remarkable
universe which writes God out of the picture.
Although always an atheist, Hawking had previously given more room for those
who believe in a Creator. In his bestselling (albeit usually unread) A Brief
History of Time, Hawking acknowledged that even if an all-encompassing set
of scientific equations for the universe is discovered, it does not
necessarily account for the universe's existence: "Even if there is only one
possible unified theory, it is just a set of rules and equations. What is it
that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to
describe? The usual approach of science of constructing a mathematical model
cannot answer the questions of why there should be a universe for the model
to describe. Why does the universe go to all the bother of existing?"
But in his latest book, Hawking strikes a different note. In a September 3rd
adapted extract that appeared in The Wall Street Journal under the title
"Why God Did Not Create the Universe," Hawking and Mlodinow claim that "as
recent advances in cosmology suggest, the laws of gravity and quantum theory
allow universes to appear spontaneously from nothing." They further argue
that many theories in modern cosmology predict the multiverse model-that
"our universe seems to be one of many, each with different laws." A small
number of this multitude of universes allow for the formation of life, and
we inhabit one of them. Accordingly, there is no need to look for a bigger
explanation for our universe. Is this true?
There are several ways in which science is employed to give rational support
for belief in a Creator. (I will not be including the anti-evolution
arguments of the Intelligent Design movement, to which I object on both
theological and scientific grounds.) These do not automatically direct us to
the God of the Jewish faith, for they do not necessarily lead to the
conclusion that the designer possesses the attributes that we ascribe to God
(as opposed to those ascribed to God by Aristotle and others). Nevertheless,
they certainly greatly enhance religious belief and help ground it in a
rational foundation.
One way in which science supports belief in God is that the laws of science
themselves require a lawmaker. As Nobel Prize-winning physicist Eugene
Wigner pointed out, it is "a miracle that in spite of the baffling
complexity of the world, certain regularities in the events could be
discovered. It is not at all natural that 'laws of nature' exist, much less
that man is able to discover them." Einstein, no believer in a conscious
God, nevertheless often expressed amazement at the comprehensibility of the
universe. As historians of science have shown, the idea of looking for such
regularities in nature was an outgrowth of monotheism, which proposed an
underlying unity to creation. When the scientific revolution picked up
momentum, many forgot its roots. But as science advanced, discovering
relatively simple equations that govern phenomena across the universe, many
physicists have begun to ask where these laws came from. Even if Hawking is
correct that the laws of gravity and quantum theory allow universes to
appear spontaneously from nothing, that they somehow breathe fire into
themselves, he has not explained how these laws themselves came to be
legislated.
The second way in which science is employed to give rational support for
faith is that were the laws of nature to be different in the slightest way,
our universe would not be possible. Some famous atheists such as Douglas
Adams dismissed this argument, claiming that it is like a puddle marveling
that its hole in the ground is exactly the right shape for it. But this
entirely misses the fact that our universe is not any old universe, but
rather an amazing universe that allows for the formation of such complex
phenomena as matter, planetary systems, life, and intelligence.
Hawking attempts to address this with the multiverse model, claiming that
since there is a multitude of universes, of course some of them will be of
an extraordinary nature. In response to this, it is first important to note
that the multiverse model is entirely speculative, with no actual evidence
whatsoever. In an article appropriately entitled "Outrageous Fortune," which
marveled at the unlikely and fortuitous nature of our universe, the leading
scientific journal Nature pointed out that "there are no apparent
measurements that would confirm whether we exist within a cosmic landscape
of multiple universes, or if ours is the only one."
But let us suppose that it is indeed the case that there are an infinite or
very large number of universes, which would mean that some of them possess
remarkable characteristics. Would this mean that Hawking has successfully
made his case? Others point out that it means no such thing. As renowned
physicist Paul Davies once wrote in The New York Times, "The multiverse
theory is increasingly popular, but it doesn't so much explain the laws of
physics as dodge the whole issue. There has to be a physical mechanism to
make all those universes and bestow bylaws on them. This process will
require its own laws, or meta-laws. Where do they come from? The problem has
simply been shifted up a level from the laws of the universe to the
meta-laws of the multiverse."
As we enter Rosh HaShanah, the festival marking the new year and the
creation of the universe, we still have reason to marvel at our universe-at
its nature, and at the laws and possibly meta-laws governing its nature. As
Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch wrote, "Each discovery in the natural sciences
only confirms the fundamental truth first set forth by Judaism: There can be
no thought without a thinker, no order without a regulator, no law without a
lawgiver, no culture without a creative spirit, no world without God and no
man without the gift of free-willed morality."
Shanah tovah!
(For extensive further discussion of all these ideas, see "The Challenge Of
Creation," available in Jewish bookstores worldwide and online at
www.zootorah.com)
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(c) Copyright by Rabbi Natan Slifkin 2010, zoorabbi@zootorah.com. All rights
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