Thursday, February 6, 2025

Why I Trust Science More Than Religion

There, did I get your attention? I hope so, because I’m serious. I do trust science more than I trust religion, even a religion I consider to be of God. Let me explain why.

First, let’s talk about science. Is science ever wrong? Of course. Quite often. In fact, being wrong is part of the whole purpose and project of science. But science, when performed properly and according to long-established rules, is also self-correcting. Several years ago, we at BYU Studies published an article by BYU geology professor Barry Bickmore and BYU philosophy professor David Grandy titled “Science as Storytelling.”1 They begin by pointing out that it is difficult to define science, but they take a stab at it anyway: “Science is the modern art of creating stories that explain observations of the natural world and that could be useful for predicting, and possibly even controlling, nature.”2

Bickmore and Grandy then describe several rules that endeavors must follow to be considered true science. “However, it is important to realize that rules are chosen not because no others are possible or because they are infallible guides to ‘truth’ but for convenience in attempting to accomplish certain goals.”3

Their first rule is: “Scientific stories are crafted to explain observations, but the observations that are used as a basis for these stories must be reproducible.”4 Of course, some types of phenomena occur very infrequently (perhaps a supernova or a very rare disease), and some areas of science are simply theoretical and not observable (string theory, for example), but most scientific experiments are constructed to be reproducible. Repetition ensures that the results are consistent over time and in numerous attempts.

Their second rules is: “Scientists prefer stories that can predict things that were not included in the observations used to create those explanations in the first place.”5 The stories scientists create attempt to explain as many observations as possible. Based on their observations, scientists then come up with educated guesses, called hypotheses, to explain what they think is true. “Once a story has successfully predicted many new observations, scientists start suspecting that it might be on the right track, and start calling it a ‘theory’ instead of a hypothesis. . . . And even if we cannot really say that scientific stories are the truth, some theories have successfully predicted so many things that we think it is reasonable to believe they are at least on the right track.”6 This is true of the theory of evolution, for example.

Rule 3 is: “Scientific stories should be subject to an infinitely repeating process of evaluation meant to generate more and more useful stories.”7 This means that when science gets things wrong, or not quite right, new stories can be created that more accurately describe the world around us. There is no set process, but Bickmore and Grandy give an outline of how science often happens:

1. Scientists make observations about the natural world.

2. Scientists come up with explanations that can explain these observations, or at least the ones that we are most sure about, or seem most important.

3. Other consequences of these explanations are evaluated, and scientists come up with ways to observe whether some of those predictions are true.

4. Scientists then make these other observations to test their predictions.

5. If the predictions work out, then the original explanation may be kept. If the predictions do not work out, then scientists do one of three things.

a. They throw out their initial explanation and try to come up with another one that explains all (or at least most) of their relevant observations.

b. They slightly modify their original explanation to account for the new observations.

c. They ignore the new observations that do not fit with their explanation, assuming there must be something wrong with the observations. Then they either go on as if nothing had happened or try to improve the observations.8

Rule 4 is: “Scientific explanations do not appeal to the supernatural. Only naturalistic explanations are allowed.”9 They give three reasons for this limitation. First, supernatural explanations don’t generate precise new predictions. Second, it’s difficult to place limits on which supernatural explanations are acceptable. Third, “just because they can come up with a naturalistic explanation for something, it doesn’t follow that the explanation is true.”10

Their fifth rule is: “Any scientific explanation involving events in the past must square with the principle of ‘uniformitarianism’—the assumption that past events can be explained in terms of the ‘natural laws’ that apply today.”11 In other words, natural laws don’t change willy-nilly over time.

Rule 6 is: “Scientists assume that nature is simple enough for human minds to understand.”12 If it is too complicated for us to understand, then it makes little sense to pursue scientific knowledge.

Their seventh and final rule is: “Scientific explanations should not contradict other established scientific explanations, unless absolutely necessary.”13 If the stories contradict each other, we end up with a mass of confusion. “When we look closely,” Bickmore and Grandy admit, “we find that scientific stories do not always fit perfectly together. However, it is by trying to resolve contradictions between different stories, and between scientific stories and observations, that scientists make progress.”14 And this may be the most important point.

Our modern world is nothing if not a testament to the fact that the scientific method works. The fact that I can type this blog post on my computer, post it to the internet, and you can read it and make anonymous comments about it is proof that science works. Without science, I would have to write this out longhand, but, on the other hand, without science I wouldn’t have anything to write about on this topic. The fact that I can drink clean water, not have lead paint on my walls, take antibiotics to cure a nasty knee infection instead of losing a leg, and watch my favorite sports team from the comfort of my family room is evidence that science works. Ironically, the fact that so many conservatives have become science doubters is also proof that science works, because most of them became doubters through the wonders of social media. Irony, I suppose is not their strong suit.

So, is science infallible? Of course not. It is the very nature of science to be fallible. But by finding faults in our hypotheses and theories, we improve our lives, and that is the whole point. And that is why I trust science. At its very core, science is a humble endeavor, even if not all scientists are.

Now let’s talk about religion. This won’t take long, because I’ve already written a long post about how devilishly difficult it is to decipher spiritual feelings. And that is the core of religion. It is based on feelings, and feelings are not reproducible or falsifiable. Even if there are divine appearances, such as Joseph Smith’s First Vision, or angelic visitors, which Joseph also reported, most people either have to take his word for what he claimed he saw, or they pray about it and get, yes, a feeling. But even when the feeling is overwhelming, as I’ve related in my earlier post, it is still subject to interpretation. As I stated before, in my own life I’ve been wrong in my interpretation of spiritual feelings as often as I’ve been right. And I don’t think I’m unique.

All we have to do is look at the history of Christianity or, more narrowly, Mormonism, to find numerous examples of when people following their feelings of certainty about religious matters got it all wrong. There have been wars fought over feelings of certainty and plenty of persecution over differences of religious opinion. In the LDS Church, we have seen how spiritual certainty about Blacks and the priesthood turned out to be completely wrong for over a hundred and twenty years. There was very little self-correction in the processes of our religion.

Also, I am the descendant of two plural wives, one on each side of my genealogy, but today in the Church we certainly don’t believe, as our forebears did, that you can’t get into the celestial kingdom without practicing polygamy. In fact, a few years ago, a Pew Research Center survey of Mormons revealed, surprisingly, that more of us believe polygamy is wrong than feel that way about extramarital sex.15

My whole ongoing series of posts about questions regarding the Book of Mormon is just more evidence that religion is often a can of worms. So, do I trust religion? Somewhat, and sometimes.16 Do I trust science? For the most part, yes, because its methods are sound and the results have been overwhelmingly positive.

_______________

1. Barry R. Bickmore and David A. Grandy, “Science as Storytelling,” BYU Studies Quarterly 53, no. 4 (2014): 3760.

2. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 40.

3. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 41.

4. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 43.

5. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 44.

6. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 45.

7. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 46.

8. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 47.

9. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 49.

10. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 52.

11. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 53.

12. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 55.

13. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 57.

14. Bickmore and Grandy, “Storytelling,” 57.

15. “Politics, Society and Morality,” Pew Research Center, January 12, 2012, https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2012/01/12/mormons-in-america-politics-society-and-morality/. According to this survey, 86 percent of Mormons believe polygamy is morally wrong. The percentages for sex between unmarried adults, abortion, and drinking alcohol were 79, 74, and 54.

16. For more detail about my views on the imperfections in the Church, see Roger Terry, “Why the True Church Cannot Be Perfect, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 46, no. 1 (2013): 94107, chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/Dialogue_V46N01_427c.pdf.


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