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RELIGION & SCIENCE
"It
(humanity) cannot fly with one wing alone. If it tries to
fly with the wing of religion alone it will land in the
quagmire of superstition, and if it tries to fly with the
wing of science alone it will end in the despairing slough
of materialism."
The Oneness Of Science and Religion
It is one of the basic principles of the
Baha'i Faith that religion and science should work together
for the improvement of the world:
"Great indeed is the claim of scientists
and craftsmen on the peoples of the world...in truth,
knowledge is a veritable treasure for man, and a source of
glory..."
Truth Relative Not Absolute
For several centuries, there has been a
degree of conflict between advocates of science and those of
religion. In the Baha'i view, this has been largely due to
incomplete understanding. Baha'is believe that truth is
relative rather than absolute. In other words, any statement
which is made is only true to a certain point, and can be
challenged when knowledge has increased.
If science is discovered truth, then
religion is revealed truth. Each Founder of religion is the
vehicle for bringing to humanity that which is needed to
advance society at that particular time:
"The All-Knowing Physician hath His
finger on the pulse of mankind. He perceiveth the disease,
and prescribeth, in His unerring wisdom, the remedy. Every
age hath its own problem....The remedy the world needeth in
its present-day afflictions can never be the same as that
which a subsequent age may require."
The underlying theme is that:
"All mankind have been created to carry
forward an ever-advancing civilization".
"Weigh carefully in the balance of reason
and science everything that is presented to you as religion.
If it passes this test, then accept it, for it is truth! If,
however, it does not so conform, then reject it, for it is
ignorance."
The Origin Of The Universe
Baha'is believe that the universe has
always existed in some form, but that it evolves from state
to another. Any reference to "creation" in the Baha'i
Writings does not imply an instant appearance in a static
form. Scientific theory has likewise concluded that the
universe has no beginning, because the current "Big Bang"
theory can only trace the history of the universe to a
fraction of a second after the "Bang", and is not yet able
to discover what form the universe took before the "Bang" or
why the "Bang" occurred.
The current theory is therefore a theory
of evolution of the universe, and not a theory of its
creation. Time is one of the dimensions used for comparison
and measurement within the universe, as are the three
traditional dimensions. The implication is that the
questions, "Where did the universe come from?" and, "How did
it begin?" are simply the wrong questions to ask. Science is
currently unable to answer these questions, just as it
cannot make any statement on the existence of God as the
Creative Force. For this reason, we have to turn to religion
for guidance:
"Know that it is one of the most abstruse
spiritual truths that the world of existence, that is to say
this endless universe, has no beginning....Know that....a
creator without a creature is impossible, a provider without
those provided for cannot be conceived; for all the divine
names and attributes demand the existence of beings. If we
could imagine a time when no beings existed, this
imagination would be the denial of the Divinity of God.
Moreover, absolute non-existence cannot become existence. If
the beings were absolutely non-existent, existence would not
have come into being."
The Baha'i Writings affirm the existence
of creatures on other planets:
"Know thou that every fixed star has its
own planets, and every planet its own creatures, whose
number no man can compute."
The Evolution Of Humanity
The Baha'i Writings use the development
of the human embryo as proof of the development of man as a
species. From a tiny cell, it passes through various stages,
in some of which it really does not resemble a human being
at all. At one stage the embryo even has a tail. However, at
every stage it is destined to reach human form:
"....it is clear that this terrestrial
globe in its present form did not come into existence all at
once; but....gradually passed through different phases until
it became adorned with its present perfection....Man, in the
beginning of his existence and in the womb of the earth,
like the embryo in the womb of the mother, gradually grew
and developed, and passed from one form to another....It is
certain that in the beginning he had not this loveliness and
grace and elegance, and that he only by degrees attained
this shape, this form, this beauty, and this grace....man's
existence on this earth, from the beginning until it reaches
this state, form, and condition, necessarily lasts a long
time....But from the beginning of man's existence he is a
distinct species."
The story of Adam and Eve has been taken
literally by many people. 'Abdu'l-Baha, the son of
Baha'u'llah (the Founder of the Baha'i Faith), comments on
this story:
"If we take this story in its apparent
meaning....it is indeed extraordinary. The intelligence
cannot accept it, affirm it, or imagine it; for such
arrangements, such details, such speeches and reproaches are
far from being those of an intelligent man, how much less of
the Divinity - that Divinity who has organised this infinite
universe in the most perfect form, and its innumerable
inhabitants with absolute system, strength, and
perfection....
Therefore this story of Adam and
Eve....must be thought of simply as a symbol."
Harmony of Religion and Science
As mankind moves into a new era, the
advantages bestowed by both religion and science need to be
woven together in order for civilisation to progress. There
are a number of implications in this principle:
Religion should be able to give moral and
ethical guidance in areas where scientific advance could
lead to new areas of uncertainty, as in genetic experiments,
transgenic experimentation, fertilisation of eggs from
foetuses, etc.
Religion should guide science ethically,
and put to good uses rather than bad. It should be able to
create new bases for human happiness. Baha'is look to the
creation, in the very near future, of a world peace treaty.
The excesses of unbridled military invention will be curbed,
and technological advance be encouraged as the servant of
world peace.
Science should be able to provide more
answers to those global problems which as yet have not been
seriously addressed, such as initiating a genuine worldwide
administrative communications system, solving world food
production and distribution problems, and meaningfully
tackling worldwide pollution.
While the exact course of the future is
clearly speculation, the general principle remains that
religion and science, as complementary aspects of human
life, need to be seen as two wings which must work together.
A Glorious Future
Scientific investigation has shown that
all human beings are of the same species, and therefore one
in principle. It is the Baha'i view that religion must unite
humanity to become one human family in practice, and that
this is one of the major purposes of the Baha'i revelation.
The scientific recognition of humanity as one kind must
replace the prejudice of race, class, colour and creed so
prevalent in the world today. 'Abdu'l-Baha states:
"When religion, shorn of its
superstitions, traditions and unintelligent dogmas, shows
its conformity with science, then there will be a great
unifying, cleansing force in the world, which will sweep
before it all wars, disagreements, discords and struggles,
and then will mankind be united in the power of the love of
God." |