SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Should God be replaced? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: briskit who wrote (12174)4/24/2002 7:06:27 PM
From: Solon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28931
 
positiveatheism.org

November 6, 1999

Introduction: While Cliff was setting up the recording device, Victor perused Cliff's copy of Patrick Glynn's 1997 book, God: The Evidence. Cliff had mentioned that he wanted to discuss the Anthropic Principle, as advocated in Glynn's book, and how Glynn's idea of the Anthropic Principle differs from two principles of the same name discussed in Stephen W. Hawking's 1988 book, A Brief History of Time. Cliff had also mentioned that he wanted to find out whether Glynn's use of physics to bolster his argument involves accepted ideas within the science of physics, or if Glynn was misrepresenting what physics says in making his case.

This is what was said between the time the recorder started functioning and the official beginning of the interview. We include this fragment because later discussions refer to what was discussed here. Also, at the time this discussion took place, Victor was clearly under the impression that the interview had already started; thus, we do not consider inclusion of this fragment an invasion of any sort.


Cliff Walker: Did you see the part I was talking about?

Victor Stenger: Yeah. I know which [Anthropic argument] your talking about.

Cliff Walker: It's different from the one that Stephen Hawking describes.

Victor Stenger: That issue hadn't really arisen when I wrote Not By Design, but I do discuss that in The Unconscious Quantum, in Chapter 8, and I've [since] gone a little further. That's basically what I will be talking about today, that argument, the Anthropic argument.

Cliff Walker: Oh, good! I covered it about six months ago [May, 1999: "Questions from a Protestant"], and I hadn't encountered anything about it yet (I hadn't read your book.) I read this book [Glynn's God: The Evidence], and I put some questions out to our e-mail list (there are a few physicists on our list), and nobody had heard the argument.

Victor Stenger: Well, I've written a bunch of stuff on this already. I have an article that I wrote for the National Center for Science Education's report, that came out a couple of years ago, now. I wrote a long article for the Skeptical Intelligencer, which is a British skeptics organization. (All of this stuff is on my Web page.) And I had a recent one in Skeptical Inquirer, in a special religion issue.

Cliff Walker: Was I thinking of one in Skeptic?

Victor Stenger: Actually, now that you mention it, I also wrote something for Skeptic on this. So I've written articles on this specific anthropic argument, and that's what the main subject of my talk is today. I will cover some of the other cosmological type arguments. I will basically be trying to explain to people what the argument is and how to counter it.


Cliff Walker: There's a fragment from Francis Crick's Autobiography floating around India and elsewhere titled, "How I Became Inclined Towards Atheism." What's your story?

Victor Stenger: Oh, wow! That's a good one!

It certainly was a gradual thing. I was raised as a Catholic in a town, Bayonne, New Jersey, just across the river from New York City. An immigrant neighborhood, everybody was Catholic -- certainly, everybody was religious (there were obviously some Jewish people, but not too many Protestants). Although I went to public school, I went through the whole process of Catechism, and so on, and getting Communion. I had to go to church every Sunday, but just sitting there listening to sermon after sermon never convinced me. By the time I went to college I had pretty much split from being a Catholic.

After I graduated from college in the east, I went west. I went to U.C.L.A., to graduate school in physics. Interestingly enough, I started going to a church there, a big Methodist church that's right on Wilshire Boulevard there in Los Angeles, one of the big central churches there -- mainly because it was a nice place to meet young ladies and sing in the choir, and things of that sort. I actually had some good discussions with the ministers there. It was a very liberal church, a kind of liberal Protestantism you don't hear of any more. It's pretty much faded out of existence.

Cliff Walker: I think it's still around, they just leave us alone.

Victor Stenger: (Laughs) I actually didn't have too much of a problem with that. But then when I graduated from U.C.L.A. I moved to Hawaii, and didn't pursue any religious interests. Although my wife and I did send our children to private schools that had religious connections. Again, it was something that just didn't bother us much. It didn't make them religious. They ended up just as much nonbelievers as I am.

My wife is (this is an interesting story, too), my wife was always a nonbeliever. She tells a story about a time she was a child and there was a big lightning storm going on outside her house. (She grew up in Canada; this was up in the woods some place.) There was this big lightning storm, and she had her nose pressed to the window, and she said, "God, if you exist, show me a sign!" At just that instant there a tremendous flash of lightning.

And she said, "You know, I still didn't believe." (Laughs) It hadn't convinced her.

So our family, in other words, never took this up. Although, I was not a person who was out there getting into big fights and arguments about it.

Then toward around 1986 or so I got involved in some skeptical things. There were some psychics doing things on campus, at the University of Hawaii, that I wasn't too happy with. They were claiming they could train you in psychic abilities, and so on. So I kicked up a bit of a fuss about that, and that led to one thing after another.

Cliff Walker: Is that the football team incident you mentioned in your book?

Victor Stenger: No, this was actually before this. This was a fellow named Garith Pendragon. What happened is that he sued us. He sued me and bunch of other people, and that got me into the business of being an active skeptic. (You may know that I got sued by Uri Geller -- three times! All these suits turned out okay; I never had to pay a cent and he's had to pay quite a bit!) But this made me increasingly militant in my skepticism.

Then I started looking more and more into these science and religion issues, and I said, "Hey, that's right up my alley!" I'm a physicist, and I also know a lot about astronomy and cosmology, and I could see what was wrong with many of these arguments. They just did not hold water. The physicist and astronomers who were aware of this were not speaking up. They were just letting the theists have their way on these issues.

So, I began to carve out a little niche for myself, not only in a science and religion interface, but also in physics and the interface with psychic phenomena. That was another place where physicists were involved, but they were really not the mainstream of physicists. The mainstream physicists were just saying, "Oh, this is nonsense!" but they weren't doing anything about it. They weren't speaking out against it. So I became the one physicist who started to write and speak out about it.

Now, I might say, there are more. The American Physical Society has begun to take a much greater interest in these matters, because it realizes that science has something to say. When people start using science to argue for their specific beliefs and delusions, to try to claim that they're supported by science, then scientists at least have to speak up and say, "You're welcome to your delusions, but don't say that they're supported by science."

That's been my main theme, just looking at the scientific end of it (that's been my expertise), and seeing what arguments hold water, and if they don't, saying so.

Cliff Walker: I spoke with Dr. M. Reza Ghadiri, who has perfected self-replicating molecules, and one of the things I brought up was the situation in Kansas, Tennessee, Illinois, and thankfully not Colorado -- what's that young girl's name, Emily --

Victor Stenger: Emily Rosa! New Mexico, recently, turned back the tide, too. They did a very impressive job. There was a bunch of scientists in New Mexico who were able to get to the education board and to convince them not only not to take evolution out of the schools, but to insist that it be taught in the schools. Otherwise, science students will not be getting the education in science that they need.

Cliff Walker: One study says 45 percent, one study says 46 percent, and one says 47 percent of Americans can be described as young-earth creationists. Is this a wake-up call for us? Or do we continue to let people be entitled to their opinions, as Dr. Ghadiri insisted that we do?

Victor Stenger: Well, people are entitled to their opinions, but when the opinion is in disagreement with the data -- with the facts -- when that opinion does not stand up under critical or rational scrutiny, I think we have a right to point that out. We shouldn't be stepping on anybody's toes when we do that. If they're going to be spouting off nonsense, then we should say that -- not as a matter of opinion, but as a matter of scientific fact. When someone says science says something, and science doesn't say something ("It doesn't say that! That's a misrepresentation of what science says!"), then I think we can state that. And if it ruffles some feathers, so what? I just don't see the basis for arguing that creationism has equal standing with evolution.

Cliff Walker: Do you think scientists need to speak out? and-or do you think science itself may need a branch that is more like a spokesperson?

Victor Stenger: I think scientists tend to say, "Leave me alone. I want to do my own work. This is not something I want to spend my time on." It's sort of a bottomless pit. So they tend to stay away from it.

Although I think it's interesting to note that there have been some recent surveys of scientists in the U.S., and their beliefs, and how their beliefs have changed over the years. (Actually, they haven't changed; that's what the survey revealed.) While something like 90 percent or more of the American people believe in God, that percentage is about 40 percent for all scientists and mathematicians. When you get down to physicists and astronomers, it's only 20 percent. I think for biologists it's even less, I'm not sure what the exact figure for biologists --

Cliff Walker: I think its five or six.

Victor Stenger: Yeah, a very low percentage for biologists.

And the other interesting figure is that they did a survey of the National Academy of Sciences which, of course, contains the top scientists in the country, and asked them specifically about a personal god (there are a lot of concepts of God that people talk about, they talk about Spinoza's god, associating "God" with the order of nature, and so fourth) but the personal god, the god that you can pray to and that takes a role in your life, that kind of god, only about seven percent of the members of the National Academy of Sciences believe in that kind of a god.

I remember (I forget who it was now) but there was some Representative who, on the House floor, was absolutely furious about that, but what could he do about it? What's he going to do, pass a bill saying that you can't be a member of the Academy unless you state a belief in a personal god? It's not the Boy Scouts! It's the National Academy of Sciences.

Cliff Walker: (Facetiously) So, is this some kind of atheist conspiracy, or something?

Victor Stenger: (Laughing) Where -- where's the conspiracy among a small group of people? It's just a small fraction of the total American public. But that points out that there is a strong disagreement between scientists and the community -- at least in the U.S. Remember, we're talking about the U.S. In other countries (except, perhaps, Iran and a few countries like that) there isn't this widespread fundamentalist belief in God, and what the Scriptures say, and interpret that as fact.

But in our country, we seem to have this aberration, almost. And it's rather strange because we're the one country that has benefitted, more than any country, from technology, from the fruits of science. And, of course, our science is the best in the world. Well, our high schools and our grade schools aren't so good. The undergraduate colleges are starting to look like high schools, now, dumbing down everything. But our graduate schools are still good, and our research is still good, and the majority of the Nobel Prizes are still coming to Americans. And so we have this tremendous science going on. It's supported well. And, of course, we have the industries that take what science gives them and develop all these wonders of technology.

And yet, the people who, on the one hand, are very rich because of that, don't like what science is telling them about the world. They like what science does for them, but they don't like what science tells them about reality. They haven't since the time of Galileo, from the time that the Earth was no longer the center of the Universe. People want to be at the center of the Universe. I think that's what you get from that, and they're going to flock to anybody who tells them that.


What we have now (and this is the whole point of this new claim of the convergence of science and religion) is that some scientists and theologians and philosophers who are theistically inclined are trying to tell us that there is a message out there in the Universe. There is evidence of design to the Universe. Religion was right after all. Of course, that's a very popular notion now, because people can have the best of both worlds: they can have the fruits of technology, and they can also say, "Yeah! Science has been telling me that I'm the center of the Universe after all!" They'll buy that any day!

If I wanted to make a lot of money (Well, I do want to make a lot of money!), but if I sacrificed my principles, I could write a book that would make me a lot of money saying just that, because that's what people want to hear. They don't want to hear what I'm telling them!

[This segment had been missing from the posted version.]

Cliff Walker: Alan Sokal?

Victor Stenger: Yes, Alan Sokal. [Laughs.] He was the physicist who hoaxed the postmodernists [who published a spoof scientific paper in the journal Social Text -- see Positive Atheism, April, 1999].

Cliff Walker: He called it a long series of non sequiters.

Victor Stenger: The postmodernists are a group of social scientists (and perhaps some philosophers, but not too many) who try to claim that science is just another narrative -- just like any other narrative -- and that what scientists say is just another story about the nature of things.

Cliff Walker: Is that line of reasoning going anywhere?

Victor Stenger: It hasn't, really. That line of reasoning has been pretty much limited to the academic world, particularly the social sciences.

There's a group of people who study science as a social activity -- and of course science is a social activity, and it's a legitimate study. The trouble is that a lot of them don't know science; they haven't really worked in science where they see how science goes about its activities. And so they're easily convinced that we make our own reality, for example, that the terms and the theories of science is just an invention -- which they are. The word electron is just our invention; we could have called it anything, but it represents something that I think exists in reality. And if we can't prove that it exists with the kind of logical deduction that they seem to want us to prove, that doesn't mean that it isn't there -- that it isn't an aspect of reality. So Sokal got a lot of publicity with his article [in Social Text] that parodied some of the stuff that is written by both social scientists and some of the people in literary criticism.

That created a stir, but at the same time I don't think it entered in any major way into the religion-science dialogue, because I think what's happening now is that theists are using science. They want science to be recognized as a powerful measure of reality, a powerful method for obtaining knowledge about reality, and to say, "Here is this very powerful thing, and this powerful thing is telling us that there is something out there, that there is design to the universe."

The main story there (that's new, compared to the old design arguments -- design arguments are pretty ancient -- this one is a new design argument) basically says that the universe is finely tuned. The constants of physics, the laws of physics, are delicately balanced for the existence of the universe as we know it, for the production of carbon and of the heavy elements that are needed for life. If any of these constants was changed ever so slightly, you wouldn't have carbon, you wouldn't have nitrogen and oxygen, you wouldn't have the complex materials that are needed for life.

That's why they call this the "anthropic coincidences," because they seem to suggest that the universe was designed with us in mind.

Cliff Walker: That's the old Teleological Argument.

Victor Stenger: Yes, that's what the claim is, that there's evidence that the universe was designed so that it could produce us. Now, it's really stretching it to say that it was designed to produced humans, because at best all they could say is that it was designed to produce carbon. Carbon, of course, is the stuff of life; life is able to evolve due to the complexity of molecules that are made of carbon. But it could have been just as well designed for cockroaches, or for bacteria.


Cliff Walker: When they throw the physics at us -- [the book] God: The Evidence by Patrick Glynn has a couple pages of physics in it -- how valid are the arguments when it comes to his physics, when it comes to his use of physics?

Victor Stenger: I think a lot of the literature that's out there is written by people who don't understand physics very well. However, let me make clear that there are some scientists (and theistic scientists and theologians and philosophers of theistic bent) who do understand the physics pretty well -- well enough to think. Glynn (is that his name?) oversimplifies it to a great degree. He is writing to the general public. But if you look at the philosophical journals and theological journals, and you read some of the more sophisticated stuff, it is a challenge to counter these.

However, let me make it clear that you won't read any of this in the scientific journals. Even though the argument is claimed to be a scientific one, you will not see it in any scientific journals. You'll see it still in philosophical journals; you'll see it still in theological literature. But these people are smart, and these people are sophisticated, and they're educated, and they know how to make good argument, and that's the one that's very tough to counter.

Cliff Walker: My favorite philosophical counter to all of this is, you can talk about unlikelihood, you can talk about complexity all you want, but in order to posit creation -- to even talk about creation -- you've got to cough up a creator first, before you can say, "creation." You can't use unlikelihood or complexity to make a solid case for creation. You can say, "Maybe it leans in that direction as a possibility," but that's as far as I'll allow myself to go on that.

Victor Stenger: The argument goes something like this: We can't understand how all of this could have happened by chance, therefore it didn't happen by chance, and therefore there must be a God.

Well, there's a number of assumptions, there. First of all, how do you know that it couldn't have happened by chance? We only have one universe to go by, and indeed that universe has life. So if you were to say, "Based on the data itself, what's the likelihood that a universe is going to have life?"

Well, we've only got one universe. The universe has life. The likelihood is one hundred percent!
Where do they come away with saying the likelihood is so small? Well, it comes from theory, from making various kinds of assumptions.

So even if you buy into that, and you say, "Okay, so therefore there had to be something going on that set the whole thing in motion, why the Christian god? Why isn't it some other god? Why isn't it any of the thousands of other gods that exist? Why isn't it Santa Claus, or the Tooth Fairy? Or why isn't it the Devil? Or, why can't the universe itself -- ? Once you accept the possibility that some entity exists that could initiate things, without cause, without redesign, well why couldn't that be the universe, you see?

Cliff Walker: Richard Dawkins always hammers home Occam's Razor: if you're going to postulate that the universe is so vast and complex that it needs to be explained by having been created, then what you need to do now is explain the existence of an even more vast, even more complex creator on top of the universe.

Victor Stenger: That's right. This is an argument that we get into all the time with the more sophisticated theists, is, "What's the proper use of Occam's Razor? Whose hypothesis is the simpler, the more economic, the more parsimonious?"

C'ONT...



To: briskit who wrote (12174)4/24/2002 7:22:04 PM
From: Solon  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 28931
 
Isaac Asimov on
Science and the Bible
(Free Inquiry -- Spring 1982)

Paul Kurtz: In your view is the Bible widely known and intelligently read today?

Isaac Asimov: It is undoubtedly widely known. It is probably owned by more people than any other book. As to how widely it is read one cannot be certain. I suppose it is read very widely in the sense that people just look at the words and read it mechanically. How many people actually think about the words they read, I'm not at all certain. They can go to a house of worship and hear verses read without thinking about what the words mean. Undoubtedly millions of people do.

Kurtz: There used to be something called the Higher Biblical Criticism. What has happened to that?

Asimov: I am constantly hearing, from people who accept the Bible more or less literally, that the Higher Criticism has been outmoded and discredited, but I don't believe that at all. This is just something that people say who insist on clinging to the literal truth of the Bible. The Higher Criticism, which in the nineteenth century, for example, tried to show that the first few books of the Bible contained several strains that could be identified and separated. I think is as valid today as it ever was. Fundamentally, there is a J-document and a P-document in the early chapters of Genesis and an E-document later on. I have no doubt that as one continues to investigate these things one constantly learns and raises new questions.

Kurtz: But by and large the public does not know much about this skeptical, critical interpretation of the Bible. Would you say that is so?

Asimov: Yes. Just as by and large the public doesn't know about any of the disputes there have been about quantum theory. The public knows only what it reads in the newspapers and sees on television, and this is all extremely superficial.

Kurtz: One thing I am struck by is that today in America we don't have a free market of ideas in regard to religion and the Bible. You are an outstanding exception. You have taken the Bible seriously and have submitted it to critical analysis. Would you agree that, although free inquiry concerning the Bible goes on in scholarly journals, and perhaps in university classes and in some books, the public hears mostly pro-religious propaganda -- such as from the pulpits of the electronic church, from various religious publications, and from the daily press -- and very rarely any kind of questioning or probing of biblical claims?

Asimov: I imagine that the large majority of the population, in the United States at least, either accepts every word of the Bible as it is written or gives it very little thought and would be shocked to hear anyone doubt that the Bible is correct in every way. So when someone says something that sounds as though he assumes that the Bible was written by human beings -- fallible human beings who were wrong in this respect or that -- he can rely on being vilified by large numbers of people who are essentially ignorant of the facts, and not many people care to subject themselves to this.

Kurtz: Do you take the Bible primarily as a human document or do you think it was divinely inspired?

Asimov: The Bible is a human document. Much of it is great poetry, and much of it consists of the earliest reasonable history that survives. Samuel I and 2 antedate Herodotus by several centuries. A great deal of the Bible may contain successful ethical teachings, but the rest is at best allegory and at worst myth and legend. Frankly, I don't think that anything is divinely inspired. I think everything that human beings possess of intelligent origin is humanly inspired, with no exceptions.

Kurtz: Earlier you said that the Bible contained fallible writings. What would some of these be?

Asimov: In my opinion, the biblical account of the creation of the universe and of the earth and humanity is wrong in almost every respect. I believe that those cases where it can be argued that the Bible is not wrong are, if not trivial, then coincidental. And I think that the account of a worldwide flood, as opposed, say, to a flood limited to the Tigris-Euphrates region, is certainly wrong.

Kurtz: The creationists think there is evidence for the Noachian flood.

Asimov: The creationists think there is evidence for every word in the Bible. I think all of the accounts of human beings living before the flood, such as Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel, are at best very dim memories of ancient Sumerian rulers; and even the stories about Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob I rather think are vague legends.

Kurtz: Based on oral tradition?

Asimov: Yes, and with all the distortions that oral traditions sometimes undergo.

Kurtz: In your book In the Beginning, you say that creation is a myth. Why do you think it is scientifically false? What are some of the main points?

Asimov: Well, all of the scientific evidence we have seems to indicate that the universe is billions of years old. But there is no indication whatsoever of that in the Bible if it is interpreted literally rather than allegorically. Creationists insist on interpreting it literary. According to the information we have, the earth is billions of years younger than the universe.

Kurtz: It is four and a half billion years old.

Asimov: The earth is, and the universe is possibly fifteen billion years old. The universe may have existed ten billion years before the earth, but according to the biblical description of creation the earth, the sun, the moon, and the stars were all created at the same time. As a matter of fact, according to the Bible, the earth itself existed from the beginning, whereas the stars, sun, and moon were created on the fourth day.

Kurtz: Yes, so they have it backward.

Asimov: They have that backward, and they have plant life being created before the sun. All the evidence we have indicates that this is not so. The Bible says that every plant, and every animal, was created after its own kind, which would indicate that species have been as they are now from the very beginning and have never changed. Despite what the creationists say, the fossil record, as well as very subtle biochemical evidence, geological evidence, and all sorts of other evidence, indicates that species have changed, that there has been a long evolutionary process that has lasted over three billion years.

Kurtz: It's not simply biology that they are questioning, but geology, astronomy, and the whole basis of the physical sciences.

Asimov: If we insist on the Bible's being literary true, then we must abandon the scientific method totally and completely. There's no way that we can at the same time try to discover the truth by means of observation and reason and also accept the Bible as true.

Kurtz: So what is at stake in this debate between evolution and creationism is not simply the principle of evolution in regard to living things but the whole status of the sciences themselves?


Asimov: That is what I believe. But I have letters from creationists who say that they don't deny the scientific method, that they are just trying to examine the inconsistencies in the evidence presented by the evolutionists. However, that is not what should be the chief job of the creationists. What they should do is present positive evidence in favor of creationism, which is something they never do. They confine themselves to pointing out inconsistencies in the evolutionary view, not hesitating to create those inconsistencies by distortion and, in my opinion, in some cases by outright fraud. Then they say that they have "proved" that evolutionary theory is false, and therefore creationism is correct.

Kurtz: Of course you don't deny that how evolution occurs is not fully or finally formulated.

Asimov: Certainly there are many arguments over the mechanism of evolution, but our knowledge about the evolutionary process is much greater than it was in Darwin's day. The present view of evolution is far more subtle and wide-ranging than Darwin's was or could have been. But it still is not firmly and finally settled. There remain many arguments over the exact mechanism of evolution, and furthermore there are many scientists who are dissatisfied with some aspects of evolution that most other scientists accept. There are always minority views among scientists in every respect, but virtually no scientist denies the fact of evolution. It is as though we were all arguing about just exactly what makes a car go even though nobody denies that cars go.

Kurtz: What about the metaphorical interpretations? When I was growing up, the general view was that we should accept creationism and that it is not incompatible with evolution but is to be interpreted metaphorically or allegorically in terms of stages.

Asimov: There is always that temptation. I am perfectly willing, for instance, to interpret the Bible allegorically and to speak of the days of creation as representing eons of indefinite length. Clarence Darrow badgered William Jennings Bryan into admitting that the days could have been very long. This horrified Bryan's followers, as it would horrify creationists today. You can say that the entire first chapter of Genesis is a magnificent poem representing a view of creation as transcending the silly humanoid gods of the Babylonians and presenting a great abstract deity who by his word alone brings the universe into existence. You can compare this with the Big Bang. You can say that God said "Let there be light" and then there was the Big Bang; and one could then follow with all sorts of parallels and similarities if one wished. I have no objection to that.

Kurtz: But aren't the stages wrong, even if it is interpreted metaphorically? You said earlier that, according to the Bible, God created the earth before the heavenly bodies.

Asimov: Yes. Some of the stages are wrong. But you could say that, when the Bible says "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth," what was really meant was the universe. We could say that, at the time the first chapter of Genesis was written, when people spoke of the earth they meant everything there was. But as our vision and perspective expanded we saw that what was really meant was the universe. Thus, if necessary, we can modify the words. But the creationists won't do this; they insist on the literal interpretation of the creation story. When it says "earth" they want it to mean Earth; when it says on the first "day" they want it to mean a twenty-four-hour day.

Kurtz: When the Bible says, "And God made the firmament," what does it mean? Isn't that odd?

Asimov: Well, if you trace the word firmament back to its original meaning, it is a thin, beaten layer of metal. It is like the top you put on a platter in a restaurant. It is like the lid of a dish. The earth is a dish and the firmament comes down upon it on all sides. It is a material object that separates things. There are waters above the firmament and waters below. In fact, in the Book of Revelation, which was written about 100 C.E., centuries after Genesis was written, the writer describes the firmament as folding up like a scroll. It was still viewed as a thin metal plate. But we know as surely as we can know anything at all that there is no firmament up there -- there's no thin metal layer -- there's only an atmosphere, and beyond it a vacuum, an empty space, except where there are planets, stars, and other objects. The blueness of it is an illusion due to the scattering of light, and the blackness of night is due to the absence of any light that we can see, and so on.

Kurtz: In a metaphorical interpretation, how would you interpret "the waters above and the waters below"? Does that make any sense?

Asimov: Not to me. Obviously the people who first wrote about the waters above the firmament were thinking of rain. The rain supposedly came down through the windows in the firmament. There were little holes, as in a shower head, and the rain drizzled through. I don't blame them for not understanding. I don't criticize the ancients for not knowing what we know. It took centuries to work up this knowledge, and the ancients contributed their share. They were every bit as intelligent as we are and every bit as much seekers after the truth. I'm willing to admit that. But the fact is that they didn't know as much as we know now.

Kurtz: They were limited by the prevailing scientific and philosophical views of the day.

Asimov: And by the little that had been learned up to that time. So this seemed a logical explanation of the rain. They didn't know the nature of the evaporation from the ocean. They didn't understand what the clouds really were and that is why they spoke of the waters above the firmament and below, but there is no reason that we should speak of it that way.


Kurtz: If you take Genesis metaphorically, you can believe in the theory of evolution as the Big Bang and also that everything evolved, so this need not be a threat to science necessarily?

Asimov: No, if you are willing to say that the universe began fifteen billion years ago -- the exact number of billions of years is under dispute -- as a tiny object that expanded rapidly and dropped in temperature, and all the other things that scientists believe happened, then you can say that God created it, and the laws of nature that controlled it, and that he then sat back and watched it develop. I would be content to have people say that. Frankly, I don't believe it, but there's no way one can disprove it.

Kurtz: You don't believe it? You don't think there is sufficient evidence that there was a cosmic egg that shattered and that God created this cosmic egg?

Asimov: I believe there's enough evidence for us to think that a big bang took place. But there is no evidence whatsoever to suppose that a superhuman being said, "Let it be." However, neither is there any evidence against it; so, if a person feels comfortable believing that, I am willing to have him believe it.

Kurtz: As an article of faith?

Asimov: Yes, as an article of faith. I have articles of faith, too. I have an article of faith that says the universe makes sense. Now there's no way you can prove that the universe makes sense, but there's just no fun in living in the universe if it doesn't make sense.

Kurtz: The universe is intelligible because you can formulate hypotheses and make predictions and there are regularities.

Asimov: Yes, and my belief is that no matter how far we go we will always find that the universe makes sense. We will never get to the point where it suddenly stops making sense. But that is just an assumption on my part.

Kurtz: Religion then postulates and brings in God.

Asimov: Except it tends to retreat. At the very start you had rain gods and sun gods. You had a god for every single natural phenomenon. Nothing took place without some minor deity personally arranging it. In the Middle Ages some people thought the planets revolved around the earth because there were angels pushing them, because they didn't know about the Galilean notion that the planets didn't require a constant impetus to keep moving. Well, if people want to accept a God as initiating the big bang, let them. But the creationists wont do that.

Kurtz: Are you fearful that this development of a literal interpretation of the Bible is anti-science and can undermine rationality in this country and in the rest of the world?

Asimov: I don't believe it can actually stop sensible people from thinking sensibly, but it can create a situation whereby there are laws against allowing sensible people to think sensibly in the open. Right now the fight is over creation and evolution. In the long run, in any fight between evolutionists and creationists, evolution will win as long as human beings have sense. But there are laws now in Louisiana and Arkansas, and other legislatures are considering similar laws.

Kurtz: It was struck down in Arkansas.

Asimov: Fortunately! But wherever the law exists, school teachers must teach creationism if they mention evolution. This is a dreadful precedent. In the United States a state can say: "This is scientific. This is what you must teach in science." Whereas in many nations that have had an established church -- nations we may have looked upon as backward -- they nevertheless understood that within the subsystem of science it is science that decides what is scientific. It is scientists who make the decision. It is in the scientific marketplace that ideas win or lose. If they want to teach religion, they can teach it outside of science, and they can say that all of science is wicked and atheistic. But to force their way into science and to dictate what scientists must declare science to be destroys the meaning of all of science. It is an absolutely impossible situation and scientists should not permit it without a fight to the very end.

Kurtz: I fully share your concern. What about religion itself? Should religion be a subject for free inquiry? Should examination of the Bible be openly discussed in American society?

Asimov: I don't see why not. I think nothing is sacred, at least in a country that considers itself intellectually free. We can study the political process all we want. We can examine the reasoning behind communism, fascism, and Nazism. We can consider the Ku Klux Klan and what they believe. There is nothing that we should not be able to examine.

Kurtz: And your examination of the Bible indicates that it is contradicted in many places by modern science?

Asimov: Yes. Now this does not automatically mean that science is correct and the Bible is wrong, although I think it is. People should examine it. One thing we cannot do is to say without examination that the Bible is right.

Kurtz: Isaac, how would you describe your own position? Agnostic, atheist, rationalist, humanist?

Asimov: I am an atheist, out and out. It took me a long time to say it. I've been an atheist for years and years, but somehow I felt it was intellectually unrespectable to say one was an atheist, because it assumed knowledge that one didn't have. Somehow it was better to say one was a humanist or an agnostic. I finally decided that I'm a creature of emotion as well as of reason. Emotionally I am an atheist. I don't have the evidence to prove that God doesn't exist, but I so strongly suspect he doesn't that I don't want to waste my time.

Kurtz: But the burden of proof is on the person who claims God exists. You don't believe in Santa Claus, but you can't disprove his existence. The burden of proof is upon those who maintain the claim.

Asimov: Yes. In any case, I am an atheist.

Kurtz: You have no doubt reflected a good deal on this. Can people live without the God myth, without religion? You don't need it presumably. Does man need it?

Asimov: Well, individual human beings may. There's a certain comfort, I suppose, in thinking that you will be with all of your loved ones again after death, that death is not the end, that you'll live again in some kind of never-never land with great happiness. Maybe some people even get a great deal of comfort out of knowing that all the people they they don't like are going to go straight to hell. These are all comforts. Personally, they don't comfort me. I'm not interested in having anyone suffer eternally in hell, because I don't believe that any crime is so nearly infinite in magnitude as to deserve infinite punishment. I feel that I couldn't bring myself to condemn anyone to eternal punishment. I am opposed to punishment.

Kurtz: The height of wickedness, is it not?

Asimov: Yes. I feel if I can't do it, then God, who presumably is a much more noble being than I am, could certainly not do it. Furthermore, I can't help but believe that eternal happiness would eventually be boring. I cannot grasp the notion of eternal anything. My own way of thinking is that after death there is nothingness. Nothingness is the only thing that I think is worth accepting.


Kurtz: Do you think that one can lead a moral life, that life is meaningful, and that one can be just and noble without a belief in God?

Asimov: Well, as easily as with a belief in God. I don't feel that people who believe in God will automatically be noble, but neither do I think they will automatically be wicked. I don't think those who don't believe in God will be automatically noble or automatically wicked either. I think this is a choice for every human being, and frankly I think that perhaps if you don't believe in God this puts a greater strain on you, in the sense that you have to live up to your own feelings of ethics. But, if you do believe in God, you also believe in forgiveness. There is no one to forgive me.

Kurtz: No escape hatch.

Asimov: That's right. If I do something wrong, I have to face myself and I may not be able to figure out a way of forgiving myself. But, if you believe in God, there are usually rituals whereby you may express contrition and be forgiven, and so on. So it seems to me that many people can feel free to sin and repent afterward. I don't. In my way of life, there may be repentance but it doesn't make up for the sin.

Kurtz: Of course a lot of people who are humanists say that, if ethics is based upon either fear of God or love of God and his punishment and reward, then one is not really ethical, that ethics must grow out of human experience.


Asimov: Well, I said the same thing in an argument about what I called the Reagan doctrine. Early in what I already consider his disastrous administration, Reagan said that one couldn't believe anything the Soviets said because they didn't believe in God. In my view, maybe you can't believe anything the Soviets say, but not for that reason. If you are ethical only because you believe in God, you are buying your ticket to heaven or trying to tear up your ticket to hell. In either case, you are just being a shrewd profiteer, nothing else. The idea of being ethical is to be ethical for no reason except that that is the way to be if you want the world to run smoothly. I think that people who say virtue is its own reward or honesty is the best policy have the right idea

Kurtz: Are you suggesting that morality is autonomous, that you learn by living and that one doesn't need an independent religious support for moral choice?

Asimov: Yes. If a group of people are living together in a community where there is a lot of lying and stealing going on, it is an unpleasant way to live. But if everyone tells the truth and is honest and thoughtful of his neighbor, it is a good way to live. You don't need to go any further than that.

Kurtz: Is there one value that you have always felt is the most important -- one moral principle?

Asimov: I am scrupulously honest, financially speaking, but I have never really had a serious temptation to be otherwise. I long for a temptation so that I can prove to myself that I am really scrupulously honest, you see.

Kurtz: I thought you were going to say that you were committed to truth and knowledge!

Asimov: When I think of being committed to truth and knowledge, that seems to be such a natural sort of thing. How can anyone be anything else? I give myself no credit for that. I don't see how it is possible to be tempted away from it, and if you can't be tempted away from it then there is no point in even considering it a virtue. It is like saying that it is a virtue to breathe. But when I think of truth, I wonder about telling those little social lies we tell for our own convenience, such as telling someone you have another appointment when you don't want to go out some evening. I don't have much occasion to do that, but I guess I am as prone to it as almost anyone is. Although I am apt to call someone up and say, "Gee, I meant to call you yesterday but I forgot." I probably shouldn't say that. I should say that I was busy all day long.

Kurtz: These are not great moral dilemmas. Have you never been tested or challenged morally? You are a man of great courage, but perhaps you are old enough that you don't have to worry.

Asimov: There's no such thing as not having to worry. I suppose that if people wanted to make a big fuss about my atheism it could conceivably reflect itself in the sales of my books so that my economic security would suffer. I figure, what the hell! There is a certain amount of insistence inside me to prevent me from bartering my feelings, opinions, or views for the sake of a few extra dollars.

Kurtz: So you have the courage of your convictions?

Asimov: I suppose so, or it may be just a desire to avoid the unpleasantness of shame! Unfortunately, many people define wickedness not according to what a person does but according to what a person believes. So an atheist who lives an upright and noble life, let us say, is nevertheless considered wicked. Indeed, a religious believer might argue that an upright and noble atheist is far more wicked than an atheist who happens to be a murderer or a crook.

Kurtz: Is this because the atheist lacks faith in God, and that is considered the ultimate "sin"?

Asimov: Yes. The atheist who is a murderer or a crook gives a bad example for atheism and persuades everyone else not to be atheistic. But a noble and upright atheist, so the believer fears, causes people to doubt the existence of God by the mere fact that a person who does not believe in God can still be upright and noble. Religious believers might argue that way, but I think that is a horrible perversion of thought and of morality.