Michael Behe warns that the domination of science by materialist dogma is costing nonmaterialist students (e.g., Christians, but also anyone who believes in extramaterial force or presence in the universe) "a significant chunk of their freedom."
Behe thinks this loss of freedom is not only bad for Christians, but bad for science as well. What reasons does he give? And what do you think?
350 words minimum; due by 9 p.m. Wednesday, 8 November 2006
Materialism is the newest and single most powerful religion in our world. It has taken over mainstream culture in America. Christianity is left to function as Ba'al-worship did in ancient Jerusalem; it is frowned upon by the secular culture, and even if it is explicitly practiced, the practitioner has to at least pretend to value materialism over his Christian beliefs. When someone asserts to a non-Christian that he believes in the Christian God, it is automatically assumed that he is just a little dumber than everyone else. Despite this, the non-Christian assumes that the Christian must also be a materialist, simply because believing otherwise is social suicide.
Behe establishes that materialists limit themselves; that is, since most of us are forced by society to be obligatory materialists, both theists and atheists are restricted in their beliefs. Behe makes the claim that this restricts the sciences, forcing them to accept the theory of evolution as universal fact, even if it does not apply everywhere. This results in the same problem that the geocentric model, Newtonian physics, or extreme Puritanism posed in their time: arrogance about their theory, with little or no proof to back it up.
Materialism provides atheists with blinders with which to overlook all the natural, unexplained phenomena in our world. Even as I write this, I have an inclination to assume that all phenomena can be explained by science, given my societal indoctrination towards materialism. For instance, no one can be sure that the Big Bang occurred. All scientists are sure of is that 13.6 billion light years away from Earth, there is a spherical wall past which we cannot see, and that the universe is expanding like a cosmic muffin. This wall is where cosmic background “noise” emanates from. Looking at this paltry evidence, I am not convinced that there was a Big Bang that created the universe nearly 14 billion years ago. I do not see how anyone could really know for certain, or have any idea, how our universe came into existence.
The beliefs of Christians are also limited by materialism. Christianity only exists as long as it does not break any of the taboos of materialism. Christians are welcome to worship and believe in God, so long as they believe that He is a figment of their imaginations, insignificant, and immaterial. Christians are allowed to believe in the Bible, but only as a storybook or a moral set of instructions. “Jesus could not have risen from the dead,” materialists say, “because it is impossible. If you believe this, you are ignorant, and you obviously have no grasp on reality. You zealous hack.”