I've met a number of
atheists over the years who claim they only believe what can be shown
to be true by science. The evidence must be peer reviewed. They
discount all other evidence. When challenged by the historical
evidence for Jesus being better than that of Tiberius Caesar they
declare that history is untrustworthy so they don't believe in Jesus
and they don't believe in Caesar.
This position is
obviously extreme and it represents only a tiny minority of atheists
but it does reflect our current cultlure: Science is Top Dog.
Science is the best way of determining the truth. Science trumps
history.
But I think that this
just isn't so. I think Science = History.
Let me explain.
How does science work?
In an ideal world:
Science is based on
observations. To explain those observations someone creates a
hypothesis. Experiments are then devised that can falsify the
hypothesis. If the hypothesis is not falsified then increasing trust
is placed in that explanation for the data until we might say we have
a scientific theory e.g. of gravity.
Now the essence of good
science is that the experiments are repeatable; someone else can
repeat the experiment and get the same results. You can go check it
for yourself.
So far so good. I can
believe the theory is true because I can go out and test it. But
here's the catch.
Do you test it?
For gravity I do. I'm
always dropping stuff and it always falls to the ground with a
reassuring clatter.
But what about theories
of particle physics? Cosmology? Evolution?
I bet you don't.
So how do you know it
to be true?
Trust.
It's been peer
reviewed. Great. This means that some other group of scientists
have repeated the experiments and found the result to be true. This
might be true. But experiments are costly, require specialist
equipment and large amounts of time and money. And some data –
like a long running climate study - can never be repeated. So what's
more likely is that they checked that the methodology sounded
reasonable and that they too took the results on trust. And unless
someone needs to replicate the results for their own work any fraud
or error is unlikely to be discovered.
But surely a scientist
wouldn't commit fraud would they? They're committed to the pursuit of
truth...
and...
fame, research
funding, getting published, promotion, job security, a pet
theory, minimizing effort etc. ...
So ultimately when we
trust a peer review article we trust that the scientists who wrote
and reviewed are reliable. That they are reliable eyewitnesses of
the experiments they record. And on the whole that's a reasonable
assumption to make.
So that's the first
catch – or rather similarity with history. With history we have to
trust that ancient writers are accurately reporting the events of
their day. But this isn't done naively – the bias of the writer is
considered and their purpose for writing is assessed. And when
events they describe can be corroborated from other sources greater confidence is placed in their accounts. On the whole we can
decide if a source is a reliable account of an event.
Which leads us to catch
number two.
Observations require
interpretation. Just as an historian examines the data and forms a
theory as to why an event happened, the scientist's hypothesis is
ultimately an interpretation of the known observations. And more than
one interpretation can fit the known data. So which interpretation
are you going to choose? For the individual scientist that depends
on what they've been taught, the theories they have emotionally
invested in and what's currently fashionable (i.e. the ruling
paradigm). None of which may be true. In other words scientist are
biased – just like other people. But it doesn't stop there. The
scientists who peer review your work are also biased and if they
don't like your interpretation – even though it explains all the
known observations – your work may never get published. And if you're not sure of that, here are three examples where publishing against the paradigm is unlikely to suceed : climate change, evolution and the big bang.
Thus I think science
and history are similar methods of knowing: both require trusting a
source of observations and weighing up the explanatory power of any
proposed interpretation. Ultimately, a
scientific paper is an historical record of observations along with
an interpretation. Science is not the be all and end all of knowledge
as many think. It's not a statement of ultimate truth.
Science
doesn't trump history.