Naturalism is the view that every law and every force operating in the universe is natural rather than moral, spiritual, or supernatural. Naturalism is inherently anti-theistic, rejecting the very concept of a personal God. Many assume naturalism therefore has nothing to do with religion. In fact, it is a common misconception that naturalism embodies the very essence of scientific objectivity. Naturalists themselves like to portray their system as a philosophy that stands in opposition to all faith-based world-views, pretending that it is scientifically and intellectually superior precisely because of its supposed non-religious character.
Not so. Religion is exactly the right word to describe
naturalism. The entire philosophy is built on a faith-based premise. Its
basic presupposition--an a priori rejection of everything
supernatural--requires a giant leap of faith. And nearly all its
supporting theories must be taken by faith as well. (See below.)Consider the dogma of evolution, for example. The notion that natural evolutionary processes can account for the origin of all living species has never been and never will be established as fact. Nor is it "scientific" in any true sense of the word. Science deals with what can be observed and reproduced by experimentation. The origin of life can be neither observed nor reproduced in any laboratory. By definition, then, true science can give us no knowledge whatsoever about where we came from or how we got here. Belief in evolutionary theory is a matter of sheer faith. And dogmatic belief in any naturalistic theory is no more "scientific" than any other kind of religious faith.
Michael
Ruse is an evolutionist who testified in the 1980s at the infamous
Arkansas creationism trial (McLean v. Arkansas). During the trial, he
claimed that creationism is a religion because it is grounded in
unproven philosophical assumptions. But Darwinism is a science, he said,
because it requires no philosophical or religious presuppositions. Ruse
has since admitted that he was wrong, and he now acknowledges that
evolution "is metaphysically based"--grounded in unproven beliefs that
are no more "scientific" than the set of beliefs on which creationism is
based. See Tom Woodward, "Ruse Gives Away the Store: Admits Evolution Is a Philosophy" on the "Origins" Web site. |
Michael
Ruse is an evolutionist who testified in the 1980s at the infamous
Arkansas creationism trial (McLean v. Arkansas). During the trial, he
claimed that creationism is a religion because it is grounded in
unproven philosophical assumptions. But Darwinism is a science, he said,
because it requires no philosophical or religious presuppositions. Ruse
has since admitted that he was wrong, and he now acknowledges that
evolution "is metaphysically based"--grounded in unproven beliefs that
are no more "scientific" than the set of beliefs on which creationism is
based. See Tom Woodward, "Ruse Gives Away the Store: Admits Evolution Is a Philosophy" on the "Origins" Web site.
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