Why There Almost Certainly Is
No God
by Richard Dawkins
www.huffingtonpost.com/, October
23, 2006
America, founded in secularism as a beacon
of eighteenth century enlightenment, is becoming the victim of
religious politics, a circumstance that would have horrified the
Founding Fathers. The political ascendancy today values embryonic
cells over adult people. It obsesses about gay marriage, ahead
of genuinely important issues that actually make a difference
to the world. It gains crucial electoral support from a religious
constituency whose grip on reality is so tenuous that they expect
to be 'raptured' up to heaven, leaving their clothes as empty
as their minds. More extreme specimens actually long for a world
war, which they identify as the 'Armageddon' that is to presage
the Second Coming. Sam Harris, in his new short book, Letter to
a Christian Nation, hits the bull's-eye as usual:
It is, therefore, not an exaggeration
to say that if the city of New York were suddenly replaced by
a ball of fire, some significant percentage of the American population
would see a silver-lining in the subsequent mushroom cloud, as
it would suggest to them that the best thing that is ever going
to happen was about to happen: the return of Christ . . .Imagine
the consequences if any significant component of the U.S. government
actually believed that the world was about to end and that its
ending would be glorious. The fact that nearly half of the American
population apparently believes this, purely on the basis of religious
dogma, should be considered a moral and ¬intellectual emergency.
Does Bush check the Rapture Index daily,
as Reagan did his stars? We don't know, but would anyone be surprised?
My scientific colleagues have additional
reasons to declare emergency. Ignorant and absolutist attacks
on stem cell research are just the tip of an iceberg. What we
have here is nothing less than a global assault on rationality,
and the Enlightenment values that inspired the founding of this
first and greatest of secular republics. Science education - and
hence the whole future of science in this country - is under threat.
Temporarily beaten back in a Pennsylvania court, the 'breathtaking
inanity' (Judge John Jones's immortal phrase) of 'intelligent
design' continually flares up in local bush-fires. Dowsing them
is a time-consuming but important responsibility, and scientists
are finally being jolted out of their complacency. For years they
quietly got on with their science, lamentably underestimating
the creationists who, being neither competent nor interested in
science, attended to the serious political business of subverting
local school boards. Scientists, and intellectuals generally,
are now waking up to the threat from the American Taliban.
Scientists divide into two schools of
thought over the best tactics with which to face the threat. The
Neville Chamberlain 'appeasement' school focuses on the battle
for evolution. Consequently, its members identify fundamentalism
as the enemy, and they bend over backwards to appease 'moderate'
or 'sensible' religion (not a difficult task, for bishops and
theologians despise fundamentalists as much as scientists do).
Scientists of the Winston Churchill school, by contrast, see the
fight for evolution as only one battle in a larger war: a looming
war between supernaturalism on the one side and rationality on
the other. For them, bishops and theologians belong with creationists
in the supernatural camp, and are not to be appeased.
The Chamberlain school accuses Churchillians
of rocking the boat to the point of muddying the waters. The philosopher
of science Michael Ruse wrote:
We who love science must realize that
the enemy of our enemies is our friend. Too often evolutionists
spend time insulting would-be allies. This is especially true
of secular evolutionists. Atheists spend more time running down
sympathetic Christians than they do countering ¬creationists.
When John Paul II wrote a letter endorsing Darwinism, Richard
Dawkins's response was simply that the pope was a hypocrite, that
he could not be genuine about science and that Dawkins himself
simply preferred an honest fundamentalist.
A recent article in the New York Times
by Cornelia Dean quotes the astronomer Owen Gingerich as saying
that, by simultaneously advocating evolution and atheism, 'Dr
Dawkins "probably single-handedly makes more converts to
intelligent design than any of the leading intelligent design
theorists".' This is not the first, not the second, not even
the third time this plonkingly witless point has been made (and
more than one reply has aptly cited Uncle Remus: "Oh please
please Brer Fox, don't throw me in that awful briar patch").
Chamberlainites are apt to quote the late
Stephen Jay Gould's 'NOMA' - 'non-overlapping magisteria'. Gould
claimed that science and true religion never come into conflict
because they exist in completely separate dimensions of discourse:
To say it for all my colleagues and for
the umpteenth millionth time (from college bull sessions to learned
treatises): science simply cannot (by its legitimate methods)
adjudicate the issue of God's possible superintendence of nature.
We neither affirm nor deny it; we simply can't comment on it as
scientists.
This sounds terrific, right up until you
give it a moment's thought. You then realize that the presence
of a creative deity in the universe is clearly a scientific hypothesis.
Indeed, it is hard to imagine a more momentous hypothesis in all
of science. A universe with a god would be a completely different
kind of universe from one without, and it would be a scientific
difference. God could clinch the matter in his favour at any moment
by staging a spectacular demonstration of his powers, one that
would satisfy the exacting standards of science. Even the infamous
Templeton Foundation recognized that God is a scientific hypothesis
- by funding double-blind trials to test whether remote prayer
would speed the recovery of heart patients. It didn't, of course,
although a control group who knew they had been prayed for tended
to get worse (how about a class action suit against the Templeton
Foundation?) Despite such well-financed efforts, no evidence for
God's existence has yet appeared.
To see the disingenuous hypocrisy of religious
people who embrace NOMA, imagine that forensic archeologists,
by some unlikely set of circumstances, discovered DNA evidence
demonstrating that Jesus was born of a virgin mother and had no
father. If NOMA enthusiasts were sincere, they should dismiss
the archeologists' DNA out of hand: "Irrelevant. Scientific
evidence has no bearing on theological questions. Wrong magisterium."
Does anyone seriously imagine that they would say anything remotely
like that? You can bet your boots that not just the fundamentalists
but every professor of theology and every bishop in the land would
trumpet the archeological evidence to the skies.
Either Jesus had a father or he didn't.
The question is a scientific one, and scientific evidence, if
any were available, would be used to settle it. The same is true
of any miracle - and the deliberate and intentional creation of
the universe would have to have been the mother and father of
all miracles. Either it happened or it didn't. It is a fact, one
way or the other, and in our state of uncertainty we can put a
probability on it - an estimate that may change as more information
comes in. Humanity's best estimate of the probability of divine
creation dropped steeply in 1859 when The Origin of Species was
published, and it has declined steadily during the subsequent
decades, as evolution consolidated itself from plausible theory
in the nineteenth century to established fact today.
The Chamberlain tactic of snuggling up
to 'sensible' religion, in order to present a united front against
('intelligent design') creationists, is fine if your central concern
is the battle for evolution. That is a valid central concern,
and I salute those who press it, such as Eugenie Scott in Evolution
versus Creationism. But if you are concerned with the stupendous
scientific question of whether the universe was created by a supernatural
intelligence or not, the lines are drawn completely differently.
On this larger issue, fundamentalists are united with 'moderate'
religion on one side, and I find myself on the other.
Of course, this all presupposes that the
God we are talking about is a personal intelligence such as Yahweh,
Allah, Baal, Wotan, Zeus or Lord Krishna. If, by 'God', you mean
love, nature, goodness, the universe, the laws of physics, the
spirit of humanity, or Planck's constant, none of the above applies.
An American student asked her professor whether he had a view
about me. 'Sure,' he replied. 'He's positive science is incompatible
with religion, but he waxes ecstatic about nature and the universe.
To me, that is ¬religion!' Well, if that's what you choose
to mean by religion, fine, that makes me a religious man. But
if your God is a being who designs universes, listens to prayers,
forgives sins, wreaks miracles, reads your thoughts, cares about
your welfare and raises you from the dead, you are unlikely to
be satisfied. As the distinguished American physicist Steven Weinberg
said, "If you want to say that 'God is energy,' then you
can find God in a lump of coal." But don't expect congregations
to flock to your church.
When Einstein said 'Did God have a choice
in creating the Universe?' he meant 'Could the universe have begun
in more than one way?' 'God does not play dice' was Einstein's
poetic way of doubting Heisenberg's indeterminacy principle. Einstein
was famously irritated when theists misunderstood him to mean
a personal God. But what did he expect? The hunger to misunderstand
should have been palpable to him. 'Religious' physicists usually
turn out to be so only in the Einsteinian sense: they are atheists
of a poetic disposition. So am I. But, given the widespread yearning
for that great misunderstanding, deliberately to confuse Einsteinian
pantheism with supernatural religion is an act of intellectual
high treason.
Accepting, then, that the God Hypothesis
is a proper scientific hypothesis whose truth or falsehood is
hidden from us only by lack of evidence, what should be our best
estimate of the probability that God exists, given the evidence
now available? Pretty low I think, and here's why.
First, most of the traditional arguments
for God's existence, from Aquinas on, are easily demolished. Several
of them, such as the First Cause argument, work by setting up
an infinite regress which God is wheeled out to terminate. But
we are never told why God is magically able to terminate regresses
while needing no explanation himself. To be sure, we do need some
kind of explanation for the origin of all things. Physicists and
cosmologists are hard at work on the problem. But whatever the
answer - a random quantum fluctuation or a Hawking/Penrose singularity
or whatever we end up calling it - it will be simple. Complex,
statistically improbable things, by definition, don't just happen;
they demand an explanation in their own right. They are impotent
to terminate regresses, in a way that simple things are not. The
first cause cannot have been an intelligence - let alone an intelligence
that answers prayers and enjoys being worshipped. Intelligent,
creative, complex, statistically improbable things come late into
the universe, as the product of evolution or some other process
of gradual escalation from simple beginnings. They come late into
the universe and therefore cannot be responsible for designing
it.
Another of Aquinas' efforts, the Argument
from Degree, is worth spelling out, for it epitomises the characteristic
flabbiness of theological reasoning. We notice degrees of, say,
goodness or temperature, and we measure them, Aquinas said, by
reference to a maximum:
Now the maximum in any genus is the cause
of all in that genus, as fire, which is the maximum of heat, is
the cause of all hot things . . . Therefore, there must also be
something which is to all beings the cause of their being, goodness,
and every other perfection; and this we call God.
That's an argument? You might as well
say that people vary in smelliness but we can make the judgment
only by reference to a perfect maximum of conceivable smelliness.
Therefore there must exist a pre-eminently peerless stinker, and
we call him God. Or substitute any dimension of comparison you
like, and derive an equivalently fatuous conclusion. That's theology.
The only one of the traditional arguments
for God that is widely used today is the teleological argument,
sometimes called the Argument from Design although - since the
name begs the question of its validity - it should better be called
the Argument for Design. It is the familiar 'watchmaker' argument,
which is surely one of the most superficially plausible bad arguments
ever discovered - and it is rediscovered by just about everybody
until they are taught the logical fallacy and Darwin's brilliant
alternative.
In the familiar world of human artifacts,
complicated things that look designed are designed. To naïve
observers, it seems to follow that similarly complicated things
in the natural world that look designed - things like eyes and
hearts - are designed too. It isn't just an argument by analogy.
There is a semblance of statistical reasoning here too - fallacious,
but carrying an illusion of plausibility. If you randomly scramble
the fragments of an eye or a leg or a heart a million times, you'd
be lucky to hit even one combination that could see, walk or pump.
This demonstrates that such devices could not have been put together
by chance. And of course, no sensible scientist ever said they
could. Lamentably, the scientific education of most British and
American students omits all mention of Darwinism, and therefore
the only alternative to chance that most people can imagine is
design.
Even before Darwin's time, the illogicality
was glaring: how could it ever have been a good idea to postulate,
in explanation for the existence of improbable things, a designer
who would have to be even more improbable? The entire argument
is a logical non-starter, as David Hume realized before Darwin
was born. What Hume didn't know was the supremely elegant alternative
to both chance and design that Darwin was to give us. Natural
selection is so stunningly powerful and elegant, it not only explains
the whole of life, it raises our consciousness and boosts our
confidence in science's future ability to explain everything else.
Natural selection is not just an alternative
to chance. It is the only ultimate alternative ever suggested.
Design is a workable explanation for organized complexity only
in the short term. It is not an ultimate explanation, because
designers themselves demand an explanation. If, as Francis Crick
and Leslie Orgel once playfully speculated, life on this planet
was deliberately seeded by a payload of bacteria in the nose cone
of a rocket, we still need an explanation for the intelligent
aliens who dispatched the rocket. Ultimately they must have evolved
by gradual degrees from simpler beginnings. Only evolution, or
some kind of gradualistic 'crane' (to use Daniel Dennett's neat
term), is capable of terminating the regress. Natural selection
is an anti-chance process, which gradually builds up complexity,
step by tiny step. The end product of this ratcheting process
is an eye, or a heart, or a brain - a device whose improbable
complexity is utterly baffling until you spot the gentle ramp
that leads up to it.
Whether my conjecture is right that evolution
is the only explanation for life in the universe, there is no
doubt that it is the explanation for life on this planet. Evolution
is a fact, and it is among the more secure facts known to science.
But it had to get started somehow. Natural selection cannot work
its wonders until certain minimal conditions are in place, of
which the most important is an accurate system of replication
- DNA, or something that works like DNA.
The origin of life on this planet - which
means the origin of the first self-replicating molecule - is hard
to study, because it (probably) only happened once, 4 billion
years ago and under very different conditions from those with
which we are familiar. We may never know how it happened. Unlike
the ordinary evolutionary events that followed, it must have been
a genuinely very improbable - in the sense of unpredictable -
event: too improbable, perhaps, for chemists to reproduce it in
the laboratory or even devise a plausible theory for what happened.
This weirdly paradoxical conclusion - that a chemical account
of the origin of life, in order to be plausible, has to be implausible
- would follow if it were the case that life is extremely rare
in the universe. And indeed we have never encountered any hint
of extraterrestrial life, not even by radio - the circumstance
that prompted Enrico Fermi's cry: "Where is everybody?"
Suppose life's origin on a planet took
place through a hugely improbable stroke of luck, so improbable
that it happens on only one in a billion planets. The National
Science Foundation would laugh at any chemist whose proposed research
had only a one in a hundred chance of succeeding, let alone one
in a billion. Yet, given that there are at least a billion billion
planets in the universe, even such absurdly low odds as these
will yield life on a billion planets. And - this is where the
famous anthropic principle comes in - Earth has to be one of them,
because here we are.
If you set out in a spaceship to find
the one planet in the galaxy that has life, the odds against your
finding it would be so great that the task would be indistinguishable,
in practice, from impossible. But if you are alive (as you manifestly
are if you are about to step into a spaceship) you needn't bother
to go looking for that one planet because, by definition, you
are already standing on it. The anthropic principle really is
rather elegant. By the way, I don't actually think the origin
of life was as improbable as all that. I think the galaxy has
plenty of islands of life dotted about, even if the islands are
too spaced out for any one to hope for a meeting with any other.
My point is only that, given the number of planets in the universe,
the origin of life could in theory be as lucky as a blindfolded
golfer scoring a hole in one. The beauty of the anthropic principle
is that, even in the teeth of such stupefying odds against, it
still gives us a perfectly satisfying explanation for life's presence
on our own planet.
The anthropic principle is usually applied
not to planets but to universes. Physicists have suggested that
the laws and constants of physics are too good - as if the universe
were set up to favour our eventual evolution. It is as though
there were, say, half a dozen dials representing the major constants
of physics. Each of the dials could in principle be tuned to any
of a wide range of values. Almost all of these knob-twiddlings
would yield a universe in which life would be impossible. Some
universes would fizzle out within the first picosecond. Others
would contain no elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. In
yet others, matter would never condense into stars (and you need
stars in order to forge the elements of chemistry and hence life).
You can estimate the very low odds against the six knobs all just
happening to be correctly tuned, and conclude that a divine knob-twiddler
must have been at work. But, as we have already seen, that explanation
is vacuous because it begs the biggest question of all. The divine
knob twiddler would himself have to have been at least as improbable
as the settings of his knobs.
Again, the anthropic principle delivers
its devastatingly neat solution. Physicists already have reason
to suspect that our universe - everything we can see - is only
one universe among perhaps billions. Some theorists postulate
a multiverse of foam, where the universe we know is just one bubble.
Each bubble has its own laws and constants. Our familiar laws
of physics are parochial bylaws. Of all the universes in the foam,
only a minority has what it takes to generate life. And, with
anthropic hindsight, we obviously have to be sitting in a member
of that minority, because, well, here we are, aren't we? As physicists
have said, it is no accident that we see stars in our sky, for
a universe without stars would also lack the chemical elements
necessary for life. There may be universes whose skies have no
stars: but they also have no inhabitants to notice the lack. Similarly,
it is no accident that we see a rich diversity of living species:
for an evolutionary process that is capable of yielding a species
that can see things and reflect on them cannot help producing
lots of other species at the same time. The reflective species
must be surrounded by an ecosystem, as it must be surrounded by
stars.
The anthropic principle entitles us to
postulate a massive dose of luck in accounting for the existence
of life on our planet. But there are limits. We are allowed one
stroke of luck for the origin of evolution, and perhaps for a
couple of other unique events like the origin of the eukaryotic
cell and the origin of consciousness. But that's the end of our
entitlement to large-scale luck. We emphatically cannot invoke
major strokes of luck to account for the illusion of design that
glows from each of the billion species of living creature that
have ever lived on Earth. The evolution of life is a general and
continuing process, producing essentially the same result in all
species, however different the details.
Contrary to what is sometimes alleged,
evolution is a predictive science. If you pick any hitherto unstudied
species and subject it to minute scrutiny, any evolutionist will
confidently predict that each individual will be observed to do
everything in its power, in the particular way of the species
- plant, herbivore, carnivore, nectivore or whatever it is - to
survive and propagate the DNA that rides inside it. We won't be
around long enough to test the prediction but we can say, with
great confidence, that if a comet strikes Earth and wipes out
the mammals, a new fauna will rise to fill their shoes, just as
the mammals filled those of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
And the range of parts played by the new cast of life's drama
will be similar in broad outline, though not in detail, to the
roles played by the mammals, and the dinosaurs before them, and
the mammal-like reptiles before the dinosaurs. The same rules
are predictably being followed, in millions of species all over
the globe, and for hundreds of millions of years. Such a general
observation requires an entirely different explanatory principle
from the anthropic principle that explains one-off events like
the origin of life, or the origin of the universe, by luck. That
entirely different principle is natural selection.
We explain our existence by a combination
of the anthropic principle and Darwin's principle of natural selection.
That combination provides a complete and deeply satisfying explanation
for everything that we see and know. Not only is the god hypothesis
unnecessary. It is spectacularly unparsimonious. Not only do we
need no God to explain the universe and life. God stands out in
the universe as the most glaring of all superfluous sore thumbs.
We cannot, of course, disprove God, just as we can't disprove
Thor, fairies, leprechauns and the Flying Spaghetti Monster. But,
like those other fantasies that we can't disprove, we can say
that God is very very improbable.
Richard Dawkins is the Charles Simonyi
Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.
He is a Fellow of the Royal Society, and the author of nine books,
including The Selfish Gene, The Blind Watchmaker and The Ancestor's
Tale. His new book, The God Delusion, published last week by Houghton
Mifflin, is already a NEW YORK TIMES bestseller, and his Foundation
for Reason and Science launched at the same time (see RichardDawkins.net).
Richard
Dawkins page
Home Page