Faith in science
That phrase was coined by Leon Lederman for his book The God Particle: If The Universe Is The Answer, What Is The Question?, and it is a title Prof Higgs and many other physicists intensely dislike.
Secondly, the search for the Higgs boson was not a search to disprove the existence of any deity. Contrary to what Mr Kearney thinks, there is no great conspiracy by science to create a “workaround” to “explain the inexplicable”, or to destroy faith or disprove God.
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Hide AdIt is, frankly, not the job of science to do that. Nor is it the job of science to be the “universal panacea to all our doubts and questions”.
It is admitted we do not know everything. But then, contrary to what Mr Kearney may think, neither does religion.
Thirdly, he states that the Big Bang Theory is “simply a theory, an effort to explain how something might have come from nothing”? A scientific theory is not guesswork. It is rather an accepted, working model, proven by research.
Far from religion being compatible with science, Mr Kearney’s article reads as an attack on science, and an attempt to claim that faith alone can answer the inexplicable. It is science which has progressed mankind, while religion has only ever held us back.
Leslie John Thomson
Moredunvale Green
Edinburgh
Peter Kearney is correct that science and religion are not necessarily in conflict and time may prove this to us.
However, he is a little unfair to Prof Peter Higgs, who has been at pains to disassociate himself from the term “God particle” and who, though not a believer himself, sees no necessary conflict between religious and scientific world-views .
Indeed, anything I have read from Prof Higgs suggests a tolerant outlook, quite in contrast to the intolerance of some of Scotland’s noisy secular activists.
Gus Logan
York Road
North Berwick, East Lothian