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Faces
of Virtue
Can Science Survive Without Virtue?
by
Donald DeMarco
Michael Polanyi changed his career
path from science to philosophy so that, paradoxically, he
could help protect science from being absorbed into a narrow
ideology. In his 1962 Terry Lectures at Yale University, he
recounts a conversation he had with Nikolai Bukharin in 1935.
At that time, Bukharin, whom Lenin called, “The Golden
Boy” of the party, was a leading theoretician for the
Communist party. When Polanyi asked him about the pursuit
of pure science in Soviet Russia, Bukharin protested that
pure science was a morbid symptom of a class society. He declared
that, under socialism, science would spontaneously limit itself
to serving the current Five-Year Plan.
Polanyi was stunned by the barefaced admission that a social
order—Russian communism—based as it was on the
Marxist contention that it was “scientific,” was
incompatible with the spirit of science that provided its
foundation. Such an admission is tantamount to denying that
one ever had parents. Moreover, for the Soviets, science was
not an open inquiry delving into the truth of things, but
merely a tool used to implement a political plan. In Polanyi’s
appraisal, there was “no place left for truth.”
With the suppression of freedom of thought came the suppression
of the freedom to pursue truth.
Soviet Russia under Stalin, the Third Reich under Hitler,
and China under Mao Tse-tung are three of the more notorious
examples of science being reduced to an ideological serving
spoon. There is evidence all around us, however, in our own
moment in history that points to an unfortunate recurrence
of this ominous condition.
Science Separated from Truth
Christianity has consistently, clearly, and courageously
emphasized the uncompromisable nature of truth. In fact, Christianity
had a decisive impact on the development of science. Alfred
North Whitehead, who is not a Christian, fully recognizes
the indispensable role Christian thought had on the free spirit
of inquiry that led to the development of modern science.
In his classic study, Science and the Modern World,
he concludes “that the faith in the possibility of science,
generated antecedently to the development of modern scientific
theory, is an unconscious derivative from medieval theology.”
What happens to science when Christianity, the world’s
strongest advocate for truth, is not taken seriously? The
surrounding evidence provides us with the answer. Science
is discouraged from stating a number of inconvenient truths:
The human nature of the human embryo is an inconvenient reality
for abortionists. The link between abortion and breast cancer,
divorce and juvenile delinquency, sexual promiscuity and disease
are incompatible with the feminist ideology of choice. Since
Darwin has become dogma, a free inquiry into the possibility
of intelligent design is now politically incorrect. Citing
the connection between certain homosexual practices and virulent
diseases is now considered an act of discrimination. The list
goes on.
The post-Christian world is one in which truth is suppressed
in order to allow an ideology to reign. The problem, however,
is not so widespread that no voices for truth can be heard.
After all, knowing the truth, especially about ourselves,
represents incalculable potential benefits. It is deeply prejudicial
to dismiss Christians as merely people of faith. Nor is it
fair to the current pope to lock him up in a faith box. Benedict
XVI has recently reminded the world that “reason is
God’s great gift to man, and the victory of reason over
unreason is also a goal of the Christian life” (Spe
Salvi, no. 23).
Ideologies are necessarily narrow and confining. They do
not serve the full needs of the human being, who, by nature,
is not meant to subserve a political agenda. Moreover, they
usually do not last very long. Poor Bukharin, who tried so
hard to be politically correct under Lenin (he even married
Lenin’s sister), was executed by Stalin in a house purge
in 1938.
Truth and Love
Christians, walking in the footsteps of Polanyi, can help
prevent the narrowing of science. But in addition to their
unswerving allegiance to truth, Christians are also committed
to love. Far from being blind, love follows the path illuminated
by truth. And it is precisely because ideologies smother truth
that they also inhibit love. For how does one love realistically
in the absence of clear knowledge?
Science will not survive as a mode of free inquiry in the
post-Christian world if Christians remain silent and do not
speak out strongly in behalf of the unalterable nature of
truth. They need to be witnesses to the “inconvenient
truth” that being a Christian actually intensifies one’s
commitment to truth and, consequently, to the freedom of the
mind that science needs. In the words of Professor Peter Hodgson,
who is both a scientist and a Christian, “The advancement
of scientific knowledge is our first duty as scientists and
no consideration of possible applications should deflect from
this aim.”
Donald
DeMarco is professor emeritus of philosophy at St.
Jerome’s University in Waterloo, Ontario. He also teaches
at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Cromwell, Connecticut,
and continues to work as a corresponding member of the Pontifical
Academy for Life.
His book Architects of the Culture of Death was released
in April of 2004. He is also the author of The Many Faces
of Virtue, which is a collection of favorite Lay
Witness columns.
To
order The Many Faces of Virtue, visit Emmaus Road
Publishing online at www.emmausroad.org.
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