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 | The Confluence of Religion and Science By Hasan Zillur Rahim Forget Samuel Huntingtons Clash of Civilizations theory: Clash of  Religion 
and Science now occupies center stage as evolutionists and intelligent design 
proponents (IDers) bitterly contend the origin of life, spawning legal fights 
over high school biology curricula in Pennsylvania,  Religion pitted against science and vice versa has always garnered unusual media and literary attention (Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code, for instance) but we should keep the proper perspective. The Church imprisoned Galileo in the seventeenth century for daring to suggest that the earth was a mere player in the cosmic drama, and not its prima donna as theologians had thought. Two centuries later, Darwin published The Origin of Species (1859) in which he proposed that evolution and natural selection could account for the biological diversity of the living world, including us, precipitating a fierce clash between faith and reason. Muslims too experienced their share of this conflict. In the 9th century, 
advocates of reason led by the Mutazalites clashed with the dogmatic Kharajites 
and, as Muslims historians often darkly summarize, effectively closed the doors 
of ijtihad. The debateӔ between al-Ghazali 
representing tradition and mysticism and ibn Rushd representing science and 
reason in the  We have traveled a long way since then, however, and although there have been 
more ambushes and skirmishes between religion and science, there have also been 
advances in our thinking. Many of us now view the two as being complementary 
rather than contradictory. Science deals with factual aspects of the natural 
world and religion with the transcendent questions of meaning and purpose. One 
deals with the how, the other with the why. The  There will, of course, always be scientists who view religion as an albatross 
around civilization's neck, and theologians who rail at science as the new God 
that has driven meaning from life. There will always be reductionists who claim 
that life and its mysteries can all be explained by the laws of physics and 
scriptural literalists who insist that the earth is  But they are a minority. There are many more theologians representing 
different faiths, for example, who find in the theory of evolution evidence of 
God's glorious self-disclosure, and many scientists whose research leads them to 
ask the deeper questions of life why are we here, why do we suffer, what makes 
our existence meaningful - that lie outside the realm of  Intelligent design proponents say that life on earth is
֓irreducibly complex to have 
been created by random genetic mutation and, therefore, Darwin's theory must be 
balanced by the recognition of an intelligence beyond its scope. The IDers are 
coy in not directly calling this  But people of faith do not need gaps in Darwins theory to experience the 
Divine; their longing for the Divine is intrinsic and is what gives meaning to 
their lives. By the same token, the IDers should realize that theirs is not a 
scientifically-testable theory since it does not meet the criteria of 
observation, measurement, experimentation and testing. It has no place in a  It is disheartening to see dire predictions in the media about a return to the Dark Ages because of the supposedly high percentage of mindshare the IDers have captured, or religion becoming obsolete because of the dizzying successes of scientists in genetics and other fields. We can ignore these predictions. Instead, we should be thinking more creatively about how religion and science relate to, and reinforce, each other. A provocative question to consider is this: Is coexistence the last word in the relationship between religion and science, or can the two interact in mysterious and unexpected ways? If the past is prologue, then lessons from Islamic history may help frame an 
answer. From the eighth through the fifteenth centuries, Muslim scientists  In our times, this scientific-spiritual quest animates many Muslim scientists but one who stands out is the cosmologist Abd-al-Haqq Bruno Guiderdoni, a director of research at the Paris institute of astrophysics and the director of the Islamic Institute for Advanced Studies. Guiderdonis main interest is galaxy formation and evolution. Exploring the universe is, in his words, ғan act of worship. (It is remarkable how so many of the leading cosmologists of the world of different faiths are also amateur theologians!) A passionate advocate of the global dialogue between science and religion, Guiderdoni finds inspiration for his quest for truth in the Quran: In the creation of the heavens and the earth, and in the alternation of night and day, there are signs for people of understanding (3:190). An article written almost four decades ago in the IBM journal.  I think by 
physicist Charles Townes also provides insights into the evolving nature of  Townes's idea caused a renewed stir after he won the Templeton Prize for 
Progress toward Research or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities in March  But Townes also tempered his speculation: Perhaps by the time this convergence occurs, science will have been through a number of revolutions as striking as those which have occurred in the last century, and taken on a character not readily recognizable by scientists of today. Perhaps our religious understanding will also have seen progress and change. But converge they must, and through this should come new strength for both. Convergence does not mean a magical fusion of faith and reason; it means, as 
Townes implied, a symbiosis that can enrich our practical, intellectual and 
ethical lives. Such a confluence may, for instance, inspire fresh views on 
issues like stem-cell research or church-state separation and deepen our 
understanding of how love, justice, cruelty and forgiveness shape human  The unexplored region between religion and science beckons people with open minds seeking spiritual and scientific truths. Is it not possible that wildflowers of insight will bloom if this tough but promising terrain is nurtured with humor and humility? 
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