What’s the difference between reason and proof?

Tuesday, October 14, 2008faith and reason

Remember all those science projects you suffered though in grade school, with the hypotheses, the experiments, the measurements and the results? That’s the scientific method. It’s how we build our repository of knowledge about the world and it’s the best thing we have going to establish the physical nature of reality. But it’s pretty clear that we’re not going to be able to take such an approach to much of what we experience in life; the level of scope and complexity is too great. We will never be able to set up an experiment to tell us what college to attend, or how to raise our children, or what career to pursue, or why we love Venice, or what music is really about, or whether God exists. The fact is, we live in a hugely complex world in which proof can only take us so far. Yet we obviously can and do think rigorously about these complicated experiences, even if they are not suited to experimental verification.

How do we reason about complicated things? In many ways. We gather information, we check facts, we recognize patterns, we make connections, we abstract, we draw diagrams, we map patterns to one another, we deconstruct by creating a new context by which to see things, we name, describe, we categorize (e.g., think about how much of biology is categorization into genus and species), we make judgments. We answer the question, “what just happened” or “what did I just see,” specifying the experience in words and creating the inputs for logic. We do what scientists do prior to the experiment, when they exercise scientific insight to figure out how to set up the experiment in the first place. In fact, it is in this intellectual space of pattern recognition and analysis that we live most of our lives; it is in this space that we run our businesses, raise our families, govern ourselves, produce our music and our art, and think about the sacred. It is not unusual in our culture to conflate reason with proof, but proof is just one of the tools in the kit.

While it’s not sensible to expect that faith will be amenable to scientific proof, it can be thought about, and thought about rigorously, using all the intellectual tools we have for thinking about complicated things. Just ignoring the contradictions we find in so much religious experience won’t do. Faith is not some subjective preference, like whether you like red wine or white wine; it is a reflection of our most basic understanding of the nature of reality. Faith, as much as science, is a way to gain insight into the world, just at a higher level of context and complexity. Therefore to engage it with anything less than full intellectual rigor is, well, illogical. Between the sloppiness of fundamentalism and the cluelessness of relativism lies the rational apprehension of reality, which includes an engagement with the phenomenon of the sacred. 

 

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