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[Date Prev][Date Next][Index] Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest, May 22, 2000
Visit the CSICOP and Skeptical Inquirer Magazine website at http://www.csicop.org. Receiving over 200,000 hits per year, the CSICOP site was rated one of the top ten science sites by HOMEPC magazine. Send comments regarding SI DIGEST to editors Matt Nisbet at mcn23@cornell.edu and Barry Karr at skeptinq@aol.com. --JOHN ALLAN PAULOS: Miracle? A Question of Science and Faith --NEW YORK TIMES WEEK IN REVIEW: More on the Third Secret of Fatima --NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The Return of Ram Dass --US NEWS & WORLD REPORT: Q&A with Robert Park, Author of "Voodoo Science" JOHN ALLAN PAULOS: MIRACLE? A QUESTION OF SCIENCE AND FAITH The following op-ed appeared in the Philadelphia Daily News, May 15th, 2000. It appears here by permission of the author. Miracle? A question of science and faith Miracles? Miracles here, there and everywhere. Popular discussions of miracles have recently appeared in Time and Newsweek, in newspapers and periodicals of all types, on TV and radio, and in movies such as the Philadelphia-based "The Sixth Sense." A more significant local example is the case of Katharine Drexel. A Philadelphia heiress, nun and social worker who died in 1955, Mother Drexel is nearing the end of the long process whereby a person is canonized a saint. The process hinged upon the recent official certification of two posthumous miracles attributed to her. That Mother Drexel was an admirable, compassionate and selfless woman who divested herself of her considerable fortune and made the world a better place, I have no doubt. It's with the general notion of miracles that I have difficulty. What does the word mean? If a miracle is simply a very unlikely event, then miracles occur every day. Just ask any lottery winner. But if a miracle is some sort of divine intervention, some questions come naturally to mind. Why, for example, is the rescuing of a few children after an earthquake often called a miracle when the death of perhaps hundreds of equally innocent children in the same disaster is laid to a geophysical fault line? It would seem both are the result of divine intervention or both are a consequence of the earth's plates shifting. The same point holds for other tragedies. If a recovery from a disease is a considered a miraculous case of divine intervention, to what do we attribute the contracting of the disease? Nobody except the most benighted maintains that AIDS is some sort of divine retribution. In the Mother Drexel case, two hearing-impaired children prayed (or their parents prayed) to Mother Drexel years after she died, and they soon enjoyed spontaneous and unexplained recoveries. But such recoveries do sometimes occur, as do the more common spontaneous and unexplained deteriorations. Not knowing what causes them in every case does not mean they're instances of divine intervention. In fact, scientists frequently are unable to ascribe a specific cause to either the contracting of a disease or a recovery from it. Statistical tests and clinical trials conducted not on one or two people but on large samples of people are sometimes insufficient to determine causes. If someone really wanted to search for a causal connection between prayers and cures, he or she would need to examine a very large number of cases, set time limits on cures, survey the prayers and the person or entity to whom they're directed, compare recovery rates of those who pray with those who don't, and guard against self-deception and wish-fulfillment. Another problem with proclaiming a miracle was noted a long time ago by David Hume, the 18th-century Scottish philosopher. Whatever evidence exists that a certain phenomenon miraculously violates a scientific law is evidence as well that the scientific law in question is flawed or irrelevant. If before Alexander Graham Bell, for example, someone heard the voice of a friend who was hundreds of miles away, the evidence for this "miraculous" event would also be evidence that the physical laws that the event seems to violate (regarding how fast sound travels, let's say) are wrong or don't apply. It's become somewhat trendy to say that religion and science are growing together and are no longer incompatible in any way, but are simply concerned with different realms. Religion, we're told, deals with faith and science with facts. The Templeton Foundation, a local philanthropy located in Radnor, makes a large annual award to whoever has made the greatest contribution to furthering this harmony between religion and science. Harmony is difficult to oppose, but I don't believe that any attempt to homogenize these very disparate bodies of ideas can succeed. In many (but not all) ways, they remain quite distinct and reflect quite different mindsets. Since getting people to change their minds about these matters usually calls for a miracle (in the sense of being extremely unlikely), I'll stop right here. Well, not quite. We can all be glad that, whatever the cause, the two children who prayed to Mother Drexel have completely recovered. **John Allen Paulos, a mathematics professor at Temple University, is the author of "Once Upon a Number." He is an advisory member of the Daily News Editorial Board. NY TIMES WEEK IN REVIEW: MORE ON THE THIRD SECRET OF THE FATIMA May 21, 2000 REVELATIONS The Third Secret Raises More Questions By ALESSANDRA STANLEY For the full article, go to http://www.nytimes.com/library/review/052100vatican-secret.html [ROME -- The Vatican's belated disclosure of the third secret of Fatima last week was a little like the F.B.I. announcing that Elvis is, in fact, dead. The revelation that the long-suppressed prophecy contained a vision of something that has already come to pass, the 1981 assassination attempt on John Paul II, deflated decades of conspiracy theories and doomsday predictions (nowadays broadcast on dozens of Fatima Web sites). Most third-secret devotees were skeptical. Fatima, revered by Roman Catholics as a place where the Virgin Mary appeared to three Portuguese shepherd children in 1917, has long held a broader fascination for people attracted to unsolved, spooky mysteries....] NY TIMES MAGAZINE: THE RETURN OF RAM DASS The Dass Effect After a near-fatal stroke, the spiritual leader Ram Dass is back -- this time guiding baby boomers to the enlightenment of age. By SARA DAVIDSON Sunday, May 21, 2000 For the full article, go to http://www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/home/20000521mag-ramdass.html [A full moon was rising on a windy winter night three years ago when Ram Dass was lying in bed in San Anselmo, Calif., trying to fix a book he was writing on aging and dying. He was 65, his hair had turned white and he had spent hundreds of hours working with people who were severely ill. He had completed a draft of the book, "Still Here" (to be published by Riverhead this month), but on that same day in 1997, his editor, Amy Hertz, had sent the draft back to him. She said it was "too glib -- funny and interesting but not really getting to the heart of the matter."...] US NEWS AND WORLD REPORT: Q&A WITH ROBERT PARK, AUTHOR OF "VOODOO SCIENCE" News You Can Use 5/8/00 How bad science can be hazardous to your health By Avery Comarow For the full text of the article, go to http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/000508/nycu/park.htm . [Sales of Voodoo Science (Oxford University Press, $25) could wind up being less than author Robert Park might like. On May 5, if Web postings based on a doomsday book are to be believed, the world will end, swamped by tidal waves and torn to pieces, when the Earth, moon, sun, and five planets line up. It's the kind of pseudoscience that Park, a physics professor at the University of Maryland, takes on in his book, which will be published this month....] -------------------------------- SI Electronic Digest is the biweekly e-mail news update of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP.) Visit http://www.csicop.org/. Rated one of the Top Ten Science sites on the Web by HOMEPC magazine. The Digest is written and edited by Matthew Nisbet and Barry Karr. SI Digest is distributed directly via e-mail to over 4000 readers worldwide, and is sent from CSICOP headquarters at the Center for Inquiry-International, Amherst NY, USA. To subscribe for free to the SI DIGEST, go to: http://www.csicop.org/list/ PERMISSION IS GRANTED TO REPRINT OR REPOST ON THE WEB. WE ENCOURAGE TRANSLATION INTO OTHER LANGUAGES. PLEASE FORWARD TO YOUR FRIENDS. Direct media inquiries regarding Skeptical Inquirer and CSICOP to Kevin Christopher at 716-636-1425 or SIKevinc@aol.com. CSICOP publishes the bimonthly SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, The Magazine for Science and Reason. To subscribe at the $18.95 introductory Internet price, go to: http://www.csicop.org/si/subscribe/ --30--
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