
How Scientific is Torah?
By Tzvi Freeman
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Question:
So we hear all the time about how Torah and science don't really
contradict. But can you give me at least one or two examples where they actually
coincide?
Answer:
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The most outstanding example:
For millennia, we were ridiculed for believing
the world began. Only in the latter half of the 20th century did the evidence come out overwhelmingly on our side. As Dr. Arno Penzias (one of the three who received a Nobel Prize for identifying the "background radiation" that became one of the pillars
of the current Big Bang cosmology) writes, "science has finally vindicated Moses and Maimonides over Aristotle."1
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Abraham was a maverick for believing that
all the forces of the cosmos are really a single force. This is the contention
of science for the past 100 years and the driving force behind the search for
the Unified Field Theory.2
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The Torah's account of Creation
and of events that defy the laws of physics -- and even defy logic -- implies that the laws of logic are not absolute --
i.e. it is not impossible for those laws to have been created otherwise, and
even now, the Creator could adjust them or supersede them at whim. An inkling of
this kind of thinking opened the way for modern mathematics, breaking away from
the Euclidian view that the axioms of geometry are absolute "self evident
truths," and laying the ground for Einstein's relativity. Indeed, later
attempts to demonstrate that mathematics is based on logic have all failed.
Thinkers today question the absoluteness of logic itself.3
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Torah, by presenting the concept
of Divine Providence within nature, requires
a universe that is only loosely linear, rejecting the determinist concept that
cause and effect are inherently linked. This is an outcome of the Principle of
Uncertainty, first enunciated by Heisenberg in 1928.4 Over the past 30 years,
experimentation has repeatedly affirmed this concept.
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Torah does not talk in terms
of matter as a self-contained substance, but as
an event, a 'word'. Today we understand matter as simply a dynamic of
concentrated energy, as in the familiar formula E=mc2. Or, in physicist David
Bohm's definition, "That which unfolds, whatever the medium."5
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Torah relies on witnesses and observation
over intuition. Today we call this objective empiricism. It is what
distinguishes the scientist from the Hellenist or medieval philosopher.
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Torah recognizes the role of human
consciousness as an active, rather than passive, participant in forming
reality.6 This outcome of the standard model of
quantum mechanics was first enunciated by John von Neumann in
1932.7
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Torah consistently relies on the
concept of synergy: The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
This has become an essential principle in many modern
disciplines, from sociology to chemistry.
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Torah, in many halachic applications,
relies on "quantum" -- smallest possible increments of change within space and
time. This was the postulate of Max Planck that opened the field of quantum mechanics.
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The Torah describes all of humankind as
descending from a single man and -- earlier -- a single woman.8 The overwhelming genetic evidence concurs, although
the dating is still somewhat skewed. They're still catching up.
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Torah understands the human psyche as
being multi-layered and multifaceted -- there isn't just one person inside. Welcome to modern psychology.
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Torah describes planet earth and the entire cosmos in holistic terms. Science today is moving sharply in this direction, in life sciences and in physics and
cosmology.
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Torah provides inference to many
of the customs, beliefs, politics, technologies, etc. of ancient times at which
historians once balked and archeologists have only recently confirmed.
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Torah presents and rigorously develops the chazakah: An event must occur repeatedly under identical conditions
to be considered the most likely outcome in the future (such as the case of the consistently goring ox). This is the basis of the scientific method.9
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Torah prescribes public education,
popular involvement and constitutional governance. Sociologists describe how these elements generate stability and productivity in a society.
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Torah prescribes a responsible
stewardship of our environment. Today we have
demonstrated that such an approach is the only one possible for sustainable life
on the planet.
Many of these examples may seem obvious and trite, however none of them were
accepted as such until recently. I'm sure there are more -- if you think of some,
please fire them over.
Acknowledgement is due to Dr. Moshe Genuth for his valuable suggestions and assistance with this article.
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I'm at a loss to see how you can claim any intellectual honesty and not see how you twist and distort fact to fit your claims. Not to mention sloppy language, ill-defined definitions, and a willing suspension of any critical thinking.
Where on the electromagnetic spectrum is "dynamic energy', Richard? This is the sloppy thinking on your part that just doesn't pass muster.
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Richard opined:
"Thus, when it is said, "There exists ONE who is above the 'circle of the earth' above those who are as grasshoppers"..
Richard, do you know the difference between a circle and a sphere? If you are telling me this is a literal statement of fact, then Torah is wrong; the Earth is not a two-dimensional circle. There is no "above" the Earth anymore than there is a "below"". Is God sitting on top of the North Pole, the South Pole, the Equator? See my point?
".the Bible is correct, is it not, and Mr. Columbus would have saved us a lot of time and energy with the flat-earth society peoples of the earth back then!"
No, the Bible is wrong. The Earth is not a flat circle that you can get "above".
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I seem to be following Rebbe Freeman about, but I really comment on what he declares, it's a coincidence, really~! But, to Science and Torah! The Bible and /or Torah is NOT to be viewed as a Scientific book, or an argument against Scientific thought, but, when and where the Bible (Torah) speak on a given scientific subject, it is Torah that proves to be saying the absolute truth. Thus, when it is said, "There exists ONE who is above the 'circle of the earth' above those who are as grasshoppers"...the Bible is correct, is it not, and Mr. Columbus would have saved us a lot of time and energy with the flat-earth society peoples of the earth back then! When Torah declares the that "G-d is dynamic energy...is that not true, that it took untold tons of ENERGY to create what is taken for granted. Nuclear Physicists have even adopted the "Jehovah" theory when the question was asked;"what was before the 'BIG BANG' "? On matters of science, Torah is correct, not man! So, why bother?
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