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9 Big Questions Science Alone Can’t Answer

David Langness | Updated May 20, 2021

PART 1 IN SERIES The Spiritual Limits of Science

The views expressed in our content reflect individual perspectives and do not represent the official views of the Baha'i Faith.

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David Langness | Dec 28, 2019

PART 1 IN SERIES The Spiritual Limits of Science

The views expressed in our content reflect individual perspectives and do not represent the official views of the Baha'i Faith.

We spend a great deal of time here at BahaiTeachings.org on the basic Baha’i principle of the agreement of science and religion – but does science have all the answers? Not hardly.

Every responsible scientist readily and humbly admits that science itself does not have the answers for many of the most important human questions. Our highly scientific age, however, tempts us to think the opposite – that science can or someday will provide all the answers to life’s big questions. 

Yes, science and technology seem to solve so many of our problems, or at least offer potential future solutions. Maybe that’s why some people have turned science into their quasi-religion, seeing it as a broader belief system rather than a methodology meant for finding ways to understand the natural world. But science makes a poor belief system, because skepticism drives science. Science asks us to suspend any final judgment or strong belief, because its conclusions are always subject to revision by new discoveries. 

RELATED: How Meditation Can Help Drive Scientific Discovery

So in thinking about the big questions science can’t answer, I’ve compiled a list drawn not only from my own curiosity and research, but also from the writings of a number of prominent scientists, philosophers and thinkers. In this series of essays, we’ll explore those questions, and see if we can find answers in the Baha’i teachings that have eluded science so far.

From the beginning, I realized that these kinds of questions fit into two distinct categories: the questions science can’t answer, and those science simply hasn’t answered yet. Science is a powerful tool, and since 1833, when the word “scientist” was first coined, many people have doubted its ability to uncover the deepest secrets and truths of the material universe. For the most part, those people have been wrong. 

Science, for instance, once generally accepted the theory of eugenics – the now-completely discredited idea of “scientific racism,” a theory that humanity consists of physically discrete superior or inferior races. Popular among not only scientists but with governmental leaders and philosophers at one time, it led to Nazism’s so-called “final solution” and other genocidal atrocities. The fields of human evolutionary genetics and contemporary anthropology have not only proven eugenics completely false, but have provided a massive body of scientific evidence for the genetic oneness of all racial groups.

In astronomy, we of course have moved from once believing that the Earth functioned as the center of the known universe to the heliocentric model and then to the increasing realization that our small blue planet has absolutely no claim to singularity or uniqueness. In another famous case, Albert Einstein, who originally believed in a static universe and wrote scientific papers attempting to prove his contention, had to be convinced that the universe was actually expanding by the scientist Edwin Hubble. Einstein called his original conclusion “the greatest blunder” of his entire scientific career.

Despite its history of incorrect conclusions, science dominates modern thought – as it should. We have built an unprecedented civilization and body of knowledge, and we owe much of that to the advancements made possibly by science. In fact, the Baha’i principle of the agreement of science and religion actually privileges science over blind faith, dogma and religious tradition. The Baha’i Writings say: “There is no contradiction between true religion and science. When a religion is opposed to science it becomes mere superstition: that which is contrary to knowledge is ignorance. How can a man believe to be a fact that which science has proved to be impossible? If he believes in spite of his reason, it is rather ignorant superstition than faith. The true principles of all religions are in conformity with the teachings of science.”

The Baha’i Writings also say that “… religion and science are in complete agreement. Every religion which is not in accordance with established science is superstition. Religion must be reasonable. If it does not square with reason, it is superstition and without foundation.

RELATED: The Scientific Religion – The Baha’is

Online you’ll find literally hundreds of lists of questions science hasn’t answered yet – what is dark energy, why do cats purr, how does gravity really work, why do bicycles stay upright, how long does a proton live, etc., etc. Reviewing them, I tried to separate those types of as-yet-unanswered questions about material existence from the bigger kind – the ones science isn’t likely to ever answer, because the nature of the question itself goes beyond the boundaries of scientific inquiry. This list, then, attempts to separate the purely physical from the metaphysical or the spiritual, and focus on the big questions:

1. Why am I here?
2. Do I have a soul?
3. What is my purpose?
4. Does the universe have a beginning?
5. Does the universe have boundaries?
6. Why is there something rather than nothing?
7. Does God exist?
8. Does humanity need religion?
9. How should I live?

So let’s examine these profound questions one by one in this series of essays, and decide whether we can discover the “complete agreement” between religion and science that the Baha’i teachings promise.

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Comments

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  • Ellen Atkinson
    Dec 28, 2019
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    My understanding is that dark matter and energy is everything traveling faster than the speed of light. Mainstream science is veiled right now, contaminated by materialism and egos. I enjoy following the work of Steven Greer and Rupert Sheldrake
  • Paul Mantle
    Dec 28, 2019
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    "There was always something, There was never nothing. You have to have something, To make a bang. There had to be voices, When the heavens sang. Here we have a creation, Surely there's been a plan, A Hidden Mystery, Before human history, All around us ways and means, Not made by man." --- from 'Getting with the Plan' by BlueLeg Walker
  • Robert Moldenhauer
    Dec 28, 2019
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    I would say questions 4 and 5 are different to your other 7 questions. These question are physical in nature and as such can be answered by science. There was a Big Bang at the beginning of the Universe and someday in the distant future the universe will either collapse upon itself or entropy will leave a cold dark dead Universe. The other seven question are more philosophical, more spiritual in nature. Science can't answer those questions.
    • advise stuff
      Mar 13, 2024
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      Until now, science still cannot prove spiritual phenomena
  • Mark David Vinzens
    Dec 28, 2019
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    The Soulful Science. “I feel this pang inside – Is it my soul trying to break out, or the world’s soul trying to break in? My mind trembles with the shimmering leaves. My heart sings with the touch of sunlight. My life is glad to be floating with all things into the blue of space and the dark of time.”
    ― Deepak Chopra, You Are the Universe: Discovering Your Cosmic Self and Why It Matters
  • Dec 28, 2019
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    Let's keep in mind that science is based on faith just as surely as religion is. Most people including scientists don't think about this, but without the belief that there is one reality and there are universal laws, science could not exist. We tend to assume that this is self-evident, but there are a lot of people who don't believe it. Talking to them about science is as futile as talking to atheists about religion.
  • Mark David Vinzens
    Dec 28, 2019
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    The science of the future will be the science of consciousness. Only if the primacy of consciousness is understood can we formulate a conclusive theory of everything. But ok, who am I to teach scientists? As a mystic, I am a "weirdo" in their eyes. But a weirdo whose prediction will come true :-)
  • James Rhodes
    Dec 28, 2019
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    After reading several translated works in ancient Egyptian, Sumerian, Babylonian it is clear, to me, that those people had a much better understanding of quantum physics than our modern day society-something also eluded to by the sayings of Jesus and the works of Moses. Today we have a tendency of calling certain events miracles when in fact they are proof of the mastery of quantum physics (!)
  • James Rhodes
    Dec 28, 2019
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    From my point of view after reading several translated ancient Egyptian, Sumerian, Babylonian texts those civilizations had a better understanding of what we now call quantum physics-as, of course, did Jesus and Moses before Him. What many today call "miracles" is misunderstood quantum physics.
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