Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Arthur Dent, Screwtape and the mysteries of story-telling
- 1 Postmodernism, grand narratives and just-so stories
- 2 Newton and Kissinger: Science as irony?
- 3 Learning to say ‘I’: Literature and subjectivity
- 4 Reconstructing religion: Fragmentation, typology and symbolism
- 5 The ache in the missing limb: Language, truth and presence
- 6 Twentieth-century fundamentalisms: Theology, truth and irony
- 7 Science and religion: Language, metaphor and consilience
- Concluding conversational postscript: The tomb of Napoleon
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - Science and religion: Language, metaphor and consilience
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Arthur Dent, Screwtape and the mysteries of story-telling
- 1 Postmodernism, grand narratives and just-so stories
- 2 Newton and Kissinger: Science as irony?
- 3 Learning to say ‘I’: Literature and subjectivity
- 4 Reconstructing religion: Fragmentation, typology and symbolism
- 5 The ache in the missing limb: Language, truth and presence
- 6 Twentieth-century fundamentalisms: Theology, truth and irony
- 7 Science and religion: Language, metaphor and consilience
- Concluding conversational postscript: The tomb of Napoleon
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
ETCHING WITH UNIVERSAL ACID
For a period that is supposed to have rejected grand narratives, our current interest in them verges on the obsessive. If literal belief in the old biblical grand narrative of Genesis has waned (at least in educated circles) it has been replaced by the scarcely less all-encompassing narrative of evolution. For Daniel Dennett, the mechanism Darwin attempted to describe in his Origin of Species can now be used (as Darwin never did) to explain almost every feature of the universe from the Big Bang onwards. That mechanism, or ‘algorithm’, is natural selection.
For Dennett and his militantly atheist sociobiological allies, such as Richard Dawkins, or A.O. Wilson, the triumphant narrative of natural selection has not merely obliterated, but replaced the Judeo-Christian narrative of the creation and destiny of humanity. In his metaphorical terminology, there are many ‘cranes’ but no ‘skyhooks’ in the ascent of man. Life has pulled itself up from primordial slime with no aids from above. Science has displaced religion, not just conceptually, but rhetorically as well.
For Dennett that Darwinian algorithm of natural selection constitutes a ‘universal acid’ – a fantasy common to many schoolchildren when they begin to study chemistry. Once invented, universal acid is, by definition, uncontainable.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Narrative, Religion and ScienceFundamentalism versus Irony, 1700–1999, pp. 225 - 255Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002