Science and Protestantism

Religion in America

Science: a Religious Activity

 Galileo and the Protestants

 Puritans as scientists

 Scottish Common Sense Realism, 1700s

             Reason, nature, Scriptural revelation

                      Evangelical response to Deism

                      Spreads from Presbyterians through colleges

 Baconian empiricism: anti-theoretical

             Bishop William Paley, Natural Theology, 1802

Science Moves Beyond the Bible

 Geology without Genesis

             James Hutton, Theory of the Earth, 1785

             Sir Charles Lyell, Principles of Geology, 1829

 Problem of archeology

             Rosetta Stone, 1822: hieroglyphs & Bible conflict

 “Higher criticism” from Germany

             The Bible as a product of human hands

 Fossils and extinctions: Flood(s)? Evolution?

             Charles Darwin, Origin of Species, 1859

Reconciling science & belief

  Benjamin Silliman, Yale, 1829: “long day”

  The “gap” theory

  William H. Green, 1863, expands Biblical time

  Louis Agassiz, Harvard: creation in geologic time

  Asa Gray, Harvard: divine purpose in Origin of Species

  Liberals, conservatives abandon natural theology

             Liberals: nothing to do with being religious

                      Popularity of theistic evolution: immanence in creation

             Conservatives: science might confirm students’ doubts

                      Popularity of “gap” & “day-age” theories until 1960s

Creationism

  Adventist “flood geology”

             George McCready Price, The New Geology, 1923

  Evangelicals get on board

             “Creationism” reborn: The Genesis Flood, 1961

             “Creation science”

                      Creation Science Research Center, San Diego, 1970

  1990s: the “intelligent design” debate

             Michael Behe, Darwin’s Black Box, 1996

Schools & courts: evolving strategies

  Scopes trial, Dayton, Tennessee, 1925

  The Cold War: the Sputnik crisis, 1957

             Are American kids falling behind in science?

  Supreme Court decisions

             No ban on evolution, 1968

             No creation science, 1987

             No intelligent design, 2005

  New strategy: teach “weaknesses”