Abstract
It is a cliché to say science and religion are antagonistic. The outlook is often
promoted by religious people uneducated in the workings of science, and equally by
scientifically-oriented individuals with little experience of religion. This essay challenges
presumptions about the irreconcilability of science and religion, focusing on action
organizing metaphysical principles infusing both. The aim, however, is not to evaluate proofs
for God’s existence, nor defend young earth creationism, nor the notion that there is one
true religion, nor still the thesis that morality demands divine guidance – all positions that
critics commonly raise to demonstrate the stupidity of religion, even though such views are
hardly universal among theists. The aim is instead to expand what one can rationally accept,
leaving it to individuals to decide what to believe. Central to my arguments is the concept of
pragmatic faith. The notion holds that willingness to act measures strength of conviction and
that actions generate empirical results that may either verify or disconfirm what was initially
held without adequate evidence. Such a stance is a necessary ingredient in both scientific and
spiritual activities, suggesting a rebuttal to New Atheists, who narrowly identify religion with
superstitious irrationality