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WSJ Refused To Publish Lawrence Krauss' Response To "Science Proves Religion"

First time accepted submitter Kubla Kahhhn! writes Recently, the WSJ posted a controversial piece "Science Increasingly Makes a Case for God", written by non-scientist Eric Metaxas. Noted astrophysicist Lawrence Krauss wrote a simple and clear retort in a letter to the editor, which the WSJ declined to publish, but Richard Dawkins did.

30 of 556 comments (clear)

  1. HHG Strikes Again by chinton · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let me guess, it was written by Oolon Colluphid.

  2. Re: Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They didn't publish a retort from a respected scientist after publishing a some complete woo by a charlatan.

    It's considered good journalistic practice to publish responses or apologies when you fuck up - not that I'm implying that WSJ deserves such high expectations.

  3. A Simple Retort by thedonger · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The nature of God is such that it cannot be proven. Otherwise, we lose the choice to believe.

    That said, science has yet to prove what the universe is, so how could we expect it to prove something outside of it?

    Note: My philosophy is "when you die, you're dead."

    --
    Help fight poverty: Punch a poor person.
    1. Re:A Simple Retort by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Note: My philosophy is "when you die, you're dead."

      My philosophy is "when you die, your relatives will throw out 99% of what you own." So throw your stuff out first, live with less and be happy.

    2. Re: A Simple Retort by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Throw your relatives away before and you'll be even happier.

    3. Re:A Simple Retort by sbaker · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You have that a little wrong. God *can* (in principle) be proven. If the sky breaks open, choirs of angels break forth, a 10km-long arm reaches down from the skies and an 8km golden-haired, bearded face looks down upon humanity and utters words of unshakable truth...then God is proven.

      God cannot, however, be DISproven. It's an unfalsifiable hypothesis. So, you're right, science cannot ever say, definitively, that god doesn't exist. It also can't disprove the hypothesis that the universe was created by an invisible pink unicorn...or any other random idea that humans might come up with that entails a literally omnipotent/omniscient being.

      But that COMPLETELY misses what this is all about. The original WSJ article is a non-scientist claiming that science has indeed proven the existence of god. That's quite clearly incorrect...and I think you'd have to look very hard to find a competent scientist in the fields involved who'd agree with that claim. So WSJ (essentially) published something that's completely untrue, incorrect, misleading - just plain *WRONG*...and journalistic integrity says that they should now be working very hard to fix that...not rejecting a perfectly sensible response from someone who knows exactly what he's talking about.

      So bad on WSJ...and at least we can make that badness clear by discussing it here.

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    4. Re:A Simple Retort by jandersen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      God cannot, however, be DISproven. It's an unfalsifiable hypothesis.

      Well, up to a point. Many theologies try to make claims that amount to predictions: God will answer your prayers etc. So far, none of these have passed the test, thus demonstrating that whether God is real or not, the theologies that try to make us believe that he is, are not true. Most people would long have abandoned a concept with such a poor track record. The only reason why some people hold on to this, as far as I can see, is bullying: every time you dare raise the question of why God never answers even the most reasonable prayers, or the most desperate ones, or indeed any prayers at all, you are met with "How dare you test God?!? Who are you to demand any proof of God?!?". Bullying, plain and simple. If God was real and cared about us, he wouldn't be so petty, I'm sure.

  4. You've got it exactly backward. by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 4, Informative

    "The article [which was printed] was written by the evangelical author Eric Metaxas, and in it, he argued that scientists have determined that life is so improbable it must have been created."

    "Krauss concluded [in a letter which was not printed] by writing that '[r]eligious arguments for the existence of God thinly veiled as scientific arguments do a disservice to both science and religion, and by allowing a Christian apologist to masquerade as a scientist [Wall Street Journal] did a disservice to its readers.'"

  5. Re:Yawn by hodet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They didn't print an opposing and well written view by one of the leading voices in the scientific community on this issue. So the claim here is that the WSJ are biased. But you are right about the yawn. That WSJ article was preaching to the choir and there are plenty of other places to get the counter view.

  6. Fair and balanced, just like Fox News. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would now expect nothing less from the WSJ, once it became a sister publication to the Boston Herald or the New York Post or any of the other myriad rag sheets put out by that wonderful, effervescent, owner, Rupert Murdoch.

  7. It's not your father's Wall Street Journal by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 5, Informative

    It was bought by Murdoch in 2007 and it's editorial director fired in 2008. Since then, it's just another mouthpiece for conservative Republicans (Murdoch also owns Fox News). The Wall Street Journal purchase was made to make Murdoch's news organizations look respectable.

    As is turns out, it was just an expensive suit on a cheap hustler who got lucky enough to get rich with media organizations after inheriting the family business from his father.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  8. Re:Yawn by sbaker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When you publish something controversial (which the original article most certainly was) and take the word of someone who is self-evidently not an expert in the field about which he's writing - you really have to do one of two things:

    a) Do careful fact-checking on the article and publish it as 'The Truth'...or...
    b) Publish it as an op-ed piece - essentially saying "This is just the opinion of this guy".

    This clearly wasn't (a) - so WSJ doesn't have to admit error or look bad in the eyes of the public. However, when accepting op-ed pieces, they need to be acutely aware of bias - and when a well-written response is provided - especially by an expert in the field - it deserves equal coverage...and that's where they failed.

    I can actually understand them not wanting to publish this response as a "letter to the editor" kind of thing - but they really *should* commission an author with scientific credentials to write an opposing-view op-ed piece of more substantial weight.

    --
    www.sjbaker.org
  9. Re: Yawn by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Aren't they owned by News Corp now?

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  10. and for a good reason. by nimbius · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Institutions like the Wall Steet Journal no longer exist to serve meaningful information to people in order to assist in their formation of knowledge, wisdom, or even understanding of the wold around them. Thanks to clenchfist profiteering as a normative model of business in the 21st century we get articles about things that drive advertising revenue and in turn function as a means to consumption, not knowledge. Taking a cursory glance at the WSJ we have 'us stocks drop sharply' 'A Nonprofit Restaurant Falls to the Minimum Wage ' and 'Russian Fund Boss Vanishes '. the wallstreet journal, as does every other news outlet controlled by our modern robberbarons, pedals fear uncertainty and doubt as a model through which products and services are delivered, not practical or even contextual study of matters at hand

    actual, useful information about how god is not in fact validated, or even designed to be validated, by science will not be tolerated. There is no product to be consumed or shared in this, and it may in fact be slightly detremental to the seasonal consumption holiday in the united states and other nations to simply tell people there isnt a valid point to be had in adhering to a religeon outside of subjugation. being told that a system of detection, observation and analysis has confirmed a superstition serves to re-enforce a behavior that benefits no one but plutocrats and oligarchs.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  11. Re:America... fuck yeah by nine-times · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not just a business folding to the religious. If you want to spin this as a big problem, it's a respected news paper, now owned by News Corp (i.e. Fox News), pushing to validate religious beliefs. That is, you could push this as evidence that the Wall Street Journal has become a part of Fox News and is no longer reputable.

    Or you could point out that newspapers often don't print letters and articles that people submit, and conclude that this isn't a big deal.

  12. This Again by dontbemad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It really is tiring to see such incendiary articles posted to slashdot. I mean, whether religious or non, is anyone here hoping to have an intelligent or civil debate on the subject? Aren't you just allowing the editors to prove how well they are doing to their Dice overlords by pointing to a piece such as this and saying "look, 600 comments! think of all the ad-revenue this article must have generated!"

    If you want to be religious and non-scientific, do that. Likewise, if you choose to be scientific and non-religious, do that as well. One can also be both or neither, and those are both valid options for how one should live his life, too. However, it serves no purpose but to further degrade the quality of this site when we engage in such a meaningless flame-war, especially when it is generated by such blatant pandering.

  13. Murdoch Bought the WSJ by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 4, Informative

    ergo unbiased, fair and balanced Op-Ed does not exist there

  14. Re:The same Lawrence Krauss by jandersen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Mr Jrauss is a theoretical physicist and cosmologist, so whatever his politial leanings, he is in fact qualified to hold an opinion on science; probably more so than Eric Metaxas or a jeering Anonymous Coward.

  15. Re:Yawn by gstoddart · · Score: 3

    I honestly can't tell if you're being ironical, or moronical.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  16. Re: Yawn by wisnoskij · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And just because you are a minor celebrity does not mean that everyone has to bend over backwards and publish everything you write.

    --
    Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
  17. Re: Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what you're saying is, every time there's an op-ed piece, someone get's to have a retort published?

    That's not what he's saying, and you know it.

    Strawman arguments are lies.

    And there is no appeal to authority, because when the topic is science, a well-respected (note that I don't use scare quotes to dishonestly imply that this isn't really the case) scientist's opinion IS in fact more valid than a non-scientist's.

  18. Specific claims can be disproven by sjbe · · Score: 3, Informative

    God cannot, however, be DISproven. It's an unfalsifiable hypothesis. So, you're right, science cannot ever say, definitively, that god doesn't exist.

    True but science CAN definitively disprove specific claims about the nature of god. There are innumerable and fairly specific claims made in religious texts detailing the nature and actions of god(s). Many of these are of such a nature that they are falsifiable and thus can be subjected to scientific inquiry. Unsurprisingly most of these claims regarding god turn out to be made up nonsense when looked at objectively or have been so twisted from the actual facts as to be effectively unrecognizable from what actually occurred.

    So if someone wants to make a completely vague assertion that there is a god and make no specific claims regarding the nature of said deity then no, science cannot disprove that. (though it doesn't mean we should believe said claim either) But it's hard to make a believable story about god without adding some details to the story and that is usually where the wheels come off. Claims about the physical world we live in can (frequently) be tested and dismissed as the made up poppycock that they so often are.

  19. Null hypothesis by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Athiesm is philosophy, not science.

    That is indeed true. However atheism is essentially a null hypothesis. It makes FAR more sense, in the absence of credible evidence, to believe that there is no "god(s)" than to by default in a theist position. Believing in a deity as a default position because you can't prove one doesn't exist is completely irrational. By comparison the only irrational position an atheist can take is to say they are unwilling to be convinced by credible evidence that a god of some description exists. But since no such credible objective evidence actually has ever been presented it's only irrational in principle since their conclusion (the null hypothesis) remains the same.

    Since scientists tend to be rational thinkers they would logically start with the null hypothesis that there is no god unless evidence shows otherwise. Most would be willing to be convinced that god exists (call that agnosticism if you want) but can find no sane basis to do so without some amount of credible evidence. So they maintain the null hypothesis that there is no god as there is no evidence to move them from the null hypothesis.

    1. Re:Null hypothesis by capedgirardeau · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is actually pretty rational to believe in God because, why not?

      Which god? What happens if you believe in the wrong one and the real god ends up super pissed off? For all you know, the god you believe in might be an ex of the real god.

      You might very well be worse off than if you had believed in no god.

      Pascals Wager has been a discredited reason for believing in a god for a long time now.

      --
      Wax on, wax off baby!
  20. Schizophrenic company by n0ano · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Guys, calm down. This is the Wall Street Journal, the most schizophrenic company in the world. Read a couple of issues of the newspaper and you'll see what I mean.

    Articles - 99% of the paper, well written, fact based pieces on current issues of the day. Not balanced since it's understandably tilted toward the business aspects of those issues but an extremely reliable source of information.

    Editorials - 2 pages, far right diatribes with the basic premise that big business & capitalism == good, everything else bad.

    I don't know how the feature reporters survive in that environment but I applaud them for living in a harsh environment and doing an excellent job.

    --
    Don Dugger
    "Censeo Toto nos in Kansa esse decisse." - D. Gale
  21. Re: Yawn by Immerman · · Score: 5, Informative

    A scientists view of claims that "science proves religion" however, is likely to be *far* more valid. Especially in the typical case where the arguments are as blatantly misleading as "science says this is hard, so god must have done it" while ignoring that science also explains why we should expect it to happen anyway.

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  22. Re: Yawn by Layzej · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a "well respected" scientist's opinion is no more valid than a "charlatan's.

    Surely we would prefer the opinion of a scientist on the subject of what science can tell us? Unless you're a child of postmodernism where there are no wrong answers and everyone's opinion is equally valuable because we're all special little snowflakes?

  23. Re:Yawn by Atzanteol · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You seem to be confusing "I don't care about it" with "it's not newsworthy." Your strongest argument is "they have the right to do it."

    Well damn - nothing ever newsworthy involves somebody doing something they have the right to do? So if they start publishing pro-nazi propaganda that's not "newsworthy?"

    The very fact that people are discussing the issue makes it newsworthy - your apathy notwithstanding.

    --
    "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

    - Charles Darwin
  24. Re: Yawn by Kierthos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Likewise, atheism is not a lack of a value system. Just because I don't believe in some sort of higher power does not mean I don't have values.

    Pretending that atheists are amoral is a fool's errand.

    --
    Mr. Hu is not a ninja.
  25. Dumping the Magisteria POV... whoops by fyngyrz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You make the assumption that religion is outside the "natural world". That's not very scientific of you.

    LOL. If it's not outside the natural world, then it has every characteristic of the most dishonest bunkum, and no characteristics of something -- anything -- to do with objective reality. In other words, if you remove the "disjoint magisteria" claim from the assessment of religion, you don't have anything left worth a plugged nickle.

    Which is not to say you have much with the "disjoint magisteria" argument; but at least you have something.

    The whole argument boils down to "there's no scientific proof of religion because science has no access to religion, and that's the way God wants it." As soon as you assert science does have access to religion... game over, because now you require consensually experiential, repeatable evidence to back your assertion -- and no one's been able to meet that standard since day one. Not that it wouldn't be super if you could do it; but all of human experience lands on the side of the scale that says you won't.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.