Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Questioning Science after Darwin
Questioning Science after Darwin
Jan 2, 2026 8:53 PM

David Berlinski has been provoking debate on a variety of subjects for decades. His new book is a sampler of his challenges to Darwinism, materialism, and the hubris of scientism.

Read More…

I can find no better way to summarize David Berlinski’s book Science After Babel than to say that it is classic Berlinski. The man himself defies a simple summary. He is a polymath and raconteur, as even his bio at the panying website explains. His Ph.D. in philosophy is from Princeton, where he studied with the great logician Alonzo Church. But his many books on the history of math and science might lead one to expect him to be a mathematician or a scientist.

He was, as it happens, a postdoctoral fellow in mathematics and molecular biology at Columbia University. And over the years, he has taught both mathematics and philosophy in the U.S. and in France. But he is best known for his books and essays, which he has continued to produce as a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute from his apartment in Paris, where he has lived for many years.

I remember the first Berlinski essay I read. “The Deniable Darwin” appeared in Commentary in 1996, just as my own doubts about Darwinism had started to harden. The essay provoked a lengthy back and forth between Berlinski and leading Darwinians in a later issue of the magazine.

Berlinski is worth reading for both his insights and his prose, which manages to be both crisp and florid. Science After Babel is no exception. The book gathers his essays, notes, excerpts from previous books, letters to the editor, and the like written over the past few decades on the scientific enterprise.

Think of Science After Babel as a sampler platter of Berlinski’s thought and writing on science and math. Its purpose, I presume, is to leave you hungry for more.

In contrast to the current academic fashion in disciplines with “studies” in their name, Berlinski never treats science as just another power trip or language game. He knows and values the achievements of science, or rather of scientists. He especially admires math and mathematical physics but seems to return, again and again, to biology. So we get glimpses of the work of Newton, Einstein, Turing, Gödel, von Neumann, as well as Darwin, Crick, Kolmogorov, Chaitin, and Thom.

Despite his admiration, or perhaps because of it, Berlinski knows when scientists are bluffing.

As the book title suggests, he likens the great edifice of science to Bruegel’s famous painting of the biblical Tower of Babel. It is a great human achievement, still piercing the clouds. But because it is human, it smacks of hubris. “The Tower is still there,” he writes. “It is, in fact, larger than ever. But,” he continues,

it has neither reached the sky nor left the ground. It resembles Bruegel’s Tower of Babel far more than the Chrysler Building, and if it suggests anything at all, it suggests that its original plans have somehow been lost. Some parts of the Tower are sound and sturdy; but, my goodness, the balustrade devoted to the multiverse—what were they thinking?

Who knows? In looking at the Tower, if we are moved to admire its size, we are also bound to acknowledge its faults.

And what makes it sound and sturdy? Berlinski credits the “algorithm and the calculus” as “the two great ideas of the scientific revolution.” Indeed, he’s written books on each of these topics. Despite his fondness for such edifices, he’s quick to remind the reader how much reality these formalisms fail to capture. He can praise such abstract thought while retaining monsense wisdom that has no patience for naive reductionism. Noting the gestures of Plato and Aristotle (the one pointing up, the other down) in Raphael’s School of Athens, Berlinski manages to keep one eye on the empyrean above and the other on the solid ground below.

So why should you, dear reader of Religion & Liberty, bother with a book about neither religion nor liberty? Simple. Berlinski is second to none in deflating ideas that are a threat to both.

Nineteenth-century materialists denied not just the cogency of religious faith but the cogency of human agency. And materialism became a dominant faith for the first time in Western history not because of new arguments but because it enjoyed the prestige of science.

One of its most malevolent offspring in economics, namely Marxism, was the chief foe to friends of liberty for more than a century. And rather than dying a respectable death with the Soviet Union, even now it animates one of the world’s most populous countries and roams the halls of our own institutions as a mutant zombie in the form of critical theory.

Berlinski does not hold science blameless for these developments. Indeed, he credits the perversions of science for “a popular culture littered with ideological detritus: atheism, of course, or naturalism, or materialism, or physicalism, or scientism, or even, God help us, trans-humanism.”

bating these -isms, he points to the fact that even the hardest and mathiest of the sciences, quantum physics, seems to focus less and less on anything we might plausibly call matter:

On current physical theories, that material base is occupied by various quantum fields, where, like so many electric eels, they occupy themselves in quivering with energy. Leptons and bosons emerge as field excitations, and so does everything else.

The great merit of materialism has always been its apparent sobriety. A world of matter? Look around! Bang the table, if necessary. Quantum fields do not encourage a look-around. There is no banging them beyond banging on about them. And for the most obvious of reasons. “Quantum field theory,” Lisa Randall writes, “the tool with which we study particles, is based upon eternal, omnipresent objects that can create and destroy those particles.”

This is an account that suggests the dominion of Vishnu as much as metaphysical materialism, a point not lost on Indian physicists.

If materialists were hoping for physics to ratify their faith, they must surely be disappointed.

Berlinski brings the same sharp rapier to another child of materialism, namely Darwinism—a subject that occupies the first third of the book. Yes, Darwin’s mechanism—natural selection acting on random variations—explains some things, and very well. It can adjust the size of Galapagos finch beaks to take advantage of droughts and wet spells. It can give rise to a bevy of bacteria that resist some or another antibiotic. We may presume it accounts for fluctuations in the color of Peppered Moth populations, depending on local conditions.

But its reach is limited. Darwin’s disciples hoped, and hope, for far more. They imagined this designer substitute would explain all the plexity of the biological world—the peering eye, the pumping heart, the tiny, flailing flagella of bacteria. Indeed, it’s supposed to explain the origin of species—and for that matter, the origin of body plans, and phyla, and kingdoms.

There’s never been any evidence that Darwin’s tool has such sweeping power, and there’s plenty of evidence against it. Berlinski has for decades been willing to speak bluntly about this fact. And he has refused to be intimidated, even as many religious intellectuals found clever ways to modate Darwinism.

Indeed, none of his objections is religious. His thought on this subject resembles the work of two formidable French skeptics of the Darwinian faith—both of whom Berlinski discusses in this book. Marcel “Marco” Schützenberger, a mathematician and a doctor of medicine, was Berlinski’s friend and sometime collaborator. René Thom was a towering 20th-century mathematician who won a Fields Medal in 1958—the highest honor for that profession. No honest person can read Berlinski’s treatment of Darwinian thought in these pages and dismiss it as religious prejudice.

Berlinski is at his best as an analyst and critic plex and controversial ideas. When es to his own convictions on matters metaphysical, however, he tends toward the epigrammatic and cryptic. He is associated with the intelligent design movement, for instance. But his own position of the subject has always been agnostic.

My sense is that he suspects more than he’s willing to say. In the short conclusion, for instance, he observes that “life itself suggests a kind of intelligence evident nowhere else; reflective biologists have always known that in the end they would have to account for its fantastic and plexity, its brilliant inventiveness and diversity, its sheer difference from anything else in this or any other world.”

Science After Babel is a foretaste of David Berlinski’s seminal work on science. mend it as an appetizer, followed by The Advent of the Algorithm, The Deniable Darwin and Other Essays, and The Devil’s Delusion: Atheism and Its Scientific Pretensions. These, especially the latter two, will help inoculate you against the bad ideas that may enjoy the prestige of science but scarcely deserve it.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Explainer: What is Going on in Venezuela?
What’s going on in Venezuela? Because of high inflation and unemployment, Venezuela has the most miserable economy in the world. The country currently has an inflation rate of 180 percent, but that’s expected to increase 1,642 percent by next year. The current unemployment rate is 17 percent, and the IMF projects it will reach nearly 21 percent next year. The country is also crippled by shortages of goods and services. A few weeks ago Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro instituted a...
5 Ways Obama’s New Overtime Rule Will Harm Workers
In announcing the Obama administration’s new overtime rule (for more on this news, see this explainer), Vice President Joe Biden panies will “face a choice” to either pay their workers for the overtime that they work, or cap the hours that their salaried workers making below $47,500 at 40 hours each work week. “Either way, the worker wins,” Biden said. Biden has held political office for more than four decades, and yet he has still not learned one of the...
Explainer: Obama’s New Overtime Rule
What just happened? On May 18, the Obama administration announced the publication of a new Department of Labor rule updating and expanding overtime regulations. Why did the overtime rule change? Since the 1930s some white collar jobs (i.e., those performed in an administrative setting) have been exempt from the overtime requirement. The white collar exemption salary level was adjusted in 2004 to $455 per week or $23,660a year. The new rule will entitle most salaried white collar workers earning less...
Why Christians Care About Economics
“Economic activity is one of the mon and basic forms of human interaction and the Bible has much to say about it,” says Dale Arand. “However, it takes time to understand plexities of our modern economy so that we can better apply God’s principles to our everyday activity.” Arand offer five reasons it’s worthwhile to understand economics, including: 3) We want our government to restrain evil, not enable it. We know stealing and lying are wrong, but in our economy...
The ‘Good Food Now!’ Olive Garden Crusade
Your writer lives beyond the outskirts of Midland, Michigan, a small Midwestern town that is buoyed fortuitously by a Fortune pany. It’s a nifty place: Population around 50,000, a plethora of parks and bike trails, three rivers converging west of town, relatively low crime rate, and plenty of establishments of both the local and national variety in which to dine out. One of these eateries is the Darden Restaurants, Inc. chain Olive Garden. Can’t say I’ve ever dined there, but...
As Venezuela Crumbles, Will America’s New ‘Socialists’ Pay Attention?
The Venezuelan economy is buckling under the weight of its severe socialist policies, and even as its president admits to a nationwide economic emergency, the government continues to affirm the drivers behind the collapse,blaminglow oil prices and global capitalism instead. This was supposed to be the dawn of “21st-century socialism,” as the late President Hugo Chavez proclaimed over 10 years plete with the right tweaks and upgrades to its materialistic, mechanistic approach to the human person. “We have assumed mitment...
French Catholic Bishop Dominique Rey: ‘Thinking Outside the Box’
Bishop Dominique Rey speaking at Acton’s April 20 conference in Rome. Yesterday in the French section of the Vatican’s newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, an exclusive interview finally appeared with the outspoken Bishop Dominique Rey of Toulon-Fréjus. Bishop Rey provided the interview when in Rome last month to speak about the current challenges to religious and economic freedom in Europe at the Acton Institute’s conference “Freedom with Justice: Rerum Novarum and the New Things of Our Time“. The May 19 headline “Sortir...
David Bentley Hart and the ‘Pelagian Criticism of Wealth’
Following up on yesterday’s post “Samuel Gregg on David Bentley Hart and Murderous Markets,” Rev. Gregory Jensen, author of the Acton book The Cure for Consumerism, observes that “Hart’s assertion that ‘the New Testament treats such wealth not merely as a spiritual danger, and not merely as a blessing that should not be misused, but as an intrinsic evil’ is simply wrong.” Writing at his Palamas Institute site, Jensen, an Orthodox Christian priest, added that “it is a gross overstatement...
Sanders’ Policies Won’t Get Us Scandinavian ‘Socialism’
Today at The Stream, I examine the dissonance between the goals of Vermont senator Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign and his mended means: [W]hile Sanders’ goals may parable to Scandinavia, there’s little Nordic about his means. It all reminds me of a quip from the Russian Orthodox philosopher S. L. Frank, a refugee from the brutality of actual, Soviet socialism. “The leaders of the French Revolution desired to attain liberty, equality, fraternity, and the kingdom of truth and reason, but they...
Video: Rev. Sirico on Private Property as the Solid Ground for Religious Liberty
The spring session of the 2016 Acton Lecture Series closed on May 17th with an address by Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico entitled “Freedom Indivisible: Private Property as the Solid Ground for Religious Liberty,” which examinedhow private property provides an essential foundation forreligious liberty in a free and virtuous society. We’re pleased to share the lecture with you via the video player below. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved