Victor J. Stenger grew up in a Catholic working class neighborhood
in Bayonne, New Jersey. His father was a Lithuanian immigrant,
his mother the daughter of Hungarian immigrants. He attended public
schools and received a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical
Engineering from Newark College of Engineering (now New Jersey
Institute of Technology) in 1956. While at NCE he was editor of
the student newspaper and received several journalism awards.
Moving
to Los Angles on a Hughes Aircraft Company fellowship, Stenger
received a Master of Science degree in Physics from UCLA in 1959
and a Ph. D. in Physics in 1963. He then took a position on the
faculty of the University of Hawaii, retiring to Colorado in 2000.
His current position is Emeritus Professor of Physics at the University
of Hawaii and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the University
of Colorado. He is a Fellow of CSICOP and Research Fellow of the
Center for Inquiry. Stenger is also founder and president of the
Colorado Citizens for Science.
Stenger
has also held visiting positions on the faculties of the University
of Heidelberg in Germany, Oxford in England (twice), and has been
a visiting researcher at Rutherford Laboratory in England, the
National Nuclear Physics Laboratory in Frascati, Italy, and the
University of Florence in Italy.
Stenger's
research career spanned the period of great progress in elementary
particle physics that ultimately lead to the current standard
model. He participated in experiments that helped establish the
properties of strange particles, quarks, gluons, and neutrinos.
He also helped pioneer the emerging fields of very high-energy
gamma ray and neutrino astronomy. In his last project before retiring,
Stenger collaborated on the underground experiment in Japan which
showed for the first time that the neutrino has mass.
Stenger
has had a parallel career as an author of critically well-received
popular level books that interface between physics and cosmology
and philosophy, religion, and pseudoscience. These include: Not
By Design: The Origin of the Universe (1988); Physics and Psychics:
The Search for a World Beyond the Senses 1990); The Unconscious
Quantum: Metaphysics in Modern Physics and Cosmology (1995); Timeless
Reality: Symmetry, Simplicity, and Multiple Universes (2000),
and Has Science Found God? The Latest Results in the Search for
Purpose in the Universe (2003). His next book, The Comprehensible
Cosmos: Where Do the Laws of Physics Come from? will appear in
2006. This is to be followed by God: The Failed Hypothesis. How
Science Shows that God Does Not Exist, which is scheduled for
publication in 2007.
Stenger
and his wife Phylliss have been happily married for 43 years and
have two children and four grandchildren. They attribute their
long lives to the response of evolution to the human need for
babysitters, a task they joyfully perform. Phylliss and Stenger
are avid doubles tennis players, golfers, generally enjoy the
outdoor life in Colorado, and travel the world as often as they
can.
Stenger
maintains a popular web site (1,000 hits per month), where much
of his writing can be found, at http://www.colorado.edu/philosophy/vstenger/.
Quotations
"Any
attempt at understanding humanity must include an explanation
of the hold that supernatural belief continues to have on most
of the human race."
"Thought,
without the data on which to structure that thought, leads nowhere."
"When
people start using science to argue for their specific beliefs
and delusions, to try to claim that they're supported by science,
then scientists at least have to speak up and say, "You're
welcome to your delusions, but don't say that they're supported
by science.""
"A
scenario is suggested by which the universe and its laws could
have arisen naturally from "nothing." Current cosmology
suggests that no laws of physics were violated in bringing the
universe into existence. The laws of physics themselves are shown
to correspond to what one would expect if the universe appeared
from nothing. There is something rather than nothing because something
is more stable."
"Scientific
evidence for God's existence is being claimed today by theists,
many of whom carry respectable scientific or philosophical credentials.
"He" who is neither a "she" nor an "it"
supposedly answers prayers and otherwise dramatically affects
the outcome of events. If these consequences are as significant
as believers say, then the effects should be detectable in properly
controlled experiments."
"Scientists
have practical reasons for wishing that religion and science be
kept separate. They can see nothing but trouble ... if they venture
into the deeply divisive issue of religion -- especially when
their results tend to support a highly unpopular, atheistic conclusion."
"People
are entitled to their opinions, but when the opinion is in disagreement
with the data -- with the facts -- when that opinion does not
stand up under critical or rational scrutiny, I think we have
a right to point that out. We shouldn't be stepping on anybody's
toes when we do that. If they're going to be spouting off nonsense,
then we should say that -- not as a matter of opinion, but as
a matter of scientific fact. When someone says science says something,
and science doesn't say something ("It doesn't say that!
That's a misrepresentation of what science says."), then
I think we can state that. And if it ruffles some feathers, so
what? I just don't see the basis for arguing that creationism
has equal standing with evolution."
"From
this experience, I have learned what science asks of us when we
claim the existence of an extraordinary new phenomenon. It requires
much, including years of hard work, uncompromising honesty, and
willingness to accept failure. I can quickly recognize fallacious
logic or faulty experimental procedure when I read a paper that
purports to observe something that goes beyond existing knowledge.
I am dubious and suspicious whenever an important result has been
obtained too easily or too quickly, and reported in the media
before it has run the gamut of critical review by disinterested,
knowledgeable parties."
"If
it looks like God does not exist, quacks like God does not exist,
then there is a good chance he does not....Proof is not required
to believe. But some sign, some evidence is needed. None exists....Find
some inkling of evidence. There is none."
"Where
did all the matter come from? E = mc^2 says matter and energy
are the same entity. Since E = 0, the total matter of the universe
is zero. Zero does not have to come from anything. Now, if by
"matter" you just mean the equivalent of rest energy,
then that came from gravitational energy during the expansion
in the early universe."
"We
are only devoted to science as the best means humans have developed,
so far, for arriving at an approximation to the truth about objective
reality -- whatever that truth may be. We are not closed minded
against psi, religion, alternative medicine, or any paranormal
claims nor prejudiced against any individual adherent. Show us
the evidence and we will consider it, but only steadfastly insisting
on the same rules that we would apply to evidence for a new particle
or a new drug. In particular, we refuse to agree to adopting new
criteria ... just for the benefit of researchers in a field of
study that cannot seem to get significant results any other way."
"I
am not one of those who think that science has nothing to say
about ultimate origins. I will try to show that it has a lot to
say, although what it does say is not always directly subject
to the empirical testing that characterizes conventional scientific
statements. Nevertheless, we have theories of physics and cosmology
that are already well-established by their success in meeting
the challenge of severe empirical testing against existing data.
We have every right to logically extrapolate those theories into
the gaps where empirical data are currently not available, and
may indeed never be. Those extrapolations can turn out to be misdirected,
so they should not be treated as scientifically established facts.
At the very least, however, they can serve to develop possible
scenarios by which the gaps in current knowledge might plausibly
be filled by natural explanations, thus refuting any assertions
that a supernatural explanation is required by the data."
"I
do not think science has to make any apologies. It looks at the
world and tells it like it is. And we all live longer, better
lives because of this dispassionate view. Sure, it commands awe
and provides inspiration. Still, I would rather be operated on
by a surgeon who sees me as an assemblage of atoms than one who
lovingly tries to manipulate what he or she imagines are my vital
energy fields."
"While
science continually uncovers new mysteries, it has removed much
of what was once regarded as deeply mysterious. Although we certainly
do not know the exact nature of every component of the universe,
the basic principles of physics seem to apply out to the farthest
horizon visible to us today."
"Altnerative
explanations are always welcome in science, if they are better
and explain more. Alternative explanations that explain nothing
are not welcome....Note how science changed those beliefs when
new data became available. Relgions stick to the same ancient
beliefs regardless of the data."
"The
battle over the validity of evolution has been publicly posed
as a scientific one. However, you will find little sign of it
in scientific journals, where such quarrels as exist are over
details, not the basic concept.... Evolution has proved so useful
as a paradigm for the origin and structure of life that it constitutes
the foundation of the sciences of biology and medicine."
"In
the United States, the new creationist movement has convinced
many people and their political servants that scientists are being
unfair in not supporting the teaching of alternatives to evolution
in science classes. They say it is censorship to exclude intelligent
design from those classes. The usual argument raised against teaching
intelligent design is that it unconstitutionally promotes religion.
Design promoters, however, insist that they have no particular
designer in mind. No one believes them, but skilled lawyers arguing
for the cause of impartiality on their behalf could probably prevail
in court. In any case, a better argument exists: Intelligent design
theory, as currently formulated by its leading proponents, should
not be taught in science classes because it is provably wrong."
"People
have a hard time imagining how the universe can possibly have
come about by anything other than a miracle, a violation of natural
law. The intuition being expressed here is at least twofold: First,
it is widely believed that something cannot come from nothing,
where that "something" refers to the substance of the
universe -- its matter and energy -- and "nothing" can
be interpreted in this context as a state of zero energy and mass.
Second, it is also widely believed that the way in which the substance
of the universe seems to be structured in an orderly fashion,
rather than simply being randomly distributed, could not have
happened except by design."
"To
most theistic believers, human life can have no meaning in a universe
without God. Quite sincerely, and with understandable yearning
for a meaning to their existence, they reject the possibility
of no God. In their minds, only a purposeful universe based on
God is possible and science can do nothing else but support this
"truth.""
"The
argument from design rests on the notion that everything, but
God, must come from something. However, once you agree that it
is logically possible for an entity to exist that was not itself
created, namely God, then that entity can just as well be the
universe itself. Indeed, this is a more economical possibility,
not requiring the additional hypothesis of a supernatural power
outside the universe....To [creationists], it is not a matter
of logic anyway, but common sense. They see no way that the universe
could have just happened, without intent. "How can something
come from nothing?" they continue to ask, never wondering
how God came from nothing."
"The
argument from design stands or falls on whether it can be demonstrated
that some aspect of the universe such as its origin or biological
life could not have come about naturally. The burden of proof
is ... on the supernaturalist to demonstrate that something from
outside nature must be introduced to explain the data."
"In
short, evolution is as close to being a scientific fact as is
possible for any theory, given that science is open-ended and
no one can predict with certainty what may change in the future.
The prospect that evolution by natural selection, at least as
a broad mechanism, will be overthrown in the future is about as
likely as the prospect of finding out some day that the Earth
is really flat. Unfortunately, those who regard these scientific
facts as a threat to faith have chosen to distort and misrepresent
them to the public."
"It
was not that I thought I was smarter. I had simply explored science
and found what seemed to me a far more powerful authority. And,
I did not steal or murder because I thought they were wrong, not
because I feared damnation."
"Define
self-awareness and tell me what it is about it that requires something
more than a material explanation. I do not accept the burden of
explaining all phenomena, real or imagined. If you think more
than matter is required for this thing you call self-awareness,
which you have not defined, then you have the burden of showing
why."
"Any
strategy that attempts to reinforce faith by undermining science
is also doomed to failure. Showing that some scientific theory
is wrong will not prove that the religious alternative is correct
by default. When the sun was shown not to be the center of the
universe, as Copernicus had proposed, the Earth was not moved
back to that singular position in the cosmos. If Darwinian evolution
is proved wrong, biologists will not develop a new theory based
on the hypothesis that each species was created separately by
God 6,000 years ago."
"The
belief in supernatural forces remains to this day a yoke on the
neck of humanity, but at least Thales made it possible, for those
of us who wish it, to be free of that yoke."
"But,
as we have seen, movement does not require a mover, and modern
quantum mechanics has shown that not all effects require a cause.
And even if they did, why would the Prime Mover need to be a supernatural
anthropomorphic deity such as the Judaeo-Christian God? Why could
it not just as well be the material universe itself?"
"Most
people in Bayonne, like folks in similar towns across the country,
had little education and could neither verbalize nor intellectualize
their problems very well. They just suffered them. They listened
eagerly when the priests promised them everlasting life in paradise,
where they would be reunited with their departed love ones, but
this was not enough when the suffering and guilt were unbearable....The
parish priests did their best and I fault them little. They operated
within a framework developed over centuries that would not have
survived this long if it did not give people something they wanted,
no matter how insufficient....My father ... remained a Catholic
and always expressed belief in God. He did not argue with me about
my views -- although he and other older relatives often told me
to keep my mouth shut.... While they succeeded in keeping me from
expressing my thoughts too openly, they had no effect on those
thoughts. As long as I kept my mouth shut, they left me alone."
"And,
yet again, because I can predict the line of criticism that this
book will generate, I need to make it clear up-front that I am
not claiming that the absence of evidence eliminates all possibilities
for a god to exist in every conceivable form. And, I am not evaluating
all the theological and philosophical arguments for or against
God. I am simply evaluating the scientific arguments and claimed
scientific evidence for a deity according to the same criteria
that science applies to any extraordinary claim. I conclude that,
so far, they fail to meet the test."
"Fifteen
years of skepticism has done more for me than 20 years of force-fed
religion and 30 years of indifference in between."
|