Reactions to the Big Bang Theory


1. Introduction

When Albert Einstein proposed his general theory of relativity in 1915, he was ushering in a new era of science. By means of his theory, scientists could, for the first time, construct physical models for the universe as a whole. Newton’s universe was infinite and the infinite cannot be measured. Einstein’s theory, however, required a finite universe, a universe that could both be tracked in its history and undergo mathematical modeling.


The Theory of Relativity quickly received several empirical confirmations, one being that it could calculate the orbit of Mercury around the sun with perfect accuracy, whereas the same calculation using Newton’s theory of gravitation contained statistical error. The most important confirmation of Einstein’s theory was Sir Arthur Eddington’s observation of a star shift during a solar eclipse in West Africa in 1919, a shift predicted by the theory of relativity.

These predictions, however, seemed minor compared to one remarked by a Catholic Belgian priest, Fr. Georges Lemaître. In a paper published in 1927, he pointed out that, if Einstein’s theory were correct, then heavenly bodies are technically not moving in the universe, but are rather moving the universe. In other words, the universe is expanding when heavenly bodies move farther and farther away from one another.

Lemaître went further in a book he published in 1931. If the universe is expanding, he reasoned, then to go back in time is to go back to a more contracted state of the universe. If we continue going back in time in this way, then we will eventually reach a point wherein all of the matter in the universe is compacted into a single point, something Lemaître referred to as a Primeval Atom, a phrase which he made the very title of his book. In this perspective, the entire matter/energy of our present universe started off in an enormously dense state at a single point and from there expanded over a long period of time up to the present day.

Lemaître’s idea was met with mixed reactions. British astronomer Fred Hoyle, for one, dismissed it out of hand, referring to it jokingly as the Big Bang Theory. Hoyle was the champion of a rival theory, called the Steady State Theory, which held that the universe is eternal and largely unchanging. Others took up the Big Bang Theory and tried to provide it empirical support.

Our objective in this multi-part article is to explore the attitude of three sets of people to Lemaître’s Big Bang Theory: atheist scientists, fundamentalist Protestants, and mainstream Catholics. After observing their reactions, we will consider whether there is solid empirical evidence for the theory.


2. Atheist scientists

Whenever we look at the reaction of this or that person to a certain event, we have to remember that it is impossible for any one of us to avoid bringing some personal bias to a given situation. If humans were mere intellects, raw thinking machines, then we could reasonably expect all of our reactions to be entirely objective. But humans are much more than what they know. They are also what they want and what they feel. Their reactions, therefore, are always some combination of intellect, will, and emotions.


It is our reason which helps us distinguish whether objectivity or subjectivity predominates in the reactions of those around us. The person reacting with rational argumentation is more objective and less biased, while the person reacting with emotional outburst is less objective and more biased.


All of this is by way of preface to considering the reaction of atheist scientists to the Big Bang Theory. They were an up and coming intellectual class starting with the wave of rationalism sweeping through the Western world in the 19th century. That wave was largely fueled by an explosion of scientific discovery. The rapid casting out of old and long-standing scientific errors worked like swelling agent on man’s all too easily inflated pride. Purely naturalistic explanations of everything under the sun—like the sun—became the rage. Many began to believe that science would eventually be able to explain everything in the universe, and do so without ever having recourse to the causality of God. The Holy Grail for unholy science soon became the goal of accounting for the existence of everything in the universe by mathematical laws alone.


Thomist philosophers know immediately that such an enterprise is doomed to failure, for the simple reason that mathematical laws do not explain the existence of anything; they only describe what things do, how things act. By and large, however, modern scientists do not understand this, for one characteristic that seems to dominate their tribe is a complete lack of philosophical knowledge. The reader does not have to rely on me for this statement; he can safely consult Einstein saying that “the man of science is a poor philosopher.”


Despite the fact that science can never even speak about the existence of things, much less assign a cause for their existence, atheistic scientists generally believe that they can use science to prove that the universe is the ultimate reality. When they embark on this quixotic enterprise, they understand that, to make the universe the ultimate reality, they have to endow it with the attributes of God. What are the attributes of God? God is eternal, He is unchanging, uncaused, infinite. That, then, is what the universe must be if it is to pretend to be a God substitute. But does science show that we live in such a universe?


The idea that the universe is infinite in space and time gained traction in scientific minds since the great Isaac Newton had put his weight behind it in the 1600s. There were, however, two strong scientific arguments against a universe without a beginning and without boundaries, both arguments being framed in the form of a paradox:


1. If the universe is eternal, then the force of gravitation has been working forever. If gravitation works forever, only two scenarios are possible: either all bodies get pulled together into a single body or no bodies come together. But neither of these is true.
2. If the universe is eternal, then the light of stars has been shining eternally. When stars shine forever, the night sky becomes entirely lit up as light eventually reaches the Earth from all directions. But the night sky is not all lit up, but is rather dark.


Fr Stanley Jaki notes with amazement in his book on this particular topic, The Paradox of Olbers’ Paradox, that the majority of scientists still maintained blind faith in the infinity of the universe in space and time, despite such solid arguments against it.


So far, so bad. Both reason and science indicate that the universe cannot be infinite. But how, one may ask, could a scientist maintain that the universe is unchanging? Well, clearly, he can’t without falling into utter absurdity. The best he can do is depict a universe that is unchanging in an approximate sense. This is what Fred Hoyle and his Steady-State crew did. They proposed that:


1. The stars are all approximately the same in composition and the same distance from one another.
2. The general character of the universe remains the same always, such that the universe is unchanging in its grand scheme.
3. The motions of all bodies in the universe are generally the same.

Clearly, such a universe is a poor substitute for God. Evidently, however, it was enough of a substitute for those who wanted it to be God, for the Steady-State Theory maintained a reputability in scientific circles long past its used-by date, which turned out to be extremely limited in time.


I could continue in this vein by speaking of other attempts by scientists, and especially the atheist types, to erect a scaffolding around the universe in order to hold up the divinity they wished to confer upon it.

There is no need for me to do so, however, for the main point that I wish to make can now be made with reasonable clarity, and that is that the Big Bang Theory makes all of the scaffolding come crashing down.


If the Big Bang Theory is true, the universe is finite in time, because it began with the initial burst of energy.


If the Big Bang Theory is true, the universe is finite in space, because it began at a single point and has since been expanding.


If the Big Bang Theory is true, the universe is forever in a state of change, because it is continually getting bigger, cooler, and less dense.


If the Big Bang Theory is true, the universe is surely caused by God, for what could possibly initiate a universe in such a way other than a Being of immense power that is outside of space and time?


This last point especially stuck in the craw of scientistic atheists. They knew that Christianity had long held to the belief that the universe is not eternal, but had a beginning in time. The last thing that they wanted to see was all of their efforts in science, their discoveries, their formulas, their experiments, and so on point ultimately to a dogma of the Christian faith, held on the basis of religious belief.


No one has expressed the disappointment more aptly than the late NASA astronomer Robert Jastrow:


For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountain of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries.

Later in this article, we will see that even atheist scientists had to accept the evidence for the Big Bang—though of course that did not convert many of them to God—but for now we just register their reaction to the theory: a reaction of intense dislike followed by an attempt to discredit and destroy the theory, and finishing with a begrudging acceptance.


3. Fundamentalist Protestants

We have just seen that atheist scientists were biased against the Big Bang Theory because it lent support for a dogma of Christianity. We will now see that fundamentalist Protestants are also biased against the theory because it does not lend support to that dogma in the way that they would like.


Under the Big Bang scenario, the development of the universe from an initial point of immense energy to a diverse collection of galaxies, stars and planetary systems takes many eons of time. While the theory indirectly implies that a being outside of space and time was at the origin of the universe, it directly asserts, by scientific argument, the precise conditions under which the universe had to develop. One of those conditions is a time period in the billions of years.


Fundamentalist Protestants, meanwhile, hold as dogma not just that God created the universe with a beginning in time, but also that He did so 6000 years ago and in a period of six, twenty-four hour days. For them, the time and the way that God created are just as dogmatic as the fact of God’s creation. This position today is commonly referred to as Young Earth Creationism (YEC).


The YEC stance stems directly from the fact that Protestantism is a text-based religion and not an institution-based religion. Protestants do not start with a divine institution that informs them on the supernatural truths that are necessary to reach salvation. They rather start with a text (compiled and transmitted across the centuries by Catholics) and seek to derive a set of revealed truths from that text.


They see that text as the only means which God has established to communicate saving truths to believers. This perspective is sometimes referred to as ‘biblicism’ because it makes the Bible the be all, end all source of religion. The Bible is made to play for Protestants the same role that the Church plays for Catholics. Just as the Church is the living voice of Jesus Christ for Catholics, so too the Bible is that voice for Protestants.


Those who over-divinize the Bible in this way tend to:


1. Interpret the Bible literally. To interpret the Bible literally here and allegorically there is to place oneself above the Bible and so above the divine mind.
2. Read the Bible as a science book as well as a spiritual book. The strictly literal sense of some passages of the Bible, especially Genesis, speaks of things which can be taken as scientific fact. Since deviating from the literal sense is to be irreverent to the Bible, those things must be taken as scientific fact.
3. Place the Bible above reason, instead of alongside it. When scientific data taken from a literal reading of God’s Word conflicts with scientific data taken from God’s nature, God’s Word must be upheld over God’s nature. It is human reason that has to interpret nature, but human reason does not have to be involved in taking a literal sense of the Bible. Because human reason can fail, the literal sense of the Bible is to be preferred over even the clearest conclusions of human reason.

Protestant biblicism sets fundamentalists on a beeline collision course with the Big Bang Theory. It leaves them with only two choices: reject all evidence for the Big Bang Theory or reject the Bible and Christian religion. An article from a 2013 issue of their Creation magazine sums it up this way:


The timescale in and of itself is not the important issue. It ultimately comes down to, “Does the Bible actually mean what it says?” The issue is about the trustworthiness of Scripture—compromising with long ages severely undermines the whole Gospel.

It undermines the whole Gospel IF you believe that a young age for the universe is part of the Gospel. And you believe that a young age for the universe is part of the Gospel only if you take your revealed truths from the Bible alone rather than take your revealed truths from Jesus Christ’s divine institution and then find them in the Bible.



4. Mainstream Catholics

This brings me to the Catholic reaction to the Big Bang Theory. I have already mentioned that the theory originated with a Belgian Catholic priest. Neither to him nor to the other Catholics of his day did the theory seem to violate any teaching of the Catholic faith. A short history of Catholic exegesis will help us understand why.


For the Fathers of the Church, the first rule of Biblical interpretation is to maintain the literal sense unless it is shown to be false. When that happens, it becomes obvious that the literal sense cannot be the sense intended by Scripture, because Scripture is the Word of God and so without error.


This rule teaches us that reason can be used to clarify the true meaning of Scripture. When the rule is followed, faith and reason, Bible and science, do not come into conflict. When the rule is not followed—when one is so attached to the literal sense that he clings to it in the face of contrary evidence—religion becomes unreasonable and subject to the mockery of the learned.


The two greatest thinkers in Christian history—Sts. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas—sternly warned Catholics not to interpret Scripture against reason. Here is St. Thomas summarizing St. Augustine in the Summa:


Since Sacred Scripture can be interpreted in many ways, one must not hold so firmly to a given interpretation such that, once that interpretation is clearly shown to be false, he presume to assert that the false interpretation is Scripture’s meaning, lest, by doing so, he expose Scripture to ridicule by non-believers, and close off for them the path to belief.


There have been many Catholic Scripture scholars in Church history who have interpreted Genesis 1 in a literal sense. They did so, however, in the spirit of the primal interpretational rule. As such, they were willing to cast aside a strictly literal sense if strong evidence was found to contradict it. They understood that certain supernatural truths of Genesis were non-negotiable—one God as creator of everything from nothing, creation in time, the direct creation of man, the unity of the human race, man’s superiority over other creatures on earth and over the heavenly bodies, man’s state of original justice and his fall, etc. Natural truths not underpinning those supernatural truths, however, were negotiable.


The time in which God created the universe and the way He had it develop are certainly among the negotiable truths, since whether God created in a long period of time or a short period changes nothing of the Catholic Faith. It was for this reason that the Fathers were fairly unanimous on the religious truths taught by Genesis 1, but were quite varied in their opinions on the scientific truths taught by the same.
St. Augustine’s opinion, the one favored by St. Thomas, was that God created everything at once, not in a period of six days. For him, the six day description was a teaching tool used by the sacred author to communicate religious truths in the most effective way possible.


In our age, a series of Popes have written encyclicals on Scripture clarifying the relationship between the Bible and science. Leo XIII was particularly clear on this question when he wrote the following in Providentissimus Deus:


[T]he sacred writers, or to speak more accurately, the Holy Spirit ‘who spoke by them, did not intend to teach men these things (that is to say, the essential nature of the things of the visible universe), things in no way profitable unto salvation.’ [St. Augustine, De Gen. ad litt., i., 9, 20] Hence they did not seek to penetrate the secrets of nature, but rather described and dealt with things in more or less figurative language, or in terms which were commonly used at the time and which in many instances are in daily use at this day, even by the most eminent men of science.


In the end, Catholics have freedom to embrace or reject the Big Bang Theory, for the Church considers it to be a question of science, not of religion. No doubt, most Protestants hold the same opinion. The difference, however, is that Protestants consistent with the spirit of their religion will read the Bible as a science book, while Catholics consistent with the spirit of Catholicism will not. The savvy Catholic exegete, on the contrary, will be careful to protect both faith and reason in his interpretation of the Bible, in order to avoid portraying religion as an exercise in irrationality.


None of this, of course, is an attempt on my part to encourage Catholics to embrace the Big Bang Theory. It is rather an attempt to encourage them to reject theories that can only appear irrational in the face of today’s scientific knowledge.


Since the Big Bang Theory is a scientific theory, it needs to be considered on the basis of its scientific merits. We will do this shortly, but only after first mentioning that Pope Pius XII openly endorsed the theory and considered it to provide support for the opening words of Genesis 1. In an address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences in 1951, he examined four pieces of scientific evidence pointing to a 5-10 billion year age of the universe. Then, he stated the following:


Although these figures may seem astounding, nevertheless, even to the simplest of the faithful, they bring no new or different concept from the one they learned in the opening words of Genesis: ‘In the beginning . . .’, that is to say, at the beginning of things in time. The figures We have quoted clothe these words in a concrete and almost mathematical expression, while from them there springs forth a new source of consolation for those who share the esteem of the Apostle for that divinely-inspired Scripture, which is always useful ‘for teaching, for reproving, for correcting, for instructing’ (II Tim. iii, 6).


5. Scientific evidence

Einstein did not perform any experimentation in order to propose his Special and General Theories of Relativity. He rather started with the hypothetical situation that the same physical laws hold true in relation to every possible observer in the universe, no matter his location or state of motion. From there, Einstein determined in detail what sort of universe that would be and how measurements of motion should take place in such a universe. But it remained to be seen, through experimentation, if Einstein’s hypothetical universe is the one in which we actually exist.


We already noted two confirmations of Einstein’s theory in part 1 of this article. But they did not concern that aspect of the theory predicting that the universe is expanding. Experimental confirmation for this had wait for the work of Edwin Hubble. In the 1920s, he was spending many nighttime hours seated in a wicker chair, peering into a new 100-inch telescope at the Mount Wilson Observatory near Los Angeles. What he discovered revolutionized our view of the universe.


The light traveling so fast, so far, and so long through space to arrive at the eye of an avid astronomer carries with it precious information. The most important quality of the light is its wavelength, which is either stretched out or compressed. If the light is stretched out, it is said to be red-shifted, because the light has a wavelength closer to the red end of the visible spectrum of light. If the light is compressed, it is said to be blue-shifted, because it has a wavelength closer to the blue end of the visible spectrum.


When an astronomer detects red-shifted light in his telescope, he knows that the heavenly body emitting the light is moving away from the earth. When he detects blue-shifted light, it is because the star, galaxy, or whatever is moving towards the Earth.


Hubble, after carefully observing numerous heavenly bodies, was able to draw the following conclusions:


1. Practically all the light viewed in a telescope is red-shifted. This means that heavenly bodies are moving away from the Earth and also from one another. In other words, the universe is expanding.
2. The heavenly bodies with greater redshift are farther away from the Earth, while the ones with less redshift are closer. And because redshift corresponds to the speed of the body emitting light, the bodies that are farther from the Earth are moving faster than the ones that are closer. This indicates that the speed of the universe’s expansion is increasing over time.

Hubble was not just able to establish the expansion of the universe and, to a certain degree, the rate of that expansion. He was also able to peer into its history. Looking into a telescope is like looking back in time, because we are really seeing planets and stars at the time that they emitted the light that is reaching us, not as they are at the present moment. For instance, it takes light from the sun eight minutes to reach Earth, and so we are seeing the sun eight minutes in the past whenever we look at it in our backyard telescopes.
By observing thousands of space objects, Hubble was able to see stars and galaxies at different stages of development and, ultimately, the universe itself at different stages of development. From this data, he was able to construct a famous ‘tuning fork’ diagram to classify different types of galaxies. Two other astronomers named Hertzsprung and Russell developed a diagram tracking the life cycle of stars, according to their color, brightness and temperature.


By the 1940s, Hubble’s empirical evidence was strongly swaying scientific minds towards acceptance of the Big Bang model. Some dyed-in-the-wool universe-deifying types, however, were still desperately supporting the Steady State model. Fred Hoyle and his cohort now had to admit that the universe was expanding and so noticeably unsteady in its dimensions. But they would not admit that the total matter of the universe was thinning out. They were sure that the density of the universe stayed the same, even with the universe expanding. As a result, they assisted the universe to be steady by claiming that one hydrogen atom per cubic meter of the universe is being created from nothing every 300,000 years and so the density of the universe always remains the same. When they said ‘created from nothing’ here, they were not saying created by God from nothing. They were saying that nothing created something—hydrogen atoms—from nothing. It was an act of scientistic ideological desperation which I did not think could possibly have a parallel until I read Lawrence Krauss’ book A Universe from Nothing.


Regardless, the atheist scientists were clinging so desperately to their fideistic religion that the Big Bang really needed some explosive evidence in order to permanently steady the fate of the Steady State Theory in a state of oblivion. Such evidence came in 1964, but before getting to it, we have to first backtrack quickly to Fr. Lemaître.


Around the time the Belgian priest was speaking about the possibility of the universe starting as a primeval atom, he suggested that there might be a way of empirically checking his theory. Some of the energy of the Big Bang would form into stars and galaxies, but surely not all of it. Where would the rest be? It would simply be in the space between the stars and galaxies. In other words, if there was a Big Bang in the beginning, then we would expect there to be leftover radiation from the Big Bang pervading all of space, to this day.


The radiation that Fr. Lemaître predicted, today called Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR), was discovered at Bell Labs in New Jersey, when technology was just becoming sufficiently advanced to do transcontinental television transmissions. Two scientists, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, were testing a microwave receiver which they were pointing at the sky to receive the transmissions. No matter which direction they pointed the receiver, however, they noted some interference, a faint microwave signal that sounded like a hiss in their earphones. After looking high and low for the source of the problem in their device—and not finding it—they went down the road to Princeton University and were told that, in all likelihood, they were listening to a very distant echo of what once was a big bang.


The little whimper from the Big Bang—and the subsequent mapping of the CMBR by three different satellite probes—was like the tolling of a death knell for any and all theories trying to deprive the universe of a beginning or of change. It did not, of course, signal the end of scientistic atheists; it only forced them into deeper recesses of irrationality. As it were from a cavern of darkness, in sharp contrast to the bright light of the universe’s birth, they spout out the theory—no, the hallucination—that universes spontaneously pop into existence without a cause. They seem to find that idea more comforting than that supremely sane and certain sentence, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

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Published on August 15, 2018 18:19 Tags: atheism, big-bang, catholicism, protestantism, science
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ShepherdsDelight Dear Father Robinson,

What do you think about scientists who hold that the Big Bang is far from settled science?

https://web.archive.org/web/201404010...

Most respectfully,
Adam Fetsch


message 2: by ShepherdsDelight (last edited Sep 25, 2018 12:27PM) (new)

ShepherdsDelight Dear Father Robinson,

Thank you for taking the time to answer all of my little notes and messages so far. I very much appreciate it. I apologize for not having fully shared my thoughts as of yet. Perhaps per email in more detail.

Here I would just like to openly express an opinion in opposition to your blog post regarding the certainty of the Big Bang theory/hypothesis.

1. First of all, I'd like to make mention of the number of scientists and engineers who doubt the Big Bang theory (see the link to the open letter with hundreds of signatures above).

2. Science as a method of reasoning is not the most reliable tool. It is prone to errors in interpretation. Seeing red-shifted stars requires an interpretation. Is it the Doppler effect, scattering, expansion of space (!), time dilation(!)? The same goes for cosmic background radiation -- it can (and is!) interpreted in many different ways. Then further, even if it's accepted that red-shift means outward movement of the stars, it's a jump in reasoning to conclude that at one point everything was contained in a single point. God certainly could have made an initial universe of definite size 1 at time 0, and since then have it expand to size 2.
If scientists are all over the place with their interpretations, and constantly inventing fudge factors to fill in the gaps, I think it's an understatement to say that this isn't settled science yet. It's one thing to stress that Catholics are allowed to hold this position, but it's quite another to say that this is settled science. The deeper one digs into cosmology, the more one realizes how little we actually know about the origins of the cosmos (and this is admitted!).

3. The fact that Fr. Lemaître was Catholic isn't proof that his theory was correct. There were and are Catholics on both sides of this issue. It's possible that someone who is Catholic can have good scientific theories and it's possible that someone who is Catholic can have scientific theories that are erroneous.

4. For anyone wishing to look more into scientific arguments against the Big Bang, I'd suggest a few starting points:
a.) Again, this open letter signed by hundreds of scientists: https://web.archive.org/web/201404010...
b.) Chapter 3 of an online book by Thomas McFadden Sr. archived on the SSPX homepage: http://fsspx.uk/sites/sspx/files/crea...
c.) Mr. McFadden also mentions this article, which highlights some of the strange notions that have been needed to fill in the gaps of the Big Bang: http://www.icr.org/article/why-modern...
d.) Even just checking Wikipedia, which generally accepts the Big Bang -- you can see some problems with the theory are listed there.
e.) Point #4, regarding the Big Bang, from this review of Father's book: https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-re...
f.) Some problems with the Big Bang as explained by Dr. Thomas Seiler (starting at 20min for the scientific points -- it gets better towards the end): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFOMF...
g.) Some problems with the Big Bang as explained by Spike Psarris, mainly with regard to planet formation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9_o7...
h.) Finally, to show that there are 2 sides to the scientific discussion of a young versus old age of the earth. 101 reasons for a young earth: https://creation.com/age-of-the-earth vs. 100 reasons for an old earth: https://paulbraterman.wordpress.com/2... .

There are so many mysteries in the cosmos, so many things we humans don't understand. So I think humility instead of certainty might be the proper disposition with regard to science.
Maybe we can look to more reliable methods for knowledge, like philosophy or Revelation. And in the meantime, continue the humble search to see what the imperfect tool of science might tell us.

Most respectfully,
Adam Fetsch


message 3: by Paul (new)

Paul Robinson Hello, Adam,
Here is my answer. I hope you find it useful.

Do you think that the Big Bang Theory is settled science?
It certainly seems that Pope Pius XII thought so, and I would tend to agree with him. But before I explain why, it would be best to decide what is meant by the expression ‘settled science’.
Settled science happens when a scientific theory has attained a preponderant and, sometimes, an overwhelming weight of certainty. It is the long term successful result of an investigative process that starts with a question. In the case of the Big Bang Theory, the question is, “How did the universe develop over time?” In the case of geocentrism and heliocentrism, the question is, “Does the sun or the earth move, or both, and how do they move?” In the case of evolutionary theory, the question is, “What is the origin of the diversity of biological life?”

The question and the proposal of theories to answer it is the starting point, stage one. Next comes the hunt for empirical evidence, stage two. This consists of gathering data from reality, as much as possible, to find which theory is correct. At first, there is not enough data, and multiple competing theories are equally plausible to cover that data. The evidence from reality is too limited to strongly prefer one theory over another.

For instance, both Greek philosophers and medieval scholastics proposed theories on geocentrism and heliocentrism. They realized that the observed movement of the stars could be explained by their actual movement relative to a stationary Earth or by their apparent movement relative to a moving Earth. Since it is easier to think of the Earth as stationary, because of our relative position, geocentrism won out through the ages. But it did not win out on the basis of empirical evidence, since both systems could “save the appearances” or account for the evidence available at the time.

This all changes when science reaches the third and final stage, the stage when empirical evidence ‘chooses sides’, as it were. The accumulating data starts to clearly favor one theory over the others, and this process develops until the point is reached where the whole body of evidence can only be accounted for by the favored theory. The other theories still have sufficient explanatory power to cover certain pieces of the puzzle, but they are utterly inadequate to circumscribe and unify the body of empirical data. At that point, I think, we declare the favored theory the winner and endow it with the phrase ‘settled science’.

In the case of geocentrism and heliocentrism, Galileo’s discoveries of the phases of Venus and the moons of Jupiter marked the time when empirical evidence started to favor heliocentrism over geocentrism. Galileo’s problem was that he thought he had reached settled science when, in fact, he had only attained certain positive signs in favor of heliocentrism. As indicated in The Realist Guide to Religion and Science, it was only when telescopes became sufficiently precise, in the 1800s, to observe stellar parallax that empirical evidence was weighty enough to turn heliocentrism into settled science. Since then, the empirical data counting against geocentrism has become a mountain, which is why geocentrists are sometimes compared to flat-earthers by those who are familiar with the scientific evidence.

If we turn now to the Big Bang Theory, we have to understand, first, that science was not able to mathematically model the universe at all until Einstein’s theory of relativity came along. Newton was able to model the solar system, but not the universe. The Big Bang Theory is a theory about the universe as such. Until the 20th century, there was not enough empirical data around for the Big Bang Theory and its rivals to appear; there was not enough information about the universe for scientists to propose theories about its development that were more than mere guesswork.

When the Big Bang Theory was proposed by the Catholic priest Fr Georges Lemaitre, it was essentially an elucidation of the consequences of Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity. Thus, its fate primarily rested on the empirical evidence that could be found to support Einstein’s theory. Lemaitre explained that relativity demanded a universe that was expanding throughout its history. But a universe that has expanded throughout its history must have been more compact as we go into the past. If we go all the way back, we reach an initial point wherein the entire matter of the universe was contained in a single point, from which the universe expanded (not exploded, as the word ‘bang’ implies).

Einstein famously began by refusing these consequences of his theory and inventing a cosmological constant to keep the universe in the steadiness he desired for it. Once the evidence came in for the expansion, however, he backpedaled and referred to his invention of the constant as the biggest mistake of his scientific career.

Before we get into that evidence, notice that we are at the second stage of the process that leads to settled science. In this case, it is the stage where there are models for the development of the universe, but not sufficient empirical data to prove any model to be true. Besides the Big Bang Theory, there were other theories being floated, the most notorious of which was Fred Hoyle’s Steady State Theory. These two theories were the main contenders for scientific consensus between the 1930s and the 1970s.

During those four decades, the third stage was attained by the accumulation of empirical evidence in favor of the Big Bang Theory. Three such evidences are particularly noteworthy. The first is the red-shifting of the stars, the fact that the stars in the night sky are moving away from us and from one another, indicating that the everything in the universe is moving outwards.
The second piece of evidence is the relative concentrations of hydrogen and helium in the universe. It was discovered that 74% of the universe’s nuclear matter is hydrogen, 25% is helium, and less than 1% is the rest of the elements of the periodic table. Now, this is what we would expect if the universe expanded over time from an initial burst of intensely hot and extremely dense energy. Moreover, it is clear that the oldest galaxies of the universe do not contain heavy elements, while the younger ones do, something that is also predicted by the Big Bang Theory.

The third piece of evidence is the weightiest and its discovery might be marked as the point when the Big Bang Theory became settled science, when the empirical evidence reached the critical stage of preponderantly supporting one theory over all the rest. This was the discovery of Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) by Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson in 1964. It is a blackbody radiation that pervades the entire universe and has the hallmarks of a very ancient radiation that could not be produced today.

The CMBR weighed heavily in the Big Bang’s favor because its existence was predicted by Fr Lemaitre. If the universe expanded over time from an initial burst of energy, and much of the energy formed into stars and galaxies, there would still be leftover energy of approximately the same frequency pervading all of space. This is exactly what the CMBR seems to be. Three probes have been sent into space to map the CMBR and the data they have collected have only served to solidify the Big Bang Theory’s claim to being settled science.

Some may object that the theory cannot possibly be settled science because the cause of the expansion of the universe is unknown and scientists speak only in terms of a dark matter and a dark energy, entities that have no connection to empirical evidence. What such objectors are doing is confusing the general theory itself, which is settled, with the models that are proposed to work the theory out to the last details, which are not settled. In this case, it is certain that the universe is expanding, that it bears all of the hallmarks of having expanded throughout its entire history, and that such could have happened only if it began with an initial burst of energy. That is the settled part of the Big Bang Theory which, after all, is more about the singularity with which the universe began than anything else. But the full cause of the expansion is not known, and scientists do not seem close to determining its cause. For the Big Bang Theory to be overturned, however, they would have to discover that the universe is not expanding, and this is simply not going to happen, since it would require the overturning of an immense weight of solidly established empirical data.

This is why atheist scientists today accept the Big Bang, despite the fact that it was proposed by a Catholic priest and provides theists with a certain scientific proof for the existence of God. Perhaps, in the end, the decision of the atheists to try to remain coherently godless with a theory that makes their position extremely difficult is the biggest sign that the Big Bang Theory is settled science.


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