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292 pages, Hardcover
First published June 2, 2015
In calm, levelheaded prose, Coyne refutes the "accommodationist" position that science and faith belong to "two non-overlapping magisteria" -- a theory coined by his late colleague Stephen Jay Gould that espouses that science concerns itself with establishing facts about the physical universe, while religion is interested in spiritual matters, and the two therefore cannot be in conflict. Reconciling the two is impossible, he writes, because religion’s "combination of certainty, morality, and universal punishment is toxic," while science, in contrast, acknowledges the fact that it might err, arriving at truths that are "provisional and evidence-based," but at least testable. Unlike religion, science self-corrects, points out its errors, and tries again.
"Everything and nothing. Listen, guys are already complaining, but we're in a war. Put it this way, no one's bitching back home if it's a bomb or our burning shit that takes someone out. Don't take that the wrong way. But just wait, when we're all sixty the government will admit that we poisoned ourselves, give the living ones a couple grand, maybe some VA bennies. That's it. Thanks for volunteering.""So you're saying we're burning more than our shit?" Wintric says.
"Will do more damage than these Taliban jerk-offs."
"No offense, LT," Wintric says. "I hear you, but it could be a flu."
"Damn, Ellis. You're making sense to me. You're an optimist. They need you at West Point. Stay with it, man. Stay with it." (103)