Freeman:
New York, 1997. xii + 362 pp. Figs., diagrams, photographs,
20 color plates. 19.0 x 24.2 cm. ISBN 0-7167-2899-0. $28.95.
For several millennia science and religion seem to
have been at odds. Cases in point are the persecution of
Galileo by the Roman Catholic Church for his defense of
Copernicus' heliocentric theory, the expulsion of Spinoza by the
Amsterdam Jewish community, the Thoms H.
Huxley-Bishop Wilberforce confrontation over evolution, and the
Scopes "monkey trial." Recently, however, a rapprochement
seems to be in progress. A spate of books, symposia, college
courses, societies, and journals aim at establishing a dialogue
between the two previously adversarial fields of human activity.
In December 1997, The Science Channel, a Web site
(http://channels.reed-elsevier.com),
even featured an "editorial
debate" on "Science and Religion," in which seven
internationally renowned authorities, including Roald
Hoffmann-Nobel laureate, Cornell University chemistry professor,
author, and poet-participated and discussed the book under review here.
Together with Shira Leibowitz Schmidt, engineer,
translator, essayist, mother of six, and teacher of English as a
foreign language at Netanya Academic College in
Israel, Hoffmann joined forces to create "our modest effort to look
at issues of science and Jewish religious tradition." Their thesis
is that "science and religion are both ways of trying to
understand the world, to find meaning in that world's beauty
and terror." They argue that science and Jewish religious
tradition, although admittedly different in many ways,
nevertheless share the belief that the actions of human beings matter
and that there is an underlying order to the universe.
This book has much in common with Hoffmann's
earlier collaboration with another female coauthor, artist Vivian
Torrence. Chemistry Imagined: Reflections on
Science (1993) (1) is an amalgam of art, science, and literature that sought
to establish similarities between art and science. Like the
earlier volume, the present book is a collage of disparate
media-correspondence, essays, sometimes heated e-mail and
Internet exchanges, a trial transcript, a debate,
autobiography, even a three-act play with two
intermezzi. The authors' unique and provocative search for parallels, interactions,
and relationships between science (particularly chemistry)
and religion (Judaism) is liberally laced with wit
and humor and accompanied by hundreds of varied and striking
illustrations. Through consideration of a series of seemingly
innocuous questions from everyday experience, they explore the
contemporary values and underlying unity of all knowledge
as science and religion both strive for ultimate
understanding. These questions lead to deeper philosophical and
societal issues concerning science, religion, and art. The authors
claim that religion and science are parallel not only in subject
matter but in the logic applied.
Among the issues dealt with in the eight chapters
are the dichotomy between natural and synthetic; the
psychodynamics of wigs (married Orthodox women must cover
their hair); religion and environmentalism; permissible
materials (specifically an elephant!) for a sukkah (the booth in
which Jews dwell during Sukkot, the autumn festival
of Tabernacles, on which Thanksgiving is based); the difference between
right and left, leading to discussions of optical
isomerism, nonconservation of parity, and "the same and not the
same" (the title and subject of Hoffmann's 1995 book
[2]); purity and impurity with excursions on alloys, pheromones,
the Delaney clause, and the chemical composition of
Coca-Cola (yes! it's now kosher); authoritarianism in science and
religion; conjectures on how Moses sweetened the bitter
waters of Marah (a monograph on ion exchange cites this as the
first use of the technique); three reasons why God would be
denied tenure at a major Ivy League university; the nature and
chemistry of the biblical blue dye tekhelet, obtained from
Mediterranean snails and used in the tzitzit (fringes) on the
tallit (prayer shawl) and the Israeli flag; the assassination of
Yitzhak Rabin; a fictionalized version of an actual case tried in
an Israeli court and appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court,
in which the appellant (later disclosed to be author
Schmidt) appealed a parking ticket citing medieval Rabbi
Nachmanides' commentary on the rainbow; the making of a torah scroll
and the question of the point at which it becomes sanctified
(which molecule has the sanctity?). A number of these themes
have been explored by Hoffmann and Schmidt in previous articles.
A detailed (45 pp) list of notes and references, some as recent
as 1997, and a glossary of Hebrew and Yiddish terms make
the volume user-friendly to Jewish and non-Jewish readers alike.
Hoffmann and Schmidt playfully tell stories,
"inherently digressive the way real life is," of how science and
religion (and occasionally art) look at pieces of the world.
Hoffmann is "an atheist who is moved by religion" for whom "the
Jewish tradition is important...because I'm a survivor of
wartime Europe." Schmidt is a ritually observant Orthodox Jew.
Because their religious convictions and expertise differ, much
of their book is in the form of dialogues, debates, and
exchanges, often in contrapuntal form, resulting in an underlying tension
and polarity. In an unusual concluding
chapter, which might better be read before the main text, they each provide
their own version of how the book came into being.
Such contention is a time-honored method of
Jewish debate by which rabbis and scholars in the yeshivot
(religious academies) arrived at their interpretations of scripture,
which were expressed in the Talmud, commentaries, codes,
and responsa. The authors claim that this is the same
procedure whereby consensus is achieved in science. However,
persons who apply Kipling's dictum about East and West to
religion and science and believe that "never the twain shall meet"
will probably not be convinced and will be apt to consider
the purported parallels sometimes forced and strained.
Whereas in science nothing is exempt from question or scrutiny
(e.g., Ostwald and other chemists questioned the actual
existence of atoms as late as the first decade of the 20th century),
in fundamentalist religion the existence of God or the sanctity
of scripture is never questioned. Schmidt expresses the hope
that "we can get started on a sequel." Perhaps these
discrepancies and contradictions can be considered in a future volume.
Literature Cited
1. Kauffman, G. B.; Kauffman, L. M.
J. Chem. Educ. 1994, 71, A240.
2. Kauffman, G. B.; Kauffman, L. M.
J. Chem. Educ. 1996, 73, A47.
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