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RALPH
WENDELL BURHOE: RELIGION IN AN AGE OF SCIENCE
1911-1997
by
Philip Hefner
Ralph
Wendell Burhoe was a twentieth century pioneer interpreter
of the importance of religion for a scientific and
technological world. He helped to found the Journal
of American Academy of Arts and Sciences: Daedalus.
While Burhoe followed an unconventional academic
path, beset by Depression era economic difficulties
that prevented him from attaining any earned degrees,
his intellectual and organizational achievements
were recognized in 1980 when he was awarded the
Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion. In a ceremony
in London, at Buckingham Palace, the founder of
the prize, noted financier Sir John Marks Templeton,
said of Burhoe, "He is not only a scientist
and a theologian; he is a missionary for a new reformation,
a reformation which may be far more profound and
revolutionary than the reformation led by Martin
Luther."
Born in Somerville, Massachusetts, on 21 June 1911,
Burhoe attended Harvard from 1928 to 1932, but dropped
out before he could complete his degree. In 1935-36,
he spent eighteen months in theological study at
Andover Newton seminary. At one point, shortly after
he was married in 1932 to Frances Bickford, when
he and his wife were both penniless and unemployed,
they retreated to a log cabin on the side of Mount
Washington to "meditate upon their situation."
His search in these years, as during his long lifetime,
was to find "ontological and rational supports
for the sacred meaning of his life." Those
supports were eroded, Burhoe believed, for himself
and for many persons, by the alienation that separated
the traditions of meaning and value carried by humanity's
religions from the knowledge attained by science
and applied in technology. He was moved deeply by
the confusion and meaninglessness that afflicted
so many persons, and believed the root of the problem
lay in this alienation of science from religion.
After he left his formal studies, in 1936 Burhoe
became assistant to the director of Harvard's Blue
Hill meteorological observatory, a position he held
until 1946. During this time he was active in the
American Meteoreological Society and founded the
journal Metereological Abstracts as an organ
for gathering international weather data, much of
which was useful for military intelligence during
the Second World War. From 1947 to 1964, Burhoe
served as the first executive officer of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. This position brought
him into contact with the finest scientists of the
time, serving to provide the intellectual resources
that he had not found in formal academic studies.
Harlow Shapley (astronomy), Kirtley Mather (geology),
George Wald (biology), and Hudson Hoaglund (biology)
were among his closest mentors. He was instrumental
in establishing the Academy's journal, Daedalus,
and its Committee on Science and Values.
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Convinced
that science does not threaten the wisdom of traditional
religion, but rather reinforces it, Burhoe developed
an extensive theoretical framework to explain how
religion emerged within the evolutionary process.
His system of thought included the concept of God
as demonstrated through the processes of natural selection,
which, however, did not depend entirely on brutal
competition. In fact, he saw trans-kin altruism, or
love, as the central factor that enabled human culture
to survive. The nub of his theories was the recognition
that in the brainthe element that has given
Homo sapiens its distinctivenessgenetic evolution
converged with culture and its evolution. Culture
carries the information that tranforms the "ape-man"
into a genuine human being. And it is the religious
traditions that have carried core information, about
how humans can live together and thereby reach their
full evolutionary potential. This core information
has been transmitted in the religious teachings that
insist on altruism beyond the kin group, and it is
this information that evolution has selected for,
thus establishing the human species and its dominance.
In one of his last published articles (1987), "War,
Peace, and Religion's Biocultural Evolution,"
Burhoe argued that religion's success in sublimating
the violent behaviors of smaller groups by fostering
altruism within the larger religious community must
now be extended to include the entire human race as
the primary community. In spite of its failures up
to now in this effort, he believed that religion was
humanity's best hope for achieving peace. His theories
of how religion has emerged and functioned within
the evolutionary process were intended as intellectual
supports that would help people understand how, through
religion, they could reach the goal of full trans-kin
altruism.
An imaginative evolutionary concept of the soul and
its immortality extended the scope of this theoretical
framework. The information that comprises the personal
center of a human being is released at death into
the larger stream of cosmic information and continues
its course through the selective processes of evolution.
In their totality Burhoe's theories presented a comprehensive
explanation of how traditional religion could be translated
into serious scientific theories. Although this explanation
was never recognized as the scientific advance that
Burhoe envisioned, it was warmly received by some
of the leading scientists who knew Burhoe, and it
attracted many of them to his work and to conversation
with religious thinkers. Among these scientists were
Shapley, Mather, Hoaglund, Wald, E. O. Wilson (biology),
Erwin Goodenough (history of religions), Anthony F.
C. Wallace (anthropology), Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
(psychology), Solomon Katz (anthropology) and others.
Writing in 1992, Roger Sperry, a Nobel Prize winner
for brain research, observed that "in the history
of efforts to join religion and science, none appears
to have achieved more wide and lasting impact than
the venture of Ralph Wendell Burhoe." Within
the broad range of attention that was directed toward
relating religion and science after the Second World
War, Burhoe was distinctive for his effort to work
with both mainstream scientific and religious thinking.
A number of these scientists, including those who
were members of the Academy Committee on Science and
Values, were responsible for that committee's becoming,
in 1956, the nucleus of the Institute on Religion
in an Age of Science. This Institute was the first
of a number of enterprises founded by Burhoe. These
include Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science,
1966, which under Burhoe's editorship became a renowned
interdisciplinary vehicle, the only refereed academic
journal in this field. The journal was supported largely
through the efforts of Meadville/Lombard Theological
School in Chicago, to which Burhoe had been called
as a professor in 1964. The Center for Advanced Studies
in Religion and Science was established in 1972. In
1988, Burhoe founded the Chicago Center for Religion
and Science, in cooperation with the Lutheran School
of Theology at Chicago. The latter school was the
scene of his major work when he retired from Meadville
in 1974. The earliest formulations of his theories
found expression in the early 1960s in his work for
the Commission for Theology and the Frontiers of Learning,
established by the Unitarian Universalist Association.
He elaborated his thought through many essays published
in Zygon and other journals. A collection of essays
was published in 1980 under the title, Toward a
Scientific Theology. David Breed's biography,
Yoking Science and Religion: The Life and Thought
of Ralph Wendell Burhoe (Zygon Books) appeared
in 1992.
In addition to the Templeton Prize, Burhoe's achievements
were recognized by honorary doctorates from Meadville
Lombard Theological School (1977) and Rollins College
(1979). The Society for the Scientific Study of Religion,
of which he was a founder, bestowed on him its first
Distinguished Career Achievement Award in 1984. He
was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,
and the World Academy of Arts and Letters.
Recommended
Reading
Zygon: Journal of Religion and
Science, Chicago
Yoking Science and Religion: the Life and Thought
of Ralph Burhoe (Chicago: Zygon Books, c.1992)
UNITARIAN
NOTE
Ralph
was long active in the life of Unitarianism's historic
Arlington Street Church, Boston. When a professor
at the Unitarian Universalist Meadville Lombard
Theological School from 1964-1974, he was an active
member of the First Unitarian Society.
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