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Baháʼí views on science

The Bahá'í Faith teaches that there is a harmony or unity between science and religion, and that true science and true religion can never conflict. This principle is rooted in various statements in the Bahá'í scriptures. Some scholars have argued that ideas in the philosophy of science resonate with the Bahá'í approach. In addition, scholars have noted the Bahá'í view of interpreting religious scriptures symbolically rather than literally as conducive to harmony with scientific findings. The Bahá'í community and leadership have also applied their teachings on science and religion with the goal of the betterment of society, for instance by providing education and technology.

The principle of the harmony of science and religion edit

The principle of the harmony of science (or reason) and religion (or faith) has been a verbalized principle of the religion since ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's journeys to the West from 1910 to 1913[1] as an extension of the view of the singularness of reality to be explored through independent investigations by reasoned and spiritual methods.[2] It had been discussed without the specific wording a decade earlier via a compilation Anton Haddad put together with Mírzá Abu'l-Faḍl along with their own perspective - a subject that was subsequently taken up by American Bahá'ís.[3] Saiedi characterizes the relationship between science and the Bahá'í Faith, and the Bahá'í Faith and the importance of reason, as "one of its main spiritual principles."[4]

The Bahá'í view of science has been summarized as emphasizing recognition of the process of science, although not one isolated to the "scientific method" from a set of values and societal choices and understandings, not mere faith in the conclusions which are always open to refinement, without casting so much doubt that the process of science is somehow lacking because it is influenced by current understandings and conditions to which religion can have a strong influence.[5][6][7]

'Abdu'l-Bahá told jokes at the expense of materialist scientists.[1] However, according to Phelps, he reserved his harshest condemnations for religious people who took religious scripture literally, who he said "…have become the cause of much of the conflict in the world, whether between different faith communities or between science and religion…"[1]

In the Bahá'í writings edit

While writing on the Bahá'í views on science, certain excerpts from Bahá'í scriptures are commonly used by experts; the following are a few examples.[a]

Nader Saiedi, adjunct professor at UCLA,[8] notes Bahá'u'lláh criticized a pursuit of pseudoscience which claimed that "…numerous esoteric sciences is required to understand the mysteries of the sacred Word."[9]

Phelps quotes Bahá'u'lláh on the issue of language and understanding:

[S]ince all do not possess the same degree of spiritual understanding, certain statements will inevitably be made, and there shall arise, as a consequence, as many differing opinions as there are human minds and as many divergent beliefs as there are created things. This is certain and settled, and can in no wise be averted…. Our aim is that thou shouldst urge all the believers to show forth kindness and mercy and to overlook certain shortcomings among them, that differences may be dispelled; true harmony be established; and the censure and reproach, the hatred and dissension, seen among the peoples of former times may not arise anew.[1]

'Abdu'l-Bahá anonymously published The Secret of Divine Civilization in 1875 in Iran, noting how the country had declined among the nations "as a result of poor education, bad governance, ignorance of scientific advances, rejection of innovation, and the atrophy of the life of the mind."[10] and later restated Bahá'u'lláh's teaching, saying:

Religious teaching which is at variance with science and reason is human invention and imagination unworthy of acceptance, for the antithesis and opposite of knowledge is superstition born of the ignorance of man. If we say religion is opposed to science, we lack knowledge of either true science or true religion, for both are founded upon the premises and conclusions of reason, and both must bear its test.” (The Promulgation of Universal Peace[11][12])

Religion and science are the two wings upon which man’s intelligence can soar into the heights, with which the human soul can progress. It is not possible to fly with one wing alone! Should a man try to fly with the wing of religion alone he would quickly fall into the quagmire of superstition, whilst on the other hand, with the wing of science alone he would also make no progress, but fall into the despairing slough of materialism. (Paris Talks [4][13])

Scientific knowledge is the highest attainment upon the human plane, for science is the discoverer of realities. It is of two kinds: material and spiritual. Material science is the investigation of natural phenomena; divine science is the discovery and realization of spiritual verities. The world of humanity must acquire both. (The Promulgation of Universal Peace)[14][15]

Shoghi Effendi, head of the religion 1921–1957, offered a vision of the future including this principle:

In such a world society, science and religion, the two most potent forces in human life, will be reconciled, will co-operate, and will harmoniously develop…. The economic resources of the world will be organized, its sources of raw materials will be tapped and fully utilized, its markets will be co-ordinated and developed, and the distribution of its products will be equitably regulated. (World Order of Bahá'u'lláh[16])

The Bahá'í International Community released a statement in 1995, The Prosperity of Humankind[17] which says in part:

For the vast majority of the world’s population, the idea that human nature has a spiritual dimension—indeed that its fundamental identity is spiritual—is a truth requiring no demonstration. It is a perception of reality that can be discovered in the earliest records of civilization and that has been cultivated for several millennia by every one of the great religious traditions of humanity’s past. Its enduring achievements in law, the fine arts, and the civilizing of human intercourse are what give substance and meaning to history. In one form or another its promptings are a daily influence in the lives of most people on earth and, as events around the world today dramatically show, the longings it awakens are both inextinguishable and incalculably potent.[18][19]

and further:

Future generations … will find almost incomprehensible the circumstance that, in an age paying tribute to an egalitarian philosophy and related democratic principles, development planning should view the masses of humanity as essentially recipients of benefits from aid and training. Despite acknowledgment of participation as a principle, the scope of the decision making left to most of the world’s population is at best secondary, limited to a range of choices formulated by agencies inaccessible to them and determined by goals that are often irreconcilable with their perceptions of reality.[20][19]

The scholar Graham Hassall[21] summarizes that statement saying it "demonstrates the breath-taking scope of the Bahá'í program of governance reform, from local to global levels, and encompasses not only political and legal fundamentals, but the roles of science and technology in the global distribution of knowledge and power."[20] and university professor Sabet Behrooz[22] called "…a brilliant statement … (showing) the necessity of harmony between science and religion …(which) must be the guiding light and the organizing principle of our endeavors in integrative studies of the Bahá'í Faith."[17]

Implications edit

A number of scholars have offered commentary on the Bahá'í teachings on science and religion. Saiedi outlines several implications of the Bahá'í view of an agreement between religion and science or reason:

  • religious evolution of understanding laws and institutions.[23]
  • religion is not a substitute or competition with science but have a mutual reciprocity because of their individual qualities[24]
  • rather than take religious statements literally, the Bahá'í Faith provides a lexicon of interpretations or allegorical relationships of past statements[25]
  • an acceptance of the laws of nature as an expression of divine will and so called miracles are not evidence otherwise.[26]

Phelps lists the following three points:[1]

  • that ultimate reality is ineffable
  • that humility about what can be understood and applied is itself "the highest degree of human attainment"
  • that religious scripture is metaphorical, not literal.

Farzam Arbab, project developer and Bahá'í administrator,[27] also states that religious literalism is a problem.[28]

Ian Kluge, independent scholar,[29] observed a relationship between the Bahá'í stance of science and reason and the Bahá'í teaching on independent investigation for the individual where without reason and faith together, quoting `Abdu'l-Bahá, "...the heart finds no rest in it, and real faith is impossible..." and beyond the individual to societal progress which would be "...trapped in traditional worldviews or paradigms, be they religious, cultural, intellectual, or scientific..." and appealed to Aristotle’s four-fold causality which to him "...suggests that science deals with material and efficient causality whereas religion deals with issues related to formal and final causality."[30]

Scholars have also drawn parallels between Bahá'í views of science and the views of various philosophers. Karlberg and Smith underscore and summarize the work of Alan Chalmers and Peter Godfrey-Smith who had published university press texts, in relation to the Bahá'í Faith on a number of points.[31] Arbab appealed to Thomas Nagel's thoughts[32] on "sophisticated secularism."[33] Roland Faber elaborated this approach in parallel with the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead (so-called Process philosophy)[34] and William S. Hatcher drew on the ideas of Aristotle, Avicenna, Bertrand Russell, and Stephen Hawking in his defence of the Bahá'í view.[35]

Sociologist Margit Warburg quotes a 1978 letter from the Universal House of Justice "The principle of the harmony of science and religion means not only that religious teachings should be studied with the light of reason and evidence as well as of faith and inspiration, but also that everything in this creation, all aspects of human life and knowledge, should be studied in light of revelation as well as in that of purely rational investigation."[36] From it Warburg sees a "clear stance in the dilemma between academic freedom and acceptance of religious premises" and the issues of where "possible conflict with doctrines that can be tested empirically" can occur.[37] She notes that at the inauguration of the chair for Bahá'í Studies at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Peter Khan spoke saying in part that the place of Bahá'í understanding between science and religion was not in the "narrow definitions of legitimate scholarly activity in some disciplines within the academic community" criticizing the materialistic scientific studies of religion, asking that Bahá'í scholars, in Warburg's words, "should not comply with their academic tradition" which ignore the spiritual inputs of religion which will conflict with the Bahá'í Faith's own teachings.[38] Warburg criticizes Khan's statement as a spokesman of the Bahá'í Faith in this situation and what it could mean for Bahá'í administration.[39] "That is precisely what is at stake in the case of the controversial sources to Babi and Baha’i history, as well as concerning the sources to the construction of Abraham."[40]

Behrooz proposed a review of the progressive nature of religion and scholarly activity with history and present contexts in 2000. He stated that "An integrative approach to understanding the implications of the Bahá'í teachings, however, follows developmental processes that begin as primarily internal and evolve in a direction of externalization and fusion with other branches of knowledge. Historically, religions show a similarity of patterns in the development of learning and scholarship methods. For instance, in earlier configurations of integrative studies, a conflict between internal and external is unavoidable since the internal values of the emerging religion are based on a prescriptive (or declarative) style of thinking that presupposes the existence of an inherent circle of unity among its teachings, while the dominant mode of scholarship in the scientific and academic community may view the validity of those presuppositions untenable. Generally speaking, absolutist positions and authoritarian attitudes expressed by the gatekeepers of knowledge in both science and religion have obscured people's clarity of vision and hindered the union of these two essential entities of human life. In the Bahá'í view, universal teachings of religion should be interpreted within the context of the relativity of human comprehension and the historical nature of knowledge."[17]

Applications edit

Others have addressed the work of a relationship between science and religion in practical expressions of development. Matthew Weinberg and Arbab, Boicu and Zabihi-Maghaddam, reviewed cases of a social engagement in locally meaningful progress that included a cooperative engagement between religion and science in particular processes.

The influence of the Bahá'í teaching on science and religion was visible in the practice of the religion dating back to the 1870s in the face of a perception of a lot of superstition of Iranian society and taking a stance towards education, science, and technology.[41] Scholars Filip Boicu[42] and Siyamak Zabihi-Maghaddam[43] underscored the Bahá'í view on education directly related to this teaching of the religion which led to some early Bahá'í schools in Iran.[44] Boicu and Zabihi-Maghaddam, recalling the Bahá'í experience in Iran on early schooling which had been extended about education of girls,[45] followed developments of three models of education - Anisa, FUNDAEC, and the Core Curriculum - all of which had direct applications of the teaching and only being distinguished on the application between the individual alone, the individual in a society, and the last one being of all people in the whole of society and a global community.[46]

In the early 20th century, as the Bahá'í Faith was expanding in the United States, the Bahá'í community viewed the issue of race according to another Bahá'í principle – the oneness of humanity – which had been expressed earlier but was further substantiated by 1912 during `Abdu'l-Bahá's talks to American audiences.[47] The idea of interracial unity was counter to views of the majority of scientists of the coming decades and for a time in government policies, which endorsed eugenics as legal steps against Indigenous Americans, people of African descent, and generally People of Color, and other practices according to white-society standards, and similarly in other countries such as when the religion was banned in Germany under the Nazis.[47] However, the American Bahá'í community did not respond by denigrating the scholarly thought of the day, but rather by supporting the then-minority view of scholars who opposed scientific racism.[47] Marion Carpenter, a notable early American Bahá'í youth, is quoted in 1925 saying “Not religion or science, but religion and science, the combination of faith and reason, is the teaching of Bahá’u’lláh to the world today.”[citation needed] The American scientist Herbert Miller defended interracial unity at a Bahá'í-sponsored World Unity Conference in 1926 in Cleveland.[47]

Project analyst Matthew Weinberg[48] outlined socioeconomic development cases using the non-profit ISGP - the Institute for Studies for Global Prosperity, "a non-profit organization working in collaboration with the Baha’i International Community",[49] in India, Uganda, and Brazil. In India stakeholders in a project developed an engagement of religion and science anchored in community of practice was seen as a majority point of view of the participants in the conference and the Indian National Spiritual Assembly established an office - the "Secretariat for the Promotion of the Discourse on Science, Religion, and Development" in 2001.[50] They had successive meetings in 2004 and 2007 and ongoing.[50] In Uganda work reached a point in 2001 working with IGSP that Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni encouraged the work of nurturing social unity "by championing the equality of women and men, alleviating poverty, and overcoming entrenched patterns of corruption."[51] Again materialistic approaches were seen as failing alone.[51] In Brazil again in 2001 a program of action was initiated, seminars were held and a group formed to develop analysis of the system[52] published a book and simultaneously application in some local community "Centers of Learning" and one as a pilot project,[53] but to advance the group needed to approach the work with some values: "To set out on a new path requires courage—not an arrogant disposition that demands swift and radical action, but one that is tempered with humility and wisdom. It requires an environment where the dynamics of individual and collective transformation are fully considered; where it is realized that growth and change are organic, that they are gradual and slow, and that they involve constant action, evaluation, and study; and where it is understood that, in pursuing such transformation, one is faced with an ongoing tension between absorbing setbacks and gaining new ground."[53]

Influence edit

Sociologist Michael McMullen found that Bahá'í converts in America appreciated the teaching of a harmony between science and religion as resolving their sense of these - that they had been disillusioned with traditional organized religion and seeing the way Bahá'ís use science to inform religion so it "makes sense and provides meaning in a globalized world" by presenting an evolutionary perspective on revelation via the teaching of progressive revelation.[54] Post-doctoral scholar in Ottoman Studies[55] and faculty at the Wilmette Institute,[56] Necati Alkan documented a case of Muslim Abdullah Cevdet in looking at the influence of the Bahá'í Faith and the teaching on a harmony of science and religion specifically as a model of reform but which was not accepted by the Turkish Muslim community.[57]

Bahá'í views on evolution edit

ʻAbdu'l-Bahá discussed evolution, including making claims that appear to contradict the modern doctrine of common descent for all earthly life. For example, in Some Answered Question he said,

...from the beginning of man's existence on this planet until he assumed his present shape, form, and condition, a long time must have elapsed, and he must have traversed many stages before reaching his present condition. But from the beginning of his existence man has been a distinct species.[58]

His teachings were widely interpreted as a kind of parallel evolution, in which humans had a separate line of descent to some primitive form, separate from animals.[59][60] But the emphasis on the harmony of science and religion and the success of the modern evolutionary paradigm resulted in at least 19 books and articles from 16 authors over the period of 1990 to 2009 trying to address how Bahá'ís should view evolution in light of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's statements, the majority of which took universal common ancestry as fact and attempted to reconcile with a new interpretation of the statements.[61] Two articles by Keven Brown and Eberhard von Kitzing,[62] jointly published under the title Evolution and Bahá'í Belief (2001), stand out as the only book-length review of the issue by Bahá'ís during the period, and has been well received.[63][64]

The new understanding viewed the apparent meaning of parallel evolution as an unfortunate misunderstanding that should be carefully studied and interpreted in terms that make sense today. Gary Matthews wrote,

...the apparent contradiction is nothing more than a question of semantics: perhaps ʻAbdu'l-Bahá is merely dating man's beginning as a distinct species from the soul's first appearance, to emphasize that we do not derive our higher spiritual nature from our animal forebears."[65]

This understanding was included in the Foreword to the 2014 printing of Some Answered Questions, stating:

...[ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's] concern is not with the mechanisms of evolution but with the philosophical, social, and spiritual implications of the new theory. His use of the term "species", for example, evokes the concept of eternal or permanent archetypes, which is not how the term is defined in contemporary biology. For Baha'is, the science of evolution is accepted..."[66]

Not all Bahá'ís were convinced of the argument that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's statements are in complete alignment with modern evolutionary theory. Salman Oskooi wrote his 2009 thesis on the subject and was unconvinced by the various authors trying to reconcile the issue with modern science, writing that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's statements have an "apparent discord with science", "appear uninterpretable in any sense but their apparent meaning", and the apparent meaning is that "humans have been distinct from other beings since the time of some primitive stage of our evolution."[67] Oskooi concluded that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá was fallible on scientific matters, but that the issue does not contradict the fundamental premise of the faith. Also in 2009, Ian Kluge wrote that, "There is no question that ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's views on human evolution are in conflict with current scientific thought", but he concluded that religion cannot "uncritically agree with science on all its pronouncements at all times" due to the changing nature of science itself.[68]

In 2023, Bryan Donaldson published On the Originality of Species, attempting to address the issue from the point of view of new research in evolutionary biology that could plausibly support the idea of "independent and parallel growth of many categories of plants and animals out of a network of gene-sharing unicellular roots."[69] Donaldson points to a variety of trends in evolutionary thought since the late 1990s, concluding that,

...it is no longer necessary to conclude that the concept of independent or 'parallel' descent is incompatible with science. In fact, the trend of discovery has clearly been in the direction of agreement... This new understanding appears to me to have only been possible since about 2015.[70]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ There have been many compilations published. A recent official collection is published at Scholarship (online ed.). Bahá’í International Community. 2022.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Phelps 2022.
  2. ^ Stockman 2020, pp. 30–31.
  3. ^ Stockman 1995, p. 90-94.
  4. ^ a b Saiedi 2021.
  5. ^ Karlberg & Smith 2022, p. 465.
  6. ^ Kluge 2022, pp. 234–235.
  7. ^ Arbab 2018, p. 149.
  8. ^ "Nader Saiedi, UCLA". University of California, UC Regents. 2022. Retrieved Apr 22, 2022.
  9. ^ Saiedi 2000, p. 150.
  10. ^ Razavi 2018.
  11. ^ Schewel 2018.
  12. ^ 'Abdu'l-Bahá (2022). "Talk 'Abdu'l‑Bahá Delivered in Pittsburgh 7 May 1912". In Howard MacNutt (ed.). The Promulgation of Universal Peace (online ed.). Bahá’í International Community.
  13. ^ 'Abdu'l-Bahá (2022). "The Fourth Principle—The Acceptance of the Relation between Religion and Science 4 Avenue de Camoëns, Paris, November 12th". Paris Talks (online ed.). Bahá’í International Community.
  14. ^ Karlberg & Smith 2022, p. 464.
  15. ^ 'Abdu'l-Bahá (2022). "23 May 1912 Talk at Home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Breed, 367 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts". In Howard MacNutt (ed.). The Promulgation of Universal Peace (online ed.). Bahá’í International Community.)
  16. ^ Stockman 2013, p. 66.
  17. ^ a b c Sabet 2000.
  18. ^ Lopez-Claros 2022.
  19. ^ a b Office of Public Information 1995.
  20. ^ a b Hassall 2022.
  21. ^ "Graham Hassall; Associate Professor". School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington Te Herenga Waka. 2022. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  22. ^ "Behrooz Sabet, Developmental Editor". Burnhaninstitute.org. Burhan Institute. February 2, 2017. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  23. ^ Saiedi 2021, p. 92.
  24. ^ Saiedi 2021, pp. 92–93.
  25. ^ Saiedi 2021, pp. 92–95.
  26. ^ Saiedi 2021, p. 95.
  27. ^ Arbab 2018, p. 281.
  28. ^ Arbab 2018, p. 143.
  29. ^ Behrooz Sabet (February 10, 2017). "Ian Kluge". BurhanInstitute.org. Retrieved Apr 22, 2022.
  30. ^ Kluge 2022, p. 234.
  31. ^ Karlberg & Smith 2022, pp. 464–466.
  32. ^ Arbab 2018, p. 132.
  33. ^ Arbab 2018, pp. 150–157.
  34. ^ Faber 2018.
  35. ^ Hatcher 2004, pp. 105–110.
  36. ^ Warburg 2006.
  37. ^ Warburg 2006, pp. 70–71.
  38. ^ Warburg 2006, pp. 71–72.
  39. ^ Warburg 2006, pp. 73–74.
  40. ^ Warburg 2006, p. 75.
  41. ^ Shahvar 2009.
  42. ^ Boicu & Zabihi-Moghaddam 2022, p. xii.
  43. ^ Boicu & Zabihi-Moghaddam 2022, p. xvii.
  44. ^ Boicu & Zabihi-Moghaddam 2022, p. 319.
  45. ^ Boicu & Zabihi-Moghaddam 2022, pp. 325–326.
  46. ^ Boicu & Zabihi-Moghaddam 2022, pp. 327–330.
  47. ^ a b c d Crosson 2013.
  48. ^ Weinberg 2018, p. 282.
  49. ^ Weinberg 2018, p. 191.
  50. ^ a b Weinberg 2018, p. 200.
  51. ^ a b Weinberg 2018, p. 201.
  52. ^ Weinberg 2018, p. 204.
  53. ^ a b Weinberg 2018, p. 205.
  54. ^ McMullen 2000, pp. 26–27.
  55. ^ "Academia profile, Necati Alkan". Academia.edu. 2022. Retrieved Apr 22, 2022.
  56. ^ "Necati Alkan, PhD". WilmetteInstitute.org. 2022. Retrieved Apr 22, 2022.
  57. ^ Alkan 2005, pp. 1–20.
  58. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 17.
  59. ^ Brown 2001.
  60. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 27.
  61. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 30.
  62. ^ von Kitzing 2001.
  63. ^ Abizadeh 2004.
  64. ^ Lambden 2007.
  65. ^ Matthews 2005, p. 93.
  66. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 44.
  67. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 36.
  68. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 39.
  69. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 57.
  70. ^ Donaldson 2023, p. 220.

References edit

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  • Alkan, Necati (Jan 2005). "'The Eternal Enemy of Islām': Abdullah Cevdet and the Baha'i Religion". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 68 (1). University of London: 1–20. doi:10.1017/S0041977X05000017. ISSN 0041-977X. JSTOR 20181854. OCLC 6015273132. S2CID 145760950. Retrieved Apr 22, 2022.
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  • Stockman, Robert H (2020). James R. Lewis; Margo Kitts (eds.). Bahá'í Faith, violence, and non-violence. Elements in religion and violence. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108613446. ISBN 9781108706278. ISSN 2514-3786. OCLC 1154852477. S2CID 225389995.
  • Warburg, Margit (2006). "The Harmony of Science and Religion". In W. J. Hanegraaff; P. P. Kumar (eds.). Citizens of the world: a history and sociology of the Bahá'ís from a globalisation perspective. Numen book series. Vol. 106. Leiden: Brill. pp. 70–3. ISBN 9789004143739. OCLC 470711207.
  • Weinberg, Matthew (2018). "Chapter 7: Contributions to International Development Discourse: Exploring the Roles of Science and Religion". In Geoffrey Cameron; Benjamin Schewel (eds.). Religion and Public Discourse in an Age of Transition: Reflections of Bahá'í Thought and Practice. Bahá'í Studies. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. pp. 191–220. ISBN 9781771123303. OCLC 1021807420.

Further reading edit

  • Filson, Gerald. Mind: ‘the Power of the Human Spirit'. Journal of Bahá’í Studies, vol. 32, no. 3-4, July 2023, pp. 9-53.
  • Phelps, Steven (2022). "Ch. 17: The harmony of science and religion". In Stockman, Robert H. (ed.). The World of the Bahá'í Faith. Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge. pp. 211–216. ISBN 978-1-138-36772-2.

baháʼí, views, science, bahá, faith, teaches, that, there, harmony, unity, between, science, religion, that, true, science, true, religion, never, conflict, this, principle, rooted, various, statements, bahá, scriptures, some, scholars, have, argued, that, ide. The Baha i Faith teaches that there is a harmony or unity between science and religion and that true science and true religion can never conflict This principle is rooted in various statements in the Baha i scriptures Some scholars have argued that ideas in the philosophy of science resonate with the Baha i approach In addition scholars have noted the Baha i view of interpreting religious scriptures symbolically rather than literally as conducive to harmony with scientific findings The Baha i community and leadership have also applied their teachings on science and religion with the goal of the betterment of society for instance by providing education and technology Contents 1 The principle of the harmony of science and religion 1 1 In the Baha i writings 2 Implications 3 Applications 4 Influence 5 Baha i views on evolution 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 10 Further readingThe principle of the harmony of science and religion editThe principle of the harmony of science or reason and religion or faith has been a verbalized principle of the religion since ʻAbdu l Baha s journeys to the West from 1910 to 1913 1 as an extension of the view of the singularness of reality to be explored through independent investigations by reasoned and spiritual methods 2 It had been discussed without the specific wording a decade earlier via a compilation Anton Haddad put together with Mirza Abu l Faḍl along with their own perspective a subject that was subsequently taken up by American Baha is 3 Saiedi characterizes the relationship between science and the Baha i Faith and the Baha i Faith and the importance of reason as one of its main spiritual principles 4 The Baha i view of science has been summarized as emphasizing recognition of the process of science although not one isolated to the scientific method from a set of values and societal choices and understandings not mere faith in the conclusions which are always open to refinement without casting so much doubt that the process of science is somehow lacking because it is influenced by current understandings and conditions to which religion can have a strong influence 5 6 7 Abdu l Baha told jokes at the expense of materialist scientists 1 However according to Phelps he reserved his harshest condemnations for religious people who took religious scripture literally who he said have become the cause of much of the conflict in the world whether between different faith communities or between science and religion 1 In the Baha i writings edit While writing on the Baha i views on science certain excerpts from Baha i scriptures are commonly used by experts the following are a few examples a Nader Saiedi adjunct professor at UCLA 8 notes Baha u llah criticized a pursuit of pseudoscience which claimed that numerous esoteric sciences is required to understand the mysteries of the sacred Word 9 Phelps quotes Baha u llah on the issue of language and understanding S ince all do not possess the same degree of spiritual understanding certain statements will inevitably be made and there shall arise as a consequence as many differing opinions as there are human minds and as many divergent beliefs as there are created things This is certain and settled and can in no wise be averted Our aim is that thou shouldst urge all the believers to show forth kindness and mercy and to overlook certain shortcomings among them that differences may be dispelled true harmony be established and the censure and reproach the hatred and dissension seen among the peoples of former times may not arise anew 1 Abdu l Baha anonymously published The Secret of Divine Civilization in 1875 in Iran noting how the country had declined among the nations as a result of poor education bad governance ignorance of scientific advances rejection of innovation and the atrophy of the life of the mind 10 and later restated Baha u llah s teaching saying Religious teaching which is at variance with science and reason is human invention and imagination unworthy of acceptance for the antithesis and opposite of knowledge is superstition born of the ignorance of man If we say religion is opposed to science we lack knowledge of either true science or true religion for both are founded upon the premises and conclusions of reason and both must bear its test The Promulgation of Universal Peace 11 12 Religion and science are the two wings upon which man s intelligence can soar into the heights with which the human soul can progress It is not possible to fly with one wing alone Should a man try to fly with the wing of religion alone he would quickly fall into the quagmire of superstition whilst on the other hand with the wing of science alone he would also make no progress but fall into the despairing slough of materialism Paris Talks 4 13 Scientific knowledge is the highest attainment upon the human plane for science is the discoverer of realities It is of two kinds material and spiritual Material science is the investigation of natural phenomena divine science is the discovery and realization of spiritual verities The world of humanity must acquire both The Promulgation of Universal Peace 14 15 Shoghi Effendi head of the religion 1921 1957 offered a vision of the future including this principle In such a world society science and religion the two most potent forces in human life will be reconciled will co operate and will harmoniously develop The economic resources of the world will be organized its sources of raw materials will be tapped and fully utilized its markets will be co ordinated and developed and the distribution of its products will be equitably regulated World Order of Baha u llah 16 The Baha i International Community released a statement in 1995 The Prosperity of Humankind 17 which says in part For the vast majority of the world s population the idea that human nature has a spiritual dimension indeed that its fundamental identity is spiritual is a truth requiring no demonstration It is a perception of reality that can be discovered in the earliest records of civilization and that has been cultivated for several millennia by every one of the great religious traditions of humanity s past Its enduring achievements in law the fine arts and the civilizing of human intercourse are what give substance and meaning to history In one form or another its promptings are a daily influence in the lives of most people on earth and as events around the world today dramatically show the longings it awakens are both inextinguishable and incalculably potent 18 19 and further Future generations will find almost incomprehensible the circumstance that in an age paying tribute to an egalitarian philosophy and related democratic principles development planning should view the masses of humanity as essentially recipients of benefits from aid and training Despite acknowledgment of participation as a principle the scope of the decision making left to most of the world s population is at best secondary limited to a range of choices formulated by agencies inaccessible to them and determined by goals that are often irreconcilable with their perceptions of reality 20 19 The scholar Graham Hassall 21 summarizes that statement saying it demonstrates the breath taking scope of the Baha i program of governance reform from local to global levels and encompasses not only political and legal fundamentals but the roles of science and technology in the global distribution of knowledge and power 20 and university professor Sabet Behrooz 22 called a brilliant statement showing the necessity of harmony between science and religion which must be the guiding light and the organizing principle of our endeavors in integrative studies of the Baha i Faith 17 Implications editA number of scholars have offered commentary on the Baha i teachings on science and religion Saiedi outlines several implications of the Baha i view of an agreement between religion and science or reason religious evolution of understanding laws and institutions 23 religion is not a substitute or competition with science but have a mutual reciprocity because of their individual qualities 24 rather than take religious statements literally the Baha i Faith provides a lexicon of interpretations or allegorical relationships of past statements 25 an acceptance of the laws of nature as an expression of divine will and so called miracles are not evidence otherwise 26 Phelps lists the following three points 1 that ultimate reality is ineffable that humility about what can be understood and applied is itself the highest degree of human attainment that religious scripture is metaphorical not literal Farzam Arbab project developer and Baha i administrator 27 also states that religious literalism is a problem 28 Ian Kluge independent scholar 29 observed a relationship between the Baha i stance of science and reason and the Baha i teaching on independent investigation for the individual where without reason and faith together quoting Abdu l Baha the heart finds no rest in it and real faith is impossible and beyond the individual to societal progress which would be trapped in traditional worldviews or paradigms be they religious cultural intellectual or scientific and appealed to Aristotle s four fold causality which to him suggests that science deals with material and efficient causality whereas religion deals with issues related to formal and final causality 30 Scholars have also drawn parallels between Baha i views of science and the views of various philosophers Karlberg and Smith underscore and summarize the work of Alan Chalmers and Peter Godfrey Smith who had published university press texts in relation to the Baha i Faith on a number of points 31 Arbab appealed to Thomas Nagel s thoughts 32 on sophisticated secularism 33 Roland Faber elaborated this approach in parallel with the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead so called Process philosophy 34 and William S Hatcher drew on the ideas of Aristotle Avicenna Bertrand Russell and Stephen Hawking in his defence of the Baha i view 35 Sociologist Margit Warburg quotes a 1978 letter from the Universal House of Justice The principle of the harmony of science and religion means not only that religious teachings should be studied with the light of reason and evidence as well as of faith and inspiration but also that everything in this creation all aspects of human life and knowledge should be studied in light of revelation as well as in that of purely rational investigation 36 From it Warburg sees a clear stance in the dilemma between academic freedom and acceptance of religious premises and the issues of where possible conflict with doctrines that can be tested empirically can occur 37 She notes that at the inauguration of the chair for Baha i Studies at Hebrew University of Jerusalem Peter Khan spoke saying in part that the place of Baha i understanding between science and religion was not in the narrow definitions of legitimate scholarly activity in some disciplines within the academic community criticizing the materialistic scientific studies of religion asking that Baha i scholars in Warburg s words should not comply with their academic tradition which ignore the spiritual inputs of religion which will conflict with the Baha i Faith s own teachings 38 Warburg criticizes Khan s statement as a spokesman of the Baha i Faith in this situation and what it could mean for Baha i administration 39 That is precisely what is at stake in the case of the controversial sources to Babi and Baha i history as well as concerning the sources to the construction of Abraham 40 Behrooz proposed a review of the progressive nature of religion and scholarly activity with history and present contexts in 2000 He stated that An integrative approach to understanding the implications of the Baha i teachings however follows developmental processes that begin as primarily internal and evolve in a direction of externalization and fusion with other branches of knowledge Historically religions show a similarity of patterns in the development of learning and scholarship methods For instance in earlier configurations of integrative studies a conflict between internal and external is unavoidable since the internal values of the emerging religion are based on a prescriptive or declarative style of thinking that presupposes the existence of an inherent circle of unity among its teachings while the dominant mode of scholarship in the scientific and academic community may view the validity of those presuppositions untenable Generally speaking absolutist positions and authoritarian attitudes expressed by the gatekeepers of knowledge in both science and religion have obscured people s clarity of vision and hindered the union of these two essential entities of human life In the Baha i view universal teachings of religion should be interpreted within the context of the relativity of human comprehension and the historical nature of knowledge 17 Applications editOthers have addressed the work of a relationship between science and religion in practical expressions of development Matthew Weinberg and Arbab Boicu and Zabihi Maghaddam reviewed cases of a social engagement in locally meaningful progress that included a cooperative engagement between religion and science in particular processes The influence of the Baha i teaching on science and religion was visible in the practice of the religion dating back to the 1870s in the face of a perception of a lot of superstition of Iranian society and taking a stance towards education science and technology 41 Scholars Filip Boicu 42 and Siyamak Zabihi Maghaddam 43 underscored the Baha i view on education directly related to this teaching of the religion which led to some early Baha i schools in Iran 44 Boicu and Zabihi Maghaddam recalling the Baha i experience in Iran on early schooling which had been extended about education of girls 45 followed developments of three models of education Anisa FUNDAEC and the Core Curriculum all of which had direct applications of the teaching and only being distinguished on the application between the individual alone the individual in a society and the last one being of all people in the whole of society and a global community 46 In the early 20th century as the Baha i Faith was expanding in the United States the Baha i community viewed the issue of race according to another Baha i principle the oneness of humanity which had been expressed earlier but was further substantiated by 1912 during Abdu l Baha s talks to American audiences 47 The idea of interracial unity was counter to views of the majority of scientists of the coming decades and for a time in government policies which endorsed eugenics as legal steps against Indigenous Americans people of African descent and generally People of Color and other practices according to white society standards and similarly in other countries such as when the religion was banned in Germany under the Nazis 47 However the American Baha i community did not respond by denigrating the scholarly thought of the day but rather by supporting the then minority view of scholars who opposed scientific racism 47 Marion Carpenter a notable early American Baha i youth is quoted in 1925 saying Not religion or science but religion and science the combination of faith and reason is the teaching of Baha u llah to the world today citation needed The American scientist Herbert Miller defended interracial unity at a Baha i sponsored World Unity Conference in 1926 in Cleveland 47 Project analyst Matthew Weinberg 48 outlined socioeconomic development cases using the non profit ISGP the Institute for Studies for Global Prosperity a non profit organization working in collaboration with the Baha i International Community 49 in India Uganda and Brazil In India stakeholders in a project developed an engagement of religion and science anchored in community of practice was seen as a majority point of view of the participants in the conference and the Indian National Spiritual Assembly established an office the Secretariat for the Promotion of the Discourse on Science Religion and Development in 2001 50 They had successive meetings in 2004 and 2007 and ongoing 50 In Uganda work reached a point in 2001 working with IGSP that Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni encouraged the work of nurturing social unity by championing the equality of women and men alleviating poverty and overcoming entrenched patterns of corruption 51 Again materialistic approaches were seen as failing alone 51 In Brazil again in 2001 a program of action was initiated seminars were held and a group formed to develop analysis of the system 52 published a book and simultaneously application in some local community Centers of Learning and one as a pilot project 53 but to advance the group needed to approach the work with some values To set out on a new path requires courage not an arrogant disposition that demands swift and radical action but one that is tempered with humility and wisdom It requires an environment where the dynamics of individual and collective transformation are fully considered where it is realized that growth and change are organic that they are gradual and slow and that they involve constant action evaluation and study and where it is understood that in pursuing such transformation one is faced with an ongoing tension between absorbing setbacks and gaining new ground 53 Influence editSociologist Michael McMullen found that Baha i converts in America appreciated the teaching of a harmony between science and religion as resolving their sense of these that they had been disillusioned with traditional organized religion and seeing the way Baha is use science to inform religion so it makes sense and provides meaning in a globalized world by presenting an evolutionary perspective on revelation via the teaching of progressive revelation 54 Post doctoral scholar in Ottoman Studies 55 and faculty at the Wilmette Institute 56 Necati Alkan documented a case of Muslim Abdullah Cevdet in looking at the influence of the Baha i Faith and the teaching on a harmony of science and religion specifically as a model of reform but which was not accepted by the Turkish Muslim community 57 Baha i views on evolution editSee also Acceptance of evolution by religious groups and Rejection of evolution by religious groups ʻAbdu l Baha discussed evolution including making claims that appear to contradict the modern doctrine of common descent for all earthly life For example in Some Answered Question he said from the beginning of man s existence on this planet until he assumed his present shape form and condition a long time must have elapsed and he must have traversed many stages before reaching his present condition But from the beginning of his existence man has been a distinct species 58 His teachings were widely interpreted as a kind of parallel evolution in which humans had a separate line of descent to some primitive form separate from animals 59 60 But the emphasis on the harmony of science and religion and the success of the modern evolutionary paradigm resulted in at least 19 books and articles from 16 authors over the period of 1990 to 2009 trying to address how Baha is should view evolution in light of ʻAbdu l Baha s statements the majority of which took universal common ancestry as fact and attempted to reconcile with a new interpretation of the statements 61 Two articles by Keven Brown and Eberhard von Kitzing 62 jointly published under the title Evolution and Baha i Belief 2001 stand out as the only book length review of the issue by Baha is during the period and has been well received 63 64 The new understanding viewed the apparent meaning of parallel evolution as an unfortunate misunderstanding that should be carefully studied and interpreted in terms that make sense today Gary Matthews wrote the apparent contradiction is nothing more than a question of semantics perhaps ʻAbdu l Baha is merely dating man s beginning as a distinct species from the soul s first appearance to emphasize that we do not derive our higher spiritual nature from our animal forebears 65 This understanding was included in the Foreword to the 2014 printing of Some Answered Questions stating ʻAbdu l Baha s concern is not with the mechanisms of evolution but with the philosophical social and spiritual implications of the new theory His use of the term species for example evokes the concept of eternal or permanent archetypes which is not how the term is defined in contemporary biology For Baha is the science of evolution is accepted 66 Not all Baha is were convinced of the argument that ʻAbdu l Baha s statements are in complete alignment with modern evolutionary theory Salman Oskooi wrote his 2009 thesis on the subject and was unconvinced by the various authors trying to reconcile the issue with modern science writing that ʻAbdu l Baha s statements have an apparent discord with science appear uninterpretable in any sense but their apparent meaning and the apparent meaning is that humans have been distinct from other beings since the time of some primitive stage of our evolution 67 Oskooi concluded that ʻAbdu l Baha was fallible on scientific matters but that the issue does not contradict the fundamental premise of the faith Also in 2009 Ian Kluge wrote that There is no question that ʻAbdu l Baha s views on human evolution are in conflict with current scientific thought but he concluded that religion cannot uncritically agree with science on all its pronouncements at all times due to the changing nature of science itself 68 In 2023 Bryan Donaldson published On the Originality of Species attempting to address the issue from the point of view of new research in evolutionary biology that could plausibly support the idea of independent and parallel growth of many categories of plants and animals out of a network of gene sharing unicellular roots 69 Donaldson points to a variety of trends in evolutionary thought since the late 1990s concluding that it is no longer necessary to conclude that the concept of independent or parallel descent is incompatible with science In fact the trend of discovery has clearly been in the direction of agreement This new understanding appears to me to have only been possible since about 2015 70 See also editDialecticNotes edit There have been many compilations published A recent official collection is published at Scholarship online ed Baha i International Community 2022 Citations edit a b c d e Phelps 2022 Stockman 2020 pp 30 31 Stockman 1995 p 90 94 a b Saiedi 2021 Karlberg amp Smith 2022 p 465 Kluge 2022 pp 234 235 Arbab 2018 p 149 Nader Saiedi UCLA University of California UC Regents 2022 Retrieved Apr 22 2022 Saiedi 2000 p 150 Razavi 2018 Schewel 2018 Abdu l Baha 2022 Talk Abdu l Baha Delivered in Pittsburgh 7 May 1912 In Howard MacNutt ed The Promulgation of Universal Peace online ed Baha i International Community Abdu l Baha 2022 The Fourth Principle The Acceptance of the Relation between Religion and Science 4 Avenue de Camoens Paris November 12th Paris Talks online ed Baha i International Community Karlberg amp Smith 2022 p 464 Abdu l Baha 2022 23 May 1912 Talk at Home of Mr and Mrs Francis W Breed 367 Harvard Street Cambridge Massachusetts In Howard MacNutt ed The Promulgation of Universal Peace online ed Baha i International Community Stockman 2013 p 66 a b c Sabet 2000 Lopez Claros 2022 a b Office of Public Information 1995 a b Hassall 2022 Graham Hassall Associate Professor School of Government Victoria University of Wellington Te Herenga Waka 2022 Retrieved May 3 2022 Behrooz Sabet Developmental Editor Burnhaninstitute org Burhan Institute February 2 2017 Retrieved May 9 2022 Saiedi 2021 p 92 Saiedi 2021 pp 92 93 Saiedi 2021 pp 92 95 Saiedi 2021 p 95 Arbab 2018 p 281 Arbab 2018 p 143 Behrooz Sabet February 10 2017 Ian Kluge BurhanInstitute org Retrieved Apr 22 2022 Kluge 2022 p 234 Karlberg amp Smith 2022 pp 464 466 Arbab 2018 p 132 Arbab 2018 pp 150 157 Faber 2018 Hatcher 2004 pp 105 110 Warburg 2006 Warburg 2006 pp 70 71 Warburg 2006 pp 71 72 Warburg 2006 pp 73 74 Warburg 2006 p 75 Shahvar 2009 Boicu amp Zabihi Moghaddam 2022 p xii Boicu amp Zabihi Moghaddam 2022 p xvii Boicu amp Zabihi Moghaddam 2022 p 319 Boicu amp Zabihi Moghaddam 2022 pp 325 326 Boicu amp Zabihi Moghaddam 2022 pp 327 330 a b c d Crosson 2013 Weinberg 2018 p 282 Weinberg 2018 p 191 a b Weinberg 2018 p 200 a b Weinberg 2018 p 201 Weinberg 2018 p 204 a b Weinberg 2018 p 205 McMullen 2000 pp 26 27 Academia profile Necati Alkan Academia edu 2022 Retrieved Apr 22 2022 Necati Alkan PhD WilmetteInstitute org 2022 Retrieved Apr 22 2022 Alkan 2005 pp 1 20 Donaldson 2023 p 17 Brown 2001 Donaldson 2023 p 27 Donaldson 2023 p 30 von Kitzing 2001 Abizadeh 2004 Lambden 2007 Matthews 2005 p 93 Donaldson 2023 p 44 Donaldson 2023 p 36 Donaldson 2023 p 39 Donaldson 2023 p 57 Donaldson 2023 p 220 References editAbizadeh Arash 2004 02 01 Book Review Keven Brown and Ederbard von Kitzing Evolution and Baha i Belief International Journal of Middle East Studies 36 1 Cambridge University Press 148 9 Retrieved May 27 2022 Alkan Necati Jan 2005 The Eternal Enemy of Islam Abdullah Cevdet and the Baha i Religion Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 68 1 University of London 1 20 doi 10 1017 S0041977X05000017 ISSN 0041 977X JSTOR 20181854 OCLC 6015273132 S2CID 145760950 Retrieved Apr 22 2022 Arbab Farzam 2018 Chapter 5 An Inquiry into the Harmony of Science and Religion In Geoffrey Cameron Benjamin Schewel eds Religion and Public Discourse in an Age of Transition Reflections of Baha i Thought and Practice Baha i Studies Waterloo ON Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 131 162 ISBN 9781771123303 OCLC 1021807420 Boicu Filip Zabihi Moghaddam Siyamak 2022 Ch 27 Education in Pedagogy and Practice In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 319 335 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Brown Keven 2001 Abdu l Baha s Response to Darwinism Its Historical and Philosophical Context In Brown ed Evolution and Baha i Belief Abdu l Baha s Response to Nineteenth Century Darwinism Studies in the Babi and Baha i Religions Vol 12 Los Angeles Kalimat Press ISBN 9781890688080 OCLC 231953658 via Bahai Library com von Kitzing Eberhard 2001 The Origin of Complex Order in Biology Abdu l Baha s concept of the originality of species compared to concepts in modern biology In Brown ed Evolution and Baha i Belief Abdu l Baha s Response to Nineteenth Century Darwinism Studies in the Babi and Baha i Religions Vol 12 Los Angeles Kalimat Press ISBN 9781890688080 OCLC 231953658 via Bahai Library com Crosson Selena M June 2013 Racial Amity Baha i Anti racist Activism and the Modelling of Mixed Race Searching for May Maxwell Baha i Millennial Feminism Transformative Identity amp Globalism in the new World Order Shaping Women s Role in Early Baha i Culture 1898 1940 Thesis Saskatoon Canada College of Graduate Studies and Research Department of History University of Saskatchewan pp 133 141 OCLC 1033000152 Donaldson Bryan 2023 On the Originality of Species Portland OR Akka Publishing House ISBN 9798 3935 8010 0 Faber Roland 2018 The Garden of Reality Transreligious Relativism in a World of Becoming London UK Lexington Books pp 13 39 47 125 134 188 9 276 7 ISBN 9781498576239 LCCN 2018012209 OCLC 1033577028 Hassall Graham 2022 Ch 29 Governance In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 352 3 doi 10 4324 9780429027772 31 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 S2CID 244692019 Hatcher William S 2004 Minimalism A Bridge between Classical Philosophy and the Baha i Revelation Hong Kong Juxta Publishing Co ISBN 9789889745127 OCLC 188535802 Karlberg Michael Smith Todd 2022 Ch 38 A Culture of Learning In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 463 79 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Kluge Ian 2022 Ch 19 The physical and spiritual dimensions of human nature In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 230 239 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Lopez Claros Augusto 2022 Ch 26 Economics The Prosperity of the World and the Development of Nations In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge p 315 doi 10 4324 9780429027772 31 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 S2CID 244692019 Matthews Gary 2005 1st edition 1993 The Challenge of Baha u llah Wilmette IL Baha i Publishing McMullen Michael 2000 The Baha i the religious construction of a global identity New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813528359 OCLC 469363661 Phelps Steven 2022 Ch 17 The harmony of science and religion In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 211 216 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Lambden Stephen September 2007 republished Jan 1 2022 Book Review Evolution and Baha i Belief Abdu l Baha s Response to Nineteenth Century Darwinism Iranian Studies 40 4 The International Society for Iranian Studies Published online by Cambridge University Press 552 3 doi 10 1017 S002108620001714X S2CID 245660055 Retrieved May 27 2022 Office of Public Information 1995 The Prosperity of Humankind online ed Haifa Baha i International Community Razavi Shahriar 2018 Chapter 6 Baha i participation in Public Discourse Some Considerations related to History Concepts and approaches In Geoffrey Cameron Benjamin Schewel eds Religion and Public Discourse in an Age of Transition Reflections of Baha i Thought and Practice Baha i Studies Waterloo ON Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 164 5 ISBN 9781771123303 OCLC 1021807420 Sabet Behrooz 2000 Integrative Approach to Knowledge and Action A Baha i Perspective Converging Realities A Journal of Art Science and Religion 1 1 online ed Switzerland Landegg Academy Archived from the original on Nov 24 2003 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Bahai Library com Saiedi Nader 2000 Logos and Civilization spirit history and order in the writings of Baha u llah Bethesda Md University Press of Maryland pp 11 3 150 244 5 ISBN 1 883053 60 9 OCLC 681923048 Saiedi Nader Winter 2021 The Reconstruction of the Concept of Religion in the Baha i Writings Journal of Ecumenical Studies 56 1 76 100 doi 10 1353 ecu 2021 0007 S2CID 234936119 Retrieved Mar 18 2022 Schewel Benjamin 2018 Chapter 1 Religion in an Age of Transition In Geoffrey Cameron Benjamin Schewel eds Religion and Public Discourse in an Age of Transition Reflections of Baha i Thought and Practice Baha i Studies Waterloo ON Wilfrid Laurier University Press p 23 ISBN 9781771123303 OCLC 1021807420 Shahvar Soli 2009 Introduction The Forgotten Schools The Baha is and Modern Education in Iran 1899 1934 International Library of Iranian Studies Vol 11 New York Tauris Academic Studies pp 21 137 140 195 ISBN 9780857712714 OCLC 1091789673 Stockman Robert May 1995 Early Expansion 1900 1912 The Baha i Faith in America Vol 2 Wilmette Ill George Ronald ISBN 978 0 87743 282 1 Stockman Robert 2013 The Baha i Faith Bloomsbury s Guides for the Perplexed New York Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781441192011 OCLC 874020717 Stockman Robert H 2020 James R Lewis Margo Kitts eds Baha i Faith violence and non violence Elements in religion and violence Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108613446 ISBN 9781108706278 ISSN 2514 3786 OCLC 1154852477 S2CID 225389995 Warburg Margit 2006 The Harmony of Science and Religion In W J Hanegraaff P P Kumar eds Citizens of the world a history and sociology of the Baha is from a globalisation perspective Numen book series Vol 106 Leiden Brill pp 70 3 ISBN 9789004143739 OCLC 470711207 Weinberg Matthew 2018 Chapter 7 Contributions to International Development Discourse Exploring the Roles of Science and Religion In Geoffrey Cameron Benjamin Schewel eds Religion and Public Discourse in an Age of Transition Reflections of Baha i Thought and Practice Baha i Studies Waterloo ON Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 191 220 ISBN 9781771123303 OCLC 1021807420 Further reading editFilson Gerald Mind the Power of the Human Spirit Journal of Baha i Studies vol 32 no 3 4 July 2023 pp 9 53 Phelps Steven 2022 Ch 17 The harmony of science and religion In Stockman Robert H ed The World of the Baha i Faith Oxfordshire UK Routledge pp 211 216 ISBN 978 1 138 36772 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bahaʼi views on science amp oldid 1192526106, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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