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Judaism

Will science prove God's existence?

Today there are researchers looking for evidence of supernatural phenomena, but what does that mean for faith?

August 18, 2011 09:17
Astronaut Ed Mitchell, who sensed the presence of divinity during a space flight

ByRabbi Dr Moshe Freedman, Rabbi Dr Moshe Freedman

3 min read

It was early February 1971. The three-man Apollo 14 crew had just completed their mission and were returning home. Edgar D. Mitchell, the lunar module pilot, gazed out of the window of the command module Kitty Hawk as it hurtled towards its landing target in the Pacific Ocean. As he stared at the earth suspended in the immense cosmos, Mitchell experienced an extraordinary epiphany.

On his return he said, "When I went to the moon, I was a pragmatic test pilot. But when I saw the planet earth floating in the vastness of space, the presence of divinity became almost palpable and I knew that life in the universe was not just an accident based on random processes."

This inspiration convinced him that reality is more complex and mysterious than conventional science had led him to believe. The 19th-century psychologist and philosopher William James described this type of mystical state as having a "noetic" quality, from the Greek noesis, meaning inner wisdom.

Rather than viewing his scientific background as a threat to this encounter, Mitchell hoped to reconcile conventional science with his new-found spirituality and established the field of noetic sciences. Today its researchers aim to scientifically substantiate a wide range of supernatural phenomena, such as extra-sensory perception, precognition and mind-matter interactions.