Ask a scientist, as a scientist, all that he or she can tell you about music and they'll say it's neural response; things firing off in our brains to the impact of soundwaves hitting the ear-drum. And of course that's true, and in its own way it's worth knowing. But there's much more to music. There is a deep mystery about music; that that succession of sounds in time can speak to us, and I think speak to us truly, of a timeless form of beauty.
He also gives the following metaphor of how science and religion work together to make sense of the world:
I mean we all know you can ask both the how question and the why question. The kettle's boiling because burning gas heats the water. The kettle's boiling, because I want to make a cup of tea and would you like to have one? I don't have to choose between those two answers, they're both true. And in fact if I'm going to understand the mysterious events of the boiling kettle, I need both answers. Similarly I need both science and religion. I need to be two-eyed when I look at the world.
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