<?xml version="1.0"?>
<rss version="2.0"
  xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
  xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
  xmlns:admin="http://webns.net/mvcb/"
  xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
  xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">

  <channel>
        <title>Custom Feed &#45; The BioLogos Forum</title>
    <link>http://biologos.org/resources/find/Blog/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/Old Earth Creationism,Brain_ Mind &amp; Soul?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
    <description>This is a custom feed of BioLogos resources. Make a new feed at http://biologos.org/resources/find</description>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:rights>Copyright 2013</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2013-05-21T11:21:44-08:00</dc:date>    
    
    

            
            
        
      <item>
        <title>Does Evolutionary Psychology Explain Why We Believe in God? Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/does&#45;evolutionary&#45;psychology&#45;explain&#45;why&#45;we&#45;believe&#45;in&#45;god&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/does&#45;evolutionary&#45;psychology&#45;explain&#45;why&#45;we&#45;believe&#45;in&#45;god&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>When we look across times and cultures and find very similar beliefs concerning the nature of physical, biological, and psychological reality, those similarities cry out for some explanation. Since these different individuals have a very diverse range of experience, something other than common experience alone just might account for the similarities of belief. In some cases we can fairly conclude that there is a common nature – some fundamental similarity in how human cognition works – that underlies broadly shared beliefs.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over the last couple of decades neuroscientists and psychologists have begun to crack open the final frontier of the human organism: the human mind.&nbsp; What they have found is truly amazing.&nbsp;</p>

<p>Many things we have learned contradicts much of what we previously thought about the mind.&nbsp; For example, it is quite common and sensible to believe that we come into the world with minds that are essentially “blank slates,” and that what we know is written on those slates by experience alone.&nbsp; But that view appears to be wrong.</p>

<p>The human mind consists of a variety of distinct and interacting mental tools, each of which comes pre-loaded with some quite specific content and some processing algorithms.&nbsp; For example, it is now clearly demonstrated that human beings are naturally endowed with what we might reasonably describe as innate beliefs and innate cognitive processors.</p>

<p>On the belief side, developmental psychologists have identified numerous domains of understanding that are native to us, such as folk physics, folk biology, folk psychology, agency detection tendencies, and so on. What these discoveries seem to show is that our minds are pre-disposed to come to think about the world in very specific ways—ways that are determined by the kinds of minds we have.</p>

<p>So it looks like from birth, or rather through a regular and maturationally natural process, we have dispositions for form beliefs in the following domains.</p>

<p>“Folks Physics”:</p>

<ul>
<li>Objects move on inertial paths</li>
<li>Objects cannot move <strong>through</strong> other objects</li>
<li>Objects must move <strong>through space</strong></li>
<li>Objects must be supported</li>
</ul>

<p>“Folk Psychology”:</p>

<ul>
<li>Agents act to satisfy desires</li>
<li>Agents have beliefs</li>
</ul>

<p>“Folk Biology”:</p>

<ul>
<li>Animals bear young similar to themselves</li>
<li>Living things need nutrients</li>
</ul>

<p>In addition to these innate dispositions toward certain kinds of beliefs, we also seem to have cognitive mechanisms that dispose us to crunch sensory inputs in specific ways. We might call these “innate cognitive processors.” Examples of these would include things like contagion avoidance and agency detection.</p>

<p>Contagion avoidance is a natural aversion human beings share to things like dead bodies, animal waste and vomit, rotting food, etc. These things “gross us out” from a very early age.&nbsp; Indeed, the aversions we have towards them pre-date any data we might come to possess that would lead us to judge them dangerous.&nbsp; We are also repelled by them in ways that are independent of other aversive stimuli like smell (that is, you can’t explain this aversion by noting that people are scared off because of an unpleasant odor since studies show that the aversions are independent of that).</p>

<p>A second processor is our Agency Detection Device. Here, psychologists have identified a&nbsp;cognitive processor that seems to pre-dispose us to form beliefs in the reality and presence of (sometimes invisible!) agents under certain conditions. In these cases, when we look for the cause of certain events, motions, sounds, or structures, we are disposed to think that it was caused by a <strong>someone</strong> rather than by a <strong>something.</strong>&nbsp;Our ADD appears to be hypersensitive.&nbsp; It is very good at detecting agency, and in fact is more likely to generate false positives than false negatives.&nbsp; This is often referred to as our hypersensitive agency detection device (HADD), and may be reflected in manifold attributions of ghosts, fairies, forest spirits, and even personalities of machines!</p>

<p>In sum, psychologists have shown that our initial presumption about the contents of our mind was wrong. Our minds are not blank slates, but processing devices that come endowed with a complex operating system.</p>

<p>Many are quick to point out that this should <em>not</em> be surprising.&nbsp; When we look across times and cultures and find very similar beliefs concerning the nature of physical, biological, and psychological reality, those similarities cry out for some explanation. Since these diverse individuals have a very wide range of experience, something other than, or in addition to, common experience would seem to account for the similarities of belief. And so it is natural to conclude that there is some fundamental similarity among human minds that explains it. And recent empirical evidence has in fact confirmed this conclusion.</p>

<p>One type of belief that is pervasive across times and cultures is <em>religious belief</em>.&nbsp; One is thus led to wonder whether those sorts of beliefs are among those that we are naturally disposed to believe.&nbsp; One New Zealand religion scholar, Joseph Bulbulia, argues that the emerging consensus is yes: <em>“The view of mind expressed by Descartes as composed of innate understandings given in advance of any experience has been thoroughly vindicated after sixty years of cognitive psychology. It may be that Descartes will be shown correct on another score, namely that knowledge of the Divinity is imprinted on every mind [as well]”</em></p>

<p>Bulbulia’s remark invites us to entertain three&nbsp;key questions:</p>

<ul>
<li>Is there any evidence that we are naturally disposed to religion?</li>
<li>How do we explain the origin of these dispositions?</li>
<li>What are the implications of such explanations for belief itself?</li>
</ul>

<p>These will be explored in the next post.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 21 May 13 08:00:32 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Michael Murray, Schloss, Jeff</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>May 21, 2013 08:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>A Plea to My Shepherds</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;plea&#45;to&#45;my&#45;shepherds?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;plea&#45;to&#45;my&#45;shepherds?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>... I would exhort these, my fellow conservative evangelical shepherds and thinkers, to set aside all reticence and fear, emerge from anonymity, and storm the forum of discourse, engaging this most pressing matter with vigor, equanimity, and humility. In doing so, know upfront that there will be few handrails to guide; you will not be building upon an extensive precedence of published conservative thought.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As I mentioned in my <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/scripture-vs-the-facts-working-through-a-crisis-of-understanding/">last post</a>, I’m deeply troubled by my fellow conservative evangelicals’ skepticism – even hostility – towards much of modern science, and believe that barring change, this disposition will prove spiritually catastrophic to our children and grandchildren, who are today being taught that assertions of an ancient universe and macro-evolution are unequivocally incompatible with the Cross of Christ, and tomorrow will enroll in universities that powerfully demonstrate the integrity of these scientific claims, thereby setting the stage for devastating crises of faith for countless thousands of young believers.</p>

<p>That said, I genuinely empathize with those who are reluctant to abandon traditional theological concepts for newer, still- developing ones. Given spiritual leaders’ biblical mandate to protect their families and congregations against error, a responsibility for which God will hold them strictly accountable (James 3:1), I respect their refusal to expose their flock to ideologies they regard as conflicting with the Word of God.</p>

<p>I further understand pastors and theologians’ resistance to tethering theology—which is meant to provide a solid epistemological foundation—too closely to that intrinsically dynamic endeavor called science. All humans need ideological stability, perhaps especially so with respect to spiritual matters. Recognizing this, pastors rightly ask why they should abandon or substantially revise an internally-consistent systematic theology that has served the church with relative stability for many hundreds of years. Science, on the other hand, is a realm for adventurers, groundbreakers, and ideological athletes intent on not just polishing or expanding today’s body of knowledge, but shattering it when necessary. Resounding with the jousts and clashes of competing ideas and arguments, and the stunning reversals of ideas once widely held, science often appears to be a messy–even tumultuous–business. Spiritual shepherds are insistent that the epistemological dynamism that necessarily characterizes science never become the mainstay of the Christian experience, which must be fundamentally stable and dependable. They see wisdom in maintaining a safe distance between the Church and the choppy waters of science.</p>

<p>The question, then, is whether the waters of scientific thought, particularly with respect to the age of the earth and evolution, have sufficiently smoothed out to warrant conservative thinkers’ taking a deeper look. Of course, the catch-22 here is that this can’t be answered without actually embarking upon an expedition of exploration and investigation, much as I recently did. Once undertaken, however, the conservative explorer will likely be confronted by a formidable problem:</p>

<p>As I can personally attest, navigating the crowded forum of wildly-differing ideas as to how to resolve the faith-science divide can be terribly daunting. Making this especially disconcerting for the conservative is the sobering reality that amidst the chorus of conflicting theories, one finds very little <em>substantive</em> published input from respected conservative theologians. As a result, the conservative seeker is sure to find herself awash in an ocean of seemingly novel theological “solutions” that are fundamentally antithetical to her evangelical sensibilities. This is likely to result in the impression that there is in fact no way to reconcile the findings of modern science with the key doctrines of orthodox Christianity, and hence the termination of the endeavor. Not only was this dynamic a constant challenge to me, but has proved a stumbling block to many would-be seekers that I personally know.</p>

<p>Whence then change? I believe the breakthrough will begin with a particular subgroup of conservative evangelical pastors, elders, and theologians. I know firsthand that there are many who, truth be told, have not been entirely at peace with their fellow conservatives’ summary rejection of—and apologias against—the findings of mainstream science. They have a gnawing sense that devastation looms for the Church and her children unless detachment yields to engagement, and rhetoric to substance. These have likely admitted to themselves that despite stridently asserting anti-evolution/old-earth views, they actually don’t understand these views in depth (nearly every conservative pastor and elder I’ve spoken with has conceded this). To date, these shepherds and thinkers have remained silent about their misgivings, reluctant to be perceived by their congregations and peers as betraying true Christianity. Given the astonishing fruitfulness of modern science and the comparative barrenness of young-earth creationism, I believe these evangelical leaders may now finally regard themselves as justified in stepping forward and publicly questioning whether the latter is in fact the view that a truth-revealing God would have His people believe.</p>

<p>Indeed, if I may, I would exhort these, my fellow conservative evangelical shepherds and thinkers, to set aside all reticence and fear, emerge from anonymity, and storm the forum of discourse, engaging this most pressing matter with vigor, equanimity, and humility. In doing so, know upfront that there will be few handrails to guide; you will not be building upon an extensive precedence of published conservative thought. Rather, you will be pioneers, with the open prairie of contemplation and consideration before you and the Word of God as a faithful, orienting star. The journey will be at times confounding, often scary, and never without challenge. Yet only through such robust, self-critical analysis will you find yourself in a posture where God can correct and refine all that He would, and only after which will you be able to pass on to your flocks a cogent, truly harmonious portrait of our Lord and His Creation that finds rich consistency between His written and natural revelations. I firmly believe that the fuller, more deeply informed portrait of the Lord and His universe that emerges from this investigation will fill your congregations with an unprecedented new sense of awe at our beloved God as Creator, and profoundly enhance their worship of Him. This has certainly been the result of my own journey.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 13 04:00:32 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Stephen Blake</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 27, 2013 04:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Series: Shaping the Human Soul</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/shaping&#45;the&#45;human&#45;soul?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/shaping&#45;the&#45;human&#45;soul?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In Washington DC, Church of the Advent teamed up with The Trinity Forum to offer a series of lectures exploring the synergy between modern science and Christian Faith.  This presentation by psychiatrist Curt Thompson and philosopher James K.A. Smith addressed the process of Christian discipleship and spiritual formation through the lens of neuroscience.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Summary of the first half of Dr. Thompson's presentation</h3>

<p>1. We are a world that longs for goodness and beauty, whether we are believers or not.</p>

<p>2.  The data from emerging neuroscience and attachment research points us to a world of goodness and beauty.</p>

<p>3.  This same data reflects and energizes the biblical narrative. Creation itself points us to the very story God is telling.</p>

<p>4.  One of the most integral processes—that helps us get to truth and beauty—involves the changing (and renewal) of our minds.  The renewal of our minds is a subset of the renewal of everything.  God is on a mission of complete renewal, albeit on his timetable.</p>

<p>In this mission for renewal, one of the most important aspects is the interpersonal experience of being known.  <em>We change primarily not by what we know, but by how we are known</em>.  We live in a culture that is really good at knowing things, but not so good at being known.</p>

<p>5.  Our first reaction is likely to be, “How will knowing this stuff change me?”  But the biblical narrative is not just about us as individuals, it is about a <em>world</em> of mercy and justice.  In order for us to have mercy and justice, we don’t do it primarily as individuals, we do it as institutions.  God’s renewal is not just about changing us, it is about changing <em>everything</em>.</p>

<p class="intro">See part 2 for the second half of Dr. Thompson's presentation</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 04 Oct 12 04:00:28 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Curt Thompson, James K.A. Smith</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Oct 04, 2012 04:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Willing to be Wrong</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/willing&#45;to&#45;be&#45;wrong?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/willing&#45;to&#45;be&#45;wrong?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The debate is often not about evidence, but about making sure that others do not transgress our interpretive boundaries and insist that we&apos;re wrong. We&apos;ve bitten from the tree of knowledge and we love its taste.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>What we know</h3>

<p>Genesis is one of my favorite books of the Bible. I read through it probably once every few months and repeatedly grind my Hebrew language skills on its opening chapters. Unlike Leviticus (at least in the opinion of <em>most</em> people I know), the Genesis narrative is exciting and adventurous. Some of our favorite stories come out of the book: Noah and the Ark, The Tower of Babel, Abraham and Isaac, Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors, and so on.</p>

<p>But no story is perhaps as infamous and well known as the creation account (or accounts) as presented in Genesis 1-2. Almost every Christian or Jew, even those less than devout, know the opening words to the tale: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” We know that God created the earth in six days. We know Eve was taken from Adam's rib for a companion. We know that God called the general creation “good”, the special creation of man “very good” and, at the very end of it all, took a day of rest (which I'm sure most of us would call “very good.”)</p>

<p>Of course, we know all of this. Yet we challenge it (and are challenged by it), continually, when we consider the variety of interpretations of how this story intersects the world as described by science. With Genesis, are we dealing with a literal scientific account, where “day” means 24-hours; are we dealing with metaphorical “days” in which epochs or periods of time or even processes are being described; or are we readers of a creation mythology from the Ancient Near East that doesn’t have anything directly to do with material origins? Interpretations go on and on, as anyone who has spent any time at all studying the creation debate knows. By and large, however, we can probably categorize Genesis interpreters into three camps: the Young Earth Creationists, the Old Earth Creationists, and the Theistic Evolutionists.</p>

<p>Now, I have the unique benefit of falling into all of these individual camps at one point or another in my life, sometimes even mixing them up. I have made a strong transition from being a die-hard Young Earth Creationist to being convinced that the evolutionary story is, in fact, the more substantiated and evidenced position. I say this with no pride, since my own transition involved many agonizing questions, a whole lot of reading, and a significant internal spiritual battle: what I believed about when and how the earth was created would not only change the way I read Scripture, it would also change certain aspects of how I viewed the Creator. </p>

<p>While I've certainly learned a lot of information on my journey, it was not an accumulation of facts that has kept me following Christ through all the ups and downs, but Jesus himself, and the knowledge that truth is not something which the Christian should find spiritually threatening.  Nevertheless, those same ups and downs—and my internalization of each of these views on creation in turn—has provided me with one simple realization about the debate over scripture and evolution: most of us are not so committed to finding the truth about Genesis and creation as we are to sustaining and maintaining our own interpretive boundaries and the boundaries of the communities which influence us. In other words, the debate is often not so much over Genesis—or even over whether we can all follow the same God when we believe different things about how he created—it's over our own ability to be right. I know this because admitting that I was wrong was the most difficult part of my own transition.</p>

<h3>Interpretive communities</h3>

<p>While I am pretty convinced of the truth of an evolutionary portrait of reality and an ANE reading of Genesis similar to that espoused by scholars like Peter Enns or Bruce Waltke, I can still make this claim about interpretive communities because my intention is <em>not</em> to dissuade others from debating the issues involved, but to ask that we simply recognize our own limits and check them as often as possible.  This is part of following Jesus, is it not? Unfortunately, vigorous debate often deteriorates quickly into screaming matches where proponents of one position or another simply are talking heads, speaking past each other and forgetting our fellowship in Christ. We play into the same interpretive competition that the Pharisee and Sadducee scribes were well known for, each claiming to have a proper interpretation of the Scriptures, but all the while forgetting that interpretive arguments matter exceptionally little if a genuine search for God is not at the forefront.  This is certainly not to insist that the discussions cease, but rather, to insist that these discussions can only be propelled forward if individuals—of whatever stripe—step outside of their own interpretive boundaries and communities and humbly present themselves before God, seeking His truth alone. It is to insist that “system maintenance” must die along with the self, because only then can we allow Scripture to interpret itself. Unfortunately (and this is an issue that goes <em>way</em> beyond the Genesis text), too many of us are more committed to a specific model than we are committed to seeking God’s truth, whatever inconvenience to us that truth proves to be. </p>

<p>In 2006, for instance, I heard a popular and well-trained Young Earth paleontologist make the following statement: “If all the evidence turns against young earth creationism, I will still believe it because that's what the Bible says.” I followed up with him in a conversation a year later over lunch and quickly realized that I did not misunderstand his statement.  For him, the parameters of his convictions were set in concrete and the truth of the overarching story of Christianity rested on these parameters not being crossed. In his view, the Bible absolutely and fundamentally teaches a universe which came into existence 6,000-10,000 years ago; to deny that is to deny Scripture, and if evidence turned up to the contrary one <em>must</em> not alter those parameters but, instead, search (perhaps in vain) for counter-evidence or be willing to live in blind faith. For this paleontologist, confident Christianity hinged on the stability of those borders of interpretation. Transition wasn't allowed. </p>

<p>But I have heard and read statements coming out of the two other camps of thought that share this kind of certainty over interpretation, too. There is a sense of doing injustice to scripture, thereby doing an injustice to Christianity, and, thereby again, doing an injustice to God if one strays from the preferred reading. One Old Earth Creationist remarked in a popular book that an interpretation of Genesis that allows for evolution is a “contradiction in terms” and it's an unfortunate thing to “blame God for it.” Genesis, in the mind of this thinker, specifically precludes any interpretation which leads to the sort of story evolution tells. To think otherwise is to “blame” God for something which he intentionally tells us is otherwise against his nature.</p>

<p>I have equally heard some theistic evolutionists deride—in a very spiritually shallow and personally offensive way—those who do not accept an evolutionary viewpoint. As one who went through an interpretive evolution on biological evolution, I can say confidently that I believe my own transition would have been much easier both intellectually and spiritually if not for feeling as if certain theistic evolutionists accused me of intentionally lying or being mentally ignorant. It seems that all three camps are at least sometimes plagued by the issue of pride—especially in the cases of a few strong advocates. But pride is nothing less than the cement by which interpretive barriers are built, helping them become unmovable walls that protect the interpretive communities within.<sup>1</sup> </p>

<p>On the other hand, one of the great benefits of the fall of positivism (or verificationism) and the rise of postmodernism was the realization that total objectivity among individuals is a false conception. And, since individuals make up communities, neither are camps of thought above error and immune from being wrong. Yet way too many Christians continue to approach Genesis as if we can interpret it on its own terms, completely and totally, without reference to our own location in history and culture. We're still functionally positivists. But it is an illusion that we’re above the interpretive fray, and we must realize time and again that we are subjective individuals, affected by a number of factors and people. We are deeply influenced by those that speak into us, those that we trust, and those that we find credible. As W. Randolph Tate writes, </p>


<blockquote>Interpretations...must be consistent with the established interpretive framework of the interpretive community. The worldview of the interpretive community sets the parameters within which interpretations are accepted or rejected.<sup>2</sup></blockquote>

<p>The Bible takes a slightly different angle and puts it this way: “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”  In other words, we are not objective data-interpreting individuals but fallen men and women, even as followers of Jesus. </p>

<p>So it’s when groups of folks line up on either side of an issue and make their positions part of their identity that the debate over interpreting Genesis reaches a near stalemate. It's communities against communities, PhDs against PhDs, experts against experts, and—perhaps more internally—interpretive parameters against interpretive parameters. The truth is that as long as we are first and foremost committed to maintaining the community in which we are involved, there will be very little chance of us getting at the real issues and the best conclusions, much less giving an adequate witness to our God, both Creator and Redeemer.</p>


<h3>New eyes, fresh air</h3>

<p>I mentioned earlier that I spent time in all three major camps of thought on this issue. I was a hard-lined Young Earth Creationist, debating on forums and writing creationist papers in college. I argued for the existence of modern-day dinosaurs, major flood geology, and so on. I was convinced I was right, that defending the truth meant digging my heels deeper into the sand. But two questions plagued my thoughts: first, I asked whether Christianity fell to pieces if I was wrong. Second, I asked whether I was committed to Christ or, rather, to myself and my interpretations. With that as my first major paradigm shift, I eventually came to accept an Old Earth view. I sat comfortably within the Old Earth view for several years, but the Lord was still at work in me, and, once again, brought those two questions to my mind.  Back to the books I went, back to the Bible I went, and back to prayer I went.  </p>

<p>Through months of extremely difficult and heart-rending transition, I found myself considering a particular reading of Genesis that I would have regarded as unacceptable as a YEC. But then I was confronted with this even more important point about Christianity: often God finds what is unacceptable to us very acceptable to Him! That included me, personally, and I felt the warmth of God’s grace flow over me. In the wake of that change of heart, people accused me of rejecting my background, my Christian education, and my interpretive communities. And, yet—whether I was right or wrong—I knew God accepted my path towards this new reading of Creation as a genuine search for Him. My spiritual struggle—contrary to what I thought while it was happening—was not a struggle to reject bad data and exegesis, it was a struggle to reject myself. </p>

<p>While the “facts” were important, that spiritual struggle was even more so for me. What was God showing me in the midst of it all? Was thinking differently about the creation making me appreciate the Creator less, or more?  Did reading Genesis differently mean only that I had been wrong, or that it was somehow less true? What did any of this have to do with my sense of calling to love and serve God and my fellow men?   In a way, I’m still figuring this out. But I can absolutely testify that the struggle transformed every single one of these questions. Indeed, for the first time, I believe I saw God as much <em>this-worldly</em> as <em>other-worldly</em>. I saw nature as intimately intertwined with itself, still being woven together by God’s hand. I saw Scripture as a beautiful expression of God’s desire that man should participate in creation. I saw that my fellow men and my fellow Christians were all on a journey, much the way I was. And I saw myself as a flawed, stubborn, and prideful man, yet forgiven for the times I’ve pitted myself and my presuppositions about Scripture against God, its author. </p>

<p>As settled as I am now, I have not forgotten that the common ribbon which ties together all of these transitions is my commitment to keep asking questions within my own circle, too—realizing that God still has much to teach all of us.  I have learned the continuing importance of stepping outside of my camp and making sure I haven’t become merely a product of or a willing prisoner to thinking a certain way, unwilling to consider that it and I might be incorrect. I came to realize that <em>everyone</em> (including myself, of course) has stories and life experiences that become the framework in which they read Genesis 1-2.  And if I stopped pretending that I, myself, could be perfectly objective, then I also had to stop pretending that those in the community that I trusted were <em>necessarily</em> objective, themselves. </p>

<p>Ultimately, I had to be willing to be wrong and to see that my friends might be wrong, too. That’s not something that any of us are “naturally” very good at, but it is possible when we realize that the world does not depend on <em>us</em> being right, but upon Jesus being right. For me, seeking truth rather than presupposition requires that we all be able to approach the communities that have influenced us deeply, and ask not just “what” they say but “why” they say it.  We all have to guard our hearts even more than our heads.  Frequently reminding myself to walk back to the edge of my own camp—to follow Jesus’ example and withdraw to a solitary place—has shown me that there is room to breathe outside our familiar interpretive parameters.  At certain times, I have found it to be the most refreshing air I've ever tasted.</p>

<h3>Notes </h3>

<p class="date">1. Though, admittedly, the theistic evolutionists tend to have a greater sense of leeway when it comes to how the claims of Genesis 1-2 affect Christianity as a whole. It would be an odd thing to say that to <em>not</em> interpret Genesis 1-2 as an evolutionary metaphor is to reject Christianity. As far as I know, most Christian evolutionists are very much willing to acknowledge that Young and Old Earth Creationists are still within appropriate spiritual bounds, even if not scientific ones. It seems to me that if individual theistic evolutionists choose an issue about which to be rigid, it’s the Fall and the existence of Adam.<br />

2. Tate, W. Randolpy. <em>Biblical Interpretation: An Integrated Approach</em>. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2008, p 222.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 29 Sep 12 14:22:49 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Randal Hardman</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Sep 29, 2012 14:22</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Dispatches From the Physicalist Frontier, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/dispatches&#45;from&#45;the&#45;physicalist&#45;frontier&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/dispatches&#45;from&#45;the&#45;physicalist&#45;frontier&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>I’m a physicalist when it comes to human persons.  I believe, in other words, that we are wholly physical objects.  I don’t believe there are non&#45;physical souls in the natural world.  So I don’t believe that we are or have such non&#45;physical souls as parts.  I believe we are through&#45;and&#45;through physical.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I’m a <em>physicalist</em> when it comes to human persons.  I believe, in other words, that we are wholly physical objects.  I don’t believe there are non-physical souls in the <em>natural</em> world.  So I don’t believe that we <em>are</em> or <em>have</em> such non-physical souls as parts.  I believe we are through-and-through physical.  The physical stuff that I believe wholly composes us is chock-full of surprising potentialities, such as the potential to produce the wine of consciousness from the spectacularly complex network of one hundred billion nerve cells and their several hundred trillion synaptic connections in the wet-ware of the human brain. Even in a world overflowing with natural wonders—consider the marsupial wolf and the carnivorous plant, for example—it is a particular  wonder that the natural world should contain conscious, self-conscious, personal, moral beings like ourselves.   But it does!  And while, to me, the “why” of our consciousness seems to fit most easily within a theistic understanding of the universe, the “how” of our consciousness seems increasingly to yield to naturalistic explanation.  </p>

<p>Let me be clear.  I do not reject dualism on account of any kind of philosophical or other kind of argument. In fact, I find many arguments against dualism—philosophical and otherwise—to be pretty weak specimens.  I’m what a friend calls an <em>antecedent materialist</em>.  In other words, I come to the discussion <em>assuming</em> I am a physical object, since that is what I have always seemed to myself to be for as long as I can remember. A non-physical soul doesn’t explain anything about consciousness that cannot be explained without it, and it is furthermore a wholly unnecessary hypothesis for many religious doctrines, despite intuitions to the contrary by many religious believers.  For example, belief in an afterlife, belief in the peculiarly Christian idea of the incarnation of Christ, as well as the belief that we human beings bear the image of God—none <em>requires</em> belief in a non-physical soul in order to be made sense of.  So until I am confronted with some knock-down, drag-out argument to the contrary, or until I am presented with some phenomena that cannot be accounted for in naturalistic terms or, yet again, until I have something resembling a conversion experience that forces me to renounce my physicalism, I'm sticking with it.  </p>

<p>To go a bit further, let’s consider several theological doctrines that seem to cut against a physicalist conception of human personhood.  These constitute perhaps the three most common objections Christian physicalists receive to their physicalism.  After I address these objections, I will say a little more about the content of my own physicalist conception of human persons, The Constitution View.  Perhaps in a future post I can say a little bit about the science of consciousness itself and address some of the most common objections to physicalism based on that mysterious phenomenon.</p>

<h3>Theological Objections to Physicalism about  Humans</h3>
<h4>The Incarnation of Christ</h4>
<p>The doctrine of the incarnation of Christ is a central tenet of Christianity, and it may seem that the doctrine is inconsistent with a physicalist conception of human personhood.  Yet I believe a physicalist view of human persons—like my own—actually makes <em>better</em> sense of the incarnation than does dualism.  Let me explain. </p>

<p>The putative problem for the physicalist is this: if God (or the second person of the Trinity in particular) is <em>essentially</em> a non-physical being, then how could such a being become <em>purely</em> physical without losing an essential property?  And if the second person of the Trinity loses an <em>essential</em> property, then wouldn’t he not simply cease to be fully <em>God</em> but simply cease to exist?  (An essential property is a property a thing has and can’t lack without ceasing to exist.  For example, my dog has the property of being a canine.  He can’t lose that property without ceasing to exist—he is essentially a canine.)</p>

<div class="see-also">For a more thorough discussion of essentialism, see the exchange between Bruce Little and Robert Bishop in our <a href="/blog/series/southern-baptist-voices-essentialism-and-evolution-series">Southern Baptist Voices series</a>.</div>

<p>Well, according to the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chalcedonian_Definition">Chalcedonian</a> formulation, the incarnate Christ is one Person with two natures, a fully divine nature (that of the Second Person of the Trinity) and a fully human nature (that of Jesus from Nazareth).   The Constitution View I hold divides things just where one would expect—between the human nature and the divine nature of the <em>single</em> person.  And keep in mind, by the way, that the <em>person</em> of Christ is <em>not</em> human; he is divine, being the second person of the Trinity.  But this one person, <em>in the incarnation</em>, had <em>two</em> natures--human <em>and</em> divine.  In this understanding of the dual natures, Christ is <em>wholly</em> non-physical in his divine nature and <em>wholly</em> physical in his human nature.  Now consider the somewhat-awkward cleavage Substance Dualists must offer.  According to Substance Dualism, Christ is wholly non-physical in his divine nature and <em>partly</em> physical and <em>partly</em> non-physical in his human nature.  Not especially elegant.  To my mind, far from being unable to accommodate the doctrine of the incarnation, my physicalist view of human persons is actually better able to explain the doctrine than is dualism.</p>

<p>Notice that if what I said above is true, the way this objection is often put contains an important mistake in assuming that the second person of the Trinity ceased to be something he was apart from the incarnation.  Indeed, the second person of the Trinity did <em>not</em> become <em>purely</em> physical (or even <em>partly</em> physical!).  The second <em>person</em> of the Trinity did <em>not</em> give up non-physicality in the incarnation.  Remember: one person (Divine and non-physical) with not one but (in the incarnation) <em>two</em> natures—one non-physical, the other physical.   How can that be?  I don’t have the slightest idea; but, the mystery of the incarnation is not explained away by any account, be it dualist or physicalist.</p>

<h4>The Imago Dei</h4>
<p>Now, what of the imago Dei or image of God?  If it’s true that we human persons are wholly physical beings—as any version of physicalism must claim—then what does it now mean to say that we have been created <em>in God’s image</em>?  Doesn’t having been created in the image of God just mean having a non-physical soul and the features of intellect, will and emotion that characterize soul? I do not believe that our having been created in the image of God means that we are non-physical as God is non-physical.  What then <em>does</em> it mean?  </p>

<div class="see-also">See <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/southern-baptist-voices-evolutionary-creationism-and-the-imago-dei-series">Tim O’Connor</a> on other ways to think about the <em>imago Dei</em>.</div>

<p>Well, there are many ways of understanding the claim that we human beings image God. One might mean that we image God when we care for Creation and contribute to the terrestrial flourishing of the Created order.  This, after all, is what the Bible means when it speaks of our having been given “dominion”.  We are God’s vice-regents, as it were.  To have dominion is to care for others, including non-human “others” like oceans and streams, octopus and salamander; in other words to have dominion is tend to the well being <em>of all the earth</em>.  Second, one might mean that we image God when we live in loving relation to other human beings and invest ourselves in their flourishing and well being.  For we are essentially <em>persons-in-relation</em>.  Since God is a Trinity, it is not surprising that we should image God in virtue of our essentially social nature.  The tenor of the relation between the three persons of the trinity is one of a harmonious and free exchange of love and joy.  So engaging in acts of mercy, hospitality, love, kindness, etc. is to act like God.  In fact, we image God when we image Jesus, who welcomed the outcast, fed the hungry, clothed the naked, hated evil and delighted in doing the work of the Father.  Finally, one might claim that we image God in our suffering.  God is love.  To love is to open oneself up to suffering.  And suffering love is God-love. </p>

<p>Now of course none of these ways that I have mentioned that we image God rules out the possibility that we are wholly or partly non-physical beings; but it doesn’t imply it either.  The fact that we have been created in the image of God is perfectly compatible with the claim that we are wholly physical beings.  Indeed, there is nothing in the doctrine of the <em>imago Dei</em>, rightly understood, that entails a dualist view of human nature.</p>

<p>But even if neither the doctrine of the incarnation nor the doctrine of humanity as reflecting the <em>imago Dei</em> require that we be at least partially non-physical beings, what about the issue of life after death?  I’ll address that third challenge to a Christian physicalism tomorrow.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 20 Aug 12 05:00:55 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Kevin J. Corcoran</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Aug 20, 2012 05:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Rediscovering Human Beings, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/rediscovering&#45;human&#45;beings&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/rediscovering&#45;human&#45;beings&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>That we are animals is something we hardly needed Darwin to tell us. It is obvious from the fact that, like other animals, we have stomachs and skin, eyeballs and ears, limbs and teeth, muscles, brains, and other organs. Yet it doesn’t follow that we are mere animals.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everyday experience tells us that a human being is the sort of thing that eats, sleeps, grows, reproduces, sees, hears, walks, feels, loves, hates, speaks, thinks, and chooses.  Aristotle’s way of summing up this homely truth was to say that we are by nature <em>rational animals</em>.  That we are animals is thus something we hardly needed Darwin to tell us.  It is obvious from the fact that, like other animals, we have stomachs and skin, eyeballs and ears, limbs and teeth, muscles, brains, and the other organs necessary to carry out the activities in question.  Like dogs and cats, apes and eels, we are essentially <em>bodily</em> creatures.</p>

<p>Yet it doesn’t follow that we are <em>mere</em> animals, and our rationality is what sets us apart from the rest of the genus.  Indeed, for Aristotle, and for Aquinas after him, rationality is unlike our other capacities in having an essentially <em>immaterial</em> and <em>non</em>-bodily aspect.  The reason has to do with our capacity to form abstract concepts, which underlies all our other distinctively rational activities.  It is because you can grasp what it is to be a <em>man</em> -- not just this particular man or that one, but any possible man, man as a <em>universal</em> -- that you can go on to form judgments like the judgment that <em>all men are mortal</em>, can reason from that judgment together with the judgment that <em>Socrates is a man</em> to the conclusion that <em>Socrates is mortal</em>, and so forth.  </p>

<p>There are several arguments that establish that this capacity for abstract thought cannot in principle be reduced to or otherwise entirely explained in terms of brain activity, even if brain activity is part of the story.  The arguments have their roots in Plato and Aristotle and have been defended in recent years by Aristotelian philosophers like Mortimer Adler, John Haldane, David Oderberg, and James Ross.<sup>1</sup>  Answering the various objections to (and misunderstandings of) these arguments takes some work, but the basic idea can be set out fairly simply.<sup>2</sup>  </p>

<p>Let us take as an example the thought that <em>triangles have three sides</em>.  For that thought (or any other) plausibly to be material, it would have to be identifiable with something like a symbol or set of symbols encoded in the brain -- something analogous to the symbols encoded in the electronic circuitry of a computer.  But there is no way a thought could be <em>entirely</em> reducible to that sort of thing.  For no material symbol could possibly have the <em>determinate or unambiguous</em> content that at least many of our concepts have; and no material symbol could possibly have the <em>universal reference</em> that our concepts have.  </p>

<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Feser_Triangle_crop.jpg" alt="" height="264" width="250"  /></p>

<p>Consider the most unambiguous symbol of triangularity there could be -- a picture of a triangle, such as the one to the right.  Now, does this picture represent triangles in general?  Or only isosceles triangles?  Or only small isosceles triangles drawn in black ink?  Or does it really even represent triangles in the first place?  Why not take it instead to represent a dinner bell, or an arrowhead?  There is nothing in the picture itself that can possibly tell you.  Nor would any other picture be any better.  Any picture would be susceptible of various interpretations, and so too would anything you might add to the picture in order to explain what the original picture was supposed to represent.  In particular, there is nothing in the picture in question or in any other picture that entails <em>any determinate, unambiguous</em> content.  And even in the best case there is nothing that could make it a representation of triangles <em>in general</em> as opposed to a representation merely of small, black, isosceles triangles specifically.  For the picture, like all pictures, has certain particularizing features -- a specific size and location, black lines as opposed to blue or green ones, an isosceles as opposed to scalene or equilateral shape -- that other things do not have.</p>

<p>Now what is true of this “best case” sort of symbol is even more true of linguistic symbols.  There is nothing in the word “triangle” that determines that it refers to all triangles or to any triangles at all.  Its meaning is entirely conventional; that that particular set of shapes (or the sounds we associate with them) have the significance they do is an accident of the history of the English language.  But something similar could be said of <em>any material symbols</em> whatever.  Even if we regarded them as somehow having a built-in meaning or content, they would not have the <em>universality</em> or <em>determinate</em> content of our concepts, any more than the physical marks making up the word “triangle” or a picture of a triangle do.  But then the having of a concept cannot <em>merely</em> be a matter of having a certain material symbol encoded in the brain, even if that is part of what it involves.  Nor can it merely be a matter of having a set of material symbols, or a set of material symbols together with certain causal relations to objects and events in the world beyond the brain.  For just as with any picture or set of pictures, any set of material elements will be susceptible in principle of alternative interpretations; while at least in many case, our thoughts are <em>not</em> indeterminate in this way.</p>

<p>We might understand the point by analogy with sentences.  If you are going to use the English sentence “Snow is white,” you are typically going to have to express it via some material medium -- ink marks, pixels, sound waves, or what have you.  All the same, the <em>meaning</em> of that sentence cannot be accounted for in terms of any of the physical properties of those media.  There is nothing in the shapes of the letters that make up the words of the sentence, or the chemistry of the ink in which they are written, or the physics of the compression waves in the air that you generate when uttering them, that makes them refer to snow or to whiteness or indeed to anything at all.  A sentence is a seamless unity of the material and the immaterial, and it is created by another seamless unity of the material and immaterial -- a human being.</p>

<p>At this point there will no doubt be those who object that positing ectoplasm or spook stuff is hardly a better explanation of thought than an appeal to brain activity is.  And that is quite true.  But then, I said nothing about ectoplasm or spook stuff in the first place.  When a mathematician points out that it is just muddleheaded to speak of the square root of 25 as if it were a kind of physical object, it would be silly to accuse him of believing that the square root of 25 is made out of ectoplasm or spook stuff.  If your picture of reality cannot accommodate numbers alongside physical objects, that is your problem, not his.  Mathematics simply provides a powerful example of a body of truths that cannot be captured in the language of physics, chemistry, neuroscience, and the like.  </p>

<p>Similarly, to point out that whatever a thought is, it cannot in principle be reduced to the physical properties of brain activity, is simply to provide another example of an aspect of reality that cannot be entirely captured in such language.  Only if we <em>assume</em> that all of reality <em>must</em> be so captured will this sound odd, but that we should not assume this is, of course, precisely the point.  And if we do assume it, we are doing so <em>in the face of</em> the evidence, and not on the basis of the evidence.  For it is precisely what we know about thought from our everyday familiarity with it -- such as the fact that it sometimes has a determinate content, and a universal reference -- that tells us that it cannot be entirely material, just as it is what we know about numbers from our everyday familiarity with them that tells us that they cannot be physical objects.  </p>

<p>But doesn’t neuroscience show that there is a tight correlation between our thoughts and brain activity?  It does indeed.  So what?  If you smudge the ink you’ve used to write out a sentence or muffle the sounds you make when you speak it, it may be difficult or impossible for the reader or listener to grasp its meaning.  It does not follow that the meaning is reducible to the physical or chemical properties of the sentence.  Similarly, the fact that brain damage will seriously impair a person’s capacity for thought does not entail that his thoughts are entirely explicable in terms of brain activity.</p>
<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/aquinas_reading.jpg" alt="" height="341" width="250"  /></p>

<p>Aristotle and Aquinas, though they regarded the human intellect as immaterial, would not have been surprised in the least by the findings of modern neuroscience.  Indeed, they would have been surprised had neuroscience not turned up the correlations it has.  This will sound surprising if you take Descartes as your paradigm of a philosopher who affirms the immateriality of the human mind.  But defending Descartes is exactly the reverse of what I have been doing.  For it was Descartes who substituted the real, concrete human being -- a seamless unity of the physical and the mental, the bodily and the immaterial -- with a bizarre patchwork of abstractions of his own devising.  Materialists have followed him ever since.  Materialism is just a riff on Cartesianism, not its opposite.  Tomorrow, I’ll explain exactly what I mean.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. See Mortimer Adler, <em>Intellect: Mind Over Matter</em> (New York: Collier Books, 1990); J. J. C. Smart and J. J. Haldane, <em>Atheism and Theism</em>, Second edition (Oxford: Blackwell, 2003), pp. 96-109; David S. Oderberg, “Hylemorphic Dualism,” <em>Social Philosophy and Policy</em> 22 (2005); and James Ross, “Immaterial Aspects of Thought,” <em>Journal of Philosophy</em> 89 (1992).<br />
2. I provide an exposition and defense of such arguments in chapter 7 of my book <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1851684786/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1851684786&linkCode=as2&tag=thebiofou06-20">Philosophy of Mind</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1851684786" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> and chapter 4 of my book <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1851686908/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1851686908&linkCode=as2&tag=thebiofou06-20">Aquinas</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1851686908" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>.  An especially detailed exposition and defense can be found in my article “Kripke, Ross, and the Immaterial Aspects of Thought,” forthcoming in the <em>American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly</em>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 18 Aug 12 04:59:58 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Edward Feser</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Aug 18, 2012 04:59</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Body and Soul, Mind and Brain: Pressing Questions</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/body&#45;and&#45;soul&#45;mind&#45;and&#45;brain&#45;pressing&#45;questions?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/body&#45;and&#45;soul&#45;mind&#45;and&#45;brain&#45;pressing&#45;questions?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>“Bit by experimental bit,” writes philosopher P. Churchland, “neuroscience is morphing our conception of what we are.” For many, this includes dispensing with the “soul” in favor of biologically anchored processes.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Bit by experimental bit,” writes philosopher P. Churchland, “neuroscience is morphing our conception of what we are.”<sup>1</sup> For many, this includes dispensing with the “soul” in favor of biologically anchored processes. As a <em>New York Times</em> article reported almost a decade ago, “Neuroscientists have given up looking for the seat of the soul, but they are still seeking what may be special about human brains, what it is that provides the basis for a level of self-awareness and complex emotions unlike those of other animals.” Noting the now-common view that morality and reason grow out of social emotions and feeling that are themselves linked to brain structures, the article suggests that, maybe, what makes us human is all in the wiring of the brain.<sup>2</sup></p>

<h3>What Is at Stake?</h3>
<p>What does it mean to be human? In what ways, if any, is our essential humanity tied to body and soul, mind and brain? This is not the stuff of mere curiosity. A host of pressing issues are at stake:</p>
	<ul><li>Is there anything about humans that our mechanical creations, our innovations in Artificial Intelligence, will be unable to duplicate?</li>
<li>What view of the human person helps us to find what we want to know about ourselves theologically — about sin, for example, as well as moral responsibility, repentance, and growth in grace?</li>
<li>Am I free to do what I want? Given what we have learned about brain functioning, how might we understand the “free” in “free will”?</li>
<li>What portrait of the human person is capable of casting a canopy of sacred worth over human beings, so that we have what is necessary for discourse concerning morality and for ethical practices?</li>
<li>If humans, like sheep, can be cloned, will the resulting life form be a “person”?</li>
<li>How should we understand “salvation”? Does salvation entail a denial of the world and embodied life, focusing instead on my “inner person” and on the life to come?</li>
<li>How ought the church to be extending itself in mission? Mission to what? The spiritual or soulish needs of persons? Society-at-large? The cosmos?</li>
<li>What happens when we die? What view(s) of the human person is consistent with Christian belief in life-after-death?</li></ul>

<p>For many, and not least for many Christians, what makes a human genuinely human is the identification of the human person with his or her soul. From the second century on, theologians debated the origin of the soul: Are souls created by God <em>ex nihilo</em> at the moment of their infusion into the body? Are body and soul formed together? Are souls preexistent? Indeed, in the late-second century it was clear to many, as the <em>Letter to Diognetus</em> puts it, that “the soul dwells in the body, yet is not of the body” (1.27). Traditionally, systematic theology has discussed the uniqueness of humanity in two theological loci: human creation in the divine image and the human possession of a soul. Often these two are reduced to one, with the soul understood as the particular consequence of creation in God’s image.  </p>

<p>For persons of faith — Christians included, but many others besides — the idea of a soul separable from the body is not only intuitive but necessary. We have regularly appealed to the soul as proof that humans are not mere animals, and so as a foundation for our views of the sacredness of human life. Moreover, Christians generally have derived from belief in the existence of the soul their affirmation of the human capacity to choose between good and ill. Further, the existence of a nonphysical soul, distinct and separable from the body, is typically regarded as the means by which human identity can cross over the bridge from this life to the next. Indeed, traditional Christian thought has tended to regard the body as frail and finite, the soul as immortal.</p>

<p>But it is the human possession of a “soul” that science now questions. When, as neurobiology and evolutionary psychology increasingly urge, the attributes and capacities traditionally allocated to the human soul are conditioned at point after point by biological processes, on what basis can belief in a soul be maintained? If science is generating “a radically new understanding of what it <em>means</em> to be human,”<sup>3</sup> then those of us in the church must prepare ourselves for searching questions about the propriety of Scripture and traditional Christian thought in our talk about humanity, salvation, the end time, and more.</p>

<p>Before we engage too much in worried hand-wringing, however, we should ask whether our situation is so dire. Do these innovations in our understanding of personhood in fact call into question our deepest beliefs as Christians? Interdisciplinary study — with contributions from neuroscience, but also from biblical studies, theological studies, ethics, and philosophy (see “Further Reading,” below) — are demonstrating that emerging scientific portraits of the human person are neither as novel as we might imagine, nor as threatening to the essential tenets of Christian faith.</p>

<h3>Biblical Contributions</h3>
<p>In the context of current discussion on the nature of the human person, the Christian Scriptures have two primary contributions. First, taken as a whole, the biblical witness is fully congruent with a view of the person that affirms the human being as bio-psycho-spiritual unity. Neurobiological evidence and/or philosophical arguments favoring some form of monism are not at all hostile to the witness of Scripture. Second, we must recognize that the Old and New Testaments do not define the human person in essentialist but above all in relational terms. Put differently, the Bible’s witness to the nature of human life is at once naive and profound. It is naive not in the sense of gullibility or primitiveness, but because it has not worked out in what we may regard as a philosophically satisfying way the nature of embodied existence in life, death, and afterlife. It is profound in its presentation of the human person fundamentally in relational terms, and its assessment of the human being as genuinely human and alive only within the family of humans brought into being by Yahweh and in relation to the God who gives life-giving breath. This non-negotiable biblical insight is being recovered by some scientists today — e.g., by J. Polkinghorne and W.S. Brown, each of whom has urged that the notion of “soul” be recast in relational terms.<sup>4</sup></p>

<p>We can press further. First, Scripture outlines a series of qualities of the human person that contrast sharply with the “modern self” derived from dualistic portraits. In his <em>Sources of the Self</em>, C. Taylor finds that, for modern folk, personal identity has come to be shaped by such assumptions as self-sufficiency, self-determination, and self-referentiality (“I am who I am”); that persons have an inner self, which is the authentic self; and that self-autonomy and self-legislation are basic to authentic personhood (Harvard University Press, 1989). Without  majoring on the notion of a metaphysical entity of the “soul,” Taylor’s analysis nonetheless intimates how modern, personal identity has been cultivated in the garden of anthropological dualism.</p>

<p>In Scripture, however, we find such emphases as the following: the construction of the self as deeply embedded in social relationships and thus the importance of dependence/interdependence for human identity; a premium on the integrity of the community and thus the contribution of individuals to that integrity; the assumption that a person <em>is</em> one’s behavior; an emphasis on external authority — that is, the call to holiness is a call to a human vocation drawn from a vision of Yahweh’s “difference”; and the reality of dualism <em>vis-à-vis</em> good/evil, resident in and manifest <em>both</em> outside <em>and</em> inside a person. The line from a substance dualism that locates personal essence in the “soul” to this vision of personal identity is not easily drawn.</p>

<p>The point is that the construction of personal identity that pervades modernity is at odds with biblical anthropology at almost every turn, while the witness of Scripture and the findings of neuroscience are converging at significant points.</p>

<p>Second, negatively, we err when we imagine that it is the “soul” that distinguishes humanity from non-human creatures. Aristotle is closer to the biblical tradition in his view that the soul is that in virtue of which an organism is alive (<em>On the Soul</em> 2.1 §§412a-413a10). Given this conceptualization, there is no particular reason to limit the idea of “soul” to the human person. Within the Old Testament, “soul” (Hebrew: <em>nepheš</em>) refers to life and vitality — not life in general, but life as instantiated in human persons and animals. <em>Nepheš</em> is not a thing to have but a way to be. To speak of loving God with all of one’s “soul,” then, is to elevate the intensity of involvement of one’s whole being. Accordingly, the Common English Bible gets it right when it translates “the first and greatest commandment” in this way: “You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your being, and with all your mind” (Matthew 22:37). Morever, in the creation accounts of Genesis 1-2, the Hebrew term used of human beings in 2:7, <em>nepheš</em>, is also used with reference to all sorts of wildlife, to everything “in which there is life (<em>nepheš</em>)” (1:30). This demonstrates incontrovertibly that “soul” (<em>nepheš</em>) is not, under this accounting, a unique characteristic of the human person. Accordingly, one might better translate Genesis 2:7 with reference to the divine gift of <em>life</em>: “the human being became a living person” — or, to quote again from the Common English Bible: “The human came to life.”</p>

<p>Third, thinking still of Genesis 2, it is instructive that the same texts that are silent on the infusion of a human soul into a dust-created body nevertheless distinguish by their use of the term <em>nepheš</em> between a being that has life and lifelessness. This speaks against any dualism that deprecates the body in favor of the soul and against any conceptualization of disembodied human existence in this life or the next. It also contravenes the widely held view that the quality of human life is vested in some thing or quality intrinsic to the individual person and that, in order to speak meaningfully of an afterlife, this “thing” must survive death. The soul does not distinguish human life as human or of particular value, but the graciousness of God does. Scripture situates the human family within the grand narrative of God’s doing; this narrative places a premium on human relatedness to God, humanity, and the cosmos because it is determined by God’s own character; and it is precisely within this narrative that the human creature draws both its value and its reason for being.</p>

<p>Hence, from a vantage point within the biblical narrative, avenues determined by autonomous individualism, interior psychic and/or mental processes, or the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells are mistaken, however well-worn they may have become. Although each of these accounts might appear to support a workable portrait of the human person and of human health, none of these carry us far in our concern to address our deepest human questions about what it means to be fully human.</p>

<p>What does it mean to be human? From a perspective within the biblical narrative, the way forward is marked by an account that rejects the necessity of a separate, metaphysical entity such as a soul to account for human capacities and distinctives; that underscores the material location of the human person in relation to the created order; that refuses to reduce personal identity to our neural equipment but rather emphasizes the personal contribution and relatedness of human beings to the human family and the cosmos; and thus that has as its primary point of beginning and orientation the human in a partnering relationship with God.</p>

<h3>Further Reading</h3>

<ul><li>W.S. Brown et al., eds., <em>Whatever Happened to the Soul? Scientific and Theological Portraits of Human Nature</em> (Fortress, 1998)</li>

<li>J.B. Green, <em>Body, Soul, and Human Life: The Nature of Humanity in the Bible</em> (Baker Academic, 2008)</li>

<li>J.B. Green, ed., <em>What about the Soul? Neuroscience and Christian Anthropology</em> (Abingdon, 2004)</li>

<li>M.A. Jeeves, ed., <em>Rethinking Human Nature: A Multidisciplinary Approach</em> (Eerdmans, 2011).</li></ul>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. P. Churchland, <em>Brain-Wise</em>. MIT Press, 2002: 2<br />
2. S. Blakeselee, “Humanity? Maybe It’s All in the Wiring,” <em>New York Times</em>, 9 December 2003, F1<br />
3. T. Metzinger, “Consciousness Research at the End of the Twentieth Century,” in <em>Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Empirical and Conceptual Questions</em>. ed. T. Metzinger; MIT Press, 2000: p. 6<br />
4. See J. Polkinghorne, “Eschatology: Some Questions and Some Insights from Science,” in <em>The End of the World and the Ends of God</em>. ed. J. Polkinghorne and M. Welker. Trinity Press International, 2000: 29-41 and W. S. Brown, “Cognitive Contributions to Soul,” in <em>Whatever Happened to the Soul?</em> ed. W.S. Brown et al.; Fortress, 1998: 99-125.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 16 Aug 12 05:00:44 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Joel Green</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Aug 16, 2012 05:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Gracious Dialogue</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/gracious&#45;dialogue?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/gracious&#45;dialogue?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Our desire to engage in gracious dialogue with fellow believers who reject biological evolution has been receiving increased attention in both the Christian and secular press.  More importantly, we are being joined in this reconciling project by our brothers and sisters in Christ who have often been defined primarily as our “opponents”.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are two main reasons why it is critically important that science & faith conversations between Christians be conducted with grace and humility.  First, as all of us see “through a glass darkly,” we need the insights of the entire Christian community (from scientists, to theologians, to Biblical scholars, to pastors to poets) in order to achieve the best understanding of the world God called us to cultivate and rule as his regents. No one discipline or perspective is sufficient in itself, whether focused on God’s Word or God’s world.</p>

<p>But it is also important that we engage believers who disagree with us (on human origins, especially) with charity and humility as a witness to our common identity in Christ—that we may be known by our love for each other in tandem with our demonstrated love for the secular world that does not yet claim Christ as Lord and Savior.</p>  

<p>While the BioLogos Foundation is committed to both of these aspects, we are especially pleased that our desire to engage in gracious dialogue with fellow believers who reject biological evolution has been receiving increased and very favorable attention in both the Christian and secular press.  More importantly, we are being joined in that reconciling project by those who have often been defined primarily as our “opponents,” rather than as brothers and sisters in Christ.</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/CT_Cover.png" alt="" height="189" width="139" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" />

<p>First, <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2012/july-august/a-tale-of-two-scientists.html?paging=off">A Tale of Two Scientists</a>, the cover story of Christianity Today’s July-August 2012 issue, featured the accounts of BioLogos Foundation President Darrel Falk and Todd Wood, Director of the Center for Creation Research at Bryan University.  Though Wood does not accept biological evolution on theological grounds, both men recognize its strength and explanatory power. But more importantly, both reject the warfare model between science and faith (and between Christians who think differently) as being, in Wood’s words, “detrimental to the Church.” </p>

<p>Second, our Southern Baptist Voices series has become a model for how such dialogue can be pursued, even in the sometimes no-holds-barred context of the web.  Several installments in our ongoing dialogue with Southern Baptist theologians have been covered by the Erin Roach of the Baptist Press (on <a href="http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=37901">May 25th</a> , <a href="http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=37981">June 6th</a>, and <a href="http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=38198">July 3rd</a>) and on on July 19th by Lillian Kwan of the <a href="http://www.christianpost.com/news/evangelicals-debate-theistic-evolution-historical-adam-78570/">Christian Post</a>.  And just this past week, Associated Press reporter Travis Loller highlighted the series in an article picked up by the <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/18/evangelical-scientists-debate-evolution_n_1683480.html">Huffington Post</a>, the <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/evangelical-scientists-debate-evolution-online-with-southern-baptist-seminary-professors/2012/07/18/gJQAqBsstW_story.html">Washington Post</a>, and many other news outlets across the country. </p>

<p>To make it easier for readers to find the entire Southern Baptist Voices series and join in the conversation themselves, we’ve launched a new landing page here: <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/sbv">Southern Baptist Voices</a>.  It is our hope and prayer that this initiative will set the stage for future dialogue between evolutionary creationists and those who hold other perspectives, as well.</p>


]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 21 Jul 12 12:50:42 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jul 21, 2012 12:50</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Series: Science and the Bible: Concordism</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;concordism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;concordism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Davis identifies core tenets or assumptions about the view of concordism, beginning with propositions about the Bible before concluding with a short historical commentary.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The word “concordism” is found in neither <a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com">Merriam Webster</a> nor the <em>Oxford English Dictionary</em>, yet it’s often used in contemporary works dealing with origins. Derived from the word “concord,” meaning a state of harmony, “concordism” has been used sparingly in English for more than a century. However, its prominence today comes from a thoroughly scholarly book written shortly after World War Two by the late Baptist theologian <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Ramm">Bernard Ramm</a>, <em>The Christian View of Science and Scripture</em> (1954). As Ramm defined it, concordism “seeks a harmony of the geologic record and the days of Genesis,” by which he really meant an old-earth creationist approach. </p>

<p>I am using the term in the same sense. Like Ramm, I don’t regard theistic evolution as a concordist view, even though some TE proponents like to say that evolution can be “harmonized” with Genesis. At the same time, Ramm completely rejected Price’s recent creation and Flood Geology, and he obviously did not consider that view to be a type of concordism either. Why not? On first glance, the YEC view might seem to fall within Ramm’s definition of concordism, and the authors of <a href="http://biologos.org/resources/books/origins">one of the books</a> recommended in the first column in this series classify it as a type of concordism. However, the harmony sought by YEC proponents comes at the cost of entirely rejecting the <em>standard</em> geologic record, which they replace with Flood Geology. That isn’t what Ramm had in mind by seeking a “harmony.”</p>

<p>Often the concordist view is called “progressive creation,” another term that Ramm used with much approval: “<em>We believe that the fundamental pattern of creation is progressive creation</em>,” he wrote prominently in italics. Indeed, it is sometimes assumed that Ramm invented both terms, “concordism” and “progressive creation,” when in fact he did no such thing. If anything, the latter term is even older than the former, having been used to refer to an OEC interpretation of natural history for about two centuries. The first American author to use it may have been <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Silliman">Benjamin Silliman</a>, an evangelical who was appointed the first professor of natural history at Yale by another evangelical, Yale’s president <a href="http://college.cengage.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/eighteenth/dwight_ti.html">Timothy Dwight</a>. Silliman was the single most influential figure in American science during the nineteenth century. In his <em>Outline of the Course of Geological Lectures Given in Yale College</em> (1829), Silliman spoke of “the progressive creation, life, death and sepulture [fossilization], of animals and plants.” On another occasion he noted how the Bible describes “a successive creation of plants and animals, ending with man,” and that geology “proves this history to be true.”</p>

<p>Clearly, then, the concordist or progressive creationist view has been around for a long time. Let’s examine its main components.</p>

<h3>Core Tenets or Assumptions of Concordism</h3>

<p><strong>(1)	The Bible and science (mainly geology and astronomy) are <em>BOTH</em> reliable sources of knowledge about the origin of the earth and the universe. God has written two “books” for our instruction, the book of nature and the book of scripture. Since God is the author of both “books,” they must agree when properly interpreted.</strong></p>

<p>If this strikes you as worded deliberately to sound like <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/galileo-and-other-good-books-about-science-and-the-bible">Galileo</a>, you’re right—but only because so many proponents of the concordist view also have Galileo very much in their minds. The basic scheme is neatly depicted in this diagram:</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/z-levels.gif" alt="" height="325" width="358" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" />

<p>Recall Galileo’s belief that the book of nature, written in the divine and unambiguous language of mathematics, should be used to help interpret the book of scripture, written in the richer but more ambiguous language spoken by the ordinary persons for whom its vital message of salvation was intended. When they accept the evidence for an ancient earth, Silliman and many other evangelical scholars right down to our own day believe they have merely applied Galileo’s logic to a different set of biblical texts. </p>

<p><strong>(2)	Scientific evidence, when properly interpreted, is consistent with the Bible, when properly interpreted. </strong></p>

<p>Galileo again: because both “books” are written by the same Author, they must agree. As he said in his <a href="http://www.disf.org/en/documentation/03-Galileo_Cristina.asp">Letter to Christina</a>, “the holy Bible can never speak untruth—whenever its true meaning is understood. But I believe nobody will deny that it is often very abstruse, and may say things which are quite different from what its bare words signify. Hence in expounding the Bible if one were always to confine oneself to the unadorned grammatical meaning, one might fall into error.” </p>

<p>What about those who interpret the book of nature? Can they ever be mistaken? Should they ever yield to those who interpret the book of scripture? Evolution was not the source of Galileo’s concerns, but concordists today would give the nod to scripture mainly when it comes to evolution—especially human evolution. Regardless of how much evolution they accept for other organisms, concordists hold strongly to the separate creation of Adam and Eve as the first human beings. They believe that Genesis 1 was intended to be at least broadly historical, even though it does not provide detailed scientific information.</p>

<p>Mainstream conclusions in geology and cosmology, however, are almost always accepted; indeed, <a href="http://www.reasons.org/articles/big-bang---the-bible-taught-it-first">Hugh Ross</a> and some other <a href="http://www.bibleandscience.com/science/images/showmegod.jpg">OECs</a> not only accept the “big bang” theory of the universe, they actively promote it as central to Christian apologetics, because it presents us with a universe that is not eternal and that appears to be exquisitely designed as a home for living creatures, including ourselves. </p>

<p><strong>(3) The Bible does <em>NOT</em> tell us the age of the earth.</strong></p>

<p>Two main concordist approaches to resolving the tension between Genesis and scientific dating of the earth have been popular since the mid-nineteenth century: the “day-age theory,” which still has numerous advocates (including Ross), and the “gap theory,” which is now nearly extinct. One hundred years ago, however, the gap theory was probably the more popular option among conservative Protestants, and it remained so until the 1960s and 1970s, when the rapid spread of Scientific Creationism all but relegated the gap view to the dust bin.</p>

<h4>The Gap Theory</h4>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/timeline.gif" alt="" height="230" width="568" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;"  />

<p>The gap theory posits a “gap” of untold length between “the beginning” of Genesis 1:1 and the first “day” of creation, starting with Genesis 1:3; the formless void of Gen 1:2 corresponds to this “gap.” Verse 1 refers to the original creation of the earth and the universe “in the beginning,” not to world as we now find it. The fossils represent creatures that populated the original creation. <em>Current</em> living creatures come from a second creation, after the “gap,” when God made them in six literal days, culminating in the creation of Adam and Eve just a few thousand years ago.</p>

<p>Although the creation of humanity matches the traditional biblical chronology—a major reason for the popularity of the gap theory in its heyday—the original creation cannot be dated from the Bible. Whether it happened 100 million years ago (as scientists thought around 1900) or billions of years ago (as scientists thought for much of the twentieth century), does not matter one bit to the Bible. Geologists can say whatever they wish about the age of the earth. The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scofield_Reference_Bible">Scofield Reference Bible</a>, originally published by Oxford University Press in 1909, taught the gap theory to generations of conservative Protestants in the English speaking world. The headings alone indicate Scofield’s endorsement of the gap theory, and he waited no longer than the second footnote to spell it out: “The first creative act refers to the dateless past, and gives scope for all the geologic ages.” (NOTE: the date “B.C. 4004" in the middle column refers to the start of the six days, not to “the beginning.” I’ll elaborate on that date in part two of this column.)</p>
 
<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/scofield_page.jpg" alt="" height="507" width="570" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" />

<p>As Scofield’s third note shows, the gap theory was usually placed within an elaborate theological structure about the fall of Satan and the angels, based on certain prophetic texts (see below). A full discussion would take us far afield, but something should be said about how gap theorists interpret Genesis 1:2, the crucial verse for their model. Scofield sticks with the King James Version, “the earth was without form, and void,” doing the exegetical work in his notes, but others like to <a href="http://www.bibleword.org/genesis1.html">render it</a> as, “the earth <strong><em>became</em></strong> a waste place,”, drawing out the implication (in their view) that God destroyed the original creation, laying waste to it in an act of judgment, leaving us with fossils of the pre-Adamic world. </p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/gap_image.gif" alt="" height="468" width="458" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" />

<p>In some versions of the gap view, the original creation included pre-Adamite people—that is, humans who were not descended from Adam and Eve. This idea that took many forms, some with racist overtones. Perhaps this strikes you as a bit surprising, but in the mid-nineteenth century it was a commonplace conception among Protestants, and not <a href="http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12370a.htm">unknown to Catholics either</a>. A prominent example would be <em><a href="http://archive.org/details/preadamiteearthc187000harr">The Pre-Adamite Earth: A Contribution to Theological Science</a></em> (1846), a very popular book by the English Congregational minister John Harris. Historian David Livingstone has written the definitive history of this fascinating idea. For more, see <a href="http://rorotoko.com/interview/20090206_livingstone_david_adam_ancestors_race_religion_politics_human_orig/?page=1">this interview</a>, but there is no substitute for reading the book itself! Let me make an invitation: who wants to borrow a copy and provide their own commentary here? </p>

<p>In all versions of the gap theory, however, fossils are vestiges of the pre-Adamic world, produced when it was destroyed; they are not a record of evolutionary history. All modern animals and many plants were created recently, in six literal days. Despite what YECs often say, there is just no way to see the gap theory as an “evolutionist” interpretation of Genesis!</p>

<h4>The "Day-Age" Theory</h4>
<p>The day-age theory takes the “days” in Genesis 1 as periods of indefinite length, such that neither the age of the earth nor the duration of any particular period in creation history can be determined from the Bible. The basis for this view is that the Hebrew word “yom” (day) can also mean an indefinite period of time. According to Hugh Ross, the leading advocate of progressive creation today, if the Hebrews had wanted to refer to a long period of indefinite length, they would have used the word “yom.” Thus, he claims to be giving a <em>literal</em> interpretation when he upholds the day-age view.</p>

<p>Numerous varieties of the day-age view have been proposed since the eighteenth century, too many to review here. They all teach that the major kinds of plants and animals were created separately, over the eons of earth history; the fossil record shows reliably which came earlier and which came later. Thus, the creation was accomplished “progressively,” as Silliman held in 1829 and Ross holds today. Ross thinks God performed <em>millions</em> of acts of special creation, but concordists differ substantially among themselves on the magnitude of the number for this.</p>

<p>Concordists mostly agree, however, that the first true humans were Adam and Eve, and that they were created <em>ex nihilo</em>—but, how recently were they created? Can the biblical 6,000 years be stretched far enough to encompass fossils of modern humans (<em>homo sapiens sapiens</em>) dating back perhaps to nearly 200,000 years? Can the biblical picture of Adam’s children living amidst cities and agriculture be reconciled with extensive evidence of humans who lived long before either existed? I’m no anthropologist, but anyone can see the relevance of such questions for this position. </p>

<p><strong>(4) The Flood was a real historical event, but it was not responsible for producing the fossils; rather, fossils are relics of organisms that were mainly here before humans.</strong></p>

<p>The last of the four basic assumptions shared by concordists is that they reject Flood Geology and accept the <a href="http://ebeltz.net/firstfam/geocolum.html">standard geologic column</a>. <a href="http://www.reasons.org/articles/exploring-the-extent-of-the-flood-part-one">Hugh Ross</a> and some others believe that the flood was <strong><em>geographically localized</em></strong>, covering part of the ancient Near East but not the whole globe. This is called the “local flood” view. Biblical scholar Paul Seely <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/the-flood-not-global-barely-local-mostly-theological">briefly assesses this view</a> in light of current knowledge here, but a full discussion of the issues goes well beyond of the scope of this online course. Anyone with appropriate expertise is invited to place comments below. The main point is that the flood has no <strong><em>geological</em></strong> significance for concordists, whether or not it was geographically “local.” </p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>Our look at concordism concludes on July 3 with some conclusions about the OEC view and further historical comments. I’ll pay attention to your comments in the meantime.</p><br> </br>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 16 Jul 12 05:00:05 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jul 16, 2012 05:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Southern Baptist Voices: A Response to John Hammett, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;a&#45;response&#45;to&#45;john&#45;hammett&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;a&#45;response&#45;to&#45;john&#45;hammett&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The Scriptures teach that we human beings have been created in God’s image. What does that mean? I am in substantial agreement with Dr. Hammett on this question.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/TimOConner.jpg" alt="" height="226" width="191" style="float:right; margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" /><p>I am glad to have the opportunity to dialogue with Dr. John Hammett. In addition to our shared Christian faith and our shared lack of expertise in evolutionary science, we have in common one of our teaching and scholarly foci: the nature of human persons. Dr. Hammett approaches this topic as a trained theologian, whereas I approach it as a philosopher. However, on a topic such as this one, those disciplinary boundaries can get smudged a bit when the discussants approach the matter from the standpoint of a biblically-rooted Christian faith. Indeed the issue is of such importance and complexity that I would welcome continued conversation with Dr. Hammett beyond this initial exchange. </p>

<p>The Christian Scriptures teach that we human beings have been created in God’s image. What does that mean? I am in substantial agreement with Dr. Hammett on this question. While I think that bearing God’s image involves our having or having a potentiality for certain basic psychological capacities that we associate with the term “person”, it has to do even more profoundly with our specific capacity for relationship with God. Indeed, I would go further and say that it is not just our having this capacity that makes us divine <em>ikons</em>, it is also the fact that God has activated this capacity—He has given the precious gift of His self-disclosure to us. Further still, it has an eschatological dimension, based on the revealed promise of a future development and perfection of each of us, and so by implication, of human nature itself, by almighty God. We are in the process of <em>becoming</em> fully human: beyond a descriptive biological or even psychological notion of human nature lies a teleological one—not a <em>telos</em> of nature but of God's loving purposes for us. Despite our unequally born deficits—physical, cognitive, emotional, and moral/spiritual—we are destined for a fuller, supernatural realization of our common nature.</p>

<p>That we are in these ways God’s image bearers is a (wonderful!) teaching of our faith. The Scriptures also speak in various places of the human “soul.” The idea of the soul seems clearly connected to the idea that we are divine <em>ikons</em>. But here we should tread carefully. It is of course not unique to the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures to use some such singular term to refer to that which is most distinctively human and that by virtue of which we are able to survive the death and decay of our bodies. But it is one thing to use the term as a kind of placeholder for whatever it is about us that enables us to be, feel, and act in distinctively human ways in this life and to survive death into the next; it is another thing to link the term to a specific metaphysical account of the matter, such as might say whether the soul is a kind of thing or substance, what kind of thing it is, and exactly how “it” relates to the human “body.” </p>

<p>It is (and always has been) very common for Christians to invest the term “soul” as it used in Scripture with such a metaphysical account. As these fellow Christians understand it, when the Bible speaks of my soul, it is referring to an immaterial substance that is, in the final analysis, <em>the thing that I am</em>. I have my body (by interacting directly with it and only with it among physical objects), but I <em>am</em> my soul. Many will add that, after my death and prior to the resurrection of the dead, I will exist in a completely disembodied state—a naked soul, as it were.</p>
 
<p>However, I believe it is a mistake to interpret Scripture as teaching or implying any such metaphysical account of the underpinnings of our distinctively human personal attributes or our capacity for surviving death. Now, after reflecting on the matter, we might conclude that the only way these Scriptural teachings <em>could</em> be true is for such a metaphysical account to be true, as well—an account in which we are immaterial substances, entirely separate from our bodies. Indeed, many have thought hard about it and have drawn just such a conclusion, and it is not hard to see why they find it tempting to do so. But to do so is to make a disputable philosophical inference; it is not a teaching of the faith.</p>

<p>The general perspective of BioLogos, which I embrace, is that theorizing about the underlying nature of the soul is best done by trying to read God’s Two Books (His Word and His Works) in tandem. Both Books have a great deal to say about us, and, as common products of an infinitely wise and loving Creator, what they say must ultimately be in harmony. As with any attempt to understand something deep and wondrous in God’s Creation, we should proceed with humility and carefulness and be prepared to rethink familiar and received ideas.</p>

<p>Spelling it out just a bit, the common Christian understanding of what it is to have a soul involves the yoking of two radically different things, a functioning human (wholly material) body and an immaterial mental thing that is the direct bearer of psychological properties such as self-awareness, emotions, and thoughts, and is that which chooses in accordance with desires and purposes. In short, a complex biological machine and a pure subject/purposive agent which interface in the brain. I want to acknowledge that this is a very natural perspective to have, quite apart from Christian revelation (hence its popularity among humans generally). It is very natural because our psychological abilities seem, introspectively, to be plainly something more than mere resultants of impersonal physical particle interactions, however numerous and complex these are within the human brain. </p>

<p>We can design highly sophisticated computers that process complex bodies of information with extraordinary speed, but no computer is a subject, or has a point of view. As philosophers of mind like to say, there is nothing “it is like” to be a computer in the way that there <em>is</em> something “it is like” to be a conscious subject.  Put another way, no mere computer is a conscious, experiencing subject, having a point of view from which it regards and interacts with its environment. Neither do computers make autonomous choices in the face of competing moral and self-interested motivations, and so on. It seems but a short step from this observation to the conclusion that human persons (and thinking/desiring/choosing things more generally) must be fundamentally different sorts of things: fundamentally distinct capacities must reside in fundamentally distinct kinds of substances (mental and spiritual substances as opposed to physical substances, however complex).</p>

<p>I have just described how matters appear from the ‘first-person perspective’ of conscious experience and self-awareness. Let me be clear that I take such evidence very seriously: I know my own conscious thoughts and experiences better than I know any scientific theory,—even a very well-attested one—as all of our theories are at bottom built on information we derive from our experiences. So awareness of the distinctive character of conscious experience is part of what is given to us in the Book of God’s Works, since we are a part of that Book. </p>

<p>But alongside that ‘first-person’ data, we have had an explosion of relevant information coming from the ‘third-person’ perspective of the natural sciences, specifically evolutionary and developmental biology and cognitive neuroscience. This information, while still incomplete and only imperfectly understood, sheds light on the deep natural history of humans and present-day animals; the processes by which individual organisms of any species develop from inception to maturity; function-specific neural structures and processes that sustain and help regulate the unfolding first-person perspective of conscious agents; and finally, observed correlations between increasing complexity of neural structures and increased psychological complexity.  This last correlation between structural and cognitive complexity is evident both when examining individuals as they develop, and when making comparisons across sentient species.</p>

<p>I suggest that this third-personal scientific information does not comport well with the two-substance or dualist metaphysical account of human persons. The fundamental problem is that our sciences point to continuous processes of increasing complexity, but the two-substance account requires the supposition of abrupt discontinuity. The “coming to be” at a particular point in time of a <em>new substance</em> with a suite of novel psychological capacities would seem to be a highly discontinuous development, both in large-scale bio-geological time and within the development  of individual organisms. </p>

<p>Since souls as purely immaterial things would lack parts, we cannot make sense of the accumulation or diminishment of capacities by proposing increased or decreased structural complexity within the bearer of such capacities. And it just seems implausible to suppose that all the necessary basic capacities for, say, calculus problem-solving are there in the soul from the beginning, awaiting only physical maturation in the body in order to become activated, but still not directly dependent on that maturation. It seems rather that psychological capacities arise and develop in tandem with the development of the brain and nervous system. </p>

<p>Of course, it is possible for the soul-body dualist to retrench: we might offload to the brain ‘side’ of the divide some of the psychological functioning that, prior to the advent of neuroscience, we might have mistakenly thought belonged to the soul. But that tack risks (as neuroscience progresses) reducing the soul to a simple, immaterial object that is radically incomplete, merely a “bearer of consciousness” that enables personal identity over time and through death.</p>

<p>Despite the fact that such future retrenchment would seem to be required, this kind of dualism remains tempting for the Christian thinker. Why? The obvious answer is that it can seem to be the <em>only</em> way to accommodate our specifically Christian data that human beings are not mere machines: our thoughts, emotions, goals, and intentions are deep, not superficial features of ourselves; they  confer a dignity upon us that makes us suitable bearers of the divine image such that human beings, after our skin has been destroyed, will yet see God. (Job 19:26). But is it true that the coherence of Christian theology requires this account? And if coherence of Christian theology does not require this account, which account might be the best one?</p>

<p>Tomorrow, in Part 2, I will address this question. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 22 Jun 12 05:00:04 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Tim O'Connor</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jun 22, 2012 05:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Series: He Who Has Ears</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/he&#45;who&#45;has&#45;ears?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/he&#45;who&#45;has&#45;ears?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Scholar and musician Jeff Warren addresses the questions of how music is meaningful, and where that meaning resides, by looking at the popular ideas that musical meaning is entirely subjective to the listener and that the meaning of music can be universal. He also explores the recent trend of attempting to explain music via neuroscience. Finally, he looks into the reasons why music continues to play such a critical role in the worshiping life of the Church.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A few months ago a couple of Jehovah’s witnesses came to my door. Upon learning of my profession, they pulled out one of their recent magazines with the cover article <a href="http://www.jw.org/index.html?option=QrYQCsVrGZNT" target="_blank">“Music: How does it affect you?”</a>  This is a question that has been asked for a long time, going back at least to the disagreements between Plato and Aristotle about how different musical scales affect moral development, and forward to the current lineup of ‘Baby Mozart’ edu-toys and the ongoing “worship wars” over what kind of music is best suited to be played in our churches.  As with arguments in the past, our contemporary discussions about how music affects people reveal underlying assumptions about the function and meaning of music that are ultimately tied to ideas about artistic creation; and varying perspectives on the source of artistic creation eventually take us back to a discussion of our ideas about God’s creation—the natural world and its inbuilt systems, including evolution—and God’s creativity, something we reflect in community as part of the <em>imago dei</em>, not least through music.</p>

<p>Humanity is marked by the biological capacity for musicality. Every known culture has something like music. Understanding how we experience and create music in the present gives us clues to why and how music emerged as one of the defining features of human culture (and, therefore, of humanness itself) in the past.  But thinking carefully about music and evolution can also help us reassess how we use music now: in the wider culture, collectively as the church, and even within our own homes.  In a nutshell, then, this essay will examine how views on evolution impact how one assesses music’s effects and meaning.  In many cases, problematic views about evolution and artistic creativity result in problematic views about music, but my argument is that an appropriate evolutionary view of music—one that looks at how music becomes meaningful within social relationships—is a view that actually enriches our appreciation of this most human endeavor, rather than trivializing it. In this first part I explore common discourses about the meaning of music and their relationship to ideas of creation. In part two next week, I suggest that understanding the role that music played in our biocultural evolution helps correct some of the myths that have made their way into popular discourse, especially with the growing popularity of trying to understand music via neuroscience.</p>

<p>Let’s begin by looking at a couple of popular ways of answering the question, “Where does musical meaning come from?” beginning with the idea that “music is in the ear of the beholder.”  One thing that is clear from years of teaching classes of first-year university students is that they are musical relativists. They have ‘their’ music that they enjoy and even use to demark their identities, but are perfectly willing to allow others to like other music. After all, music is all about enjoyment, right?  Historically, this cultural trope developed out of the post-Kantian argument of musical autonomy, the often-fashionable argument that music’s meaning is strictly musical and does not relate to other parts of the world. It is also reflected in Steven Pinker’s argument that music is ‘auditory cheesecake’. For Pinker, music used to be useful for things like attracting mates, but now we have evolved out of needing music: it’s not necessary, but is a nice extra. I might like cheesecake, but you might prefer ice cream. Either way, it won’t change the survival of the species, so we can enjoy what we like. This argument may have a harder time standing up when music is used as a means of torture at Guantanamo Bay, but it remains popular none-the-less.  Like many ideas of creation and the arts, the idea of music as primarily pleasure (determined by individual taste) is a post-Enlightenment development.</p>

<p>This musical relativism takes a slightly more exacting form in another popular idea, that meaning is embedded within the ‘music itself’ not in the taste of the listener. This view of meaning is the starting point of Plato and Aristotle’s disagreement about the effect of certain modes, the disagreements in the early church about the usage of certain musical instruments, and the arguments of the detrimental moral impact of certain forms of popular music (which, by the way, is an argument not just limited to the 20th or now 21st centuries). It is also the foundation of the statement from one of my former conductors that if we played well enough, we would summon up the ‘spirit of Haydn’. In other words, ‘proper’ participation can reveal the meaning of the work—be that the composer’s meaning or another idealized meaning.</p>

<p>Musical autonomy in this case refers to the view that music stands apart and has no relations or meaning outside of itself. Many philosophers and musicologists rely on this view in an unreflective way, represented by Peter Kivy’s statement that music “is a quasi-syntactical structure of sound understandable solely in musical terms and having no semantic or representational content, no meaning, and making no reference to anything beyond itself”<sup>1</sup>. For Kivy, the heart of the autonomy argument is that music is completely self-contained. Such a view is possible because of the historical development of ‘absolute music’, referring to music without a text or narrative, typified by the development of the symphonic form in the late 18th century. It is no accident that between 1750-1850, the form of the symphony developed, Kant theorized the idea of genius, and Schopenhauer claimed music to be “pure will.” In the 19th century, music came to be considered the highest of the arts, and even at the turn of the 20th century Kandinsky claimed that all art should try to achieve the autonomy and abstraction of music.</p>

<p>The idea of musical meaning somehow residing within the musical work is based on an assumption that the more one can isolate and analyze something, the more can be known about it. We can certainly learn much about a rock or plant by isolating it and putting it under a microscope, and those who take music to be autonomous believe that music can also be known most thoroughly by placing it ‘under the microscope’ through close analysis of a score or recording, or through close listening. It is through such pseudo-scientific analytical acts that knowledge about music is thought to be accessed. This is also the guiding ideology of ‘music appreciation.’  But while much can be gained by close examination of rocks or music, much more can be gained by studying how a rock or (especially) music is used by people—a central point to which we will return.</p>

<p>It is more than a little ironic, then, that a further example of the belief in an intrinsic musical meaning is the argument that music is ‘universal’; that is, that at least some music can cross cultural barriers and mean the same thing to all people. Often this view assumes a primacy of the Western canon, as it is believed that Mozart has a universal meaning but Chinese qin (zither) music does not. In a globalized world where many cultures listen to and value Mozart, people who do not share a common language or view of the world may find Mozart a common point of contact. But finding Mozart a point of contact is not caused by the music having a universal meaning. Rather, it is an example of the way music can become a shared space where people enter into a relationship via art. <a href="http://www.west-eastern-divan.org/the-orchestra/the-orchestra/" target="_blank">The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra</a> (a project of Daniel Barenboim and the late Edward Said) is an example of music being a common ground where people from different views of the world can connect, not an example of universalized meanings of music.</p>

<p>Indeed, there are many situations when music’s meanings are not shared, showing that meaning is most definitely not universal. Martin Lodge recounts the encounter of Dutch explorers and the Maori people of New Zealand in 1642. When the parties got close enough to see (and hear) each other, each group signalled with trumpets. The Dutch, thinking they were successful in making contact, sent a boat of unarmed sailors to shore. The boat was met by Maori warriors who killed more than half of the sailors. This misunderstanding was caused by not sharing a musical meaning: “The Maori trumpeting in this case was the music of war, an invitation to fight. On the other hand the Dutch trumpets played a variety of tunes intended to be welcoming.”<sup>2</sup> Musical meanings are often shared, but are not universal or ‘in the music’.</p>

<p>As we have begun to see, considering music as culturally embedded lets us recognize something quite different from the arguments that musical meaning is either subjective or encoded within the music itself. Music does allow for subjective response, but not truly autonomous response—our experience of music occurs within the bounds of cultural norms. Since music’s significance cannot be abstracted from it’s embeddedness within social relationships, an attention to culture and human intentionality (not just a reductionist sense of biology) must inform the ways that music is studied, whether in contemporary culture, in neuroscience, and with reference to human evolution.  Unfortunately even many Christian views of music have relied upon some of these problematic views of musical meaning, aligning ideas like individual artistic genius and the “meaning in the music” concept with theologies of creation <em>ex nihilo</em>.  As Bruce Ellis Benson discusses in an essay in the journal <a href="https://journal.twu.ca/index.php/verge/article/view/31/28" target="_blank">Verge</a> (and in a shortened version <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/in-the-beginning-there-was-improvisation/">here</a> at BioLogos), this combination or paralleling of genius and <em>ex nihilo</em> creation complicates the church’s understanding not only of music, but also about the Creator God, downplaying the essential element of community and interpersonal relationship inherent to both.</p>

<p>Next week, we’ll look at a similar tendency to abstract and quantify the way music makes meaning in the burgeoning field of neuroscience (from the “Mozart Effect” to fMRI scans), and return to the way that thinking about music within the evolution of human culture might give us a deeper appreciation of music—even of worship—within the church.  In the meantime, here are some questions to consider:</p>

<p>How do my own assumptions of the way music is meaningful affect the ways I conceive of and use music?</p>

<p>Are there negative consequences stemming from these assumptions?</p>

<p>How have problematic views of musical meaning affected the use of music as personal identity? Or in the church? Or in the media? Or in popularized science?</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p>1. Kivy, Peter (1990) Music Alone (Cornell University Press: Ithica, NY): p. 202.</p>
<p>2. Lodge, Martin (2009) 'Music Historiography in New Zealand' in ed. Zdravko Blazekovic, Music's Intellectual History (RILM: New York): p. 627.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 22 Jan 12 04:00:50 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Jeff R. Warren</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jan 22, 2012 04:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Mitochondrial Eve, Y&#45;Chromosome Adam, and Reasons to Believe</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/understanding&#45;evolution&#45;mitochondrial&#45;eve&#45;y&#45;chromosome&#45;adam?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/understanding&#45;evolution&#45;mitochondrial&#45;eve&#45;y&#45;chromosome&#45;adam?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>When presented with the evidence for human population sizes over our evolutionary history, a common point of confusion for evangelicals is how this evidence fits with Mitochondrial Eve. How can we all come from one woman (and one man) but also come from a large population of 10,000 individuals?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">One of the challenges for discussing evolution within evangelical Christian circles is that there is widespread confusion about how evolution actually works. In this (intermittent) series, I discuss aspects of evolution that are commonly misunderstood in the Christian community. In this post, we tackle the issue of why “Mitochondrial Eve” and “Y-chromosome Adam” are not an ancestral couple from whom all humans descend, as claimed by the Old-Earth Creationist organization <em>Reasons to Believe</em>.</p>

<p>It is reasonably well known among evangelical Christians that all living humans trace their mitochondrial DNA back to a single woman (a so-called “mitochondrial Eve”) and that all living males similarly trace their Y-chromosome DNA back to a single male (a so-called “Y-chromosome Adam”).  These individuals are commonly assumed by evangelicals to be the Biblical Adam and Eve, the first humans alive and the progenitors of the entire human race. While most young-earth and old-earth creationist organizations make this claim, perhaps one of the best-known organizations to do so is the old-earth creationist / anti-evolution organization <em>Reasons to Believe</em>, who have produced numerous  articles, podcasts, and even entire books on the subject.</p>

<p>In contrast to this common evangelical understanding, the scientific picture is rather different. Mitochondrial Eve, though the most recent common matrilineal ancestor of all humans, was but one of a large population living about 180,000 years ago. So too for Y-chromosome Adam: he was also a member of a large population, and he lived about 50,000 years ago. As has been discussed several times here at BioLogos, there are multiple lines of evidence that indicate the human population has never been below around 10,000 members at any time in its history: we branched off as a large population to form our own species.</p>

<p>When presented with the evidence for human population sizes over our evolutionary history, a common point of confusion for evangelicals is how this evidence fits with Mitochondrial Eve. How can we all come from one woman (and one man) but also come from a large population of 10,000 individuals? Aren’t these two observations in conflict?</p>

<p>The answer is no, these lines of evidence fit together. Humans do come from a large population, and all present-day humans do inherit mitochondrial and Y-chromosome DNA from specific individuals in the past. The reason for the apparent discrepancy lies in how mitochondrial and Y-chromosome DNA are inherited, as we shall see below.</p>

<p>Mitochondria are organelles responsible for energy conversion, and they contain their own small, circular chromosome that they replicate apart from regular chromosomes in the cell nucleus. Mitochondria are not passed on to progeny through sperm, but only through the egg: as such, mitochondrial DNA is passed on solely through the maternal line. Consider a small pedigree (family tree) below. Circles represent females, males are represented with squares. In this family, one grandmother (the woman at the top right of the pedigree) has passed on her mitochondrial DNA to her sons and daughter, but only her daughter passes it on to the next generation. All individuals who have this grandmother’s mitochondrial DNA are shown in blue:</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_1.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="363"  /></p>

<p>Conversely, if we examine Y-chromosome inheritance in this same family, we would see that (obviously) women cannot pass it on to their children. Here, the red lines show all males who have descended from a grandfather of the family (the male at the top left of the pedigree):</p>
 
<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_2.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="355"  /></p>

<p>Now we are ready to examine how these types of DNA are inherited in a larger group, and compare their modes of inheritance with regular chromosomal DNA. While it is not possible to draw out a pedigree for a population of 10,000 individuals, let’s examine a smaller group to see how a specific mitochondrial sequence can “take over” a population of organisms (note that this effect applies to other organisms besides humans that use an XX – XY system of sex chromosomes).</p>

<p>In the family tree below, three mitochondrial DNA variants are present in the first generation (the top row of the pedigree) and a represented with different colors (green, blue and red). Tracing the inheritance of these mitochondrial DNA versions through the family tree shows that all living members of this population (the bottom two rows) have inherited the red version only. The blue and green versions eventually hit a dead end where they were not passed on (either through females who did not have children, or males). As such, all living individuals can trace their mitochondrial DNA back to this group’s “mitochondrial Eve”, the woman at the top right of the tree with the “Mito 3” variant.</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_3.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="391"  /></p>

<p>Let’s now examine Y-chromosome inheritance patterns in the exact same family tree. Suppose there are three Y chromosome variants present in the first generations:</p>
 
<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_4.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="386"  /></p>

<p>Here we can see that the current population has inherited its Y-chromosome DNA from one individual as well (variant 1, the red lines) and that the other Y-chromosome variants (blue and green) hit dead ends through males that did not reproduce or men who only had daughters. All living members of the population trace their Y chromosome DNA back to an individual (filled in with yellow) who lived two generations after their most recent matrilineal common ancestor (the woman at the top right).</p>

<p>Now we are ready to examine regular chromosomal inheritance in this same family tree. Genetic variation on chromosomes other than the Y can be passed through either gender without problem, and individuals can have two variants at a time (one on the chromosome inherited from mom, the other on the chromosome inherited from dad). These key differences (compared to how mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosomes are inherited) produce a very different effect. In this same family, numerous variants (represented by the different colors) have been transmitted to the present generation without loss:</p> 
 
<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_5.jpg" alt="" width="565" height="371"  /></p>

<p>Notice the middle couple in the first generation in the pedigree. This man’s Y chromosome did not make it to the present day, and similarly his wife’s mitochondrial DNA did not make it either (scroll up to see this if you need to refresh your memory). So, they contributed nothing to the current generation, right? Not at all: both of them have passed on regular chromosomal variation to the present day (traced as blue and black lines).</p>
  
<p>In other words, it would be incorrect to examine this population, determine (correctly) that they share common mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome ancestors, and then go on to conclude that these two individuals were an ancestral pair that started this entire family. We know that this group descends from a larger population, because genetic variation in the present population is too large to explain as coming from one pair (there are five colors, or genetic variants in this population, and the max any one pair could carry is four, with two each).</p>

<p>While this example examines a small family, the same principles apply to larger groups: mitochondrial and Y-chromosome lineages, though interesting, cannot be used to estimate population sizes over time. For that type of work, regular chromosomal variation should be examined. Present day human genetic variation indicates that though we all share a common mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome source, these individuals came from a population of at least 10,000 individuals, and that they lived over 100,000 years apart. If you are interested in examining the evidence for human population sizes, Darrel Falk and I have discussed it previously.</p>
 
<p>In summary, anti-evolutionary groups, such as <em>Reasons to Believe</em>, that claim that the evidence for Mitochondrial Eve and Y-chromosome Adam supports an ancestral couple for the entire human race are not interpreting the data correctly. They have failed to account for the unique pattern of inheritance these types of DNA have in populations.</p>

<p class="intro">Photo courtesy of <a href="http://irkedmagazine.com/417/chromosomes/" target="_blank">Lewis Schofield</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 11 08:25:23 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Oct 28, 2011 08:25</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Series: Maker of Heaven and Earth</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/maker&#45;of&#45;heaven&#45;and&#45;earth&#45;series?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/maker&#45;of&#45;heaven&#45;and&#45;earth&#45;series?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In his sermon, Dave Swaim discusses the early chapters of Genesis that seemingly contradict scientific evidence, and he suggests that Christians have simply asked the “wrong questions” about this ancient text, which has led to warfare between the two. In light of this, Swaim wraps up his sermon with the three concluding points that he feels sums up the Biblical truth of creation: there is an all&#45;powerful God, he has a perfect plan, and he has given us his love through Jesus Christ.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/30571770?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="434" height="240" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<h3>Introduction</h3>
<p>Today BioLogos begins a series that we think ought to have significant impact on evangelical churches far beyond the local congregation in Arlington, Massachusetts where it was first delivered.  A recent   <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2011/june/noadamevenogospel.html/" target="_blank">editorial</a> in Christianity Today stated that many Christians likely face another "Galileo moment."  In that earlier era, finding that the earth moved around the sun--and not the other way around--caused the Church to reorient its understanding of certain scriptural passages.  Today, interconnecting strands of evidence all of which lie at the heart of biology, geology, physics and astronomy require segments of the Church to carefully evaluate its magnificent creation narrative--it needs to be certain it is hearing God's message in the way that God intends for it to be understood.  It is healthy for the conservative wing of Christianity to be carefully examining the genre of the creation narrative.  It has had to do this once before and, it is appropriate to prayerfully seek clarity once again.  Christians are truth-seekers and God's Spirit will guide the process as we sincerely seek that wisdom which is from above.</p>
  
<p>Oratory, at its best, has long been an important key in opening the door to new and dramatically important insights.     Pastor David Swaim of <a href="http://www.highrock.org/" target="_blank">Highrock Church</a> in the Boston suburb of Arlington illustrates this poignantly.  In fact his sermon is so significant, we've asked permission to post it in serial form so that each of us can deeply reflect on his words in a protracted fashion.  We encourage you to let others who are conflicted over this issue know about the series so that they can follow it.   Indeed, we believe It will be a great series for small group discussions--we need to lovingly support each other as we seek God's guidance in coming to understand God's truths.</p>

<p>In this sermon, Swaim discusses our belief in God as creator, or “Maker of heaven and earth”, as the Apostle’s Creeds so poetically states.  To begin, he reminds us that some passages in the Bible, like the parable of the prodigal son, convey deep truths even though they are not historical accounts.  Asking “the wrong questions”—questions that focus on arbitrary details—about such stories can cause us to miss out on their intended message.  In a similar way, he says, it is possible that we might be asking the “wrong questions” about the opening chapters of Genesis.  In recent years, conflict has erupted because a literal reading of Genesis seems to contradict the findings of science.  Swaim suggests, however, that accepting scientific evidence about things like evolution and the age of the earth need not rule out faith in Scripture.</p>

<p>If you wish to jump ahead and hear the sermon in its entirety, you may do so <a href="http://www.highrock.org/listen-to-sermons/2011-10-2-the-apostles-creed-creator/" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p class="intro"><em>Introduction written by the BioLogos editorial team.</em></p>

<h3>"Maker of Heaven and Earth" (transcript)</h3>

<p>One of my favorite parables is that of the lost son.  There’s a lot to it. Basically, it’s a story that Jesus told about a young man who insulted his father by demanding his share of the inheritance early, then ran off to spend that money on wild living, and found himself destitute when the money was gone.  In desperation, he returned to his father, asking to work as a servant.  But instead of being angry, his father joyfully embraced his lost son and threw a huge feast to celebrate his return.  It is a great story that Jesus tells to help us understand God’s amazing grace.</p>

<p>How many of you know this story?  Raise your hand, if you would.  Okay.  Now I want to make sure I’m clear…that’s a lot of you…I don’t mean just like, you know it because I just told it to you.  I mean you know it because you’ve heard a sermon on this before, or maybe you’ve read it on your own.  Raise your hand high if that’s true of you.  Wow, still a lot of you.  That’s perfect because I actually have a couple of questions maybe you can help me with.  You see, it says that the father saw the son while he was still a long way off.  Can anybody tell me how far off was the son at that point?  Anybody know that? Because, you know, they didn’t have glasses back then, and the father was really old, so how far could he really see?  It just doesn’t really add up for me.  Can anybody tell me about that?  Nobody?  Okay.  Well I have another question.  Maybe this one’s easier.  What town did that family live in? Does anybody know that?  No?  Nobody?  What town they lived in?  People, this is one of the greatest stories of all time!  This is a story that has changed thousands of lives, including many of yours!  How can you say that you know this story, that you understand this story, if you don’t even understand these basic facts?  Okay, well maybe this is easier.  Speaking of family, the Bible’s into family values, so I want to know—where’s the mother?  Can anybody tell me?  Is this family not intact?  What’s wrong?  Did they get a divorce maybe?  And how come the father ended up with the custody of the sons?  And why did they only have two?  Families back then had much bigger families.  Maybe they just got divorced too early?  But I mean he seems so nice—why do you think she left?  Anybody know these things?  I mean I just don’t get it.  You all tell me you know this story, and yet you don’t understand just these simple things about it. </p>

<p>Obviously, my questions miss the whole point of the story.  There was no mother, or for that matter, no father or son either. This never actually happened.  It’s just a parable.  It’s one of the many marvelous stories that Jesus told in order to help us understand something that was hard to see.  Now does that make it so that this story isn’t true?  No, it is true.  This story communicates some of the most important truths in the universe—about God’s nature, and the way that we relate to him. There are many passages in scripture that promise God’s love, or praise God’s love, or even try to explain God’s love.  But this passage helps us grasp that truth in a way that’s much more effectively communicated than just through direct reporting.  This way helps us feel it.  This event never happened, but it’s one of the truest stories in the world.  And what a shame for someone to dismiss it as irrelevant because it’s not literal history, or miss the point by asking the wrong kinds of questions.</p>

<p>Now I bring this up because just like my questions miss the point of the lost son parable, so, I fear, many of us ask the wrong questions about the beginning of the book of Genesis, which we read from just a few minutes ago.  Not only does this generate needless confusion and division, it also makes us miss the point, miss the life-changing truths that we could see if we asked the right questions.  Right now we’re in a sermon series studying the Apostle’s Creed, an ancient declaration of faith in the God of the Bible.  And today, we’re considering the word “creator.”  So, Genesis seemed like the right place to go.</p>

<p>Like the story of the lost son, most of you know the basic outline: God created the universe in six days and then napped on the seventh (so those of you who nap through my sermons every Sunday, you’re in good company!).  But by adding up all the names of the people mentioned in Genesis, and throughout the rest of the Bible, seventeenth century Bishop Ussher determined that the creation of Adam and Eve, and everything else, happened in 4,004 BC—about 6,000 years ago.  And that’s great.  But you’re probably also aware that this creates some tension with contemporary scientists who suggest a different timeline.  Considering the evidence offered by the size and expansion rate of the universe, plate tectonics, fossil evidence, and genetics, their best guess is that the universe was created by a big bang about 13 billion years ago, the earth appeared about 4.5 billion years ago, and the earliest humans existed about 200,000 years ago.  In the past 300 years, this has become a very heated debate.  Apparently, we need to choose whether we believe in science or in scripture.  At least that’s the claim made by the most strident voices on each side, so the general population seems to have accepted that if you believe in God you can’t believe in evolution, and if you believe in evolution then you can’t believe in God.</p>

<p>This topic arouses passions and anxieties in many people, including some in this room.  No matter what your perspective is, I’m probably going to say something today that you’ll disagree with, and might even make you angry.  There’ll be plenty of time for you to set me straight in the coming weeks.  But for the next half hour, in order to allow the possibility that we might hear something new, or even learn from the Holy Spirit, let’s lay aside our defensiveness so that we can at least consider why we are so attached to whatever ideas we have, and evaluate whether our devotion to one truth may be blinding us to others.  As scientists have discovered more and more evidence supporting the basic evolutionary theory outlined in Darwin’s Origin of Species, Christians have responded in a variety of ways.</p>

<p>Science has been right about so many things, so some Christians have embraced evolution and felt forced to abandon their trust, not only in the truth of Scripture, but also in the God it describes.  Other Christians, including many renowned scientists, have fought back by pointing out the many flaws in evolutionary theory and proposing alternative theories of their own.  These include Young Earth Creation, which asserts that the earth was created in six days six thousand years ago, and offers thoughtful explanations to reconcile the findings of science with the words of Genesis 1.  Old Earth Creationists do the same thing, but contend that each of the days in Genesis could represent an epoch, or a million years, or whatever amount of time, instead of just a 24-hour day.  This is linguistically legitimate—it’s a fine interpretation of the Hebrew word “day” in Genesis—and it recognizes that it’s hard to measure a day before the invention of the sun in day four, anyway.  So, Old Earth Creationism opens up many possibilities to reconcile scientific claims about the age of the earth with a literal interpretation of Genesis.  Theistic Evolution takes further steps to accommodate evolution while still honoring God as the one who created heaven and earth and everything in them through the evolutionary process.  This is attractive because it eliminates the conflict between science and scripture, but it requires a very different way of reading Genesis.  They suggest that, like I did with the parable of the prodigal son earlier, perhaps we’re asking the wrong questions about Genesis so that we’re inventing an unnecessary argument, and even worse, we’re also missing what the first chapters of Genesis really are all about.</p>

<p class="intro">In the next installment, to be posted tomorrow, Pastor Swaim goes on to discuss the Genesis passage in detail.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 17 Oct 11 08:00:03 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Swaim</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Oct 17, 2011 08:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Series: From ID to BioLogos</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/from&#45;id&#45;to&#45;biologos?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/from&#45;id&#45;to&#45;biologos?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Dennis Venema describes his personal journey that took him away from the Intelligent Design arguments toward the evolutionary creation worldview. Through careful and honest research, he discovered ID scientific reasoning to be analogy&#45;based, in sharp contrast to evolutionary science, which was supported by concrete data. After accepting this view, God’s presence ever strengthened him as he explored the compatibility between the Bible and God’s creative mechanism.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For those familiar with my work here at BioLogos, it might come as a surprise to know that until relatively recently I was a supporter of the Intelligent Design Movement (IDM). In this series of posts, I tell the story of my transition to the view that God uses evolution as a creative mechanism.</p>

<h3>Early years</h3>
<p>I grew up in northern British Columbia, Canada, in a small town called <a href="http://www.visitterrace.com/" target="_blank">Terrace</a>, where I spent a lot of time in the woods with my father and brother hunting and fishing. Little did I know how spoiled we were –Terrace and its environs are a world-class destination for outdoor pursuits, especially fishing. As a hunter, my father was always interested in patterns in nature: what animals fed on, where they moved at certain times, and so on. Even as a child I can remember being similarly interested in how nature worked. Often, while dad fished, I was the one brandishing a net, bucket at the ready, to see what critters I could scoop up and examine. While my peers at school wanted to be astronauts and firemen, I dreamed of being a scientist some day.</p>

<p>My local church setting was pretty much a wash when it came to science. Science was not held up as a potential vocation, but neither was it denigrated as suspect.  Creation science did not seem to be a priority, but rather global missions.  As such, science–faith issues were seldom, if ever, discussed in the church I grew up in. I can vaguely recall one dust-up over eschatology, which was perhaps the first time I realized that not all Christians agree on everything when it comes to interpreting the Bible. I cannot, however, recall any similar discussion about the means by which God created.</p>

<h3>High school</h3>
<p>Despite evolution being almost a complete non-issue in my local church, I seemed to acquire a generic, evangelical, anti-evolutionary position by default. Certainly I knew of no Christians who accepted it, and I can still recall the feeling of dread I would get even at hearing the word <em>evolution</em> spoken aloud. That word, in my mind, was effectively synonymous with <em>atheism</em>. Fortunately, even in high school biology class evolution seemed to be a complete non-issue too, for as far as I can recall evolution was not a subject I was exposed to in high school. In fact, in high school I found biology to be intensely boring – it seemed to me to be mere regurgitation of information. Chemistry and physics seemed much more interesting, and I suspect now the reason for the appeal they held for me then was that they were taught from their underlying principles: atomic theory, Newtonian mechanics and Einstein’s theories of special and general relativity. What was missing was the theoretical underpinnings of  biology: a way to organize the laundry list of information into a <em>context</em>. It would be a long time before I realized that <em>evolution</em> was the theoretical underpinning that was missing from my biology experience. Given my dread of the topic, had this been pressed on me in high school I may have never pursued a career in biology. </p>

<p>As a high school student I had left behind my childhood desire to be a scientist. After all, I knew no scientists, and had no notion of how one might become one. In my small-town, northern Canadian setting, a medical doctor was about as close as one came to a scientific career that I was aware of. Accordingly, I set my sights on medicine, and off I went to the University of British Columbia in the fall of 1992. Biology seemed a natural choice for an aspiring doctor, so that was what I chose.</p>

<p>One church incident that I do recall with great clarity happened just before I left for university. There were several recent grads in the congregation: some were headed to Bible College, and others, such as myself, were off to “secular” universities. Our congregation had a time of prayer for all of us, but the contrast was stark: prayers of thanksgiving and blessing for those bible-school bound, but for those of us heading into the lion’s den, prayers of supplication that we not lose our faith in the process. I can remember steeling myself for the upcoming battle, where professors tried to snare me with their atheistic teachings and peers likewise pressured me to give up my faith. One battle I knew was coming was the evolution one: certainly, as a biology student, this would be one of the challenges I would have to face.</p>

<h3>University 101</h3>
<p>To my delight, I found that university was not going to require me to hold my breath spiritually for four years. Soon I was involved with Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and enjoying the friendship of many other Christian students. Biology, however, remained boring and laundry-list like. My grades in chemistry and physics were still higher than those within my declared major of biology. The one bright spot was that evolution barely seemed to rate a mention except in passing. Certainly no compelling evidence for evolution was ever mentioned – professors seemed too intent on teaching the details of their fields to provide a wider evolutionary context. Even the introductory survey courses seemed more intent on a mere description of biodiversity rather than any detailed understanding of how that diversity arose.  I did note that there was a 400-level evolution course, but thankfully it was an optional elective. Avoiding the evolution issue was easier than I had thought: I simply skipped taking that elective.</p>

<p>At the start of my third year, with my grades still marginal for medical school, I somehow decided to upgrade into a biology “honors” student. This meant two things: working on an undergraduate research thesis with a faculty member, and attending an “honors seminar” class with other students in the same program.</p>

<p>Experiencing my first taste of research was electrifying: here at last was genuine science! Not long after, my upper-level classes seemed a lot more interesting and relevant, and also much easier. My grades improved dramatically, and medical school looked to be a live option once more – except for the fact that my childhood interest in science had blossomed again.</p>

<h3>Standing against evolution</h3>
<p>The undergraduate thesis seminar class included an assignment that required students to familiarize themselves with the research of one of the professors in the department. As the list of potential faculty and their research interests was read, one caught my attention: the work of <a href="http://www.zoology.ubc.ca/~schluter/" target="_blank">Dolph Schluter</a> on experimental evolution. I decided to take the opportunity to score a few hits on the so-called “theory” by signing up for this topic. What followed can only be described now as a painful memory: full of ignorance and confidence, I trotted out every long-refuted, anti-evolutionary argument in the book (in fact, if memory serves, my “research” was nothing beyond skimming one anti-evolutionary book for its arguments). I remember that the class was quite engaged by the presentation, and there was some  vigorous back-and-forth with some of the students who knew the science better than I because of their research work. I can only imagine what the thesis class faculty supervisor was thinking at the time. The worst part was that Dolph himself arrived early for his own presentation to the class, which was to follow my own. As such, he was able to hear a good portion of my nonsense.</p>

<p>Fortunately for me, Dolph had no interest in what would have been a very easy dressing-down. Rather, he restrained himself to a few words to the rest of the class on their lack of knowledge. Personally, I thought I had scored a victory for the faith, against the evils of evolution.</p>

<p><em>In the next post in this series, I’ll describe my introduction to, and enthusiastic embrace of, the Intelligent Design Movement.</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 25 Aug 11 05:00:30 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Aug 25, 2011 05:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Thomas Aquinas: Saint of Evolutionary Psychologists?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/thomas&#45;aquinas&#45;saint&#45;of&#45;evolutionary&#45;psychologists?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/thomas&#45;aquinas&#45;saint&#45;of&#45;evolutionary&#45;psychologists?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Thomas Aquinas (1225&#45;1274) was the foremost Christian scholar of the High Middle Ages and is today regarded as a &quot;doctor&quot; of the Catholic Church. No, Aquinas was not a materialist neuroscientist, but he understood the intimate interdependence of mind and body.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This post first appeared on <em>The Huffington Post</em>.</p>

<p>In 1975, Harvard biologist E. O. Wilson created a firestorm when, in his book <em>Sociobiology: The New Synthesis</em>, he argued that human nature might be explainable in evolutionary terms. Centuries earlier, however, a leading Christian scholar was already applying many key evolutionary principles to the understanding of man.</p>

<p>Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) was the foremost Christian scholar of the High Middle Ages and is today regarded as a "doctor" of the Catholic Church. Working six centuries before Darwin, he obviously was not an evolutionist. His major project was the Christianizing of Aristotelian philosophy. As an ardent Aristotelian (enough so that some of his teachings were condemned by the Bishop of Paris in 1277), Aquinas assumed that species were fixed and unchangeable, an idea incompatible with evolution. But Aquinas was the star student of Albert the Great, an enthusiastic Medieval naturalist. Albert assiduously observed the Dominican Order's policy of walking, not riding, when traveling. Ostensibly this was to emphasize the Order's commitment to poverty, but for Albert it was an opportunity to more closely observe nature's minutiae. Under Albert and Aristotle's mentorship, Aquinas acquired a deep appreciation for nature's continuity, which he understood as reflecting purposeful design rather than common descent.</p>

<p>Aquinas had no doubt that humans were specially created by God. However, he was also convinced that they were created out of the same basic materials used for all creatures and were therefore connected to all of nature. In his <em>Summa Theologica</em> he writes:</p>

<blockquote><p>"But it was fitting that the human body should be made of the four elements, that man might have something in common with the inferior bodies, as being something between spiritual and corporeal substances." (<em>ST</em> P1 Q91 A1)</p></blockquote>

<p>Aquinas had no qualms about calling humans animals:</p>

<blockquote><p>"Socrates and Plato ... have the same human species; others differ specifically but are generically the same, as man and ass have the same genus animal." (<em>De Principiis Naturae</em> 45)</p></blockquote>

<p>Following Aristotle, Aquinas rejected the strict dualism of the Augustinian/neo-Platonic philosophy dominant at the time. No, Aquinas was not a materialist neuroscientist, but he understood the intimate interdependence of mind and body. For Aquinas, different bodies meant different levels of intelligence: "...because some men have bodies of better disposition, their souls have greater power of understanding." (<em>ST</em> P1 Q85 A7)</p>

<p>Aquinas is most famous for his <em>Summa Theologica</em>, much of which is considered authoritative in Catholic theology. Less known is another great summa, <em>Summa Contra Gentiles</em>, where he sought to persuade non-believers using purely rational arguments for Christian doctrine. It is here that we find a naturalistic discussion of marriage.</p>

<blockquote><p>"We observe that in those animals, dogs for instance, in which the female by herself suffices for the rearing of the offspring, the male and female stay no time together after the performance of the sexual act. But in all animals in which the female by herself does not suffice for the rearing of the offspring, male and female dwell together after the sexual act so long as is necessary for the rearing and training of the offspring. This appears in birds, whose young are incapable of finding their own food immediately after they are hatched. ... Hence, whereas it is necessary in all animals for the male to stand by the female for such a time as the father's concurrence is requisite for bringing up the progeny, it is natural for man to be tied to the society of one fixed woman for a long period, not a short one." (<em>SCG</em> B3 Q122)</p></blockquote>

<p>The ideas expressed above are familiar to evolutionists as part of parental investment theory -- male/female pair-bonding is more likely to emerge where offspring are highly dependent.</p>

<p>Aquinas also anticipated another core evolutionary concept: paternity certainty. Males find an evolutionary advantage in long-term pair bonding because it helps to insure that offspring possess their genes. Without this assurance, males are unlikely to provision or protect the offspring. Thus, monogamy serves the genetic interests of both males and females. Females and their offspring receive resources and protection from the male (paternal investment), while males gain assurance of a genetic legacy (paternity certainty).</p>

<blockquote><p>"...every animal desires free enjoyment of pleasure of sexual union as of eating: which freedom is impeded by there being either several males to one female, or the other way about ... But in men there is a special reason, inasmuch as man naturally desires to be sure of his own offspring ... The reason why a wife is not allowed more than one husband at a time is because otherwise paternity would be uncertain." (<em>SCG</em> B3 Q124)</p></blockquote>

<p>Note how Aquinas' discussion also alludes to another important evolutionary precept: male mate competition. Aquinas goes on to describe how monogamy benefits women by reducing the female competition inherent in polygynous households, thereby insuring the concentration of emotional and material resources on a single female mate.</p>

<blockquote><p>"For among men that keep many wives the wives are counted as menial. For one man having several wives there arises discord at the domestic hearth..." (<em>SCG</em> B3 Q124)</p></blockquote>

<p>Along with anticipating many key concepts in evolutionary psychology, Aquinas also understood that humans possessed a natural moral sense. Some believers today foolishly try to argue that without religion there is no morality. Aquinas would have scoffed at such simple-mindedness. Synderesis, as Aquinas called it, was the natural human inclination toward right behavior.</p>

<blockquote><p>"Wherefore the first practical principles, bestowed on us by nature, do not belong to special power, but to a special natural habit which we call synderesis. Whence 'synderesis' is said to incite the good, and to murmur at evil, inasmuch as through first principles we proceed to discover, and judge of what we have discovered. It is therefore clear that 'synderesis' is not a power, but a natural habit." (<em>ST</em> P1 Q79 A12)</p></blockquote>

<p>In contrast to Augustine, Aquinas did not see human nature as inherently depraved. Instead, his view was generally more positive. We are, as Aristotle had argued, naturally social animals who seek to get along in society. Divine grace did not radically alter human nature, it perfected it.</p>

<p>If he were alive today would Aquinas be an evolutionist? His writings suggest a mind already resonating with many evolutionary concepts. My sense is that Aquinas, like Aristotle and Albert before him, was just too curious and too smart not be at the intellectual vanguard wrestling with exciting new knowledge.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 18 Jul 11 10:07:59 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Matt J. Rossano</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jul 18, 2011 10:07</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Series: Science and Faith at the Movies: AI</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/godawa&#45;ai?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/godawa&#45;ai?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series filmmaker Brian Godawa looks at the Stephen Spielberg movie A.I..  Godawa begins by summarizing the plot of A.I., explaining that a boy robot, raised in a human family, goes on a quest to find a mythical blue fairy who he believes will convert him into a “real boy.” The author goes on to highlight the philosophical and theological issues raised by the film, such as “the idea that we all live in a materialistic universe” and that meaning does not exist in reality but is rather created by complex machines.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Before I write about this movie, I want to open up the column to readers’ suggestions for movies to dialogue about. Just note them in the comments section. We want to discuss movies that deal with the issues of science and faith. All genres are welcome: thriller, comedy, action, new releases, old classics, cult favorites, whatever. I’ll try to take note and maybe start a conversation eventually by doing a column on it, or as I like to call it a “movie exegesis.” Now, let’s get to this week’s column.</p>

<h3>A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)</h3>

<p><em>Written and directed by Steven Spielberg, based on the short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" by Brian Aldiss.</em></p>

<p><em>A.I.: Artificial Intelligence</em>, was an idea that the late great director Stanley Kubrick had been collaborating on with Steven Spielberg before Kubrick died. After his death, Spielberg was inspired to try to bring this original vision to the screen in honor of Kubrick. The result is a sci-fi fairy tale journey, a visually stunning, philosophically thoughtful examination of what it means to be human. But it is also a story that becomes an analogy for mankind’s quest for meaning and significance in transcendent notions like religion that demythologizes that quest into a materialistic enterprise of symbol creation rather than true spiritual reality.</p>

<p>The story begins with the not too distant future as a world that has flooded many coastal cities because of the polar ice caps melting due to greenhouse gases. Thus mankind has fewer resources which leads to population control. Robots are created to take the place of many more “mouths to feed” because somehow they’ve discovered a way to energize these robots with less resources than humans consume. Laws regulate the amount of humans that are allowed to be birthed, making us all a little bit more lonely.</p>

<p>We are then treated to a literal academic exposition of scientist, professor Hobby (William Hurt) for the Cybertronics corporation which spells out clearly for us just what the ethical issues are that the movie is going to attempt to solve. Professor Hobby explains that the pursuit of creating artificial beings has been a perpetual hunger for mankind. They may have achieved artificial intelligence, but he concludes that it all amounts to “toys” of mere physical stimulus response. What they need to do is to create a robot that can love, with genuine emotional reaction to other human beings. It is through this accomplishment of creating a “mecha” (robot) that loves “orgas” (humans) that they might transcend mere physical existence. He suggests that “love will be the key by which they acquire a kind of subconscious, never before achieved -- An inner world of metaphor, of intuition, of self-motivated reasoning, of dreams.” The corporation’s goal is to create a child robot that could fulfill the parents’ needs to be loved. But then the question is put to the professor, “If a robot could genuinely love a person, what responsibility does that person hold toward that mecha in return? It’s a moral question.” “The oldest one of all,” says the Professor. “But in the beginning, didn’t God create Adam to love him?”</p>

<p>And so the questions are set that the film will explore: What makes a “real” person? Is our consciousness transcendent of our brains and neuronic impulses? Can a complex machine whose identity is reducible to physical and chemical properties transcend that identity by achieving metaphor, intuition and love? By referencing the Bible the storytellers also reveal that these are questions that reach into the very heart of our most cherished religious beliefs, questions of the value and dignity of human persons.</p>

<p>Twenty-two months later, the company has created their first child robot, and they have chosen one of the company’s employees to test it on, the perfect guinea pigs. Henry and Monica Swinton (Francis O’Connor) are a couple who have suffered the loss of their little boy to a permanent vegetative state in a comatose chamber where Monica reads to him daily and never is able to grieve her loss as science can keep him alive, but cannot bring him back. So the company offers a robot child, David (Haley Joel Osment), as a substitute for Monica’s child Martin. At first, Monica has a hard time accepting the offer, but he is so lifelike and “present” that she chooses to initiate the imprinting sequence that will bind the robot to her forever in “love.” She suddenly becomes “mommy” to David, and they enter into a simulacrum of a real mother and child union.</p>

<p>When a miracle occurs and their son Martin comes out of his coma and back into their lives, a new rivalry is born between brothers (well, sort of brothers). Martin gives his mother a children’s book to read to them: <em>Pinocchio</em>, the story of a puppet who wanted to be a real boy. This becomes the obvious central metaphor throughout the film in David’s own quest to become a human being. The original <em>Pinocchio</em> was a morality tale about ethically good behavior and choices being the defining characteristics of a child worthy of love to their parents. In this reimagining, the Pinocchio quest is no longer merely an ethical question but an ontological one: Can a complex machine transcend its materiality to become a person of equal worth to a human? What makes human beings any different from highly complex mechanical devices? If we can create artificial intelligence, is our human intelligence any less “artificial”?</p>

<p>The human Martin and his friends, devious and mischievous as most young human boys are, play tricks on David that put them in trouble and even danger, causing Monica to bring back David to the manufacturer. The only problem is, she can’t do it because she has grown fond of David, and she knows they will destroy him as defective product. So she leaves him in the woods and tells him to never come back but to run away. So David concludes from his <em>Pinocchio</em> story that he too wants to become a “real live boy” so that Monica will love him. He reasons that if he can just find the Blue Fairy like the wooden puppet did in the story, she will make him into a real boy. Because he is a robot incapable of understanding the metaphor, he seeks it as literally true, which sets him on his quest.</p>

<p>In the next post, we will continue to follow David’s journey and look more at what A.I. has to say about religion and what it means to be human.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 11 06:26:04 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian Godawa</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jun 23, 2011 06:26</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Form and Content</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/form&#45;and&#45;content?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/form&#45;and&#45;content?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>A theological belief can grow in our minds unobserved for years, the results of many imperceptible influences, until the full flower bursts into conscious thought.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Higgins' poem "With What Kind of Body” was featured in a <a href="/blog/with-what-kind-of-body/">previous post</a>.</strong></p>

<p>A theological belief can grow in our minds unobserved for years, the results of many imperceptible influences, until the full flower bursts into conscious thought. Just so, the idea that our bodies are saved as well as our souls had taken root in my approach to the arts, worship, literature, and fashion long before I articulated it in conscious thought or language. The idea is radical, bordering on monism, and I hope it’s not heretical. I have come to believe that a person’s <strong>form</strong>—his or her physical organism—is inseparable from his or her <strong>content</strong>—mind, soul, spirit, psyche, personality, behavior…</p>

<p>Where did this idea originate, for me? While I could traces its sources through my reading, or discuss its permutations in Church history, I think it began with poetry.</p>

<p>Coleridge wrote in his <em>Biographia Literaria</em> about poetry: “whatever lines can be translated into other words of the same language, without diminution of their significance, either in sense, or association, or in any worthy feeling, are so far vicious in their diction.” In other words (although he is condemning exactly <em>other words</em>), <strong>there is no such thing as a synonym</strong>. In other words again: the vocabulary, rhymes, meter, line length, stanza shape, figures of speech, images, and other technical aspects of the poem—its <strong>form</strong>—are inseparable from its <strong>content</strong>: WHAT is says is constituted by HOW it says it.</p>

<p>Take this tiny example. There is a beautiful Puritan classic by Jeremiah Burroughs entitled <em>The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment</em>. That’s a weighty, poetic title, heavy with the seventeenth century, implying the value and grace of a seriously pious life. Now, in 1988 a contemporary adaptation was released, entitled <em>Learning to be Happy</em>. Look what has happened in four hundred years. From <em>The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment to Learning to Be Happy</em> is dumbing-down indeed. But what’s worse, the content of Burrough’s title has been altered by the alteration of its form. Indicating a mechanistic program for how to be happy is worlds away from the Christian concept that contentment is a priceless, precious gift. The English civil war; the American, French, and Russian revolutions; Marx, Freud, and Nietzsche; two world wars; and capitalistic health-and-wealth, name-it-and-claim-it gospels stand between Burroughs and his Christianity-for-dummies descendant.</p>

<p>Because the words matter. Words have both denotation and connotation, sound and sense, and they resonate with our minds and our bodies. It is impossible to say the same thing in other words, because once it is in other words, it is not the same thing.</p>

<p>To get back to Coleridge: that is why a paraphrase, though an indispensable pedagogical tool, must never be confused with the poem. Students must never read “No Fear Shakespeare” as a substitute for the play itself. Every musical setting of a poem turns the poem into something other than its original self. Every movie adaptation of a book disappoints. The movie must be evaluated on its own merits, not simply compared to the book. Words and images are not interchangeable: the Deconstructionists showed us that when they pointed out that the phonetics of “T-R-E-E” are not the tree.</p>

<p>And what about that tree? Are the color, shape, size, and texture of the tree something apart from the tree itself? Is the oak something separate from those particular leaves, that regal height, those glorious shades of bronze and rust in autumn? If I took away a rose’s petals in their Fibonacci whorl, the inimitable scent, the tiny pain of thorns, and the reddish-green of its woody stem, what would be left of the rose? Would a rose by any other form still be a rose? Of course it wouldn’t. The question is absurd.</p>

<p>But then again, the smartest folks have always been asking that question. It’s the Plato-vs-Aristotle debate all over again, about whether everything exists only here in its particulars, or in the sum total of all its physical examples, or out there somewhere in an eternal extraction from which all instances are copied. If there were a metaphysical form of “ROSE,” I suppose it would still be itself without its petal, smell, and shape. Or would it? Wouldn’t the metaphysical prototype dictate exactly those blossoms on precisely that stem? Isn’t that how it copies its eternal form: by expressing itself in those particulars?</p>

<p>It seems, then, that asking Plato to weigh in hasn’t changed a thing. In the natural world, “form”—like having a certain shape and scent, or like having fourteen lines of iambic pentameter with the rhyme scheme <em>abba abba cde cde</em>—is inseparable from “content”—the rose-ness of the rose, or a longing for the unattainable Laura. The rose <strong><em>is</em></strong> the aggregate of its essential and accidental characteristics, just as the line “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet” is itself in just those words.</p>

<p>Then leap to the idea that each rose, each oak tree, and each poet is a work of art carefully crafted by the great Creative Artist. Picture God making a tree (either the original Platonic tree or one specific instance in your backyard) with care, defining the path each branch will follow from the trunk. Compare His concentrated artistry to that of a poet bending over a piece of paper, carefully weighing each word and balancing the lines. Perhaps the natural world serves as analogy for the unity of form and content in the art world, or perhaps it is actually the original after which every artistic work is patterned.</p>

<p>This natural analogy, then, is theologically useful. If the true nature of the oak tree is inseparable from the actual material stuff, the atomic matter, from which it is made, why (or how) should I be any different? How can I abstract (in both senses) ME from the-stuff-of-which-I-am-made? This goes beyond “you are what you eat.” My body is inseparable from my personality, just as if my height and weight shape a sonnet or sestina, while my redemption is the volta after the eighth line.</p>

<p>That last is essential. Each human embodied story needs that turn: the about-face of repentance into the narrative trajectory of redemption. If the soul is saved, the body is too. The old faith vs. works debate is moot: either without the other is dead. The soul without the body is a ghost; the body without the soul is a corpse. A saved person must be saved all through that embodied union—in a word, INCARNATION. In flesh. Me in my body, living in grace, living towards heaven. Salvation, to be itself, must be of both form and content. No paraphrases accepted on earth or in heaven.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 19 Jun 11 05:00:30 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Sørina Higgins</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jun 19, 2011 05:00</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>The (Lack Of) Conflict Between Science and Religion in College Students</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;lack&#45;of&#45;conflict&#45;between&#45;science&#45;and&#45;religion&#45;in&#45;college&#45;students?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;lack&#45;of&#45;conflict&#45;between&#45;science&#45;and&#45;religion&#45;in&#45;college&#45;students?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Media&#45;hungry atheist, creationist and religious fundamentalist provocateurs have dominated the science and religion narrative for the past decade. A recently published large&#45;scale survey of college students, however, finds that the call to arms has fallen on deaf ears.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Reposted with permission from <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/matt-j-rossano/no-sciencereligion-confli_b_865543.html" target="_blank"><em>Huffington Post</em></a>.</p>

<p>Media-hungry atheist, creationist and religious fundamentalist provocateurs have successfully dominated the science and religion narrative for the past decade or so. In doing so, they have created the false impression of an ongoing unavoidable war between the two camps. A recently published large-scale survey of college students, however, finds that the call to arms has fallen on deaf ears. For the vast majority of American university students, there simply is no conflict between science and religion.</p>

<p>Christopher Scheitle, a Penn State sociologist, analyzed survey data from more than 10,000 students at over 200 colleges and universities across America (<em>Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion</em> 50, p. 175). The students were surveyed both as freshman and juniors so that attitudinal change over the course of their university years could be assessed. Among the many items on the survey was one that asked the following: "For me, the relationship between science and religion is one of..." Four possible responses were provided: (1) Conflict -- I consider myself to be on the side of science, (2) Conflict -- I consider myself to be on the side of religion, (3) Independence - science and religion refer to different aspects of reality and (4) Collaboration -- each can be used to support the other. Students were also asked about their religious beliefs and affiliations and their course of study (i.e. major).</p>

<p>Results showed that nearly 70 percent of college freshman saw the science/religion relationship as one of either independence or collaboration. The minority who saw science and religion in conflict were roughly evenly split between those who sided with religion (17 percent) and those who sided with science (14 percent). Even more interesting was the fact that when students changed their opinion over time, the most likely change was moving from a conflict position to one of non-conflict (either independence or collaboration). For example, 70 percent of those who as freshmen said they were on "religion's side" had changed to a non-conflict position by the time they were juniors. Similarly, 46 percent of freshmen who said they were on "science's side" had adopted a non-conflict position by the time they were juniors. By contrast, only 13 percent of freshman who took a non-conflict position changed to one of conflict by their junior year (5 percent to religion's side, 8 percent to the side of science). For most students, more education means less science/religion conflict, not more.</p>

<p>The above results also reflect the fact that the pro-science point of view appears to be more entrenched than the pro-religion point of view. In other words, once someone has adopted "science's side" in a perceived science and religion conflict, it is harder to move them from this position compared to when someone has adopted "religion's side." Exactly how to interpret this is unclear. Are religious people actually less dogmatic on the issue? Maybe. Maybe the evidence more clearly confirms the rightness of the "science" side and this is why fewer people switch. Then again, if the evidence so clearly supports the "science side" then why don't the majority of people see a conflict to begin with, and why do nearly half of the pro-science folks defect over time?</p>

<p>The apparent greater willingness of "religion side" students to re-examine their stance can also be seen in another interesting finding. Students at religious schools were actually less likely to claim to be on "religion's side" than students at secular schools. This pattern held true even after the results were adjusted for the students' degree of religious commitment and religious conservatism. The author suggests that students at religious schools may feel less threatened than equally religious students at a secular school and that the conflict narrative may be more salient at secular schools.</p>

<p>The breakdown of findings by major also showed some interesting trends. Business and education students were most likely to adopt a conflict approach, with nearly 40 percent doing so, most of whom claimed a pro-religion stance. The conflict approach was endorsed by just under 30 percent of natural science, math and engineering, social science, and arts and humanities students. However, while the majority of "conflict" students in natural science, math and engineering sided with science, the majority of arts, humanitie, and social science students sided with religion. While it is important to keep in mind that most students of all majors saw no conflict, this pattern across majors was somewhat troubling to the author:</p>

<blockquote><p>"The finding that scientists and engineers are among the most likely to have a pro-science conflict perspective could mean that some of the most influential voices in these public debates might be more likely to fuel the debates than attenuate them. Similarly, future educators are among the most likely to hold a pro-religion conflict perspective. Given that classrooms and school boards have been one of the central forums for the struggle over religion and science, this does not bode well for a reduction of those struggles" (p. 185).</p></blockquote>

<p>A shrill alarm cry naturally attracts attention and the few extreme voices promoting a science and religion conflict have taken full advantage of this. Seeking common ground or respecting distinct domains are not sexy, but this is where the majority of educated people are when it comes to science and religion. As the author of this survey points out, the non-conflict position firmly established among college students is only a reflection of what has already been found for most working scientists.</p>

<p>The majority position is not always the right one. It is not always the wrong one either. But one is justified in being wary of those who promote conflict (whether in science and religion or in politics, society, etc.) when: (a) it not obvious to most people why the conflict is necessary and (b) those promoting it have something to gain by doing so. Crass opportunism could be afoot just as easily as sincere disagreement.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jun 11 08:59:34 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Matt J. Rossano</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jun 03, 2011 08:59</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>An Evangelical Geneticist&apos;s Critique of Reasons to Believe&apos;s Testable Creation Model</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/an&#45;evangelical&#45;geneticists&#45;critique&#45;of&#45;reasons&#45;to&#45;believes&#45;testable&#45;creatio?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/an&#45;evangelical&#45;geneticists&#45;critique&#45;of&#45;reasons&#45;to&#45;believes&#45;testable&#45;creatio?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Biologist and BioLogos Senior Fellow Denis Venema examines the interaction between RTB literature and several lines of genetics&#45;based evidence for common ancestry. In so doing, he also addresses the scientific robustness and reliability of the RTB model.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Biologist and BioLogos Senior Fellow Denis Venema examines the interaction between RTB literature and several lines of genetics-based evidence for common ancestry. In so doing, he also addresses the scientific robustness and reliability of the RTB model.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 02 May 11 19:02:57 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>May 02, 2011 19:02</dc:date>-->
      </item>
            <item>
        <title>Recovering the Doctrine of Creation: A Theological View of Science</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/recovering&#45;the&#45;doctrine&#45;of&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;theological&#45;view&#45;of&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/recovering&#45;the&#45;doctrine&#45;of&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;theological&#45;view&#45;of&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Philosopher Robert Bishop explores the Biblical doctrine of creation, which he describes as &quot;perhaps one of the most helpful pieces of theology for thinking about science&quot;, and describes why the doctrine needs to be recovered from narrower, contemporary interpretations of creation.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Philosopher Robert Bishop explores the Biblical doctrine of creation, which he describes as "perhaps one of the most helpful pieces of theology for thinking about science", and describes why the doctrine needs to be recovered from narrower, contemporary interpretations of creation.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 11 16:43:49 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Robert C. Bishop</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 25, 2011 16:43</dc:date>-->
      </item>
      

      

    
  </channel>
</rss>