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        <title>Custom Feed &#45; The BioLogos Forum</title>
    <link>http://biologos.org/resources/find/Essay/sort&#45;by&#45;Recommended/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/Atheism &amp; Scientism,Creation &amp; Origins?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>2013-06-18T15:52:59-08:00</dc:date>    
    
    

            
            
        
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        <title>God Did It (But I Don’t Exactly Know How the World Was Created)</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/god&#45;did&#45;it&#45;but&#45;i&#45;dont&#45;exactly&#45;know&#45;how&#45;the&#45;world&#45;was&#45;created?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/god&#45;did&#45;it&#45;but&#45;i&#45;dont&#45;exactly&#45;know&#45;how&#45;the&#45;world&#45;was&#45;created?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>After we both exhaled some relieved laughter, I whispered, &quot;I believe God created the world and holds it together. Just how he did that is up for debate, but whatever conclusions you come to about the earth&apos;s origins, God did it. Okay?&quot;</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Carolyn Arends recently wrote an article in <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2012/november/god-did-it.html"><em>Christianity Today</em></a> that we thought our readers would appreciate. In it, she writes about a difficult conversation that many Christian parents have with their kids. It’s the conversation about creation—we believe God made the heavens and the earth, but did God really do it in seven literal days? If God used natural selection as one of His creative processes—does that mean that humans really evolved from monkeys? How does it change the way we read the Bible, if we choose to accept the conclusions of modern science?</p>

<p>These are tough questions, and Arends provides some helpful insight on how she’s handled them with her own kids.</p>
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        <pubDate>Mon, 10 Jun 13 09:15:23 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jun 10, 2013 09:15</dc:date>-->
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        <title>A Survey of Clergy and Their Views on Origins</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;survey&#45;of&#45;clergy&#45;and&#45;their&#45;views&#45;on&#45;origins?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;survey&#45;of&#45;clergy&#45;and&#45;their&#45;views&#45;on&#45;origins?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>What do today’s pastors think about science? What views do they hold on creation and evolution and how strongly do they hold them? How do origins issues impact their ministries? These were just a few of the questions that motivated us at BioLogos to commission a survey of pastors on origins</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What do today’s pastors think about science? &nbsp; What views do they hold on creation and evolution and how strongly do they hold them? &nbsp; How do origins issues impact their ministries?</p>

<p>These were just a few of the questions that motivated us at BioLogos to commission a survey of pastors on origins. &nbsp;In 2012, the Barna Group conducted 743 telephone interviews with pastors from across the US, from churches big and small, and from all Christian denominations. &nbsp;This comprehensive, in-depth survey provides a fascinating analysis of views held by clergy today. &nbsp; In the coming month, we’ll be digging deeper into the survey results, but for now, here are some key highlights:</p>

<h3>#1: Pastors hold a diversity of views on origins.</h3>

<p class="caption-center"><img alt="" src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/clergy_views_chart.jpg" /></p>

<p>Overall, while a slight majority of the pastors surveyed fall under the label of Young Earth Creationism (54%), sizeable portions of clergy accept Progressive Creation (15%) and Theistic Evolution (18%).</p>

<p>The numbers varied widely based on a number of factors, however. Pastors of mainline churches were most likely to accept Theistic Evolution, while non-Mainline, Charismatic, and Southern Baptist pastors were overwhelmingly Young Earth Creationists. Pastors of larger churches were also more likely to accept Theistic Evolution.</p>

<p>Regionally, the highest percentage of YEC pastors was found in South, while the highest percentage of pastors accepting TE was in the Midwest. Pastors from the western states were the least likely to accept TE.</p>

<h3>#2: Most pastors think science and faith questions are important.</h3>

<p>Regardless of their views, the majority of pastors surveyed feel that the Church needs to look at how it handles issues of science. 72% of pastors with YEC views and 73% of pastors with TE views agree with the statement that <em>“the Christian community needs to take a serious look at its understanding of science and human origins in order to maintain its witness in the world.”&nbsp;</em>(The numbers are slightly lower for pastors who hold to Progressive Creation and who are uncertain).</p>

<p>Similarly, 66% of YEC pastors and 61% of both TE and Progressive Creation pastors agree that <em>“younger adults today are more concerned than ever about whether faith and science are compatible.”</em></p>

<h3>#3: Clergy think disagreements on science and faith harm our witness (but for different reasons).</h3>

<p>Clergy across all three viewpoints feel that disagreements are harming the Church’s outreach, but they differ in how they view that harm.</p>

<p>YEC pastors overwhelming agreed (85%) that <em>“Christian disagreement on matters of creation and evolution is compromising our witness to the world.”</em> However, a majority of TE pastors disagreed with the statement (63%).</p>

<p>Conversely, a majority of TE pastors (63%) agreed that <em>“The church’s posture toward science prevents many non-Christians from accepting Christianity,”</em>&nbsp;while a majority of YEC and Progressive Creation leaning pastors disagreed (59%).</p>

<h3>#4: Pastors aren’t avoiding science.</h3>

<p>The majority of pastors think that addressing issues of science for their congregations is an important part of their work. Of those surveyed, 72% felt that addressing science issues in the local community was somewhat (51%) or very (21%) urgent. When asked about science on a national and global level, even more pastors felt that addressing science issues is important (43% somewhat and 46% very). Furthermore, 79% of pastors included scientific themes in at least one sermon in the past year, and 40% had included them in at least ten sermons.</p>

<p>The majority of clergy across all four viewpoints also agreed with the statement <em>“Just as scripture should influence human interpretation of science, science should also inform our understanding of scripture.”</em> The numbers were highest for TE pastors and those who are uncertain (81% and 72%, respectively), though over half of YEC and PC pastors also agreed (52% and 65%, respectively).</p>

<p>Finally, although YEC’s are more reluctant than other pastors to say “science should inform understanding of scripture, they strongly agree (84%) that <em>“The Christian community needs a greater commitment to showing how young earth creationism is consistent with science.”</em></p>

<h3>#5: However, they are concerned about evolution for biblical reasons.</h3>

<p>Over half of pastors said they had “major concerns” about the idea that God used evolution. The main reasons for that concern were that the idea “undermines the authority of Scripture” (64%), “views portions of the Bible as non-literal, like Genesis” (62%), “raises doubts about a historical Adam and Eve” (61%), and “raises questions about how and when death and sin entered the world” (59%). However, 26% of pastors saw no concern with the idea that God used evolution.</p>

<h3>#6: The majority of clergy accept parts of scripture as symbolic.</h3>

<p>60% of the pastors surveyed felt that “some portions of the Bible are symbolic, but all that it teaches is authoritative.” Clergy whose views fall under theistic evolution and progressive creation were more likely to accept this statement (79% and 73% respectively), but a sizeable number of YEC pastors (40% among the core followers and 49% among those leaning towards YEC) also agreed with the statement.</p>

<h3>#7: Clergy are concerned that changing their views on origins might compromise their ministry.</h3>

<p>Over half of pastors (58%) who fell under the YEC category agreed that <em>“If you publicly admitted your own doubts about human origins, you feel you would have a lot to lose in your ministry.”</em> 41% of pastors in the Progressive Creation group also agreed with the statement. Pastors who were uncertain or who fell under the Theistic Evolution group were less concerned, with only 26% and 17% respectively agreeing with the statement.</p>
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        <pubDate>Wed, 08 May 13 08:00:35 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>May 08, 2013 08:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Denis Alexander on Understanding Creation Theology</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/denis&#45;alexander&#45;on&#45;the&#45;barriers&#45;to&#45;traditional&#45;creation&#45;theology?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/denis&#45;alexander&#45;on&#45;the&#45;barriers&#45;to&#45;traditional&#45;creation&#45;theology?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this video Conversation, Denis Alexander asserts that contemporary Christians are not taking the early chapters of Genesis seriously enough.</description>
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<p>In this video Conversation, Denis Alexander addresses two prominent barriers for Christians to accept evolutionary creation. The first is Biblical interpretation. When contemporary Christians interpret the early chapters of Genesis literally, they do so out of a desire to take the text seriously. Yet the early church fathers saw these chapters as figurative—and that figurative interpretation did not lesson the important foundational truths taught in these passages. The contemporary literal reading is actually a modern approach to the text in that our scientific mindset inappropriately shapes the interpretation. Since science did not even exist at the time that Genesis was written, an overly literal interpretation can actually cause us to miss the inspired message that the Biblical authors were communicating.</p>

<p><span style="line-height: 1.3em;">The second barrier is the rhetoric of the New Atheists, who claim that it is impossible to accept evolution while still believing in God. Christians should challenge this. Traditional Christian views are not in conflict with modern science. Instead, they see nature as God's work, with St. Augustine writing that "nature is what God does." As humanity develops a scientific understanding of nature, we will only learn more about the handiwork of God.&nbsp;</span></p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 15 Feb 13 07:00:14 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Denis Alexander</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 15, 2013 07:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Evolution and Christian Faith Grantees Announced</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/evolution&#45;and&#45;christian&#45;faith&#45;grantees&#45;announced?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/evolution&#45;and&#45;christian&#45;faith&#45;grantees&#45;announced?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Congratulations to the 37 winners of the Evolution &amp; Christian Faith (ECF) grants competition! ECF is a new BioLogos program designed to support projects and network&#45;building among scholars, church leaders, and parachurch organizations.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Congratulations to the 37 winners of the Evolution &amp; Christian Faith (ECF) grants competition!&nbsp; ECF is a new BioLogos program designed to support projects and network-building among scholars, church leaders, and parachurch organizations. Each project takes a different approach to address theological and philosophical questions commonly voiced by Christians about evolutionary creation. ECF places a premium on scholarship with high “translational” potential—that which leaves the academy and makes an impact on the church. The program runs through August 2015.</p>

<p>Grantees will benefit from in-person interaction through a series of summer workshops in 2013, 2014, and 2015. These meetings will not only foster a broader knowledge base, but will build a sustained network of scholars and church leaders, both young and seasoned, who are serious about addressing the concerns of the church about evolution. Also in 2015, in connection with the third summer workshop, BioLogos will host a large conference open to scientists, scholars, and church leaders from around the world.</p>

<h3>ECF History</h3>

<p>In January 2012, BioLogos was awarded a multi-million dollar grant from the John Templeton Foundation to fund the work of scholars and church leaders on evolution and Christian faith. In spring 2012 we worked hard to get the word out. You may have seen announcements on the BioLogos website, in our newsletters, on the Books &amp; Culture, Leadership Journal, or First Things websites, on your professional society’s listserv, or perhaps on your friend’s blog.</p>

<p>The response was overwhelming: we received 225 letters of intent for a total request of $21 million—about seven times the amount we had to offer. We needed to invite the most promising applicants to submit a full proposal, but recognizing the projects with highest potential would require broad expertise. From the beginning, we envisioned that a panel of scientists, pastors, and scholars would oversee the application and review process as well as play key advisory roles throughout the project. A team of eight highly qualified individuals came on board in the early months of the project. They reviewed each proposal and together recommended that BioLogos invite 86 applicants to submit full applications.</p>

<p>The deadline for submissions was October 1, 2012. As in the previous round, the ECF panel evaluated each proposal. In addition, we asked 55 other experts to participate, so that each proposal received 3-4 scores. Criteria for the decision included significance of topic, project design, creativity and innovation, long-term impact potential, feasibility, and budget.</p>

<p>The panel then met together November 29-30, 2012, to make the final funding decisions. In the end, they recommended that BioLogos give 37 awards, ranging from $23,000 to $300,000. BioLogos staff notified applicants of their awards on December 14, 2013.</p>

<h3>The Grantees</h3>

<p>As part of our objective to create a network of scholars and leaders, we awarded grants to organizations across the U.S. and the world. Thirty of the 37 grantees are domestic; seven are international, hailing from Canada, France, Great Britain, Netherlands, and Spain.</p>

<p>Two-thirds of the accepted projects will be led by teams—some with three or more Project Leaders. We expect that the teamwork and time spent together at our summer workshops will be the start of a long-lasting network of people dedicated to helping the church think carefully about origins.</p>

<p>Applicants chose to apply under one of three program tracks: interdisciplinary scholarship (Track 1), intra-disciplinary scholarship (Track 2), and translational projects (Track 3). Track 1 projects focus on both the collaboration between individuals in different disciplines and the development of projects at the interface of different content areas. Track 2 projects focus on work done within a specific discipline. Track 3 focuses on projects that encourage Christians, especially those within more conservative traditions, to engage in meaningful and productive dialogue to reduce tensions between mainstream science and the Christian faith. The numbers of grantees in Tracks 1, 2, and 3 are 6, 8, and 23, respectively.</p>

<p>Many of the scholarly projects tackle questions about Adam and Eve, the Fall, human identity, and Original Sin—some of the most critical interpretive issues for evangelical theology.&nbsp; Some examples:&nbsp;</p>

<ul>
<li><p>Theologian Oliver Crisp of Fuller Seminary will take an analytic theology approach to ask to what extent a theological account of the origin of human sin depends upon the evolution of modern humans from one and only one ancestral pair—especially if that pair does not appear to correspond to what we would think of as modern human beings.&nbsp;</p>
</li>
<li><p>Pastor Michael Gulker and philosopher James Smith, leading a large team from The Colossian Forum, ask a related question: if humanity emerged from non-human primates—as genetic, biological, and archaeological evidence seems to suggest—then what are the implications for Christian theology’s traditional account of origins, including both the origin of humanity and the origin of sin?&nbsp;</p>
</li>
<li><p>Biologist Dennis Venema of Trinity Western University and New Testament scholar Scot McKnight of Northern Seminary will write a book on the evidence for evolution and population genetics, with informed theological reflection on how these issues interact with orthodox Christianity.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Biologist David Wilcox of Eastern University will develop an updated model of human identity which reflects the complex recent scientific advances in genetics and paleoanthropology and yet is sensitive to theological concerns.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
</li>
</ul>

<p>These are just a few of the scholarly awards; check out the <a href="/ecf/grantees">Grantees page</a> for full descriptions of all Track 1 and Track 2 projects.</p>

<p>All projects have translational potential, but Track 3 projects are designed to meet the needs of a particular constituency within the evangelical church. These projects run the gamut from ethics to education to media production to ministry resources. &nbsp;Some examples include:</p>

<ul>
<li><p>Theologian Lee Camp of Lipscomb University will produce “The Questions in Monkey Town,” an episode of Tokens, a live variety show that features musical performances, comedic sketches, brief interpretive monologues, and dialog with authors and scholars. The episode will be performed and filmed on the site of the famous Scopes Trial in Dayton, Tennessee.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Chaplain Joshua Hayashi and Educator Diane Sweeney of the Punahou School in Hawaii will lead a team to produce multimedia curricula aimed at helping high school students connect with their biology curricula and, at the same time, deepen their Christian faith.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Physics teacher and pastor Benoît Hébert of Science et Foi Chrétienne in France will lead an international, multi-denominational team of French speaking Evangelical scientists, pastors and church leaders to produce a large number of resources on evolutionary creation.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Pastor Seung-Hwan Kim of Grace Truth Community Church, a Southern Baptist church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, will produce teaching and preaching materials about evolution for church leaders.</p>
</li>
<li><p>President Gregory Wolfe and Director of Resource Development for IMAGE will gather artists and writers of faith whose work explores the dialogue between evolutionary science and faith practice, convening a conversation between them and scientists, theologians, and church leaders in private and public conferences.</p>
</li>
</ul>

<p>Again, this is just a taste of the diversity of Track 3 projects. Read more about each project on the <a href="/ecf/grantees">Grantees page</a>. You can look forward to an incredible variety of resources coming out of the ECF program, many of which will be featured right here on the BioLogos Forum.</p>
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        <pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 13 05:25:03 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Kathryn Applegate</dc:creator>
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        <title>Evolution, the Enlightenment, and Worldviews</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/evolution&#45;the&#45;enlightenment&#45;and&#45;worldviews?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/evolution&#45;the&#45;enlightenment&#45;and&#45;worldviews?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this video conversation, N.T. Wright discusses how the Enlightenment worldview &#45;&#45; which clearly separates God from the world &#45;&#45; has impacted our view of Scripture, and why cleaning the &quot;spectacles&quot; through which we view the world can help us see both Scripture and the world more clearly.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the video above, N.T. Wright discusses how the Enlightenment worldview -- which clearly separates God from the world -- has impacted our view of Scripture, and why cleaning the "spectacles" through which we view the world can help us see both Scripture and the world more clearly. In contrast to the Enlightenment, most other worldviews present a more fluid and messy interrelationship between God and the world. According to Wright, we need to learn how to navigate this fluid, messy relationship in order to learn how to read the Bible.</p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 08 Feb 13 11:11:50 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>N.T. Wright</dc:creator>
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        <title>Made in the Image of God: Human Values and Genomics</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/human&#45;values&#45;and&#45;genomics?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/human&#45;values&#45;and&#45;genomics?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Genes and physiology are seen as something different from &quot;us&quot; and &quot;our mind,&quot; and they seem to be controlling us, so we can&apos;t even change our mind. Humans are presented as pawns of their biology, puppets dancing to the tune of their genetic masters.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In January 2011 and then in January 2012 I posted two articles exploring the implications of contemporary genomics for the Judeo-Christian idea of humankind made in the image of God (<em>Imago Dei</em>), an ancient idea that has contributed historically to the shaping of moral values, political systems, medical care, education and the justification of human rights. In this article we consider the meaning of the "image of God" language in its historical context and the way in which its vision of human freedom and identity challenges the fatalistic ideas that are often linked to our understanding of the role of DNA in human destiny.</p>

<p>During the past year the first results were published from the "Encyclopedia of DNA elements" project (<a href="http://www.nature.com/encode/#/threads">'ENCODE'</a>), revealing that at least 20 percent of the genome, perhaps more, is involved in regulating the expression of its 21,000 protein-encoding genes. The "selfish gene" had its day in the sun, but has now been replaced by the image of a finely tuned genomic system in which each type of gene product cooperates via an intricate networking complex to generate the music of life. The vast array of epigenetic signals whereby genes are switched on or off ensures a steady flow of two-way communication between the genome and its wider environments.</p>

<p>The human as a complex, interactive and highly integrated system might not on the face of it seem a fruitful hunting ground for those who see the genes as pulling the strings of life. Nevertheless, the past year has continued to see a growing love affair between the social sciences and genomics. This is well illustrated by a <a href="http://www.nature.com/news/biology-and-ideology-the-anatomy-of-politics-1.11645">recent article in <em>Nature</em></a> entitled: "The anatomy of politics -- from genes to hormone levels, biology may help to shape political behavior." The author writes that "An increasing number of studies suggest that biology can exert a significant influence on political beliefs and behaviors," reporting that "genes could exert a pull on attitudes concerning topics such as abortion, immigration, the death penalty and pacifism." The political scientist John Hibbing is quoted as saying that "...it is difficult to change someone's mind about political issues because their reactions are rooted in their physiology."</p>

<p>Geneticists have highlighted the <a href="http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=why-genes-dont-predict-voting-behavior">suspect nature of such claims</a> from a purely scientific perspective. But in our present context it is the way that the genetic results are reported that is most striking. Note the dualist language involved and its assumption of genetic determinism. Genes and physiology are seen as something different from "us" and "our mind," and they seem to be controlling us, so we can't even change our mind. Humans are presented as pawns of their biology, puppets dancing to the tune of their genetic masters.</p>

<p>What has all this to do with the "big idea" concerning human identity that the <em>Imago Dei</em> provides? More, it turns out, than initially meets the eye. The clash of ideas here between theology and science comes not at the level of the science itself, which, in this case, remains ambiguous and disputed, but at the level of the ideological packaging of scientific ideas. To see where the clash comes from, we first need to understand the revolutionary nature of the <em>Imago Dei</em> idea in its original context in the texts of Genesis.</p>

<p>For millennia it was uniquely the pharaoh or the king who was seen as being in the "image of a god" in the polytheistic political systems of ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. Adad-shum-ussur, a court astrologer and cultic official in the seventh century B.C. royal court of Nineveh, made clear that the Assyrian king Esarhaddon is the very image of Bel (Marduk), the top god of that era:</p>

    <blockquote>A (free) man is as the shadow of god, the slave is as the shadow of a (free) man; but the king, he is like unto the (very) image of god.</blockquote>

<p>Richard Middleton provides further examples in his book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1587431106/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=thebiofou06-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1587431106"><em>The Liberating Image</em></a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1587431106" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, which describes how the stratified urban society of great cities such as Babylon was structured politically, socially and economically round the king's court and the cultic practices of temple worship of the various polytheistic deities of the city. Social destinies were unchanging because rooted in powerful creation myths. Power was in the hands of the privileged few and true freedom belonged only to the king, for only he was in the image of a powerful god.</p>

<p>Would Hebrew thinkers and writers have been familiar with this idea? Almost certainly, yes, since Israel had significant cultural and economic contact with both Egypt and Mesopotamia over prolonged periods, not least during their periods of exile. So how would the original readers of that wonderful theological essay, Genesis chapter 1, have understood these words?:</p>

    <blockquote>Then God said, "Let us make adam [humankind] in our image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over all the creatures that move along the ground." So God created adam in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. [Genesis 1:26-27]. </blockquote>

<p>In its historical context, the implications were revolutionary: the kingly and priestly male roles previously allocated to the privileged few by a pantheon of gods were now being delegated instead by the one creator God to the whole of humanity, male and female. In a stroke the entire ruling and priestly structure of Mesopotamian society was delegitimized. The <em>Imago Dei</em> was being democratized and it was now humankind who were to be the significant players in the arena of earthly life, the mandate to rule underlying their new responsibilities. Above all, humanity was set free by the one true God to determine their own destiny, no longer under the yoke of all-powerful dictators, nor under the baleful astrological control of the moon and stars.</p>

<p>Yet, ever since, humans have become experts at re-enslaving themselves, refusing the responsibilities that come with free-choice and submitting instead to narratives of fate and destiny. It seems ironic that today it is not the creation myths of ancient Babylon but the ideological interpretations of biology that provide the narratives of fate, in which genes "pull" humans toward certain political views and people cannot change their minds because their convictions are "rooted in their physiology."</p>

<p>"It's in his or her DNA" is a new phrase becoming increasingly embedded in our language, referring to something that cannot apparently be changed. On Sept. 8, 2012, Brad Pitt was quoted by the <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-2199295/Brad-Pitt-talks-Angelina-Jolie-I-want-approval-Angie-force--I-want-proud-man.html">Daily Mail</a> as saying that "America is a country founded on guns. It's in our DNA. It's very strange but I feel better having a gun." No it's not in our DNA, Mr. Pitt, either literally or metaphorically. People have choices -- they are the prisoners neither of their genetics, nor of their physiology, nor indeed of their environments. Human beings made in the image of God are free to chart their own destiny in a way that preserves human value and dignity. On that we can leave the last word to Abraham Lincoln: "...nothing stamped with the Divine image and likeness was sent into the world to be trodden on, and degraded, and imbruted by its fellows" (Aug. 17, 1858).</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 15 Jan 13 06:00:13 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Denis Alexander</dc:creator>
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        <title>Does Evolution Compromise Human Morality?</title>
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        <description>Once we have a scientific hypothesis for how something exists, it is tempting to make the philosophical inference that this is also why it exists.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Once we have a scientific hypothesis for <em>how</em> something exists, it is tempting to make the philosophical inference that this is also <em>why</em> it exists.  Richard Dawkins (1976), as well as Michael Ruse and Edward O. Wilson (1993), do this in the evolution of human morality.  Scientifically, they hypothesize that, once humans started living in large, complex social groups, individuals whose genes made them constantly selfish were punished by the group and therefore produced fewer offspring than individuals whose genes made them believe in an objective moral code. Moving into philosophy, Ruse and Wilson (1993) write,</p>

<blockquote>Morality, or more strictly our belief in morality, is merely an adaptation put in place to further our reproductive end.</blockquote>

<p>Important scientific theories invite philosophical and theological reflection. Dawkins, Ruse, and Wilson, have described their conclusions. But scientific theories are often compatible with multiple philosophical and religious interpretations. For example, Newton's laws of motion and gravity allow several competing theistic and atheistic interpretations.</p>

<p>To avoid Ruse and Wilson's philosophical conclusion, we need not dispute their scientific hypothesis about how morality evolved. We need only dispute their philosophical extrapolation as to why morality exists. Even if we restrict ourselves to an atheistic worldview, this extrapolation is questionable.  Donald MacKay (1965) would call this an example of "the fallacy of nothing but-tery".  This is the assertion that a description of something at one level renders other levels of description meaningless.  From our everyday experience, we know that a successful description on one level does not invalidate other levels of description.  For example. one might assert that a Shakespeare sonnet is "nothing but" ink blots on a page (MacKay 1965).  True, one way to describe a sonnet is to precisely specify the page coordinates of every ink blot.  This description is valid and complete on its own level; however, one could also analyze the sonnet linguistically, emotionally, socially, historically, and on other levels.  If one is programming an inkjet printer, the most important description is in terms of ink blot coordinates. For almost every other purpose in life, however, that is an unimportant level of description.  In the same way, a complete evolutionary description of the existence of morality does not necessarily invalidate the truth, utility, or significance of other levels of description of morality.</p>

<p>If we do not restrict ourselves to atheism and instead allow for the existence of a creator, the extrapolation from <em>how morality evolved</em> to <em>why morality exists</em> fails further. Consider an analogy.  Suppose an inventor builds a robot which could do a variety of useful things-- mow the lawn, clean the house, grade homework, write book chapters, and so on.  One thing this robot can do, given a complete set of spare parts, is build a replica of itself.  Whenever the inventor needs another robot, she gives one robot a set of spare parts and has it build a replica of itself.  Amongst all the software subroutines within this robot, there is a set of subroutines that govern the robot's self-replication, including the replication of those self-replication subroutines.  Would it be correct to say that the purpose of the robot's existence is merely to reproduce those particular self-replication subroutines? Do all of the other software and hardware of the robot--which allow it to mow the lawn, and so on-- merely further the reproductive ends of those self-replication subroutines? At one level, the robot's hardware and software do serve to reproduce those self-replication software routines.  At another level of analysis, however, those self-replication software routines serve the robot to produce more copies of itself.  At still another level, those self-replication software routines serve the robot's creator.  The creator of the robot should get the last world as to which of those levels of description is most important.</p>

<p>In humans, does morality exist to further the reproduction of certain genes, or do those genes exist in order to allow for the production of new human beings who can behave morally? If human beings have a creator, the creator gets the final word on the question of purpose.  The mechanism which the creator used to make those genes-- whether <em>de novo</em> or via evolution-- is secondary.  The creator's purpose in creating those genes decides the issue.</p>

<h3>References</h3>
<ul><li>Dawkins, Richard. 1976. Pp. 1-11 in <em>The Selfish Gene</em>. Oxford: Oxford University Press.</li>

<li>MacKay, Donald. 1965. <em>Christianity in a Mechanistic Universe</em>. Chicago: InterVarsity.</li>

<li>Ruse, Michael, and Edward O. Wilson. 1993. The approach of sociobiology: The evolution of ethics. In <em>Religion and the Natural Sciences</em>, ed. James E. Huchingson. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace Javonovich.</li></ul>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 14 Jan 13 04:00:14 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Loren Haarsma</dc:creator>
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        <title>Why Strict Atheism Is Unscientific</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/why&#45;strict&#45;atheism&#45;is&#45;unscientific?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Do you believe in God? If a cadre of outspoken, strong atheists wrote a litmus test for scientists, that might very well be question #1.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Do you believe in God?</p>
<p>If a cadre of outspoken, strong <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atheism">atheists</a> wrote a litmus test for scientists, that might very well be question #1.</p>
<p>"Scientists,  if you're not an atheist, you're not doing science right," PZ Myers --  a well-known blogger, biology professor and atheist -- regularly <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&amp;v=TdKU_zvVAno">preaches</a>.</p>
<p>But if this is true, then as many as <a href="http://news.discovery.com/tech/are-scientists-atheists.html">half of scientists are doing science wrong</a>.  A 2009 study from the Pew Research Center polled members of the  American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Fifty-one percent of  respondents reported a belief in a higher power. Does this mean that  it's too late for science? Has religion already pillaged the minds of  researchers worldwide? No, of course it hasn't.</p>
<p>"It seems to me that we as a society have lately been caught in this  false dichotomy where it's either God as the guy with the beard on the  cloud or nothing at all," neuroscientist David Eagleman <a href="http://news.discovery.com/tech/are-scientists-atheists.html">told</a> <em>Discovery News.</em></p>
<p>Staunch  atheists often falsely characterize followers of religion as being  "all-in" with their beliefs, opining that they ascribe to the whole  creationist, woo-y shebang. "Where's your evidence?" atheists mockingly  question. "You can't prove that God exists!" they accuse (correctly).  Yet, hypocritically, strict atheists are guilty of the exact same crime:  belief without evidence.</p>
<p>"We know too little to commit to a position of strict atheism. [But] we  know way too much to commit to any particular religious story," Eagleman <a href="http://blogs.howstuffworks.com/2010/11/22/possibilianism/"> said</a>.</p>
<p>Just  as it's a leap of faith for a religious person to assert that God  incontrovertibly exists, it's an equally large leap for a strict atheist  to declare, without question, that God does not exist. As Carl Sagan  eloquently explained:</p>
<blockquote>An atheist is someone who is certain that God does not exist, someone  who has compelling evidence against the existence of God. I know of no  such compelling evidence. Because God can be relegated to remote times  and places and to ultimate causes, we would have to know a great deal  more about the universe than we do now to be sure that no such God  exists. To be certain of the existence of God and to be certain of the  nonexistence of God seem to me to be the confident extremes in a subject  so riddled with doubt and uncertainty as to inspire very little  confidence indeed.</blockquote>
<p>Absence of evidence is not  evidence of absence. As this statement applies to science, so does it  apply to religion. History is replete with signs that an all-powerful  deity may not exist, but such substantiation is nowhere near  tantamount to proof -- especially, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_of_Albert_Einstein">as</a> Albert Einstein said, in a universe as incomprehensibly vast as our own:</p>
<blockquote>The  human mind, no matter how highly trained, cannot grasp the universe. We  are in the position of a little child, entering a huge library whose  walls are covered to the ceiling with books in many different tongues.  The child knows that someone must have written those books. It does not  know who or how. It does not understand the languages in which they are  written. The child notes a definite plan in the arrangement of the  books, a mysterious order, which it does not comprehend, but only dimly  suspects. That, it seems to me, is the attitude of the human mind, even  the greatest and most cultured, toward God. We see a universe  marvelously arranged, obeying certain laws, but we understand the laws  only dimly.</blockquote>
<p>Ultimately, the key is not to be swayed  to one extreme or the other -- fundamentalist religion or strict  atheism -- but to walk a reasoned middle path. Eagleman believes that  path is "possibilianism," the concept of holding multiple beliefs or  hypotheses whilst exploring new ideas.</p>
<p>"The goal is to avoid committing to any particular story," Eagleman <a href="http://news.discovery.com/tech/are-scientists-atheists.html">told</a><em> Discovery News</em>, "whether that's religious fundamentalism or strict atheism. The  goal of possibilianism is to retain the wonder that drives us all into  science in the first place and to avoid acting as though we know the  answers to things we can't possibly know at the moment."</p>
<p>Strict  atheists do the world an incredible service by promoting the scientific  method, skepticism, and critical thinking. But they do a disservice by  campaigning against religion or touting -- as pure truth -- the  non-existence of God, for those actions (especially the latter) are just  as unscientific as a blind belief in all aspects of religion.</p>
<p>This summer, a <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/on-faith/poll-shows-atheism-on-the-rise-in-the-us/2012/08/13/90020fd6-e57d-11e1-9739-eef99c5fb285_story.html">worldwide poll</a> showed that atheism is on the rise and religiosity is on the decline.  It is my hope that these "New Atheists" and agnostics won't narrowly focus  on denigrating religion, but will instead focus on encouraging  open-mindedness and discouraging fundamentalism.</p>
<p>That would surely make the world a more enlightened place.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 12 11:20:38 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ross Pomeroy</dc:creator>
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        <title>Surprised by Jack, Part 4: Mere Evolution</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/surprised&#45;by&#45;jack&#45;part&#45;4&#45;mere&#45;evolution?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In short, Lewis made it quite clear in his writings that he believed that there is no real conflict between mere evolution and mere Christianity.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Mere Evolution: Lewis on Evolutionary Science versus the Myth of Evolutionism </h3>

<p>For many American evangelicals it will come as a surprise to realize just how little Lewis thought was at stake in the scientific question of our biological origins.  As we have seen, Lewis had no objection to the notion that “man is physically descended from animals.”  Four years after admitting to being shaken by some of the writings from Bernard Acworth’s Evolution Protest Movement, Lewis could still write in a private letter, “I don’t mind whether God made man out of earth or whether ‘earth’ merely means ‘previous millennia of ancestral organisms.’  If the fossils make it probable that man’s physical ancestor’s ‘evolved,’ no matter.”<sup>1</sup> So far as we can tell, Lewis never took the view that belief in mere Evolution, “Evolution in the strict sense,”<sup>2</sup> “the Evolution of real biologists,” which he took to be “a genuine scientific hypothesis” and “a purely biological theorem”<sup>3</sup> was necessarily at odds with a belief in mere Christianity.  </p>

<p>Indeed, the final chapter of his classic book <em>Mere Christianity</em>, “The New Men,” assumes an evolutionary picture of life’s origins and development throughout.<sup>4</sup> He writes, </p>

<blockquote>Perhaps a modern man can understand the Christian idea best if he takes it in connection with Evolution.  Everyone knows about Evolution…: everyone has been told that man has evolved from lower types of life.<sup>5</sup></blockquote>

<p>While Lewis acknowledges that “some educated people disbelieve [the theory of Evolution],” he gives no hint throughout the rest of the chapter that he is one of their number.<sup>6</sup> In fact, throughout the rest of the chapter he seems to simply assume a broadly evolutionary picture of natural history (as he does in <em>The Problem of Pain</em> and elsewhere).  So, for instance, he writes:</p>

<blockquote>Thousands of centuries ago  huge, very heavily armoured creatures <strong>were evolved.</strong><sup>7</sup><br /><br />
At the earlier stages living organisms have had either no choice or very little choice about taking the new step [of development].  Progress was, in the main, something that happened to them, not something that they did.<br /><br />
<strong>Century by century God has guided nature up to the point of producing creatures</strong> (humans) which can (if they will) be taken right out of nature, turned into “gods.”<sup>9</sup></blockquote>

<p>And he says much more in that vein.  While it may be possible to read Lewis as invoking Evolution for purely illustrative purposes without actually believing in it, such a reading seems less than likely given his statements in this chapter and elsewhere.  In fact, Lewis offers no hint anywhere in his public writings that he regards evolutionary theory as either untrue or conflicting with mere Christianity.</p>

<p>What Lewis did believe to conflict with Christian faith was what he called the great “Myth” of “Evolutionism” or “Developmentalism.”    But this is not the same as evolutionary theory per se.  “[We] must sharply distinguish between Evolution as a biological theorem and popular Evolutionism or Developmentalism which is certainly a Myth,” he writes in his essay “The Funeral of a Great Myth.”<sup>11</sup> Lewis believed that the great myth of “Evolutionism” conflicted not only with the Christian faith, but with Reason itself, undercutting the grounds for believing in human rationality and, therefore, in any human rationale that could be offered for believing in Evolutionism in the first place.   According to Lewis,Evolutionism’s chief premise, namely, Naturalism, invalidates human reasoning itself, amounting to “an argument which proved that no argument was sound—a proof that there are no such things as proofs—which is nonsense.”<sup>12</sup> “All possible knowledge…depends on reasoning,” he writes in chapter III of <em>Miracles</em>.<sup>13</sup> “We infer Evolution from fossils: we infer the existence of our own brains from what we find inside the skulls of other creatures like ourselves in the dissecting room.”  All sciences, including evolutionary science, depend upon the validity of human inference for their own validity.  “Unless human reasoning is valid no science can be true.”<sup>14</sup> Naturalism, however, with its grand Myth of Evolutionism explains all of reality, including human reason, in terms of non-rational natural causes and effects, reducing all human reasoning to being no more than the accidental byproducts of chance, matter and time, and thereby undercutting the validity of reasoning itself.    </p>

<p>However, if one allows, as Lewis apparently did, that God guided the evolution of humanity so as to make us reasonable creatures, then humanity’s descent from the animals in no way undermines the validity of human reasoning.  By maintaining the distinction between Evolution as a scientific theory and Evolutionism as a popular Myth it becomes possible for one to be a full-blooded theistic evolutionist with both a robust belief in God and a robust belief in evolution.  The distinction frees Christians to accept evolutionary science without knuckling under to reductionistic Scientism.  Thus, in the very essay where Lewis most acerbically attacks Evolutionism, “The Funeral of a Great Myth,” Lewis also clearly allows for a form of theistic evolution.  Lewis writes: </p>

<blockquote><em>I am not in the least denying that organisms on this planet may have ‘evolved.’</em>  But if we are to be guided by the analogy of Nature as we know her, it would be reasonable to suppose that this evolutionary process was the second half of a long pattern—that the crude beginnings of life on this planet have themselves been ‘dropped’ there by a full and perfect life.<sup>15</sup></blockquote>

<p>As Lewis makes clear in another piece, “Two Lectures,” the “full and perfect life” by which “this evolutionary process” was “dropped” exists outside of Nature, which is to say, exists outside of the purview of the natural sciences.  “Is it not…reasonable to look <em>outside</em> Nature for the real Originator of the natural order?” he asks.<sup>16</sup></p>

<p>Lewis, however, was no Deist.  He clearly did not believe that the “crude beginnings of life” were simply “dropped” by God so that the “evolutionary process” would do what it would.  Lewis seems to have thought that God at least superintended the evolution of humankind, particularly humanity’s cognitive capacities, in a rather hands-on manner:</p>

<blockquote> <strong>For long centuries God perfected the animal form which was to become the vehicle of humanity and the image of Himself.</strong>  He gave it hands whose thumb could be applied to each of the fingers, and jaws and teeth and throat capable of articulation, and a brain sufficiently complex to execute all the material motions whereby rational thought is incarnated.  <strong>The creature may have existed for ages in this state before it became man</strong>: it may even have been clever enough to make things which a modern archaeologist would accept as proof of its humanity.  But it was only an animal because all its physical and psychical processes were directed to purely material and natural ends.  Then, in the fullness of time, <strong>God caused to descend upon this organism</strong>, both on its psychology and physiology, <strong>a new kind of consciousness</strong> which could say “I” and “me,” which could look upon itself as an object, which knew God, which could make judgments of truth, beauty, and goodness, and which was so far above time that it could perceive time flowing past.<sup>17</sup></blockquote>

<p>Whether this picture of hands-on divine guidance is friendlier towards present day Intelligent Design theory or towards theistic evolution, <em>a la</em> BioLogos, will be a matter for debate.  Lewis does not draw the distinctions that are customary in contemporary debates surrounding evolution—macro- versus micro-evolution, Evolution <em>qua</em> mere common descent versus Evolution <em>qua</em> wholly unguided, random process, and so on—making it difficult to say with certainty what he would say if he were here today. It seems likely, however, that Lewis would not have expected the <em>natural</em> sciences to be able to detect God’s <em>supernatural</em> guidance of man’s evolutionary path any more than he expected the modern archaeologist to be able detect the moment when our ancestors crossed the threshold from beast to man, and that likelihood might count as a strike against the ID movement’s claim on Lewis.  In any case, Lewis plainly outlines a view that is quite compatible with the standard evolutionary picture of common descent and that hardly amounts to Scientistic reductionism.  In short, Lewis made it quite clear in his writings that he believed that there is no real conflict between mere evolution and mere Christianity.</p>

<h3>Surprised by Jack</h3>
<p>Whatever Lewis may have believed in private, as a spokesperson for the faith, Lewis consistently allowed that mere Christianity was compatible with mere evolutionary science, and he even took the trouble to articulate his understanding of the Fall in such a way as to harmonize it with his belief in human evolution. While some recent writers have attempted to wield Lewis as weapon in intra-Evangelical debates around Evolution, to wield a thinker is, as Martin Buber says, to treat that thinker as an ‘It’ rather than as a ‘Thou,’ to treat him as an object to be used rather than as person with the right and capacity to defy our expectations.<sup>18</sup> We evangelicals have become so accustomed to inserting quotable quotes from Lewis’s corpus into our sermons, books, power-point presentations, Facebook walls, and Twitter feeds that we drowsily pass over the surprising elements of his thought—the elements not easily reconciled with our clean-cut theological shibboleths—without even noticing.   This is an intellectual habit ripe to be broken, and it is high time we allowed the real Jack to shatter the cultural icon—indeed, the <em>mirror</em>—we have made out of him.  At this watershed moment in the history of the Church, when so much seems to threaten to upend the faith once delivered—whether scientific or archaeological discoveries, cultural trends, or newfangled philosophies—there is doubtless much that the greatest modern exponent of mere Christianity can teach us to help us navigate these troubled times.  But it is only by opening ourselves to being surprised by Jack that we will be capable of actually learning something from him. </p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. C.S. Lewis to Joseph Cranfield, Feb. 28, 1955, unpublished letter, Wade Center Collection, Wheaton College, as cited in West, “Darwin in the Dock,” 113<br />
2. Lewis, “Is Theology Poetry?,” in <em>The Weight of Glory</em>, 137<br />
3. Lewis, “The Funeral of a Great Myth,” 85, 86<br />
4. Lewis, <em>Mere Christianity</em>, 185-91<br />
5. Ibid, 185<br />
6. Ibid<br />
7. Ibid, 186<br />
8. Ibid, 187<br />
9. Ibid, 188, my italics<br />
10. Ibid<br />
11. Ibid<br />
12. Ibid, 24<br />
13. Lewis, <em>Miracles</em>, 23<br />
14. Ibid<br />
15. Lewis, “The Funeral of a Great Myth,” in <em>Christian Reflections</em>, 91<br />
16. Lewis, “Two Lectures,” in <em>God in the Dock</em>, <br />
17. Lewis, <em>The Problem of Pain</em>, 68<br />
18. Buber, <em>I and Thou</em>, (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996)</p>
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        <pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 12 04:00:31 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Williams</dc:creator>
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        <title>Can Science Ever Know Enough?</title>
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        <description>To say something is poetic is not to declare it ultimately untrue, futile and meaningless—it is to say it is more profound and meaningful and true than many other modes of expression.</description>
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<blockquote><p>There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.</p>
<p style="float:right;"><strong>—Hamlet Act 1, Scene 5</strong></p></blockquote>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>We live in a world driven by the gods of economics, technology and science.  Particularly in a time of economic austerity, it is tempting to see the arts or humanities as an optional “extra”—a happy by-product of those true engines of society when they are running smoothly. But in this article we will look at how a biblically informed worldview might turn this perspective on its head, and what the humanities might have to tell us about the present contours of the science and faith conversation.</p>

<p>In his iconic 1959 Rede lecture, “The Two Cultures,” CP Snow noted the dysfunctional relationship between science and the humanities, arguing that the situation is principally the result of our educational system in the West. Ken Arnold, from the medicine and arts focused <a href="http://www.wellcomecollection.org/about-us.aspx">Wellcome Collection</a> in London, believes that the split continues today, but with the further extension that </p>

<blockquote>In emerging countries . . .  amongst the middle classes there is a strong pressure to join the ranks of doctors and scientists and engineers because they see that as the place where future economies are growing. . . . In some ways you could almost begin to feel sorry for the arts and the humanities because they seem to be worth less than the sciences.<sup>1</sup></blockquote>

<p>Is Protestant Christianity also peculiarly prone to such thinking? A skepticism of art in religious spaces as a result of iconoclasm and the reformation, combined with a proud history of the protestant work ethic, economic success, and a profound influence on the history of science, might lead Protestants to be more inclined towards the sciences and technology than to the arts. However, there are more corrosive reasons that science has usurped the humanities in our culture than merely educational or theological bias.</p>

<p>In the early 20th century, logical positivists regarded the humanities as expressions merely of our inner states and desires, but having nothing to do with objective reality. Such imperialistic claims to knowledge denied that other knowledge claims referred to any true reality, and were therefore not really forms of knowledge at all. Bertrand Russell writes, </p>

<blockquote>But if there is a world which is not physical, or not in space-time, it may have a structure which we can never hope to express or to know … Perhaps that is why we know so much physics and so little of anything else.<sup>2</sup></blockquote>

<p>Christian scientists are of course very sensitive to this, and work hard to explain that science cannot answer questions of ultimate meaning or the existence of God, which are beyond the scope of science.  Often, this line of thinking can be narrow in focus, delineating the limits of the science, and naming those assumptions made by science that cannot be justified empirically. Such arguments can be very fruitful within this narrow context, but we should not be led into thinking that our true perception of reality is limited to such analytic and evidential approaches.  There are fields of inquiry that science isn’t able to explain (such as metaphysical judgments, ethics, and beauty), and even our confidence in mathematics— upon which so much of science itself is based—rests upon assumptions that cannot be experimentally demonstrated. </p>

<h3>The human condition</h3>

<p>Mathematics and the sciences do seem to provide tools by which we are able to perceive the external world and its regularities. However, the arts and humanities, too, are a way of understanding reality, and they tell us less about external reality than the internal human condition. The problem is that the ‘human condition’ seems to have been relegated by many to the realm of mere desire and subjective feeling and, therefore, not <em>reality</em>. </p> 

<p>The modernist account of science is that, through our reason, we are somehow able to get outside of nature and describe it objectively. The biblical account, though, has human beings as part of the created order, and so embedded in nature—made from the dust of the earth.  Given that, human thought life is also part of the natural world, even despite the fact that it is not best described by the sciences.</p>

<p>The works of Shakespeare, for instance, are part of the created order, as are the poems of Wordsworth, the sculptures of Michaelangelo, and the music of Bach, not to mention children’s nursery rhymes, home decoration, and humming tunes whilst waiting for the bus. As C. S. Lewis wrote, "This is not panache, it is our nature." <sup>3</sup></p>  

<p>A little reflection on life reveals something very strange going on here. Somehow, the mythic ‘war’ between science and religion has become the dominant battleground for defending the Christian faith, and competing explanations of the material world are used as apologetic weapons.  But the reality is that science plays a peripheral role in our experience of life, not least our life as Christians. Of course that is not to deny the enormous impact of science on the material conditions of our lives, or the prevalence of the products of science. Instead, it is to observe that science plays a facilitatatory role, enabling us to carry out the real core business of our lives, which does not revolve around science. Cars, trains and airplanes are modes of transport to take us to work, or to see family, or go on holiday. Social media provide another way of being in relationship with people. Health services are not an end in themselves, but aim to make people well, so that they can get on with their lives. Why then, when life is not about science, does science dominate our way of thinking about life?</p>

<p>In focusing so much energy on opposing positivism are we not being inadvertently drawn into a positivist way of thinking, that science and material explanations of things are, indeed, our basic reality, what is ultimately true?</p> 

<h3>A biblical model</h3>

<p>“We feel,” wrote the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, “that even when all possible scientific questions have been answered, the problems of life remain completely untouched.” <sup>4</sup> Likewise, philosopher Susanne Langer questions any philosophy which claims to be able to explain everything:</p>

<blockquote>Philosophers in every age have attempted to give an account of as much experience as they could. Some have indeed pretended that what they could not explain did not exist; but all the great philosophers have allowed for more than they could explain, and have, therefore, signed beforehand, if not dated, the death-warrant of their philosophies.<sup>5</sup></blockquote> 

<p>Fortunately, the Bible preserves us from total positivist oblivion. There are a great many types of literature represented in the Bible, with the notable exception of scientific writing. If we long to be able to express our deepest emotions, we have the psalms; if we are looking for wise advice, we have the proverbs; if philosophical reflection, Ecclesiastes. There is poetry, song, history, biography, but there is no science. In addition, the Bible refers to the use of the visual arts in, for example, the designs of the tabernacle and temple.  The Bible does seem to think the arts and humanities are fundamental for human life, but it doesn’t seem to think that what we think the physical world is constructed of matters much at all.</p>

<p>Do we sometimes read the Bible more like a science textbook than a novel or a poem?  Most will agree that each type of literature needs to be read in its own way, but lip-service to that idea notwithstanding, recent arguments prove that it is still possible to read a poem with a scientific mentality—looking out for the ‘facts.’  Is that because we have too high a view of science, or because we have too low a view of the humanities? To say something is poetic is not to declare it ultimately untrue, futile and meaningless—it is to say it is more profound and meaningful and true than many other modes of expression.</p>

<p>According to Langer, part of the problem is the priority that has been accorded to discursive language as the only valid way we have of representing reality to each other.  She observes that a study of symbolism shows us that this is actually only one way humans use to abstract from reality, and in fact, the situation even with discursive language isn’t as simple as has been made out. She notes that our sensory organs mediate our perceptions of the world and are already on the job— formulating, framing the world to us—before our cognitive apparatus gets to work. It must be so, or we would not be able to evaluate the importance of the vast array of sensory data we receive and reality would appear as a blur.</p>

<p>A linguistic symbol carries a concept we associate with it, which in turn denotes a reality. In language there is a commonly agreed definition for each word we use, thus enabling communication. But each person also has associations unique to him or her which color any particular concept. Though such personal associations with words are present all at once, they can only be expressed and communicated one at a time, because language is also sequential.</p>

<p>A picture also acts symbolically, though in a different way. Even something as ‘realistic’ as a photograph is likewise a representation of reality and not the reality itself. It also carries with it layers of meaning which reflect the subjective intentions of the person who took the photograph, and opens up for interpretations and associations of the person ‘reading’ the picture. A picture, though, is not sequential. All the information comes at once, and individual blotches of color carry no significance on their own, but only as part of the whole.</p>

<p>No amount of words could ever describe a picture in full. The number of blotches of color and their relations to each other are vast in their complexity, and one could never read words quickly enough to carry the meaning a picture brings in an instant, even if it warrants a far longer period of contemplation.  Indeed, though we are only speaking here of visual perception, the same is true of our other sensory inputs, too: they all carry knowledge in quite distinct and profound ways, whilst we, in line with the Greeks, have tended to give sight a special place as the most ‘objective’ of our senses.</p>

<p>As we dig down into empirical science and explore the mechanisms by which sights and sounds and textures are transmitted and processed by the brain, we discover that the meaning of the sense-data which we perceive and which we attempt to describe is likewise profoundly limited by the use of words—much less mathematics—and that our science, as such, represents a tiny fraction of reality.</p>

<p>To suggest, then, that science is the only true way of representing reality—as positivism has done—or to exclude the humanities from our world, leaves us without a proper or even adequate means of expressing the significance we attach to even the most mundane day-to-day activities. Science is very good at describing the regularities of the physical world, but the experience of being human is no less part of the real natural world than are the structure of proteins or the movement of planets, and science does not have the appropriate tools to explore our inner worlds.</p>

<p>Nowadays it seems that Christian cultural life has also too-often failed to fully acknowledge other ways of representing reality than materialist science—ironic because this state of affairs is so at odds with the Bible’s model of using the arts and humanities to profoundly explore the human condition.   Perhaps it is time to recover that side of the biblical witness, and remind ourselves that there are more ways of representing the world to each other than positivism has ever dreamt.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">1. BBC Radio 4, “The Life Scientific”, Tuesday 25th September 2012.<br />

2. Bertrand Russell, “Philosophy”, New York. W.W.Norton &Co, 1927, page 265, quoted by Susanne K. Langer, <em>Philosophy in a New Key</em>, Harvard University Press, 1979, page 88.<br />

3. C. S. Lewis, “Learning in War Time” in <em>Fernseed and Elephants and other Essays on Christianity</em>, Fontana, 1975, page 28.<br />

4. Ludwig Wittgenstein, <em>Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus</em>. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1951, page 187.<br />

5. Susanne K. Langer, <em>Philosophy in a New Key: A Study in the Symbolism of Reason, Rite and Art</em>. Harvard University Press, 1979, p 5.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 29 Oct 12 04:59:52 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>James May</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Oct 29, 2012 04:59</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Series: Genesis Through Ancient Eyes</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/genesis&#45;through&#45;ancient&#45;eyes?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/genesis&#45;through&#45;ancient&#45;eyes?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this talk, originally delivered at the BioLogos President&apos;s Circle meeting in October 2012, Dr. John Walton discusses the origin stories of Genesis 1&#45;3, and why their focus on function and archetypes mean there is no Biblical narrative of material origins.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the first segment of his talk, “Genesis Through Ancient Eyes”, Dr. John Walton discusses the authority of Scripture and how we should both honor and understand the text. According to Walton, we must remember that Scripture is “for us”, but that it was not written “to us”. He briefly highlights the ancient cosmology of both Egypt and Isreal and implores us to see the text of the Bible the way the Ancient Israelites would have seen it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 18 Oct 12 08:00:48 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>John Walton</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Divine Action in the World</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/divine&#45;action&#45;in&#45;the&#45;world?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/divine&#45;action&#45;in&#45;the&#45;world?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this talk, Professor Plantinga addresses the fact that many contemporary thinkers—including many theologians—believe that God cannot perform miracles, providentially guide history, or interact in the lives of people, as these activities would be contrary to science.   Plantinga, on the other hand, makes the case that this popular view is mistaken; excluding divine action in the world is not a central feature of natural science itself, but a philosophical or theological preference that has been added on to science (and can just as readily be removed).   Plantinga concludes that it is completely logical to accept the miracles of the Bible and support contemporary science.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My talk is entitled “Divine Action in the World.”  I want to talk about a certain kind of objection to Christian belief that some people raise. They claim that central thoughts, central doctrines of Christianity, are contrary to science, and therefore, are suspicious or incredible or such that one can’t sensibly hold them—can’t be rational in accepting them.</p>

<p>There are several different kinds of arguments that people bring along these lines; I want to talk about just one. So first… the Heidelberg catechism, one of the forms of unity of the church I go to (the Christian Reformed Church), says </p>

<blockquote>Providence is the almighty and ever-present power of God, by which he upholds as with his hand heaven and Earth and all creatures and so rules them, that leaf and blade, rain and drought, fruitful and lean years, food and drink, health and sickness, prosperity and poverty. All things, in fact, come to us not by chance, but from his fatherly hand.</blockquote>

<p>And part of the way it comes to us—not by chance, but from his fatherly hand—part of the way God has designed our world, is that there is a great deal of regularity and dependability in our world. Of course, if it were not for this regularity and dependability, we couldn’t do the things that we actually do. I mean, for example, if I just wanted to walk off the stage—if, for example, all the sudden those stairs over there suddenly turned into a ladder going up—well, that would make it really difficult.</p>

<p>If you are trying to build a house, for example, you have this hammer, but all the sudden the hammer turns in to a goose or a pigeon. Again, that would make things really difficult…or if the nail turned into a worm…or if you get in the car and turn the key and the car turns into a camel, things would be really hard, much harder than they are. This regularity and dependability in our world is an essential condition of our being able to live in the world in which we actually do.</p>

<p>If the world were irregular enough, we would not even be able to live in it, but there are also, according to classical Christianity here (the Heidelberg catechism, for example) there are also special divine actions; sometimes God does things specially. There are miracles in Scripture: the parting of the Red Sea, for example, Jesus walking on water, Jesus changing water into wine. There are miraculous healings: Jesus rising from the dead, Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead, and so on. And according to classical Christians, many of them, perhaps most of them, are special divine actions. God, for example, responds to prayers. He works in the hearts and minds of his children to effect sanctification. There is, what Calvin called, the internal testimony or witness of the Holy Spirit, and there is what Thomas Aquinas called the internal instigation of the Holy Spirit. So, these things are all special actions on the part of God. God constantly causes events in the world. Ok, so far fair enough—what is the problem?</p>

<p>Many theologians seem to think there is a science-religion problem here. I don’t think any of the theologians of Biola think this, (I don’t know, but I doubt it) but many theologians do. For example, Rudolf Bultmann says, “The historical method,” which of course he thinks that is the method we should use, “includes the presupposition that history is a unity in the sense of a closed continuum of effects in which individual events are connected by the succession of cause and effect. This continuum, furthermore, cannot be rent by the interference of supernatural, transcendent powers.”</p>

<p>That’s what he says. Alright, there is this continuum that cannot be rent by the interference of supernatural (that would be God) or transcendent powers. So, it is a little bit like the laws of the Medes and Persians. You probably remember Daniel. Daniel was a favorite of King Darius, and well, the other courtiers became jealous of Daniel (they didn’t like it that the king liked him so well). So, they came to the king and said, “Oh king, live forever, we think it would be a great idea if you passed an edict to the effect that you alone can be worshipped. Everybody has to worship you and nothing else.”  Well the king thought that over for a minute, and that sounded pretty good to him so he said, “I guess that it is a pretty good idea.” So he made this edict; he made this declaration: “Only King Darius is to be worshipped—no one else, nothing else.”</p>

<p>These courtiers knew that Daniel worshipped God, and they thought probably Daniel would keep right on worshipping God despite this edict. So they were watching Daniel, and he was, in fact, worshipping God. So they came to the king.  Now the penalty for worshipping something else was to be thrown into the lion’s den and they said, “Well, king live forever, looks like Daniel has been violating this edict. You have got to throw him in the lion’s den.”</p>

<p>Well, the king didn’t want to do this because he really liked Daniel. He thought this was a miserable way to proceed, and he didn’t want to do it, but then they said to him, “O king live forever, and remember a law of the Medes and Persians cannot be abrogated, even by the king himself.” So once it’s put in place, not even the king himself can change it or abrogate it or go against it.</p>

<p>That is sort of the suggestion that you get here from Bultmann. Bultmann thinks, “Maybe God created the world and set it up in a certain way, but once he did that, not even he can interfere in it”—he uses that word interference—“not even he can do anything in it. He just has to keep hands off.” It is like the law of the Medes and the Persians.</p>

<p>Another theologian who agrees is John Macquarrie, who says,</p>

<blockquote>The way of understanding miracle (and that would be one kind of special divine action) that appeals to breaks in the natural order and to supernatural intervention belongs to the mythological outlook, and cannot commend itself in a post-mythological climate of thought. The traditional conception of miracle is irreconcilable with our modern understanding of both science and history. Science proceeds on the assumption that whatever events occur in the world, can be accounted for in terms of other events that also belong within the world, and if on some occasion, we are unable to give a complete account of some happening, the scientific conviction is that further research will bring to light further factors in the situation that will turn out to be just as imminent and this worldly as the factors already known.</blockquote>

<p>Ok again, no room there for special action. And the third thinker here, Langdon Gilkey (still another theologian), says something similar, but I will pass. I will not read that one in the interest of saving a little bit of time, but these three theologians, plus many others want to assert that there is something wrong with the idea of God acting in the world, acting in the world in a way that goes beyond creation and sustaining, or creation and holding things in existence. So they think, “Ok, God created the world; God sustains it in existence”…that is ok with them, but anything beyond that, God performing any miracles, raising Jesus from the dead, or for that matter working in somebody’s heart and mind in a special way, that, they say, is a real problem.  The question is, what is the problem?</p>

<p>Well, the next little bit here…according to the Christian and theistic idea, God is a person; he has knowledge, loves, and hates. He has aims and ends. He acts on the basis of his knowledge to achieve his ends. He is all-powerful, all-knowing, and wholly good. Thirdly (noted above by the Heidelberg catechism), God has created the world. Fourth is God conserves and sustains and maintains in being this world he created, but fifth, at least sometimes, God acts in a way going beyond creation and conservation in miracles, but also in his providential guiding of history, his working in the hearts of people, his internal instigation of the Holy Spirit, and so on, and it is with that fifth category that these people have a problem. It is God’s special action in the world—action beyond conservation and creation—and miracles would be an example.</p>

<p>So we might think of these theologians as endorsing what we could call hands off theology. God has got to keep his hands off. God could create the world. God conserves the world, sustains it in being, but he can’t do anything else—that is as far as he could go. It is hands off theology, and Bultmann, even in this context, even talks about interfering. I mean if God did something in the world that would be interfering, which, when you think about it, is a sort of strange thing to say—I mean if God created the world, he is the omnipotent, omniscient, holy, good creator of the world—when you accuse someone of interfering, you are saying they are doing something they should not be doing, right?</p>

<p>So Bultmann thinks if God did something in the world that would be interfering, and he should be ashamed of himself. Ok, now why is this a problem? Their suggestion is that somehow it is contrary to science. It is contrary to science the suggestion that God acts specially in the world. I didn’t read that bit, but Gilkey says, "The causal nexus in space and time which the enlightenment science and philosophy introduced into the western mind is also assumed by modern theologians and scholars. Since they participate in the modern world of science, both intellectually and existentially, they can scarcely do anything else.”</p>

<p class="intro">From a presentation sponsored by Biola University’s <a href="http://cct.biola.edu/" target="_blank">Center for Christian Thought</a>, and delivered February 12, 2012 at EV Free Church, Fullerton, CA.  Used by permission.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 12 04:00:33 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Alvin Plantinga</dc:creator>
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        <title>Science and the Bible: Theistic Evolution, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;theistic&#45;evolution&#45;part&#45;i?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;theistic&#45;evolution&#45;part&#45;i?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The dictionaries I checked don’t define the term, “theistic evolution,” so I offer my own definition: the belief that God used the process of evolution to create living things, including humans.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The dictionaries I checked don’t define the term, “theistic evolution,” so I offer my own definition: the belief that God used the process of evolution to create living things, including humans. Some might find this a vague definition, since (for example) it doesn’t include the adjective “Darwinian” before “evolution,” but that would eliminate most of the people prior to World War Two who would otherwise fit the definition. On the other hand, if we left out a specific reference to human evolution, then the category would be even larger, since a number of important Christian writers have accepted evolution among the “lower animals,” while explicitly rejecting it for human beings. We could argue endlessly about such things, and not pointlessly; my point here is simply to be clear about terminology.</p>

<p>“Theistic evolution” has been discussed by that name since at least 1877, and one of the first to do so was the great Canadian geologist John W. Dawson, in his book, <em>The Origin of the World, According to Revelation and Science</em> (1877). In the midst of a lengthy discussion of the animals created on the fifth day of creation, he says:</p>

<blockquote>The long time employed in the introduction of the lower animals, the use of the terms “make,” and “form,” instead of “create,” and the expression “let the waters bring forth,” may well be understood as countenancing some form of mediate creation, or of “creation by law,” or “<strong>theistic evolution,</strong>” as it has been termed; but they give no countenance to the idea either of the spontaneous evolution of living beings under the influence of merely physical causes and without creative intervention, or of the transmutation [evolution] of one kind of animal into another.  (p. 225)</blockquote>

<p>As the final part of this sentence implies, Dawson was (ironically) a staunch opponent of both human evolution and the common ancestry of other animals; in short, by no reasonable definition was he a theistic evolutionist, even though he thought that a great deal of change had taken place naturally, “within certain limits” that he associated with the created “kinds” spoken of in Genesis. Indeed, references to “theistic evolution” are probably no less common among opponents of the view (including William Jennings Bryan in the 1920s) than among proponents, but I won’t attempt to enumerate further examples.</p>

<p>In recent years, however, some proponents of TE have endorsed alternative labels for their position(s). The most prominent example is Francis Collins, the geneticist who started BioLogos. Collins uses the term “BioLogos” itself as the label for his <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/biologos-id-creationism">overall position</a>, which fits well within my TE category. The evangelical theologian <a href="http://www.ualberta.ca/~dlamoure/">Denis Lamoureux</a>, one of the most qualified of all writers on this topic (he has earned doctorates in both theology and biology), strongly prefers the term, “Evolutionary Creation” (EC), precisely because he thinks the noun “creation” ought to have more emphasis than the adjective “evolutionary,” something that the term “theistic evolution” does not accomplish. I recommend <a href="http://biologos.org/resources/books/evolutionary-creation">his book of that title</a> to anyone who wants an authoritative analysis of both biblical and scientific aspects of the origins controversy. The main ideas are clearly presented in his <a href="http://www.ualberta.ca/~dlamoure/web_lectures.htm">web lectures</a>. Another highly qualified proponent of TE, George Murphy, also has reservations about the term, but he recognizes its wide recognition and agrees with <a href="http://www.theologyweb.com/campus/showthread.php?29480-Deep-Theistic-Evolution">the idea itself</a>, that “Evolution is God’s way of creating”. I will have more to say about Murphy, a very important voice, in a subsequent post.</p>

<p>Despite these quite reasonable objections to the term, I continue to use the “TE” term, partly because it has historical continuity and I’m an historian, and partly because it’s easily recognized. If anyone wants to object, however, they won’t get objections from me, unless their own reasons aren’t reasonable. My only request: define your terms as clearly as I’ve defined mine.</p>

<p>Because the term is broad and a bit hazy, more should be said about it. When we talk about “Intelligent Design” next month, I’ll tell you that it’s a “big tent” (something proponents of that view also say), insofar as it glosses over the biblical and theological issues that have usually separated Christians into various “camps” (such as the various positions we are now studying) when it comes to origins. TE is also a “big tent,” in that adherents differ strongly amongst themselves on theological and biblical issues. Unlike ID, however, theology is openly discussed—and competing theologies of God, nature, and humanity are openly advocated, not left implicit. We’ll say more about this next time. This column presents one type of TE, a type favored by many evangelical scientists and scholars. For example, the people I will discuss all accept (as far as I can tell) the Incarnation and Resurrection—that is, they are Trinitarian Christians who believe that Jesus was fully divine (and fully human) and that the disciples went to the right tomb, only to find it empty, before encountering the risen Christ in diverse places. They also believe in <em>creation ex nihilo</em>, the classical view (illustrated at the start of this column) that God brought the universe into existence out of nothing. There are other types of TE, some of which are not (in my opinion) sufficiently biblical, or even sufficiently Christian, to be part of this series. Please keep that in mind as we proceed: don’t tar all TEs with the same brush—something that happens all too often elsewhere. Let knowledge, not ignorance, be our guide. </p>

<h3>Core Tenets or Assumptions of Theistic Evolution</h3>
<p style="margin: 0 0 0 20px;">(1) The Bible is <em><strong>NOT</strong></em> a reliable source of scientific knowledge about the origin of the earth and the universe, including living things—because it was never intended to teach us about science.</p>
<p>This reflects not only modern scientific knowledge, but also (more importantly) modern biblical scholarship. Peter Enns and some other evangelical scholars have recently stressed this point, initiating a firestorm in the evangelical academic community that, so far, has confirmed my view that evangelicals in general are just not ready to <a href="http://erb.kingdomnow.org/the-evolution-of-adam-peter-enns-feature-review/">deal with this</a>, even though it is consistent with the classical notion of accommodation. My own comments about the magnitude of the problem, written before the firestorm started, can be found <a href="http://evanevodialogue.blogspot.com/2008/06/evangelicals-evolution-and-academics.html">here</a>.</p>

<p style="margin: 0 0 0 20px;">(2) The Bible <em><strong>IS</strong></em> a reliable source of knowledge about God and spiritual things.</p>
<p>Remember the quip that Galileo attributed to Cesare, Cardinal Baronio, “The intention of the Holy Ghost is to teach us how one goes to heaven, not how heaven goes.” (We discussed this earlier in <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/galileo-and-other-good-books-about-science-and-the-bible">the series</a>). Evolution was not an issue in Galileo’s day, but this platitude is frequently quoted by advocates of TE—and often without proper attribution to Baronio. Commonality obviously lies in the attitude, not the topic. Many critics of TE are willing to adopt Galileo’s approach when it comes to the Solar System, but not when it comes to evolution: they are anxious to <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/galileo-and-the-garden-of-eden-part-2">keep Galileo out of the garden of Eden</a>.</p>
 
<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/ted_ted_second.jpg" alt="" height="349" width="270"  /><br />
Portrait of Cesare, Cardinal Baronio,<br />attributed to Caravaggio (1602-3) (<a href="http://caravaggio.com/preview/images/250/I000432.jpg">Source</a>)</p>

<p style="margin: 0 0 0 20px;">(3) Scientific evidence is <em><strong>irrelevant</strong></em> to the Bible—it is simply not a science book.</p>
<p>See above. This needs to be stated separately, since some believers look to science for “proof” of the Bible, just as some unbelievers look to science for “disproof.” Proponents of TE stress that science and the Bible aren’t like apples and oranges; rather, they are more like apples and rocks: you can hold one in each hand without tension, but they have very little in common. We wouldn’t look for God in the phone book, or in an automobile repair manual. Don’t look for science in the Bible. In principle, scientific theories neither support nor threaten the Bible.</p>

<p style="margin: 0 0 0 20px;">(4) The creation story in Genesis 1 is a confession of faith in the true creator, intended to refute pantheism and polytheism, not to tell us how God actually created the world. </p>

<p>This is meant to echo what we said about the <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/science-and-the-bible-the-framework-view">Framework View</a>. It is not necessarily true that all TEs accept the Framework View or something like it, but many do. Most would probably say that the Bible is not contradicted by any specific scientific theory of biological diversity—unless that theory oversteps its philosophical boundaries and functions as a kind of religion, what Conrad Hyers called <a href="http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1984/JASA9-84Hyers.html">“dinosaur religion.”</a></p>

<p style="margin: 0 0 0 20px;">(5) The Bible tells us <em><strong>THAT</strong></em> God created, not how God created</p>

<p>Again, this sounds like the Framework View—or, at least, it should. Belief in God the creator is consistent with science, and even supported by some aspects of science; but, it is not a <strong>substitute for</strong> scientific explanations. </p>

<h3>An Assignment: It’s Your Turn to Read and Write</h3>
<p>Astronomer Owen Gingerich has written an eloquent little TE book, <em><a href="http://biologos.org/resources/books/gods-universe">God’s Universe</a></em>. A number of quotations have been compiled <a href="http://www.alisonmorgan.co.uk/Gingerich%2006.pdf">here</a>. My <a href="http://www.firstthings.com/article/2007/04/300-all-things-bright-and-beautiful-36">review</a> for <em>First Things</em> identifies some of the key theological and philosophical issues related to TE. Please follow these links, study what you find, and offer comments below. If anyone has actually read the book itself, your views would be particularly valuable to include.</p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>In our next column in two weeks, we continue our discussion of Theistic Evolution, focusing on some crucial theological aspects of TE. In the meantime, please do the “assignment” and get back to us. </p>
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        <pubDate>Wed, 15 Aug 12 05:00:37 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Science and the Bible: The Framework View</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;the&#45;framework&#45;view?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;the&#45;framework&#45;view?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Although the Framework View has existed for about ninety years, its attitude toward the Genesis “days” is similar to that held by Augustine. He taught that God created all things at once and told us about it in the pattern of six days, in order that we could understand it. The days themselves, however, were “unknowable” and not meant as a “literal” description of the passage of time.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Although the Framework View has existed for almost ninety years and I’ve been familiar with the main idea since the mid-1980s, I didn’t know it even had a name until just a few years ago. The circumstances in which I learned it add some real-world flavor to a discussion that might already seem a bit too abstract for some readers, so I’ll tell you about it. I was in Manhattan, Kansas, for a few days, lecturing at Kansas State University, when I received an invitation to walk literally across the street and visit a class at Manhattan Christian College—a combination of words that may seem somewhat humorous, given that there is no Wall Street or Broadway anywhere in town. The students had on their desks copies of this book: <a href="http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-g3n3s1s-debate-j-ligon-duncan/1004692480">The G3N3S1S Debate: Three Views on the Days of Creation</a>. According to the front cover, three views on origins were presented inside, with the final one being “The Framework View,” written by <a href="http://www.veritas.org/Presenters.aspx?pid=242">Lee Irons</a> and the late <a href="http://www.meredithkline.com/kline-biography/">Meredith Kline</a>. Not recognizing the term, I asked if I could look at the book, whereupon I realized that something I’d been telling students about for many years actually had a name.</p>

<br /><br />
<h3>No Football Coaches</h3>
<p>When I explain this position to students, I like to start with a little puzzle. Many years ago, after attending an academic conference in a major city, I was driving through the rural countryside some distance away, en route to an historic house that wasn’t well marked. As I got closer to where I thought I might start seeing some signs directing me to the house, I noticed a fair-sized hotel, restaurant, and bar off to one side of the road. What really caught my attention was a sign, prominently displayed at the start of the driveway, warning off a certain clientele: NO FOOTBALL COACHES, it said. Unfortunately I’d forgotten my camera, but this is pretty much what I saw.</p>
 
<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/football_coaches_sign.jpg" alt="" height="443" width="428"  /></p>

<p>When I show it in class, I ask the students to guess what this was all about: why such a sign outside of such a place? The stories they come up with are pretty good. My favorite involves two neighboring high schools, arch rivals, with the football coach at one having an affair with the wife of his opposite number, resulting in fist-fights in that bar every fall, when friends of one man or the other would go at each other in the bar, which was on the highway connecting the two school districts. After a few students have tried their luck to no avail, someone asks, where did this take place? Was it maybe in England, where football means soccer and coach means bus? Give that student an A, I say. It was England, on a highway running between York and Manchester. Now, who can fill in the blanks? Almost right away, a student will explain that soccer fans in England can be pretty rambunctious, and that a busload of them might not make the best impression on the rest of the clientele at a respectable country inn and pub. Thus, the manager would rather not have their business.</p>

<p>The take-away message, of course, is that there is always a context in which the meaning of a text is embedded. Unless you know something about the time and place in which a text is composed, you aren’t going understand what it actually says. The same is true for any part of the Bible, including the opening verses of Genesis. That’s the bottom line for the Framework View: if you don’t know anything about literature and culture in the Ancient Near East, you won’t understand what Genesis is really saying.</p>

<h3>Core Tenets or Assumptions of the Framework View</h3>
<p style="margin: 0px 0px 0px 20px;">(1) The “days” in Genesis have nothing to do with historical time; they are literary devices, employed by God in order to communicate the story of the creation in terms that we can understand.</p>

<p>This sounds like an example of the principle of accommodation, and it should. The activities of the six days of creation are arranged into a “framework” of two triads (days 1-3 and days 4-6), with parallel types of activities in each triad.</p>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/framework_gif.jpg" alt="" height="296" width="424"  /></p>
 
<p>Thus, light is created on the first “day,” and on the fourth “day” God makes the Sun and Moon, the two great lights in the firmament that produce light and “rule over” the day and the night. The air and sea appear on the second “day,” and on the fifth “day” God fills them with birds and fish, etc. In other words, the order of events seems to be more logical than chronological. The key element is the fourth day: as we noted in our discussion of Concordism, the Sun was not made until the fourth day, yet it was expressly given the task of producing the day and the night and we’ve had “evening and morning” since the first day. What’s going on here? How can this be taken “literally”? Advocates of the Framework view see a solution in the parallel triads.</p>

<p>Another way to see this focuses on the second verse in the Bible, which reads (in the American Standard Version, a translation that follows the Hebrew closely), “And the earth was waste and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep: and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.” God is confronted by darkness, a watery abyss, and a formless earth—each of these features posing a problem for God, who deals with them in the subsequent six “days.” First, on “days” 1 to 3, God prepares the heavens and the Earth to be a home for the great creatures to come, by separating light from darkness, separating waters above the firmament from waters below the firmament, and causing the dry land to “appear” and to “put forth” vegetation. Then, on “days” 4 to 6, God makes the creatures and puts them in the places God has prepared—the Sun and Moon in the “firmament of heaven (day 4), birds in the air and fish in the seas (day 5), and finally “the beasts of the earth” and “man” on the land (day 6).</p>

<p>We emphasize that the Framework View is simply about <strong><em>the Bible</em></strong>, not about science. The Earth and the universe can be as “young” or “old” as anyone wishes to claim, because the literary form of early Genesis leaves this an open question. The “days” were probably meant to be understood “literally” as ordinary days, <em>but only in the context of a literary form that was <strong>not</strong> meant to be understood literally, when taken as a whole.</em></p>

<p>What about the seventh “day”? Because it lacks a “morning” and an “evening” in the text (have you ever noticed this?), some authors interpret the seventh “day” as a prophetic reference to God’s own eternal rest, which has not yet begun and which we will share with God in the eschatological future. An OEC book I discussed in my column on Concordism, Robert Newman’s <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0944788971/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=thebiofou06-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0944788971">Genesis One and the Origin of the Earth</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0944788971" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> (1977), advocates this interpretation (see pp. 65-66), and so do some advocates of the Framework View. </p>

<p style="margin: 0px 0px 0px 20px;">(2) When seen against the cultural and literary context of the Ancient Near East (ANE), it is clear that Genesis was written to combat the polytheism and pantheism of other creation stories. It was not written to provide a scientifically accurate account of the creation.</p>

<p>This is why the Sun and Moon are not even named on the fourth day: they were worshipped as divine beings by many people in the ANE, and the Hebrew author(s) of Genesis intentionally omit their names as an act of defiance against worshippers of those two false gods. (Remember: for the ancient Egyptians, the Sun was the chief god.) Furthermore, the stars are mentioned simply as an afterthought, at the end of verse 16: “And God made the two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also.” This was done deliberately, as a way of belittling the Babylonians and others who worshipped them. Indeed, the whole creation account stands in the face of polytheism, by affirming that the one true, invisible God has actually created all visible things, including the heavenly bodies. Nothing we see is divine: this is the essence of monotheism, stated bluntly and boldly.</p>

<p>(3) It is not possible to find a close match between what is proclaimed in Genesis—<strong><em>that God is the creator</em></strong>—and the details of natural history. We should not approach this text with inappropriate expectations.</p>

<p>For many readers, the crucial question awaits: according to the Framework View, is Genesis 1-3 historical in any meaningful sense? Here there is a division of the house, with authors falling into either of these two camps:</p>

<p>(1) <strong>Genesis 1-3 is an historical narrative</strong> (though not strictly chronological), not a creation myth. As Lee Irons and Meredith Kline emphasize in <em>The G3N3S1S Debate</em>, “The framework interpretation does <em>not</em> teach that creation was a nonhistorical event” (p. 220). The universe was actually created, Adam and Eve were the first humans, and the Fall was a real historical event. Some OECs like this approach, which can be seen as a looser type of Concordism than the day-age theory; Bernard Ramm’s “moderate concordism” might be understood as fitting into this category, even though he did not discuss the Framework View per se. </p>

<p>(2) <strong>Genesis 1-3 is not an historical narrative</strong>; it resembles some other, older ANE creation stories. Conrad Hyers advances this view in his book, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0804201250/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=thebiofou06-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0804201250">The Meaning of Creation: Genesis and Modern Science</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0804201250" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />
</em>; see below. Some aspects of the story reflect this: the days, the progression from chaos to order, and the creation of humans from mud or clay. These are common to other ANE stories, and they are present in Genesis because that’s what hearers in the ANE expected such stories to include. Other aspects of Genesis, however, are profoundly unlike other ANE stories: the transcendence of God and the de-deification of nature. These constitute the crucial, timeless, substantive message that God has revealed to us. Theistic evolutionists tend to like this non-historical approach, which is not usually seen as a kind of Concordism.</p>

<h3>Historical Comments</h3>
<p>The Framework View is modern, but its attitude toward the Genesis “days” is similar to that held by Augustine. As I explained in an <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/science-and-the-bible-concordism-part-three">earlier column</a>, he taught that God created all things at once and told us about it in the pattern of six days, in order that we could understand it. The days themselves, however, were “unknowable” and not meant as a “literal” description of the passage of time. </p>
<p>In the 19th century, the German scholar J. H. Kurtz put forth an interpretation that Ramm called the “pictorial day” view, which he considered to be a type of “Moderate Concordism,” the overall position that Ramm himself favored. Kurtz described the creation story as “prophetico-historical tableaux, [in] which are represented before the eye of the mind, scenes from the creative activity of God, each one of which represents some grand division of the great drama, some prominent phase of the development” (<em>The Bible and Astronomy</em>, 1861 Philadelphia edition, p. 110). His Scottish contemporary <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Miller">Hugh Miller</a>, one of the most prolific and influential evangelical writers of his day, endorsed Kurtz’ interpretation, holding that “the form and nature of the revelation” in Genesis was “conveyed by a succession of sublime visions” (<em>The Testimony of the Rocks</em>, 1857 Boston edition, p. 180).</p>
<p>The Framework View itself, with the “days” arranged in parallel triads, was first proposed in 1924 by the Dutch scholar Arie Noordzij and made more widely known by another Dutch scholar, N. H. Ridderbos. His book—<em>Is There a Conflict Between Genesis 1 and Natural Science?</em>—was translated into English in 1957. Subsequently, Kline and the French theologian <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Blocher">Henri Blocher</a> have been its most prominent supporters.</p>

<h3>An Assignment: It’s Your Turn to Read and Write</h3>
<p>I’ve done most of the heavy lifting in this series, but now it’s your turn. As a way of getting into all three of the views we’ve studied thus far (not simply the Framework View), I’d like everyone to read an article by Conrad Hyers, <a href="http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1984/JASA9-84Hyers.html">“Dinosaur Religion: On Interpreting and Misinterpreting the Creation Texts,”</a> <em>Journal of the American Scientific Affiliation</em> 36 (September 1984): 142-48. The questions below are intended as helpful suggestions; feel free to discuss other matters as well!</p>

<p>1.  What does Hyers mean by “dinosaur religion”?</p>
<p>2.  What is Hyers’ most basic objection to “creation science,” the YEC view?</p>
<p>3.  What does Hyers believe to be the true message of Genesis One?</p>
<p>4.  Overall, do you agree with what Hyers says? Why or why not? Whether or not you agree, do you have any critical comments?</p>

<p>NOTE: Hyers wrote a sequel, <a href="http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1984/JASA12-84Hyers.html">“The Narrative Form of Genesis 1: Cosmogonic, Yes; Scientific, No,”</a> <em>Journal of the American Scientific Affiliation</em> 36 (December 1984): 208-15, in which he employs an interpretive scheme highly similar to the Framework View, although that term is not used. I encourage you to read this also, but our discussion will focus on the first article. </p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>In our next column on August 14, we begin a lengthy discussion of Theistic Evolution. Although that is the view advocated (under an alternative name) by BioLogos, I will approach it no differently. After explaining its central tenets, we’ll examine them critically and outline its history. Between now and then, I’m keen to see your responses to the assigned reading. If you gotten this far, you’re more than just a casual reader. Tell us what you think of Hyers’ ideas.</p>
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        <pubDate>Tue, 31 Jul 12 05:00:16 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Southern Baptist Voices: Essentialism and Evolution, Part 1</title>
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        <description>If what has been called an essence (Plato referred to these as Forms, and Augustine as Ideas in the mind of God or eternal reason) explains natural kinds, it is easy to see how this would logically lead to the idea of fixity of species.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am grateful for the opportunity to enter this dialogue which in my thinking is fundamentally a discussion on the nature of reality. The following comments come from a philosophical perspective and not that of a scientist; however, the issue of evolution and its compatibility with Christianity surely has philosophical as well as theological dimensions. Richard Dawkins recognizes this and it is a comment he makes that raises what I think is a very salient point.  Let me be clear. My reference to Dawkins in no way should be understood to imply that the position of <em>BioLogos</em> has entailments of atheism, nor am I trying to connect Biologos with Dawkins in any way. Rather my point is that I think Dawkins puts his finger on something that goes to the heart of understanding evolution philosophically as well as theologically as it speaks to the nature of reality. </p>
 
<p>In his book <em>The Greatest Show on Earth</em> (2009) on the first page of the second chapter, Dawkins raises the interesting question: “Why did it take so long for a Darwin to arrive on the scene?” After suggesting possible answers he approvingly quotes the late Ernest Mayr's suspicion as the most insightful answer to this question. According to Dawkins, Mayr’s suspicion is: “The culprit was the ancient philosophical doctrine of---to give it its modern name—essentialism. The discovery of evolution was held back by the dead hand of Plato [Dawkins' language].” Later in his book, Dawkins states boldly that evolution is anti-essentialist, a point Mayr made in other places. One can find the same argument, if not the same language, in the writings of Edward O. Wilson where the idea of nature trumps any idea of something existing above experience. Clearly, I am not the first one to consider this argument. I think, however, that further discussion regarding the implications of essentialism for evolutionary models remains important especially for theists in particular and humanity in general. At the heart of this discussion is the matter of ontology, the nature of being. While evolution speaks to the development of what is, it necessarily carries with it very strong ontological implications, implications that affect views on the nature of being. If the idea of essence has no currency in the discussion of reality, then the thing itself is all there is and, hence, quickly becomes the object complete in itself. </p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Bruce_Little_bio.jpg" alt="" height="328" width="250" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" />

<p> It seems that essentialism (I use this term with Christian emphasis), if true, would seriously challenge any form of evolution where different species evolve through common descent.  The point that Mayr and others have made turns on the idea that essentialism provided the philosophical foundation for the idea of fixity of species from at least the time of Plato. If right, that would make evolution, in the sense of producing new species, suspicious if not impossible. Furthermore, it seems that essentialism cannot be easily dismissed simply because it is associated with Plato. One must consider the philosophical/theological legitimacy of essentialism based on the merits of its own claims within the discussion of the nature of reality. With that said, if Mayr and others are right about essentialism, then the question to be taken up is whether essentialism has any ground upon which to stand, especially within Christian theology. </p>

<p>Generally speaking, essentialism teaches there is more to reality of the thing than what is presented to the senses which, is to say there is more to reality than the biological dimension (we might say DNA). It is the material that provides a means of expression of the essence. A member belonging to a natural kind is so because of its essence and all members belonging to this natural kind must have this essence or it does not belong. In this way, natural kinds are distinct from others by virtue of their essence. While essence determines what natural kind to which a thing belongs, there are also non-essential or accidental properties. These help to distinguish one member from another within a natural kind, but these are not determinative for the natural kind itself as they are subject to change while essential properties are not. That is, what makes a cow a cow is the essence belonging to being a cow. Without that, the cow could not be a cow. In other words the idea of essence is what gives stability to natural kinds. If essentialism is true this would, as Dawkins points out, seriously challenge the idea of common ancestry. </p>

<p>Applied to human beings, the essential attributes of humanness are predicated of beings called human beings which distinguishes them from non-human beings –this is not an arbitrary naming. While human beings (a natural kind) share universally the same essence of humanness, they do differ in non-essential properties (short, tall, thin, fat, and so forth). So while the members differ in many non-essential ways, they belong to the same natural kind by their shared essential attributes of human<em>ness</em>. </p>

<p>If what has been called an essence (Plato referred to these as Forms and Augustine as Ideas in the mind of God or eternal reason) explains natural kinds, it is easy to see how this would logically lead to the idea of fixity of species (which may be very broad allowing for a wide range of adaptations and variations within natural kinds which allows for a very rich biological diversity). The suggestion here is that it is time to rethink the matter of essentialism in this discussion. Of course there must be some reason to think that essentialism has merit on its own terms.</p>

<p>The fact that a being is determined by its essence finds support in understanding who Jesus is.  Consider what makes Jesus the God-Man. As argued by the early Church Councils, it was His nature (in Greek, <em>OUISA</em>). He had the nature of both---the essence of God and the essence of man. It was not that He had all the outward appearance and DNA function of a man that made him a man---it was more than that. He was a man, precisely because He possessed the nature (essence of a man) and He was God as He had the nature (essence of God). This at least supports the idea that a being is what it is, not by virtue of developmental issues, but because of its essence.</p>
 
<p>In thinking about essence, one might consider the matter of transubstantiation. One may discount transubstantiation on theological grounds, but it does say something interesting to the discussion of essentialism. It assumes that the bread is of one essence and the body is of another essence. In order for the wine to become blood (a different essence) it would take a miracle as one essence does not give way to a different essence in the process of nature. The idea of transubstantiation is discussed in Aristotelian categories; in this case substantive cause is what Aristotle meant by the what<em>ness</em> of a thing–that is, what makes it what it is. Additionally, Genesis 1:20 notes that living creatures were created according to their own kind (the whatness of the thing) supporting the idea of natural kinds, which is consistent with the idea of fixity of species.</p><br></br>

<p class="intro">Tomorrow in part 2, Dr. Little makes the case that modern science has unjustifiably marginalized essentialism because it does not fit within a purely physical understanding of reality.</p>
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        <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jul 12 04:01:33 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Bruce A. Little</dc:creator>
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        <title>Naming &apos;the God Particle&apos;</title>
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        <description>The discovery of the Higgs boson would certainly be a breakthrough for particle physics and cosmology, but would such a finding also radically redefine theology’s understanding of God or challenge the existence of such a deity?  Is there actually any theological or religious significance in Higgs physics at all?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="date"> The image above describes an "event" (proton-proton collision) recorded in 2012 with the CMS detector at CERN's Large Hadron Collider. According to CERN, "the event shows characteristics expected from the decay of the SM Higgs boson to a pair of Z bosons, one of which subsequently decays to a pair of electrons (green lines and green towers) and the other Z decays to a pair of muons (red lines). The event could also be due to known standard model background processes. ATLAS Experiment © 2012 CERN </p>


<p>Judging from the flurry of headlines over the past week, one might be tempted to think that proof positive of God’s existence (or lack thereof) had just appeared out of a 27-km-tunnel buried beneath the Swiss-French border. This frenzy of news headlines and blog titles hailed the recent news that CERN’s Large Hadron Collider has discovered a brand new particle of a mass of 125-126 GeV, which is assumed to be the Higgs boson, or the so-called “God particle.” The discovery of the Higgs boson would certainly be a breakthrough for particle physics and cosmology, but would such a finding also radically redefine theology’s understanding of God or challenge the existence of such a deity?  Is there actually any theological or religious significance in Higgs physics at all?</p>

<p>The short answer is “no,” which becomes apparent when one considers the widely-reported story of how it got named. In 1993, Nobel Laureate physicist Leon Lederman, along with science writer Dick Teresi, wrote a book detailing the history of particle physics starting with Pre-Socratic Greek philosophy Democritus and culminating with the hunt for the Higgs boson. Until this latest discovery, the Higgs boson was the elusive final missing piece of the puzzle known as the Standard Model—a collection of the fundamental particles that constitute our universe and the complex and mathematically-sophisticated relationships between them. Considering how incredibly difficult finding the Higgs boson was proving to be, Lederman wanted to name the book after that “goddamn particle,” according to some of his collaborators. His editor, however, would not allow it and so the name was shortened to “The God Particle: If the Universe Is the Answer, What is the Question?” And thus ‘the God particle’ was born, carrying with it more than enough social baggage for such a miniscule particle.</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Zosia_Krusberg.jpg" alt="" height="340" width="250" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;"  />

<p>Particle physicist Dr. Zosia Krusberg (at right) is visiting assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Vassar College and thinks “the term ‘god particle’ is unfortunate. The Higgs boson is no more (or less) divine or spiritually significant than any other elementary particle within the standard model of particle physics.” It may be fundamental to explaining one of the most basic characteristics of the universe—namely the existence of matter and mass in addition to energy—but “it is no more (or less) important than any other physics principle underlying the Standard Model.” </p> 

<p>Last week’s discovery was monumental in that it may have finally provided experimental evidence for the Higgs Mechanism and defined the specific energy of the resulting Higgs boson, but even this “breakthrough” for particle physics leaves many scientific questions unresolved. Finding the Higgs boson completes the Standard Model, but it does not do away with many other questions and shortcomings of the current state of particle physics, such as the constituent particles of dark matter, a quantum theory of gravity, and other “mathematically subtle problems.” Not to mention that there is still significant work to be done to determine the exact nature of this newly-found particle. According to Dr. Krusberg, this particle might behave just as the Standard Model predicts or it could instead be “a Higgs-like particle that will serve as a gateway into explorations of physics beyond the Standard Model." Krusberg continued, “And I guarantee that it is this latter scenario that most of us are hoping for: physicists love nothing more than discovering the shortcomings of their theories, since this is the first step toward more fundamental theories with even more predictive power!”</p>

<p>No, finding the Higgs boson does not answer all the questions of particle physics, much less lend insight into the existence (or not) of God.  For that reason, Dr. Krusberg (like most physicists) bemoans the term ‘God particle’ and insists, “There really is nothing either literally or metaphorically god-like about the Higgs boson.”  Indeed, one writer for the British journal The Guardian reached such a point of frustration about the name that he ran a <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/2009/jun/05/cern-lhc-god-particle-higgs-boson ">competition for alternatives</a>. The winner was “the champagne flute boson,” ostensibly because the bottom of a champagne bottle is an excellent and oft-used demonstration of the energy potential of the Higgs Mechanism. Or then again, perhaps it is simply because physicists thought that finally finding this shy particle would call for some of the bubbly.</p>

<p>On the other hand, some science writers and scientists can appreciate the ‘educational benefits’ of such a mysterious and controversial name because it attracts the attention of the general public and puts a relatable face on an extremely esoteric physics concept. Krusberg herself admits that “People are naturally drawn to the mysterious and the controversial, providing educators with great teaching opportunities.” But she worries about the larger social implications involved in “mixing the vernacular of physics and spirituality,” not least because such uncritical mixing can lead the non-scientific community to draw conclusions about the authority and reach of science that are not justified.</p>

<p>Understanding that the Higgs boson is not the literal stuff of God and that it does not prove or disprove God’s existence (as the name seems to suggest) extinguishes the fire under any sort of religious outcry. But this does not mean that its discovery is irrelevant to the discussion of science and faith, nor to the Christian community as a whole. As Dr. Krusberg remarks, “The recent discovery of [this] new boson at the LHC perfectly embodies the scientific process at its best (and thereby illustrates to the public why and how science works).” Scientific exploration of nature is not a fool-proof endeavor; healthy skepticism and accountability to a wide community of other researchers are absolutely critical to its success. But such evidence of the power and finesse of well-executed science as we saw last week is a testament to our ability to explore and understand the ‘how’ of the universe. God has equipped humanity with the desire, the intellectual abilities, and the collective will to recognize and explore the cosmic order and beauty of his creation. God has made our home knowable, and has given us the tools and capacities by which to know it.</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Tucker_Higgs_2_sm.jpg" alt="" height="194" width="300" style="float:left;margin:0px 10px 0px 0px;" />

<p class="date"> At left, Cern researchers present their findings to a few hundred of their colleagues in Melbourne, Australia.  Image © 2012 CERN </p>

<p>It is valuable, then, for the Christian community to understand and appreciate how science works, in part to recognize that there are many instances in which science and the church work in tandem in order to better understand and better serve the world. But I think there is something else we can draw from the story of the Higgs boson, too. The nickname ‘the God particle’ has touched nerves in religious communities because it implies that science has the ability to prove or disprove divine existence by physical means.  Even though the physics community is by no means claiming insight into the divine, it is sometimes assumed by the religious community that scientists view their work as chipping away at God’s existence when they begin to understand something that was previously unknown, or known only “by faith” in esoteric theories and models.</p>

<p>And yet, regardless of motives or metaphysical interpretations, perhaps physicists' search for the Higgs boson <em> is in fact</em> an apt picture of our own search for God.  How many times have we stared up at the starry ceiling in times of crisis and prayed fervently for some kind of sign from God to assure us of his presence? And how many times has that much-desired evidence appeared only in retrospect, when we look back to see God’s hand faithfully and elegantly working in ways inscrutable at the time? It took a <em>community</em> of physicists to discern the presence of the Higgs boson. But even so, they could only do so after the fact from the cascade of particle decays it sparked; they could not observe the particle itself directly. In a similar way, though we often do not see the working of God directly, “in the moment,” we still trust in his presence and providence, often depending on friends, family and the community of the church to help us see his hand in hindsight.  </p>

<p>So while the discovery of the Higgs boson does not itself explain God, we rejoice at the subtle yet striking new insight we have into God’s creative genius via the Higgs boson and at the way God gives evidence of his faithfulness in the ordered creation itself. Perhaps, however, the greatest insight we can glean from this breakthrough is an analogy for the way God calls us to seek him and find him together, in the community of those who follow his son.</p>

<p class="intro"> Tomorrow, Baylor University physicist Gerald Cleaver answers the question, "What <em>is </em>the Higgs boson?"</p><br> </br>

]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 10 Jul 12 09:02:29 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Faith Tucker</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jul 10, 2012 09:02</dc:date>-->
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        <title>What is Scientism?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/what&#45;is&#45;scientism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/what&#45;is&#45;scientism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Scientism is a rather strange word, but for reasons that we shall see, a useful one. Though this term has been coined rather recently, it is associated with many other “isms” with long and turbulent histories: materialism, naturalism, reductionism, empiricism, and positivism.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/SaintSimonResized.jpg" alt="" height="224" width="161" style="float:left; margin:0px 10px 0px 0px;"/><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
<blockquote>A scientist, my dear friends, is a man who foresees; it is because science provides the means to predict that it is useful, and the scientists are superior to all other men. --Henri de Saint-Simon<sup>1</sup></blockquote>
<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>Scientism is a rather strange word, but for reasons that we shall see, a useful one. Though this term has been coined rather recently, it is associated with many other “isms” with long and turbulent histories: materialism, naturalism, reductionism, empiricism, and positivism. Rather than tangle with each of these concepts separately, we’ll begin with a working definition of scientism and proceed from there.</p>

<p>Historian Richard G. Olson defines scientism as “efforts to extend scientific ideas, methods, practices, and attitudes to matters of human social and political concern.” <sup>2</sup>  But this formulation is so broad as to render it virtually useless. Philosopher Tom Sorell offers a more precise definition: “Scientism is a matter of putting too high a value on natural science in comparison with other branches of learning or culture.” <sup>3</sup>  MIT physicist Ian Hutchinson offers a closely related version, but more extreme: “Science, modeled on the natural sciences, is the only source of real knowledge.” <sup>4</sup>  The latter two definitions are far more precise and will better help us evaluate scientism’s merit.</p>

<h3>A History of Scientism</h3>

<p>The roots of scientism extend as far back as early 17th century Europe, an era that came to be known as the Scientific Revolution. Up to that point, most scholars had been highly deferential to intellectual tradition, largely a combination of Judeo-Christian scripture and ancient Greek philosophy. But a torrent of new learning during the late Renaissance began to challenge the authority of the ancients, and long-established intellectual foundations began to crack. The Englishman Francis Bacon, the Frenchman Rene Descartes, and the Italian Galileo Galilei spearheaded an international movement proclaiming a new foundation for learning, one that involved careful scrutiny of nature instead of analysis of ancient texts.</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/descartesresized.jpg" alt="" height="252" width="204" style="float:right; margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" /><p>Descartes and Bacon used particularly strong rhetoric to carve out space for their new methods. They claimed that by learning how the physical world worked, we could become “masters and possessors of nature.” <sup>5</sup> In doing so, humans could overcome hunger through innovations in agriculture, eliminate disease through medical research, and dramatically improve overall quality of life through technology and industry. Ultimately, science would save humans from unnecessary suffering and their self-destructive tendencies. And it promised to achieve these goals in this world, not the afterlife. It was a bold, prophetic vision.</p>

<p>As this new method found great success, the specter of scientism began to emerge. Both Bacon and Descartes elevated the use of reason and logic by denigrating other human faculties such as creativity, memory, and imagination. Bacon’s classification of learning demoted poetry and history to second-class status.<sup>6</sup> Descartes’ rendering of the entire universe as a giant machine left little room for the arts or other forms of human expression. In one sense, the rhetoric of these visionaries opened great new vistas for intellectual inquiry. But on the other hand, it proposed a vastly narrower range of which human activities were considered worthwhile.</p>

<h4>The Enlightenment</h4>

<p>A century later, many of the Enlightenment intellectuals continued their love-affair with the power of natural science. They claimed that not only could science enhance the quality of human life, it could even promote moral improvement. The Encyclopedist Denis Diderot aimed to collect, organize, and preserve all human knowledge so that “our children, becoming better instructed, may become at the same time more virtuous and happy.” <sup>7</sup> Many of the French philosophes even claimed that science could be a substitute for religion. In fact, during the French Revolution, numerous Catholic churches were converted into “Temples of Reason” and held quasi-religious services for the worship of science.<sup>8</sup></p>

<h4>Positivism</h4>

<p>The 19th century witnessed the most powerful and enduring formulation of scientism, a system called positivism. Its founder was August Comte, who built his positive philosophy from a deep commitment to David Hume’s empiricism and skepticism. Comte claimed that the only valid data is acquired through the senses. Nothing was transcendent, and nothing metaphysical could have any claim to validity.<sup>9</sup> The task of scientists was twofold—first, to demonstrate how all phenomena, including human behavior, are subject to invariable natural laws.<sup>10</sup> Second, they would reduce these natural laws to the smallest possible number, and ultimately unify them under the laws of physics.<sup>11</sup></p>

<p>Comte also subsumed all of human intellectual history into a single process which he called the Law of Three Stages. In his view, each branch of knowledge passes through three stages: the theological or fictitious, the metaphysical or abstract, and lastly the scientific or positive state. He believed that through the continual advancement of human understanding, religion would fade away, philosophy and the humanities would be transformed into a naturalistic basis, and all human knowledge would eventually become a product of science. Any ideas outside that realm would be pure fantasy or superstition.</p>

<h4>Logical Positivism</h4>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/ruler2.jpg" alt="" height="188" width="250" style="float:left;margin:0px 10px 0px 0px;" /><p>Positivism did not lose its appeal in the 20th century. To the contrary, a group known collectively as The Vienna Circle reinvigorated the fundamental tenets of positivism with enhanced symbolic logic and semantic theory. They called their approach, fittingly, logical positivism. In this system, there are only two kinds of meaningful statements: analytic statements (including logic and mathematics), and empirical statements, subject to experimental verification. Anything outside of this framework is an empty concept.<sup>12</sup></p>

<p>Given its sweeping claims, logical positivism came under heavy scrutiny. Karl Popper pointed out that few statements in science can actually be completely verified. However, a single observation has the potential to invalidate a hypothesis, and even an entire theory. Therefore, he proposed that instead of experimental verification, the principle of falsifiability should demarcate what qualified as science, and by extension, what can qualify as knowledge.<sup>13</sup></p>

<p>Another weakness of the positivist position is its reliance on a complete distinction between theory and observation. Observations, essential to the empirical approach of science, were claimed by positivists to be brute facts which one could use to establish, evaluate, and compare the theories. However, W.O. Quine pointed out in his “Two Dogmas of Empiricism” that observations themselves are partly shaped by theory (“theory-laden”).<sup>14</sup> What counts as an observation, how to construct an experiment, and what data you think your instruments are collecting—all require an interpretive theoretical framework. This realization does not deal a death-blow to the practice of science (as some post-modernists like to claim), but it does undermine the positivist claim that science rests entirely on facts, and is thus an indisputable foundation for knowledge.</p>

<h3>Scientism of Today</h3>

<p>Scientism today is alive and well, as evidenced by the statements of our celebrity scientists:</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/nasa_resized.jpg" alt="" height="263" width="264" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" />
<blockquote>The Cosmos is all that is or ever was or ever will be. –Carl Sagan, Cosmos<br /><br />

The more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it also seems pointless. –Stephen Weinburg, The First Three Minutes<br /><br />

We can be proud as a species because, having discovered that we are alone, we owe the gods very little. –E.O. Wilson, Consilience</blockquote>

<p>While these men are certainly entitled to their personal opinions and the freedom to express them, the fact that they make such bold claims in their popular science literature blurs the line between solid, evidence-based science, and rampant philosophical speculation. Whether one agrees with the sentiments of these scientists or not, the result of these public pronouncements has served to alienate a large segment of American society. And that is a serious problem, since scientific research relies heavily upon public support for its funding, and environmental policy is shaped by lawmakers who listen to their constituents. From a purely pragmatic standpoint, it would be wise to try a different approach.</p>

<p>Physicist Ian Hutchinson offers an insightful metaphor for the current controversies over science:</p>

<blockquote>The health of science is in fact jeopardized by scientism, not promoted by it. At the very least, scientism provokes a defensive, immunological, aggressive response from other intellectual communities, in return for its own arrogance and intellectual bullyism. It taints science itself by association.<sup>15</sup></blockquote>

<p>Noting that most Americans enthusiastically welcome scientific advancements, particularly those in health care, transportation, and communications, Hutchinson suggests that perhaps what the public is rejecting is not actually science itself, but a worldview that closely aligns itself with science—scientism.<sup>16</sup> By disentangling these two concepts, we have a much better chance for enlisting public support for scientific research than we would by trying to convince millions of people to embrace a materialistic, godless universe in which science is our only remaining hope.</p>

<h3>Distinguishing science from scientism</h3>

<p>So if science is distinct from scientism, what is it? Science is an activity that seeks to explore the natural world using well-established, clearly-delineated methods. Given the complexity of the universe, from the very big to very small, from inorganic to organic, there is a vast array of scientific disciplines, each with its own specific techniques. The number of different specializations is constantly increasing, leading to more questions and areas of exploration than ever before. Science expands our understanding, rather than limiting it.</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Gears_large.jpg" alt="" height="340" width="250" style="float:left;margin:0px 10px 0px 0px;" /><p>Scientism, on the other hand, is a speculative worldview about the ultimate reality of the universe and its meaning. Despite the fact that there are millions of species on our planet, scientism focuses an inordinate amount of its attention on human behavior and beliefs. Rather than working within carefully constructed boundaries and methodologies established by researchers, it broadly generalizes entire fields of academic expertise and dismisses many of them as inferior. With scientism, you will regularly hear explanations that rely on words like “merely”, “only”, “simply”, or “nothing more than”. Scientism restricts human inquiry.</p>

<p>It is one thing to celebrate science for its achievements and remarkable ability to explain a wide variety of phenomena in the natural world. But to claim there is nothing knowable outside the scope of science would be similar to a successful fisherman saying that whatever he can't catch in his nets does not exist.<sup>17</sup> Once you accept that science is the only source of human knowledge, you have adopted a philosophical position (scientism) that cannot be verified, or falsified, by science itself. It is, in a word, unscientific.</p>

 <h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">1. "<em>Un savant, mes amis, est un homme qui prévoit; c’est par la raison que la science donne le moyen de prédire qu’elle est utile, et que les savants sont supérieurs à tous les autres hommes.</em>"  Translated into English by Valence Ionescu in <em>The Political Thought of Saint-Simon</em>. Oxford University Press, 1976.  Page 76<br>

2. Olson, Richard G. <em>Science and Scientism in Nineteenth-Century Europe</em>. Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 2008.<br>

3. Sorell, Tom. <em>Scientism: Philosophy and the Infatuation with Science</em>. New York: Routledge, 1991.<br>

4. Hutchinson, Ian. <em>Monopolizing Knowledge: A Scientist Refutes Religion-Denying, Reason-Destroying Scientism</em>. Belmont, MA: Fias Publishing, 2011.<br>

5. Descartes, Rene. <em>Discourse on Method</em><br>

6. Sorell, p176<br>

7. Sorell, p35<br>

8. Ozouf, Mona. <em>Festivals and the French Revolution</em>. Harvard University Press, 1988.<br>

9. Zammito, John H. A Nice Derangement of Epistemes : Post-Positivism in the Study of Science from Quine to Latour. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004.<br>

10. This view is a form of strict determinism, and current popularizers of continue to enthusiastically endorse it. Perhaps they are “determined” to do so?<br>

11. This view is a form of extreme reductionism, also widely endorsed by current popularizers of science.<br>

12. Zammito, p8<br>

13. Popper, Karl. <em>Logic of Scientific Discovery.</em> 1959<br>

14. For an extended discussion, read Zammito’s chapter “The Perils of Semantic Ascent: Quine and Post-positivism in the Philosophy of Science” in <em>A Nice Derangement of Epistemes</em>. University of Chicago Press, 2004.<br>

15. Hutchinson, p143<br>

16. Hutchinson, p109<br>

17. Giberson, Karl, and Mariano Artigas. <em>Oracles of Science: Celebrity Scientists Versus God and Religion</em>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.</p> ]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 11 Jun 12 05:00:14 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Thomas Burnett</dc:creator>
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        <title>America&apos;s View on Evolution and Creationism (Infographic)</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/americas&#45;view&#45;on&#45;evolution&#45;and&#45;creationism&#45;infographic?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The BioLogos Forum is pleased to present this infographic about science and faith in America. The graphic uses data from Gallup Research, The New York Times, and the Pew Research Center to show what Americans currently believe about the origins of humans.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/AmericasViews_full_4412.png" /><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/AmericasViews_570_4412.jpg" alt="" height="2086" width="570"  /></a></p>
<p><strong>(Click Image for Full Resolution)</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 12 06:42:15 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
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        <title>A Biologist&apos;s Perspective</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;biologists&#45;perspective?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;biologists&#45;perspective?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In today&apos;s video, Dr. David Finch, a biologist at New York University, discusses his thoughts on both Creationism and the effects of &quot;new atheists&quot; like Richard Dawkins.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In today's video, Dr. David Finch, a biologist at New York University, discusses his thoughts on both Creationism and the effects of "new atheists" like Richard Dawkins. Finch voices his frustration that many "seekers of truth" ignore the scientific truth of evolution. He asserts that while Darwin was right about natural selection and the patterns of evolution, he was wrong in regards to genetics--the central mechanism by which biological change occurs. However, evolutionary science did not stop with Darwin, and modern science has made a lot of progress towards understanding how genes work in light of evolution.</p>

<p>Ultimately, however, Finch remarks that "science can neither prove nor disprove the existence of God." To him, those who proselytize atheism under the banner of "science" do a disservice to science. The goal of scientists is to understand the physical world around us, and most scientists go into their labs to discover something wonderful about the world, rather than to comment on the existence of God.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 29 Mar 12 07:56:30 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Fitch</dc:creator>
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        <title>What do Biblical scholars today say about Genesis 1&#45;2?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/questions/biblical&#45;scholars&#45;genesis?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/questions/biblical&#45;scholars&#45;genesis?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In recent decades, evangelical Biblical scholars have reconsidered non&#45;literal interpretations of Genesis.   The Accommodation view of St. Augustine and John Calvin is supported by recent discoveries about ancient cultures.  Literature from these cultures shows interesting parallels and differences with Genesis accounts.   The differences are striking, such as stories where creation is a battle among many gods rather than the acts of one sovereign Creator.  The similarities, however, show how God accommodated his message so that the Israelites could understand it.   For example, the Egyptians and Babylonians thought the sky was a solid dome.  This solid dome appears in Genesis 1 as the firmament created on day 2.  God did not try to correct the “science” of the Israelites by explaining that the sky was a gaseous atmosphere.   Instead, God accommodated his message to their cultural context.  Many evangelical Biblical scholars have concluded that Genesis is not meant to teach scientific information.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Coming Soon</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 15 Mar 12 12:48:13 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
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