A General Statement of Belief
Nov. 23rd, 2006 11:03 amI think arguing against evolution in the name of God is akin to arguing against meteorology.
Assuming that God makes weather (or at least guides the systems that create the conditions we regard as weather) why is it that no one decries meteorologists for describing or attempting to predict the way those systems work? After all, meteorology is an imperfect science with a great many inaccuracies, proof of man's arrogance in trying to determine the mind of God.
(Of course, there is scriptural support for meteorology in Matthew 16:1-3, so, okay, maybe that's a bad example.)
Anyway, my point is that evolution does not deny the existence of God, a god, many gods, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster, nor does it provide any particular explanation for the creation of the universe. It's a description of a process - you can accept God as the motivator of that process without denying his existence.
I understand why Biblical literalists and Young Earth people argue against evolution. I don't agree with the foundation of their arguments, but I understand that they must argue against evolution as a "logical" result of their belief. What baffles me are those who deny "macroevolution" (the creation of new species) while happily accepting adaptation or "microevolution." They regard their position as enlightened - and there are certainly a few scientists who take issue with macroevolution and who level serious scientific criticisms against it. However, the average person with this view often has totally outrageous ideas about what evolution actually entails. You get nonsense like Kirk Cameron and the Banana, or worse.
(At his site, Kirk Cameron claims that "bypassing the intellect" is the only way to convert people. Then his next video uses logical arguments to convince people that evolution is false. The arguments are false and based on crap, but they are definitely not trying to "bypass" the intellect of their victims. Kirk Cameron needs to be beaten up by a tag-team of Jesuits and 18th century logicians, or something. Go on - watch the video about evolution. They ambush college kids and present them with straw men arguments and misleading logic. One person is asked to point to a transitional species, and can't. And, since a 20-year-old kid can't name a transitional species, they must not exist! Hello? Archaeopteryx? They present anti-evolution quotes from such scientific luminaries as Malcolm Muggeridge. Malcolm Muggeridge. The satirist/journalist. It's like trying to debunk quantum mechanics by quoting Andy Rooney. The whole video is laughable and frightening.)
Finally, there's simply a class of Christian (or Hindu, or Muslim, or what-have-you) that seems to think that there are mysteries we aren't meant to know. They react to theories and ideas as though they were somehow unseating or diminishing God. This has been happening for a long time.
The question you have to ask yourself is this - "What kind of crummy God/god/godess/gods do you worship, that our discoveries about divine creation can somehow threaten or diminish Him/Her/It/Them?"
Biblical literalism is a thin defense, especially if you happen to be Protestant. Martin Luther stripped out entire books because he disagreed with them. You may argue that he was divinely inspired to do so, but then you must accept that God allowed Christians to use a false text as their sole guide for 1500 years. You have to assume that the original synods and councils that selected the books for inclusion in the Bible were not divinely inspired - and in fact diabolically misled.
Or, you can be Catholic (or Orthodox) and believe that Luther was fooled by the devil! No matter what sect or denomination a Christian hails from, they must believe that one version of the Bible is divinely inspired, and the other an abomination. Alternately, they can accept that both Luther and the bishops were simply acting according to their human interpretation of the Divine Will and came to different conclusions, presumably because the Divine permitted it. This somewhat takes the shine off Biblical literalism.
One of my favorite quotes about this whole matter comes from Charles McKay's 1841 book, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.
"Some peculiar custom may disgrace the people amongst whom it flourishes; yet men of a little wisdom refuse to aid in its extirpation, merely because it is old. Thus it is with human belief, and thus it is we bring shame upon our own intellect.
To this cause may be added another, also mentioned by Lord Bacon -- a misdirected zeal in matters of religion, which induces so many to decry a newly-discovered truth, because the Divine records contain no allusion to it, or because, at first sight, it appears to militate, not against religion, but against some obscure passage which has never been fairly interpreted...
... Who does not remember the outcry against the science of geology, which has hardly yet subsided? Its professors were impiously and absurdly accused of designing to 'hurl the Creator from his throne.' They were charged with sapping the foundations of religion, and of propping atheism by the aid of a pretended science.
The very same principle which leads to the rejection of the true, leads to the encouragement of the false."
And that's what I think.
Assuming that God makes weather (or at least guides the systems that create the conditions we regard as weather) why is it that no one decries meteorologists for describing or attempting to predict the way those systems work? After all, meteorology is an imperfect science with a great many inaccuracies, proof of man's arrogance in trying to determine the mind of God.
(Of course, there is scriptural support for meteorology in Matthew 16:1-3, so, okay, maybe that's a bad example.)
Anyway, my point is that evolution does not deny the existence of God, a god, many gods, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster, nor does it provide any particular explanation for the creation of the universe. It's a description of a process - you can accept God as the motivator of that process without denying his existence.
I understand why Biblical literalists and Young Earth people argue against evolution. I don't agree with the foundation of their arguments, but I understand that they must argue against evolution as a "logical" result of their belief. What baffles me are those who deny "macroevolution" (the creation of new species) while happily accepting adaptation or "microevolution." They regard their position as enlightened - and there are certainly a few scientists who take issue with macroevolution and who level serious scientific criticisms against it. However, the average person with this view often has totally outrageous ideas about what evolution actually entails. You get nonsense like Kirk Cameron and the Banana, or worse.
(At his site, Kirk Cameron claims that "bypassing the intellect" is the only way to convert people. Then his next video uses logical arguments to convince people that evolution is false. The arguments are false and based on crap, but they are definitely not trying to "bypass" the intellect of their victims. Kirk Cameron needs to be beaten up by a tag-team of Jesuits and 18th century logicians, or something. Go on - watch the video about evolution. They ambush college kids and present them with straw men arguments and misleading logic. One person is asked to point to a transitional species, and can't. And, since a 20-year-old kid can't name a transitional species, they must not exist! Hello? Archaeopteryx? They present anti-evolution quotes from such scientific luminaries as Malcolm Muggeridge. Malcolm Muggeridge. The satirist/journalist. It's like trying to debunk quantum mechanics by quoting Andy Rooney. The whole video is laughable and frightening.)
Finally, there's simply a class of Christian (or Hindu, or Muslim, or what-have-you) that seems to think that there are mysteries we aren't meant to know. They react to theories and ideas as though they were somehow unseating or diminishing God. This has been happening for a long time.
The question you have to ask yourself is this - "What kind of crummy God/god/godess/gods do you worship, that our discoveries about divine creation can somehow threaten or diminish Him/Her/It/Them?"
Biblical literalism is a thin defense, especially if you happen to be Protestant. Martin Luther stripped out entire books because he disagreed with them. You may argue that he was divinely inspired to do so, but then you must accept that God allowed Christians to use a false text as their sole guide for 1500 years. You have to assume that the original synods and councils that selected the books for inclusion in the Bible were not divinely inspired - and in fact diabolically misled.
Or, you can be Catholic (or Orthodox) and believe that Luther was fooled by the devil! No matter what sect or denomination a Christian hails from, they must believe that one version of the Bible is divinely inspired, and the other an abomination. Alternately, they can accept that both Luther and the bishops were simply acting according to their human interpretation of the Divine Will and came to different conclusions, presumably because the Divine permitted it. This somewhat takes the shine off Biblical literalism.
One of my favorite quotes about this whole matter comes from Charles McKay's 1841 book, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.
"Some peculiar custom may disgrace the people amongst whom it flourishes; yet men of a little wisdom refuse to aid in its extirpation, merely because it is old. Thus it is with human belief, and thus it is we bring shame upon our own intellect.
To this cause may be added another, also mentioned by Lord Bacon -- a misdirected zeal in matters of religion, which induces so many to decry a newly-discovered truth, because the Divine records contain no allusion to it, or because, at first sight, it appears to militate, not against religion, but against some obscure passage which has never been fairly interpreted...
... Who does not remember the outcry against the science of geology, which has hardly yet subsided? Its professors were impiously and absurdly accused of designing to 'hurl the Creator from his throne.' They were charged with sapping the foundations of religion, and of propping atheism by the aid of a pretended science.
The very same principle which leads to the rejection of the true, leads to the encouragement of the false."
And that's what I think.