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Tuesday, July 1, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments

Document Can't Darwin and God get along?

by Salon

Thanks to Wesley Scott for the link.

http://www.salon.com/books/atoms_eden/2008/07/01/saving_darwin/

Can't Darwin and God get along?

Of course they can, argues physicist and theologian Karl Giberson, if only many believers were more sophisticated and atheists less dogmatic.

By Vincent Rossmeier


July 1, 2008 | With biologist Richard Dawkins leading the way, many scientists today are locked in an unending match of whack-a-mole with Christian creationists, who insist that God created heaven, earth and humanity in its present form, and with disciples of intelligent design who want to expel evolution from its scientific prominence in public schools. If you've been following the battle, you might be inclined to believe that Americans are faced with a choice between believing in God and scientific fact.

God and scientific fact.

In his new book, "Saving Darwin: How to Be a Christian and Believe in Evolution," Karl Giberson calls this a false choice. A professor of physics at Eastern Nazarene College, and director of the Forum on Faith and Science at Gordon College, Giberson believes in evolutionary theory as adamantly as he does in God. For Giberson, evolution and Christianity are not in competition but complement one another. Holding equal disdain for creationists who read the Bible literally and scientists who disregard God altogether, Giberson seeks a middle way, and attempts to resuscitate Darwin's reputation as both a religious man and a scientist. In conversation, Giberson possesses a boundless inquisitiveness typical of many scientists, but also displays the wry wit of a seasoned polemicist. He seems to know how to counteract your best arguments before you have even made them.

Why does Darwin need to be saved?

He has been vilified in American evangelical culture and even more broadly than that. Yet his important contribution to science reaches into theology and religion, and so it's important to rehabilitate him so that you can't simply call something Darwinist and have people say, "Oooo, that smells bad."

Why do misconceptions about Darwin persist?

Because in the latter part of the 20th century, evolution became identified with negative social agendas, and some very effective polemicists like Henry Morris and Ken Ham convinced people that evolution was responsible for the breakdown of the family and drug abuse and all manners of evil. Christians who tend to see satanic or sinister influences behind those things were only too ready to demonize Darwin and say he had an agenda to destroy their faith. In their eyes, Darwinism destroyed belief in God the creator.

Darwinism became associated with repugnant beliefs like Nazism and eugenics. But as you point out, evolution doesn't make judgments, it merely describes.

Right. There's an important distinction between a theory that tells us the way the world is and a theory that tells us the way it ought to be. In practice, however, we think we should behave by the way we think the world is. That's why there's such an intense debate about homosexuality. Conservatives don't want homosexuality to be perceived as something natural because that would force them to reevaluate the way we treat it from a moral perspective. While it's true that you can't justify eugenics on the basis of Darwin's observations, as soon as genetics was recognized to be as important as it is, people began to realize that genetics could be used to improve the species. This was kind of a natural extension but it's certainly not implied in Darwin's work.

Aren't some people threatened by evolution because they can't reconcile biblical literalism, or "young-earth" creationism, with the fact that the earth is not 10,000 years old but billions?

Yes, but young-earth theory is an interpretation of Genesis that requires that you bring a certain set of suspect assumptions to the text. The early chapters of Genesis do not read like history. They have a different sort of character to them. People who read Hebrew and understand the ancient Near Eastern worldview, and the cosmology that informed it, have given us ample reasons why you would not read Genesis that way, even if you weren't worried about reconciling it with a billion-year-old planet.

Yet Americans do. One poll you cite shows that 51 percent of Americans believe that God created humans in their present form. You write that the strength of creationism in the U.S. "has more to do with American culture than biology or Christian theology." What is it about our culture that has led to creationism's popularity?

In short, intellectual laziness. We're not prepared to do the hard work to make our culture more sophisticated. We don't drill into our children in Sunday school or church the fact that ancient people thought differently about the world than we do. Even a modest amount of sophistication in biblical interpretation will show that the biblical authors, in both the Old Testament and New Testament, are not writing history.

In the Bible, you read the same events chronicled by different writers, and they put things in different orders or leave things out. If someone is really chronicling events, then events would be lined up in the right order. We know the Civil War comes after the American Revolution. But a biblical author, who thought for some reason that the American Revolution seemed more relevant, might reverse the order. It wouldn't be because he was incompetent historically, it would be because he was presenting these events from an agenda that's not that of a historian.

Many Christians insist the Bible is the literal word of God.

Yes, that's widespread and again it's because of a certain lack of sophistication from a literary point of view. Many people translate "the word of God" into the "words of God." They don't recognize that when you talk theologically about the Bible being the word of God, you mean that it contains an important message, that God is revealing himself through the history of Israel and Jesus Christ. New Testament theology gives us the "Word made flesh in Jesus." But that phrase makes no sense if you're talking about words and sentences. But it does make sense if you're talking about some kind of revelation about the nature of God.

The Bible is correctly understood in Christianity as the Word of God. But it's a distortion to say the Bible contains the words of God as if God had dictated these things. We need to grant that there are differences in the way that biblical authors talked about the world. We can't just pull all of this into the 20th century as if it was just recently written down by God for our benefit.

Evolution is taught in American high schools and yet many still don't believe in it. How can that be counteracted?

Well, if you could figure that one out, someone would be interviewing you, not you interviewing me. You're absolutely right. That's a challenging problem and it's a problem that the Europeans are just shaking their heads over.

Why is that?

Because Europe doesn't have a robust fundamentalist subculture like America has had since the early parts of the 20th century. American religion has been characterized by an entrepreneurial spirit. In Europe, many of the great religious traditions wasted away because they were supported by government. They didn't need to be popular and have lots of people coming to worship on Sunday to continue. So they atrophied and people lost interest.

In America, without that kind of governmental support, religious leaders had to be entrepreneurial. So a charismatic evangelist can come up with a brand-new approach to faith and touch some chord contemporary with people's needs. It's why we see people like Rick Warren, a very popular guy who is revolutionizing the way a lot of evangelicals think about their faith. He's obviously tapped into an anti-evolutionary fundamentalism and biblical literalism that people find important and like.

Biblical literalism is very simple. You read the Bible in English and you say to yourself that these are the things God wrote down through a secretary a long time ago, and all I need to do is read this in English and that's all the work I have to do to understand it. Who wouldn't want that to be the case? If you try to tell these people that they need some egghead scholar from Harvard, who can read Hebrew, to come in and help them with it, that seems offensive and alienating, and people aren't attracted to that. So I think the ability of American religion to invent itself and to appeal to common denominators, sometimes the lowest denominator, has allowed these evangelical movements to flourish with their own agendas.

Discussing intelligent design, you write, "although I wish it were true, it must be rejected." Why?

I don't think the intelligent design movement does anything useful. Its poster children for God's intervention are things like the clotting of blood or the propeller on the back of a bacterium. These aren't interesting features of the world, and the fact that they seem complicated and hard to explain through evolution doesn't suggest for one second that we ought to invoke the supernatural finger of God. I do think there are lots of things we don't understand about the world and maybe the intelligent design movement is doing us a service by shining a bright light on those. But when all is said and done, I don't think Christian theology wants to have a God who is one of several different factors in shaping natural history.

Do you think the intelligent-design movement demeans God?

Yes, it turns God into a kind of conjurer, one who comes in every now and then to do a trick in nature. How is this a helpful model for God?

You criticize creationism's leading opponents like Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould for treating evolution as religion. What's your main point of contention with them?

I think there's a reckless extrapolation from what we know about evolution to an all-encompassing materialism. Evolution has so much of its data missing in history that to look at the whole thing and say we know for sure that despite all the stuff we can't find, and have never seen, has purely naturalistic causes -- and we know this with such certainty that we insist the knowledgeable buy into this idea -- goes way too far. It overlooks the reality of human experience, overlooks that religious experiences are very common and meaningful for a lot of people.

I'm not at all uncomfortable saying that religious experiences can be genuine. A lot of them are fraudulent and some of them are epileptic seizures or whatever. But I believe in God, I believe God is personal and that God exists and cares about the created order. I think it's a very reasonable belief that God interacts with creation and that experiences people have of interacting with God are profound and deeply meaningful.

But you reject the idea that God tinkers and has his hand in day-to-day processes, so how do nature and God interact?

That's the tough question. You should rewind the tape and erase the question because I don't really have a good answer. What I would say, however, is when you know a lot about how something works, it's reasonable to rule out certain things and say, well, I don't think it could be this or that. When you know almost nothing about how something works, you need to be more humble. We don't know how we interact with the world. Somehow you got it into your head that you were going to call and talk to me about this book. Some kind of vague intention, purposeful agenda emerged in your mind, and it got translated into a whole set of actions, and now we're talking on the phone. We don't understand that.

Consciousness is a very deep mystery. All of our models say consciousness shouldn't be possible, that it should just be atoms and molecules in your brain randomly doing things. Nothing that we've developed for a model of how human intentionality works makes sense of our own experience of the world. But here we are, doing things in the world. Somehow a conscious-like starting point for human actions emerges and we are able to execute things in the world and change physical reality. Now, we know this happens, this isn't a mystical theory, you can see this happening every day.

How do we know there isn't some similar mechanism by which God interacts with the world, that God can be understood as a spirit, that God is more like consciousness than a material object? If we have an all-encompassing, pervasive personal being that has created the entire universe, and is coupled to that universe in some way, it just seems to me that the notion of God acting through the world without violating its laws is no more mysterious than us acting through that same world. So I'd say to Dawkins, until you explain to me how human beings interact with the world, don't tell me that God couldn't interact with the world in the same way we do.

But haven't scientists shown that human consciousness is a relatively recent phenomenon?

Yes.

Wouldn't that suggest that if God was involved in evolution that he had to tinker and give us consciousness?

No, because, here's another mystery: Consciousness emerges in the development of an embryo. We have a fertilized egg and there's no consciousness there, and it's not that consciousness is present but is really small, it just isn't there. And then, some months later, a baby is born, and child psychologists debate about exactly when self-awareness occurs, but at some point before the age of 3, you've got a conscious human being.

Now, God doesn't have to step in to make consciousness occur, but something that we don't understand at all is occurring. I don't think it's supernatural. I think that someday we may understand this. There's something going on that when the neuronal networks reach a certain level of complexity, something appears that maybe is brand-new and that is consciousness. But that's just a guess about how we'll eventually be talking about that phenomenon.

You criticize the creationists for questioning the gaps in the fossil record and call it a "fool's errand" because over time, scientists usually find evidence that fills these gaps in. But aren't you engaging in the same sort of intellectual maneuver, by saying that because there are some aspects of nature and evolution that we don't understand, therefore God exists?

Right. That's an extremely fair criticism. And if I was debating an I.D. person, they'd get lots of applause for putting me down with that statement. You're absolutely right. But I think the difference is that we need to know more than we know to make certain claims. And I would claim that what we know historically about the closing of these gaps suggests that we are always going to be able to close them. That we have gaps now in our understanding of how the blood clotting mechanism arose doesn't puzzle me at all. I just say, OK, there's more work to do.

When we finally understand how human intentionality works, I don't think it represents a dead end. We know that all of this discussion about how God might interact with the world is driven by metaphors and extrapolating our own human experience, and trying to find analogies that are always imperfect. I think we will never have some sort of model that says, "OK, here's how God gets his agenda across in the natural order. Here's how the will of God gets realized in nature -- we won't ever have that. But we might have insights into possibilities about how we could think about that. These insights will be rich enough that they will accommodate religious experience and some of the things that have long been a part of religion.

Do you think life can only have meaning and purpose with God?

I think it's very dangerous to try and argue that. I have children and raising them has been one of the most inspiring and purpose-filled parts of my life. Yet it doesn't seem helpful to say that seems meaningful and not meaningless because God made child-rearing purposeful. I found it purposeful to learn how to do a Willie Mays basket catch when I was in high school. I got very good at it and loved doing it. But certainly, God didn't make that a part of the natural order. So I think there's loads of ways to get purpose because purpose ultimately is a psychological state of mind. And certainly people like Daniel Dennett and Richard Dawkins and Stephen Jay Gould aren't walking around glum all the time, saying, "Oh, life has no purpose, I think I'll just kill myself." They are very energetic people who love life and do lots of fun things. I don't think Christians are wise to say we've got the corner on purpose.

You also criticize creationists because they ignore the fact that there is so much bad design in nature and so much barbarity and cruelty apparent throughout all life forms. You write that our spine was intended for a four-legged creation and yet we walk upright. So if creationists are wrong, as a Christian, how do you account for bad design and the evil in nature?

I think that we need to understand bad design and evil things in nature in the same way that we understand bad choices and evil actions on the part of humans in nature. It's been a part of the Judeo-Christian understanding of creation that when God created the world it was somehow separate from God. People debate about what that means and how great the separation is, but in articulations that I find most congenial, that entails God giving some freedom to the world. We have a free will to choose good or choose evil.

One of the points of the Garden of Eden story is that Adam and Eve got this idyllic situation and all they need to do is make a set of simple choices that are right and avoid one kind of no-brainer that is wrong. And what do they do? They choose the wrong thing. It's a mysterious, incomprehensible act. Why would you do that? Why would you screw up such a situation? If anybody today was on a marvelous Caribbean island with a beautiful woman and you're told that all you've got to do is not eat those fruits, you'd say, "OK, fine with me." It defies comprehension that Adam and Eve freely chose the wrong thing.

This is a story that I understand as mythology and not history. It's a deep truth about the significance of freedom and how irrational freedom can ultimately be. In the same way that we can choose to do things that make no sense, we can build things that are evil. We can make gas chambers or we can build hospitals. So if nature is free, what is nature going to do? Nature can create a creature with a spine like ours that walks upright. Nature can create a booby that has webbed feet. Nature can create the Ichneumonidae wasp that bothered Darwin so much. [The wasp hatches eggs inside a living caterpillar, allowing baby wasps to devour the caterpillar from the inside out.]

But nature can also create the delightful goldfinch that comes to my feeder every day and the cardinal and the deer that I see. There's so many things that nature has done that are marvelous. We have great achievements, symphonies and great art, and we have gas chambers and weapons of mass destruction. So I think nature is free in that way.

But if nature has free will, does it necessarily have a place for God?

God doesn't need to have a place within nature as one of the creatures within nature, and that's one of the objections to intelligent design. It brings God into nature as this auxiliary engineer to tweak things every once and a while. But the center of the doctrine of creation has never been that God makes stuff like an engineer or a carpenter. The central idea has been that God is responsible for the fact that creation simply exists. The words being and ontology are thrown around a lot in this context. God sustains the universe. God holds it continuously in existence. And that's the centerpiece -- not that God originated it once upon a time, either 10,000 or 10 billion years ago. Or that God tinkers in it constantly but that God holds it steadily in existence. In that sense, yes, the natural order does need God in order to continue to exist. But the events, as they unfold, don't have to have God tinkering and puttering like a weekend gardener.

But you can see why people like Dawkins and Dennett say that science seems to be functioning perfectly well on its own and we don't need to fall back on an explanation of God?

Yes, absolutely. And that has never been the way that people come to God. The number of people who embrace religious belief because they find it at the end of a long argument is very small. People come to religious faith in a variety of ways, but that's almost the last one on the list. People are far more likely to have certain experiences that overwhelm them and don't seem like conclusions of rational arguments, but seem like a kind of momentary contact with something genuinely transcendent. You say there's something more to the world than the atoms and molecules. Out of that experience comes a religious commitment. And that has characterized human experience forever.

Comments 1 - 50 of 176 |

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1. Comment #202346 by camoguard on July 1, 2008 at 11:07 am

 avatarGetting along beats unnecessary war, but thinking together seems like the better alternative. How about some articles on cross belief etiquette? I'm not likely to change my mind on my belief, but I don't mind being civil about it.

Other Comments by camoguard

2. Comment #202348 by Apathy personified on July 1, 2008 at 11:11 am

 avatar
if only many believers were more sophisticated and atheists less dogmatic.
What the fuck? - How is it dogmatic to NOT believe some unsubstantiated world viewpoint that originates in bronze age myths?

Even a modest amount of sophistication in biblical interpretation will show that the biblical authors, in both the Old Testament and New Testament, are not writing history.

No shit sherlock - Is this an admission that it's all made up?

This person seems to believe in belief, he offers no proof or explanation of god - just 'god exists because he/she has to, end of chatter'

Other Comments by Apathy personified

3. Comment #202349 by clodhopper on July 1, 2008 at 11:15 am

 avatar"Giberson seeks a middle way, and attempts to resuscitate Darwin's reputation as both a religious man and a scientist"

I am sure Darwin is most grateful to Mr Gibberson

Other Comments by clodhopper

4. Comment #202352 by Steve Zara on July 1, 2008 at 11:16 am

 avatar
All of our models say consciousness shouldn't be possible, that it should just be atoms and molecules in your brain randomly doing things. Nothing that we've developed for a model of how human intentionality works makes sense of our own experience of the world.


This is sheer nonsense. It is not hard at all to understand why we have the feeling of intentionality and why we then act on that.

I think there's a reckless extrapolation from what we know about evolution to an all-encompassing materialism.


It isn't reckless. Ideas of supernaturalism block rational investigation.

Other Comments by Steve Zara

5. Comment #202355 by nancy2001 on July 1, 2008 at 11:20 am

Giberson's gibberish.

Other Comments by nancy2001

6. Comment #202356 by Dax on July 1, 2008 at 11:24 am

"blabla bla, I don't know, bla bla bla. I really don't know but I believe in god. Bla. That's not a contradiction: we just don't understand it so it must be divine. Bla bla bla blabla bla..."

Nothing new here: same old steaming pile of bovine excrement.

Other Comments by Dax

7. Comment #202359 by clodhopper on July 1, 2008 at 11:29 am

 avatar"God holds it steadily in existence. In that sense, yes, the natural order does need God in order to continue to exist."

How?
Because I want him to.
Oh, ok then.

Other Comments by clodhopper

8. Comment #202360 by Spinoza on July 1, 2008 at 11:30 am

 avatar
and atheists less dogmatic.


This just echoes Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi's sentiments about Spinozism 275 years ago... Dogmatic philosophy just means "principled" (i.e. rationalism, and the Principle of Sufficient Reason).

Jacobi recognized that dogmatism (read: rationalism) inevitably leads to atheism, and therefore, he "ran away from dogmatism with his head down" (that's a paraphrase), and took a "leap of faith" (Jacobi was the first to use this phrase, Kierkegaard borrowed it from him... and the rest is history) into the realm of non-dogmatic (read: non-rationalist) religious belief. In this sense, it's a kind of "religious scepticism" about the foundations of human knowledge... And there's some work to be hashed out there, of course.

But it's not like this is anything new... A lot of these debates would be well served by the interlocutors reviewing the history of belief and disbelief in philosophy.

Other Comments by Spinoza

9. Comment #202361 by Mango on July 1, 2008 at 11:33 am

 avatarGiberson argues for a belief in God(s), but not for Christianity in particular. And how possibly could he?

Other Comments by Mango

10. Comment #202364 by Gregg Townsend on July 1, 2008 at 11:36 am

 avatar
Consciousness emerges in the development of an embryo. We have a fertilized egg and there's no consciousness there, and it's not that consciousness is present but is really small, it just isn't there. And then, some months later, a baby is born, and child psychologists debate about exactly when self-awareness occurs, but at some point before the age of 3, you've got a conscious human being.


Does anyone know if he's referring to any kind of study with this statement or just offering speculation? I've never heard this before and my knee-jerk reaction was, "How do you know that Mr. Wizard?"

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11. Comment #202369 by PaulJ on July 1, 2008 at 11:50 am

 avatarSo Karl Giberson doesn't believe in a God who tinkers, but he's not a deist.
God sustains the universe. God holds it continuously in existence. And that's the centerpiece -- not that God originated it once upon a time, either 10,000 or 10 billion years ago. Or that God tinkers in it constantly but that God holds it steadily in existence. In that sense, yes, the natural order does need God in order to continue to exist. But the events, as they unfold, don't have to have God tinkering and puttering like a weekend gardener.
God holds it steadily in existence. Interesting idea, but I'm not sure Giberson means it literally. This kind of vague metaphor isn't really much use in explanatory terms. It's almost like saying, "I'd really like God to exist, but I can't think of a way he could exist that's compatible with how I believe the universe is."

Interesting discussion, but not much help.

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12. Comment #202371 by Quetzalcoatl on July 1, 2008 at 11:55 am

 avatar
We don't know how we interact with the world


I switched off after this!

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13. Comment #202374 by Gregg Townsend on July 1, 2008 at 12:01 pm

 avatarQuetz,

I found that a curious statement as well. Uuuu, I get up, poor a cup-a-joe (hail Quetz), shit, shower, shave, drive to work, turn on my computer, check RD.net, etc...

What's not to know?

Other Comments by Gregg Townsend

14. Comment #202375 by Oystein Elgaroy on July 1, 2008 at 12:05 pm

 avatarI have never understood why people say that the universe needs god to keep it in existence. It seems like a completely arbitrary statement. Is God the same thing as the conservation law for the energy-momentum tensor?

Other Comments by Oystein Elgaroy

15. Comment #202378 by dyak on July 1, 2008 at 12:10 pm

"...Steven Jay Gould [isn't] walking around glum all the time..."

Ok, no argument with that part.

As for the rest....

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16. Comment #202380 by V'Ger on July 1, 2008 at 12:11 pm

 avatarI really don't understand all this stuff.

I would have thought that if your a scientist then you strongly believe in scientific method. Yet a belief in God requires you to put this method out of mind - and jump to an immense conclusion, which is not supported by any known evidence.

So I really don't understand how you can follow science and yet still hold a faith of some kind.

Surley resorting to God just means that you don't understand the science involved (yet).

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17. Comment #202381 by Misael on July 1, 2008 at 12:12 pm

Gregg Townsend--
I don't understand what it is you don't understand.
to summarise:
with a developing embryo, previously there was no consciousness there, but at some point, (though we don't know when) it comes to be.

Why would "a study" be needed to verify that?

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18. Comment #202383 by toddaa on July 1, 2008 at 12:13 pm

Dogmatic Atheist: An atheist who does not apologize for being an atheist.


Hope this helps.

Other Comments by toddaa

19. Comment #202384 by clodhopper on July 1, 2008 at 12:21 pm

 avatarComment #202375 by Oystein Elgaroy
I have never understood why people say that the universe needs god to keep it in existence.


Haven't there been a number of belief systems that held/hold the idea that the universe is part n parcel of God himself? Without him there is nothing etc etc.

Other Comments by clodhopper

20. Comment #202385 by HourglassMemory on July 1, 2008 at 12:22 pm

Can't Darwin and God get along?
Sure they can.
But they don't have to!!!! That's the point! Thsi is the thing that people fly over without noticing. this is what people have flying over their heads, and yet they keep looking at the buttons of their shirts, so to speak.

The fact that one feels the need to want something, or someone, to get along with Darwin in the first place is beyond any reasonable thinking.
That one postulates a god being there, is because of other reasons other than Reason and Rationality and Evidence.
One is told/taught to depend on/indoctrinated into having/making a virtue out of Faith, a belief that a god is there. Without any evidence. It is totally baseless.
It's like Tradition of Thought, handed down through generations.

And people keep holding on to it, and generate questions like "Can't Darwin get a long with God?"
Drop the God! Why are you holding on to the God thing?

It's just so clear to me that it's unreasonable.
Why can't others see it? Why do they hold on?
Why does these people's happiness and stability of mind depend on baseless thought-experiments?
I can almost bet that it's pure indoctrination that doesn't ever go away.

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21. Comment #202386 by funkyderek on July 1, 2008 at 12:22 pm

 avatarOK, I see why Bible believers need to embrace Darwin, the same way as they need to accept that the universe is more than 6,000 years old, but nothing in the article suggests why atheists should start believing in gods.

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22. Comment #202387 by nervouswreck on July 1, 2008 at 12:23 pm

One of the points of the Garden of Eden story is that Adam and Eve got this idyllic situation and all they need to do is make a set of simple choices that are right and avoid one kind of no-brainer that is wrong. And what do they do? They choose the wrong thing. It's a mysterious, incomprehensible act. Why would you do that? Why would you screw up such a situation? If anybody today was on a marvelous Caribbean island with a beautiful woman and you're told that all you've got to do is not eat those fruits, you'd say, "OK, fine with me." It defies comprehension that Adam and Eve freely chose the wrong thing.


I have a hard time understanding how this "defies comprehension." If Giberson had only ever lived on that island and had only ever known that beautiful woman, can he honestly say that he would never be tempted to eat the fruit of new knowledge? Isn't that desire to discover responsible for his being a scientist?

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23. Comment #202392 by black wolf on July 1, 2008 at 12:27 pm

 avatarI've read a very detailed paper about the evolution of the blood clotting system about a year ago. There are fewer gaps than Giberson may think. I understand that he can't keep up with every detail of evolutionary biology, but then he shouldn't be making such unwarranted claims.
It amuses me that he rejects the gap-god, but has compartmentalized his faith so utterly that he isn't aware of his own cognitive dissonance when he puts a wild guess handed down and adapted from the stone age on equal footing with a scientific extrapolation of factual data. Mr. Giberson, the universe does not owe us explanations, meaning or comfort - we have to find these for ourselves. Just because we don't like to die, it doesn't mean there must be a God who prevents it. Once you can prove we have a soul which survives physical death, you might have a case. Your theological colleagues have attempted that for centuries, even with modern scientific means, and failed completely. There is less evidence for a soul than even for much of the most 'esoteric' physics. The dusty God idea has less to stand on than string theory, antimatter, or bubbling multiverses. Just let it go, it makes no sense.

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24. Comment #202396 by Apathy personified on July 1, 2008 at 12:32 pm

 avatarblack wolf,
anti-matter is real, it can be created and contained (for a short while) - but it isn't abundant because it has a nasty habit of self destruction when it comes into contact with matter.

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25. Comment #202398 by clodhopper on July 1, 2008 at 12:37 pm

 avatarWhy do people hold on to the notion that personal experience is a reliable indicator of the truth without lots and lots of corroborating data?

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26. Comment #202400 by 82abhilash on July 1, 2008 at 12:38 pm


if only many believers were more sophisticated and atheists less dogmatic.


Calling passionate people dogmatic for calling foul on those who hold an untested assumption and impose their will on others. That could confuse a lot of the undecided.

I suspect someone is shooting for a linguistic coup.

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27. Comment #202403 by Don_Quix on July 1, 2008 at 12:42 pm

 avatarSo let me see if I understand:

God (presumably the Christian one) created the Universe, but does not meddle in the affairs of the Universe. However, the Universe needs God's constant attention on a moment-to-moment basis in order for it to continue to exist.

What?

It seems like he's describing some strange hybrid form of deism that allows the deluded to continue to believe that their God is not totally irrelevant.

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28. Comment #202415 by Diacanu on July 1, 2008 at 1:11 pm

 avatarThe title of his book should've been "mollycoddling the deluded".
A must-miss on my reading list. Right up there with "The Secret".

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29. Comment #202416 by Dhamma on July 1, 2008 at 1:13 pm

 avatarWhy don't they just give up their belief if they see evolution as true?

Evolution could potentially get along with some deism, but Yahweh and evolution are in direct contrast, no matter how you twist and turn your stupid head.

The bible says everything was created in six days, if you believe in the evolution you realize they don't exactly add up! So what happens? They all of a sudden claim the six days are symbolic for the evolutionary process! Why didn't you debate this before Darwin? I wonder, I wonder.

If the bible is holy, inspired by an omniscient god, there's no way it could be false. Now that it's been proven wrong all over the place, Yahweh simply CANNOT be true, or he wouldn't inspire them to write lies.

Belief in a deism is very improbable, yet I accept such a belief far more than every belief in a god of scriptures.

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30. Comment #202418 by DoctorE on July 1, 2008 at 1:14 pm

 avatarWho the hell is this god guy

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31. Comment #202424 by Gregg Townsend on July 1, 2008 at 1:24 pm

 avatar17. Comment #202381 by Misael

I don't understand what it is you don't understand.
Misael, I was probably wasn't very specific:
And then, some months later, a baby is born, and child psychologists debate about exactly when self-awareness occurs, but at some point before the age of 3, you've got a conscious human being.


I was wondering about who the psychologists were, when was their debate, what makes 3 the cut-off date, what is their definition of conscious, etc.

I'm not trying to be overly critical; I'm just genuinely curious about the claim and think it would make fascinating study. I'll have to google around myself, I suppose.

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32. Comment #202428 by Steve Zara on July 1, 2008 at 1:27 pm

 avatar
Evolution could potentially get along with some deism


I guess it could, but I have always thought of deism as rather silly. Darwin's message was universal - you don't need a designer to give the appearance of design. That applies to the universe too. If God has been removed from the creation of species, he should also be removed from the creation of universes.

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33. Comment #202429 by Quetzalcoatl on July 1, 2008 at 1:29 pm

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People are far more likely to have certain experiences that overwhelm them and don't seem like conclusions of rational arguments, but seem like a kind of momentary contact with something genuinely transcendent.


Notice the use of "seem like". "Seem like" does not equal "are"!

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34. Comment #202432 by 8teist on July 1, 2008 at 1:34 pm

 avatarThis argument will never die ,...yes it will........no it won`t.........yes it will.....no it won`t........etc....

What really needs to happen is the erosion of the churches privileged position in all societies,the promotion of science is doing this ,but its going to be a tough road.
How do you combat an organization that uses the old soviet technique of diplomacy.......nyet,nyet,nyet.

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35. Comment #202434 by Misael on July 1, 2008 at 1:38 pm

Ok gregg :-)
Seemed a bit of a non-claim to me, that's all -- asin, Consciousness is there by the age of 3 but i can't pin point it more accurately than that. Which is probably true, but uninformative.
Avoid making a contentious claim just by having a large enough ball-park.
No-one really knows how or when it appears. Well, clearly "appears" is not the right word, but...

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36. Comment #202436 by Oystein Elgaroy on July 1, 2008 at 1:39 pm

 avatarComment #202416 by Dhamma

I think symbolic interpretations of the creation stories in Genesis were advocated already by the Church fathers, long before Darwin. But the question of which bits of the holy scriptures really are holy is a tricky one for christians, as this interview shows. And of course evolution causes loads of other problems for believers. I am glad I don't have to try to square this circle anymore.

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37. Comment #202442 by 8teist on July 1, 2008 at 1:44 pm

 avatarHA HA .......Welcome to the darkside Lord Elgaroy .....

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38. Comment #202443 by Gregg Townsend on July 1, 2008 at 1:47 pm

 avatar36. Comment #202436 by Oystein Elgaroy
I am glad I don't have to try to square this circle anymore.
Oyestein,

I'm extremely grateful you don't have to, too (to many tos?).

Your posts have been the bright spot in reading this site over the past month. I'm learning slowly, and it's great fun.

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39. Comment #202445 by Abhishek on July 1, 2008 at 1:52 pm

 avatar
I think we will never have some sort of model that says, "OK, here's how God gets his agenda across in the natural order. Here's how the will of God gets realized in nature -- we won't ever have that. But we might have insights into possibilities about how we could think about that. These insights will be rich enough that they will accommodate religious experience and some of the things that have long been a part of religion.
What the hell does that mean? "But we might have insights into possibilities about how we could think about that" ? We'll have an insight. That insight will illuminate possibilities. Those possibilities will reveal potential avenues for new thought? Wtf.

edit: I guess he's trying to mingle words and say ohh don't worry, in the future we'll find more ways to blur the line and keep god alive. Still, wtf.

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40. Comment #202447 by Auraboy on July 1, 2008 at 1:55 pm

 avatarI still think Darwinism is a silly term.


So it's another book on the theme of 'How to hold two utterly opposing views by not asking too many questions.'


The 'new atheist writers' have always pretty much said doubt should be the default position until you prove otherwise...


Oh why bother...

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41. Comment #202449 by Garnok on July 1, 2008 at 1:56 pm

At least he freely admits that he is commiting the "God of the Gaps" fallacy, even to the extent that his arguments are ultimately on par with ID. Sadly, it doesn't seem to give him pause for thought regarding his conclusions based on it. No instead he writes a book to promote his ideas based on fallacious reasoning.

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42. Comment #202452 by Oystein Elgaroy on July 1, 2008 at 1:58 pm

 avatarComment #202445 by Abhishek

Maybe it becomes clear if we look at a specific example: we might have insights into possibilities of how we could think about how God tuned the fine structure constant to be 1/137. Hmmm... doesn't seem to quite work. I am amazed that he doesn't see how this kind of thinking eliminates all links between reality and the concept of god.

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43. Comment #202468 by kraut on July 1, 2008 at 2:16 pm

What I have never understood: a scientist who introduces a hypothetical entity with no evidence at all to explain the universe. I call this perverse, unscientific, idiotic etc.

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44. Comment #202469 by Corylus on July 1, 2008 at 2:16 pm

 avatarI am generally happy with moderates who defend the seeking of knowledge and fight against the misrepresentation of scientific fact.

I can even understand the thinking in a way. For example,
Yes, it [ID] turns God into a kind of conjurer, one who comes in every now and then to do a trick in nature. How is this a helpful model for God?
I can see how for some this is a denigration of what they perceive to be god. After all, a conjurer god is just naive anthropomorphism and thus; for the high level moderates at least; a form of idolatry.

However, (and my is it a big however!), my patience disappears whenever they bring theodicy in...
I think that we need to understand bad design and evil things in nature in the same way that we understand bad choices and evil actions on the part of humans in nature. It's been a part of the Judeo-Christian understanding of creation that when God created the world it was somehow separate from God. People debate about what that means and how great the separation is, but in articulations that I find most congenial, that entails God giving some freedom to the world. We have a free will to choose good or choose evil.
Natural evil as a manifestation of free will? Hmm... so people are born disabled in order to give freedom to the world. I see.

How can anything give freedom to the world as a whole when it; by definition; negates the freedom of individuals?

This is nonsense and by no stretch of the imagination a "congenial articulation."

To be bend-over-backwards fair here I should note that moderate can backtrack at this point and redefine 'freedom' as the presence of varying situations - some of which will (obviously) be defined as more desirable as others.

However, when this happens they are then open to the counterargument that the extent of bad design seems somewhat excessive.

Meh. Doesn't work. Try again.

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45. Comment #202471 by Goldy on July 1, 2008 at 2:19 pm

 avatar
Can't Darwin and God get along?

Of course they can, argues physicist and theologian Karl Giberson, if only many believers were more sophisticated and atheists less dogmatic.

Not quite how I'd phrase it. More like....
"Sure they can. There's no God - what's the problem?"

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46. Comment #202472 by Abhishek on July 1, 2008 at 2:19 pm

 avatarComment #202452 by Oystein Elgaroy
I am amazed that he doesn't see how this kind of thinking eliminates all links between reality and the concept of god.

Yeah, me too. I guess rationality is itself rationed in the mind. It takes an enormous amount of clear reasoning to do physics, I dont know -- it still gets to me how the brain compartmentalizes so well.

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47. Comment #202477 by Goldy on July 1, 2008 at 2:22 pm

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People debate about what that means and how great the separation is, but in articulations that I find most congenial, that entails God giving some freedom to the world. We have a free will to choose good or choose evil.
So Hell is what? An alternative heaven?
I like the way they always seem to make God sound all benevolent with his free choice and free will. Yep, we can be evil, but we will be eternally punished for it, punished in the most unimaginably horrible way. Nice choice.

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48. Comment #202478 by 8teist on July 1, 2008 at 2:23 pm

 avatarCan't Darwin and God get along?




Weeeeeeell, at least there`s proof Darwin existed , dunno `bout that other fella tho..

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49. Comment #202480 by Quine on July 1, 2008 at 2:24 pm

 avatar
I still think Darwinism is a silly term.
Thank you, Auraboy. Yes, we don't say "Newtonism" we get along fine with e.g. "Newtonian Mechanics." The same goes for "Einsteinism" and "Einsteinian Relativity." Because of the cult connotations of "ism" we should drop "Darwinism" and sign up for the extra effort of the added syllables required to say "Darwinian Evolution."

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50. Comment #202501 by Quine on July 1, 2008 at 2:37 pm

 avatar
People are far more likely to have certain experiences that overwhelm them and don't seem like conclusions of rational arguments, but seem like a kind of momentary contact with something genuinely transcendent. You say there's something more to the world than the atoms and molecules.

Well, LSD is a molecule, and the transcendent experience that some get on that path also goes beyond rational logic. If LSD receptors exist in the brain, what molecules does the brain itself make to get transcendent experiences? How can you ever know when the pharmaceutical factory you carry on your shoulders can "drop a tab" on you at any moment?

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