Title: A Christian Approach to Biological Complexity
1A Christian Approach to Biological Complexity
- Dr. Ard Louis
- Department of Physics
- University of Oxford
- www.cis.org.uk
- www.faraday-institute.org
- www.cpgrad.org.uk
2Colliding cultures?
- Christian sub-culture(s)
- Scientific sub-cultures
- culture is often caught not taught
Words Customs Traditions Behaviour Beliefs Values
Assumptions
My main argument Much of the tension between
evolution and faith is due to unrecognized
cultural assumptions
3OUTLINE
- Self-assembly things that make themselves
- What does the Bible say about nature?
- What does nature say about God?
4Biological self-assembly
- http//www.npn.jst.go.jp/ Keiichi Namba, Osaka
- Biological systems self-assemble (they make
themselves) - Can we understand?
- Can we emulate? (Nanotechnology)
5Virus self-assembly
viruses
- Self-assembled from identical subunits
(capsomers). - Characteristic number T.
- Capsid T 12 pentamers, 10(T - 1) hexamers.
12/16/2020
6Self-assembly of computer viruses
Computer viruses?
Monte-Carlo simulations stochastic
optimisation http//www-thphys.physics.ox.ac.uk/us
er/IainJohnson/
7Self-assembly with legos?
8Christian reaction Fear?
9OUTLINE
- Self-assembly things that make themselves
- What does the Bible say about nature?
- What does nature say about God?
- Language and metaphors of evolution
10God created and sustains the world
- In the beginning, God created the heavens and
the earth Gen 11 - For by him Christ all things were created
and in him all things hold together Col
116,17 - The Son is the radiance of Gods glory
sustaining all things by his powerful word Heb
13
11Biblical language of creation
- He makes springs pour water into ravines it
flows between the mountains the wild donkeys
quench their thirst Psalm 104 10,11 (praising
Gods creation) - Natural processes are described both as divine
and non-divine actions - 2 perspectives on the same natural world
12Science studies the Customs of the Creator
- If God were to stop sustaining all things the
world would stop existing - Donald MacKay, The Clockwork Image, IVP
- An act of God is so marvelous that only the
daily doing takes off the admiration - John Donne (Eighty Sermons, 22 published in
1640) - Miracles are not God intervening in the laws
of nature they are God working in less
customary ways
13Newton and the planets
- This most beautiful system of the sun, planets
and comets could only proceed from the counsel
and dominion of an intelligent being. - Sir Isaac Newton
14 Leibniz objects
- For, as Leibniz objected, if God had to remedy
the defects of his creation, this was surely to
demean his craftmanship - John Hedley Brooke, Science and Religion, CUP
1991, p147
15Leibniz objects
- And I hold, that when God works miracles, he
does not do it in order to supply the wants of
nature, but those of grace. Whoever thinks
otherwise, must needs have a very mean notion of
the wisdom and power of God
16God of the gaps
- This is a fatal step to take. For it is to assert
that you can plant some sort of hedge in the
country of the mind to mark the boundary where a
transfer of authority takes place. .. Either God
is in the whole of Nature, with no gaps, or Hes
not there at all.
Charles Coulson (1910-1974) First Oxford
professor of theoretical chemistry
17Interpreting the Bible
- What kind of language?
- What kind of literature?
- What kind of audience?
- What kind of context?
- The antidote to bad interpretation is not no
interpretation, but good interpretation, based on
common sense guidelines - G. Fee and D. Stuart, How to Read the Bible for
All It Is Worth, Zondervan (1993), p17
18Biblical or cultural?
19Genesis 1-3
Genesis 11-23 In the beginning God created the
skies and the earth. The earth was without form
and void And the Spirit of God was hovering over
the waters. Day (yom) one God created day and
night Day two God made the sky (firmament)
between the waters Day three God made dry land
and vegetation Day four God made Sun and
Moon (greater and lesser lamps) he also made
the stars (sic!) Day five God made Sea creatures
and flying creatures Day six God made Land
animals. God made Mankind (adam) Male Female in
Gods image Day seven God rested from his work.
- Genesis 24-25
- In the day (yom) that the Lord made the earth and
the skies before any vegetation or rain. - God formed the man (adam) out of the dust of the
earth (adama) - God planted a garden eastward in Eden, where He
put the man - God made out of the ground every tree grow that
is pleasant to the sight and good for food. The
tree of life and the tree of knowledge of good
and evil were also in the garden - God took man and put him in the garden of Eden to
tend and keep it. - God commanded the man not to eat of the tree of
good and evil for in the day (yom) that you eat
of it you shall surely die.
20Genesis 1-3
Genesis 11-23 In the beginning God created the
skies and the earth. The earth was without form
and void And the Spirit of God was hovering over
the waters. Day (yom) one God created day and
night Day two God made the sky (firmament)
between the waters Day three God made dry land
and vegetation Day four God made Sun and
Moon (greater and lesser lamps) he also made
the stars (sic!) Day five God made Sea creatures
and flying creatures Day six God made Land
animals. God made Mankind (adam) Male Female in
Gods image Day seven God rested from his work.
- Genesis 24-25 cont.
- God said It is not good that man should be
alone I will make him an ally comparable to
him. The LORD God brought every beast of the
field and every bird of the air to the mans to
see what he would call them. .. But for the man
there was not found an ally comparable to him. - God caused the man to sleep, and took his side to
make a woman. The man called her wo-man, for she
was taken out of man. - For this reason a man will leave his father and
mother and be united to his wife, and they will
become one flesh.
21What kind of literature?
- Genesis 1-23
- Phrases that occur 10 times
- 10 times God said (3 for mankind, 7 for other
creatures) - 10 times creative commands (3 x let there be
for heavenly creatures, 7 x let for world
below) - 10 x To make
- 10 x According to their kind
- Phrases that occur 7 times (heptads)
- and it was so
- and God saw that it was good
- Genesis 12-3
- Phrases that occur 3 times
- God blessed
- God created
- God created men and women
- Other numerical patterns
- Intro 11-2 contains 21 words (3 x 7) and
conclusion (2 1-3) contains 35 words (5 X 7) - Earth is mentioned 21 times and God 35 times
- -- see e.g. H. Blocher In the Beginning, p 33
or E. Lucas Can We Believe Genesis Today , p 97
22What kind of literature?
FRAMEWORK VIEW
- SHAPED
- Day 1
- The separation of light and darkness
- Day 2
- The separation of the waters to form the sky and
the sea - Day 3
- The separation of the sea from dry land and
creation of plants
- INHABITED
- Day 4
- The creation of the lights to rule the day and
the night - Day 5
- The creation of the birds and fish to fill the
sky and sea - Day 6
- The creation of the animals and humans to fill
the land and eat the plants
Day 7 The heavens and earth were finished
and God rested
23What genre of literature?
- Gen24-7 -- more patterns
- These are the generations
- of the heavens
- and the earth
- when they were created
- in the day that the Lord God made
- the earth
- and the heavens.
- Chiastic structure (C. John Collins, Genesis 1-4
PR (2006)) - When no bush of the field was yet in the
land and no small plant of the field had yet
sprung upfor the Lord God had not caused it to
rain on the land, and there was no man to work
the ground, and a mist was going up from the
land and was watering the whole face of the
ground then the Lord God formed the man of dust
from the ground and breathed into his nostrils
the breath of life, and the man became a living
creature. - A completely different emphasis!
24What genre of literature?
- More like Revelation than like Luke
- But very clear in its teaching e.g.
- God created the world
- Creation is good
- I Tim 4 4 For everything God created is good,
and nothing is to be rejected if it is received
with thanksgiving,
25What genre of literature?
- More like Revelation than like Luke?
- But very clear in its teaching e.g.
- God created the world
- Creation is good
- Man is made in Gods image
- Mankind (adam) has fallen into sin
- A promise of redemption (seed of woman)
- MANY! More things
- No problems with perspecuity on doctrine
26What genre of literature?
- a conscious and deliberate anti-mythical polemic
which meant an undermining of the prevailing
mythological cosmologies. - Gerhard F Hasel, The Polemic Nature of the
Genesis Cosmology, Evangelical Quarterly46
(1974), pp. 81-102.
27What genre of literature?
- Is it chronological?
- What man of intelligence, I ask, will consider
that the first and second and the third day, in
which there are said to be both morning and
evening, existed without sun and moon and stars,
while the first day was even without a heaven? - Origen 185 - 254 First Principles, 4.3
28What genre of literature?
- Is it chronological?
- On this subject there are three main views.
According to the first, some wish to understand
paradise only in a material way. According to
the second, others wish to take it only in a
spiritual way. According to the third, others
understand it both ways, taking some things
materially and others spiritually. If I may
briefly mention my own opinion, I prefer the
third - Augustine of Hippo (354-430) De Gen. ad litt
VIII, 1. (on the literal interpretation of
Genesis)
29What does the Bible say about nature?
- God sustains the universe
- Language of Gods action
- Miracles v.s. customs of the creator
- God created the universe
- Genesis 1-3 polemic structured prose, not a
journalistic account. - Gods creation is good.
- Bible is not a science textbook
- E.g. John Calvin, Augustine, etc.
30OUTLINE
- Self-assembly things that make themselves
- What does the Bible say about nature?
- What does nature say about God?
- Language and metaphors of evolution
31What does nature tell us about God?
- What does the Bible say?
- the heavens declare the Glory of God - Psalm 19
- What is man that you are mindful of him? Psalm 8
- For since the creation of the world God's
invisible qualities his eternal power and divine
naturehave been clearly seen, being understood
from what has been made, so that men are without
excuse. Romans 120
32Natural Theology
- History of Natural theology
- Paley Newman Barth ..
- The fundamental thesis of the book is that if
nature is to disclose the transcendent, it must
be "seen" or "read" in certain specific ways --
ways that are not themselves necessarily mandated
by nature itself. It is argued that Christian
theology provides a schema or interpretative
framework by which nature may be "seen" in a way
that enables and authorizes it to connect with
the transcendent. - --- A. McGrath p x about "the Open Secret"
33History of life on earth
- Grandeur of God?
- humans -- last 2 seconds of 24 hr day
- not unlike astronomy the heavens declare the
Glory of God - Psalm 19 - What is man that you are mindful of him? Psalm 8
In our galaxy there are 100,000 million stars,
like our sun. our galaxy is one of 100,000
million galaxies. In a throwaway line in Genesis,
the writer tells us, "he also made the stars" ..
Gen 116
34History of life on earth
- Grandeur of God?
- humans -- last 2 seconds of 24 hr day
- not unlike astronomy the heavens declare the
Glory of God - Psalm 19 - What is man that you are mindful of him? Psalm 8
If the earth was 24 hours old, then your life is
the last millisecond ..
35Evolution?
- EMOTIONAL DEBATE ?
- Does where we come from determine who we are
and how we should then live? - Natural theology?
-
362009 International Darwin Year
- Charles Robert Darwin
- 1809 Born into Unitarian family
- 1859 Publishes Origin of Species
- Biological Complexity arises from
- Variation and Natural Selection
There is grandeur in this view of life, with its
several powers, having been originally breathed
into a few forms or into one and from so
simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful
and most wonderful have been, and are being,
evolved.
37OUTLINE
- Self-assembly things that make themselves
- What does the Bible say about nature?
- What does nature say about God?
- Language and metaphors of evolution
38Intermezzo Defining Evolution
- Evolution as Natural History
- the earth is old (/- 4.5 Billion years)
- more complex life forms followed from simpler
life forms - Evolution as a mechanism for the emergence of
biological complexity - generated by mutations and natural selection
- (note most Christians agree that God created
this mechanism) - Evolution as a big picture worldview
(scientism) - George Gaylord Simpson
- "Man is the result of a purposeless and
materialistic process that did not have him in
mind. He was not planned. He is a state of
matter, a form of life, a sort of animal, and a
species of the Order Primates, akin nearly or
remotely to all of life and indeed to all that is
material." - or Richard Dawkins
- "Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually
fulfilled atheist.
39Christian approaches to emergence of biological
complexity
- Young Earth Creation Science
- Earth is about 10,000 years old
- Genesis 1,2 are historical in the modern sense
- mainly in the last 50 years
- Progressive Creationism
- Earth is old
- Complexity came about through miracles
- Varied views on exegesis of Genesis
- Theistic Evolution/Biologos
- Earth is old
- Complexity came about through normal processes of
God - Genesis 1,2 are theological (framework view
--prose poem) - Intelligent Design
- All the above views are strictly creationists
and believe in intelligent design - Capital ID is a more recent movement, could be
YECS, PE, or TE.
40Language Random or stochastic?
- Random mutations and natural selection...(chance
and necessity -- Monod) - Stochastic optimisation
- e.g. used to price your stock portfolio .....
41Lego blocks or clay?
- Evo-Devo Lego Blocks
- pax6
- sonic-hedgehog
- shaven-baby
- tinman
- Endless Forms Most Beautiful The New Science of
Evo Devo and the Making of the Animal Kingdom.
S.B. Carroll (Blackwell Science 2005)
42Why so few genes?
Mycoplasma genitalium (483) (300 minimum?)
E.coli (5416)
S. cerevisiae (5800)
Drosophila Melanogaster (13,500)
C. elegans (19,500) P. pacificus (29,000)
H. sapiens (23,000)
43Why so few genes?
We share 15 of our genes with E. coli
25 yeast
50 flies
70 frogs
98 chimps
44Gene language
Why are there so few genes? complexity comes
from the interactions gene networks systems
biology
transcriptional network for yeast Saccharomyces
cerevisiae
45Nothing Buttery
humans are collections of chemicals
46Nothing Buttery
humans are collections of chemicals
47Nothing Buttery
humans are collections of chemicals
48Dawkins on being human
-
- "The individual organism ... is not fundamental
to life, but something that emerges when genes,
which at the beginning of evolution were
separate, warring entities, gang together in
co-operative groups as "selfish co-operators".
The individual organism is not exactly an
illusion. It is too concrete for that. But it is
a secondary, derived phenomenon, cobbled together
as a consequence of the actions of fundamentally
separate, even warring agents. - From Richard Dawkins, Unweaving the Rainbow,
(Penguin, London, 1998) p 308. -
Prof. Richard Dawkins (Oxford)
49Gene language
- Genes are trapped in huge colonies, locked
inside highly intelligent beings, moulded by the
outside world, communicating with it by complex
processes, through which, blindly, as if by
magic, function emerges. They are in you and me
we are the system that allows their code to be
read and their preservation is totally dependent
on the joy that we experience in reproducing
ourselves. We are the ultimate rationale for
their existence.
- Genes swarm in huge colonies, safe inside
gigantic lumbering robots, sealed off from the
outside world, communicating with it by tortuous
indirect routes, manipulating it by remote
control. They are in you and me they created us,
body and mind and their preservation is the
ultimate rationale for our existence.
- Denis Noble --
- The Music of Life Biology Beyond the Genome (OUP
2006)
- Richard Dawkins --
- The Selfish Gene (1976)
50Contingency v.s.deep structures Re-run the
tape of evolution?
When you examine the tapestry of evolution you
see the same patterns emerging over and over
again. Gould's idea of rerunning the tape of life
is not hypothetical it's happening all around
us. And the result is well known to biologists
evolutionary convergence. When convergence is the
rule, you can rerun the tape of life as often as
you like and the outcome will be much the same.
Convergence means that life is not only
predictable at a basic level it also has a
direction. Simon Conway Morris Life's Solution
Inevitable Humans in a Lonely Universe (CUP,
2003)
51Convergent Evolution?
Convergent evolution in mechanical design of
lamnid sharks and tunas Jeanine M. Donley, et al.
Nature 429, 61-65 (6 May 2004)
52Convergent Evolution
- North America
- Placental Sabre-toothed cat
- South America
- Marsupial Sabre-toothed cat
53Convergent Evolution
compound eye
camera eye
54Convergent Evolution?
- Enormous number of examples ... from proteins to
vision up to societies to intelligence. - Are rational conscious beings an inevitable
outcome?
55Summary
- What the Bible tells us about nature
- Created and sustained
- Genesis 1
- What Nature can tell us about God
- Natural theology and its critics
- God and Evolution
- Extracting much meaning from these mechanisms is
hard . - Metaphors are important
- Self-assembly (things that make themselves)
- random v.s. stochastic processes
- gene language etc..
- There is much more to discover
- Atheism of the gaps?
56- The Bible tells us about nature
- What nature tells us about God (natural theology)
- Evolution and its metaphors
57-------
58------------
59Case study 2 common descent of human chimp?
- Divergence of the chimpanzee and human lineages
occurred about 6 million years ago the times of
lineage divergence are not to scale - News Views The chimpanzee and us, Wen-Hsiung
Li and Matthew A. Saunders, Nature 437, 50-51
(1September 2005) .
60tapestry arguments in biology chromosomal
banding
Humans have 46 (2 X 23) chromosomes Apes have 48
(2 X 24) chromosomes
chromosome 2 Human, Chimp, Gorilla, Orang-utan
- The origin of man a chromosomal pictorial
legacy. J.J Yunis and O. Prakash, Science 215,
1525 (1982)
61tapestry arguments in biology fusion of
chromosome 2?
chromosome 2 Human, Chimp, Gorilla, Orang-utan
62tapestry arguments in biology evidence from
the human genome
Chromosome 2 is unique to the human lineage of
evolution, having emerged as a result of
head-to-head fusion of two acrocentric
chromosomes that remained separate in other
primates. The precise fusion site has been
located in 2q13-2q14.1 (ref. 2
hg16114455823-114455838), where our analysis
confirmed the presence of multiple subtelomeric
duplications to chromosomes 1, 5, 8, 9, 10, 12,
19, 21 and 22 (Fig. 3 Supplementary Fig. 3a,
region A). During the formation of human
chromosome 2, one of the two centromeres became
inactivated (2q21, which corresponds to the
centromere from chimp chromosome 13) and the
centromeric structure quickly deterioriated 42.
Generation and annotation of the DNA sequences of
human chromosomes 2 and 4, L.W. Hillier et al.,
Nature 434, 724 (2005).
63endogenous retroviruses
HERV-K insertions
- In humans endogenous retrovirus sequences make up
about 1 of the genome. - Lebedev, Y. B., et al. (2000) "Differences in
HERV-K LTR insertions in orthologous loci of
humans and great apes." Gene 247 265-277.
64tapestry arguments in biology more threads of
evidence
- Genetic threads
- SINEs (Alu )
- LINEs
- Retroviral insertions
- pseudo genes (e.g. olefaction)
- chromosomal inversions
- Phenotypal similarities
- Fossils
- The tapestry for do humans and chimpanzees share
a common ancestor? seems to most biologists
almost unbreakably strong
for physicists, mathematicians and engineers --
these arguments may still seem foreign and vague
where is the proof?, how do you know? -- so
communities talk past each other
65Jewish Commentators
- the sages agree that the creation of this earth
and sky was a single divine event and not a
series of distinct occurrences spread out over
six or seven days - N.M. Samuelson, Judaism and the Doctrine of
Creation, CUP (1994) p115 - The text does not point to the order of the
acts of creation the text does not by any
means teach which things were created first and
which later it only wants to teach us what was
the condition of things at the time when heaven
and earth were created, namely, that the earth
was without form and a confused mass - Rashi (1040-1105), Commentary on Genesis
- Many more examples, e.g. Maimonides (1135-1204)
etc
66- In understanding the central role of figurative
language in the early chapters of Genesis, the
Church Fathers were following an already
established Jewish tradition of creative and
highly flexible interpretation. Early Jewish
commentaries on Genesis favoured symbolic
readings of the early chapters. Many of the early
rabbinic writings were of the view that God
created everything instantaneously rather than in
any particular period of time. The Targums, the
Aramaic translations of and commentaries on the
Hebrew Scriptures with which Jesus and St Paul
would have been familiar, were extremely flexible
in how they 47 read (and what they read into)
these verses. The highly influential Alexandrian
Jew, Philo, a contemporary of both Jesus and
Paul, explained at some length how the days of
creation, the image of God, Adam and Eve, and
the garden of Eden were all intended
symbolically rather than literally, being no
mythical fictionsbut modes of making ideas
visible. 6 Such figurative readings continued
into the Middle Ages, in the work of rabbis such
as Rashi, Maimonides and Gersonides, and some
Christian theologians such as Nicholas of Lyra.
In the process, allegorical readings of Biblical
texts became excessive and it was in reaction to
this trend that the Reformers downplayed moral,
allegorical and anagogical interpretations
(representing three strands of the mediaeval
Quadrigaor fourfold sense of scripture) in
favour of a literal reading alone.7 Even then the
pattern wasnt universal. Calvin, for example,
favoured a literal interpretation but recognised
that Moses, whom he believed authored Genesis,
had adapted his discourse to common usage. 8
Rescuing Darwin Early Jewish commentaries on
Genesis favoured symbolic readings of the early
chapters.
67Science has a servant role in interpretation of
the Bible
- All truth is Gods truth, so, properly
interpreted, science and the Bible cannot
contradict
- The Bible must not be placed under any other
authority! no authority, even one at the apex of
the scientific world, may impose his authority on
the Bible in order to dictate how it is to be
understood, even with the best intentions. - Instead of an authority, however, a ministerial,
servant-role apears possible. .. The knowledge
derived from the observation of reality
(science) would help us to understand the
language of the Bible better. - Henri Blocher In the Beginning IVP (1984) p 25
68The Bible is not a science textbook
- The whole point of scripture is to bring us to a
knowledge of Christ --- and having come to know
him (and all that this implies), we should come
to a halt and not expect to learn more.
Scripture provides us with spectacles through
which we may view the world as Gods creation and
self-expression it does not, and was never
intended, to provide us with an infallible
repository of astronomical and medical
information.
John Calvin 1509-1564
69Warfield on evolution
- B. B. Warfield (1851-1921). A biblical
inerrantist as evolutionist. Livingstone DN, Noll
MA, 1 Isis. 2000 Jun91(2)283-304. - The theological doctrine of biblical
inerrancy is the intellectual basis for modern
creation science. Yet Benjamin Breckinridge
Warfield of Princeton Theological Seminary, the
theologian who more than any other defined modern
biblical inerrancy, was throughout his life open
to the possibility of evolution and at some
points an advocate of the theory. Throughout a
long career Warfield published a number of major
papers on these subjects, including studies of
Darwin's religious life, on the theological
importance of the age of humanity (none) and the
unity of the human species (much), and on
Calvin's understanding of creation as
proto-evolutionary. He also was an engaged
reviewer of many of his era's important books by
scientists, theologians, and historians who wrote
on scientific research in relation to traditional
Christianity. Exploration of Warfield's writing
on science generally and evolution in particular
retrieves for historical consideration an
important defender of mediating positions in the
supposed war between science and religion.
B.B. Warfield 1851-1921
70Writers of the Fundamentals
- One of the original Fundamentalists
- There is not a word in the Bible to indicate that
in its view death entered the animal world as a
consequence of the Sin of man. - When you say there is the six days and the
question whether those days are meant to be
measured by the twenty-four hours of the suns
revolution around the earth -- I speak of these
things popularly. It is difficult to see how
they should be so measured when the sun that is
to measure them is not introduced until the
fourth day. Do not think that this larger
reading of the days is a new speculation. You
find Augustine in early times declaring that it
is hard or altogether impossible to say what
fashion these days are, and Thomas Aquinas, in
the middle ages, leaving the matter an open
question.
James Orr 1844-1913
71AsideEmergence of Humans?
e.g. at what age is a child spiritually
responsible to God? John Stott on Homos Divinus
- Advice from C.S. Lewis
- When the author of Genesis says that God made man
in His own image, he may have pictured a vaguely
corporeal God making man as a child makes a
figure out of plasticine. A modern Christian
philosopher may think of the process lasting from
the first creation of matter to the final
appearance on this planet for an organism fit to
receive spiritual as well as biological life.
Both mean essentially the same thing. Both are
denying the same thing -- the doctrine that
matter by some blind power inherent in itself has
produced spirituality. - (C.S. Lewis, God in the Dock Eerdmans (1970), p
46)
72Advice from Billy Graham
- "I don't think that there's any conflict at all
between science today and the Scriptures. I think
that we have misinterpreted the Scriptures many
times and we've tried to make the Scriptures say
things they weren't meant to say, I think that we
have made a mistake by thinking the Bible is a
scientific book. The Bible is not a book of
science. The Bible is a book of Redemption, and
of course I accept the Creation story. I believe
that God did create the universe. I believe that
God created man, and whether it came by an
evolutionary process and at a certain point He
took this person or being and made him a living
soul or not, does not change the fact that God
did create man. ... whichever way God did it
makes no difference as to what man is and man's
relationship to God. - - Billy Graham quoted by David Frost
- Source Book - Billy Graham Personal Thoughts of
a Public Man (1997, p. 72-74)
73SUMMARY
- COMPLEX MATERIAL!
- Evolution as
- Natural history
- Mechanisms to create biological complexity
- World view (evolutionism)
- Metaphors are important
-
- The mechanisms of evolution can be beautiful
-
- Biblical Interpretation important to look at
genre of literature
74Writers of the Fundamentals
- One of the original Fundamentalists
- There is not a word in the Bible to indicate that
in its view death entered the animal world as a
consequence of the Sin of man. - When you say there is the six days and the
question whether those days are meant to be
measured by the twenty-four hours of the suns
revolution around the earth -- I speak of these
things popularly. It is difficult to see how
they should be so measured when the sun that is
to measure them is not introduced until the
fourth day. Do not think that this larger
reading of the days is a new speculation. You
find Augustine in early times declaring that it
is hard or altogether impossible to say what
fashion these days are, and Thomas Aquinas, in
the middle ages, leaving the matter an open
question.
James Orr 1844-1913
75The Bible and Science
- The lesson of Galileo, , should remind us that
careful observation of the natural world can
cause us to go back to Scripture and reexamine
whether Scripture actually teaches what we think
it teaches. Sometimes, on closer examination of
the text, we may find that our previous
interpretations were incorrect. - Wayne Grudem, Systematic Theology IVP (1994) p
273
Wayne Grudem
76The Bible is not a science textbook
- The whole point of scripture is to bring us to a
knowledge of Christ --- and having come to know
him (and all that this implies), we should come
to a halt and not expect to learn more.
Scripture provides us with spectacles through
which we may view the world as Gods creation and
self-expression it does not, and was never
intended, to provide us with an infallible
repository of astronomical and medical
information.
John Calvin 1509-1564
77Advice from Schaefer
- We must take ample time, and sometimes this will
mean a long time, to consider whether the
apparent clash between science and revelation
means that the theory set forth by science is
wrong or whether we must reconsider what we
thought the Bible says. - Francis Schaefer
Francis Schaefer 1912-1984
78(No Transcript)
79Intelligent Design (capitalised)
heterogeneous movement -- will focus on ID
centred at Discovery Institute
- some key publications and people
- The Mystery of Lifes Origin (1984)
- Charles B. Thaxton, Walter L. Bradley, Roger L.
Olsen - Evolution, a Theory in Crisis (1986)
- Michael Denton
- Darwin on Trial (1991)
- Philip Johnson
- Darwins Black Box (1996)
- Michael Behe (CT book of the year)
- Icons of evolution (2000)
- Jonathan Wells
- No Free Lunch (2001)
- William Dembski
80What is ID
- Intelligent agency, as an aspect of scientific
theory making, has more explanatory power in
accounting for the specified, and sometimes
irreducible complexity of some physical systems,
including biological entities, and/or the
existence of the universe as a whole, than the
blind forces of. . . matter.1 That is,
intelligent design is a better explanation for
entities exhibiting complex specified information
(CSI) than are appeals to the inherent capacities
of nature (i.e. chance and/or physical
necessity). ID suggests that the world contains
objects that exhaust the explanatory resources of
undirected natural causes, and can only be
adequately explained by recourse to intelligent
causation. - (definition from Peter S. Williams)
81Irreducible Complexity
Michael Behe (1996)
- Bacterial flagellum, immune system, etc... are
too complex to have evolved
- This result is so unambiguous and so significant
that it must be ranked as one of the greatest
achievements in the history of science ... The
discovery of intelligent design rivals those of
Newton and Einstein, Lavoisier and Schroedinger,
Pasteur and Darwin.
82Complex Specified Information
William Dembski
- CSI -- information that could not have come
there by chance alone? - e.g. when we see a statue v.s. weathered rock
- Law of the conservation of information
83Intelligent Design
- Philosophical issues
- Definition of science (demarcation) ?
- Problems, but why not follow the evidence?
- Theological issues
- when/why does God intervene?
- miracles?
- Newman/Barth critique
84ID and Christians
- Major issues is -- why these miracles?
- Miracles occur to serve Gods redemptive purpose
- Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin etc...
And I hold, that when God works miracles, he
does not do it in order to supply the wants of
nature, but those of grace. Whoever thinks
otherwise, must needs have a very mean notion of
the wisdom and power of God Leibnitz
e.g. what is the Biblical rationale for
supernatural action aiding the creation of the
flagellum?
85Intelligent Design (capitalised)
- GOOD
- Looking at complex questions in
science/philosophy - counteracting evolutionism
- middle road, broad church?
- LESS GOOD
- Detached from scripture
- doesnt solve some pressing questions (like death
before fall) - very political
- http//www.discovery.org
- William Dembski, Michael Behe, Stephen Meyer,
Paul Nelson
86Calvin on using science
- As far as I am aware, there is no evidence that
Galileo had any direct knowledge of Calvin's
writings. Nevertheless his understanding of the
nature of the language used by the Bible when
referring to the natural world is the same as
Calvin's as the following quotations from the
Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina show. - B1. These propositions set down by the Holy
Ghost were set down in that manner by the sacred
scribes in order to accommodate them to the
capacities of the common people, who are rude and
unlearned. (p. 181) - B2. It is necessary for the Bible, in order to
be accommodated to the understanding of every
man, to speak many things which appear to differ
from the absolute truth so far as the bare
meaning of the words is concerned. (p. 182) - B3. For that reason it appears that nothing
physical which sense-experience sets before our
eyes, or which necessary demonstrations prove to
us, ought to be called in question (much less
condemned) upon the testimony of biblical
passages which may have some different meaning
beneath their words. (p. 182f) - B4. ...having arrived at any certainties in
physics, we ought to utilize these as the most
appropriate aids in the true exposition of the
Bible and in the investigation of those meanings
which are necessarily contained therein, for
these must be concordant with demonstrated
truths. (p. 183) - The first two quotations express the same
'accommodation' understanding of biblical
language as Calvin adopted. The third recognises
that, as a result of this, the literal sense of
the biblical text may sometimes be at variance
with the scientific understanding of the natural
phenomenon described. In the final quotation
Galileo makes the point made by Prof. McKay that
one reason why biblical interpreters should take
scientific knowledge into account is that it will
help them to recognise when the biblical writers
are using the language of appearance or cultural
idioms, and so help them avoid the kind of
misinterpretation made by those who condemned
Galileo. - lehttp//www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk/cis/lucas/lectur
e.html