From: Lucien Carroll (serapio@linuxmail.org)
Date: Wed Jun 18 2003 - 16:13:01 EDT
Hi,
Moorad said:
> I think is best to think in terms of physical and nonphysical rather than theism vs. atheism. The former allows us to define science as the study of the purely physical. The obvious existence of the nonphysical—human self, reasoning, etc.—gives the limitations of science and the need to suppose the basis for the study of the nonphysical aspect of Nature. Clearly, the assumption of a Creator is the logical end of sound, honest, human reasoning regarding the fundamental question of origins. Therein begins the basis for the study of the whole of reality.
I respond:
I don't think the existence of the non-physical (self, mind, thought etc) defines a clear boundary for science. It is possible that the non-physical is indeed another realm of existence, but the experience that we (selves) can interact with our bodies and a look at the conceptual layering in science suggests that our intuitions of mind and self are conceptual simplifications of whatever it is that goes on in our heads, just as Newtonian mechanics are for quantum. We can indeed conduct investigations by reasoning alone, regarding souls, reasoning itself, hypothetical geometries, or quantum, classical or Aristotelian dynamics. But at some point our conceptual framework breaks down, and diverges from reality.
If I understand you correctly, you are saying study of the origin of souls implies a Creator. In a way that makes sense, but our understanding of souls is pretty weak. It's close enough to our experience to warrant serious consideration, but not enough to make it a formal basis for studying reality.
Ted Davis said:
> I understand Lucien's difficulties with understanding the fall. IMO, the
> problem of evil cannot be fully resolved within theism. Let me add,
> however, that nontheists don't get off the hook: if there is no God, no
> ultimate good, then there really is no category of evil. Thus, we can't
> really claim honestly or even coherently that the holocaust (for example)
> was evil--and that does seem to be a very large problem indeed. Nor can
> nontheists fully resolve what we might call the problem of design--how it is
> that the universe itself, and its contents appear so strongly to have been
> purposefully made. Why, to cite a famous paper by Eugene Wigner,
> mathematics is so unreasonably fruitful in explaining nature. We do seem to
> have something like a "draw" between design and theodicy.
The problem of good is real but not insoluble. The atheist is left without an authority on good and evil, but that does not invalidate the concepts. Within theism, good and evil are declared such because they are respectively beneficial or detrimental to us, constructive or destructive. Even if there is no God and no eternal souls, those things which are constructive or destructive to our systems are still much the same.
> As for the fall, I like what John Polkinghorne writes in Belief in God in
> an Age of Science, p. 89. "There was death in the world long before there
> were our human precursors. After all, it was the extinction of the
> dinosaurs that gave us mammals our evolutionary chance. But the Fall, as I
> have described it, turned death into mortality. Self-consciousness made us
> aware of our transience--we could foresee our deaths--and alienation from
> the God who is the eternal ground of hope, turned that recognition into
> sadness and bitterness. In a similar way, the problems of living,
> symbolised by thorns and thistles, became causes of frustration and the
> expense of spirit."
>
> ted
Thanks. I may have to go read more Polkinghorne.
-Lucien.
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