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- From: lippard@skyblu.ccit.arizona.edu (James J. Lippard)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Creator or Blind Watchmaker?
- Message-ID: <27JAN199315381034@skyblu.ccit.arizona.edu>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 22:38:00 GMT
- Distribution: world,local
- Organization: University of Arizona
- Lines: 134
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-
- Johnson sent me a copy of the paper of this title from the January
- 1993 issue of _First Things_, and I thought some portions to be
- worth quoting:
-
- p. 9: "Those who regard Scripture as more authoritative than
- scientific theories, and who are confident that they know the
- correct way to interpret it, may choose to defend the Genesis
- account as literally true and employ scientific argument to
- discredit the alternatives. Fundamentalist creationists of this
- kind make up perhaps half of the 47 percent that the Gallup
- poll described as creationist. Unfortunately, the commitment of
- this large group to a literal interpretation of Genesis has
- confused and divided the Christian world, and even played into
- the hands of the evolutionary naturalists. Darwinists assiduously
- promote the notion that the only possible alternatives are six-day
- Genesis literalism on the one hand, and fully naturalistic,
- neo-Darwinistic evolution on the other."
-
- [Johnson suggests putting aside biblical issues, the age of the
- earth, and the method of creation on the same page. He seems to
- suggest that he is unconcerned about whether or not evolution
- has occurred or not.]
-
- p. 10: "The theistic naturalists seem to share this fervent faith
- that a naturalistic explanation for the origin of life simply *must*
- be there to be found. To suppose that God may have played some
- direct, active role in creating the first life on earth would
- reduce God to the status of a creature, would posit an impossible
- missing relation between the members of nature, and would deny the
- functional integrity of the universe. One might almost say that it
- would constitute blasphemy."
-
- [This is the view he is arguing against.]
-
- p. 12: "In any case, Darwinistic evolution would be a most peculiar
- creative method for God to choose, given the Darwinistic insistence
- that biological evolution was *undirected*. That requirement means
- that God neither programmed evolution in advance nor stepped in from
- time to time to pull it in the right direction. How then did God
- ensure that humans would come into existence so that salvation
- history would have a chance to occur?"
-
- [This is his critique of "theistic naturalism," which holds that
- God exists but that nature proceeds without supernatural influence.]
-
- p. 12: "Of course, God *could* make some use of random mutation and
- natural selection in a fundamentally directed creative process. God
- can act freely as He chooses: that is just the problem for those
- who would constrain God by philosophy. God could employ mutation
- and natural selction or act supernaturally, whether or not His choice
- causes inconvenience for scientists who want to be able to explain and
- control everything. Once we allow God to enter the picture at all,
- there is no reason to be certain a priori that natural science has the
- power to discover the entire mechanism of creation. Maybe science can
- discover how living things were made, and maybe it can't. Consistent
- theists will therefore accept Darwinist claims for the creative power
- of mutation and selection only insofar as those claims can be supported
- by evidence. That isn't very far at all."
-
- [This seems to me to be Johnson's central claim. That there is no
- a priori reason to suppose that God doesn't intervene, and that
- the empirical evidence for such things as common ancestry is so weak
- that we should be at best agnostic, and more likely reject it in
- favor of divine intervention. Further, he argues that the only
- reason people have thought that the empirical evidence for common
- ancestry is strong is because of their presupposition that God does
- not or cannot intervene. His argument about the a priori doesn't
- seem half-bad, but I think he is wrong about the state of the
- empirical evidence--and that his *own* presuppositions are biasing
- his own examination of it.]
-
- p. 13: "When people ask whether Darwinism and theism are compatible,
- they normally take the Darwinism for granted and ask whether the theism
- has to be discarded. It is far more illuminating, however, to approach
- the question from the other side. Is there any reason that a person
- who believes in a real, personal God should believe that biological
- creation has occurred by Darwinian evolution? The answer is clearly
- no. The sufficiency of any process of chemical evolution to produce
- life has certainly not been demonstrated, nor has the ability of
- natural selection to produce new body plans, complex organs, or anything
- else except variation within types that already exist. The fossil
- record notoriously does not evidence any continuous process of gradual
- change. Rather, it consistently shows that new forms appear suddenly
- and fully formed in the rocks, and thereafter remain fundamentally
- unchanged. ... If Darwinian evolution is the only allowable source
- for life's diversity and complexity, then the shortage of evidence
- doesn't matter. The only question, to borrow Darwin's own words,
- is why 'Nature may almost be said to have guarded against the
- frequent discovery of her transitional or linking forms.'"
-
- p. 14, continuing immediately: "Atheists can leave the matter there,
- but theists have to go farther. If God exists, then Darwinian
- evolution is not the only alternative, and there is no reason for
- a theist to believe that God employed it beyond the relatively
- trivial level where the effects of variation and selection can
- actually be observed.
- "In short, the reason that Darwinism and theism are fundamentally
- incompatible is not that God could not have used evolution by
- natural selection to do his creating. Darwinian evolution might seem
- unbiblical to some, or too cruel and wasteful a method for a benevolent
- Creator to choose, but it is always possible that God might do something
- that confounds our expectations. No, the contradiction between Darwinism
- and theism goes much deeper. To know that Darwinism is true (as a general
- explanation for the history of life), one has to know that no alternative
- to natural evolution is possible. To know *that* is to assume that God
- does not exist, or at least that God does not or cannot create. To
- infer that mutation and selection did the creating because nothing else
- was available, and then to bring God back into the picture as the omnipotent
- being who chose to create by mutation and selection, is to indulge
- in self-contradiction."
-
- [Here Johnson seems to contradict his earlier statements about what can
- and cannot be established a priori. His sentence "To know that Darwinism
- is true ... one has to know that no alternative to naturalistic evolution
- is possible" is false, whether he means "logically possible" or "physically
- possible." Either way, it leads to a radical skepticism, to a rejection
- of virtually all knowledge. Ruling out all alternative *possibilities*
- is far too strong a condition for knowledge. I would challenge Johnson
- to specify what *relevant* *probabilities* (as in probable explanations,
- not numeric probabilities) have *not* been ruled out as an alternative
- to "naturalistic evolution." If there are no highly probable alternatives
- to naturalistic evolution, then we *do* know that naturalistic evolution
- has taken place. Johnson suggests that there are such possibilities, but
- never actually specifies any. This is surely a tactic to avoid having
- to defend his own views, as I suspect that any possible alternative he
- would be happy believing suffers from problems of internal incoherence.
- (E.g., if God is good and doesn't want to deceive us, why plant all this
- misleading evidence for evolution? Johnson's only response to this will
- be to deny that there is such evidence.)]
-
- Jim Lippard Lippard@CCIT.ARIZONA.EDU
- Dept. of Philosophy Lippard@ARIZVMS.BITNET
- University of Arizona
- Tucson, AZ 85721
-