Showing posts with label David Crumm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Crumm. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2009

#53. Bridging the Gap


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One of the reasons why the word "convergence" in my blog title sound so strange is because many people still think science and religion are opposed to one another.



They're not. Obviously they are two very different things.

But while most of us assume that we know what the difference is, it's not easy to put that difference into words. What this post is about is an attempt to state the difference between science and religion clearly and to spell out the practical importance of bridging the gap between them.

I think the effort is worth it because once we're clear about the difference, we can have a much better understanding of their relationship and also of their surprisingly important practical consequences for our current environmental crisis.

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As a start, history helps a lot in getting that difference clear. From the evidence of archeology and anthropology, religion seems to be as old as humanity itself-- several million years. Science, on the other hand, began only recently-- about 500 years ago.

Even if we think of science as having begun back in the time of ancient Greeks and Babylonians, it's still recent in comparison with the several million years of human history.

Five hundred years out of two million years is a very small fraction: 500/2,000,000ths. It looks even smaller as a decimal: 0.0025. As a human enterprise, science has been around only ¼ of one percent as long as religion.

And yet, in that short time our misuse of science has totally transformed our existence and even the very Earth itself. That our home planet has become inhospitable is what we mean by "the environmental crisis." So whether we care about religion or not, it's obviously important that we understand just what science is, if we are to be part of the healing of the Earth.

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The best thing I've seen dealing with the difference between science and religion is a recent talk given at the annual conference of the Metanexus Institute held this year in Phoenix, Arizona, in July.

If you're unfamiliar with Metanexus, it's a Philadelphia-based global endeavor dealing with science and religion. I mentioned it in post #39 (Hebrew Thought); it has an excellent e-publication which you might like to check out: The Global Spiral.

This year, several of the conference's major addresses were made available on line prior to the beginning of the conference. It seems Metanexus thinks along the same lines as the journalist-author David Crumm. I quoted him in post #51 (A New Series of Posts).

He says that five hundred years ago, "global change came through movable type and pamphleteering. Today, it's the Internet and blogs." To effect social change in our day, Crumm says, we need to "publish quickly and often."

So, a word of congratulations and thanks to Metanexus for having such a fine collection of topics and speakers, and for making their papers available on line-- even before they were officially presented at the conference!

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The talk dealing with the difference between science and religion was given by Dr. Jakob Wolf, a Lutheran pastor and professor of theology at the University of Copenhagen.

His paper is one of the most enjoyable essays I've read in a long time. It's intelligent, honest, and free of the ponderous academic style that is so deadly for easy understanding and delight. I'm planning to give a summary in this post of a few of his main ideas.

Dr. Wolf makes two especially significant points. One is about our critical need for a clear understanding of how science and religion are related. The second is that, in order to have that understanding, we also need a clear description of what is known in modern philosophy as "phenomenology."

"Phenomenology," needless to say, isn't an everyday word. But it's a necessary concept if we are to understand how science and religion differ and why that difference is important.

Professor Wolf's basic point is explicit: science by definition is a search for causes and explanations of how things work, while religion has to do with our valuing of things.

If you are thinking, "Well, OK, but that's not anything new," I agree. 
Hang in there! One of the things that's so valuable about Dr. Wolf's presentation is that he spells out just what it means to say that "science intentionally reduces things to the simplest explanations of how things work." In our day, that's an especially important concept.

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He begins by noting that science is a human project. It wasn't accidental; it was deliberately invented by earlier thinkers as a way to understand the world that didn't depend on the pre-scientific view that whatever happens in human life is the result of the whims of the gods.

A familiar example of events being determined by the gods' arbitrary whims is the story of the wanderings of Odysseus. You may remember how, in the Odyssey, the god Poseidon causes the wind to blow Odysseus off course on his way home from the Trojan war. It took Odysseus 20 years to get back home simply because he had displeased Poseidon.

In that pre-scientific perspective, there were no clear patterns to the way things worked. The Greeks of antiquity, however, developed “a radical new idea, that the phenomena in nature do not occur as a result of the free decisions made by the gods."

Since its beginning science has been defined by this restriction: only the mechanical laws of nature and chance occurrences are considered valid scientific explanations. The ideal of science is still the same today: to understand how specific causes, without outside interference, results in specific effects. Science is intentionally and deliberately mechanistic in its perspective.

Scientific researchers work hard to figure out how things work and to make use of that understanding to make things work better. An example familiar to everyone of the good use of our understanding of the working of things is the miracle of modern dentistry.

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Religion, obviously, is something very different from this mechanistic view of how the world works. Religion simply is not about trying to understand the mechanical results of specific causes.

However-- and this is a key idea-- the very basis of science is the assumption that specific causes produce specific results, and that, when we work at it, we humans can figure out (at least some of) the patterns to how things work. Another way to say that is that the designs which we see in the world's workings are humanly understandable patterns.

Although it has taken a great deal of effort, over the last five centuries scientific researchers have been able to figure out how some of those intelligible patterns work: how stars are formed, how living things reproduce, how language is learned by young children.

But it's important to see that the human enterprise we call science assumes the intelligibility of nature. While research scientists try to figure out the cause-and-effect details in the patterns found in things like planetary formation, embryological growth, and speech development, that fact that those patterns are intelligible isn't science. 

It's something else.

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In Europe, the understanding that there are intelligible patterns to how things in nature work is referred to as "intelligent design." But, as Dr. Wolf says, in the United States, the term has been taken over by Christian fundamentalists to promote their creationist views.

That's a problem, he says, because "intelligent design" is a very positive idea. It's a deep and rich concept and "it would be a tragedy to lose it."

But while it's obviously not a scientific concept, he also insists that neither is it a religious concept. It's something else, a completely different aspect of our human attempts to make sense of the world. The study of that "something else" is known as "phenomenology."

Because phenomenology is so important for an understanding of the difference between religion and science, I am going make a probably-foolish attempt to explain just what "phenomenology" means as I understand it. Bear with me. I think it's worth it.

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Phenomenology is a branch of modern philosophy that has to do with how we understand things. It is our attempt to "understand understanding," as the biogenetic structuralists like to say. Readers of earlier posts know that I wrote about Biogenetic Structuralism in many of them; if it's new to you, you might want to check out a few, for example: #8 (Background to Biogenetic Structuralism) or #10 (Overview of Biogenetic Structuralism).

In everyday speech, the word "phenomenon" refers to something which is unique or special. If a cow gives birth to a two-headed calf or weather conditions result in snow with a bluish tint, those events are said to be "phenomena." But we're more familiar with the word being used as an adjective-- as when we say of something really special, "It was phenomenal!"

In the philosophical sense, in contrast, a "phenomenon" is anything we can observe-- any object, event, person or process that we can be aware of. So in this technical sense, every observable thing is "phenomenal."

It's important to note that while phenomenology is a human endeavor-- just as science is-- it's not an attempt to understand the cause-and-effect patterns to how things work. Rather, it is an attempt to understand how our perception of things works.

Phenomenologists refer to our perception of things-- our observing, knowing, being aware of events, processes, persons-- as our "apprehension" of them. The point of all this is that our apprehension of design in nature is not the result of thinking about those patterns but is the direct result of our immediate experience of the fact that the phenomena have patterns.

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Dr. Wolf notes that everyone-- "even the most hardcore Darwinists"-- agrees that natural phenomena have patterns. No one-- "not even militant atheists," he says-- denies that there are patterns to how things work: "the perception of design in nature is as old as human reason itself. It is spontaneous, involuntary, universal, and not even a matter of choice."

One more idea. It may sound like double talk at first, but it's not. The fact that we can see patterns to natural processes like the formation or stars or the development of an embryo is itself a phenomenon. In slightly different words: the human ability to see that some phenomena in nature are intelligible is also an intelligible phenomenon.

The point is that our apprehension of design in nature (which is the direct result of our immediate experience of phenomena having patterns) is something completely different from our effort to figure out how those patterns work.

So, the apprehension of design is not "science."

But it's not "religion," either.

It's something completely different from both-- a “third” thing. And it is, as Dr. Wolf says, what "bridges the gap" between science and religion.

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While science is our effort to understand the intelligible designs we apprehend in nature-- in terms of random, unconscious and impersonal forces-- religion interprets those designs as a result of a creative intelligence or a divine mind.

Dr. Wolf lists some of the common interpretations which humans have come up with in our recognition of the intelligible patterns we observe in nature, things like pantheism, stoicism, neo-Platonism, pan-en-theism, deism and, of course, theism (which is where theologians jump in!).

When we keep in mind that both science and religion are based on the "phenomenological apprehension of design," we see that, while science makes use of the phenomenological perception of intelligent design to figure out how the patterns work and religion interprets the intelligence in the designs as coming from a creative consciousness, religion and science are in fact two totally different things.

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At this point, you are probably saying to yourself, "OK. But, so what?"
Well, in fact, many significant things follow. One is that the "phenomenological apprehension of design" isn't as unusual as the phenomenologists' name for it might make us think. It's a down to earth experience familiar to all of us. We just call it other names.

Another is that the "phenomenological apprehension of design" has some important implications for our understanding of those Sophia/Wisdom perspectives which I've mentioned in many previous posts as being at the core of the western religious tradition.

I'll share some thoughts about both of those ideas in future posts. Here, I will offer just one very practical response to that "So what?" that may have been in your mind.

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Wolf notes that it's almost impossible in the United States to be sympathetic to the idea of design in nature because, as he says, the idea of design in nature has been compromised by American fundamentalists' use of it to promote their creationism views.

But the whole point of Dr. Wolf's talk is that "it would be a disaster if we abandon the idea of design in nature. It is a philosophical idea that we in no way can afford to lose."

Why not? He spells it out nicely.

If we have only science and religion, and the idea of design in nature fits into neither of these categories, we tend to lose it as a valid concept for expressing our experience of nature.

But neither institutional religion nor scientific rationalism provides us with that experience of nature. And in this time of environmental crisis, it's our experience of nature that makes all the difference. Dr. Wolf talks about the environmental situation in terms of "ethics."

He notes that theories are never ethically indifferent, that they have practical consequences. Here, the fundamental connection between theory and ethics is that the different ways in which we experience things determine the ways we treat them.

If we see the creatures of nature only as the results of unconscious processes and random events (in the way which science-- by conscious intention-- does), then it is impossible, as he says, that they have any intrinsic value.

But "if they do have a value in their own right, it is outrageous to damage them."

And the one thing that justifies this "ethical" view of nature is our phenomenological recognition of intelligent design in nature.

Neither patriarchal religion nor mechanistic science-- but only our personal experience of nature as an expression of intelligent design-- can inspire each of us to personally contribute to the healing of the Earth.

sam@macspeno.com


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PS. Two articles in today's (23 Aug 09) New York Times are relevant to this post. One is by Thomas L. Friedman, the other by Robert Wright.
In "Connecting Nature's Dots," Friedman quotes Map Ives, director of sustainability for Wilderness Safaris in Botswana, about reading "Mother Nature’s hieroglyphics." It's an excellent example of what Jacob Wolf means by "apprehending intelligent design."

Director Ives says, “If you spend enough time in nature and allow yourself to slow down sufficiently to let your senses work, then through exposure and practice, you will start to sense the meanings in the sand, the grasses, the bushes, the trees, the movement of the breezes, the thickness of the air, the sounds of the creatures and the habits of the animals with which you are sharing that space.”
Friedman adds, "Humans were actually wired to do this a long time ago."

The point of his column, says Friedman, is that "We’re trying to deal with a whole array of integrated problems-- climate change, energy, biodiversity loss, poverty alleviation and the need to grow enough food to feed the planet-- separately." But "We need to make sure that our policy solutions are as integrated as nature itself."

Poverty fighters, climate-change folks, food advocates and biodiversity protectors "all need to go on safari together."

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The other article is "A Grand Bargain Over Evolution" by Robert Wright. 

It's also about apprehending design in nature. Although it's longer and more complex than Freidman's, it's well-worth working your way through.

The sections about the "intrinsic creative power" of natural selection and about seeing intelligible design in plants and animals are especially helpful. "Unlike a rock," says Wright, "an organism has things that look as if they were designed to do something."

Most helpful is the section in which he talks about "seeing the same kind of pattern in the development of human culture."

He says, "The technological part of cultural evolution has relentlessly expanded social organization, leading us from isolated hunter-gatherer villages all the way to the brink of a truly global society. And the continuing cohesion of this social system (also known as world peace) may depend on people everywhere using their moral equipment with growing wisdom-- critically reflecting on their moral intuitions, and on the way they’re naturally deployed, and refining that deployment."

Good stuff. I hope you can get to read it.

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

#51. A New Series of Posts

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After a seven-month break, I am beginning a new series of posts. I used the time to catch up on some of the many interesting things going on in the worlds of science and religion, especially with regard to new attitudes about biological evolution, the diversity of religions which have emerged in humanity's cultural evolution, and our role in the cosmic process.

There are so many conflicting views about these two major areas of human life that to talk about the convergence of science and religion sounds, I'm aware, more than a bit naive.

But it seems to me that that "convergence" is the right term for what's happening at a deep level in our human world just now.

At least it describes my own experience, and I've learned over the years that whatever I'm experiencing in terms of cultural development is usually being experienced by others, too. We're simply not yet in touch with one another to any great extent. Until recently in the world's development, there just wasn't any way for us to link up.

But with the growth of the internet and world wide web, we can be in touch more and more. This blog is one small contribution to that process.

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It's great fun, but also a lot of work. Spelling out personal thoughts so that they are clear to everyone reading them is a tremendous challenge. And it takes time and energy away from learning more on my part.

"Learning more" is what I've been doing since I posted my last entry, #50 (The End of Patriarchy), back in December 2008. And I hope to share some of it in this new set of posts.

One of the most interesting things I've learned recently is how to express well the difference between science and religion. The difference may seem obvious, but that we're not clear about it is the source of many of our most common conflicts. It will be the topic of my next post (#52).

My inborn teaching instincts keep me always on the alert for finding the right words for making sense to readers of important ideas that are, for the most part, still missing from our culture.

As I said back in posts #34 (Talking About Us) and #40 (Wisdom/Sophia), we still live in a culture of distraction. And for that the media carries major responsibility. A good example is the death of Michael Jackson on June 25. Practically everyone on our planet knew about it in just a few hours.

But not many were aware of the deaths several weeks earlier of Thomas Berry and Ewert Cousins, two giants of our contemporary world whose life's work is of tremendous relevance for science, religion and human survival on the Earth.

Ewert Cousins was a professor of theology at Fordham University for 40 years. He was a world-renowned theologian and pioneer in inter-religious dialogue who brought Christians, Hindus, Muslims, Jews, and Buddhists together at gatherings around the globe. He died on May 30.

His full obituary is worth reading. Among other things, he is responsible for the name "Second Axial Period" used to describe our present time of great turning. I talked about his work in post #35 (Aspects of the Immense Transition, Parts 1 & 2).

In contrast to the lack of familiarity with Professor Cousins, almost everyone interested in environmental concerns knows something of the "grand old man" of the New Cosmology, Thomas Berry. He died two days after Cousins, on June 1. A fine obituary appeared in the New York Times. It describes him as a man "with a mission for mankind."

Berry's work is mentioned in nine of my previous posts: #2 (Spirituality Research Symposium), #3 (High School 50th-Anniversary Report), #5 (Alternative to "Human Nature Redux"), #6 (Tai Chi), #7 (Brief Autobiography), #17 (What is the Universe Doing?) , #24 (Ontogenesis: Phases One & Two), #31 (Integrating the Four Functions) and #32 (Comments Collected).

I was lucky to learn about these men early in my life, back in the 1960s. And I got to meet both of them several times. I hope to share more thoughts about their work in this new set of posts.

The media, as I said, bears great responsibility for our culture of distraction. I had thought, when I was first writing this, that I would offer as an example the media's apparent over-emphasis on those few minutes of Obama's recent healthcare press conference when he offered his thoughts about the arrest of a Harvard professor for "breaking in" to his own home.

Most of that conference dealt with healthcare concerns which are, needless to say, of tremendous significance for the American people, but the media-- with its delight in controversy-- focused on the president's use of the word "stupid" with regard to that police action.

However, I changed my mind when I read the e-mail note sent to those on his mailing list by Rabbi Arthur Waskow from the Shalom Center in Philadelphia. I wrote about Rabbi Arthur's work in post #47 (The Growing Edge).

In his note he asks, Was the Cambridge Cop "Stupid"? It's a fine example of what needs to be said and which, as far as I know, has been said by no one else. It's not on the web, but if you'd like to read it I'll be glad to forward you the copy I received. Just let me know: sam@macspeno.com.

I'd still like to offer an example of the media's typical focus on trivia, in contrast to concern for the significance of the work of people like Ewert Cousins and Thomas Berry.

A good example is the criticism leveled at the president when he threw out the first pitch at the Major League Baseball's All-Star game. Seems the well-worn bluejeans he wore on the pitcher's mound were considered "un-cool."

That's a good example, indeed, of our culture of distraction. Sad stuff.

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Probably the thing that surprised me most when I first started the blog was how few readers were willing to respond by way of comments on specific thoughts in the posts.

Sending a comment is hardly a high-tech process, yet it seems to be intimidating to many. And, believe me, I'm sympathetic. You should have seen me trying to learn how to listen to a voice-mail message on my new iPhone. Shaking her head, my usually patient daughter who was trying to teach me said, "I wish the Apple people could see what they're up against."

With regard to readers being hesitant to send comments, I think that even more intimidating than the technology is the feeling that our personal thoughts don't really matter all that much-- especially when it comes to such deep areas as spirituality and science. It's "Heavy, man!" as the hippies used to say.

We're still working our way out of the time when authority was vested in others-- parents, politicians, church leaders. But evolutionary development is happening in that area, too. We're learning-- quickly, in terms of our awareness, although sometimes quite slowly in terms of our ability to deal with it emotionally-- that we can't depend on external authority as earlier generations did.

It's been a painful lesson, taught us by those who the American people allowed to remain in the White House for eight years and by pastors appointed by the religious authorities in many denominations. We're learning that we shouldn't hand over our authority either to popes or presidents.

And we're learning that we can't let them-- or the media-- tell us what to think. It's easy to accept that thought as a concept; but, as I've said, for many it's far harder to accept emotionally.

The evolutionary worldview helps here, too. If the universe worked for 14 billion years to bring us into existence-- with our personal thoughts and personal feelings at this time and this place in cosmic history-- then our thoughts and feelings do count.

And if they count to the universe itself and to mystery behind the universe, we shouldn't hesitate to share them, and to do so by making use of whatever technology is available to us at this time in humanity's cultural development.

Reading newspapers or watching a ball game on TV is mostly a passive-receptive activity, and so is reading a long or "heavy" post. It takes a lot more active energy to write and send even a brief comment.

But writers need feedback as does anyone involved in a creative activity. And all of us need to value our own thoughts and feelings more than in the past and to realize that they do matter to others. So I hope you will share your thoughts and feelings with other readers. I need your help.

That sharing is, I think, what the convergence of science and religion is all about at its deepest level.

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Good examples of that sharing appear in two relatively new online publications, the Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue and ReadTheSpirit.

The Journal is academically oriented, while ReadTheSpirit is for a popular audience, but they both focus on religion and spirituality from an inter-religious perspective.

Their concern is the promotion of good relationships between the various religious traditions of the Earth which emerged in various parts of the world during thousands of years of humanity's cultural evolution, and which now, due to the shrinking of the Earth, have no choice but to come to understand themselves in relation to the others.

The founding editor of ReadTheSpirit, David Crumm, is an author, journalist, and filmmaker who was for more than two decades a religion writer for the Detroit Free Press and the Knight-Ridder and Gannett newspaper chains. He has an excellent essay posted just a few weeks ago on theJournal website. It's called "When the Old Connectors Are Fading."

In his essay he notes that five hundred years ago global change "came through movable type and pamphleteering. Today, it's the Internet and blogs."

He notes that ReadTheSpirit began with the words "We haven't seen times like these in 500 years." The reference is to the Reformation era in Europe around the time of the discovery of the New World, but the global transformation which began then is still in process.

My blog is a very small part of that global transformation. But it is part of it. And it does need your help.

I hardly knew what I was doing when I started the blog back in December 2006, and I still don't. It's an on-going creative process.

My main concern, then, was to share with readers insights about the links between science and religion, especially those that are overlooked in public education and ignored by the media.

Although I share with readers many of the new scholarly voices addressing these important issues, it's not meant to be an academic publication. It's intended to reach real people struggling with basic understanding of the issues raised by humanity's present transformational stage of our evolutionary development.

Many readers have told me they couldn't keep up with the two or three entries each month I'd been posting, so I am thinking that with this second series of posts I should aim for just one entry a month. That should be helpful for readers-- and for me.

And I usually tell readers who mention having trouble keeping up with the posts that they will likely be on the web for years, so "Take your time; read them when you can."

But David Crumm offers a different view. He says "Publish quickly-- and often." I don't know which direction I'll take, yet.

The one thing I do know is that I need your help. So if something that appears in this blog touches you, say so. Just quote the lines that spoke to you and add "I really like this" or "I think you're wrong about this." It's as easy as that.

These are exciting times and anyone with views about what's happening is needed.

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In June I posted a temporary entry to let those who have asked know that something more was in process.

I called that temporary post " "COMING SOON"-- maybe!" It was posted on 28 June 09, six months to the day from my last post. In it I said that "I haven't been able to get it together yet." And tried to be funny in describing it:

What's "coming soon"?

Facebook? No.

Text-messaging? No.

Twittering? No.

Two things:

1) Some thoughts about the connections between evolution and ritual-- the one big area of interest that I didn't get to in my previous posts.

2) Examples of personal experiences linking religious ritual with the world's evolution.

Writing about ritual and evolution is one of my main goals, although I still don't know if I'll ever be capable enough to spell out well my understanding of the role of religious ritual in cosmic evolution.

Sharing my personal experience along those lines is also one of my long-term goals and I've been strongly encouraged by readers to give these entries a more personal touch. For me that's even more challenging than trying to express concepts clearly.

Since everything evolves, however, I'm hoping that my skills will also evolve. The blog itself changed considerably over the course of those first fifty entries, so I'm expecting it to evolve with this new series of posts as well.

I think it's the not-knowing exactly where things are going that makes our creative efforts-- yours and mine- so enjoyable.

Wish me luck! And do give me your help!


PSs:

1) My photo at the top of the archives list is courtesy of purplestork.com.

2) To email a link to this post to a friend, with your own message, click on the little envelope with an arrow, below.

3) If you would like to be notified when I publish a new post, send me an email.

4) To send a comment: use "Click here to send a comment" (below) or click on "Post a Comment" (at the bottom).

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