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Source: (consider it) Thread: Original Sin and the Theory of Evolution
Evensong
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On a different thread itsarumdo asked me what the new heaven and the new earth was in Christian theology and in the context of suffering and evil. Thread here.

* explained the basic Christian metanarrative as * saw it but for brevity and the point in hand will shorthand it to: God created the world and man and it was good. Something went wrong (Original Sin). Suffering and evil has existed since then and Christ came to change and heal this. But the full extent of the end of suffering and evil will only occur in the new heaven and the new earth when God will make all things right again as they were in the Garden of Eden before Adam and Eve knew evil.

Karl: Liberal Backslider posed this question:

quote:
Except that we now know there was no garden of Eden, no era of innocence without suffering. Humans have been killing each other, suffering, dying etc. since before they were actually humans.

Now * think that's a really interesting statement that poses a really interesting question:

Where does the original state of goodness and communion with God (without suffering - described metaphorically as the Garden of Eden) exist in the evolutionary record of us evolving from apes? Where and how does the idea of original good without suffering and the Theory of Evolution coincide?

* came across some writings of a Pope here.
quote:
Some hypotheses

In the different attempts to reconcile with Revelation the scientific theory of evolution and of polygenism, proposals valid in themselves, it must be firmly held that the dogma remains unchanged in its fullness of truth, while the theological explanation is perfected, so that it can accord better with the modern scientific and philosophical mentality.

1. One opinion, the simplest, says that at a certain moment of evolution when full consciousness was first reached, man was placed by God in a state of original justice. This, however, lasted for a very short time and Adam fell back quickly on account of his sin into the previous state. Since the state of justice was of short duration, it left no traces in palaeontology, which knows nothing of it.

This is the simplest solution, too simple in fact to convince; therefore, the problem must be studied in greater depth.

2. More acceptable is the explanation proposed by M. Labourdette which observes that man coming from evolution was constituted in the state of original justice, receiving grace and a complex of gifts, which for him was an incomparable wealth. Nothing, however, leads us to expect that through these gifts the first man would have quickly reached complete perfection in every direction. Rather, he would have been at the beginning of a tremendous progress which he would have been able to attain by means of grace and the divine gifts.

This concept of Labourdette seems natural and logical, but too general. So other hypotheses come down to more precise particulars.

3. According to another recently proposed hypothesis, humanity continued to develop not only somatically but also psychologically and intellectually. At a certain moment God offered to man, enjoying his first responsibility, a particular assistance. Because he had from birth this life of grace, he would have dominated nature, even to the point of eliminating suffering and death, by the perfect development of his person. In fact man refused this gift; but the divine plan was not to be rendered ineffective by sin, rather it would be actualized in the Redemption and in the Paschal Mystery of Christ and would be perfected in the eschatological kingdom of God.

This hypothesis does not appear contrary to the dogma; nevertheless it seems less probable in so far as it admits an original justice, which was virtual rather than actual, that is, contained in the initial help of God. The Sources of Revelation are more in favour of an original justice possessed initially and actually by man.

4. Yet another opinion says that the original justice must not be placed at the beginning but rather at the end of huma history, that is, of creation understood as a continuous evolutionary progress. It is therefore a destination which man must reach at the end of his existence by his collaboration with divine help.

The sinful state of man results, according to the opinion, not from a sin committed by a first parent at the beginning of history, but rather from the fact that man w***es to remain exactly as he is. Hence, he is opposed to the grace which urges him towards the supernatural. This opposition to grace is aggravated by the influence of the sinful world, that is, by the influence of the sin of all men.

Understood in this way, original sin consists in the impossibility of man making his way, unaided by grace, towards the end ordained by God. Besides, concupiscence tends to sever relations with God while the sin of the world, in which man lives, inclines him towards evil.

This opinion is defective in that original justice is placed not at the beginning but at the end of human existence. This does not appear very compatible with the data of Revelation. Also, the concept of original sin as sin of the world causes notable difficulties both with regard to the interpretation of Genesis 3, which is considered as a completely symbolic story, and more especially with regard to the doctrine of original sin as defined by thy Council of Trent.

The same opinion is also developed by other theologians. In it original sin consists not simply in an offence committed by our first parents at the beginning of humanity, but in the fact that all men, we ourselves included, commit the sin. Every child that is born is admitted into this sinful world and impelled by it towards evil.

This idea of original sin as the sin of the world does not seem to harmonize very well with Revelation and in particular with the Council of Trent, according to which the child is born with a guilt which is cleansed by Baptism (Session V; DS, 1513, 1515). If this sin of the world theory were true, there would be no guilt in the child to be washed away. Baptism would only serve to introduce the child into the Church. This, however, does not agree with the Council of Trent.


But * 'm interested to know how you reconcile the idea that suffering originally did not exist nor was intended by God (Garden of Eden, Original Sin) with the Theory of Evolution.

Thoughts?

[ 07. October 2014, 21:20: Message edited by: Louise ]

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jrw
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Somehow the idea of humanity being created 'perfect' dosen't really hold water for me. If the Adam and Eve story is to mean anything at all, it's that if we had all been handed everything on a plate from the beginning, we would more than likely have messed it all up. We don't appreciate things if we've always had them. Maybe evolution is a process of 'having to work for it'. Don't ask me what that all means in practise though. It'll be interesting to see what others think.

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quetzalcoatl
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* 've often seen the Adam and Eve story as about the dawning of consciousness and shame. So, animals are innocent, even though they kill and so on.

So presumably primitive hominids were innocent; but at some point, humans began to conceive of themselves, and then lost their innocence. Now they became morally conscious, and could experience shame and guilt.

However, * haven't the foggiest as to how God fits into that.

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itsarumdo
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* really appreciate the links - especially to the book by the B***0p of Durham - thanks Evensong

This theme is more or less central to the particular spiritual "wisdom" * am doing my best to put into practice. The idea is that "originally" (whatever that means), everyone knew that whatever they felt, thought, experienced was not of themselves, but was from and of God. And in that state, they experienced Love in all its various forms. They also regularly reconnected to and absorbed the divine energy that caused creation in the first place, which is made constantly available for all living things so that they can constantly renew to the fulness of their lifespan. * think it is correct to translate that energy as "holy spirit", but * 'm not completely sure, and in this spiritual arena small differences in intention and perception have a big effect on what happens. Animals and all other life still does this - they spend time each day just being in connection. But humans not - we have far too many important things to do, and have also forgotten.

* assume that this time was somewhere between us being apes and recognisable hominids. There must have been some spark, not only of creation, but also something specific to humans in which we were given free will and so became "human" as well as remaining partly animal. Or it could be that free will is one aspect granted to Earth as a planet, so we have evolution in (roughly) the way we see it and so in that case we just became "clever" enough to realise that we could decide for ourselves.

Incidentally, * think the science points to evolution as being part Mendelian and part Lamarkian, and not either one or the other. But at the moment we seem to have a Mendelian mythology in our culture, whereas the science shows epigenetics and methylation/expression of genes is just as important as the genes themselves.

My understanding of the next bit is more intuitive based on what it feels like to take that creative energy in again, and what my current experienced relationship with God is like. * think that people started to think that the thoughts were theirs, the Love was an emotion they were feeling rather than experiencing, and the power they felt was themselves rather than an expression of God through divine energy. This energy could also be considered to be the force that empowers spiritual answers to prayers to manifest in the world. They are all answered, but the answer has to have some means to step down from a spiritual realm into the physical, and it is our individual responsibility to take in the energy that performs that function. Then, when we forgot that it all came from God things started to go downhill to the point that we forgot the experience of living in God and started to just experience the world as something outside ourselves - we separated. We no longer knew that the feeling Love or the power we felt in our bodies was part of God - we maybe, if we were lucky, just thought that. But there is a vast gulf between an idea/thought and a lived experience. An embodied experience.

The task now is to reconnect. When * have a small flash occasionally of what this must be like, * get the sense that life is extremely numb, and the emotional sensual all-encompassing experience of being connected back into what we have lost would - in my present state - be overwhelming in its intensity. There are also quieter feelings that are equally important that are subject to being lost through numbness and/or the sensory cacophony of our culture, until a personal relationship with them is re-cultivated.

There are also big ramifications for free will and divine order (or not) that run through choices we make each moment of the day. Another aspect of the "fall from Grace" is that we forgot to distingu*** good from evil, forgot that we could choose, forgot how to make that distinction, and then have been left with the effect of generations of being mis-taught by people who maybe had the right idea (maybe not), but had no sense of how to embody that. Because that is the choice each moment - we can be in God and in Divine order and express that through the thoughts we accept and the actions we make, or we can do the same for evil. It's a bit of a stark choice.

The whole thing is a bit like learning to be a cabinet maker from a very thin book and no personal tuition. The furniture is inevitably rickety and as each year goes on everything becomes to look more and more like a few pieces of packing crate nailed together. And we think that is the definition of cabinet making because that's what we see and sit on.

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cliffdweller
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My thinking has been influenced a lot by Greg Boyd and his work on natural evil (i.e. animal or human suffering not caused by human actions). Boyd builds a good biblical case that "fallenness" (i.e. the result of original sin) are not exclusive to humans, rather the Bible speaks of "all of creation groaning" in anticipation/yearning for the New Creation. And of course, the problem of evil (when understood to include natural evil) predates the existence of humanoids. Oversimplifying a rather complex and thoughtful argument, Boyd suggests that "the fall" occurred (thru Satanic intervention) in the 2nd moment (of 2nd nanosecond, or whatever the appropriately small measurement of time currently used to describe the Big Bang or whatever current theory of origin of universe) of the creation of the universe. iow, God's original intent not only for humans but for all of creation, was good and perfect, and had evolution proceeded along that divine plan, we would have that New Creation-- Eden. But the "corruption" of creation occurred at that 2nd moment, interrupting and subverting the entire process of evolution, so that corruption (or "fallenness") is built into the very process of evolution and of nature itself (e.g. "survival of the fittest", the food chain, nature as "red of tooth & claw"). Human fallenness is the ultimate expression of that corruption because of our freedom-- i.e. the degree of freedom we have determines both the amount of godliness we are capable of (the degree to which we reflect the imago Dei) but also the degree of evil to which we are capable. Humans are the most free creatures so are the most capable of evil (but also of godliness).

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Alan Cresswell

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I admit to some sympathy with option 4 quoted in the OP
quote:
Yet another opinion says that the original justice must not be placed at the beginning but rather at the end of human history, that is, of creation understood as a continuous evolutionary progress. It is therefore a destination which man must reach at the end of his existence by his collaboration with divine help.
I think it works very well with the first creation myth in Genesis. God makes humanity in his own image, and it is very good. The Christian gospel includes that we are being made into the image of Christ. It doesn't seem too unreasonable to look around us and say that we're still in those first "6 days" of creation, that the culmination of creation with humanity made in the image of God and God taking his rest from his labours is in our future.

Of course, it's a view that doesn't work very well at all with the second creation myth, which places innocent humanity in a "historical" context with a fall from innocence in our past.

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Anglican_Brat
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Here is how I understand original sin and evolution:

The "Fall" occurred when human beings matured to a point where they could make a genuine free choice of whether to be self-centred or care for others. At that point, the law of love, the great commandment was imprinted upon the human heart. Humans thus "fell" when they refused to live up to their new maturity of being responsible stewards of creation and caretakers of each other, choosing instead to live out of concern only for themselves.

Understood this way, sin is interpreted as a refusal to mature, a refusal to grow up into the people God wants us to be. In short, sin is a refusal to evolve morally.

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Barnabas62
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This is an aspect of the Dead Horse of creation and evolution. So the thread belongs there, rather than Purgatory.

See you there, wearing my other Host Hat.

Barnabas62
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itsarumdo
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Just a tad hasty there Barnabas - I think the power of being let loose on the blog macro settings last week has gone you you head slightly.

It might be a dead horse to you, but it's horse and salad sandwiches to us.

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Barnabas62
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Looked a pianola ruling to me.

But feel free to query in the Styx, itsarumdo. That's how Host rulings can be reviewed. Just not on the thread itself.

Barnabas62
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(Hyde mode abandoned)

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Martin60
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I love Boyd's open theism, and I've heard that before about Satan fouling the cosmos in the first Planck tick, and if Boyd said that with ANY hint of the literal, he's wrong. As a pure metaphor, OK. As with ALL of our narratives.

Evil is contingent. It goes with creation. There is no 'problem' of evil. If Satan didn't exist it wouldn't be necessary for Voltaire to invent him. ...

The trouble is, according to the incarnate Word, he does. Jesus not only interacted with him, which could have been intense, dissociated projection, but He remembered him from when He was God the Son. Which could also be totally genuine - true for Jesus - AND dissociation yet further I suppose.

So to the evolution of human consciousness, i.e. our sapience which is an order of magnitude and then a million, infinite above that of dogs, dolphins, cephalopods, ravens, other anthropoid apes ... which I've only JUST at 60 begun to seriously entertain, as my 'side bet' on Eden, on divine intervention, that degree of theistic evolution, has been far bigger than I realised, in fact until today, now, on this thread ... ... it means that if sapience evolved, if ontogeny does recapitulate phylogeny in child development (invalidated as it is in biology proper but not there) and one can therefore envisage the evolution of sapience, we are INNOCENT.

Sin is a metaphor.

But we cannot save ourselves.

We STILL need deliverance from evil, leading not in to temptation and forgiveness of sin and being washed whiter than snow and wool and shorn of all shame in The Blood of the The Lamb - well I do, to overcome my testeria - to find headspace above it all. We STILL need Jesus. Jesus IS the answer as without His transcendence in and of His humanity we'd have even less chance of seeing that.

Original sin, sin, the 'need' for Jesus to atone for our sins is ALL metaphor. All to be embraced and retained. As we move forward including the language of science, of psychology and beyond in to the postmodern. Poetry. BACK to the timeless and millennia of evolving poetry of the Bible and all the narratives that have spun off that and on again.

Jesus, Son of God, have mercy - pathos - on me a sinner. Including my sins of modernism, of analysis, of reason, of induction and deduction: all the logos enemies of ethos.

(and, itsarumdo, from BITTER experience, NEVER go there!)

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itsarumdo
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not sure where the "there" is you mean, notPC, but I think the principle "whatever you put your attention on gets bigger" is a good rule of thumb for life.

as for Evolution, Genetics is a young science in the most complex thing there is - life - and I think it's got quite a few surprises up its sleeve. I don't think we were meant to be tweaking it. There's a very new and original sin for you.

[ 21. September 2014, 18:05: Message edited by: itsarumdo ]

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Martin60
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If not us then who?

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churchgeek

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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
I've often seen the Adam and Eve story as about the dawning of consciousness and shame. So, animals are innocent, even though they kill and so on.

So presumably primitive hominids were innocent; but at some point, humans began to conceive of themselves, and then lost their innocence. Now they became morally conscious, and could experience shame and guilt.

However, I haven't the foggiest as to how God fits into that.

Well, there are different ways to think about innocence, as I learned from my late professor Alex García-Rivera. We tend to think of it as a virtue lost (like a pure white cloth that is ruined when stained) - or even as a childish ignorance that is lost (innocence v. knowledge/experience), but it can also be conceived of as a virtue to be gained.

It's one of my pet peeves when people romanticize nature (which you're not doing, I should add) - like a man in a class I took in seminary, who said, "All other creatures do God's will perfectly except humans." That can only be believed as a point of dogma, because any time spent with any non-human creatures will irrefutably demonstrate otherwise! Yet as you say, we don't consider them morally culpable, because, as you also say, they haven't attained to that point of self-awareness some ancestor of our species did at some point. And, just as we did as individuals, we as a species learned to sin (in the sense that we formed habits - many of which assured our survival and evolution - which we now see as morally problematic or evil) before we knew right from wrong.

Here's where I think God fits into it:

Like Martin PC not says,

quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
Evil is contingent. It goes with creation. There is no 'problem' of evil. If Satan didn't exist it wouldn't be necessary for Voltaire to invent him. ...

(Oh, I love that!)

Everything is contingent except God; everything is created except God; everything is mortal except God; only God is perfect. So in creation, God lovingly made room for that-which-is-not-God, and loved creation out into existence. That's "original blessing." But because creation is not God, it falls short of all God's perfections. It lacks love, it lacks goodness, it lacks unity, it lacks beauty, it lacks truth,* all to some degree - and that lack is what we know and experience as evil. When it is found in human (moral) behavior, we call it sin.

So our problem is not original sin - I don't really have much use for that particular dogma, and as an Episcopalian, I'm free to toss it out. [Razz] Our problem is that, as creatures, we are bound, if you will, to imperfection and to corruptibility and mortality. We couldn't be otherwise. Even God could not have created us free from corruptibility and imperfection. They go with creatureliness.

Rather, God's problem - and ours, but really God's, more, since God chose to create - is that God's creation, left to its own devices, will end in decay and annihilation, while unleashing all kinds of evils along the way.

God "solves" that through the Incarnation. It's a mystery beyond our comprehension (as we're creatures, and have limitations like that), and the best I can state it is this: By joining the divine and human natures in the person of Christ, God has overcome the inherent alienation of creation from the creator. The Creator became creature, wedded creature and Creator together, and brought creation itself into the very life of the Holy Trinity (which is what the Ascension of Christ is really all about).

Now innocence is a virtue we can gain, and do gain, through Christ who possessed it (and all other virtues) all along.


*You'll note that most of these - beauty, goodness, unity, truth - are the "transcendentals" of philosophy; meaning they transcend all accidental categories, so that all things possess them to some degree. Transcendentals are also considered to be "convertible." IOW, all things have some degree of beauty, goodness, truth, and unity to the extend that they are real. That's one of the classical arguments against a dualistic system where good and evil (or God and Satan) are equals: I believe it was CS Lewis who pointed out that Satan possesses at least the (philosophical) good of existence, and therefore is not as "perfectly" evil as God is good. Lewis believed in a literal Satan; I take him to be metaphor, but that's beside the point.

[ 21. September 2014, 22:20: Message edited by: churchgeek ]

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Barnabas62
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quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:

(and, itsarumdo, from BITTER experience, NEVER go there!)

Back off, Martin. My rulings are testable publicly in the Styx by reference to the 10Cs and board guidelines. That's the right place.

And if you want to critique the effectiveness of the Styx for this purpose, you can do that in the Styx as well.

What you can't do is play Styx-critical games in the guise of "well-meaning" advice to another Shipmate in a discussion thread outside the Styx.

As you very well know.

Barnabas62
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Evensong
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quote:
Originally posted by churchgeek:

Everything is contingent except God; everything is created except God; everything is mortal except God; only God is perfect. So in creation, God lovingly made room for that-which-is-not-God, and loved creation out into existence. That's "original blessing." But because creation is not God, it falls short of all God's perfections. It lacks love, it lacks goodness, it lacks unity, it lacks beauty, it lacks truth,* all to some degree - and that lack is what we know and experience as evil. When it is found in human (moral) behavior, we call it sin.

So our problem is not original sin - I don't really have much use for that particular dogma, and as an Episcopalian, I'm free to toss it out. [Razz] Our problem is that, as creatures, we are bound, if you will, to imperfection and to corruptibility and mortality. We couldn't be otherwise. Even God could not have created us free from corruptibility and imperfection. They go with creatureliness.

Rather, God's problem - and ours, but really God's, more, since God chose to create - is that God's creation, left to its own devices, will end in decay and annihilation, while unleashing all kinds of evils along the way.

God "solves" that through the Incarnation. It's a mystery beyond our comprehension (as we're creatures, and have limitations like that), and the best I can state it is this: By joining the divine and human natures in the person of Christ, God has overcome the inherent alienation of creation from the creator. The Creator became creature, wedded creature and Creator together, and brought creation itself into the very life of the Holy Trinity (which is what the Ascension of Christ is really all about).

Now innocence is a virtue we can gain, and do gain, through Christ who possessed it (and all other virtues) all along.

Isn't this a contradiction? First you say we are imperfect purely by being created and contingent creatures (unlike God). Our nature is contingent and by very virtue of definition corruptible.

Then the problem of our contingent nature is solved by fusing it or joining it to the uncontingent (God). That seems to me to be mixing the natures and our nature being subsumed somehow.

If God wanted us to be "taken up" within the Holy Trinity, why not do that from the start of creation?

It sounds like you're trying to jettison the idea of original innocence or Grace but you still end up with the same problem that Original Sin is trying to address: why are we imperfect now?

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itsarumdo
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deosn't sin mean "to miss the point"? I think a mistake that's caused a lot of difficulty is the assumption of original sin = guilt = therefore we are BAD = therefore there's no hope through our own actions = therefore hat the heck, lets party. It also generates guilt, and spiritually, guilt is completely wasted effort - we do something or we don't do something - that's how it is. Then the next moment arises. If the next one arises with a feeling of guilt, the moment is wasted - we could have been doing something far more useful.

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Martin60
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Barnabas 62, sorry and please see the Styx.

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The Great Gumby

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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
* 've often seen the Adam and Eve story as about the dawning of consciousness and shame. So, animals are innocent, even though they kill and so on.

So presumably primitive hominids were innocent; but at some point, humans began to conceive of themselves, and then lost their innocence. Now they became morally conscious, and could experience shame and guilt.

However, * haven't the foggiest as to how God fits into that.

This, but with a few additions. The very nature of our existence means that we're consuming finite resources and killing other animals, plants, etc. Just to stay alive, we need to destroy - the Gospel According to Entropy, I suppose. With a dawning self-awareness, we suddenly have to reckon with that fact, and it makes us all guilty of putting our needs ahead of others' on some level.

With that self-awareness/consciousness comes a realisation that we will all die one day. And that's a game-changer. Death is just another natural process, to which we only attach significance when it has a terminal effect on the function of a particular bunch of cells we like to call a person, but the knowledge that it will happen to all of us in the end is both blessing and curse.

The story's a myth and a parable, but I don't think the involvement of a deity and a mischievous serpent adds anything to the basic message, which is that knowledge and awareness is good, but it's also sometimes scary, and because we know certain things, we've lost the simple innocence of just being able to do what we like without any consideration for the wider implications. I'm a firm believer that there's a very powerful secular angst in the Creation Myth, a feeling that things weren't always this way, but it's the price we pay for our knowledge.

(If you like, you can draw further speculative parallels based on the "pain of childbirth" being one of the consequences in the story, and the fact that what makes childbirth an especially painful and risky process in humans is that our heads/brains are now too big to comfortably fit through the pelvis. I like this idea, but I try not to get too fond of it.)

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A letter to my son about death

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quetzalcoatl
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The Great Gumby

I like that. I have often pondered upon Adam and Eve in my work, as a therapist, as so much work with clients is taken up with guilt and shame, as paralyzing and indeed, self-destructive feelings.

In some ways, people who are full of shame and guilt, are excessively self-conscious; there really has been a fall into a kind of morbid self-preoccupation. However, that idea in itself has no effect, and in fact, is counter-productive.

But relief can be found from them; hence I suppose the (sort of) joke that therapy has replaced religion. We hear confessions and issue forgiveness, and charge moderate amounts of dosh.

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LeRoc

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I believe in neither original sin nor the fall, so I guess that limits my ability to discuss on this thread a bit.

What I do believe is that evolution has an aspect of "looking out for number one" and part of God's wishes for us ('to be come sinless' if you want) is that we overcome these restraints evolution has brought us.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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Martin60
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Anadromously

LeRoc - it qualifies you admirably. As I no longer do except as metaphor. And aye, we must transcend. Be transcended.
like a
q. - can I hire you?! Confession and forgiveness don't work of course. Not without the certainty that all will be made well. All the damage one has done to oneself and others.

TGG. - yep.

churchgeek. - YESSS! And not just because you like my sound bite.

Therefore:

Evensong. - No. I look forward to churchgeek answering for themselves, but there was never any original innocence, no paradise was lost apart from the bliss of non-sapient ignorance. It's evolutionarily meaningless. It's therefore meaningless in the Bronze Age onwards too. As it is in Papua-New Guinea and the Amazonian tribes that hide from man. We are perfectly imperfect. The best we can be. Always have been.

churchgeek is perfectly correct on the greatest mystery, the hypostatic union - Jesus - being the answer, the way, the only way for all humanity and more to be transcended. To be lifted up.

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Love wins

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no prophet's flag is set so...

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The possibility of reconciling original sin and evolution, or finding parallels that actually mean something beyond feeling good about how it sounds, is remote.

One of these is a later-derived concept from an ancient mythology applied to a specific group of people several thousands of years ago. The other is a scientific theory that meets standards for data collection and interpretation consistent with the theory such that we accept it as fact (well, to fair, educated people accept evolution as fact).

This reminds of me of William Ewart Gladstone's attempts to take biblical creation and interpret it as parallel to evolution in the 19th century. It just doesn't go. Even if you can tell a "just so story" to persuade yourself and then get one of those warm glowing and elated feelings because you managed to convince yourself. Myself, I prefer wine, or better better yet, scotch for the creation of warm glowy feelings.

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\_(ツ)_/

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itsarumdo
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This documentary maybe has something to say about your question, Evensong.

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

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ChastMastr
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I suspect that the Adam and Eve story, as a myth (in the sense of the literary genre of myth), is perhaps the best or only way we can grasp certain metaphysical truths, regardless of how it does or doesn't match up to evolution.

I also understand that the world is broken. Precisely how our actions and/or those of the fallen angels may have caused this, in a sense more specific than that of the myth of Creation and the Fall, I do not claim to know. It may even be that Time itself is one of the things which got broken, in a Time before Time. Certainly as a SF/fantasy/comics fan, the notion of reality being altered/broken (including backwards in time) and in need of repair is not foreign to me. So perhaps with this. Or something else beyond our comprehension.

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My essays on comics continuity: http://chastmastr.tumblr.com/tagged/continuity

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quetzalcoatl
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Interesting that some Eastern religions see the brokenness as because of dualism - the dualism of self and other. In other words, the human can conceive of him/herself as an entity separate from life.

Once this is established, the gates of hell yaw open, as this 'self' is now subject to visceral anxiety, guilt, shame, and so on, because of its separation from life.

It also reminds me of Sartre, the idea that one is not a pure being, but a being as object for another. So I internalize an image of myself as an object.

The solution to this? Probably all religions provide some kind of solution, whereby the lonely self is reintegrated into life, via praxis not doxis.

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no prophet's flag is set so...

Proceed to see sea
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ChastMastr, you said the world is broken. Is it? or is it humanity that is broken? It seems to me that the natural world does it's thing in a non-broken way.

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Out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety.
\_(ツ)_/

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itsarumdo
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Which suggests that human "sin" may be at least pstyly to do with a departure from the natural order.

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

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Evensong
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The Christian metanarrative suggests the whole of the created order ( humans, animals, the earth) is broken.

Broken in the sense that it is not running as God intended.

The theory of evolution bases itself on the idea of the survival of the fittest through natural selection.

This is contrary to Revelation in that God cares for the least of things and prefers self-giving love and sacrifice for others rather than self-serving interests.

So in that sense, nature and animals (thus evolution) are not a good guide to God's will.

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a theological scrapbook

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quetzalcoatl
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Survival of the fittest is a dangerous phrase, as it can all too easily lead to the idea that the biggest and strongest are most likely to survive.

Well, look at the dinosaurs, who were pretty big.

It's getting close to 'red in tooth and claw' which again is incorrect. For example, cockroaches have lasted pretty well, not because they are strong and ferocious, but because they are adapted to their environment.

Or you can think of flightless birds and eyeless fish, and so on. Sometimes the weak and the slow survive pretty well.

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quetzalcoatl
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I forgot to point out that cooperation is found widely in different animal groups, and without doubt helps them in their ability to reproduce. However, cooperation is not 'red in tooth and claw'!

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itsarumdo
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"Survival of the fittest" in its competitive, tyranosaurus rex sense is certainly not the modern view of natural ecological systems, but is far more related to 19th century economics. I have the impression that even Darwin didn't believe in it. Nature is only as broken as man has interfered with it, and if you look at any abandoned building or canal, it is clear that Nature reclaims its own very quickly indeed. If something changes and the lion and the lamb lie down together, then I will not deny that, but at the moment I have the opinion that nature is not about twee furry animals having tea parties on an imaculately manicured lawn - but about each tiny piece of life living in harmony with each other. That harmony includes the fact that some bits of life eat other bits of life - but the whole system has an implicit order and an underlying energy, joy and exuberance of expression.

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

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quetzalcoatl
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Well, Darwin did use the phrase, survival of the fittest, but 'fittest' then meant 'fitted'. Whereas it has been considerably vulgarized since then to mean biggest, fastest, bloodiest, and so on, which is off the mark.

So a delicate little moth or a humming bird may be a good fit in its ecological niche, and is able to transfer its genes to the next generation. Hurrah!

I don't really get what 'broken' means in relation to nature, unless people want vegetarian lions, I suppose.

Yes, there is a pleasing harmony sometimes in nature, although I suppose it's in the eye of the beholder. I remember that Darwin saw a huge flower, and predicted that a moth must exist with a huge proboscis, which fed from the the flower, and later, it was discovered. Neat fit. But maybe there is a bat or a bird which eats the moth - is this brokenness?

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W Hyatt
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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Survival of the fittest is a dangerous phrase, as it can all too easily lead to the idea that the biggest and strongest are most likely to survive.

Only if one makes the mistake of equating "fittest" with "biggest and strongest."

quote:
Well, look at the dinosaurs, who were pretty big.
It's getting close to 'red in tooth and claw' which again is incorrect. For example, cockroaches have lasted pretty well, not because they are strong and ferocious, but because they are adapted to their environment.

Or you can think of flightless birds and eyeless fish, and so on. Sometimes the weak and the slow survive pretty well.

"Survival of the fittest" is actually a definition of "fittest" (or maybe even a tautology) because "fittest" = "adapted to their environment" = "survive pretty well."

"Red in tooth and claw" seems pretty accurate to me, in an abstract sense, since every living organism is food for some other organism, even if it's bacteria or scavengers feeding on a decomposing corpse. Only a very few species have no predators who hunt them.

Our usual idea of niceness does not fit well with the idea of nature being an expression of a Divine Design.

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A new church and a new earth, with Spiritual Insights for Everyday Life.

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quetzalcoatl
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I agree, that it's not nice. Maybe magnificent though. I've been watching hobbies catch dragonflies, a beautiful sight. Sometimes they also catch swallows and house-martins, the blackguards. Doubleplusnotnice.

A weird bit of publishing history - the Russian anarchist Kropotkin published a book, called, 'Mutual aid', which is about cooperation in animals, and he argues that this is important in evolution, and not just competition. It has been influential to an extent.

[ 24. September 2014, 19:31: Message edited by: quetzalcoatl ]

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Palimpsest
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quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
I believe in neither original sin nor the fall, so I guess that limits my ability to discuss on this thread a bit.

What I do believe is that evolution has an aspect of "looking out for number one" and part of God's wishes for us ('to be come sinless' if you want) is that we overcome these restraints evolution has brought us.

I don't believe in original sin or the fall so I'll join you in not discussing it [Smile]

In defense of evolution, much of the "survival of the fittest" rhetoric ignores the way evolution occurs for social organisms. A mother defending her children or a man sacrificing his life to protect his brother both help the survival of the genes of the social group.

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Martin60
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Creation is broken by definition. Which is good. As He said. God could not intend otherwise. What He intends is for it to transcend.

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Love wins

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ChastMastr
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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:

I don't really get what 'broken' means in relation to nature, unless people want vegetarian lions, I suppose.

Evensong pretty much summed it up, but apparently vegetarian lions are what we're getting, yes, what with them lying down with lambs (and both of them getting up again, of course). The whole death/disease/predation thing is, as I understand it, part of the Fall and of the brokenness of this world, which waits in travail for the world to come. It doesn't mean lions (or we) are sinning by eating other animals, but it does not appear to be part of the original plan (even in Genesis the story talks about plants and the like being given to humans and animals for food).

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My essays on comics continuity: http://chastmastr.tumblr.com/tagged/continuity

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mousethief

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quote:
Originally posted by W Hyatt:
"Survival of the fittest" is actually a definition of "fittest" (or maybe even a tautology) because "fittest" = "adapted to their environment" = "survive pretty well."

I have read that one of the philosophical quandaries of evolution is to define "fitness" in such a way that "survival of the fittest" isn't a tautology.

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Dafyd
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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Well, Darwin did use the phrase, survival of the fittest, but 'fittest' then meant 'fitted'.

AIUI Darwin himself never used the phrase. It was coined by Thomas Huxley.

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we remain, thanks to original sin, much in love with talking about, rather than with, one another. Rowan Williams

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Dafyd
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quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
I have read that one of the philosophical quandaries of evolution is to define "fitness" in such a way that "survival of the fittest" isn't a tautology.

I think this is a pseudo-problem for Darwinism itself. Darwinism doesn't require there to be any single trait or set of traits that is universally the fittest. Thus, for finches, on some islands broad bills are fitter than narrower bills, and on others narrower bills are fitter than broad, depending on the vegetation.

On the other hand, if you start moralising Darwinism in a social Darwinist direction, so that you believe that the more deserving win out, then you do need to define more deserving independently of the fact that they win out.

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we remain, thanks to original sin, much in love with talking about, rather than with, one another. Rowan Williams

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quetzalcoatl
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quote:
Originally posted by Dafyd:
quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Well, Darwin did use the phrase, survival of the fittest, but 'fittest' then meant 'fitted'.

AIUI Darwin himself never used the phrase. It was coined by Thomas Huxley.
I think it's in later editions of 'The Origin', well, the fifth edition. But modern biologists seem to hate the phrase, as it has been vulgarized, to refer to nature red in tooth and claw.

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Evensong
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I don't think "surveil of the fittest" is any different from "survival of the most adapted" in the context of the Christian metanarrative. The lion will lie down with the lamb etc as ChastMastr said.

Neither is part of the plan.

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Survival of the fittest is a dangerous phrase, as it can all too easily lead to the idea that the biggest and strongest are most likely to survive.

Well, look at the dinosaurs, who were pretty big.

And probably the most successful group of animals ever to walk the planet. They were the dominant land animals for 150 million years or so. Of course, in the last 65 million it's been the smaller ones that have survived, as a rule. They are still the dominant flying animals. A tremendously important and successful group, as I said.

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LeRoc

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quote:
Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard: Creation is broken by definition. Which is good. As He said. God could not intend otherwise. What He intends is for it to transcend.
I find myself gloriously agreeing with you. Which is a rather nice thing.

I'm still trying to fit my own thoughts on the subject into a somewhat coherent narrative. Not sure if I'm succeeding (or indeed whether I should). But this is what I've got so far.
  1. There is a nasty streak about evolution. It involves death, competition for limited resources, looking out for yourself in the first place ...
  2. I don't believe that this is the result of the fall, sin, the devil, a demiurg ... God created the world in this way.
  3. The question "Why would a good God create such a world?" is related to the Problem of Evil of course. My own partial take on it is that living in a limited world is necessary for us to have free will.
  4. Evolution doesn't have a moral dimension in itself. These things started to be seen as 'bad' when conscient humans arrived on the scene.
  5. Evolution isn't all bad. There are many examples of animals who collaborate with eachother.
  6. I still believe there is a selfish element to most of these forms of collaboration though. Helping the group can improve your own chances of survival. Helping your children allows your genes to live on. Therefore, I still hesitate to classify this collaboration as altruism or self-sacrifice.
  7. There are some reported cases of altruism in animals. Dolphins rescuing drowned people for example. I do think that the frequency of these cases is exaggerated in some discussions. But I'm willing to concede that 'higher' animals have some form of proto-morality.
  8. At least in part, the task God has given us is to transcend some of the limitations put upon us by evolution. To become altruist or self-sacrificial, even when evolution says we shouldn't. This is in large part how I interpret the references to the Kingdom of God in the Gospels.
Not sure if this is completely coherent yet. Maybe if I let it simmer for a while it will be.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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itsarumdo
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quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Survival of the fittest is a dangerous phrase, as it can all too easily lead to the idea that the biggest and strongest are most likely to survive.

Well, look at the dinosaurs, who were pretty big.

And probably the most successful group of animals ever to walk the planet. They were the dominant land animals for 150 million years or so. Of course, in the last 65 million it's been the smaller ones that have survived, as a rule. They are still the dominant flying animals. A tremendously important and successful group, as I said.
It puts an entirely new slant on dinosaur shaped turkey bits. [Smile]

[ 25. September 2014, 11:47: Message edited by: itsarumdo ]

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itsarumdo
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quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
quote:
Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard: Creation is broken by definition. Which is good. As He said. God could not intend otherwise. What He intends is for it to transcend.
I find myself gloriously agreeing with you. Which is a rather nice thing.

I'm still trying to fit my own thoughts on the subject into a somewhat coherent narrative. Not sure if I'm succeeding (or indeed whether I should). But this is what I've got so far.
  1. There is a nasty streak about evolution. It involves death, competition for limited resources, looking out for yourself in the first place ...
  2. I don't believe that this is the result of the fall, sin, the devil, a demiurg ... God created the world in this way.
  3. The question "Why would a good God create such a world?" is related to the Problem of Evil of course. My own partial take on it is that living in a limited world is necessary for us to have free will.
  4. Evolution doesn't have a moral dimension in itself. These things started to be seen as 'bad' when conscient humans arrived on the scene.
  5. Evolution isn't all bad. There are many examples of animals who collaborate with eachother.
  6. I still believe there is a selfish element to most of these forms of collaboration though. Helping the group can improve your own chances of survival. Helping your children allows your genes to live on. Therefore, I still hesitate to classify this collaboration as altruism or self-sacrifice.
  7. There are some reported cases of altruism in animals. Dolphins rescuing drowned people for example. I do think that the frequency of these cases is exaggerated in some discussions. But I'm willing to concede that 'higher' animals have some form of proto-morality.
  8. At least in part, the task God has given us is to transcend some of the limitations put upon us by evolution. To become altruist or self-sacrificial, even when evolution says we shouldn't. This is in large part how I interpret the references to the Kingdom of God in the Gospels.
Not sure if this is completely coherent yet. Maybe if I let it simmer for a while it will be.

Sorry, I just can't agree for several reasons - the principle that something is deliberately made broken I can't go with.

Free will creates huge possibilities, but also the possibility to self-break. Or in this case, to separate, to name things as if they were separate. Every time we use a noun without also being aware of the relationships that "object" exists in, we perpetuate the fall. Particularly when we objectify evil, as if it is something we own or are ("I am ill", "I have a cold"), or we believe that it exists. This solidifies it and manifests it rather than it remaing a spiritual "idea".

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

Posts: 994 | From: Planet Zog | Registered: Jul 2014  |  IP: Logged
itsarumdo
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# 18174

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sorry - that was a duplicate

[ 25. September 2014, 11:57: Message edited by: itsarumdo ]

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

Posts: 994 | From: Planet Zog | Registered: Jul 2014  |  IP: Logged
LeRoc

Famous Dutch pirate
# 3216

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quote:
itsarumdo: Sorry, I just can't agree for several reasons - the principle that something is deliberately made broken I can't go with.
No problem if you don't agree with me. It's interesting to read your take on it.

quote:
itsarumdo: Free will creates huge possibilities, but also the possibility to self-break.
It's funny. You seem to be using a similar argument to mine here, but turned around. To me, the possibility to (self-)break creates (gives room to) free will. We can only have free will if there is something to choose.

quote:
itsarumdo: Or in this case, to separate, to name things as if they were separate. Every time we use a noun without also being aware of the relationships that "object" exists in, we perpetuate the fall.
Now you've moved into an interesting and to me somewhat surprising realm. Are you saying that we should look at things wholistically, and naming them individually is the cause of bad things? Or am I interpreting you wrong here? I'm not sure if we can really avoid naming things.

(I am aware that naming things is an important theme in the Genesis creation story. Is this what you're referring to?)

quote:
itsarumdo: Particularly when we objectify evil, as if it is something we own or are ("I am ill", "I have a cold"), or we believe that it exists. This solidifies it and manifests it rather than it remaing a spiritual "idea".
I agree with you that it's probably not a good idea to objectify evil, but for different reasons. I don't share your belief that naming things in this way gives them more power.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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Karl: Liberal Backslider
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# 76

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quote:
Originally posted by itsarumdo:
quote:
Originally posted by Karl: Liberal Backslider:
quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Survival of the fittest is a dangerous phrase, as it can all too easily lead to the idea that the biggest and strongest are most likely to survive.

Well, look at the dinosaurs, who were pretty big.

And probably the most successful group of animals ever to walk the planet. They were the dominant land animals for 150 million years or so. Of course, in the last 65 million it's been the smaller ones that have survived, as a rule. They are still the dominant flying animals. A tremendously important and successful group, as I said.
It puts an entirely new slant on dinosaur shaped turkey bits. [Smile]
Aye. It's worth remembering, as you dive into your Christmas dinner, that 100 million years ago its ancestors were eating yours.

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Might as well ask the bloody cat.

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