Thinkberry
Rational GoodnessArchive for Science
Finding Darwin’s God
Last night I decided to get around to reading Ken Miller’s Finding Darwin’s God: A Scientist’s Search For Common Ground Between God And Evolution. As my favorite scientist, I owed him an opportunity to express his views as to the main point upon which we disagree. After much consideration, though, my views have not changed, yet I may have more respect for his. I fear that this review will be rather harsh, therefore I must initially express my vast degree of fondness for the book. From the fact that I read it in one sitting, one could rightly infer that it was a real page-turner. Miller beautifully defends Darwin from the the fossil record to the mechanism of natural selection. However, I did not read the book to strengthen my belief in evolution. I read it to challenge my conclusion that any meaningful conception of God cannot coexist with scientific and philosophical scrutiny. I feel that this review will not do justice to the brilliance of the first half of the text, but, unfortunately, appreciation doesn’t make for as good of a read.
I cannot say that Professor Miller did not fulfill the initial premise. The title of the book declares exactly what one would hope to find, common ground between God and evolution. He does not attempt to support theism as evolution. He does not attempt to argue biblical inerrancy. He does not attempt to “prove” God. Quite to the contrary, he suggests that the bible cannot be literally true. What he does do is argue that science and religion are in different domains, that there are limits to science, not established by man’s lack of knowledge, but limits imposed both by scientific findings and definition. Not only is it beyond a scientific inquiry to discern meaning from the evidence in any higher, moral sense, but even at it’s most basic quantum level, our understanding tends to collapse. There is much to say on this point, though I will leave much of it with the book.
It was once an argument against the necessity for a creator to explain natural law, and it still is, but to Miller, it is also a powerful tool to God. On the quantum level, the laws of nature no longer apply. We cannot predict much of the actions of much of the subatomic activity, not by a lack of knowledge, but in principle. They truly are indeterminate. However, the statistical averages of these indeterminate events give us the predictable happenings at our superatomic level. I’ll also leave the reader to either figure out to consult the book for as to what this means for God’s place.
Getting to my main point, Miller once said at a lecture on the Dover trial, “I’m a Roman Catholic. I believe in a creator in the vaguest sense.” He justifies well how such a vague creator could exist without conflicting with modern science. However, he’s missing much of the conflict. The conflict lies not with those with abstract conceptions of God and modern science. The problem arises with religion and modern science, when one materializes the workings of the designer. In the book, he writes that religion can coexist without being disfigured beyond any traditional understanding. This, he cannot defend. Perhaps it is wrong to take the philosophical implications of evolution labeled as science, and to use it against religion. But, that is not the problem as I see it. The problem is what happens to religion when it’s mythological foundations are corroded away by the “universal acid”, the science. Then, without these, there is a deep rooted problem. I cannot recall who wrote, wisely, that if we cannot trust the Bible’s history, how can we trust its morals? Simply put, one can’t.
Miller rightly quotes Richard Dawkins on this issue:
“The trouble is that God in this sophisticated, physicist’s sense bears no resemblance to the God of the Bible or any other religion. If a physicist says God is another name for Planck’s constant, or God is a superstring, we should take it as a picturesque metaphorical way of saying that the nature of superstrings or the value of Planck’s constant is a profound mystery. It has obviously not the smallest connection with a being capable of forgiving sins, a being who might listen to prayers, who cares about whether or not the Sabbath begins at 5 pm or 6pm, whether you wear a veil or have a bit of arm showing; and no connection whatever with a being capable of imposing a death penalty on His son to expiate the sins of the world before and after he was born.”
The problem is not that science conflicts with God. The problem is that science causes philosophical conundrums within religion that it cannot withstand. I’m sorry Professor Miller, but these philosophical plagues, religion cannot survive. What happens when the bible cannot be literally true? What happens when original sin fades away? What happens when the fall of man never happened? What happens when Moses was never given the 10 commandments? What happens when Jesus may never have existed? The only way to prevent the erosion of such religious thought from being grotesquely disfigured is to not think, not consider these implications, to have faith. That may even be fine. You can believe whatever you like. The problem arises when you impose it on others. Then, it demands justification. It demands its own suicide.
Spiritual Experience & The Brain
A study by Missouri University found that spiritual experiences, such as transcendence, whether through prayer or mediation, correspond to the same neurological activity.
The full article is here.
This is incredibly interesting, further findings that these “special feelings” that people get with religious experiences are not only not unique to their religion, but associated with the same physiological response. How much longer are we going to be invoking some dualist mind type situation with so much being learned about the brain? The evidence just keeps piling up for the idea that these feelings just accompany the human experience, derived from our physiology, not some celestial message.
But, the most interesting finding of all is that these spiritual feelings are correlated with decreased activity in the right side of the brain, and people with brain damage to this area feel them more strongly.
Decreased brain activity leads to religion? Isn’t this what atheists have been saying all along? :D
In Defense Of Abiogenesis, An Introduction
I would be the first to admit that a modern cell in its entirety with its billions of base pairs of DNA forming directly by means of some animo acids collecting just right would be quite a stretch.
There is still much we don’t know about the origins of life, however, with a little research as to things we do know, abiogenesis (which doesn’t suggest the content of the first sentence), is significantly more plausible. First, one must understand that modern cells have gone through just as much evolutionary processes as complex humans have. One should not assume that cells are exactly the same today as they were two billion years ago.
But, I digress. Cell biology is not my topic. Amino acids mixing to a cell in any common conception of the word was likely not the case. Have many forgotten that there are many things more basic then cells? The first thing that comes to mind is a virus, an agent about 100 times smaller than bacteria, and technically “not alive” by definition in the cell theory. They possess a genome, and undergo the same evoutionary processes as cells. However, the possibility of viruses evolving into cells like bacteria technically being life from non-life, I can see how such would be an unsatisfactory answer. However, viruses still have quite a degree of complexity, so let’s look even smaller.
Plasmids are replicating DNA molecules autonomous of the chromosomal DNA within a suitable host. They have been found to be as small as a thousand bases pairs. We’ve gone from modern cells in all their complexity to plasmids as our simplest known replicons, billions of base pairs to a mere thousand without such intricate components. With the understanding of the ability for a chemical soup to form into animo acids, instrinsic to the DNA molecule, the formation of something like a plasmid seems significantly more plausible.
Anticipation criticism, one could mention that viruses and plasmids, as we know them, require a host. Yes, this is true. I would answer this question with my second sentence. There is still much we don’t know about the origin of life. My intent was solely to attest that abiogeneis is conceivable, and not the fatal blow to evolution that creationists make it to be.
Abiogenesis, Spontaneous Generation, and Thermodynamics
Many creationists like to claim that abiogenesis violates scientific principles in that living matter cannot come from non-living matter. At least they’re consistent in the literalistic interpretation of wording that leads them to lunacy. Their misunderstanding of the meaning of abiogenesis and spontaneous generation is staggering.
Amino acids combining into primitive RNA is not the same as a bird spawning from a tree or a frog materializing out of thin air. That sounds closer to what the creationist is asserting as to the origins of life, with divine intervention of course.
Secondly, an even more common claim is that evolution (chemical or biological) violates the second law of thermodynamics in that things tend to become more disorderly over time, contradicting with the increasing complexity of organisms within the theory of evolution. If you subscribe to that assumption, you can do your own research. I just have one thing to say on that: pregnancy.
But, dogmatically misinterpreting principles referring to certain situations is very much like if I were to make the following argument.
Creationism violates the first law of thermodynamics which states that energy cannot be created nor destroyed. If energy cannot be created, God could not have created it.
It’s a funny argument though.
Atheist Anti-evolutionist?
For quite awhile I wondered if there were any atheists that rejected the Theory of Evolution. Though religious folks are divided on the matter, for the most part, secularists have been in agreement. However, I never noticed the one right under my nose: David Berlinski. As a member of the Discovery Institute, I had assumed he would agree with the intelligent design mantra of that organization.
The first thought is intrigue as to what would remain in respect to the origin of life should both the God hypothesis and the theory of evolution be rejected, and how could one not side with either? Then I realized he’s actually in the second best position (the first being accepting of evolution, of course). If one is inadequate, then the other doesn’t win by default. It must also be supported by the evidence. His view, not motivated by religious dogma, rejected both as insufficient, and then takes the perfect stance when without explanation: “I don’t know.”
Oh No! Bush Isn’t Christian Enough!
Haha
On a Nightline interview, President Bush said that the bible is “probably not” literally true, and it’s “not incompatible with the scientific proof that there is evolution”. Come on, creationists. If Bush can do it. . .
Ken Ham thinks he needs a bible lesson. More in Ham’s blog.
Tiktaalik music video?
This one’s been showing up quite a few places.
For those of you who don’t know, Tiktaalik is thought to be a transitional form between fish and amphibians. Check out the mutant fish-hands. :O
PZ Myers – Amylase & Human Evolution
For those that don’t read Pharyngula, do eet! I found This rather interesting.
HGH Mutation
Scientists tested the mechanisms of evolution by mutating the receptor of human growth hormone, removing the tryptophan, an essential animo acid right in the center. With that gone, it wouldn’t work. After 7 generations, the cells were able to mutate the receptor gene sufficiently to bind the receptor.
“It illistrates beautifully the ability of natural selection to respond to a mutation, and for proteins to coevolve.” – Dr. Ken Miller
Hedylepta – Speciation
Hedylepta is a genus of butterfly native to and found only in Hawaii.
Two species within the genus can only eat bananas.
Bananas are not native to Hawaii. They were introduced about 1000 years ago by the Polynesians.
Therefore, by mutation & natural selection, these two species have emerged within the last thousand years on the Hawaiian islands.
