Sunday, October 23, 2005

The Church and intelligent design: Part Umpteen

Physicist Stephen Barr, author of the worthy book Modern Physics and Ancient Faith, has weighed in quite usefully on the interminable debate over Cardinal Schönborn's New York Times Op-Ed piece on evolution, which I have of course discussed before myself. Barr writes:
I personally am not at all sure that the neo-Darwinian framework is a sufficient one for biology. But if it turns out to be so, it would in no way invalidate what Pope Benedict has said: “We are not some casual and meaningless product of evolution. Each of us is the result of a thought of God. Each of us is willed, each of us is loved, each of us is necessary.” In his New York Times article, Cardinal Schönborn understandably wanted to counter those neo-Darwinian advocates who claim that the theory of evolution precludes a Creator’s providential guidance of creation. Regrettably, he ended up giving credibility to their claim and obscuring the clear teaching of the Church that no truth of science can contradict the truth of revelation.
That seems about right—not because the substance of His Eminence's position was incorrect, but because his language did not explicitly observe the necessary distinctions. In my anxiety to defend Schönborn, I didn't take due account of that and thus treated his approach too charitably. But his error is the sort of made by people who address philosophically quite subtle issues in journalistic fashion. Read Barr's article instead. I shall use it to address the larger topic again.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Mike
    Nice surreal graphic. Well I read that whole article, difficult as it was. I have already been discussing evolution with an atheist who fell away from the catholic church on alternet. He saw himself as my teacher. Yeah. Right.
    It is interesting you posted on this today because I picked up a booklet on faith and science in my church library ,published by the orthodox christain education committee. I put it back after reading the first paragraph which was about the gravitational attraction between a 160lb boy and a 120lb girl!
    Did you know public school science teachers are in demand in my state? I have thought about pursuing this career at some point in the future. I am not looking forward to all this turmoil around evolution. Actually science is the one subject I have not completed for my university general education.
    I believe in evolution and I am orthodox. I don't see a conflict there.
    Regards
    Oly
    PS I found out from my ex that he did not hear the encyclicals growing up in the catholic church. Did you?

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