I Think I Believe I am Jesus' little brain cell

13Mar/102

More on KJV Origin of Species

Even though he seems to think that I'm a secularist, I want to give Ian Monroe's King James Version of The Origin of Species another mention. I had some money to spend, so I bought a copy. A nice novelty purchase and I imagine I'll pull it out every once in a while for some enlightened humour.

As Ian points out in the foreword, the book isn't designed to be read. The redaction is so extensive that it can't be read. That, of course, is the point. The message is clear: If the Bible is your standard for what goes and doesn't go in science, you're left with something that's completely indecipherable and utterly nonsensical. More sinister overtones are also in there somewhere: There are people who actively redact and censor science because it, in their opinion, doesn't accord with the Bible. They sit on education boards in Texas and run faith schools in London.

The book also raises questions of language. How do we speak religiously and how do we speak scientifically, and how do these two modes of speech relate? Can religion and science communicate without redaction and censorship happening - not only of science by religion, but also the other way around? Can they help trampling all over each other? Can we ever hope for mutually enriching communication? The book asks these questions starkly.

Specifically, I think the question of origin of religious language is asked most seriously. Darwin proposed a (very persuasive and successful) explanation about the origin of species, of life in the natural world. But just like some religious people, fundamentalists specifically, reject Darwin's findings for the idea of special creation of each individual species, they also reject what Biblical scholarship has found (and, really, the tradition has always known) about the origin of the Bible for a sort of Biblical special creation. Like the birds in the air and fish in the sea that just popped into existence, so the Bible just popped into existence. For me the KJV Origin raises the question of the origin of the Bible in a very vivid way. Why do we presume that the Bible simply appeared ex nihilo, like a fax from Heaven? Why do we presume that that the Bible is different from life? Just like Darwin discovered the evolutionary origin of life by looking at life itself, so the "evolutionary" origin of the Bible has been discovered by looking at the Bible itself, in addition to extra-Biblical archeological and historical data. By evolutionary, I mean that the Bible is quite human and was composed, edited, redacted and canonised over centuries. That's not the whole story, as is the case with biology too, but it is certainly a very important part of the story. The Bible is not simply given.

Most Christians consider the canon closed. It is fully evolved, you could say. But our understanding of it isn't. It evolves too. The belief, though, of some is that their doctrine is set in stone. I should elaborate more in another post, but it's a peculiar belief of some more fundamentalistic Christians that their doctrine has its direct origin with God, via the Bible. This makes them blind to the fact that their doctrine is in reality their interpretation. God didn't come up with it. They did. The message of KJV Origin can be said to be that doctrine should evolve too. Because it does so already. The fundamentalists just don't know it or want to know it. Just like scientific language, religious language evolves. It is wrong, then, to censor Origin of Species because of doctrine.

This was, by the way, my first purchase from Lulu. I am, then, somewhat of a late comer to the self-publishing revolution. I'm happy to support it though. It's the future.

Buy the book here.

Oh, my original post about the book is here.

24Feb/101

Finally! A Darwin safe for Christians!

Haha.. This is genius! Journalist Ian Monroe has removed every word in The Origin of Species that doesn't also appear in the KJV Bible.

Now, you can see what all the controversy is about for yourself, without fear that you may accidentally damn your immortal soul to hell.

For the first time, Darwin’s dangerous ideas have been published, with every word which doesn’t occur in the King James version of the Holy Bible safely redacted. By removing more than 33,000 references to non-KJV terms, we have finally succeeded in translating this demonic work into a safe manuscript, appropriate for high school biology classes, as a text for homeschooling, and even for discussion in Bible study groups.

Seriously, this is the purpose according to Monroe.

I wanted people to reflect on the nature of language, and particularly on fundamentalism, and the notion of ‘the Bible said it, I believe it, that settles it,’ which seems to preclude most concepts in a modern worldview. I also thought it would be pretty funny to actually see what it would look like if you could visually remove all those modern concepts.

Very cool.

27Nov/092

Pannenberg on Genesis and evolution

God always used creatures to bring about other things. Think of the function of the earth in the first part of Genesis. The earth is addressed by God to assist in His act of creation. First, the earth is addressed to bring about vegetation. So we may wonder, 'How can the earth, an inorganic reality, bring about an organic reality, vegetation, and then bring about the self organization of organisms from inorganic materials?' Yet, this is the Christian creation story.The second address of the earth is even bolder than that! God addresses the earth to bring about animals. And the text means higher animals. Such boldness does not really characterize even Darwin's theory of evolution. Darwin wouldn't have dreamed to have higher animals spring immediately from the earth, from inorganic matter. Darwin is much more moderate than that. In criticizing the doctrine of evolution, our creationist friends among Christian theologians should read their Bibles more closely.

Wolfhart Pannenberg

25Nov/091

It’s official: Kirk Cameron knows nothing

I don't know why, but I sort of expected more. Maybe because I assumed that if you're going to write an introduction to The Origin of Species, making claims about Darwin and his theory and putting yourself forward as a kind of expert on these things, you'd do at least some research. And by research, I mean more than browsing Answers in Genesis' website. Apparently, Kirt didn't even know that Darwin wasn't an atheist. What the hell?! It's all right to be a creationist, if you want - at least in principle - but please, please try to get your facts straight, even if you deny them.

The trumpet playing gets a bit too loud at times, but it's strangely appropriate. And whoever's playing is pretty good.

29Sep/090

Told you so!

So it appears that Creation, the Darwin biopic, just got a distributor in the States. Somewhat ironically, it's independent company Newmarket who also distributed The Passion of the Christ. I guess the film wasn't too controversial anyway - or maybe that's exactly what it was. Everyone knows that controversy sells tickets.

Does this reflect badly on the film? The reviews have been mostly positive, but not exuberantly so. It's a quiet film. Maybe there's some truth in the rather infantile comments from Uncommon Descent, a leading intelligent design blog.

Most likely, the film – which led off the Toronto International Film Festival – was rejected because it is a bore. No one here cares about Charles and Emma Darwin.

Maybe it is a little unexciting compared to, say, Die Hard 4. And maybe the producers feel that they need to drum up some controversy to fill seats in the cinema. Haven't seen the film yet, but I really don't think it's necessary. It'll never be a blockbuster, but in addition to being by all accounts a decent grown up drama, it has some built in controversy simply because of the fact that it's about Darwin. It'll do good and a little bit more, but that's it.

14Sep/090

“Creation”, ctd.

Creation, the new Darwin biopic, might be put to death by creationism. The makers can't find a distributor in the US. The Telegraph says,

However, US distributors have resolutely passed on a film which will prove hugely divisive in a country where, according to a Gallup poll conducted in February, only 39 per cent of Americans believe in the theory of evolution.

Movieguide.org, an influential site which reviews films from a Christian perspective, described Darwin as the father of eugenics and denounced him as "a racist, a bigot and an 1800s naturalist whose legacy is mass murder". His "half-baked theory" directly influenced Adolf Hitler and led to "atrocities, crimes against humanity, cloning and genetic engineering", the site stated.

The film has sparked fierce debate on US Christian websites, with a typical comment dismissing evolution as "a silly theory with a serious lack of evidence to support it despite over a century of trying".

Jeremy Thomas, the Oscar-winning producer of Creation, said he was astonished that such attitudes exist 150 years after On The Origin of Species was published.

"That's what we're up against. In 2009. It's amazing," he said.

"The film has no distributor in America. It has got a deal everywhere else in the world but in the US, and it's because of what the film is about. People have been saying this is the best film they've seen all year, yet nobody in the US has picked it up.

"It is unbelievable to us that this is still a really hot potato in America. There's still a great belief that He made the world in six days. It's quite difficult for we in the UK to imagine religion in America. We live in a country which is no longer so religious. But in the US, outside of New York and LA, religion rules.

"Charles Darwin is, I suppose, the hero of the film. But we tried to make the film in a very even-handed way. Darwin wasn't saying 'kill all religion', he never said such a thing, but he is a totem for people."

It's sad that creationists thrive on misinformation, with their false - vile, really - assessment of Darwin and the legacy of his theory, and suppression of information, with no one wanting to distribute Creation.

Edit 18/09/2009
This is my prediction: While the film hasn't found a distributor yet, there are already rumours of an ensuing bidding war. I'm pretty convinced that the article above is a slightly clever attempt to drum up some hype for the film, first of all in the blogosphere and then the media in general. It's like when films are banned or when the Catholic church says it disapproves: Everyone wants to see the film.  Wait and see. Creation will announce an American distributor in a couple of days. Or maybe weeks. But it will happen.

12Sep/090

Shy “Creation”, apparently

7430_124957669860_39212784860_2252969_3266259_n

Creation, the new Darwin biopic, was just premiered a couple of days ago at the Toronto Film Festival and will begin screening, in the UK at least, the 25th of September. I've been looking forward to it for a while. It looks pretty good. And I'm always interested in films that explore the interface between science and faith.

But according to initial comments by Roger Ebert, the film shies away from really going into the depths of the conflict between science and faith, as personified by Darwin and his wife respectively. The films both intellectual and dramatic depth and impact consequently suffers.

The movie devotes most of its attention to the marriage, as Emma (Jennifer Connelly) rebukes Charles (Paul Bettany) for his heretical convictions and thinks they mean the two of them cannot spend eternity together. They're both intelligent and deeply in love, and it's a shame the movie doesn't allow them to fully debate their differences. It sees their opinions instead somewhat vaguely as personality characteristics. Did it occur to Darwin or his wife that nothing in his ideas precluded the existence of God? Today, no major religion finds conflict between God and the theory of evolution. The majority of Christians can live with both ideas; religious opposition to Darwin is limited primarily to a fundamentalist minority of American Christians.

I ask myself, do we really need to watch the Darwins edging around the substance of their disagreement? The film maker, Jon Amiel, obviously has great respect and affection for the scientist--for them both, really. Did he restrain himself in fear of provoking controversy? Has it gotten to that point? "Creation" dares not state relevant ideas that were acceptable nearly 50 years ago, when "Inherit the Wind" was nominated for four Academy Awards. There's no such shyness in the anti-Darwin faction.

28Jun/090

John Haught on Biblical and cosmic literalism

Literalism in the religious community is especially conspicuous in the phenomenon of biblical "creationism," notorious among scientists for its repudiation of evolutionary biology. An interesting subset of the creationist camp is "scientific creationism." Longing to bolster religion's cognitive status in a literalist scientific culture, the scientific creationists place the Bible in direct competition with Darwinism. They insist that the biblical book of Genesis provides a scientifically accurate explanation of life and that Darwin's ideas are scientifically weak by comparison. Rather than seeking to understand life at an altogether deeper level than that of science, scientific creationists have decided - most ironically - to embrace scientism's own cosmic literalism. They have implicitly conceded that only a scientific reading of nature will command respect today. And after making this concession they declare that an ancient religious gives a more accurate scientific reading of life than Darwin does.

Where creationists read things with a biblical literalism, however, evolutionary materialists approach the world with no less shallow reading habits of their own. Both readings, as far apart as they may be in other respects, characteristically share an aversion to understanding things on many levels simultaneously. If creationism collapses explanation of life onto one level, this is no less true of countless contemporary interpretations of Darwinism. By proclaiming that natural selection of adaptive genetic ensembles is fully explanatory of life's diversity and complexity, some well-known evolutionists exhibit a literalism that matches, in its flight from depth, anything in the wprld of contemporary religious fundamentalism.

John F. Haught, Deeper Than Darwin, pp. 16-17