Mentioning spirituality in debate is like a pail of cold
water over the head. It is impossible to debate spirituality. I was arguing that
“it” all started with the big bang. My protagonist in the argument was a young physician
who was highly trained in science and culture: he originated in India. He recognized
that science advanced as human nature advanced. With discovery of an explanation
for something man observed in our physical world, scientists soon made irrevocable
clear how and why, which moved what ever it was out of the supernatural into
the realm of our understanding, some other unknown took its place: earth quakes;
volcanoes; thunder, lightening, and rain, sea tides, death, genes etc, etc. It
seemed the “supply” of unknowable things “only God knows”, was inexhaustible. You
would think that science would have squeezed God into a very small corner, but
no. As my protagonist said, “While, we
can know everything since the big bag, down to quarks and bosons but we will never know where the energy in
the big bang come from—that is the spirit.”
Obviously, that was the end of logic in the argument. It has
been that way since the development of the mind of man. I know that what we do
not know we will someday know but I also know that until we do we have to admit
that we don’t know, which is the crack in the door that religion squeezes
through. However, the answer seems to be that we are asking the wrong question.
The question should be, “Why we feel or
sense we need a spirit in the first place?” or alternatively, “What is it that
we mean by spirit?” It is the need to survive imbedded in our genome and
the genomes of all living things.
The concept of survival as the result of genetic buffering in
a broad sense is common to all living things and not just man and animals; that
is, it is unique to all things with genes. It is both biochemical and
biological. It is both physical and mental. We can speak about survival just as
we speak about thirst, hunger, and all the other feelings carried in our genes
that are important to us. It is the result of eons and eons of materialistic-mechanistic
systematic probability in the dangerous game of adaptability—obviously
dangerous because if you do not adapt you die. On the brink of death due to
starvation, freezing, the ravages of disease, in a fox hole surrounded by enemy,
or whatever, you unknowingly call on the full force of all your genetic
capabilities to survive, you call on the spirit of survival. Thus, the collective
and pervasive force of survival is beyond our control but not beyond our scientific
understanding.
If you personally refer to the collective forces of survival
as “God" then you are obligated to accept the idea that nature created God
and not the other way around, unless you are a Deist and believe a God or
spirit created the earth with the big bang and then bowed out of the picture as
my protagonist alleged. Adhering to that belief, if scientists could ever explain
the big bang, a Deist would have to become an atheist but the spirit of
survival concept would remain.
As explained above, science has relentlessly worked to lift
the veil of ignorance to the point where we believe that everything is
knowable, even things we don’t know, which is perhaps the most egotistical
thing a man can say. Learning how to create life and survive just took longer
than religious history indicates—compares 20 billion years for the beginning of
probability to 50,000 years claimed by palioanthorphologists, or the biblical 4000
years. In addition, it did not all happen in the Garden of Eden. In truth,
there was no mystical guiding force because it is all scientifically
explainable, therefore knowable. Life’s force, using the definition of life as
inheritable, dynamic, and sustainable organization, equates the evolution of
life to our morphological existence including our nervous system, our mental
existence, and our mentality. These things operate in harmony.
An additional revelation concerning our understanding about
the creation of life is that we live in two separate but intimately intertwined
spheres: the slow plodding genetic sphere developing by random chance and the
rapidly expanding supra genetic sphere. A key step to understanding some of the
basic conflict concerning religion verses science is to realize where the
conflict arises; it is between our deeply held inherent forces and our equally
pervasive but deeply held supra genetic beliefs. The supra genetic sphere is
where engineers, for example, live and function. Engineers can and do create “things”
through intelligent design. That is what they learned to do and that is what
they do. Is it total folly to think a transistor radio, for example, can evolve
out of cosmic dust as organisms evolved without an intelligent designer— the
concept that God is an engineer? I think the thought is the worst of folly.
Clearly, a simple radio is a product of the supra genetic capabilities of
engineers. The development of a radio can be traced step-by-step from the
elements: copper, silicon, carbon, and insulation organized into wire, capacitor,
resisters, and antennas. In this sense, the radio evolved with time. The one
big difference between organisms and a radio is that a radio and all of its
parts were designed by man to allow man to communicate; it was purposeful. Man
created the radio by design. In contrast, organisms developed by chance. In
other words, G.G. Simpson got it right, “He (man) was not planned.”
Darwin’s theory of evolution is truly the theory that enabled
us to put religion in perspective but only after we understood the sweeping
force of genetic synergy. Thus, our study of biopoiesis created the
understanding needed for man to develop the concept and name the force(s) or sense
of survival Allah, God, Buddha, etc. that is create God out of the concept of
survival. Irrespective of the name, the concept or belief is no less meaningful
or less influential in our lives manifested as some form of religion.
The concept makes a lexicon of terms meaningless: blasphemy
for example, resurrection, holy trinity, heaven, Bible, but surprisingly it
retains terms usually associated with religion such as everlasting life (via
our DNA), individual mortality, and transforms soul into a function of erasable
memory. It means man has a choice even if it is genetically guided—you cannot
decide not to be a man but you can decide, within genetic limits, to be a good
man or an evil man. However, it redefines good and evil in terms of survival. The
spirit of survival gives salt its good taste but also its bad taste.
The first commandment takes on special meaning if God is
equated to survival: “Put no other God before me”, the consequences of doing so
would be your own survival. The concept gives prayer a new meaning—the meaning
of a wish, what one hopes for and not a petition for favors. It means that organized
religions with all the rules and obligations are products of our supra genetic
capabilities. It drives a stake into the heart of so-called divinely guided
behavior claimed by religious leaders who often upset social order for personal
power.
In the words of Barbara Theiring: “God is not to be found in
people, or in places, nor in words; God is that which cannot be named or
defined or known.” Thus, the spirit, from which we create God, is an undefined
biochemical force found in the synergy conserved in our massive body of genes
associated with survival, every thing else about religion is circus. Although
information concerned with the “force or spirit of survival” is embodied in
DNA, we cannot ignore post-transcription modifications. These supra genetic changes
in many respect freed us from our dependence on the slow plodding of random
mutations for new and exciting things. Learning how to communicate at a more
and more sophisticated level, perhaps the most important supra genetic
capability, enable us to know, convey, and debate a number of challenges in the
form of unanswered questions. What part “should” religion play in our lives?
What does everlasting life mean in terms of our survival as a species? What is
our individual soul? What part does determinism plays in our lives? Perhaps the
most perplexing question is “What is the purpose of life?” I will leave all of
this to the “supra genetic” capabilities of our religious philosophers where it
properly belongs. However, I am content I understand what a spirit is.
URL: firetreepub.blogspot.com Comments Invited and not moderated
At what point did evolution stop and become something else for us as humans?
ReplyDeleteFood, water, shelter, maybe some type of defense, and a way to reproduce (community) that should be all we need right? That'd be all we need for our genetic code to be satisfied and adapt slightly for maybe a colder winter or harsher summer.
But if our genetic code, good or bad, why would there have been a need our want too advance?
There is no use for creativity (art, music) as they serve no purpose to survive. So that can't be based on our DNA? Never heard of genes making music.
I find it tough to believe that a theory can define why we have a need to advance. Science is about knowledge, but wouldn't our base genetics be satisfied with basic survival skills?
I am confused as to your point. I would really like to understand what your criticism is so I could answer it—or at least try to answer it. The thrust of this article is that, like all creatures, we have an instinct for survival that I chose to refer to as a spirit. Our genes embody that instinct but there is no one survival gene anymore than there is a God gene, for example. We behave as we behave because of our genes including our universal appreciation of rhythm.
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