I hear a lot of talk about Darwin and his theory of Evolution. So I am wondering. Just how different would our world be today, if Darwin had never written a book and if he had never proposed a theory of Evolution?
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Originally posted by JohnR7
I hear a lot of talk about Darwin and his theory of Evolution. So I am wondering. Just how different would our world be today, if Darwin had never written a book and if he had never proposed a theory of Evolution?
Originally posted by lucaspa
2. Deism was making significant difficulties for Christianity. The mechanistic clockwork universe of Newton, Galileo, Kepler, and others pushed god back to just winding up the whole mechanism and watching it work. There was no need of the theistic type of god Christianity needed; one who would intervene in human history and even become human. Why bother, when the outcome was foreordained at the moment the clockwork was set in motion?
Evolution by natural selection rescued Chritianity from both problems...
I second that, having been a member of such a church as a child.I also fundamentally disagree that Christianity has, in fact, been "rescued" from Deism. The most liberal Christian denominations today pay very little attention to traditional dogma and are effectively Deist in their worldview.
Originally posted by Nathan Poe
400 years before Darwin, Leonardo Da Vinci wrote in one of his notebooks, "Man does not differ from the animals except in what is accidental." Sounds like the seed of the idea, doesn't it?
Originally posted by Jerry Smith
Great post, lucaspa
Originally posted by lucaspa
Jefferson was more than a century earlier. the increasing data was for a clockwinder, there being fewer and fewer places a deity could intervene. Newton thought that deity could intervene from time to time to make sure the planets were in orbit even though gravity did most of the work. By the mid-19th century such twiddling was seen as beneath Yahweh.
Second, while evolutionary theory may allow for the occasional intervention by a Deity, it by no means requires it.
You don't know that. Now we are back to the methodological materialism limitation in science. Deity may be required for any and every material process to work.
In addition, the TOE provides absolutely no reason whatsover to favor a Christian Deity over a Deist, Muslim, or Pagan one.
If you've noticed, neither does scientific creationism or Intelligent Design. Either of them could accomodate a deity other than Yahweh.
LFOD, I'm not trying to convince you that TOE makes being Christian compelling. I'm only pointing out to John how different the Christian theological world would be without TOE.
I also fundamentally disagree that Christianity has, in fact, been "rescued" from Deism. The most liberal Christian denominations today pay very little attention to traditional dogma and are effectively Deist in their worldview.
That may be, but I wasn't talking about today. I was talking about 19th century. Without Darwin and TOE deism would have won then and you wouldn't even be worrying about it now; it would have been decided.
Miller points out that quantum mechanics now rescues Christianity from deism.
Originally posted by lucaspa
Should I interpret your silence on the first part that you agree evolution helped Christianity out of a very bad spot in regard to designs in nature?