stumpjumper said:
I made the wiki entry on [WIKI]theistic evolution[/WIKI]but was wondering if there was anything someone felt I missed or need to improve upon.
Anyone can edit it also so if there's something you'd like to change feel free to do so...
I think the most problematic section is the paragraph on Teilhard de Chardin, and it may be best to leave it out altogether. There are several difficulties with it.
Teilhard de Chardin, a Jesuit paleontologist, described the God of evolution as a god who pulled the world ahead and towards the future in comparison to Aristotles prime mover who guided or pushed the world and life from behind.
Actually what Chardin is describing IS the Aristotelian view. Aristotle proposed 4 causes: material, formal, efficient and teleological. The material and formal causes are simply the matter from which physical bodies are formed, and the shape or form that gives them definition. The efficient cause is the push-from-behind force of cause-and-effect. The telelogical cause is the pull-from-ahead cause and Chardin is actually taking this from Aristotle as he describes the Omega point.
Science today does not acknowledge a teleological cause in nature and works only with the concept of efficient cause. It may be that theistic evolution picks up the teleological cause again in saying that evolution works, not only from the efficient causes in nature but also toward the purposes of God.
Teilhard described this God as almost completely Omega and primarily concerned with the future. This is the God that evolution requires and it is a God that is motivated by love.
I am not certain I would go to the point of saying evolution "requires" this God. Theistic evolution may, as a theological stance, but evolution, as science, would not. But I am not certain that even theistic evolution would insist on this theology.
Another problem with referring to Chardin's vision, is that science has moved on since his time. Chardin's vision of evolution was relatively linear and progressive, along the lines of
orthogenesis.. Modern evolutionary biology rejects this concept.
An Omega God would primarily be a pulling force drawing new and complex life towards itself. Not surprisingly, then, the feature most obvious about macro-evolution, and the feature that caught Charles Darwins eye, is the emergence of novel life.
The association of evolution with new and complex life is more typical of creationist views. Special creation identifies each species as a wholly new life form, without precedent in the past.
But what Darwin noted was not so much the newness of species, but the continuity of new with old, such that a relationship could be posited between extinct and extant species. The connectedness of descent is fundamental to evolution.
In fact, it is appropriate to say that what evolution stresses is not the novelty of diverse life forms but the continuity of life forms. There are no completely novel life forms. All new forms are modifications of previous forms.
I am also wary of identifying the purpose of evolution, even theologically, with complexity. A better term than complexity is diversity. Had God chosen to populate the world with no other life form than bacteria, the diversity of bacteria is still due to evolution. Complexity is not an inevitable end of evolution, but diversity is. As it happens, the diversification of life forms included the production of complex life forms. Is this an outworking of God's purpose for evolution? Maybe. But it is not, on a scientific basis, a necessary outcome of evolution.
I am going to think on this a bit more and will post some additional thoughts tomorrow. Looking at evolution to me conveys several positive values, but I need to think yet how to articulate them.