Events at Harvard. And congrats to Abraham Lincoln, whose was born on the same day as Darwin in 1809!
January 31, 2009
My Venerable Opponent
My evangelical Christian friend Wintery Knight as started a blog, and fires off a shot at atheism. We often debate by e-mail, and I generally disagree with everything he says, but it’s stimulating. His somewhat over-the-top tone may prove a recipe for success on the Internet (my moderate nature has never gotten me anywhere). In his post, he makes a number of arguments for theism. Wintery is too prolific for me to address everything he says, but I made the following point.
The traditional rebuttal to the First Cause argument is, who created God? That makes a nice point, but I don’t find it entirely convincing, because it contains a complacent acceptance of an uncaused universe.
I think we humans find ourselves unable to resolve the logical paradox–things don’t come into existence without a cause, yet there is no explanation for the first cause. Neither the atheist nor theist views quite hang together.
My agnostic view is that humans are too limited in our intelligence to solve the problem, at least at this time. Perhaps logic itself is something that reflects human psychology and perception rather than the underlying truth of the universe.
I’ve been interested to read recent reports of research show how intelligent bees are, and how bees can recognize facesand count to four. It’s amazing what bees can do, but we wouldn’t expect them to be able to explain the universe. Likewise, it’s impressive what humans can do, but perhaps understanding the universe in full is above our pay grade.
January 28, 2009
Work With Dignity – Cleaning Toilets vs. Investment Banking
This video is apropo the UUWorld article about dignity and “rankism”. It describes how we can view our jobs as merely a job, a career, or a calling, and how house cleaners can invest meaning in a job many look down on.
People who clean toilets prove a tangible benefit for mankind. There are certainly some professions, like investment banking, where the benefits are more dubious.
I suppose I’m being cheeky, and missing the point by suggesting that investment banking has les value. The UUWorld article suggests we respect every person’s work equally. That to me may go tar far in preventing an assessment of “right livelihood.” We should retain the right to critique work that may be anti-social, but we should respect people who work hard at jobs that contribute to society with a lot less regard to how much those jobs pay.
And seriously, as far as investment banking goes, a certain amount of financial servies are essential to an economy, but the developments since the Reagan era created an environment where financial engineering was compensated far more than its actual worth, leading to the current debacle.
January 14, 2009
Going Deeper
Doug Muder has, as a member of the UU Lay Theological Education Task Force, called for a discussion on what needs “lay theological education” ought to satisfy.
First, as a quibble, I’d prefer the task where defined as “philosophical” education rather than theological, since theology is centered on god, which may not be the appropriate focus.
But moving beyond that, and writing as someone who has not been systematically trained in philosophy, but has thought about it for quite a while, it seems to me that first thing to focus on is two mysteries, the mystery of existence and the mystery of consciousness.
The Mystery of Existence
Why is there something rather than nothing? The starting point for many theists is the First Cause Argument, which holds that a Creator is needed to explain existence. The atheist riposte is, “Who created God?” I find this riposte good as a debating point, but ultimately not satisfying. While insisting that things must have causes leads to infinite regress, postulating that things can come into existence without a cause is kind of like an appeal to the miraculous, with the restriction that miracles only occurred 13 billion years ago!
There really is a paradox here that is currently insoluable. People find uncertainty (agnosticism) unsettling, and in my opinion to quickly adhere to pat answers. It may be that human intelligence is not capable of understanding the true nature of reality. We are after all creatures that evolved in a specific ecological niche, and understanding the universe is not strictly necessary for our survival.
The Mystery of Consciousness
Just as strange as the fact that we exist is the fact that we know it. Rocks exist but do not know it. Why do we?
I think it’s critical that lay theological education address debates about consciousness, because they bring into question whether we can really be free and responsible.
All adults and anyone who come to Unitarian Universalism will know that there are people who question god’s existence. Conflicts between believers and non-believers and debates between theists and atheists are commonly covered in the news media.
The average adult, perhaps even the average educated adult, is probably not aware of debates regarding the nature of the mind and body. Cartesian dualism, while in disrepute in the scientific community, is still the “common sense” position of everyday speech.
There is something mysterious about the fact that we know we exist. Scientists are learning more and moe about the brain and the neural activity that goes on when we experience and pay attention to what we sense, and when we recall the past. The standard view is that the mind reflects what is going on in the brain, but does not affect the brain (cause future brain states). This also means that there is no freewill in the conventional sense–the sense that our mind makes choices is an illusion.
An yet, there is at least an apparent paradox here. If the mind or consciousness has no effect on the brain, how does it contribute to our survival? If it does not contribute to our survival, why did we evolve to be conscious? Some scientists speculate that consciousness is a spandrel, a side-effect of evolution not specifically selected for. I find this suspicious and an easy out. Mystery remains.
Still, I think its important for every UU to know that a debate about freewill exists. It seems almost un-American, unconstitutional, to question it, but human laws cannot change basic facts about the universe. Undermining freewill also undermines notions of responsibility. If we are not free, why should we be punished for what we do.
My own view is that we have a sort of pseudo-freewill. It may be that at the deepest level, what we do is a combination of determinism and randomness, without any soul or self making choices. But there is enough recursiveness and self-consciousness in the brain that it can adapt behavior to meet laws, rules and expectations. We may not be free in principle, but in practice we have a lot of flexibility, and should be held accountable.
How We Know Things
I think UUs should deal with questions of how we know things to be true. When I read atheist blogs, I find an overvaluation of reason and rationality. It’s not that I love irrationality. Rather, I see an overestimation of a narrow rationality modeled after the calcuations of a digital computer. In fact, neuroscientists are finding that human rationality is constrained by our emotions. Scientists are also beginning to see intuition not as mystical, but as relying at human skills in pattern recognition.
Prayer and Meditation
Most people who come to a UU church will know what a prayer is. So the question for UUs is how and whether to pray. While there is no good evidence that prayer helps those at a distance who don’t even know they are being prayed for, I think it’s pretty obvious that expressing a hope through prayer can help the person who is praying, and also affect those who witness it. Prayers can be expressed in ways that don’t offend the sensibilities of humanists and naturalists.
On the other hand, its quite likely that people who come to a UU church will never have had first-hand experience with meditation. Without specifying how one meditations, since there are so many methods, I think I UU lay curriculum should expose people to the practice of meditation and allow them to experience the phenomenon of the quieting of the mind. Before I first learned to meditate (at the YWCA no less!) I simply didn’t understand what people were talking about when they spoke of quieting the mind. It’s not something that can be observed from the outside. It has to be experienced.
January 13, 2009
Stoic Registry
A commenter at Doug Muder’s Free and Responsible Search points out The Stoic Registry, a site that hosts an online Stoic community. I’ve long admired Marcus Aurelius (though I wish his meditations displayed more of a sense of humor). I’ve more recently read Epictetus and Seneca. I’ll be interested in delving into what this site has to say.
Doug and I have discussed the similarities between Stoic and Buddhist thought, and Doug referred me to The Shape of Ancient Thought, a very interesting scholarly work which identifies cross-fertilization of Greek and Indian thought. Even before Alexander the Great’s conquest of part of India, the author finds interchange between Greeks and Indians who were subjects of the Persian Empire.
Stoicism and Buddhism share a practice of focusing on the present moment without judgment. One different I see is that Stoicism is popular among the military, whereas contemporary Buddhism emphasizes non-violence. Of course, the participation of Buddhists in the Japanese war effort during World War II suggests that this distinction may be limited in time and place.
January 12, 2009
Can Faith Heal Fibromyalgia?
Pastor Steve Hickey, who apparently practices faith healing, says yes, at least in theory, but not so easily in practice.
The answer to the question – can God heal Fibromyalgia? – is YES! The Bible says, he forgives all our sins and heals ALL our diseases! (Psalm 103:3) There isn’t one disease or diagnosis that is beyond his ability or desire to heal today. I hope that is a hopeful truth for somebody who is hurting right now.
I’m led to post on this topic today because people very close to me, whom I love dearly, are getting pummeled by Fibromyalgia. We have seen God physically heal people here at Church at the Gate in numbers into the three digits. However, we have only seen what I’d call temporary relief as we pray for healing from Fibromyalgia so far.
It’s interesting that he finds the illness a tough nut for God. Fibromyalgia is a chronic illness involving pain and fatigue that is often linked with depression. However, if depression were the fundamental cause of the illness, one would think that faith healing could make an impact–since faith or optimism is almost by definition anti-depressive.
I do think that faith healing can have a significant impact on pain. Studies show that placebos can be very effective as analgesics, and a placebo is nothing more than a trick to manipulation faith and expectation. Faith and optimism are energizing, so they should make a dent on fatigue.
I know that fibromyalgia has been linked to central sensitization, neuroplastic changes in the central nervous system which causes pain sensations to be amplified. I’m inclined to believe that these changes are at least in part affected by cognitive states, and thus should be sensitive to faith and expectation.
To me, God’s difficulty healing fibromyalgia is suggestive either of an unknown organic cause that goes beyond mood disorders, or perhaps that its kindled by stress, but accompanied by irreversible changes like cell death that faith cannot reverse.