Posted on 03/14/2008 5:08:51 AM PDT by iowamark
The $1.6 million Templeton Prize, the richest award made to an individual by a philanthropic organization, was given Wednesday to Michael Heller, 72, a Roman Catholic priest, cosmologist and philosopher who has spent his life asking, and perhaps more impressively answering, questions like Does the universe need to have a cause?...
Much of Professor Hellers career has been dedicated to reconciling the known scientific world with the unknowable dimensions of God.
In doing so, he has argued against a God of the gaps strategy for relating science and religion, a view that uses God to explain what science cannot.
Professor Heller said he believed, for example, that the religious objection to teaching evolution is one of the greatest misunderstandings because it introduces a contradiction or opposition between God and chance.
In a telephone interview, Professor Heller explained his affinity for the two fields: I always wanted to do the most important things, and what can be more important than science and religion? Science gives us knowledge, and religion gives us meaning. Both are prerequisites of the decent existence.
Professor Heller said he planned to use his prize to create a center for the study of science and theology at the Pontifical Academy of Theology, in Krakow, Poland, where he is a faculty member....
On returning years later to Poland, where Communist authorities sought to oppress intellectuals and priests, Professor Heller found shelter for his work in the Catholic Church. He was ordained at 23, but spent just one year ministering to a parish before he felt compelled to return to academia....
The prize will be officially awarded in London by Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, in a private ceremony on May 7 at Buckingham Palace.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
hosepipe: The pasture on the outside(of the sheep pens) is free and peaceful(Ps 23)..
But ye believe not, because ye are not of my sheep, as I said unto you. My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me: And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any [man] pluck them out of my hand. My Father, which gave [them] me, is greater than all; and no [man] is able to pluck [them] out of my Father's hand. I and [my] Father are one. John 10:26-30
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou [art] with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me. Psalms 23:4
For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. Colossians 3:3
Actually according to a couple of Hebrew scholars I know.. The word is retreated.. or updated... "remodeled" in our terms.. They could be right.. If so then there could have been "a society" of "something" pre-Adam.. Angel?.. whatever.. Its an interesting supposition.. At least they say the word created in some places in Genesis ch 1 could NOT mean created from nothing.. If the earth had to be remodeled then something could have happened(before Adam) to make that needed... for proto-humans..
Why not in scripture?.. need to know maybe..
corr: re-created..
I like your speculation about this very much MHGinTN. To my way of thinking, your "volumetric time" corresponds to my own speculation about a fifth "timelike" dimension....
Of course, neither speculation is "scientific," strictly speaking. The scientific method -- methodological naturalism -- really has no way to reach such insights, which are inherently cosmological (and therefore, philosophical).
Thanks ever so much for writing!
I have a friend who’s very knowledgeable about Hebrew and he told me much the same thing some 30 years ago.
He said in the Hebrew, there’s a change in verb tense between the first and second verses of Genesis. In the first verse, it does indicate creation of something new, never created before.
In the second verse, it’s a remaking of what was there.
His speculation, and it makes sense to me, is that what happened between the first and second verses was the fall of Satan. When Satan fell, he deliberately destroyed the earth, likely in an attempt to thwart God’s purposes. So God had to make it habitable for man again. He remodeled it.
Oh, I so much admire Noah Waldman's comments here! The "essence of science" is to reduce observations to "neat positivistic formula." Scientific observations necessarily depend on direct sense experience. Yet there is so much in human experience that is inaccessible by and independent of sense perception.
There really are superpersonal objects and goals that neither require nor are capable of foundation by means of direct observation/sense perception alone. Such objects and goals have informed the conduct and progress of human life from time immemorial. These objects and goals refer primarily to nonsensory modes of human experience that are superior in rank and worth, as Ellis Sandoz put it, to the objects of sense experience the domain of the scientific method.
As Sandoz says, Inasmuch as such nonsensory experiences are constitutive of what is distinctive about human existence itself and of what is most precious to mankind a purported science of man unable to take account of them is egregiously defective.
Such nonsensory modes of experience lie entirely outside the reach of the scientific method as presently constituted: methodological naturalism. But the fact that science cannot reach them does not mean they do not exist in Reality.
I appreciate Waldman's mention of Aristotle in this connection. Aristotle didn't lose sight of the "whole," the context in which natural phenomena occur. It's interesting that the methods of the "father of science" were supplanted by the "father of modern science," Sir Francis Bacon, who was motivated by the desire to expunge "philosophy" from science, thus to make it more "reliable." He inaugurated methodological naturalism, which is based on direct observation, replicable experiments, etc.
But Bacon misses something that Aristotle saw: that observation is limited precisely because we cannot see the whole, the context in which the visible/phenomenal things occur. As such, the scientific method as presently constituted is a very limited tool. I'm not saying it's not an important tool for the acquisition of human knowledge. But it is limited in the kinds of knowledge it can acquire, and therefore needs to be supplemented by other knowledge disciplines, preeminently philosophy and theology.
Thank you so much for writing cornelis!
It's an "ism." That is, a construct of the human mind. It is an abstraction from reality, not reality itself.
Oh! the judeo-christian fiction that could be written about that... even science fiction.. We have our hands full dicerning the bible we have.. bringing these(events) into the picture would be fool hardy.. that IF they happened at all.. {cough}.. (shineing glasses) trying to look credible..
I said it was speculation on his part.
Just a *cough* theory *cough*.
Some girls like guys in uniforms?..
Whats the problem..
I hear ya.. I would never speculate wildly like that..
But (shakeing finger) I might buy the book....
He had other Scripture that supported his viewpoint.
It does make sense though. Why would something need remodeling in the first place if it were OK?
I know a few verse in Jeremiah... is one place.. where Satan is talked about..
I think it was Ezekial where it talks about Satan (the King of Tyre).
I think you’re correct.. Very few places is there a hint of pre Adam anything..
BTW, the word 'bara' is used in Genesis to specify a completely new thing brought into existence which never was. The word shows up at the advent of the whole universe, at the segment where single cell life transmogrifies into 'multicelluar organisms', and when Adam has the Spirit breathed into him and he becomes a 'living soul'. It will be briefly covered in my coming book, if I ever get it finished.
Concerning the meaning of the first five verses of Scripture, since you are looking at the Hebrew language, I thought you might find these sources interesting. First, the King James version which was translated from the Masoretic text:
Lurkers: The Masoretic Text is the Hebrew text of the Tanakh (the Jewish Bible.) Compiled around the seventh century AD, it includes the additional notations necessary for vocalizing, or reading, the text. Protestants translated the Old Testament from this version rather than the Vulgate (Latin) which was translated from the Greek (Septuagint) which was translated from the Hebrew.
And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness [was] upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.
And God said, Let there be light: and there was light. And God saw the light, that [it was] good: and God divided the light from the darkness. And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day.
in the summit Elohiym [Powers] fattened the sky and the land, and the land had existed in confusion and was unfilled and darkness was upon the face of the deep sea and the wind of Elohiym [Powers] was much fluttering upon the face of the water, and Elohiym [Powers] said, light exist and light existed, and Elohiym [Powers] saw the light given that it was functional and Elohiym [Powers] made a separation between the light and the darkness, and Elohiym [Powers] called out to the light day and to the darkness he called out night and evening existed and morning existed one day.
1In the beginning the Mighty One filled the skies and the land 2because the world existed devoid and void. A chaotic void was over the face of the deep then the creative breath of the Mighty One hovered over the face of the water.
3The Mighty One said "let order exist" and order came into existence. 4The Mighty One saw that the order was beautiful. The Mighty One made a separation between the order and the chaos. 5The Mighty One called the order day and the chaos night. There was an evening and there was a morning, a unified day.
...
The Talmud (Chagiga, ch. 2), in trying to understand the subtleties of Torah, analyzes the word "choshech." When the word "choshech" appears in Genesis 1:2, the Talmud explains that it means black fire, black energy, a kind of energy that is so powerful you can't even see it. Two verses later, in Genesis 1:4, the Talmud explains that the same word -- "choshech" -- means darkness, i.e. the absence of light.
Other words as well are not to be understood by their common definitions. For example, "mayim" typically means water. But Maimonides says that in the original statements of creation, the word "mayim" may also mean the building blocks of the universe.
Another example is Genesis 1:5, which says, "There is evening and morning, Day One." That is the first time that a day is quantified: evening and morning. Nachmanides discusses the meaning of evening and morning. Does it mean sunset and sunrise? It would certainly seem to.
But Nachmanides points out a problem with that. The text says "there was evening and morning Day One... evening and morning a second day... evening and morning a third day." Then on the fourth day, the sun is mentioned. Nachmanides says that any intelligent reader can see an obvious problem. How do we have a concept of evening and morning for the first three days if the sun is only mentioned on Day Four? There is a purpose for the sun appearing only on Day Four, so that as time goes by and people understand more about the universe, you can dig deeper into the text.
Nachmanides says the text uses the words "Vayehi Erev" -- but it doesn't mean "there was evening." He explains that the Hebrew letters Ayin, Resh, Bet -- the root of "erev" -- is chaos. Mixture, disorder. That's why evening is called "erev", because when the sun goes down, vision becomes blurry. The literal meaning is "there was disorder." The Torah's word for "morning" -- "boker" -- is the absolute opposite. When the sun rises, the world becomes "bikoret", orderly, able to be discerned. That's why the sun needn't be mentioned until Day Four. Because from erev to boker is a flow from disorder to order, from chaos to cosmos. That's something any scientist will testify never happens in an unguided system. Order never arises from disorder spontaneously and remains orderly. Order always degrades to chaos unless the environment recognizes the order and locks it in to preserve it. There must be a guide to the system. That's an unequivocal statement.
The Torah wants us to be amazed by this flow, starting from a chaotic plasma and ending up with a symphony of life. Day-by-day the world progresses to higher and higher levels. Order out of disorder. It's pure thermodynamics. And it's stated in terminology of 3000 years ago.
The creation of time.
Each day of creation is numbered. Yet there is discontinuity in the way the days are numbered. The verse says: "There is evening and morning, Day One." But the second day doesn't say "evening and morning, Day Two." Rather, it says "evening and morning, a second day." And the Torah continues with this pattern: "Evening and morning, a third day... a fourth day... a fifth day... the sixth day." Only on the first day does the text use a different form: not "first day," but "Day One" ("Yom Echad"). Many English translations make the mistake of writing "a first day." That's because editors want things to be nice and consistent. But they throw out the cosmic message in the text! Because there is a qualitative difference, as Nachmanides says, between "one" and "first." One is absolute; first is comparative.
Nachmanides explains that on Day One, time was created. That's a phenomenal insight. Time was created. You can't grab time. You don't even see it. You can see space, you can see matter, you can feel energy, you can see light energy. I understand a creation there. But the creation of time? Eight hundred years ago, Nachmanides attained this insight from the Torah's use of the phrase, "Day One." And that's exactly what Einstein taught us in the Laws of Relativity: that there was a creation, not just of space and matter, but of time itself.
Einstein's Law of Relativity.
Looking back in time, a scientist will view the universe as being 15 billion years old. But what is the Bible's view of time? Maybe it sees time differently. And that makes a big difference. Albert Einstein taught us that Big Bang cosmology brings not just space and matter into existence, but that time is part of the nitty gritty. Time is a dimension. Time is affected by your view of time. How you see time depends on where you're viewing it. A minute on the moon goes faster than a minute on the Earth. A minute on the sun goes slower. Time on the sun is actually stretched out so that if you could put a clock on the sun, it would tick more slowly. It's a small difference, but it's measurable and measured.
If you could ripen oranges on the Sun, they would take longer to ripen. Why? Because time goes more slowly. Would you feel it going more slowly? No, because your biology would be part of the system. If you were living on the Sun, your heart would beat more slowly. Wherever you are, your biology is in synch with the local time. And a minute or an hour where ever you are is exactly a minute or an hour.
If you could look from one system to another, you would see time very differently. Because depending on factors like gravity and velocity, you will perceive time in a way that is very different. The flow of time varies one location to another location. Hence the term: the law of relativity.
Today, we look back in time. We see 15 billion years. Looking forward from when the universe is very small -- billions of times smaller -- the Torah says six days. They both may be correct.
What's exciting about the last few years in cosmology is we now have quantified the data to know the relationship of the "view of time" from the beginning, relative to the "view of time" today. It's not science fiction any longer. Any one of a dozen physics text books all bring the same number. The general relationship between time near the beginning when stable matter formed from the light (the energy, the electromagnetic radiation) of the creation) and time today is a million million, that is a trillion fold extension. That's a 1 with 12 zeros after it. It is a unit-less ratio. So when a view from the beginning looking forward says "I'm sending you a pulse every second," would we see it every second? No. We'd see it every million million seconds. Because that's the stretching effect of the expansion of the universe. In astronomy, the term is "red shift." Red shift in observed astronomical data is standard.
The Torah doesn't say every second, does it? It says Six Days. How would we see those six days? If the Torah says we're sending information for six days, would we receive that information as six days? No. We would receive that information as six million million days. Because the Torah's perspective is from the beginning looking forward.
Six million million days is a very interesting number. What would that be in years? Divide by 365 and it comes out to be 16 billion years. Essentially the estimate of the age of the universe. Not a bad guess for 3300 years ago.
The way these two figures match up is extraordinary. I'm not speaking as a theologian; I'm making a scientific claim. I didn't pull these numbers out of hat. That's why I led up to the explanation very slowly, so you can follow it step-by-step.
Now we can go one step further. Let's look at the development of time, day-by-day, based on the expansion factor. Every time the universe doubles, the perception of time is cut in half. Now when the universe was small, it was doubling very rapidly. But as the universe gets bigger, the doubling time gets longer. This rate of expansion is quoted in "The Principles of Physical Cosmology," a textbook that is used literally around the world.
(In case you want to know, this exponential rate of expansion has a specific number averaged at 10 to the 12th power. That is in fact the temperature of quark confinement, when matter freezes out of the energy: 10.9 times 10 to the 12th power Kelvin degrees divided by (or the ratio to) the temperature of the universe today, 2.73 degrees. That's the initial ratio which changes exponentially as the universe expands.)
The calculations come out to be as follows:
The first of the Biblical days lasted 24 hours, viewed from the "beginning of time perspective." But the duration from our perspective was 8 billion years.
The second day, from the Bible's perspective lasted 24 hours. From our perspective it lasted half of the previous day, 4 billion years.
The third 24 hour day also included half of the previous day, 2 billion years.
The fourth 24 hour day -- one billion years.
The fifth 24 hour day -- one-half billion years.
The sixth 24 hour day -- one-quarter billion years.
When you add up the Six Days, you get the age of the universe at 15 and 3/4 billion years. The same as modern cosmology. Is it by chance?
But there's more. The Bible goes out on a limb and tells you what happened on each of those days. Now you can take cosmology, paleontology, archaeology, and look at the history of the world, and see whether or not they match up day-by-day. And I'll give you a hint. They match up close enough to send chills up your spine.
Ah, I see, you aren't interested in science, only in philosophy.
Not true bezelbub. I'm just reminded of a famous line from Dirty Harry: "A man's got to understand his own limitations." Many scientists today claim that science can explain everything; which is in effect to say that the human mind, human reason is unlimited. But we know this isn't so.
We need science. But its method all by itself does not exhaustively explain the entire universe and man's place in it. Many scientists claim to be able to do this anyway. But then it's they who are practicing philosophy, "under the color of science."
You folks might particularly enjoy listening to Hugh Ross at reasons.org, click on the Interviews and Lecturs, then choose the ‘Other Issues’ category and locate to click on the 10-30-1999 interview. The discussion is generated over Dr. Ross’s book The Genessis Question.
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