Metanexus: Views 2003.02.11 3043 words"Naturalism in theology," says Andrew Porter, "is the attempt to describe
everything that really matters in terms of ideas taken from the natural
sciences. But naturalism would be an odd theological method for a historical
religion, and biblical religion in all its original forms is supposedly a
historical religion. Indeed, one might well ask of science-and-religion
conversations, science and which religion? If the religion in question is a
historical religion, then it might help to look at how historical concepts
work."
Moreover, he goes on to say that
"The idea of action, whether human or divine, seems to be the cross- roads
through which all these explorations must pass. It is the place to begin. We
often think we can see actions (human and divine alike) in the terms of the
sciences, physics notable among them. Recent versions of this approach are
variants on the god-of-the-gaps theologies, but the older versions, reliant
on "miracles," are classic and work in much the same way. Naturalistic ideas
about divine action get into trouble fast when you look at them carefully.
If historical thinking is instead taken as the guide, religion begins to
make sense."
Today's column is the first in a four-part series taken from chapters in the
book By the Waters of Naturalism: Theology Perplexed Among the Sciences
(Eugene, Oregon, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2001: ISBN 1-57910-770-2) by
Andrew Porter. And in the excerpts from his book we will bring together two
themes that we have been exploring this month on Metanexua: (1) the place of
humans in the universe: is it natural? And (2) what is the nature of divine
action, a theme that will be explored in a three-part series by Ilia Delio.
Today's author, Andrew Porter, is an adjunct faculty member in philosophy of
religion at The Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences in the Graduate
Theological Union, Berkeley, CA.
--Stacey E. Ake
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Subject: By the Waters of Naturalism, Part 1/4
From: Andrew Porter
Email: <app@jedp.com>
Introduction
In popular culture science seems to be the central challenge to biblical
religion and its theology today, and discussions about science and theology
inevitably come to the issue of theological naturalism. This perception is
not wrong, but seeing how it is right takes some digging. In theologians'
experience, the central challenges came not from science but from history,
and only a little of that story can be told here. Yet the popular perception
is onto something: naturalistic thinking is the major alternative to
biblical religion. And people instinctively approach most questions with
naturalistic assumptions, even when they think about biblical religion.
Unraveling some of those assumptions and looking for alternatives is what
this book is about.
Naturalism in theology is the attempt to describe everything that really
matters in terms of ideas taken from the natural sciences. But naturalism
would be an odd theological method for a historical religion, and biblical
religion in all its original forms is supposedly a historical religion.
Indeed, one might well ask of science-and-religion conversations, science
and which religion? If the religion in question is a historical religion,
then it might help to look at how historical concepts work.
The idea of action, whether human or divine, seems to be the cross- roads
through which all these explorations must pass. It is the place to begin. We
often think we can see actions (human and divine alike) in the terms of the
sciences, physics notable among them. Recent versions of this approach are
variants on the god-of-the-gaps theologies, but the older versions, reliant
on "miracles," are classic and work in much the same way. Naturalistic ideas
about divine action get into trouble fast when you look at them carefully.
If historical thinking is instead taken as the guide, religion begins to
make sense.
So after we see how naturalistic ideas really don't work well to make sense
of biblical religion (chapters 1 and 2), then we can begin to find
alternatives (chapters 3 and 4).
The problem of history brings chills and anxieties and uncertainty for
biblical religion. Can we know enough? And can we be responsible? Yes, in a
word; but that takes some showing (chapter 5).
It will help to have a brief retelling of how it all got started (chapter
6). Without the story of the Exodus, historical religion won't make much
sense.
Mircea Eliade once characterized life in history as terror, and so we need
to look at how something as precarious as history could ever end in Easter
joy (chapter 7). The language we use to speak about these things is
analogical (chapter 8), and that's not as strange as it might look. In the
end, you have a responsible liberty of interpretation in how you want to
conduct a covenant in history (chapter 9), if that doesn't cause too much
anxiety.
Chapter 1: Finding God in Physics
1.1 Dilemma
It appears we have to choose between science and religion today -- and the
only kind of "religion" is Christianity (or Judaism, but Judaism is not much
different), and science is not a religion at all. Or that is how things
appear. To believe in God means to believe in some kind of a supernatural.
Whether or not there is a supernatural today, "religion" says there was one
at some times in the past. And if you are religious, you have to give up at
least some scientific ideas, because science and religion conflict; science
does not allow belief in any kind of supernatural. If you believe in
science, then the natural world is all there is, there "is no God", and so
making sense of human life must proceed with reference to nature alone. The
basic shape of the difficulty is clear: the choice is between "science" and
"religion," and biblical religion is having a hard time articulating its own
faith in an age of science.
There are a lot of hidden confusions here, and it will take some work to
sort them out.
Perhaps the basic idea that lies behind all this is the notion that if God
is to act in the world, he has to push things around, just like I do when I
step on the gas in my car or turn the steering wheel. Thus God takes his
place alongside other actors in the world, and becomes one more like all the
rest, even if his "pushing" is of a slightly different kind. Maybe his
pushing on things can't be inspected the way the law of gravity can be, but
it still has to be a "pushing" of some sort. Thus an action not only has to
have an intention, it also has to take effect in the real world by means of
physical causes. This is the second assumption behind our dilemma.
This is where the collision with science happens. For science understands
the notion of a physical cause in ways that make it very difficult to make
sense of divine actions.
It is as if for God to act in the world, something in the world has to move
over to make room for God to act. There has to be a hole cut in the world to
make space for God to act. For God to act, he has to push on something, and
for that to happen, ordinary forces have to stop pushing on that something,
or he has to add his own force on top of whatever natural forces are also
pushing on the thing that he has to move in order to act. Over and over
again we will see this simple assumption, that the world has to make room
for God to act, or else God can't act at all. It is a natural mistake, but a
mistake nonetheless. It assumes that for God to act he has to come "into"
the world and act the same way that other actors act in the world.
Even human actions are hard to make sense of from the point of view of
physics. The foot moves, the car goes, the wheel turns, and the car turns,
but all that is just physical motions, forces and levers. It is not a human
action, it is just the motions of the body-parts in a human action. (You can
call the body-parts the "material substrate," because that's what the person
is composed of, but the person is more than just his material substrate,
fond of it as he may nevertheless be.) We describe human actions in another
language, a language of intentions, not the language of forces and motions.
The language of physics is mathematics, but the language of action is
narrative.
Nevertheless, in human actions as we commonly think of them, there is a
material substrate, and the substrate moves. Physics can understand the
material substrate and its motions even if it cannot understand or talk
about the action itself. If divine actions are like human actions, they
should work the same way.
Some questions arise at this point. Is such a "pushing" on the world a
supernatural phenomenon? And if it were, what would "supernatural" mean?
Does the language of action, divine or human, really work the way it appears
to here?
To spill the beans, I don't think so. The concept of action and the
language we use to speak of actions do not work the way our original dilemma
assumes they do. Action is a concept from history, not from physics, and
once the differences between thinking in historical terms and thinking in
physical terms are seen, all these problems will go away. The rest of the
book is an exploration of this sort of thinking. We begin with the problem
in its original form, when people looked for God in physics, and show that
even in terms of physics, it doesn't really make sense. Then, turning to
history, things will begin to clear up.
Most of the book will be spent on history because thinking in history is
still strange and unintuitive. It is not enough just to say that God doesn't
make sense as a scientific explanation. After that, you have to see how
thinking about a God of history works, or else the idea of God will come
back seeking refuge in nature and the sciences.
1.2 Cause Laundering
If the problem for Christianity seems to come from science, some
theologians have tried to defend religion in an age of science with ideas
taken from recent physics. It is well known that at microscopic scales, the
motion of sub-atomic particles is not deterministic. For these theologians,
indeterminism opens up a realm of causation where God can act, giving God
the tip of a long lever by which he could influence the motion of bodies at
macroscopic scales. Physical causes are presumably traceable from the
macroscopic domain to some microscopic scale after which they cannot be
traced any further, and there God can act. When divine action has been
conceived as "just like human action," and a very particular model of human
action at that, this is the most natural way to ask whether divine action
"really" happens in the world. In the end, I would prefer other ways to
understand both divine and human action, and another sense of "really," but
this one is close to the heart instincts of contemporary culture. Any
discussion of acts of God today must at least implicitly take notice of it.
Before looking for other ways to explain what is going on in acts of God,
let's see how this one works.
What, then, is an "act of God," as it has appeared to those who want to
find the acts of God in the microscopic interstices of physics? The tacit
assumption is that acts of God make sense only if there are realms of
physics where the behavior of bodies is not determined by physical law: then
and only then is there room for objective acts of God. (This is how to cut a
hole in the web of physical causation to make room for God to act.)
Attributions of an event to an act of God and to deterministic explanation
by physical law are taken to be mutually exclusive. The motions of physical
bodies in regions where there are no physical causes can be ascribed to God.
Presumably there is enough leeway so that God can influence the course of
events and act in providential ways. (I have never seen actual calculations
to show that there is enough leeway for God to act, but let that pass. It
may not be a hard problem.)
One early example of this approach was William G. Pollard's Chance and
Providence (1958), in which he argued that quantum uncertainty supplies just
the indeterminacy that is needed to give God room to act. Pollard was a good
physicist and a good theologian, but when he was doing philosophy of
religion, he tended to switch back and forth from reasoning in physics to
reasoning in theology without realizing what he was doing. Since then, many
others have tried his same strategy, often more carefully, but not with any
better results. I am dubious about whether the strategy itself will do what
is demanded of it.
Usually, people assume that with quantum mechanics, the gaps in physical
causation are essential and permanent and cannot be removed by any advances
in knowledge of physics. If the gaps are irremovable, and if their
indeterminacy allows enough room for God to act effectively, then they
presumably would provide theology with breathing room and a secure realm
that science cannot penetrate. It is this strategy and its tacit assumptions
that I would like to contest, and I shall do it by stages. It is an
assumption about the way to articulate biblical religion today, in the
context of a scientific culture. At the beginning, it will be enough to see
what is going on in the theological arguments about physics.
Opponents have called this approach "the God of the gaps," a derisive
dismissal of it on the grounds that the gaps are not large enough to make a
difference, or are evanescent and will evaporate with the course of progress
in science. The phrase "God of the gaps" expresses the pathetic straits to
which attempts to exhibit God within the language of physics had been
reduced. But there is a deeper and more instinctive rejection of attempts to
introduce God into nature in this way, because it is an intrusion into the
integrity of nature. The grounds for rejecting providence by intrusions are
at least as strong from the point of view of history as from that of
physics, and we shall come to that in later chapters.
The "God of the gaps" was to act in regions of physics that we don't know
now, gaps in present knowledge of how nature works. Theologians rejected
such a strategy because those gaps in physical theory get filled with time
and the progress of science. Any theological claims located in those gaps
would be cut down like fresh grass before the lawn-mower of advancing
scientific research.
The accusation of peddling a "God of the gaps" has been hurled at
theologians by "atheists" for some time. But so far as I am aware, the
notion of a "God of the gaps" was used first not by atheists but by a
theologian. After reading in Weizsacker's book, The World-View of Physics,
Dietrich Bonhoeffer in a letter to Eberhard Bethge remarked on "how wrong it
is to use God as a stop-gap for the incompleteness of our knowledge. . . .
We are to find God in what we know, not in what we don't know. God wants us
to realize his presence, not in unsolved problems but in those that are
solved" (Bonhoeffer, 1971, p. 311). We are not to use God as a stop-gap for
the incompleteness of what we know, but what is currently being proposed is
not a stop-gap until future knowledge, but instead a program licensed by a
permanent ignorance, one that is guaranteed ontologically. (How a program
dependent on permanent ignorance (or even on what cannot be known) can be
based on what we know rather than what we don't know baffles me.)
This way to make sense of divine action takes advantage of a simple feature
of modern physics. For in physics, some things are determined by their
causes, and other things, other motions, are random and in- determinate.
This is true in many areas of physics, not just quantum mechanics, and in
some places, the randomness is essential, where in other places it is just a
convenient approximation for the physicist. It seemed impossible to make
divine actions effective through determinate causes in physics, and so a
refuge was sought in the indeterminate causes of physics.
If theologians are not careful, we shall be accused of cause laundering: In
money laundering, drug lords put their money in bank accounts where it (or
its sources) cannot be traced, and then it can be withdrawn and invested in
"legitimate" businesses. Cause laundering is like money laundering. If
causes can be traced to places where they cannot be traced any further, then
a theologian is free to use them for his own purposes, such as ascribing
them to "acts of God." Now classical chaos could be called classical cause
laundering, because there are real causes that go into the laundry, and are
untraceable when they come out. But quantum cause laundering is the drug
lord's dream machine! There are no causes that go in, and yet effects come
out, and they are guaranteed to be untraceable forever. If only drug money
worked that way!
There are many problems with this approach. For only one, it is not clear
what it would mean to say that physical causation can be traced back so far
and no further -- but agent causation can be traced back further than that
limit. I think acts, especially divine acts, work differently from what has
been tacitly assumed here, and we shall come to that soon enough. But first,
there is more to be learned from examining the implications from physical
theory for such a conception of divine acts.
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