Letters to the Editor

This letter is associated with the following article:
Adam and Eve frolic amid the dinosaurs in the new $27 million museum that demonstrates Darwin has nothing on the Book of Genesis.
  • Speaking from the synthesized portion of the debate -

    "As we all know in dialectics (we do, don't we?) thesis and anti-thesis produce a new "synthesis." That is why Atheists don't mind being a pole, to move the folks in the middle perhaps a nudge over, and create a new American 'synthesis' of religion." -ELYDOG

    Yes, thesis and antithesis produce synthesis, a third thing. But this paradigm does not reify either side of the dichotomy, or even the synthesized results. It's good to see yourself as part of a dialogue—would that more of us did—but too many on either "pole" of this particular dialogue refuse to talk to not only their opposite pole, but those of us doing the synthesizing.

    I'm an agnostic who finds theism useful. I've been a militant atheist and an agnostic who found atheism useful. My personal investigation of reality, well grounded in science (biology, physics, psychology, neuroscience), as well as the history of science, has led me through this development into who I am today.

    I know a PhD in biology who worked at Woods Hole for years (excellent bona fides if I ever heard of them), who is a Jesuit priest. Actually, I've known several scientifically degreed priests, as well as dozens of lay people who believe in evolution and also believe in God. They understand that God is a personal experience, and evolution is a scientifically demonstrated fact.

    I know a few physicists who found in their work, as I did in my physics studies, serious reason to believe some kind of observing intelligence must exist, in order to provide a ground of being for the universe we live in. They were in the minority at the SSC, but there they were, working on science, looking for particles, and doing it all with a belief in God. Hmmm....

    I think the synthesis has been around for at least a century, if not longer. I think the sudden increase in both militant atheism and fundamentalist Christianity is a backlash, because now that the information age is upon us, the new synthesis is "out there" and threatening to the false dichotomy of the old poles. Else why is it that neither militant atheist nor fundamentalist Christian will talk to the true agnostics looking to science to understand their world? We are reviled by both sides, yet we offer hope for sanity in dealing with these issues. Certainly we offer a better option than the creation science/IDers, or the few (but loudly speaking) elitist, insulting atheists.

    I think most people are humbler than these two poles, and less able to tell another human "I'm right and you're wrong." We're doing our best. And for those on both sides who see themselves as part of the larger dialogue, please—be more open to seeing the synthesized results already around you.

    My deepest wish is that humans stop seeing the knee-jerk viewing of thoughts in either-or terms, and realize that any two and perhaps many more options might be right, viable, or useful in different circumstances. Try stepping away from either-or beliefs and into your personal experience (the only thing you truly "know" is the present moment), and see what the world has to say.

    People who force the world to fit their beliefs, instead of experiencing and learning from existence, believe not in God or science, but themselves.