Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Hobbits

1. This raises a potential challenge to biblical creation:


As we discover more fossils, there may be further challenges in kind. One issue this raises is whether Christians should just admit that human evolution is true. Is the time past due to throw in the towel? Sure, we can contrive ingenuous explanations to reconcile this with biblical creation, but isn't that special pleading? It's only because Genesis is part of the sacred canon of Christianity rather than The Argonautica that we make an effort to defend the historicity of Genesis when we'd never make a comparable effort to defend the historicity of The Argonautica. So goes the argument. 

It would, indeed be special pleading to defend the historicity of The Argonautica, but the comparison is inapt. If there's abundant evidence that Christianity is true, then it's not special pleading to treat the Bible differently than we treat The Argonautica

Not to mention that there are scientific objections to the theory of evolution. The evidence isn't one-sided. 

2. Another issue is how we tell that something has humanoid intelligence. For instance, there are animals that use things designed by humans. It would be invalid to infer that animals invent what they use. For that matter, lots of humans are smart enough to use a cellphone who aren't smart enough to design a cellphone. So there's a distinction between inventing tools and using tools. Suppose you had jungle inhabited by humans and apes. Apes might steal human tools and toy with them. Discovering apes with tools wouldn't ipso facto prove the apes had humanoid intelligence. 

3. There's also the question of how we identify humanoid intelligence. This goes to the larger issue of what makes humans human or unique compared to animals. A common criterion is a certain level of intelligence. A capacity for abstract thought. Imagination. Deliberation. Thinking about the past and future. Is it possible for a creature to have humanoid intelligence, yet be inhuman?

In Christian theology, angels have humanoid intelligence, yet angels are unrelated to humans. To take another example, there's a sense in which psychopaths are both human and inhuman. On the one hand they have human intelligence. Indeed, above-average intelligence. Yet a psychopath lacks normal human psychology. Psychos are expert at mimicking human emotions, but they lack human emotions. In particular, they lack empathy. They have no conscience. 

A psychopath is like a vampire. A vampire retains human intelligence and memories. But its psychological makeup is inhuman. When it looks at a human being, it views the human as food. By the same token, psychos are predators who hunt human prey. So there's something fundamentally inhuman about psychopaths (and sociopaths). 

Or take someone like Bobby Fischer who's a genius, but devoid of social intelligence. He can relate to the game of chess, but he can't relate to human beings. 

Or, to consider this from the other end of the telescope, consider people with Down syndrome who, in a sense, have subhuman intelligence, yet they have a human emotional makeup. In a sense, someone with Down syndrome has greater humanity than Bobby Fischer. 

Another example, albeit fictional, is rational aliens. Suppose you had a conversation with an E.T. Initially, you might find that you have a lot in common with the E.T. But as the conversation progresses, you come to the terrifying realization that there's something fundamentally foreign about its outlook. Suppose what humans find beautiful, our hypothetical aliens don't find beautiful. What we find emotionally compelling, they don't. They don't respond to music. They don't gaze in awe at sunsets. They have no instinct to comfort a crying child. 

4. Apropos (3), imagine if God created some animals with humanoid intelligence that are, nevertheless, unrelated to humans. Imagine if you had a conversation with one of them. At first you seem to share a lot in common. But as the conversation deepens, it becomes increasingly apparent that they operate on a different wavelength. Humanoid intelligence is, at best, a necessary but insufficient condition to make one human. And even that may be overstated (e.g. Down syndrome). 

5. Scripture doesn't detail the animals God created. It classifies them by ecological zone. Land animals, aquatic animals, and volant animals. Even if God created (now extinct) animals with humanoid intelligence, there's no presumption that Scripture would mention that fact. Just as there's no expectation that the Genesis narrator would list the Tasmanian devil. For one thing, the original audience would have no idea what the narrator was referring to. Indeed, the narrator wouldn't have the vocabulary. And even if the Bible did use the word "Tasmanian devil", that term would be co-opted by Bible readers to refer to something other than the marsupial. By the time the Tasmania devil was discovered, it would be called something else.

6. Inspiration doesn't make a Bible writer omniscient. The Genesis narrator was ignorant about the existence of most species. But ignorance is not the same thing as error. And even if he knew about Australian/Tasmanian fauna, there'd be no occasion to mention that in the creation account. By the same token, even if God created (now extinct) animals with humanoid intelligence, there'd be no reason for Genesis to mention that. 

7 comments:

  1. --It would, indeed be special pleading to defend the historicity of The Argonautica, but the comparison is inapt. If there's abundant evidence that Christianity is true, then it's not special pleading to treat the Bible differently than we treat The Argonautica.--

    I'm sure you've heard mockers who compare the Bible's claim of historical veracity to Harry Potter: "Well the Harry Potter books place London in England, and tell us WW2 happened in the middle of the 20th-century... So does that mean Voldermort is real?"

    I tried to reason out a fundamental difference between them, but came to an epiphany after some redditors pointed it out: THERE IS NO FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCE.

    Instead, every book or tale must be weighed according to the same standards. This is where the multi-pronged fields of archaeology, textual history, geography etc come into play - the Bible excels far and above any other work of fiction or alleged nonfiction.

    To clarify the above point, don't compare the Bible to obvious fiction like Harry Potter or The DaVinci Code (which opens with the boast of 'factual accuracy'). Compare it instead to something like the Quran, another book that claims both historical fact and spiritual truth - often competing directly with the Bible's own claims.

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    --Not to mention that there are scientific objections to the theory of evolution. The evidence isn't one-sided.--

    Related to my first point, I put it this way, that: 'SCIENCE' IS ARROGANT, BUT THE BIBLE ALWAYS WINS.

    Even as recent as a few decades ago, it was 'proven fact' that...

    The universe was not created, it no beginning and simply existed for eternity. Then evidence for the Big Bang Theory displaced the Steady State Theory.

    That the Hittite people never existed. Then archaeology showed they were an empire as strong as Egypt.

    That there was no Sojourn, Slavery in Egypt, or Exodus. Then digs in Egypt's Tell El-Dab'a (Biblical Goshen) uncovered how a massive Middle Eastern population had lived there.

    That there was no conquest of Canaan, and especially no destruction of Jericho by the Israelites. Then the Amarna Tablets, the burnt ruins of Ai, and the collapsed walls of Jericho were discovered.

    That there was no monarchy of David and Solomon. Then the Tel Dan Stele and the ruins of Megiddo were dug up.

    That the Persian king would never, ever have simply let the Jews return to Jerusalem. Then the Cyrus Cylinder was discovered.

    That Mark's claim of 'all Jews' washing their hands ritually is an obvious forgery, since only the priests were required to do so. Then the Letter of Aristeas got even Bart Ehrman to grudgingly admit that Mark was right.

    That Luke-Acts got its names, places and dates all wrong. Then one by one, Luke-Acts was proven to be accurate over and over.

    That John's gospel was written after 200AD and is very un-Jewish. Then Rylands Library Papyrus P52 showed that copies of John's gospel were already in circulation around 100AD, and the Dead Sea Scrolls showed similar language to John's phrases.

    So with a track record like this, for current 'problems posed by science' like the age of the earth, Noah's flood, or Darwinian evolution... I'm confident that in due time, the Bible will be proven right once again.

    'SCIENCE' IS ARROGANT, BUT THE BIBLE ALWAYS WINS.

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    1. Scott,
      That was an excellent list of issues, events, that later discoveries proved the Bible is true. Some of them I already knew, but a few of them were new to me. Do you have a source that documents all that? It would be very useful to have all that under one article or book.

      Where did Bart Ehrman admit that Mark was right on that from Mark 7?

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  2. So far from "throwing in the towel," I think we need to remember that most of the confident declarations in an article like this--e.g., referring to stone tools, where that is often highly conjectural--are often extremely shakily based when it comes down to it. The alleged evolutionary history of man and the intelligence and nature of other "hominins" are largely a matter of guesswork. One reads this sort of thing and one may think that this means that there was some human-like creature made in the image of God prior to Adam and one wonders about all the theological implications that would have, but, y'know, probably not. In fact, very likely not. The paleontology is often just made up. I'm not saying that this particular alleged hominin is addressed there, but reading the essays in Science and Human Origins shows just how dubious so much evolutionary theory is concerning the supposed history and origins of mankind.

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  3. An ingenuous point!

    On the one hand, it's possible there could be intelligent hominoids. On the other hand, that doesn't necessarily mean they're human.

    Of course, evolutionists would argue that's technically true inasmuch as we're each of a different species but still Homo (e.g. Homo sapiens, Homo erectus, Homo neanderthalensis, Homo floresiensis).

    However, that misses the point. The point is there's not necessarily an evolutionary lineage between humans and other Homo species in the first place.

    That's something no fossil can tell us, for being "human" is something above and over the physical evidence.

    As such, Steve's post destroys the taxonomy of human evolution and likewise subtly shifts the argument to one over immaterial properties (e.g. psychology).

    Finally it's relevant to extraterrestrials (as Steve alluded). Like arguments about if aliens exist, then that disproves the Bible somehow.

    (Of course, I think the scientific evidence for human evolution on neo-Darwinian grounds is highly debatable at best. Far from settled science.)

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  4. What’s wrong with saying these were just short stature humans?

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    1. Yes, that is what I thought.

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  5. Lydia McGrew is correct. There is way too much paleontological conjecture that goes on - the recent case of supposed Neanderthal art is a case in point. They just assume the art must have been made by Neanderthals since, supposedly, humans had not yet migrated to the site at that time. Or the belief that Neanderthals practiced ceremonial burials because they found traces of pollen (supposedly from flowers used in the rite) near corpses.

    I am open to the idea that we are related to Neanderthals, Denisovans, and Homo Erectus. But there is still quite a chasm between Homo and the smaller more ape-like Australopithecus and other bipedal primates. A lot of links are missing. Chapter 14 in Theistic Evolution (Moreland et al. 2017) addresses this.

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