In my view, belief in a benevolent higher power can be combined with evolution, but it requires a paradigm shift to make it work without contradictions.
IMO, this is entirely true, and it confirms the validity of the late Stephen
Jay Gould's "Non-Overlapping Magisteria" hypothesis
<http://www.stephenjaygould.org/library/gould_noma.html>.
Evolution is a brutal process. (If you don't see it that way, consider the case of a mother duck and duckings. Very cute, very beautiful. On average, in the life of the mother duck, only two offspring will survive to reproduce. But there is a litter of a half dozen, and that is only one season. The mother will try her best to care for her young, and they will try to survive, but most of them will starve, die of disease, or otherwise meet an unpleasant end. Evolution depends on this trying and failing for the selection of beautiful traits in ducks. Furthermore suffering is inherent to the process, not projected from the mind of one witnessing it. For the process to work, the duck must want her offspring to be cared for and to survive. So when they die, she feels that loss and failure.)
Of course, the degree of "suffering" inherent in this is directly proportional
to the degree of (A) self-awareness, and (B) memory retention, to be found
in the experiencing organism. In the overwhelming majority of biological
organisms, the degree to which both of these qualities are inherent varies,
in comparison with their inherence in hominins, from nonexistent to minimal,
with the result that the "suffering" involved in the process is entirely or
mostly to be found, not in the "suffering" organism, but in the human
individual witnessing it or considering it.
There are two ways to suppose that this is the work of a benevolent power. One is to degrade our vision of benevolence, so that it includes cruelty. The other way is to suppose that there is no other way, that brutality is inherently essential to life. In both cases, you give up on the idea of redemption.
Actually, there is an entire range of other ways to suppose that evolution
is the work of a benevolent power, i.e. God. One, suggested by my previous
statement, is to recognize that "cruelty" is an anthropomorphic value
judgment rather than an objective fact. Consider: Would one regard the
cutting-open of a living human body to be "cruel"? Obviously so, and yet
our usual term for this process is "surgery", which is commonly used to
alleviate severe pain and/or to save a human life.
Now, when we examine the process of evolution, the reality of it, we must
swiftly conclude that concepts such as "cruel" or "kind" simply don't fit.
What is evolution, really? Evolution is a process inevitably resulting from
copying errors in the duplications of DNA sequences and/or the
transcription of a DNA sequences into RNA sequences, both processes
being essential to the continuation of biological life. These copying errors
are both minimal and inevitable under any normal circumstances, and result
in variations in the affected genes known as "alleles". The larger the
number and variation of alleles in the gene pool of any species, the greater
the degree of physical variation within that species, and, therefore, the
greater the extent to which that species can be capable of adapting,
surviving, and even thriving under changing environmental conditions.
Evolution is no more and no less than the observable fact that the
proportional variation in the expression of alleles within the gene pool of
a given species changes from one generation to the next. To be alive is
to experience change and, on the species level, that's what evolution is.
Die, and the changes stop. Live, and you will experience change. Some of
those changes will be wonderful, and some will be extremely unpleasant,
and the last change you will ever experience will be your own physical
death, which may be welcome or unwelcome to you when it occurs, but
which will occur anyway, with or without your approval.
Some people have suggested that evolution is all about defeat, loss,
tragedy, and death. This is patently incorrect, since evolution occurs,
and can occur, only among living organisms, not dead ones. Evolution
is a process that rewards adaptability to changing environmental
conditions; i.e., it rewards those that live, not those that die.
People who are unwilling to give up that hope either deny the reality of evolution, or they just allow the ideal to coexist with apparently contrary facts, without resolving the contradiction. One is the American fundamentalist approach (very broadly speaking), and the other is the Catholic approach (very broadly speaking).
I agree with your description of the American fundamentalist approach,
i.e. creationism, "intelligent design", etc. However, although I am not a
Roman Catholic, I must disagree with your description of the Catholic
approach, because the Catholic approach is to affirm that truth does
not, and cannot, contradict itself. If the existence and goodness of
God is true, and the theory and observable instances of evolution are
true, then neither truth can contradict the other.
The other alternative is to accept that evolution works the way it appears to work, and to reject the idea that it is the work of a benevolent creator. One branch of this is to abandon the idea of a benevolent higher power. The other branch is to assume that there was some kind of 'Fall' and that evolution by natural selection, in its current form, is symptomatic of some kind of mistake, and is not how things have to work.
Of course, if true, the above statement would limit us to the following
selection of alternatives:
(A) to deny observable reality; or
(B) to deny the existence and/or goodness of God; or
(C) to insist that prelapsarian carnivores were herbivores with the wrong
kind of teeth.
None of the above appears even remotely probable or makes the least
bit of rational sense to me, so I choose none of the above.
Below is a link to the words of an eminent, and eminently sane,
scientist, recognized as one of the greatest geneticists and
evolutionary biologists of the 20th century, who was also a
convinced and devout Christian:
<http://people.delphiforums.com/lordorman/Dobzhansky_1973.pdf>.
This man did not mess around; he told it like it is: "Nothing in biology
makes sense except in the light of evolution"! Did this man know what
he was talking about? Judge for yourself:
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodosius_Dobzhansky>
The problem with giving up on the idea of divine benevolence, is that you throw away something that you might discover and know in your own life. The problem with believing in a 'fall', is that when you look at natural history, you can see that the current natural order extends all the way back to the beginning of life on earth. Dinosaurs had sharp teeth. Ants fight genocidal wars every time they encounter another colony. So for brutality to be a result of a 'fall', that fall had to occur outside of what we think of as the history of the world.
Precisely so! You've said it far better than I ever could, and I have
absolutely nothing to add.
As we consider this possibility, we are radically relaxing the assumption that reality, as we perceive it, is something concrete and immutable, the only way for a world to be. We extend our ideas of God to allow God to be something greater than or other than the creator of this natural order. And our thoughts of our own identities shift to beyond the roles we were born into, if we presume to have some fundamental choice in matters of right and wrong. We are thinking 'outside the box'.
IMO, this is true only if the box one started out with was far too small,
in which case anything resembling rational thinking *must* occur outside
that small and restrictive box.
As we do that, we gain freedom, and more power to change our relationships and destinies than we had before. As our assumptions about what was possible relax, things become possible that we would formerly have thought of as magical. And yet, our desires are still very significantly what they had been 'inside the box'. We are still selfish, greedy, and aggressive. But having expanded our mental horizons we're an order of magnitude more dangerous to ourselves and to other people, because of the power and imagination that we have gained.
To summarize, my argument is that there is a price to not being able to reconcile divine benevolence with evolution. It amounts to a specific instance of not being able to reconcile love with objective reason, and we suffer without both. But as we reach for the answer that marries them, then we've got to be ready to work hard on honesty, humility, and deep personal transformation, because we're opening up a whole Pandora's box of new challenges.
My other point, as a kind of corollary, is that its not necessarily wrong for individuals to disbelieve in evolution, or to accept apparent contradictions without challenging them, or to disbelieve in God. We live in a difficult state of affairs, and different people have to accommodate themselves to it in different ways. There isn't a Right Way of Thinking that makes sense from our limited and distorted human standpoint and which will work for everyone if we can just convince them of it. We've got to give other people freedom to be wrong in different ways, and understand that our own way isn't going to work for everyone else.
To my way of thinking, there are two things we can do which truly are
wrong, both morally and spiritually. The first is to form one's opinions
in advance of, or in the absence of, any knowledge of the objective
facts as best they are known. The second is to blindly copy the errors
and mistakes of others, when it is our job, as rational humans, to make
our own mistakes.
Regards,
Jim