path_of_one
Embracing the Mystery
But you continually reduce human nature to the same as everything else. I see that as a huge contradiction — you seem to deny there is anything 'human'.
No, just because I do not see humans as uniquely unique doesn't mean I don't see humans as unique. Nothing is the same as everything else, yet the unity is more present than the diversity. I don't deny that there is something that is human, I just am honest when I say science has not been able to pinpoint clear distinction. Various spiritual traditions have beliefs on the distinction, but that is not the same as arguing it coincides with the science.
Nature doesn't teach love, for example. Not much love in a tsunami, or a hungry tiger ... one can wax about birdsong and swans, but for every sunset, there is a storm, there is 'nature red in tooth and claw'
I think Nature does teach love. Why do you say there is no love in a tsunami or a hungry tiger? Just because Nature isn't all fluffy bunny rabbits and flowers doesn't mean that there isn't love in the full cycle of creation and destruction. Endings are beginnings. It isn't the type of love that we like to think about- that is easy and comfortable. But it is love at its most profound- love that is linked to creativity and sacrifice and continuity.
I would say if you cannot see that Nature teaches love, we must have very different ways of perceiving love and/or very different experiences of Nature's gifts of insight.
Much of your critique of humanity seems founded on negatives.
What can I say? Humanity is in discord with both God and Nature. We're unsustainable and mean and cruel, even to each other. I think there are some wonderful qualities in humanity too, but as a group we have failed thus far to realize them.
If there is no order to the cosmos, then both our arguments are pointless.
I find there is order. It just isn't the order that you are finding.
Things depend upon things. Without some things, other things can't exist, so yes, nature is all about the relationship between things, both horizontally and vertically.
Well, yeah. I'm not saying there aren't vertical relationships, but you had said relationships were all about the vertical. I am saying there are many ways to be in relationship, of which vertical is only one.
Without the vertical, you could not have complex organisms.
Explain please?
I sense a distaste of verticality, but a bad relationship does not mean relationships are bad. I would gently argue that your view of hierarchy lacks objectivity?
I don't find verticality distasteful, but I also do not see it where it isn't in evidence. Just because things are in relationship does not make the relationship vertical. In cognitive science, we find that humans sometimes assign verticality to orders of objects where there is none. I'm just pointing out that while some relationships are vertical, many are not, and we can force that type of classification schema, but it would be erroneous.
That's a hierarchy ... something emerges, built on something ...
That is not hierarchy. By definition, hierarchy implies ranking. Just because there are emergent properties, does not indicate ranking among a group of objects. The more I read of modern physics and biology and evolutionary theory, the more it becomes clear to me that science supports a reality that is not generally hierarchical. Rather, it supports a reality that is interactive. Nothing is “in charge,” but order emerges out of the mutual and horizontal interactions between the bits and pieces. I find this in physics, ecology, biology, and social science.
But we don't spontaneously turn into cats, or chairs ... so something's calling the shots ...
I don’t see it as much of a hierarchy for me to believe God exists and manifests order in Nature. Not, God calls the shots. But rather, Nature was created by God and is a manifestation of the Creator. So, it is not surprising to me that out of the interactions in Nature, order emerges. Just because there is order doesn’t mean there is hierarchy (ranking).
Natural Law, or the Laws or Nature, are hierarchical. Survival is hierarchical. Darwin. I don't see how you can get round it ... all nature, evolution, development, works that way ... without it, there would be no impetus for change.
Really? Because all that I have learned in evolutionary theory, in modern physics, in science in general indicates that there are very few natural laws, and none seem to operate the same at different levels of inquiry. That’s why there is the hunt for the “theory of everything.” Second, reality seems to be interactive with emergent properties rather than ranked. Scientific inquiry didn’t stop with Darwin and Newton. Theory has advanced since then and so has the data. And I can’t see how hierarchy or the lack thereof has much to do with change- perhaps you could explain?
Please be aware, Thomas, I am not saying your worldview is wrong. I am just pointing out that I have a very different one to point out that there are many ways to interpret experience and observable reality. We are both of us grounded in faith; the science brings more questions than answers.