I believe in evolution and the genius of Darwin and I find this particular quote from him very interesting. His stance is that a belief in God starts in the prolonged creation of and exposure to culture.
“The belief in God has often been advanced as not only the greatest but the most complete of all the distinctions between man and the lower animals. It is, however, impossible to maintain that this belief is instinctive in man. The idea of a universal and beneficent creator does not seem to arise in the mind of man until he has been elevated by long, continued culture.”
-Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
It bothers me that the idea of God is often referred to in a singular manner; the creator, he, the father, etc. The idea of a collective unconscious, a universal energy that is both internal and external, unified yet separate, I think gets lost sometimes in this pretext of a male patriarch God. I don't believe that there is one super being that is like master of the universe. We are all connected, and our spirits are eternal, now if you want to call that God, well then I might agree with you.
There is a nature special that I have seen on PBS numerous times, about a species of orchid in Madagascar that is 10-11 inches long. Once upon a time after Darwin saw one, he predicted that there had to be a moth with a tongue of about 12 inches, long enough to pollinate the orchid. The documentary I refer to was about a man's quest to prove Darwin right. He set up cameras for weeks until his team finally got their golden ticket, a shot of the moth pollinating the orchid with it's ridiculously long tongue. Darwin's bold prediction, more than a century old, was finally proven to be true.
2 comments:
I consider myself badly versed in theology and religion. I believe what I feel and I haven't bothered to research much beyond that narrow frame of mind. Perhaps one day I will become better versed (literally and figuratively). I admire Darwin a great deal. I have yet to read his magnum opus that is "Origin of Species," but I have a copy waiting on my shelf for when the time is right, and I do believe he hit the nail on the head with Evolution. I'm a fairly devote agnostic. I don't believe humans have the ability to know the unknowable, and lets face it, God is the ultimately unknowable. I find atheists to be just as unreasonable as those willing to wage wars and sacrifice lives based on religious justifications -- just as I view atheists as having taken a definitive stance with no provable grounds. I like this Darwin quote because it is justifiable. One can attest that their religious convictions are instinctive. Religion is a cultural devise - no doubt - and the purity, honesty, and wholesomeness of religion has been so warped by human ideologies that it not longer exists in the way "a God" would ever wish it to exist. IMO
*One cannot attest...
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