Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Was There A Divine Spark That Created All?


I heard on the news that Bill Nye the 'Science Guy' was to debate Ken Ham, head of the Creation Museum.  

Mentioning it to someone in passing, it sparked a comment from them that although they believe in evolution and don't believe in creation science, nor do they believe that a supreme being is actively involved in day to day affairs, this person felt that when you think about how incredible and complex life is, it could only have come about by divine action.  The world as we know it along with human beings just couldn't have happened by chance.  The comment stuck with me and I woke up the next morning with the following argument/reply running through my head.  I felt compelled to write it down.  It went as follow:


Let's do a thought experiment. Let's imagine two people are having a debate about the makeup and nature of the world. These two individuals are living on earth 6,000 years ago and therefore all their knowledge and understanding of the world and things in general are limited to that period in history. Our two debaters are having this discussion in front of a respected panel of community elders and leaders. The two points of view are as follows: The first is that the earth is a large flat disk that rests on the back of a giant turtle which slowly moves through the cosmos. The second view is that the earth is a sphere that revolves around the sun and that the sun is one of many suns swirling in an elliptical pattern called a galaxy.

Which of these two postulations would seem most probable to someone 6,000 years ago?  I would argue the disc on the back of a giant tortoise would seem the most plausible. To an ancient observer of the earth, the earth itself would appear flat. Although the surface is rough, with mountains and valleys, there is no perceptible drop off or curve. When you look from one mountain range to the next, the strata upon which the mountain ranges rest seems level. On large flat plains or even on the open ocean, the world looks level for as far as the eye can see. Why might the ancient observer decide on a disk and not another shape for the perimeter? When you look from a high point of observation or from an expansive flat plain, the horizon seems equidistant in every direction, thereby lending support to a uniform disk shape.

Next, why argue that the disk is supported, let alone by a tortoise and not simply a rock or other inanimate object? The ancients clearly had a sense of movement as they noticed the stars in the heavens moved across the sky over time. To them, something was clearly moving, be it the earth or the heavens.  Given their life experience I would imagine that the motion of the stars would resemble the motion of distant trees or other fixed object as you walk along a path. As you walk, the relative position of nearer objects to the walker change relatively quickly, while you would have to walk farther to get the relative position of a distant object to change.  The concept of the distant objects moving in a regular pattern would be harder for them to imagine because it would not have been in their life experience, not to mention that the position of the stars themselves always remain fixed relative to all other stars similar to fixed objects on earth.  Why would one argue that the earth be on the back of an animal and specifically a tortoise?  Since the pattern of movement repeats itself over time with each season repeating the motion of the stars, the movement is not haphazard or random. The disk is not floating or moving out of control as on a body of water or the air. Clearly it is moving with purpose and intent. The only things on earth that move with purpose and intent are living animals and people. The tortoise, if large enough, is clearly the best option because of it's sturdy compact form, hard shell, and slow, steady gait. Glue a rock on the back of a tortoise and depending on it's size and weight, the tortoise would never notice it. Another animal, say an elephant, might be sturdy enough, but it has a relatively soft skin and one could imagine the problem of chaffing and pressure sores. An elephant is also apt to get up to a running gait now and again, which wouldn't fit with observations.  This all presupposes that my imagined ancients had experience with both animals.  Obviously our early cosmologist could imagine some unknown creature, but that would be more easily assailed by critics.

Now what about our proponent of the sphere model. There would clearly be a lot of obstacles that would be hard to overcome. To start, no wandering observer has ever reported back an area where the earth curves off. The observation of a relatively level earth is one that everyone at the debate would probably share. Additionally, if the earth were a sphere, anything on the sides and bottom would simply slide off into the cosmos, or at the very least, if you traveled far enough down the side of the sphere, you would get to a part of the earth where you began to feel like you were sliding off and no distant traveler has reported this. It is true that the disk must have an edge and no one has made it to the edge yet, but clearly on a sphere as big as the disk appears to be, you would begin to reach the slope within the know distances people have traveled.

Having the earth travel around the sun would also be hard to support. The earth moves at a slow and steady pace in reference to the stars, but clearly the sun is moving much faster across the sky. If the earth was the object moving that fast around the sun, the stars would also be flying across the sky. A much stronger argument could be made that the sun is the faster body and moving around the disk. As to the sun being one of many, and that all the stars in heaven are moving, this could not be supported by their level of observation.  To them, the stars appear fixed.  Each season the pattern of stars is repeated as the disk travels around the cosmos. They have remained unchanged in their seasonal positions for as long as anyone can remember.

With these arguments for the disk model, our sphere model proponent might feel out-matched at the end of the debate. There might be a weak attempt to show that the sun appears to travel in an arc above the earth, connoting a circular movement. It might therefor follow that if the sun moves in a circle, perhaps the earth is round in the vertical plane as well and the horizontal. As noted before, the opponent would refer to the argument that things would slip off a sphere and possibly add the fact that a sphere is unstable. What is to prevent it from spinning or rolling? In the end, absent the ability for all present to zoom out into the cosmos and look back at the earth from a distance to see for themselves how the earth was arranged, one could only make logical conclusions from all that was known and observed about the world to that point. The disk on tortoise model clearly fit very well with all observations. Thus would end the debate.

It is impossible for us to know exactly how the earth and the cosmos came in to being at our current level of collective knowledge. What is clear is that we need to resist the temptation to treat whatever we deduce, theorize, or assume about the origin as being actionable fact. It is useful to have working hypothesis and theories on which to work on and build on in order to find the answers to the beginning of it all, but we must always be wary and constantly remind ourselves that we really just don't know. When evaluating ideas on how the cosmos began, one must constantly re-evaluate that idea and constantly tests it's ability to hold up to new observations, making sure that all know facts can be explained and accounted for. As we saw in the flat disk analogy, even if all the facts fit, you can be way off base. Only time and exploration will sort out the good hypotheses from the bad.

If you imagine tracking how the acceptance of the flat disk model might hold up over the following 6,000 years to the present, one could imagine the model holding firm and becoming quite ingrained in the culture of origin for several thousand years. Today, the disk model of the cosmos, which would seem most plausible 6,000 years ago, is clearly not true and that which would have been inconceivable 6,000 years ago is actually true.

When trying to evaluate the plausibility of a creator for the cosmos or that the beginning was the result of a divine spark or intervention, critically evaluate whether such a concept realistically explains our observations and understanding of the world today, or whether it is simply our modern day giant tortoise.  We can't conceive the complexity of life beginning without an intelligent agent causing it to happen, because that is the limit of our experience.  An intelligent agent starting life on earth fits with current know facts almost as well as the giant tortoise fits with known facts 6,000 years ago.  One main difference is people could see and evaluate the properties of a tortoise which we cannot do with currently proposed candidates for the intelligent agent of creation as their is no tangible evidence of its/their existence.  Clearly all types of intelligent actors could be swapped into the role of "Creator of Life on Earth", from an alien race, a god or deity, a council of gods or deities; the list is limited only by our imagination.

Without elaboration, here are just some quick observations against the existence of a divine creator or supreme being(s):

Evolution of species and man, extinction of many animals over eons before the arrival of humanoids and after.
Absence of life on earth for eons before life began. Absence of man for eons after live began.
Constantly changing planet. No indication of divine hand in natural events.
Conflicting beliefs on deities, changing and evolving religious ideas and concepts.
No scientific evidence for supernatural or the existence of a “soul”.
Unreliability of a single human observer. Fallibility of human observer, ingrained instinctual  behaviors, limits to biochemical and physical function and capacity of the human brain, susceptible to conditioning, indoctrination, manipulation, and self-deception.

Lastly, I don't believe the disk on a tortoise cosmology is based on an actual belief system, but it is what popped into my head in the early morning hours.  I know it has been used in fiction (Terry Pratchett).  I do believe there are actual belief systems that do have the earth  being supported by animals, or animal shaped deities, but you will have to research the specifics.