Iconasostacles
New member
Vision in Verse said:What you're describing is life. There is no reason to assume that life continues after it has died. Evolution does not specify anything spiritual or otherworldly. Therefore, it would be ridiculous to claim that a teaching in evolution leads to a pagan belief.
Yes, "life" or at least the abstracted essence thereof. There is no reason to assume that this quality has no substance apart from its temporary material embodiment -- there are only a variety of philosophical options that describe how such a realm of 'interior life quality' would basically be unverifiable by (basically) any conventional physical means.
Evolution, as you say, does not specify anything spiritual -- but it does not specify anything at all above the general notion of organisms taking shape over vast aeons of time in accordance with their relationships. Nothing 'otherworldly' is specified. Yet this "life" quality and the mental imagery associated with its formative action over enormously trans-human spans of time has the same basic shape as if we invisioned an otherworldly "spirit" performing the creative deeds. There is a mental or emotional affirmation of life as a ancient, organism-transcending force that originally lived in matter but somehow, incredibly, mysteriously, awakened and 'made' human culture and psychology. That is a picture that is flush with paganism (on one of its sides, so to speak).
There is no direct, rational connexion between teaching evolutionary theory and encouraging paganism. Yet we can certainly see that a shift of focus onto the very impressive activities of 'life' within the realm of matter makes for easier veneration of both life and matter. A healthy Christianity, however, should not live compressed with fear, anxious that children could be convinced by such things. Rather we should see that a healthy paganism is a partial/limited piece of a larger, more comprehensive spiritual viewpoint.
Eating encourages defecation which takes away from the contemplation of the Highest Value (Divinity) but no eating, and therefore no defecation, leads to a much worse situation in which there is no contemplating of the Highest whatsoever.
Whatever structural correspondences between the ideas of paganism and those of evolutionary theory, neither are "flat surface" rivals to Christian faith. The higher is not damaged by the health of the lower -- even if it disagrees with the lower.
Vision in Verse said:All people have the capacity for those traits regardless of their metaphysical beliefs.
Precisely -- so the mere presence of such traits must be held at arm's length from a consideration of the relative merits of various worldviews. We can make a loose estimation that paganism is, for various reasons, more primitive, less accurate, than certain other views without knowing anything about any particular 'pagan'. This is an obvious point but always worth remembering. i