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Does God Exist?
by Sally Morem
Does God exist? Whole libraries of books have addressed this
complex question. How can I simplify the discussion to make my answer
short enough to fit in this essay, yet coherent enough to satisfy
philosophical rigor?
For the sake of brevity, I will be referring mainly to the
Judeo-Christian God, although most of this discussion is applicable
to other theological constructs. I will not get into the messy
business of trying to assert and analyze in-depth definitions of the
word God, leaving that work to theologians and philosophers.
Instead, God will refer to the anthropomorphic concept of a
supreme being who created the universe and all that is in it, a
concept very familiar to most Americans.
I will concentrate on the two aspects of the question which seem
to exercise the most power over the imagination of those theologians
and philosophers who believe God must exist: the Argument From
Design and the Argument From Morality, with a necessary
detour through the Problem of Evil. Then, I will pose an
alternative to the traditional concepts of theistic creation and
command, namely—a self-organizing universe of growing
complexity.
The Argument From Design runs roughly like this: the
universe and everything within it seem to exhibit far too many
elements of apparently deliberate and thoughtful design to have come
into being without a Designer.
But does it? What is good design? The most appropriate definition
for the noun design that I could find is the fifth sub-definition
listed in Websterís Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary—
". . . an underlying scheme that governs functioning, developing, or
unfolding: pattern, motif." We also observe that good design has
elements of precision and craftsmanship: the careful selection of
materials, the detailed pattern, the exact placement of elements.
Does this definition fit our universe?
Good design presumes the existence of a Designer, one who planned,
fabricated, and deployed it precisely as desired. But, I ask again,
does the universe have good design? Could we ever tell? Perhaps not,
but we do manage to see pattern in the cosmos and nature. We see a
buildup of many levels of organization over time—subatomic particles
making up atoms, atoms uniting in molecules, molecules bonding into
larger, much more elaborate molecules known as amino acids, amino
acids clumping together into proteins and nucleic acids, cells,
multicellular life of lush variety and every changing form, brains of
increasing complexity flashing neural patterns known better as human
minds, humans shaping themselves and their ideas, first in the most
intimate of societies known as families, then tribes, villages,
cities, nations, empires, and superpowers which span continents.
Surely such fecundity of nested patterns indicates the presence of a
master Patternmaker.
But, we also see examples of what we might call shoddy
workmanship: galaxies running into one another, black holes sucking
in material from companion stars, misshapen disease-ridden, dying
lifeforms. We also see examples of what for a lack of a better term
might be called fuzziness or goopiness. Molecules jostle and bump
into one another until some of them "stick," forming a larger
molecule. Cells are not the orderly protein factories depicted in
biology books. Bits of RNA, ribosomes and amino acids wander about
the cell endlessly, occasionally running into one another. Then, and
only then, do they build proteins for the body. When we study them up
close, the processes producing nested patterns which earlier looked
so marvelously precise take on a much more random character.
Scientists suspect that whatever order we do observe around us
actually grows out of a kind of spontaneous ordering, a universe
lifting itself up by its own bootstraps, if you will, Instead of the
Creator God ordering everything just so—Let There Be
Light—space itself actually expanded out of a microscopic
quantum vacuum, carrying matter and energy with it. One wag called
this version of the Big Bang theory "the ultimate free lunch." The
universe in this scenario continued to grow into the vastness we know
today. And still it grows and freely orders itself. Each level of
organization builds upon whatever ordering pattern was already in
existence in a thoroughly naturalistic way.
Ponder these questions. They bear directly on the question of
Godís reputed existence: Is the world a made thing or did it
just happen? Is our perception of Design in the world accurate or is
it merely a reflection of our deepest hopes and fears? Could we ever
perceive the true nature of reality or must we be content with
approximations? Does the Designer live outside or within
ourselves?
Now for the Argument From Morality. What is morality and
how do we humans build it into vast, intricate systems of belief and
governance of behavior? The same Websterís dictionary defines
morality as ". . . a doctrine or system of morals" and "conformity to
ideals of right human conduct." To theists, morality is Godís
shadow on the human soul. C.S. Lewis has written of this belief
plainly and simply, yet most eloquently. ". . . I find that I do not
exist on my own, that I am under a law, that somebody or something
wants me to behave in a certain way."
Lewis believed that the somebody or something existed Before and
Outside our reality and implanted messages within us. Such beliefs
invite further questions. For instance, if you believe God exists and
that He has something to do with the existence of morality, does God
establish morality or enforce it? This question is a little trickier
than it looks.
If God establishes morality, then morality is anything He wants it
to be. You, a loyal Believer, could and should rob, rape and murder,
if these are Godís moral commands. A universe in which
morality is ordained by God is a universe with a fundamentally
arbitrary moral code. Lewisís messages would merely be a
further reminder of Godís own desires. They would have little
to do with us.
But, if you believe that God merely enforces an inherent moral
order, then that morality would exist pretty much as is whether
commanded or not. At that point, your concept of God changes. God
ceases to be the omnipotent Being you were postulating earlier.
Lewisís messages in this situation would either be a plaintive
cry for help from a deficient deity or merely an echo of a
remembrance of moral laws laid down by ancient ancestors.
As far as moral systems are concerned, we must now face the fact
that infinite goodness, knowledge, and power are mutually exclusive
characteristics for a creative and sustentacular God. It is simply
not possible for a supremely good and powerful deity to create a
universe He must know will have evil in it. Here it is, then, the
Problem of Evil: If God is so good, why does he permit evil to
exist in His creation?
We grant that any being with great power can cause much that is
good and much that is evil to take place. We humans observe much that
is good and much that is evil in us and around us. In this question
of Godís existence (as in any other question), our
observations work as evidence for and against our conjectures. In
light of these statements, letís consider the main
possibilities as structured by the history of Western religious
thought: 1. There is good and evil, therefore a God (or gods) who
wished to create good and evil did so. 2. There is good and evil,
therefore a God who wished to create only good failed to achieve His
goals. 3. There is good and evil, but humans alone make the call,
therefore God becomes redundant.
The first defines many religions. Ancient people believed in their
gods, but didnít believe they were particularly good or kind.
They feared their gods, certain that they were as willful and
capricious as any human, but with far more power at their disposal.
We acknowledge the history of these beliefs and call them
mythologies, but they hold no power over the modern human
imagination, save that of a few pagans and Druids. The thought of
Zeus, Athena, Aphrodite or Thor commanding the elements and directing
human lives has been rendered laughable by the sheer weight of the
last 2,000 years of human cultural experience. We can dismiss this
possibility out of hand.
The second defines the great monotheistic religions. Somehow, an
All-Knowing, Omnipotent God, who wished to create a world with beings
in it who would worship and obey Him, actually wound up creating
stubborn, disobedient, immoral human beings. How could such a thing
happen? There are various explanations given in various sacred
books—a heavenly battle, a fallen angel, free will, the Garden of
Eden, a serpent, an apple, and the wiles of woman (Eve). But these
are all merely parts of a mad existential scramble to attempt to
bridge a paradox of astounding proportions—the Perfect Creator
versus a Creation that should be recalled to the factory.
If we know nothing whatsoever of how we humans perceive the world
and ourselves, if we know nothing whatsoever of physical and
biological science, we would still have to opt for the third
possibility simply because it involves no horrendously tangled logic
or unbridgeable contradictions.
There is good and evil. These are judgments made only by humans
with respect to many aspects of reality. Morality grew out of
countless decisions made and stories told through hundreds of
generations of human struggle and joy. That which we like we call
good; that which we hate we call evil. Itís as
simple as that. If the question of Godís existence rests on
the acknowledged existence of good and evil, even though we humans
are the ones who develop and employ moral systems, God need not
exist. We humans can do it all by ourselves, thank you very much.
Letís consider another possibility. Letís consider
self-organizing systems of growing complexity. This
alternative to the created, commanded, scripted universe of religion
is a multi-level, self-ordering, evolutionary process in which humans
can and do play a major role. In such a universe the Problem of
Evil disappears. Evil doesnít exist because some deity
inflicts it on us deliberately or because the deity in question was
rather incompetent. Evil exists because we humans have named
something we donít like, and we havenít figured out
what to do about the existence of that thing—yet.
Evolution proceeds by aggregation. Simple systems build themselves
into more and more complex systems, layer upon layer of
self-organizing processes. Indeed it does proceed from less order to
more as matter feeds on energy flow. As an alternative scenario to
Creation, letís see where this three-step evolutionary
paradigm takes us—physical, biological, and cultural.
Our story begins with the Big Bang, which is not an explosion at
all. No primordial shrapnel flies off into empty space. Instead, a
multi-dimensional "bubble" of space-time forms out of a quantum
fluctuation and builds on itself. Titanic energy forces are
unleashed. As the bubble spreads, the infant universe cools. Matter
crystallizes energy. Matter spreads out smoothly in
space-time—almost. Great galactic clusters gravitate around the
slight imperfections. Giant stars form, burn their nuclear fuel,
build up stores of heavy elements and then explode in spectacular
supernovae, spewing their treasure trove into deep space. Much later,
new star systems are born as the nuclear furnaces of a new generation
of stars ignite within nebular stellar nurseries. Planets clump
together out of planetesimals formed in orbit from the nebular
remains of the ancient supernovae. Some stars are small, like our
Sun, and begin a long, slow career of nuclear fusion, giving any
planet orbiting it at the right distance the chance to bear liquid
water for at least most of the year in this "water zone," and hence,
having a good shot at bearing life.
We do know of at least one planet in which this took place—Earth.
At some point, small molecules came together and formed amino acids,
the building blocks of life. Research chemist Stanley Fox discovered
that by copolymerizing a simple mixture of the twenty amino acids
which make up all life on Earth and aspartic acid over low heat, the
amino acids would form themselves into what Fox called
"proteinoids." One would think that these proteinoids would be very
disorderly, but they turned out to be orderly, closely resembling
proteins produced by biological systems. Like biological proteins,
some can act as enzymes, others as hormones. "The only logical
explanation [Fox could come up with] was that the reactant
amino acids themselves carried the instructions for their own
order."
Fox continued to push his analysis of how life may have emerged
from non-life in a naturalistic, emergent fashion. He dissolved
proteinoids into warm salt water and then allowed them to cool. They
aggregated into spherical, fine, cell-like structures which strongly
resembled primitive spherical cells found in very early fossils.
These protocells emerged from the proteinoid mixture as part
of large protocell groups. They tended to form as "couples."
Opposite-charged protocells attracted one another, just as real
biological cells do. From this, Fox deduced that there was no one
single "ancestral cell." Protocells gained lifelike attributes in
groups.
Biological evolution continues this tendency. It can be described
as a bundle of trends operating on large, genetically diverse
populations of organisms over an extended period of time. Those
organisms which interact with their environment most effectively live
long enough to pass on their characteristics to their offspring.
Those which donít, donít.
As the environment changes, desirable characteristics change. The
environment plays a crucial role in determining the size, shape,
hunting and feeding instincts, and mating habits of organisms at any
given time. Genetic mutations deepen the gene pool, ensuring the
emergence of further diversity from which selective pressures may
choose.
The point at which biological evolution and cultural evolution
meet is in the human brain. Our brains are powerful pattern hunters.
They are primed to seek out and find. They search for every
meaningful pattern in the world as if our lives depend on it—because
they do!
Our brains enable us to hunt for food and keep an wary eye out for
predators, to seek friends who may protect us and guard against
enemies who may harm us. During our long history, friends and enemies
were not limited to other humans, but were titles bestowed on
anything appearing to be sufficiently humanlike to gain our fear and
respect. We gave the sun, moon, and stars, thunderstorms, volcanoes
and earthquakes the names of spirits and gods and we worshipped them
with fear and hope. And thus, religion.
How can three pounds of gray matter perform such magical feats?
Our visual cortex, for example, receives the most basic forms of
stimuli from the eyes—lines, color, direction. Then, groups of
neurons take the resulting information about the outside world and
analyze it, giving more weight to some bits of it, while ignoring
most perceptions in a manner directed by internal models of the world
previously devised by the brain. Larger portions of the brain then
push the analysis of what was perceived to greater and greater levels
of abstraction. We "see" whatever we are looking at only after this
process is done.
We never experience the world directly, only through these
cerebral filters which protect us from the onslaught of sensation of
the fuzziness of reality. We perceive reality through lenses of
pattern perception which cull and code the vast assemblage of
impressions and deductions to make them usable to us.
As a result, we humans become makers. Ever since the first
Paleolithic flintknapper chipped his first handaxe, we have imparted
design to the world. We naturally see design all around us, and where
there is design we believe there must be a Designer, a greater Maker.
We project humanlike qualities onto our surroundings, imagining
intentionality where none exists.
Evolution is a long, slow, convoluted, impersonal process of
development. But, on Earth at least, it led to the development of
beings with minds powerful enough to categorize, classify, and model
reality, and envision something better. And these beings, our first
human ancestors, are the ones who set off an explosion of ideas whose
reverberation we feel yet today. If we would further this process of
cultural evolution, it behooves us to learn how such systems of
self-organization work, so that we may participate in the human part
of it knowledgeably and effectively. Evolution may be blind. It is we
who see.
Evolution does not make good and evil, right and wrong disappear.
These concepts grew naturally in the minds of humans our of hundreds
and thousands of generation of hard-earned knowledge. These are
cumulative judgments on which things, events and behaviors are
helpful and which are hurtful to humans. Every scrap of knowledge
that turned out to be crucial in this ancient search for certainties
is preserved in our oldest learning tool—human language. If you
donít belie language is the keeper of moral system—consult
your English thesaurus. Watch the streams of words sculpt the
intricate landscape of human aspiration.
Here are just a few synonyms of the adjective ëgoodí
that I have managed to find: virtuous, moral, righteous, honorably,
honest, high-minded, noble, lofty, wholesome, pure, chaste, virginal,
innocent, unsullied, untainted, pious, saintly, angelic, devout,
right, correct, proper, decorous, seemly, permissible, allowable,
fit, fitting, suitable, appropriate, timely, well-behaved, obedient,
well-mannered, courteous, beneficent, altruistic, benevolent, kind,
kindhearted, benign, sympathetic, humane [my
emphasis].
Words are the keepers of ideas. Ideas are at the core of cultural
evolution. As you can see by my list, we humans are drenched in moral
sentiment, even in this age of apparent moral relativism.
Biological evolution does not command people to be good or bad or
anything else. Perhaps this is why many people find the concept of
evolution distasteful. It leaves us to our own devices, guided only
by our personal and aggregate knowledge and experience, and whatever
instinctual attraction or revulsion our biological makeup bequeathed
us. Evolution canít condemn anything, not even Hitler or
Stalin. But we do. Morality is our slow-growing, cultural
invention of dire necessity, as necessary to thinking, feeling beings
as food and water are. It is not the universeís job to pick up
after us. If we judge something or someone evil, it is up to us to
stop them and to make sure they donít do it again. Hitler and
Stalin were horribly wrong, not because they fell under the judgment
of God or the universe, but because by our lights they and their
devoted followers inflicted horrors untold.
The assertion that evolution removes decision-making power from us
is just plain false. The opposite, as weíve seen, is true.
Instead, evolutionary processes explain how spontaneous order occurs
in human societies, as well as in physical and biological systems.
Self-organization is especially powerful in democratic societies,
where large numbers of people wield a large amount of decision-making
power and interact with one another freely in enormously complex and
creative ways. The traditional religious creation story in which God
commands and matter obeys more closely resembles the top-down command
system of the traditional medieval monarchy or a dictatorship of the
modern era.
In the end, the Arguments from Design and Morality
fail for the same reason. Such arguments seriously underestimate the
fecundity of self-organizing systems, and especially the profound
creativity of the human mind.
Reality exists. The outside world is demonstrably there and has
its own pattern, its own organization. But any indication of
intelligent design or command that we may sense within us or see
manifested around us lies only within our minds. God does not exist.
It is we who string beads of light together, crafting the
design of the world.
Notes
1. C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, originally published in
1943 as a compilation of transcripts of radio addresses (New York:
Macmillan, 1960), p. 34.
2. Stanley Fox, The Emergence of Life: Darwinian Evolution from
the Inside, (New York, Basic Books, 1988), p. 64.
Copyright © 2001 by Religious Humanism and
The Friends of Religious
Humanism.
Email: huumanists@huumanists.org
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