View by:  Subject  Theme  Question  Term  Person  Event

The requested page was not found.

Topic Sets Available

AAAS Report on Stem-Cells

AstroTheology: Religious Reflections on Extraterrestrial Life Forms

Agency: Human, Robotic and Divine
Becoming Human: Brain, Mind, Emergence
Big Bang Cosmology and Theology (GHC)
Cosmic Questions Interviews

Cosmos and Creator
Creativity, Spirituality and Computing Technologies
CTNS Content Home
Darwin: A Friend to Religion?
Demystifying Information Technology
Divine Action (GHC)
Dreams and Dreaming: Neuroscientific and Religious Visions'
E. Coli at the No Free Lunchroom
Engaging Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence: An Adventure in Astro-Ethics
Evangelical Atheism: a response to Richard Dawkins
Ecology and Christian Theology
Evolution: What Should We Teach Our Children in Our Schools?
Evolution and Providence
Evolution and Creation Survey
Evolution and Theology (GHC)
Evolution, Creation, and Semiotics

The Expelled Controversy
Faith and Reason: An Introduction
Faith in the Future: Religion, Aging, and Healthcare in the 21st Century

Francisco Ayala on Evolution

From Christian Passions to Scientific Emotions
Genetic Engineering and Food

Genetics and Ethics
Genetic Technologies - the Radical Revision of Human Existence and the Natural World

Genomics, Nanotechnology and Robotics
Getting Mind out of Meat
God and Creation: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Perspectives on Big Bang Cosmology
God, Humanity and the Cosmos: A Textbook in Science and Religion
God the Spirit - and Natural Science
Historical Examples of the Science and Religion Debate (GHC)
History of Creationism
Intelligent Design Coming Clean

Issues for the Millennium: Cloning and Genetic Technologies
Jean Vanier of L'Arche
Nano-Technology and Nano-ethics
Natural Science and Christian Theology - A Select Bibliography
Neuroscience and the Soul
Outlines of the Science and Religion Debate (GHC)

Perspectives on Evolution

Physics and Theology
Quantum Mechanics and Theology (GHC)
Questions that Shape Our Future
Reductionism (GHC)
Reintroducing Teleology Into Science
Science and Suffering

Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action (CTNS/Vatican Series)

Space Exploration and Positive Stewardship

Stem-Cell Debate: Ethical Questions
Stem-Cell Ethics: A Theological Brief

Stem-Cell Questions
Theistic Evolution: A Christian Alternative to Atheism, Creationism, and Intelligent Design...
Theology and Science: Current Issues and Future Directions
Unscientific America: How science illiteracy threatens our future
Will ET End Religion?

Current Stats: topics: >2600, links: >300,000, video: 200 hours.

Shifting Pictures of the Universe

A. Traditional

Below is an example of one kind of the many kinds of traditional representations of the universe and of time: the snake swallowing its tail. It is a symbol that one finds all over the world.E. Neumann, Origins and History of Consciousness (Princeton University Press, 1995), Fig.6.

A. Traditional Uroboros (snake swalllowing its tail)

B. Biblical

This is a representation of the cosmos of the ancient Near East, the Genesis cosmos. It is a three part picture: the heavens, the flat earth, the underworld. As it is described in Genesis, God separated the waters, providing a space. The firmament held up the upper waters, making space for dry land where animals, plants, and people could find a home. But the firmament had the possibility of breaking, and in the Noah story, the “chimneys” in the firmament and the “fountains” of the deep open up. The Flood was understood as not just a rainstorm but a cosmic catastrophe, a threat to recreate the primordial chaos.R. E. Friedman, The Disappearance of God (Little, Brown, 1995).

B. Biblical

C. Medieval

The Medieval picture is based on the Ptolemaic and even earlier Platonic and Aristotelian conceptions of the crystalline spheres, with the spherical earth at the center and the whole pattern of spheres revolving around the earth every day. The spheres also revolve slowly against each other. The innermost sphere carries the moon, and then Mercury and Venus and the sun (with Mercury and Venus closely linked to the sun). Beyond the sun were Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn (the Seventh Heaven), the fixed stars, and then angels.Cf. C. S. Lewis, The Discarded Image (Cambridge University Press, 1967). This basic picture was reflected in many ways in Medieval culture. For example in a mystical Jewish Kabbalistic representation, there are also the ten spheres, but the story is different. In Lurianic Kabbalah God creates the universe by withdrawing from the center, a process called Tzimtzum in Hebrew. The ten spheres - or spherot, the numbers - represent the emanations of God back into the universe. Ein Sof - the infinite God - surrounds all.Cf. D. S. Ariel, The Mystic Quest (Schocken, 1988), especially pp.169ff; D. C. Matt, god & the Big Bang (Jewish Lights, 1996).

C. Medieval

D. Newtonian

Galileo’s observations with the telescope provided the first convincing evidence that the Ptolemaic picture was wrong. This pulled the rug out from the entire Medieval conception of a hierarchical structure of the universe - including the human universe. Galileo’s work, published in Italy in 1610, spread quickly throughout Europe. Already in 1611 in England John Donne writes:J. Donne, An Anatomie of the World: First Anniversary, in John Donne’s Poetry, A. L. Clements, ed. (W.W. Norton & Co., 1992), p. 102. Cf. T. S. Kuhn, The Copernican Revolution (Vintage Books,... 

The new Philosophy calls all in doubt,
The Element of fire is quite put out;
[the sphere of fire, the highest of the spheres below the lunar sphere, does not exist]
The Sun is lost, and th’earth, and no man’s wit
Can well direct him where to look for it...
‘Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone;
All just supply, and all Relation;
Prince, Subject, Father, Son, are things forgot...

Such was the impact of this change in cosmology.

What was the new picture? The Newtonian cosmos replaced the Medieval picture. There is simply empty space, the void, stretching on indefinitely in all directions. In the Middle Ages, when one went out at night and looked up, one saw majestic height, not infinite vastness. The statement in Pascal’s Pensees, “the eternal silence of these infinite spaces alarms me,”Blaise Pascal, Pensees, Sec. III, no. 206.is a sort of statement that one simply never encounters in Medieval writings.Cf. C. S. Lewis, The Discarded Image (Cambridge University Press, 1967) But it is a very common view once one is living in the Newtonian universe - here represented by a work by Escher.M. C. Escher, The graphic work of M. C. Escher (Ballantine, 1971).

D. Newtonian
M.C. Escher's "Cubic Space Division" © 2002 Cordon Art B.V. - Baarn - Holland. All rights reserved.

E. Modern?

Our modern conception bears some elements of all these pictures, but it is very different from all of them. Let me start by summarizing the differences between the Medieval, Newtonian, and modern pictures.

The Medieval cosmos is of finite size, it began a finite length of time ago - which could be calculated by adding up the begats in Genesis - and it was geocentric. The physical part had to be finite in size because the whole thing goes around once every day. There’s a distinction between the material contents of the sublunar world and of the perfect, unchanging heavens. The unifying ideas are constant circular motion and the Great Chain of Being:A. O. Lovejoy, The great chain of being; a study of the history of an idea (Harvard University Press, 1936).hierarchy, continuity, plenitude. God pervades the entire structure - or gods: pagan planetology coexisted with Christian cosmology.

Newton argued that if the cosmos were finite, then everything would fall to the center,I. Newton letter to R. Bentley, in Space, Time and Creation,M. K. Munitz, ed. (Free Press, 1957).so it was probably infinite. But there were paradoxes associated with this: Kepler had already pointed out that the night sky would be bright as day in an everlasting infinite universe (“Olber’s paradox”E. R. Harrison, Darkness at night: a riddle of the universe (Harvard University Press, 1987).). It also was not clear whether the Newtonian universe was created a finite length of time ago. The unifying ideas were deterministic local mechanics and universal gravitation: the laws of motion were the same on Earth as throughout the universe. God’s role was the creator of this clockwork universe at the beginning. For Newton at least, God also kept setting the clock right again every so often.

In the modern cosmos, we know how big the visible universe is, about 1028 centimeters (cm) - that distance is called the “cosmic horizon.” We know how long ago the universe started - about 14 billion years ago. We know that on large scales, It is homogeneous and isotropic (the same in all directions). It is made of atoms, dark matter, and radiation. Gravity is curvature of spacetime and can create horizons, and nondeterministic quantum mechanics and evolution are the key ideas. It is not clear whether there is a role for God.

Contributed by: Joel Primack and Nancy Abrams


Cosmic Questions: An Introduction

Shifting Pictures of the Universe

Introduction
Scientific Revolutions
Some Modern Pictures

Source:


Joel Primack
and Nancy Abrams

Related Media:

Hubble Deep Field Animation
At Home in the Quantum Universe
Did the Universe Have a Beginning?
Was the Universe Designed?
Are We Alone?
Interview Index
The Copernican Solar System
Ptolemy's Solar System
  Media Index

Other Resources:

Big Bang Cosmology and Theology
The Rise of Copernicanism
Glossary Terms
Books
Bonus Material Home...