Design and Divine Conservation
Do
not imagine that dividing divine interference from natural physical processes
is an easy affair. For one thing, it is standard theology to say that the
cosmos would immediately vanish if God ceased to conserve it in existence
from moment to moment, the theologians then adding that the laws of physics
hold only because this is what God wills. Keeping everything in existence, and
keeping it obedient to physical laws, are simply not counted by theologians as
interference or miracle. I see nothing wrong in this, but the point is a
controversial one. It becomes particularly difficult to handle when you bear in
mind two further points: first, that
our universe can seem to obey laws of quantum physics which do not dictate
precisely how events develop, and second, that quantum randomness, perhaps
together with other types of randomness, may have had major effects on the
general structure of the world which we see. It is often theorized that the
strengths of various forces such as electromagnetism, gravity, and the nuclear
weak and strong forces, and the masses of such particles as the neutron, the
proton and the electron, could all have been settled during early instants of
the Big Bang by random processes inside
an initially very tiny domain which later grew large enough to include
everything now visible to our telescopes. Physicists speak, for example, of
symmetry breaking by scalar fields whose values could have varied randomly from
one very tiny domain to another. Against this background, how would things look
to a theologian who believed that God
would have to choose at each instant precisely how the cosmos would be at the
next instant when he conserved it in existence? - when he preserved it,
that is to say, but preserved it in a slightly changed form which led humans to
speak of the action of physical forces. The laws of physics, as I noted, could
fail to dictate exactly what would have to happen in order for them to be
obeyed. They could be quantum-physical laws that left this up to God. In which
case God might have chosen cunningly that events would in fact develop, at
early instants of the Big Bang, in such a way that there would later be the
sort of world which permitted the evolution of intelligent life because the
strengths of its physical forces and the masses of its particles had been
settled appropriately.
Having
chosen cunningly how things would happen at early instants, God might also act
rather similarly at various crucial later moments, ensuring that events which
quantum physics allowed to develop along various different paths, most of them not leading to the evolution of
intelligent life, in fact took one or other of the few paths leading to it. We
might be unjustified in calling this type of thing divine interference, as
long as it did not happen on too large a scale. The distinction between
designing a worlds laws in a life-encouraging fashion and then leaving
them to operate, and actually designing such things as eyes by, say, putting
the optic nerves in the right places, is a sufficiently clear distinction -
but in between there is a fuzzy area where what one person would call
messy divine interference or miracle would be classified by another person
as God just not choosing perversely
to make events happen in life-excluding ways when life - encouraging
ways were equally present among the possibilities allowed by physical laws, the
possibilities among which God had to choose.
Contributed by: Dr. John Leslie
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