Introduction
In this chapter it is my task, my daunting
task, to suggest some of the ways in which the three Cosmic Questions of the
program - “Did the universe have a beginning?” / “Is the universe designed?” /
“Are we alone?” - may have taken the form they have because of the historical
interaction between Athens and Jerusalem (using the name “Jerusalem” to include
also the New Testament, whose principal events did, after all, take place
there). But first I need to point out
again that it is in fact to neither of these ancient cities but to Classical
Rome that we must look for the most brilliant - and the most skeptical -
formulation of these three Cosmic Questions in Classical Antiquity, and
specifically to the De rerum natura
of Lucretius. For Lucretius stands with Goethe and Dante
among those whom George Santayana early in this century described as the “three
philosophical poets,” who embodied in a special way the combination of poet and philosopher and scientist:
Whence
was a pattern for making things [exemplum
gignundis rebus] first implanted in the gods, or even a conception
of humanity [notities hominum],
so as to know what they wished to make and to see it in the mind’s eye?
Or in what manner was the power of the
first-beginnings [uis principiorum]
ever known, and what they could do together by change of order, if nature
herself did not provide a model for creation [specimen
creandi]?
In coping with the three Cosmic Questions of this week’s program,
however, and therefore also, directly or indirectly, with the devastating
challenge of Lucretius to the theistic and teleological answers to them, both
the Greek East and the Latin West, for a thousand years and more, pondered
above all the heritage of Athens and Jerusalem. From Athens this meant Plato’s most important treatise on
cosmology, and the only dialogue
of Plato that was known in the West during most of the Middle Ages, while the
scientific works of Aristotle, which Byzantium did preserve along with the
other works of Plato, were still unknown in the West: the Timaeus, which
determined the vocabulary of science, philosophy, and theology, indeed, their
way of framing questions. And from
Jerusalem it meant the Book of Genesis:
not in its original Hebrew, except when occasional contacts with Jewish
biblical scholarship made it accessible,but in the Septuagint, the Greek translation by Hellenistic Jews of Alexandria
during the two centuries B.C.E.,whose interpretation and, I believe, very vocabulary were significantly shaped
by the Timaeus; and then in the
Latin Vulgate, which still owed much to the Septuagint, even though Jerome had
translated from the Hebrew. It should,
moreover, be emphasized, especially in the light of subsequent history, that the
effort to harmonize Athens and Jerusalem on all three of our Cosmic Questions
had not originated with Christianity but with Judaism, more particularly with
Philo of Alexandria.(As a historical curiosity, I should add that exactly three weeks ago today I
received from Hong Kong a Chinese translation of Philo’s On the Cosmogony of Moses - speaking
of “daunting tasks”!).
Contributed by: Dr. Jaroslav Pelikan
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