Other Considerations
There are a number of other
considerations that can be held to be relevant to the discussion of whether the
universe is designed. One concerns what seems to me to be the most astonishing
(and most significant) event known to us that has happened since the big bang.
I refer, of course, to the dawning of self-consciousness here on Earth (and
perhaps elsewhere). In us, the universe has become aware of itself. You
remember that Blaise Pascal said that human beings are thinking reeds, so insubstantial on the grand
scale of the cosmos, but we are thinking
reeds, and so greater than all the stars, for we know them and ourselves and
they know nothing. With, for example, Paul Davies in his book The Mind of God, I cannot regard this
dawning of consciousness as being just a fortunate accident in the course of an
essentially meaningless cosmic history. We know from the Anthropic Principle
that the potentiality for this happening was present in the ground rules of the
universe from the beginning. I see this striking emergence as a signal of
meaningfulness, amounting to an intimation of intrinsic design. Something is
going on in what is happening in cosmic process. Of course, I am talking in
terms of a propensity to great fruitfulness. There is much that is contingent
in the way that this has been realized. I am not claiming that it was laid down
from all eternity that Homo sapiens
should have five fingers! I will return later to the matter of contingency.
Meanwhile, let us recognize
that our human self-consciousness enables us to look through many different
windows onto reality. We are not confined to the impersonal scientific
perspective of Galilieo`s primary quantities, but we have access to those
personal qualities that Galileo set aside. I take with the greatest seriousness
our human encounters with beauty and with moral imperative. I see them as
affording us windows onto the reality within which we live and not, as I think
Steven Weinberg does, as being internally constructed human attitudes through
which we defy an intrinsically meaningless and hostile universe.
I have already drawn
attention to sciences inadequacy in relation to music. Its reductionist
strategy can never do justice to a work of art, for a Leonardo painting is much
more than a collection of specks of paint of known chemical composition. It
would be a disastrous mistake to throw away the insights of aesthetics, for
they must find their proper place in a true Theory of Everything.
I believe that the same is
true of our ethical intuitions. I know something about what the anthropologists
tell us about the cultural tricks of perspective that different societies
impose upon their discernment of moral issues. Of course, we must pay attention
to these matters but, when all is said and done, I personally cannot believe
that my conviction that torturing children is wrong is just a convention of my
society. It is a fact about reality, the way things are. We have access to
moral knowledge, which is knowledge of a totally different kind from scientific
knowledge, for ethical insights are more than disguised genetic survival
strategies. If that were not so, what would be the grounds on which Richard
Dawkins could, on the last page of The
Selfish Gene, urge us to rebel against their influence?
A true cosmology - an
adequate account of reality - will have to take these issues into account. The
physical world that science describes, is the carrier of beauty and the arena
of moral decision, value-laden aspects of reality that science does not
describe. One of the attractions of theism is that it offers a way of tying
these different levels of experience together, which otherwise might seem so
unconnected with each other. Just as we can understand the rational order of
the world that science discovers, as being a reflection of the mind of its
creator, so we can understand our aesthetic experience as being a sharing in
the Creators joy in creation, and our moral intuitions as being intimations of
Gods good and perfect will. And, I would want to add that dimension of human
experience that testifies to a meeting with the sacred as being an encounter with
the divine presence.
Contributed by: Sir John Polkinghorne
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