Hefner, Philip. Biocultural Evolution: A Clue to the Meaning of Nature."
Philip Hefner begins with
the two-natured character of the human: the confluence of genetic and
cultural information. These co-exist in the central nervous system (CNS) and
have co- evolved and co-adapted. The genetic has made the cultural dimension
possible; their symbiotic character differentiates humanity from other forms of
life. Ralph Burhoe describes them as co- adapted organisms. Though we are
conditioned by our evolutionary development and our ecological situation, we
are free to consider appropriate behaviors within an environmental and societal
matrix of demands, since our freedom serves the interest of the deterministic
evolutionary system and is rooted in our genetically controlled adaptive
plasticity. The emergence of conditionedness and freedom are an evolutionary
preparation for values and morality; the ought is built into evolution and need
not be imported from external sources. Hefner reports that evolutionary
psychology and human behavioral ecology have moved beyond their roots in
sociobiology. He notes two key issues: how adaptive behaviors are shaped by
critical moments in evolutionary history and then transmitted by bundles of
adaptations, and how cooperative behaviors, including morality, evolve in the
context of genetic, neurobiological, and cultural interactions.
Humans have evolved to seek and to shape meaning, enabled by the CNS,
and our survival depends on it. A crucial step is the construction of
frameworks and interpretations which are pre- moral, as Solomon Katz puts it.
Moreover, our species, though bounded by evolution, acts within this context,
thus inevitably altering the world. Hefner speaks theologically of the human as
created co-creator. We encounter transcendence in several ways: as evolution
and the ecosystem transcend themselves when they question their purpose through
us; as we act in the non-human world and in culture; and as we open ourselves
to our future. Thus the project of the human species is also natures project,
and the challenge for us is to discover its content.
Human culture includes diverse strategies for living; its greatest
challenge is science and technology. These provide the underlying conditions
for our interrelated planetary community but also its pressure on the global
ecosystem. They are essential for human life and they thoroughly condition the
future of the planet. Culture functions to guide behavior comparably to the
role of physico-bio-genetic systems in plants and animals. Its interpretation challenges
us intellectually and spiritually. Hefner opts for a non-dualistic
interpretation: technology, like all culture, is an emergent form of nature
grounded in human neurobiology. Still, as a thoroughly technological
civilization we now face a crisis not merely of tools out of control, but of
an all-permeating form of existence that threatens to turn against itself and
nature. He calls for a re-organization of consciousness adequate to this
crisis.
Christian theology, through the doctrine of creation, can provide such
perspective. The natural world is vested in meaning by its relation to God as
creator ex nihilo; nature is
entirely Gods project, what God intended. The doctrine of continuing creation
emphasizes the way in which, at every moment of time, God creates in freedom
and love, giving the world its evolutionary character, purpose, and meaning.
Our understanding of natures meaning arises in the context of our scientific
experience of the world, including randomness and genetic predisposition.
Humanity, as created in the imago Dei,
becomes a metaphor for the meaning of nature. Human sin represents the
epistemic distance between the actual human condition and the primordial
intentionality and love that God bequeaths the world. The key question for
relating theology to science should be whether we believe that what governs the
world at its depths is divine love. The Incarnation and the sacraments are
pivotal theological affirmations that nature is capable of being an instrument
of Gods will and purpose. In Jesus Christ we discover both the normative image
of God and the instantiated character of Gods freedom, intentionality, and
love.
Hefner concludes with six claims regarding the created co-creator as a
fully natural creature illuminating the capabilities of nature, the convergence
of the human project and the project of nature, and the transcendence and
freedom of both. The evolution of the created co- creator reveals that natures
project is also Gods project, and the human project must be in the service of
natures project. The imago Dei,
and particularly Christ, gives content to Gods intentionality for this
project.
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