Russell, Robert John. Finite Creation without a Beginning: The Doctrine of Creation in Relation to Big Bang and Quantum Cosmologies."
Robert Russells paper is
divided into two sections. In the first
section Russell focuses on inflationary Big Bang cosmology and the problem of
t=0. The theological reaction to t=0
has thus far been rather mixed. Some
(such as Peters) have welcomed it as evidence of divine creation; others (such
as Barbour and Peacocke) have dismissed it as irrelevant to the core of the
creation tradition. As Russell sees it,
the argument on both sides has been shaped by the work of Gilkey in his Maker of Heaven and Earth. Here Gilkey acknowledges that the problem of
relating empirical and ontological language is a fundamental issue for theologians, reflecting what he later
calls the travail of Biblical language.
However Russell is critical of Gilkeys resolution of the problem, which
begins with his use of the traditional distinction between what can be called
ontological origination and historical/empirical origination. Gilkey, citing Aquinas, seems to view these
as strictly dichotomous alternatives. One then either rejects the latter as
theologically irrelevant (Gilkeys position) or elevates the latter into the
essential meaning of the former (the position Gilkey rejects). In the first case, science, insofar as t=0
is concerned, plays no role in theology; in the second case it plays a
normative role.
Russell criticizes both
extremes by attempting to undermine Gilkeys assumption that the alternatives
should form a strict dichotomy. Instead
he believes that historical/empirical origination provides an important
corroborative meaning for ontological origination, although it is neither its
essential nor even its central meaning, a view, incidently, which he takes to
be more in keeping with that of Aquinas.
Russell then argues that an important way of relating historical/empirical
origination to ontological origination is through the concept of finitude. This abstract concept, initially closely
connected to ontological origination, can take on an important
historical/empirical meaning in the context of cosmology, where the past
temporal finitude of the universe is represented by the event, t=0. Hence he argues that t=0 is relevant to the
doctrine of creation ex nihilo if
one interprets arguments about historical origination (such as found in t=0) as
offering confirming, but neither conclusive nor essential, evidence for
ontological origination. In this way
science plays a more vigorous role in the doctrine of creation than many
scholars today allow but without
providing its essential meaning. In
particular, taking a cue from the writings of Ian Barbour, Nancey Murphy and
Philip Clayton, he frames his approach in terms of a Lakatosian research
program in theology. Creation ex nihilo as ontological origination will
form the core hypothesis of this program, with t=0 entering as confirming
evidence through the use of a series of auxiliary hypotheses involving the
concept of finitude deployed in increasingly empirical contexts of meaning.
In the second section, he
discusses the Hartle/Hawking proposal for quantum cosmology. Their startling claim is that the universe,
though having a finite age, has no beginning event, t=0; i.e., that the
universe is finite but unbounded in the past.
How should this result affect the arguments in Part I? To answer this, he first critically
discusses the positions developed by Isham, Davies and Drees regarding the
theological significance of the Hartle/Hawking proposal. Next he presents Hawkings own theological
views and offers a counterargument to them.
Finally, his constructive position is that the Hartle/Hawking proposal,
even if its scientific status is transitory, can
teach us a great deal theologically.
First, given their work, we should distinguish between the theological
claim that creation is temporally finite in the past and the further claim that
this past is bounded by the event, t=0.
This leads to the important recognition that the first claim by itself
is actually quite sufficient for creatio ex
nihilo. Hence Russell says
we can set aside arguments specifically over t=0 and yet retain the
historical/empirical sense of the past temporal finitude of creation. Moreover, this insight, which he terms
finite creation without a beginning, is valid whether or not the
Hartle/Hawking proposal stands scientifically; thus it suggests that we can in
fact work with speculative proposals at the frontiers of science instead of
restricting ourselves necessarily
to well-established results, as most scholars cautiously advise. He views this generalization of the meaning
of finitude as an additional auxiliary hypothesis to our research program, and
following Lakatos again, look for novel predictions it might entail and without
which it would be ad hoc.
Thus, Russell analyzes the
temporal status of the universe in terms of quantum gravity and general
relativity. The variety of ways time
functions here (external, internal, phenomenological) and their implications
for the temporality of the universe lead to important new directions for
understanding Gods action as creator and the doctrine of creation. From one perspective, the combination of
quantum gravity and general relativity describes the universe as having domains
of a temporal, of a timeless, and of a transitional character. Accordingly we must reconsider Gods
relation as Creator to each of
these domains. Here the generalization
of the concept of finitude to include an unbounded finitude might allow us to
claim the occurrence of the transition domain as a Lakatosian novel fact of
our research program. From a different
perspective, however, taken as quantum gravity the fundamental theory replacing
general relativity. Here Gods relation
to the universe as a whole will need to be reinterpreted in terms of the
complex role and status of temporality in quantum gravity. In either case, Gods activity as Creator is
not limited to a first moment (whether or not one exists) but to the entire
domain of nature, returning us to the general problem of divine action in light
of science. Russell closes by pointing, then, to the need to rethink the
current models of divine agency and of the relation between time and eternity
in terms of a more complex understanding of temporality from a Trinitarian
perspective informed by quantum physics and quantum cosmology.
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