Tracy, Thomas F. Creation, Providence, and Quantum Chance."
Uncertainty regarding the
meaning of the acts of God pervades modern theology, according to Thomas
Tracy. Critical historical and literary techniques have deepened the problem of
interpreting biblical texts and the connection they make between story and
history, while the natural sciences have changed the intellectual context of
interpretation by offering an account of nature without appeal to transcendent
causes. On the one hand, scientific methods do not rule out divine action, and
scientific findings are not inconsistent with it. Ironically, theologians from
deists to liberals such as Schleiermacher, Bultmann, and Kaufman, have worked
with a closed causal picture of the world that they feel is authorized by science.
They have taken this to be incompatible with divine action in the world,
leaving either a God who only sets the worlds initial conditions or whose
actions violate the laws of nature. But contemporary natural science does not
necessarily lead to a deterministic metaphysics. Tracy cites two possible
responses. First, a theologically sufficient account of Gods particular
actions in history might actually be developed that still limits God to being
the creator of history as a whole. Second, God can be said to act in particular
cases without intervention in history if one can defend an indeter ministic
interpretation of natural causes. It is here that quantum physics might be
relevant.
Though Tracys focus is on
the second response, he starts with an extended treatment of the first one
since he does not want to underestimate its resources and since he explicitly
assumes it as background for the second response. Here Gods fundamental action
is the free intentional act of creating the world, which continuously gives
being to the created world in its entirety but which cannot be understood by
analogy with human agency. Moreover, God gives to created things active and
passive causal powers, so that Gods action is direct in causing their
existence, but indirect in acting through them and their powers to produce
results in the world. Thus even though God acts uniformly in all events, we can affirm Gods objectively
special action in two ways: particular events may reveal Gods overall
purposes, and they may play a special causal role in shaping history. It is
interesting to note that, in identifying this second way, Tracy is making an
important addition to the typology developed in previous CTNS/VO publications
and republished above, where only the first way, called subjectively special
action, was discussed.
If, however, the structures
of nature are on some level(s) indeterministic, God can act to determine the
outcomes of natural processes without disrupting their intrinsic causal
properties. Here God could be thought of as acting in all such chance events or
in just some of them, though the latter generates conceptual puzzles. Moreover,
the extent of ontological chance in nature will influence the extent of Gods
action in nature. Indeterminism also plays a role in incompatibilist accounts
of free human action. Here again God could be thought of as acting in all human
acts, as John Calvin and Aquinas seemed to imply, or as empowering people to
make their own choices. Both options raise further issues, including the
problem of evil and the ultimate redemption of the world. Indeed, faith in
Gods redemptive action in history provides a compelling theological reason
to argue for a noninterventionist account of divine action and thus an
indeterministic interpretation of nature.
A number of challenges,
however, face any attempt to use quantum physics for such an account. First,
quantum physics can be interpreted in a variety of different ways including the
Copenhagen interpretation, Bohmian nonlocal hidden-variable determinism,
many-worlds determinism, and so on. While it is legitimate, even unavoidable,
to prefer one of these on theological grounds, we should stress that others are
available and their theological use in each case is tentative and provisional.
A second challenge is the measurement problem found in some of these
interpretations. Does this overly limit the occasions of divine action, or is
measurement more universal in nature than some interpreters suggest? And how
do the worlds of quantum processes and observable objects relate? A third
challenge is to show that indeterministic transitions associated with
measurement can produce a difference in the course of the everyday world.
Laboratory equipment, of course, involves precisely this sort of
amplification, but so do natural processes, such as vision and genetic
mutation. In conclusion, Tracy stresses the primary importance of Gods
creating and sustaining the world, and within this, Gods indirect action
through created causes and, possibly, Gods direct noninterventionist action at
points of underdetermination in natural processes.
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