a) t=0
To what extent is t=0 relevant to the doctrine of creation ex
nihilo? Responses have ranged widely from direct relevance to complete
irrelevance.
i) Direct relevance: For some, the scientific
discovery of an absolute beginning of all things (including time) provides
empirical confirmation, perhaps even proof, of divine creation. This was the position
taken by Pope Pius XII in 1951 in an address to the Pontifical Academy of
Sciences. In 1978
Robert Jastrow, then head of NASAs Goddard Institute for Space Studies, spoke
metaphorically about scientists who, after climbing the arduous mountain of
cosmology, came to the summit only to find theologians there already.The idea that t=0 provides strong, even convincing, support for belief in God
is frequently advanced by conservative and evangelical Christians.A more nuanced argument showing the theological importance of there being a
beginning of the universe and the consonance between theology and Big Bang
cosmology on this point was developed by Peters in a number of writings.Peters combines this with temporal holism, an insistence that the prefection
of creation lies in the future, not the past, particularly in its
eschatological fulfillment(see Part 2/E/3 below). A very sophisticated argument for the temporal finitude
of the universe based on t=0, as well as on an argument that rejects the
possibility that the universe is also actually infinite in size, has been
developed by William Craig, partially through an explicit debate with atheist
Quentin Smith More
recently, Phil Clayton has suggested that contemporary cosmology affords a
clear case of divine activity.
t=0 also has served to inspire the construction of an
alternative, and very successful, cosmology. In the 1940s, Fred Hoyle, an
outspoken atheist, together with colleagues Hermann Bondi and Thomas Gold,
constructed a cosmology that would have no temporal beginning or end. Their
steady state cosmology depicted the universe as eternally old and expanding
exponentially forever. For two decades, the Big Bang and the steady state
models seemed equally viable given the empirical evidence then available. By
the mid 1960s, however, the Big Bang model was vindicated, at least in most
scientists minds, by the discovery of the microwave background radiation and
the successful prediction of the cosmological abundances of hydrogen and helium
in the 1960's.What is important here, however, is Hoyles motivation in developing the steady
state cosmology. One reason, although probably only secondary, was his concern
that Big Bang cosmology seemed, at least in the public mind, to support
Christianity. Of course,
any such proposal --- steady state or Big Bang --- must be tested strictly by
the scientific community; the role of t=0 and its religious overtones is
restricted to the context of discovery and excluded from the context of
justification. Nevertheless it demonstrates that very fruitful ideas can come
from extra scientific disciplines, such as philosophy and theology, and lead
even if indirectly to scientific theories with testable consequences (see Part
3, B below).
ii) Complete irrelevance: Nor surprisingly, those who
view theology and science as totally separate fields find no relevance in t=0.What may seem surprising is that several of the most important scholars in the
theology and science interaction agree that when it comes this specific issue.
Here, creatio ex nihilo is seen as an entirely philosophical argument
regarding contingency for which specific empirical evidence is irrelevant. The
contingency of the universe consists in its sheer existence, and is entirely
independent of the question of its temporal beginning. Arthur Peacocke,John Polkinghorne,and Bill Stoeger,take this position, as do process theologians who eschew creatio ex nihilo
in general. Ian Barbour did so in his earlier writingsbut has since shifted to the third option (iii). Recently, Steven Baldner and
William Carroll have defended this position on the basis of Thomistic
metaphysics.
iii) Indirect relevance: There are a variety of
positions that one can take between the two extremes of direct relevancy and
complete irrelevancy. Those assuming what I call the indirect relevance
approach include Ian Barbour (in his recent work),Walter Hearne,Ernan McMullin,Nancey Murphy and George Ellis,Ted Peters, Thomas M.
Ross, Howard van
Till, and Mark Worthing.I have suggested that the contingency of the universe can be categorized in
three ways: global contingency, local contingency and nomological contingency,
and each of these, in turn, can be differentiated further.Global contingency includes both the existence of the universe as such (which I
call its global ontological contingency) as well as contingent theoretical or
empirical aspects of the universe as a whole (its global existential
contingency). t=0 would come under the latter; it is a form of past temporal
finitude, and this is a form of temporal finitude, and this of finitude, and
thus finally of global existential contingency. Thus its existence and its
beginning relate to different strands of global contingency.
I also stress that the infinities in size and future of the
flat and open models argue against contingency. Drawing on McFagues approach
of metaphorical theology, I extended McMullins term, consonance, and
suggested that if t=0 is consonant with creation theology then these
infinities are dissonant with both creation and eschatology.Finally, by embedding t=0 within philosophical theology, we have a method by
which the conversation can continue when scientific cosmologies change, as they
already have with the development of inflationary and quantum cosmologies
(below).
Contributed by: Dr. Robert Russell
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