Erasing Theology: A Rough-Draft Excerpt From My Book Project
[Below is a short excerpt from a book I am working on. It is from a chapter tentatively entitled "Erasing Theology"]
In 1881, when the London Natural History Museum in South
Kensington opened, it was not only one of the pinnacles of the Gothic revival
in the Victorian period. It also encapsulated the newly minted Victorian spirit
of scientific investigation. Though the concept of a “scientist” as we now know
it is so familiar it may appear ageless in its self-evidence, William Whewell coined
the term in 1830’s.[1] To
be sure, the Latin term scientia is
quite old. It signified, however, any area of knowledge that could admit of
some type of systematic investigation appropriate to its object of inquiry. The
term, moreover, indicated a type of habitual virtue taking root in the
individual. It was a form of mind, a mode of knowledge, indeed one could even
call it a way of life.[2] The term “scientist” supposedly inaugurated
something quite new, especially in Anglophone circles.[3]
This term was meant to delimit its object of inquiry from theology,
metaphysics, aesthetics, natural philosophy, and other matters (including what
was to many at the time the annoying social prestige of the Victorian cleric).
Regardless, at the inception of the Natural History Museum, outside the walls
of this house of wisdom, sitting at the apex of its highest gable resided a
terracotta statue of the Biblical first man, Adam.[4]
This was no aberration, some vestigial holdover from an
atavistic religious or theological past that had yet to be removed, now
juxtaposed awkwardly with the newly won vistas of legitimate human knowledge. Just
as the grand Cathedrals of old (in whose style the museum itself was crafted),
“The Natural Museum in Kensington … encouraged its visitors to view it as a
temple of science.” Indeed, one commentator even remarked that as visitors came
to this “animal’s Westminster abbey” with its “stained glass windows, and
church-like atmosphere,” were known to “respectfully remove their hats as they
entered the building.”[5]
Gazing down from his
parapet, Adam represented the interlocked worlds of science and theology. As
Peter Harrison records, many at the time saw the figure of Adam as the
prototypical investigator of nature. “Much as [Adam] surveyed the creation,
named and classified the creatures, and bent them to his ends, those who now
labored within the confines of the museum also sought to bring order to the
unruly diversity of nature and to organize the whole of the living world into a
kind of material encyclopaedia.”[6] Knowledge
was, as Harrison demonstrates, seen in all its variety as restoring the primal
wisdom Adam lost in the Fall. Far from some enterprise justified in terms of
“knowledge for knowledge’s sake,” the rapidity of scientific advance, and
indeed the unity of a bewildering variety of new disciplines were all justified
and circulated in explicitly theological terms.
Beyond Harrison’s meticulous and wide-ranging study, for
example, it has also been demonstrated that interpreting the meaning of the
figure of Adam instigated what Umberto Eco has termed the “search for the
perfect language,” that Adam supposedly once possessed in his pre-lapsarian
state. Such a language would allow us once again to gaze clearly and
transparently into the inner secret essences of a world rendered opaque to us
after our collective fall from grace.[7] Such
language would, indeed, pierce what was often in mythological terms deemed the
“Veil of Isis,” and peer into the inner-storerooms of a nature that (as the
philosopher Heraclitus supposedly put it millennia ago) “loves to hide” its
wares from humankind, but which would now be laid bare for us.[8]
Francis Bacon, who is often named as the “Father of Modern
Science,” explicitly formulated his recommendations for scientific method in
such theological terms, based on what was needed to overcome what he understood
to be the frailness of human reasoning and senses after Adam was cast, with
Eve, eastward from Eden. Unlike the rationalism of René Descartes, who prized
human reflection as effective apart from investigation of the empirical world,
believing it could achieve not only clarity, but also certainty—Bacon saw this
avenue as forever closed. What was needed instead was a hard-nosed and
meticulous empirical investigation to guard against and weed out our many
proclivities for being deceived, or reaching false conclusions.[9]
And yet Descartes’ rosier view of the possibility of human reason was not born
from ignoring the Fall, but by interpreting it (and indeed God) in terms that
reflected his Catholic heritage, with Bacon’s epistemology sorting itself out
to be more in line with Protestant theological sensibilities. This is the case
to such a general extent that the story of Modernity as one in which thinkers
“turned to epistemology” divided (problematically) into lines of “empiricists”
and “rationalists” in fact “[largely] mirrors [traditional] confessional
allegiances.”[10]
This search for the Adamic language, along with appropriate
methods to compensate for what was lost in Adam’s transgression, spanned
semiotics, hermeneutics, epistemology, anthropology, magical theory, all the
way to mathematics, physics, astronomy, and even to inquiring upon the very way
knowledge was best organized and displayed (perhaps as an encyclopedia, or in a
museum; as a story; or an internally self-discontinuous deconstruction). This
theological quest found itself an unlikely ally in the rise of hermeticism, as
the search for the supposedly ancient wisdom of Hermes Trismegistus (Hermes the
Thrice-Great) was seen by mystics, theosophists, alchemists, and others as a
recovery of Adam’s original superknowledge, mediated in secret codes through
the law of Moses and the lost pillars of Seth (mentioned by Josephus in his Antiquities bk. 1 ch. 2). As we will
speak about at length momentarily, there was a sea change in the historiography
of science in the mid-twentieth century as many realized the strange and
pivotal roles played by theology, alchemy, and occult study. The most famous
example of this turn in scholarship might well be Lynn Thorndike’s massive
eight-volume A History of Magic and
Experimental Science, which really started historian’s fascination with the
topic. More accessible on this score would be the seminal work of Frances
Yates’ Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic
Tradition,[11]
while other notables include Charles Webster’s From Paracelsus to Newton: Magic and the Making of Modern Science[12] which argues convincingly that the
first conflict of the scientific revolution (if we are to stick with that
designator for a moment) was not between Copernican and Ptolemaic cosmology,
but between the medical theory of Galen and the Christian-hermetic research of
Paracelsus.
As Roland Boer and Christina Petterson argue, theorizing on
theological anthropology and human knowledge by interpreting the story of Adam
and Eve also spread to the early economic and political theory in figures like
Hugo Grotius, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Adam Smith, and Thomas Malthus.[13] Beyond
even these figures, Robert H. Nelson argues that modern economic theory itself
is a parody of Christian salvation, a secularized theology,[14]
while William Cavanaugh argues much the same in regards to the modern state.[15]
Even the very notion of a primordial “fall” of one sort or another that needs
to be diagnosed in order to be redeemed became a key structural motif among
numerous philosophers. Despite the variety of differences not only from
Christianity, but amongst themselves, their basic view of the world parodies
the Christian logic they are often trying to overcome.[16]
And, as David Livingstone explores at length, the notion of
pre-Adamic races living before and alongside the biblical proto-patriarch were
abloom in the time just preceding Darwin’s publication of the first edition of
the Origin of Species. Indeed, this
was culled from questions the Biblical text seems to pose regarding the origins
of humanity and the world (where did all of the people populating the cities
feared by a newly exiled Cain come from, one wonders?). These topics, which can
be counted as an age-old favorite object of speculation among the Rabbis and
early Church Fathers,[17] ultimately
gave impetus to late-19th century questions that pontificated upon
the “genetic” relation of all humanity (to put it anachronistically).[18]
And yet, visitors to the Natural History Museum in
Kensington will not today come upon the terracotta Adam, gazing down as a
unique symbol unifying the variety of disciplines, discoveries, and data held
within the towering spires and dizzying hallways yawning beneath Gothic archway
stones. “Intentional or not,” writes Harrison, “some time after the end of
World War II [the Adam statue] was toppled from its commanding position.” This,
in turn, serves as a powerful metaphor for our theme:
This particular fall of Adam might
also be vested with symbolic significance, for the twentieth century witnessed
the final stages of the secularization of scientific knowledge along with the
development of a degree of historical amnesia about the role of religion in its
early modern origins.[19]
Adam is newly fallen, and with him a forgetfulness also fell
and perpetuated itself among historians of science, philosophy, and indeed
often even the theologians themselves. This is a forgetfulness that nevertheless
appears as a memory, encoded into textbooks and popular accounts. To take four
individuals upon whom we will spend much more attention shortly, for example:
René Descartes’ theology was distorted, deemphasized, and in some instances
purely stripped away to create a figure worthy of being christened “The Father
of Philosophical [and perhaps Scientific] Modernity.” This thus ignored the
fact that Descartes is (despite his own protestations to the contrary) thought
of as one of the last scholastics.[20]
Though Galileo’s life and trial have gone through an innumerable succession of
interpretations and reception as Maurice Finocchiaro masterfully details,[21]
most recently the historiography of the positivist Ernst Mach has reigned
supreme.[22]
Mach presented Galileo as a pure empiricist, severing him from his scholastic
and Jesuit sources,[23] his
theological commitments[24]
and metaphysical background,[25] as
well as underplaying the developments and contributions of the church in the
areas of astronomical observation and mathematics in particular[26]
which, as Cohen notes, “was a
conception that has continued to fit in well with the prejudices of many
philosophically and historically untrained scientists regarding the nature of
their craft.”[27]
A while back the philosopher and historian Dudley Shapere collected a large
number of textbook accounts of Galileo that were, in their essence, little more
than a repetition of Mach’s trimmed-down caricature of Galileo as path-breaking
empiricist.[28]
Perhaps the most telling is its cameo in Bertrand Russell’s bestselling A History of Western Philosophy. Yet, where Mach at least made an argument, Russell introduces this picture of Galileo with the phrase "as everyone knows." Historiography has here been reborn as a truism passed down to posterity.
Isaac Newton’s work and life have been narrated and
re-narrated so many times that his theology and alchemical oddities were parsed
away by this scholarly slight of hand. In fact these narrations were such a trend
that the genre of “meta-biography” was essentially invented to take an
inventory and sort through the mess of sketches and caricature.[29]
It wasn’t really until P.M. Rattansi and J.E. McGuire’s seminal 1966 paper
“Newton and the ‘Pipes of Pan’” that Newton’s deep concern with biblical
interpretation, alchemy, and the so-called prisca
theologia were no longer just that awkward hobby he would put away when polite
company came over. They were rather a core feature of his entire life’s work
and even drove his physical and mathematical theory.[30] Indeed
both these and his alchemy were considered by Newton to be “a study of the
modes of divine activity in the world.”[31]
The interpretation and reception of Darwin (again, as we
shall turn to momentarily) has likewise been filtered to both eliminate its
theological and religious contexts as Dov Ospovat demonstrated,[32]
as well as exaggerate features of the theory that appear to maximize its
antagonism to religion in general and Christianity in particular, such as the
claim that Darwinian evolution must reduce all altruism to a deeper abiding
current of selfishness, or that evolution must be fundamentally non-teleological.
Design theory for example—especially that of William Paley or associated with
the “Bridgewater Treatises”—is often mistakenly equated with notions of
teleology traditionally held by theologians such as Thomas Aquinas (it isn’t),[33] or
that the function of “proofs for God” and “natural theology” remained constant
in the modern period and in fundamental continuity with traditional uses (they
aren’t). All the while at the same time the extensive teleological language and
reason utilized by Darwin himself is ignored.[34]
The outcome, as we will see, was the widely held opinion that Darwin eliminated
theological arguments for teleology, while at the same time setting the ground
for a purely naturalistic view of the world.
Much of this is an illusion wrought by historians. In
particular, through the tireless efforts of “Darwin’s Bulldog” T.H. Huxley,
whose major plan was, as Matthew Stanley has eloquently demonstrated, to
“reinterpret the history of science and erase its theistic past,” making
“methodological naturalism” appear as solely the province of the naturalist.[35]
This despite the fact Huxley shared nearly identical scientific and
philosophical values and procedures to theistic scientists contemporary to him,
most notably James Clerk Maxwell.[36] As
a matter of course, Darwin’s theory of evolution was widely accepted by a huge
array of individuals who nonetheless easily assimilated it into categories that
allowed (and even demanded) progress, teleology, and an array of other
“theologically loaded” concepts.[37]
Because of this the Origin of Species has
been remarked to itself be the last example of Victorian natural theology.[38]
Not only has theology been subsumed in many of its
historical details—but indeed just as (if not more) importantly entire epochs
have been crafted upon this erasure. As Thomas Albert Howard puts it in his
recent work Religion and the Rise of
Historicism, Jacob Burckhardt—who wrote one of the first and most
influential accounts detailing the essence of “the Renaissance”—secularizes the
Adamic “fall and redemption” narrative as he periodizes history, separating
“the Renaissance” from the “Dark Ages” which he argues preceded it.[39] Despite
the lingering undertones of theology saturating Burckhardt’s historical work,
his real influence comes by way of the fact that when he first published The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy
in 1860, he was the first to present and popularize the very notion of “the
Renaissance” as a period marked by
the implosion of theology, and the rise of humanism and the “modern man” by way
of humankind turning from God, the church hierarchy, and feudalism to finally
focus on itself and its own individual capabilities.[40]
In the Middle Ages both sides of
human consciousness … lay dreaming or half awake beneath a common veil. The
veil was woven of faith, illusion, and childish prepossession, through which
the world and history were seen clad in strange hues. … It is in Italy that
this veil first melted into the air; an objective
treatment [emphasis added] and consideration of the State and of all the
things of this world became possible… Man became a spiritual individual, and recognized himself as
such.[41]
Despite the fact that Burckhardt acknowledged his was not
the only possible interpretation
given the vast wealth and complexity of the material,[42]
it was eagerly picked up and disseminated by those who discerned in it the
philosophical roots of secular humanism. “When once the veil of illusion was
torn asunder,” he wrote “when once the dread of nature and the slavery to books
and tradition were overcome, countless problems lay before [Renaissance
thinkers] for solution.”[43]
As we mentioned above, even the theologians began to take
this epochal notion painted by Burckhardt as a starting point. For example, the
wildly influential Christian apologist Francis Schaeffer invokes a very
Burckhardt-esque portrait of the Renaissance as a time of godlessness and the
rising, boundlessly narcissistic and secular self importance of mankind in his
classic How Should We Then Live? The Rise
and Decline of Western Thought and Culture.[44] In
a more sophisticated way, the Dutch Calvinist and philosopher Herman
Dooyeweerd’s Roots of Western Culture:
Pagan, Secular, and Christian Options does this as well.[45]
Both Schaeffer and Dooyeweerd accept a characterization like Burckhardt’s, only
instead of lauding it, they lament it as a fundamental epochal
moment when “everything went wrong” so to speak. It is hard to overstate how
influential Schaefer in particular has been on evangelical views of theological
and philosophical history.[46]
Burckhardt’s beautiful prose and commanding vision held sway
among countless other influential figures, and so the notion that the
transition out of the “Dark Ages” (or, perhaps, a theological “Golden Age”
depending on who the narrator was) had only been achieved when an
anti-theological secular humanism slithered its way deep into the roots of the
subsequent mountains of scholarship. Though Burckhardt did not coin the term
“Renaissance” (we most likely owe this to the French historian Jules Michelet),
the essential notion of what constituted its vital character was Burckhardt’s
baby. Jason Josephson-Storm summarizes it well:
We can see Burckhardt’s influence
on [innumerable other historians such as] Wilhelm Windelband, who in 1878 first
tried to popularize the idea of … [the Enlightenment] as a periodization; he
did so in a volume that addressed Burckhardt’s version of the Renaissance.
Furthermore, [Martin] Heidegger and Wilhelm Nestle—two of the most significant
thinkers … were [also] readers of Burckhardt. Later, another reader of
Burckhardt, Alexandre Koyré, would popularize the ‘scientific revolution’ as a
periodization in part to steal the Renaissance’s thunder. Max Weber … read
Burckhardt, and did so before writing The
Protestant Ethic. … Burckhardt’s portrayal of the Renaissance as a complete
period was a prototype for a host of later narrative tropes we now associate
with not just the Renaissance, but classical Greece, the Enlightenment, the
Protestant Reformation, and, of course, other vaguer descriptions of the birth
of modernity. To exaggerate slightly: Burckhardt
was one of the authors of modernity as a literary device [emphasis added].
… Burckhardt asked the historian’s question: When did the modern age begin? His
answer was that ‘modern man’ was born in the Renaissance, and while others
would transpose this periodization into other epochs, the disenchantment narrative had found its coroner [emphasis
added].[47]
The absence of “Adam” is now, paradoxically, the new “perfect
language”—that is, a language purged of God, detoxed from its theological
hangovers. The role of religion and theology in the formation of the sciences,
its place among particular thinkers, its presence (for good or ill) among the
many fascinating twists and turns of discovery, has been lost, erased, rewritten
as little more than a restless foe of scientific progress, or otherwise ignored
as irrelevant to such an extent that it is no exaggeration to speak (without
necessarily invoking an intentionally networked conspiracy) of the systematic deformation
and deletion of theology in the historical record. It is to this story and its origins that we now turn.
[1]
See: Sydney Ross, “Scientist: The Story of a Word,” Annals of Science, 18 no.2 (1962): 66-67; H. Floris Cohen, The Scientific Revolution: A
Historiographical Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994),
27-39.
[2]
Peter Harrison, The Territories of
Science and Religion (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015), 1-21.
[3]
Donald R. Kelley, History and the
Disciplines: The Reclassification of Knowledge in Early Modern Europe (New
York: University of Rochester, 1997).
[4]
Carla Yanni, Nature’s Museums: Victorian
Architecture and the Culture of Display (New York: Princeton Architectural
Press, 2005), 142f.
[5]
David N. Livingstone, Putting Science in
its Place: Geographies of Scientific Knowledge (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2013), 39, picture caption 9.
[6]
Peter Harrison, The Fall of Man and the
Foundations of Science (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), 245.
[7]
Umberto Eco, The Search for the Perfect
Language (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 1997).
[8]
Pierre Hadot, The Veil of Isis: An Essay
On The History of The Idea of Nature trans. by Michael Chase (Cambridge:
Belknap Press, 2008).
[9]
Harrison, The Fall of Man, 187.
[10] Ibid., 8.
[11]
Frances Yates, Giordano Bruno and the
Hermetic Tradition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).
[12]
Charles Webster, From Paracelsus to
Newton: Magic and the Making of Modern Science (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1982).
[13]
Roland Boer and Christina Petterson, The
Idols of Nations: Biblical Myth at the Origins of Capitalism (Minneapolis:
Fortress Press, 2014).
[14]
Robert H. Nelson, Reaching for Heaven on
Earth: The Theological Meaning of Economics (Maryland: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, 1993).
[15]
William Cavanaugh, Theopolitical
Imagination: Christian Practices of Space and Time (New York: T&T
Clark, 2002), esp. 9-53.
[16]
Stephen Mulhall, Philosophical Myths of
the Fall (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007).
[17]
See, for example, John Walton, The Lost
World of Adam and Eve: Genesis 2-3 And the Human Origins Debate (Downers
Grove: IVP Academic, 2015), 53-190; and for the multiple creation accounts
within scripture, see: William P. Brown, The
Seven Pillars of Creation: The Bible, Science, and the Ecology of Wonder (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2010).
[18]
David Livingstone, Adam’s Ancestors:
Race, Religion, and the Politics of Human Origins (New York: John Hopkins
University Press, 2008).
[19]
Harrison, Fall of Man, 245.
[20] In particular see the work of
Jorge Secada, Cartesian Metaphysics: The
Scholastic Origins of Modern Philosophy (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2004); Roger Ariew, Descartes and
the Last Scholastics (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1999); Idem., Descartes and the First Cartesians (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2015).
[21]
Maurice A. Finocchiaro, Retrying Galileo
1633-1992 (California: University of California Press, 2007)
[22] H. Floris Cohen, The Scientific Revolution: A
Historiographical Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994),
39-45 on Mach’s interpretation of Galileo.
[23]
William Wallace, Causality and Scientific
Explanation: Volume 1 – Medieval and Early Classical Science
[24]
Amos Funkenstein, Theology and the
Scientific Imagination From The Middle Ages to the Seventeenth Century (New
Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1986), esp. 117-202.
[25] Ibid., 41: “What was new about Mach’s book was that it purported to
discuss the entire science of mechanics from a historical point of view …
Galileo was now, in a seemingly well-documented manner, made the central focus
of the first stage of the new physics.”
[26] J.L. Heilbron, The Sun In The Church: Cathedrals as Solar
Observatories (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999).
[27] Cohen, The Scientific Revolution, 41.
[28] Dudley Shapere, Galileo: A Philosophical Study (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1974), 3-8.
[29]
Rebekah Higgit, Recreating Newton:
Newtonian Biography and the Making of Nineteenth-Century History of Science (Pittsburgh:
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2007).
[30]
P.M. Rattansi and J.E. McGuire “Newton and the ‘Pipes of Pan,’” Notes and Records of the Royal Society of
London 21 (1966): 108-143.
[31]
Betty Jo Teeter Dobbs, The Janus Face of
Genius: The Role of Alchemy in Newton’s Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1991), 13; Rob Iliffe, Priest
of Nature: The Religious Worlds of Isaac Newton (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2017).
[32]
Dov Ospovat, The Development of Darwin’s
Theory: Natural History, Natural Theology, and Natural Selection, 1838-1859 (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1981).
[33]
Edward Feser, Neo-scholastic Essays
[34]
Robert J. Richards, The Meaning of
Evolution: The Morphological Construction and Ideological Reconstruction of
Darwin’s Theory (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1993).
[35]
Matthew Stanley, Huxley’s Church and
Maxwell’s Demon: From Theistic Science to Naturalistic Science (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2016), 8.
[36]
See in particular Ibid., 34-119.
[37]
See: James R. Moore, The Post-Darwinian
Controversies: A Study of the Protestant Struggle to Come to Terms With Darwin
in Great Britain and America 1870-1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1979), 217-346.
[38] John
Durant, ed., Darwinism and Divinity:
Essays on Evolution and Religious Belief (London: Blackwell Publishing,
1986).
[39]
Thomas Albert Howard, Religion and the
Rise of Historicism: W.M.L. de Wette, Jacob Burckhardt, and the Theological
Origins of Nineteenth-Century Historical Consciousness (Cambridge:
University of Cambridge Press, 2006), 157-170.
[40]
Jacob Burckhardt, The Civilization of the
Renaissance in Italy: An Essay (New York: Penguin Books, 1990).
[41] Ibid., 98.
[42] Ibid., 3.
[43] Ibid., 187-188.
[44]
Francis A. Schaeffer, How Should We Then
Live? The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture (New Jersey:
Revell Press, 1976).
[45]
Herman Dooyeweerd, Roots of Western
Culture: Pagan, Secular, and Christian Options (Toronto: Wedge Publishing,
1979), 149-150; see also his In the
Twilight of Christian Thought: Studies in the Pretended Autonomy of
Philosophical Thought (Philadelphia: Presbyterian & Reformed Press,
1960), 46-47.
[46]
Molly Worthen, Apostles of Reason: The
Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2013), esp. 209-219.
[47]
Jason Josephson-Storm, The Myth of
Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2017), 91-93.








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