(A Very Brief) History of the Trinity and the Argument from Design (Part Four)
Whereas
in the last section we sketched a transition from an understanding of God’s
“immanent transcendence” as Trinity, to a non-Trinitarian understanding of God
as efficient mechanical cause. We also
sketched how this problem that arose in the mechanical philosophy of Newton, paralleled
the outlines of Fourth Century Trinitarian debates. In this section we want to build on this
discussion, by looking at how these general transitions cause terms to mean
different things in their respective contexts. To do this, we will look at how
Gregory of Nyssa in particular viewed living creatures, and the natural world,
in relation to God. In particular we
will focus on instances where he speaks of the order of creation as showing
evidence of God as artisan, and how this relates to spiritual transformation
and participation in God’s life as Trinity.
We will then briefly look at the work of William Paley, who also is
quite famous for putting forward arguments about how the world shows evidence
for God’s design and handiwork. Despite
the surface similarity, there is a world—and indeed a God—of difference between
them.
To begin, Gregory[1]
has an “argument from design” of sorts.[2] Reflection on the design and order in the
universe produces “a consideration of the harmony of the whole” and of “the
concert resulting even from opposite movements in the circular revolutions” in the sky.[3] Pelikan notes Nyssa’s arguments stand in radical
contrast to any theory of chaos or disorder.
Indeed, as a sort of Paley before himself, Nyssa puts into the mouth of
his dying sister Macrina a design argument from a garment: “the sight of a
garment suggests to anyone the weaver of it, and the thought of a shipwright
comes to mind upon seeing the ship, and the hand of a builder is suggested to
anyone who sees the building …”[4] And yet, creation is not a series of
artifacts. By “design” here the analogy
to craftsman—a weaver, a builder, a shipwright—falls apart under its apophatic
qualifications. For God is the creator
of the whole creation—therefore
whereas a garment stands out from, say, a rock as designed, such a criteria of
distinction cannot apply to God’s relation to creation. “Design” does not therefore refer to a
concept that holds that natural law can explain things only so far, but then
runs into a roadblock where it fails and something—or someone—else must account
for it. Such a distinction between nature
and grace is alien to Gregory. Nor does
it to merely the material constitution of a thing. Rather the material and the ideal are here
united in Gregory’s concept: “No one thing in the body—neither its shape nor
its size nor its bulk nor its weight nor its color, nor any of its other qualities
taken in themselves are the body:
they are in themselves simply intelligibles.
Their concourse (sundromh),
nevertheless, does make the body.”[5]
It was, rather, the harmonious and
interconnected “normal” course of things that suggested the Creator. Such was also certainly the case for his
friend, Gregory of Nazianzus who wrote: “Sight and instinctive law” showed “the
existence of God, the creative and sustaining cause of all.” This was the plain teaching of sight, when it
would “light upon things seen as nobly
fixed in their courses [emphasis added] borne along in, so to say,
motionless movement [that is, natural law].”
In fact “it was the teaching of instinctive law” says Nazianzus, “to
infer their author through seeing things in their orderliness.”[6]
If “Design” for Gregory does not
reference a specific mechanism for creation, or a purely material description,
neither does it indicate the automatic wholeness of what is “designed.” Gregory writes of something akin to seed-like
potencies:
The
sources, causes, and potencies of all things were collectively sent forth in an
instant, and in this first impulse of the Divine Will, the essences of all
things assembled together; heaven, earth, star, fire, air, sea, earth, animal,
plant—all beheld by the eye of God. … There followed a certain necessary series
according to a certain order … as nature created nature required … appearing
not by chance … but because the necessary arrangement of nature required
succession in the things coming into being.
All
things were virtually in the first divine impulse for creation, existing as it
were in a kind of spermatic potency, sent forth for the genesis of all
things. For individual things did not
then exist actually.[7]
Creation is in its every aspect a
movement, where things strive upwards, “a conversion from the darkness of
nonbeing toward the light of God, a kind of ontological heliotropism.”[8] In fact movement is not just of a creature,
but within a creature as well, the creature dies at every moment, writes Gregory,
to be reborn in the next (In Canticum
Canticorum 12) and if it ceased to change, it would cease to exist (De Hominis Opificio 13). “Being both divine and creaturely [for
Gregory]” says Anatolios, “ is a dynamic movement of self-announcement that cannot
be superseded by the knower’s grasp and announcement of it.”[9] Indeed, in the course of the world “the
material elements pass from one body to another, so that the universe is in
fact but a single body [of many qualities].
All things exist together, says St. Gregory of Nyssa, and all things
mutually support each other, for there is a kind of transmuting power which, by
a movement of rotation causes the terrestrial elements to pass from one to the
other and gathers them in again to the point from which they started.”[10]
Finally, “Design” for Nyssa is not an
explanation for things, per se. It is
not a hypothesis of function, for the providential arrangement of the world is
so obvious to Nyssa that he believes everyone must simply acknowledge it. Rather in perceiving the whole one is led to
perceive God: “He who has been instructed thus far in the things of love, and
who had learned to see the kala in
due order and succession will suddenly perceive a nature of wondrous beauty …
beauty absolute, separate, simple, and everlasting, which is imparted to the
ever growing and perishing beauties of all other beautiful things.”[11] Thus this “argument from design” ultimately
leads to union with God. As A.N.
Williams puts it:
The
dual emphasis on wisdom’s manifestation in creation and the appropriation of
wisdom to the Second Person indicates that Nyssen conceives of it more as a
divine power working ad extra than as
an attribute chiefly constitutive of divine nature … In Christ, wisdom and
power are woven together, and because this is so, he is the one through whom
all things were made; contemplation of these indescribable wonders leads us to
worship the wisdom of that maker, so the Incarnation itself reveals divine
wisdom, particularly its linkage to goodness and justice.[12]
Thus to reiterate our points on what
“design” seems to mean for Gregory: design does not enumerate a specific
mechanism, or delineate that which has been produced in an unusual circumstance
apart from the normal course of things.
Rather it indicates the harmonious interconnection of nature’s normal
succession, which is intimately related to God at all times. It also does not name a specific material
constitution, but relates the ideal elements of quality that make up a
body. “Design” does not indicate
whatever is viewed as “designed” be a complete and irreducible whole—rather for
Gregory though things have complete integrity, this integrity is won through
dynamic teleological movement and integration of parts straining toward
God. And finally “design” does not name
a sort of hypothesis of why things are the way they are, rather it is more a
theological attitude that when things are properly understood in their order,
they will lead one to a better knowledge of God by being incorporated through the
Son, the same Wisdom that imbued nature with its order. Let us now turn to William Paley.
Sometime in the middle third of the
nineteenth century, some observers began to suspect that “every new conquest
achieved by science involved the loss of a domain to religion.”[13] This retreat of religion is rendered
picturesque by Matthew Arnold’s famous poem Dover
Beach. First published in 1867,
Arnold describes the general dwindling of religious faith in the world at large
as akin to a “melancholy, long, withdrawing roar/ Retreating, to the breath/ of
the Night-wind, down the vast edges drear/ And naked shingles of the
world.” Though Arnold seems to have
taken no notice that seas, in fact, eventually change their minds and turn back
round again, the visceral nature of the imagery is clear enough: the ambient
religion of Arnold’s day is retreating.
But where Arnold heard a “melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,” his
contemporary John Ruskin was haunted by hammers digging into the deep edges of
a time seemingly far beyond what the Bible predicted: “[My] faith, which was
never strong, is being beaten into mere gold leaf, and flutters in weak rags
from the letter of its old forms; … if only the geologists would let me alone,
I could do very well, but those dreadful hammers! I hear the clink of them at the end of every
cadence of the Bible verse.”[14] But for our purposes this transition is best
illustrated by a once rising, if somewhat obscure, fad.
As fads are wont to do, it hit the upper
classes of the mid-19th century first. Like a breath of fresh air it surged through
bourgeois boredom. It had been shown
that the hydra (a freshwater polyp) could regenerate itself when cut into
pieces. This became amply confirmed by
what may somewhat too generously be called “lay experimentation” when “a wave
of polyp-chopping swept across Europe” due to extreme curiosity at this most
unexpected trait. Matter no longer
appeared in need of God’s mechanical “input” or external design.[15] Moreover, experiments on cadaverous muscles
by Albrecht von Haller had shown that, even separated from the body, they still
contract when given a hearty poke. And
so it was thought the soul as an animating force was abolished. And yet, from what we have seen of Gregory of
Nyssa, Aquinas, and Augustine (one could add many other names to this list,
say, Maximus the Confessor) such conclusions would no doubt have perplexed
them. It is here that we receive a clue
to a key transition to the differences that lay between two different epochs of
“design argument.” Indeed, to recall the
observation of Brooke regarding the transformation of the concepts “natural”
and “supernatural” so that they became competing hypotheses, Paley in a sense
represents the historical culmination and azimuth of this trajectory:
Paley,
in effect, had thrown down a challenge.
No natural law, comparable to, or derivable from, other genuine natural
laws, he tacitly claimed, would ever be found to explain organic function and
adaptedness, including the morphological co-adaptnedness of parts to one
another and the ecological fittingness of organisms to their niches.[16]
Thus, (to exaggerate slightly) the
outcome of this polyp-chopping fad was that “natural theology [of the physical
sort we briefly described] was not so much destroyed by science as eased out of
scientific culture by a growing irrelevance.”[17] We have to be careful what is meant
here. It is not that somehow science
“disproved” God’s activity (though many of its cruder physical theorizations
were rightly discredited). It is rather
that the questions that arose due to assuming design in nature “simply became
too blunt an instrument to yield precise information at the rock face of
research.” This growing sense of
irrelevance came both from within theology and from without. From within, many sensed a sort of inanity at
the lengths many would go to try and correlate every feature of the universe to
some purposeful end. Alfred Russell
Wallace “grew impatient” for example, when some praised the soft-scar on a
coconut as a wise contrivance of design, which allowed the embryonic shoot to
emerge instead of being trapped within.
Far from equating a denial of design with a denial of God, here Wallace
thought the extremity of the design argument insulted God—“it was like praising
an architect for remembering to put a door in his house.”[18]
More seriously, specific assumptions that
went into design arguments seemed to forestall the investigative process by
disallowing certain questions to be asked—such as the famous example of
“Darwin’s finches” and the general populations of the Galapagos
archipelago. Each island had distinctive
species that closely resembled those on the other islands and mainland South
America—but not elsewhere. Why? This seemed “too tantalizing a puzzle to be
solved by invoking the will of God.”[19] But again let us be specific with what is
meant: design of a metaphysical sort is not ruled out here, for it is not even
in the purview of the discussion; for “the case for reinterpreting traditional
concepts, like that of form, in
mechanical terms, had been developing over several decades.”[20]
“Form” no longer meant that something participated in its ideal archetype, or
perhaps an idea in God’s mind or purpose as in earlier Christian Platonism and
Aristotelianism. “Form” now was meant in
a purely physical-chemical sense of composition.[21] “Paley exemplifies a fundamental shift,
commenced in the seventeenth century, toward extrinsicism in the meaning of law
itself. As a consequence, the so-called
laws of nature in Newton’s and Paley’s sense are incidental to the things they
govern, just as the things governed are ‘internally’ indifferent to [the
laws].”[22]
This “axiomatic extrinsicism” as Hanby
calls it, “makes misunderstanding all but inevitable. It determines in advance what these terms
[God, man, nature] can mean to contemporary minds …” so that “Once God ceases
to be the fully transcendent and thus the fully immanent source of being and becomes instead a finite
object within being extrinsically
juxtaposed to the world … then the question of creation ceases to be about
creation in its proper sense and becomes instead a question of manufacture.” Creation is no longer
understood as a question of “ontological constitution but is rather
misinterpreted as a question of temporal origins in a series of causes and
effects which culminate in the manufactured artifact.”[23]
“Paley dramatically alters the meaning of
the relation [of God and world] as such, and therefore the meaning of the
relation between the parts of organic beings and the whole of being.” Hanby continues:
The
first and most obvious change is that Paley has defined relation in purely
functional terms, as the ratio of means to ends. The second is that Paley identifies the unity
of the parts in these same terms, as the result of their ‘unified action.’ This effectively makes the part prior or more
basic than the whole whose part it is, and conversely, makes the unity of the
whole a unity of function or effect consequent upon the interaction of
parts. Relation as such is therefore a
secondary and extrinsic qualification of the relata, which, so far as we can tell, are internally unaffected in
their own identity or meaning by the relation.
In other words, the identity of parts precedes and excludes relation to
the wholes of which they are parts and to the world … In themselves, living things now lack the
indivisible unity conferred on them by physis. In the act of being, living, and doing, they
no longer comprise a single actuality with the world that is their essential
presupposition. Relation, then, of
whatever species is extrinsic and accidental, as it were, to a more basic
‘inertial’ indifference which precedes and excludes that relation. Relation is something ‘superadded’ when
‘unconscious particles of matter [that] take their stations, and severally
range themselves in an order, so as to become collectively plants or animals,
i.e., organized bodies’[24] This ‘superaddition’ of relation then becomes the problem requiring an
explanation, a problem whose very formulation determines in advance that an
explanation takes the form of an extrinsic force or mechanism [emphasis
added].[25]
“Design” as such references a particular
sequence of physico-theology that collapsed the metaphysical into the physical,
equating the ability to discern theological “meaning” in the world with one’s
ability to describe an organism exhaustively in terms of perfect physical pre-adaptation
to fit an environment: “Paley’s natural theology … is not the antithesis to
modern naturalism. It is modern naturalism in its theological
guise.”[26]
It was design as perfect pre-adaptation, especially as exemplified by Paley,
which were the theories threatened by Darwinian natural selection.[27] It is largely through Paley’s influence upon
Darwin that the problem of “pre-adaptation”—the fit between ‘biological insides
and environmental outsides”—would become, in Stephen J. Gould’s words, the
“primary problem of evolution.”[28]
Moreover, Paley runs into the fundamental
problem we mentioned briefly regarding the apophatic qualification to Macrina’s
“garment” argument: identifying design for human artifacts only works on the
basis of the assumption that it can be distinguished from the category “not
designed.” A sweater is designed, a rock
is not. But this fundamentally breaks
down as an analogy attempting to designate something as designed by God, who created
and sustains everything. But by the
necessity of its logic, this distinction must show up in Paley’s argument in
order for it to function. As a result it
unintentionally creates some disastrous theology:
Paley
ambles across his imaginary heath in the opening pages of the Natural Theology undisturbed by his
surroundings. The heather, the stones,
the blue sky above elicit no commentary from him [aside from his later comment:
“Dead matter is nothing.” (Natural
Theology, 253)]. Paley finds nothing
remarkable in the utter contingency and irreducible uniqueness of all that
exists [in fact: “the metaphysics of that question can have no place” (Natural Theology, 12)] … in other words
Paley’s project does not evince the slightest curiosity in the question of
being or the slightest evidence that he can even formulate the question properly.
…For all his interest in the difference between a watch and a stone, Paley
exhibits remarkably little interest in the difference between a watch and a
man.[29]
In order to tie this in to our other
sections, Hanby also comments on how all this relates to Paley’s conception of
God. We have already seen that Paley
favors a sort of extrinsicism that is alien to Nyssa or Augustine. In part, this is because the Trinity plays no
part in his view of God, and so the true apophatic nature of God’s transcendence
and works is lost:
There is a
similar loss of analogy in Paley’s treatment of the divine attributes. Though
Paley seeks to justify the traditional attributes of goodness, omnipotence and
eternity, they acquire meanings in his thought which depart substantively from
the tradition and are even fundamentally at odds with it. Owing to this loss of analogy, Paley’s
understanding of these attributes is substantially more anthropomorphic than
the tradition’s. Indeed, as theology, Paley’s treatment of the
divine attributes scarcely merits consideration …His treatment is of deep
historical interest, however, for it reveals both the extent to which the
metaphysical revolution of modern natural philosophy had rendered thought about
God incoherent and the nature of the ‘God’ against whom modern evolutionary
biology has constituted itself. … Paley’s explanation of the relationship
between ‘mind’ and ‘personhood’ is egregiously anthropomorphic and departs
radically from traditional theological reflection. The tradition has never treated so-called ‘attributes’ such as ‘mind’ or ‘reason’ as
constituting some sort of specific difference for God, as if ‘reason’
differentiated God as ‘a person’ in the way that it might differentiate a human
being from the Aristotelian genus ‘animal.’ … God does not ‘have mind’ or any
other attributes but is mind as well
as those attributes. He does not
‘perceive’ the world and thus use it to teach him what he did not know, but
knows the world into existence through being and knowing his own superlative
perfections.[30]
[1] For the record, most of
the citations of Gregory were found through secondary sources, though I tracked
down anything I quoted for context. If I
could not locate the source to read or translate for myself, I will cite the
source of quotation. A lot of recent
work on Gregory has been done. For
introductions to the discussion, cf. Sarah Coakley, ed., Re-Thinking Gregory of Nyssa (Massachusetts: Wiley-Blackwell,
2003); Morwenna Ludlow, Gregory of Nyssa:
Ancient and Postmodern (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).
[2] I am here reliant on
the account of Jaroslav Pelikan, Christianity
and Classical Culture: The Metamorphosis of Natural Theology in the Christian
Encounter With Hellenism (New Haven: Yale, 1993), 68ff.
[3] Quoted in Pelikan, Christianity and Classical Culture,
68.
[4] Quoted in Ibid., 69.
[5] Nyssa, De Anima, PG XLIV, 124C.
[6] Gregory Nazianzen, Orations, 28.6.
[7] Quoted in Conor
Cunningham, Darwin’s Pious Idea: Why the
Ultra-Darwinists and Creationists Both Get It Wrong (Grand Rapids:
Eerdman’s Publishing, 2010), 299.
Quoting from Apologetic on
Hexameron.
[8] David Bentley Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: The Aesthetics
of Christian Truth (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing, 2003), 189.
[9] Anatolios, Retrieving Nicaea, 163.
[10] Lossky, Mystical Theology, 103.
[11] Quoted in Pelikan, Christianity and Classical Culture,
70.
[12] A.N. Williams, The Divine Sense: The Intellect in the
Patristic Tradition (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 122.
[13] Ronald Numbers,
“Aggressors, Victims, and Peacemakers: Historical Actors in the Drama of
Science and Religion,” in Harold W. Attridge, ed., The Religion and Science Debate: Why Does it Continue? (New Haven:
Yale, 2009),20.
[14] Quoted in Brooke, Science and Religion, 32.
[15] Ibid., 235.
[16] D.J. Depew and B.H.
Weber, Darwinism Evolving: Systems
Dynamics and the Genealogy of Natural Selection (Cambridge: MIT Press,
1997), 102.
[17] Brooke, Science and Religion, 298.
[18] Ibid., 299.
[19] Ibid., 300.
[20] Ibid., 176.
[21] Chapp, God of Covenant and Creation, 78: “The
medieval mind saw the qualitative and teleological elements of form as a real
representation of God’s agency in the world, not just his image, and the
reduction of formal causation to mathematical relations among natural entities
seemed to call the entirety of God’s agency in the natural world into
question.”
[22] Hanby, No God, No Science (Massachusetts:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2013), 163. Cf. 156: “The vast difference between Paley’s
mechanical universe and the cosmos of the ancients is indicated by the fact
that he overwhelmingly identifies the good with the useful, in spite of
glimpses of a higher sense of the good, and that he is led by this to conceive
of the question of the world’s ‘proportioning’ as a question of the odds of it
arising by accident.”
[23] Ibid., 35.
[24] Here Hanby is quoting
William Paley, Natural Theology: Or,
Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity Collected from the
Appearances of Nature (New York: Sheldon & Company, 1854), 235.
[25] Hanby, No God, No Science, 158-159. Cf. Peter Harrison, The Bible, Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural Science, 194: “It is hardly surprising that the
expression ‘book of nature is ubiquitous in works of theology and natural
philosophy alike. Yet it is important to attend to the discontinuities between the
medieval and the early modern uses of the metaphor [emphasis added]. The triumph of literalism contributed to a
widening gap between the written text of God’s word and the book of
creatures. For this reason ‘book of
nature’ takes on a quite different meaning in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries. Medieval uses of the image
are more or less uniform: the idea that nature is a book underlines the fact
that things act as signs just as words do.
Nature and scripture must be read together for the meaning of words of
scripture is given by the meanings of the natural objects to which they
refer. The key to the meanings of natural
objects, in turn, was provided by references to scripture. Hermeneutics was a dialectical enterprise
which always entailed a knowledge of both books. In the early modern period, by way of
contrast, the metaphor is used in a variety of ways. The general tendency now is to elevate nature
over some alternative authority—such as scripture or the writings of
Aristotle—or to contrast nature with written authorities by arguing that it has
a different purpose, that it is to be interpreted by a different strategy, that
it enjoys particular advantages over written texts.”
[26] Ibid., 170.
[27] Brooke, Science and Religion, 377.
[28] Stephen J. Gould, The Structure of Evolutionary Theory
(Cambridge: Belknap Press, 2002), 188.
[29] Hanby, No God, No Science, 153. Though it is beyond the scope of this paper,
Del Ratzsch, Nature, Design, and Science:
The Status of Design in Natural Science (New York: State University of New
York, 2001), 163, says nearly the same the about Intelligent Design proponent
William Dembski: “That exclusive character [this,
not that, is designed] is essential
to the operation of the Explanatory Filter, as Dembski constructs it, but that
benefit, it seems to me, comes with a significant cost. What it immediately means is that anything
produced by nature (whether by law or by chance) can be neither classified as
designed in Dembski’s sense, recognized as designed by Dembski’s Explanatory
Filter, nor epistemically justified as designed by Dembski’s design
inference. Anything produced by natural
law simply sticks at the first point of the filter. … If a supernatural agent
deliberately structured natural laws and regularities to produce specific,
patterned phenomena, such phenomena would surely count as designed, but need
not be at all improbable with respect to the relevant laws and structures of
nature. It seems to me, in fact, that designed and improbable are simply orthogonal notions, and that making
improbability a necessary condition for designedness, as Dembski does, is
simply to mistake two different concepts.”
[30] Hanby, No God, No Science,
166-167.


Comments
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-j5kKSk_6U
we know that a motor is evidence for design. even if its very small and made from organic matter and have a self replicating system. lets say that scientists will create a human-like robot with dna and self replicating system. we will agree that this kind of robot is evidence for design. so why not the human itself that is much more complex then this kind of speciel robot?
the evolutionist claim that small steps for milions years become a big steps. but according to this a lots of small steps in self replicat car (with dna) will evolve into a airplan.
but there is no step wise from car to an airplane
evolutionist claim that common similarity is evidence for common descent. but according to this 2 similar cars evolved from each other and not made by designer.
about order in fossils record- we can make order in cars. for exmaple: a car--> a jeep--> a truck. but its not prove that they evolve from each ohter.
check this site
http://creation.com/qa#Biology
what do you think about those arguments? have a nice day