Evolving Continents and Oceans Senior University 2008 Evolving
- Slides: 29
Evolving Continents and Oceans Senior University 2008
Evolving Continents and Oceans
Major Issues at stake These are the four controverted areas of science and religion: 1. cosmology (origins/big bang) 2. quantum physics (micro-physics and necessity) 3. evolution (developmentalism) 4. human nature (environment and genetics)
Gilbertsons in front of Mt. Mc. Kinley
Sessions Overview: We will view Creation and Cosmos as 1. Story (Assembly Assertions) 2. Record (No assembly required) 3. Chronicle (Some assembly required) 4. Account (Lots of assembly required) 5. Sketch (Full assembly required) 6. Epic (Assembly on steroids required)
Let’s have FUN:
Darrel’s five biases: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. I will not hesitate to focus narrowly on science and religion, challenge their assumptions, respect all convictions, expand boundaries, and express my own faith in God.
More of what Darrel is up to And two goals: 1. to re-frame the issues/questions and 2. to consider an alternative approach to current solutions.
Dr. Myth—Joseph Campbell
Aspects of MODELS 1. 2. 3. 4. Data dependent—basis of all discovery Coherent—consistent with other accepted theories Scope—comprehensive enough to meet current need Fertile—sparks imagination and leads to other discoveries
Comments on Religious God-talk 1. No definition of this human phenomena will be accepted by everyone. 2. A working definition is not impossible. 3. Our working definition of religion—the vehicle to express the deepest yearning for human connection with the universe.
Three Elements of Religion 1. Narrative as content 2. Ritual as theater/belief in action 3. Experience as function
Six Types of Religious Experience 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Numinous of the Holy Mystical of Oneness Transformative and Re-orienting Courage in the face of suffering and death Obligations (sometimes heroic) of ethical Awe at beauty and elegance of nature
How did the culture wars begin? 1. Loss of intellectual respectability 2. Concern for becoming technologically anachronistic 3. Fear of loss of status—or power and authority—in heirarchically inferior in the “Great Chain of Being”
Goethe “Zum Erstaunen ben ich da” (I am here to wonder)
Darrel’s DAFFY-nitions: l l l l Cosmology—the origins of the earth Creation—a view of the cosmos as Gift Creator—Giver of all things Teleology—assignation of purpose Mythos—assignation of meaning Life—biotic mass including humans Faith—hermaneutic of trust in Creator Eschatology—endview of cosmos
Creation in Deep Space Spitzer Space Telescope infrared image of billowing clouds of dust ablaze with the light of newborn stars, described as the Mountains of Creation, in a region of deep space some 7, 000 light years away from Earth.
Creation as STORY l STORY appears to be universal l Used extensively by anthropology to infer culture and its functions l Replete in “theology” of Bible
Assets of STORY Model 1. Descriptive—places tribe and person in the largest possible context—seasons, geography, major symbolic content 2. Prescriptive—generates core taboo/rules, authority, and hierarchical patterns 3. Didactic/pedagogical—except for catastrophic interruption, provides challenges and answers/lessons
Deficits of STORY Model 1. Speculative—often fanciful with little connection to “facts on the ground” 2. Tradition bound—provides no continuing method for revision or adjustment 3. Elitist—often the vehicle for power in shamanism, authoritarian structures, etc
Australian Aboriginal: The Dreamtime In the beginning the earth was a bare plain. All was dark. There was no life, no death. The sun, the moon, and the stars slept beneath the earth. All the eternal ancestors slept there, too, until at last they woke themselves out of their own eternity and broke through to the surface.
Dreamtime continued: Continued: For the Dreamtime does not merely lie in the distant past, the Dreamtime is the eternal Now. Between heartbeat and heartbeat, the Dreamtime can come again.
About Babylonian "Epic of Creation -Enuma Elish" Supposedly was written no later than the reign of Nebuchadnezzar in the 12 th century BCE. Drawing some new light on the ancients, Henry Layard found within the ruins of the library of Ashurbanipal in Nineveh, texts that were not unlike the Genesis creation in the Bible. The Babylonian God finished his work within the span of six tablets of stone. The last and seventh stone exalted the handiwork and greatness of the deity's work.
Babylonian Epic The First Tablet: When in the height heaven was not named, And the earth beneath did not yet bear a name, And the primeval Apsu, who begat them, And chaos, Tiamut, the mother of them both Their waters were mingled together, etc Written on seven tablets; each is between 115 and 170 lines long. Some portions of the tablets are illegible.
Turtles Model The BIG questions are does the universe have direction, and if so, does it have purpose. There are four possible options or tentative “answers” to the great questions.
Recent Shift of Zeitgeist My reading of the current cultural landscape and an opinion about opportunities
Sessions Overview: We will view Creation and Cosmos as 1. Story (Primal view) 2. Record (Literal view) 3. Chronicle (Allegorical view) 4. Account (Blended view) 5. Sketch (Minimalist view) 6. Epic (Emergent view)
Share your comments/questions Remember the goals of our SU course are: Goal # 1—Civil and courteous discourse Goal # 2—Impartiality (to the degree we are able to recognize our own biases) and Goal # 3—Interactive class participation
- Antarctica outline map
- Continents and oceans for kids
- Continents and oceans
- Label the world's 5 oceans
- What are the 7 continents and 5 oceans
- Continents and oceans
- Continents and oceans
- Continents and oceans jeopardy
- Continents and oceans jeopardy
- France 5 themes of geography
- 2008 2008
- Evolving design
- A framework for clustering evolving data streams
- Key evolving signature
- Evolving
- The seven continents
- Chapter 5 glaciers oceans and landscapes
- Continents in order
- 7 continents in order
- Roman empire continents
- Largest continent
- How many continents
- Chapter 24 section 1 landforms and resources
- Continents all together
- How many continents are there
- Similar fossils found on different continents
- Evidence for pangea
- Continents change position over time
- Geographical names with and without the
- Glacial scars continental drift