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"Belief in the supernatural causes problems for religion it can not solve, and supernaturalism makes religion incompatible with science. For both reasons, religion needs to give it up."
"Belief in materialism causes problems for science it can not solve, and materialism makes science incompatible with religion. For both reasons, science needs to give it up."
In addition to the views on resolution of this de facto conflict between religion and science, Mr. Griffin's book has shed a considerable amount of light on my meager understanding of Alfred North Whitehead's writings around what I refer to as Process Theology. It has encouraged me to study further my own philosophy and theology and to explore how it fits with my understanding of the material world. As a technologist, it seems imperative for me to clearly understand this issue if for no other reason than to have a sound basis for ethical conduct in our increasingly technology dependent society. So to that end, this book is must reading for all of us, since we will all have to make ethical decisions about advancement in technology from creation of "spiritual machines," to genetic manipulation.
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Our current conceptual architecture has created a house where the mind, the body, and the spirit each has a separate room without adjoining doors or even widows. Yet our common sense tells us that these are simply different facets of the same reality. What is needed is a new conceptual architecture which can support this deeply felt sense of the unity of reality.
Griffin's latest book goes a long ways toward articulating this new conceptual architecture in a manner that is generally clear and persuasive. Citing both empirical research and numerous contemporary and historical philosophers, he offers up a number of compe! lling arguments which aim at resolving once and for all times the paradox of how mind emerges from a seemingly material or physical universe.
Drawing from his extensive background in the process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead's, Griffin makes it clear any number of times that the process cosmology is able to bring physical dynamics and mental dynamics together into each and every core unit of reality.
This is a radical idea which works its way into the reader's consciousness from any number of points of view. For example, most scientific analyses of reality, and the philosophies which build upon them, exclude anything to do with mentality. This means that mental elaborations of direct physical experience are banished from consideration. This, in turn, makes it impossible to clearly understand how mind is in any way connected to the natural world. Whitehead's Process Philosophy, however, understands the physical and the mental as integral aspects of every component of! reality. This alone, if at least tolerated, makes it much ! easier to have an appreciation of how mind can be a part of nature.
Secondly, by reversing the emphasis of the above, Griffin shows how mind also can influence the body built by nature. This challenges the complementary assumption of most scientific analyses of reality, namely that mentality either does not exist, or if it does, it is at best an epiphenomenon without efficacy in the real world. Whitehead's perspective is that all of the events which constitute what we call mind have a physical component and therefore are capable of being causally efficacious in the real world, just as all of the so-called physical world has at least a low-grade mental elaboration of the physical experience.
Thirdly, Griffin shows how the idea of a presiding mentality of the level of the human mind is foreshadowed for many millions of years in the kind of organization to be found in cells, organelles within those cells, and even down to macromolecules, ordinary molecules, and atoms. Whereve! r there is "behavior [which] seems to require a central agent with an element of spontaneity or self-determination," one has the potential for a presiding event which has emerged in response to the necessity of providing organizational unity and flexibility of response (even if very minute). The human mind, while unique in some very important respects, is not at all discontinuous with the natural world.
If there is any significant criticism of this book, it might be that the issues and dynamics of spirituality are not as vigorously developed as the other major themes. The Whiteheadian perspective supports this fully integrated discussion. However, for purposes of this book and its primary audience, a fuller discussion of spirituality could well have been an unnecessary impediment to an already challenging work.
Overall, Griffin's arguments are numerous, varied, both complex and direct. Even the most committed materialist or dualist will find something disturbing ! in this work, will encounter some argument or appeal to dat! a which cannot be easily dismissed. For those of us wishing to be systematically persuaded that we live in a single reality that includes atoms, consciousness, and spirit, his systematically developed book is very helpful.
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But I have not chosen to give 5 stars because of one expression where Mr.Griffin says in order to praise the traditional cultures that they have managed to survive for thousands of years wheras we are not sure if modernity will make next century.This is a very wrong idea ;resistance to time has got nothing to do with truth value and this is something we must care about a lot.Many traditional civilizitions killed the people who criticized them in order to resist time, is this something to be praised? If moderns accepted to change their minds after a paradigmatic scientific discovery does this show their weakness or strength?.Do you accept to believe in sea goddess who does not like her father and whose hair we have to comb in order to get rid of bad luck because it has lasted more then modern science?We need more than gentleness (as well as needing gentleness) to every culture in order to build a meaningful relation with reality.
The idea of a constructive postmodernism and this book are very good but they need further development too.
The problem of evil, as traditionally understood, involves rejecting one the four following elements: rational consistency, worldly evil, perfect divine goodness, or divine omnipotence. Griffin wants to retain all of the four notions. He insists on the possibility of a consistent view as long as the traditional notion of omnipotence is modified in such a way that God is no longer conceived as capable of unilaterally determining everything that happens in the world. If this modification is accepted then the reality of evil will be understood in its proper context, one where God cannot be said to be indictable for evil, even though God is an indirect partner to the existence of evil.
Griffin distinguishes two strands of traditional theodicies: all-determining theism and free-will theism. All-determining theism attributes to God absolute unilateral power in the sense that it does not allow anything besides God to determine what happens in the world. Free-will theism suggests that God has essentially unlimited power but that God voluntarily exercises self-limitation or delegates some power to the creatures. This shows certain advancement over all-determining theism in that it allows for the possibility of genuine freedom in the world. This position may also say that God never interrupts the laws of nature, although it would affirm that God COULD do so. However, one way or another, both forms of theism seem to reject the reality of genuine evil.
Of interest here is the author's distinction between theological freedom and social, political, and economic forms of freedom. To affirm the latter, he says, would not necessarily mean that we have theological freedom, which is freedom vis-à-vis God. Also, whereas traditional free-will theists find the source of moral evil in our theological freedom, not in God, there is a question as to who is responsible for natural evil. For this and other reasons, Griffin rejects the view that genuine freedom of worldly creatures is the result of God's self-limitation. For him, theological freedom is inherent freedom. This means that God's power is essentially persuasive, not voluntarily persuasive. Griffin believes that the idea that creatures inherently have freedom, so that divine power could not be all-determining, is necessarily true, which means that it would be true in any possible universe.
With regard to the reality of genuine evil, Griffin holds that this is a hard-core commonsense notion that does not need proof. He does not think that God is the aboriginal power that existed alone prior to creation, and from which both freedom and evil came about. Rather, he agrees with Whitehead that creativity is the primordial power. This creativity is two-fold: on the one hand, it is exhibited in the self-creation of actualities and, on the one hand, it is embodied in the creative influence between these actualities. All actual entities, including God, manifest this two-fold power. What this means is that power is multilateral and that God is not the only operating agent in the world.
Griffin says there is evidence that God influences the world. The order manifest in the laws of nature and the complexity visible in the evolutionary process are said to be the result of God's luring the world towards beauty and intensity of experience. In addition, the existence of the demonic in the world is an indication that there is resistance to God's power, which suggests that God's power is persuasive, not coercive.
This book is the most elaborate discussion in process thought on the question of evil. Its main merit is that it takes the problem of evil very seriously and avoids such probabilistic arguments in the Swinburnean tradition that turn suffering into a theoretical matter. Although the author seeks to justify the reality of genuine evil by a reworking of the doctrine of divine power, thus running the risk of being accused of neglecting the suffering of those who experience evil, his book is highly recommended for the sheer fact that it gives a meaningful understanding to the notion of power. Griffin operates with a metaphysical perspective in mind, and his theodicy has an element of generality that is sometimes characteristic of theodicists who seem not to have looked at the actual evil in the world to see how people respond to it. But he does look at particular examples, and I invite the reader to search for them in the book in order to see how they fit in the overall theodicy of the author. The discussion in the book shows an astute mind that brings philosophical rigor and imaginative boldness into the discussion of one of the most intricate problems in philosophy.
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I Highly recommended this,as well as Griffin's other books, and books by John B. Cobb, Jr, Marjorie Suchocki, and Ken Wilber.
The author's delineation of the types of naturalism with a subscripted terminology, e.g. naturalism-sam and naturalism-ns, and darwinism-1 to darwinism-8, etc,... is clarifying and useful. The retreat to a form of naturalism-ns (no supernatural)is very acute, and would probably relieve the current concealed metaphysics in the Darwinist enterprise, whose flaws the author analyzes at great length. Very provocative book, whatever one's views of its affirmations.