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Being and Time

Being and Time. Quotable Quotes. Origen (3 rd Century): if it were practically possible for everyone to abandon the concerns of daily life and spend their leisure doing philosophy – then this is indeed the only path we (Christians) should be pursuing.

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Being and Time

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  1. Being and Time

  2. Quotable Quotes • Origen (3rd Century): if it were practically possible for everyone to abandon the concerns of daily life and spend their leisure doing philosophy – then this is indeed the only path we (Christians) should be pursuing. • Albert the Great (12th /13th Century): when it comes to theology and morals I’ll read Augustine, but when it comes to science, I’ll read Aristotle and when it comes to medicine, I’ll read Galen.

  3. Ancient Science • How useful are the following terms today for explaining things? • Being • Substance • Essence – nature • Logos • Hypostasis (underlying material), individual • Elements: Earth, air, fire and water

  4. Modern Science • Energy • Atoms, particles • Gravity • Nuclear forces • Atomic properties, • Molecular properties • Electromagnetic fields • Inertia, motion, action and reaction • Evolving biological kinds

  5. God beyond the world • If God is the creator of all that exists then God cannot be identified with any part of creation • So technically, none of the things around us within nature can tell us about God, beyond saying ‘God is not that’. • Yet we need to talk about God and his relationship to our world. Are there any ideas in modern science that can help us?

  6. Boundary Metaphysics Ancient science worked within the bounds of what we can see and experience as human beings. Modern science is weird and only works by using ideas which run counter to our daily experience of the world Is there anything here that can help us when we try to think about God?

  7. Weird idea one • The smallest particles of the universe are not exactly in one place… until you look. If I’d known about those damn jumps I’d never have got involved.

  8. Weird idea two When we look out into the universe, the further we look outwards, the further into the past we look. The faster we travel, the slower time becomes for us.

  9. Unfortunately in spacetime, a straight line is not the shortest distance between two points! Time Boundary of spacetime If you want to stay young, keep moving! Space

  10. Did you catch this one? • O God, strength of those who hope in you. • Graciously hear our pleas • Since without you mortal frailty can do nothing Grant us always the help of your grace • That in following your commands we may please you by our resolve and by our deeds.

  11. An ancient debate about causality, freedom and responsibility The ‘lazy argument’ If there is prophecy and fate, then everything is already decided, so whatever we choose to do is what was going to happen anyway. So we might as well do nothing and save ourselves the effort.

  12. Different ancient takes on the debate Epicureans, Sadducees, Cicero: no prophecy, no fate, humans completely free, complete responsibility. Essenes (Jewish group): everything is foreknown and predetermined, we are all sinners utterly dependent on God’s grace. Stoics (and Pharisees): fate and freedom - destiny and human responsibility. ‘All is foreknown and yet there is freedom of choice’ (Rabbi Akiva)

  13. Holy words and science words The theological debate about grace (a holy word) is also a scientific/philosophical debate about causality (a science word). It is an important because it affects our ideas about how free we are to do good and bad, and how far we should be rewarded and punished. Are any of our weird scientific ideas able to help us?

  14. Augustine and Hawkings • Augustine (relying on Plato and Aristotle) talked about God being ‘outside time’ and therefore having a complete view of world history. • Stephen Hawking refers to Augustine’s idea in a ‘Brief History of time’ - and uses it to give a non-theistic account of a universe that is already complete.

  15. A thought experiment Divine foreknowledge does not exclude human freedom ETERNITY fastest ETERNITY ETERNITY faster O1 O2 O3 O1 O2 O3 O W1 W2 W3 W1 W2 W3 W1 W2 W3 ALL HISTORY ALL HISTORY ALL HISTORY The History of the universe begins at W1 and ends at W3

  16. A further thought experiment Divine action does not exclude human freedom ETERNITY fastest ETERNITY ETERNITY faster O1 A O2 O1 A O2 AO W1 W2 W3 W1 W2 W3 W1 W2 W3 ALL HISTORY ALL HISTORY ALL HISTORY The History of the universe begins at W1 and ends at W3

  17. The Word and the Masterplan Logos: form, definition, explanation, argument, the commanding word of God. Blueprint or Space of Possibility?

  18. Space of possibility?

  19. Logos as the space of Possibility • The evolution of forms – space for the emergence of different life forms. • The space for co-creation, creative, human living

  20. The Word of God • The Divine imagination, open to a creative dialogue with humanity. • Human beings, creatures open to sharing freely in the realm of creative possibility.

  21. Why Doctrine is incomplete • Not even Theology itself, {52} though it comes from heaven, though its truths were given once for all at the first, though they are more certain on account of the Giver than those of mathematics, not even Theology, so far as it is relative to us, or is the Science of Religion, do I exclude from the law to which every mental exercise is subject, viz., from that imperfection, which ever must attend the abstract, when it would determine the concrete.

  22. Our religious understanding is bound to all human knowledge • For even the teaching of the Catholic Church, in certain of its aspects, that is, its religious teaching, is variously influenced by the other sciences. Not to insist on the introduction of the Aristotelic philosophy into its phraseology, its explanation of dogmas is influenced by ecclesiastical acts or events; its interpretations of prophecy are directly affected by the issues of history; its comments upon Scripture by the conclusions of the astronomer and the geologist; and its casuistical decisions by the various experience, political, social, and psychological, with which times and places are ever supplying it. The Idea of a University, Discourse 3, part 4.

  23. Reason and Revelation • The Quest continues…

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