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The
Seeds of Reason
By
Sadaputa dasa
In
the mid-nineteenth century Charles Darwin corresponded regularly with
Asa Gray, a Harvard professor of botany who was an evangelical
Christian. Gray was dedicated to scientific empiricism, but in those
days he opposed the idea of the evolutionary transformation of species.
He held the traditional view that God had individually designed and
created the bodily forms of living organisms.
For
some time, Darwin tried to break down Gray's resistance. For example,
in 1860 Darwin wrote to Gray:
I see
a bird which I want for food, take my gun and kill it. I do this
designedly. An innocent and good man stands under a tree and is killed
by a flash of lightning. Do you believe (and I really should like to
hear) that God designedly killed this man? Many or most persons do
believe this; I can't and don't. If you believe so, do you believe that
when a swallow snaps up a gnat, that God designed that that particular
swallow should snap up that particular gnat at that particular instant?
I believe that man and the gnat are in the same predicament. If the
death of neither man nor gnat are designed, I see no good reason to
believe that their first birth or production should be necessarily
designed.1
Gray was quickly persuaded by Darwin's thesis that species evolve, but
in spite of many powerful arguments like this one, he stuck to the idea
of divine design. He would argue that species might evolve by Darwin's
process of natural selection but God must somehow guide the process. In
fact, even Darwin himself was swayed by Gray's arguments. Once he
reprinted one of Gray's reviews of his theory at his own expense, and
across the top he printed the slogan "Natural Selection not
Inconsistent with Natural Theology."
Darwin
soon rejected Gray's method of harmonizing evolution with theology, and
so did many mainstream Christian scientists. As David Livingstone put
it in his history of the Christian response to Darwinism, "Christians
were soon to abandon this version [of Asa Gray] in favor of a more
holistic design located in the regularity of natural law."2 In other
words, instead of guiding nature organism by organism to bring forth
specific designs, God designed the laws of physics in such a way that
all organisms would emerge automatically by Darwinian evolution.
The reason for abandoning Gray's guided evolution is this: The laws of
physics (in Darwin's time and now) do not allow for some nonphysical
agent to manipulate the course of events. Therefore, if God were to
guide the natural processes to come up with particular species one by
one, He would violate the laws of physics.
Gray argued in favor of evolution by saying, "If the alternative be the
immediate origination out of nothing, or out of the soil, of the human
form with all its actual marks, there can be no doubt which side a
scientific man will take."3 The scientist will certainly prefer a
process of evolution that follows the course of nature. But if
occasional big violations of the laws of physics are to be rejected,
why accept large numbers of small violations? Thus the scientist who
accepts Gray's argument for evolution is likely to opt eventually for a
fully naturalistic evolutionary process that does not violate the laws
of physics at all.
For Christian theologians, this choice is not hard to justify. This was
demonstrated by George Frederick Wright, a geologist, evangelical
minister, and friend of Asa Gray. Wright rejected guided evolution, and
he used the doctrines of Calvinism to argue that God is concerned only
with the ultimate cause of creation-the laws of nature. Wright was able
to satisfy physical scientists and Darwinian evolutionists by asserting
that Darwinism was "the Calvinistic interpretation of nature."
Of
course, the real laws of nature may differ from the laws of physics. In
Chapter 3 I pointed out that the Vedic literature clearly supports this
view. Since no scientist has ever shown that all natural phenomena obey
known physical laws, students of science and religion might be wise to
seek alternatives to using physics as the basis for understanding God's
role in nature. I would therefore like to describe in more detail the
Vedic version of the creation of living species.
To
do this, let me return to another topic mentioned in Chapter 3-Saint
Augustine's idea of "seed principles." According to Augustine, at the
moment of creation God planted in nature rationes seminales, or
"rational seeds." In due course of time, these seeds produced the forms
of living beings by a natural process of unfolding. The rational seeds
cannot be directly perceived by human senses, but each seed contains
the potential for manifesting a specific gross form. According to the
Catholic philosopher Frederick Copleston, the idea of the rational
seeds did not come from Christian scripture or tradition. Augustine got
the idea from the pagan philosopher Plotinus, and ultimately it came
from the Stoics.4
Some scientists say that Augustine's theory foreshadows the modern idea
that the laws of physics unfold the development of species through
Darwinian evolution. These scientists suggest that the physical laws
can thereby be regarded as "seed principles" of creation. This is
certainly not what Augustine had in mind, but Augustine's idea does
turn out to be strikingly similar to the concept of divine creation
presented in the Vedic literature.
According to the Vedic conception, Krishna brings about creation by
investing His potency in seed forms called bijas. This idea is
illustrated by the following passage from a lecture on the Srimad
Bhagavatam given by Srila Prabhupada in 1972:
Krishna's
energy is so powerful that He puts the potency in a seed. Bijo 'ham
sarva-bhutanam. Krishna says bija, means "seed," sarva-bhutanam.
"Whatever is coming out, being manifested, the seed, I am."
Means-"Seed, I am"-means "It is manufactured under My supervision."
Just find out the seed of a banyan tree, a small grain, like mustard
seed. But you sow the seed and a big tree, gigantic tree, will come
out. Unless the energetic tree is there within the seed, how it comes
out?
Like
Augustine's rationes seminales, the bijas, or the creative seeds, are
placed within matter at the initial moment of creation. This is
described in the Srimad Bhagavatam (3.26.19), which says that the
Supreme Personality of Godhead (Maha Vishnu)
impregnates the womb of material nature. nature then delivers the sum
total of cosmic intelligence. This cosmic intelligence includes
specific information defining the karmic destiny of the conditioned
souls. Initially material nature is in a quiescent state, called
pradhana. Maha Vishnu injects into the pradhana innumerable conditioned
souls, along with seed information defining their karma. This
information guides transformations of material nature which give rise
to the bodily forms and situations of the conditioned souls.
A
crucial difference between this model of creation and modern
evolutionary theories is that the injected seed information involves
specific details for individuals. Rather than compare this information
to the laws of physics, we could better compare to the software of a
virtual-reality system.
Asa Gray and George
Frederick Wright felt that
creation must be the work of
God but it should not violate
the course of nature. We can
see that the Vedic account
of creation satisfies these
two requirements.
When
virtual-reality software is inserted into a suitable computer, the
computer generates illusory bodily forms, which the players in the
virtual-reality game experience as real. The intelligent design of the
software by the computer programmer corresponds to the intelligent
design of the seeds information by Maha-Vishnu.
One
might argue that computer contains complex electronic circuits designed
to run its software but in nature we find but randomly moving atoms and
subatomic particles. If "seed information" were injected into nature,
how would it be able to generate the bodily forms of living
organisms?
This
question is not answered by Augustine's sketchy theory of the rationes
seminales. The Vedic literature, however, gives an answer. Just as
gross physical seeds are always produced and disseminated by living
organisms, so the seed information injected by Maha-Vishnu is always
controlled and manipulated by living beings.
In
the Brahma-samhita, texts 7-10, it is said that the impregnating glance
of Maha-Vishnu becomes manifest in the material world as a being named
Shambhu. The conceiving potency of nature, known as Maya, likewise
appears from Rama Devi, the eternal consort of Vishnu. From the union
Shambhu and Maya, innumerable living beings are generated through
sexual procreation. The bodies of these beings are generated made of
spiritual and subtle forms of energy unknown to modern physics. The
gross physical bodies of our experience are generated from subtle
living forms by the interaction of gross and subtle forms of energy.
Thus the basic rule is that life forms are generated from seeds by a
process of reproduction, subtle forms giving rise to gross forms.
Asa
Gray and George Frederick Wright felt that creation must be the work of
God but it should not violate the course of nature. We can see that the
Vedic account of creation satisfies these two requirements. It does so,
however, by speaking about spiritual and subtle phenomena in nature
that are completely outside the space of modern physical science.
The
Vedic view also provides an answer to Darwin's questions about design
in nature. The Padma Purana explains that karmic reactions to
activities exist in the form of seeds stored within the heart, or
subtle mind, of an individual.5 In due course of time, these seeds
fructify in the form of specific physical events.
This
is the Vedic explanation why lighting strikes Darwin's "innocent and
good man" standing beneath the tree. The lighting stroke is not
delivered whimsically by a wrathful God; it comes naturally as a
reaction to man's past actions. But the natural system that brings
about this reaction is designed by God for the explicit purpose of
administering divine justice. Even the eating of gnats by swallows is
part of the divine plan. Gnats and swallows also have souls, and the
experience they undergo in the course of nature are designed to bring
about progressive evolution of their consciousness.
The
karmic seeds culminating in the lightning stroke consist of subtle
energy. They are transferred from body to body in the process of
transmigration of the soul, and they manifest their effects
through
complex control system operating within nature. according to Vedic
literature, these control systems are directed by living beings known
as demigods, and ultimately they are under the supervision of the
Supreme Personality of Godhead.
Darwin's
theory of evolution can be seen as an attempt to the idea of whimsical,
sudden creation by divine fiat. The theory attempted to explain the
origin of the species rationally in terms of a natural process of
causes and effect. According to the Vedic literature there is indeed a
rational process of creation. But it involves concepts and categories
of being that go far beyond the limits of present day science.
1. Darwin, Francis, ed., 1959, The
Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, New York: Basic Books, p. 284.
2. Livingstone, David N., 1987,
Darwin's Forgotten Defenders, Grand Rapids, Mich.: W. B. Eerdmans, p.
64.
3. Frye,
Roland Mushat, ed., 1983, Is God a Creationist? New York: Scribners, p.
112. 4. Copleston, Frederick, 1963, A History of Philosophy, Vol. II,
New York: Doubleday, p. 76.
5. Prabhupada, A. C. Bhaktivedanta
Swami. The Nectar of Devotion, Los Angeles: Bhaktivedanta Book Trust,
1982, p. 6
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![]() Subtitles
A
Deeper View of Cause and Effect
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