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Go to the main page of Evolution and Wonder: Understanding Charles Darwin.
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Listeners' Reflections

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Submit Your Reflection about "Evolution and Wonder: Understanding Charles Darwin."

The Role of Unitarian-Universalism in Darwin's Thought (September 28, 2007)
In listening to your discussion of the theological views of Charles Darwin, I am appalled that you and your guest do not discuss the influence of his strong "dissenting" Unitarian heritage in his thinking. Although modern North American Unitarian Universalism poses as a theology-free social organization, in Darwin's day the ministers were well-trained in scriptural interpretation. In fact, as self-conscious heirs of the Reformation, they were proud of their training and education in scriptural interpretation through each individual mind. While it is appropriate to speak of "the church," it is wrong to overlook the existence of minority religions and the role that classical Unitarianism played in the ideas you are discussing.

Elizabeth Curtiss
Burlington, VT (Listens to SOF OnDemand)

A Multifaceted Being (September 23, 2007)
Thank you so much for exposing other aspects of Charles Darwin. Before listening to the Evolution and Wonder program, I thought of Darwin as little more than an intelligent atheist. Hearing Darwin's actual words spoken by James Moore gave me a new perspective on Darwin, the man and the naturalist. Although he is known for reporting insights that fall outside of religious boundaries, Darwin did not oppose the idea of God as the original author of creation. To my mind, Darwin's complex description of the entire process of creation illustrates God in an even more magnificent and compassionate light. The concept of "wonderful adaptations" is far more amazing to me than the idea of simple creation. I think Darwin himself is a superb example of a multifaceted being.

Lisa Baker
Minneapolis, MN (KNOW, 91.1 FM)

Darwin Studies (September 23, 2007)
I am so delighted to have you back on WAMU, especially with your wonderful program on Darwin. Very Christmas in September. My husband has given much thought to a School of Darwin Studies that would encompass the many disciplines and controversies that have formed around Darwin's ideas. Darwinian processes are everywhere, but as you ably point out, Darwin's name provokes much anger among some people you would expect to understand his vision of the beauty of the natural world (Hosanna!). Then there are people like Richard Dawkins who invoke Darwinian science to justify their similar hostility to the products of human evolution known as religions. How to reconcile these opposed views of creation (E.O. Wilson's term)? You and your excellent guest James Moore, and the profusion of resources compiled on your Web site, may have found the solution.

Sarah Forman
Chevy Chase, MD (WAMU, 88.5 FM)

Further Thoughts (September 22, 2007)
Perhaps one way to conceptualize the apparent conflict is to pose that the creator established the rules of the game, as it were, but that each being was free to act within those rules.

Peggy Unsworth
New York, NY (WNYC, 93.9 FM)

Knowing Who He Was (January 26, 2007)
I appreciated your commentary about Darwin and his findings, and your interview with the writer of his biography, and sharings from Darwin's diary. To understand who Darwin was, from the beginning, and the family he came from, his particular educational background, is so significant to perceiving what he was trying to tell us about the ways of nature and the development of species.

I have felt this strongly ever since reading some of his book, many years ago; and I am so glad to hear it being discussed openly now, in an effort to understand his respect and awe of the natural world, and its Creator. I really appreciated your way of emphasizing that it was never his intention to say that God was not a part of creation, but just to observe and record what he saw in his observations.

Laquita Powers
Huntsville, AL (Listens to SOF OnDemand)

What Kind of God? (July 26, 2006)
I enjoyed your reflections on Darwin, but I resist seeing the author of The Origin of Species as another "natural theologian." Natural theology was, indeed, the context that informed Victorian sensibilities about God and nature. Clearly, many skeptical Englishmen and women found God in nature long after they had rejected both church doctrine and a literal interpretation of Scripture, especially where the natural world was concerned.

Still, Darwin was and is the destroyer of natural theology, not its preserver. He was certain that the central tenets of natural theology — a benevolent, intelligently-designed (if you will pardon the anachronism), man-centered universe — were false. More importantly, what kind of God does Darwin leave us? An absentee landlord in a universe governed by chance. What kind of faith is this?

Peter Bograd
Teaneck, NJ (WNYC, 93.9 FM)

Incorrect Attribution (July 26, 2006)
I very much enjoyed the program with James Moore discussing Charles Darwin's struggle with faith in light of his seemingly contradictory and compelling findings in the natural world. Mr. Moore was introduced as the author of Darwin: The Life of a Tormented Evolutionist. There was no attribution given to Adrian Desmond, the co-author of the book. I read the book (well, most of it) last winter, and I have the book in front of me on my desk. Mr. Desmond's name is first on the cover and on page 809, "About the Authors," receives a lengthier bio. Why was he given no attribution on Speaking of Faith?

George Williams
McHenry, IL (Listens to SOF OnDemand)

A Line Beyond Intellect (July 23, 2006)
Thanks for your wonderful program on Darwin. This is a subject that has fascinated me from the time I read a biography of Clarence Darrow in junior high more than 40 years ago and which I have pursued through much intervening reading; a visit to Dayton, Tennessee with one of my sons a few years ago; the Dover decision; and the current show at the Museum of Natural History.

Of course, the nature of my fascination has changed, but the one constant is my feeling that if there were a God with the consciousness imputed to it by the devout, it would be deeply disappointed by the use to which its unique gift to man — the ability to think and reason — has been put. Namely, to draw a line beyond which intellect may not venture. The way you described Darwin's role in separating God from responsibility for every little act of God was inspired.

I enjoy your program in general. Although I am a semi-observant Jewish atheist, I appreciate the way you honor the impulse towards belief without leaving the rest of us out. Unlike the power-mad exhibitionism that currently dominates the public square, yours is an approach to faith that doesn't lend credence to Jesse Ventura's comment that religion is a crutch for weak minds, or words to that effect. There is frequent expression of awe before nature in terms that can be shared without a belief in the divine. The Darwin show was the most inspired instance yet. Once again, well done.

Henry Ehrlich
Brooklyn, NY (WNYC, 93.9 FM)

Darwin and Religion (July 23, 2006)
I'm rather surprised that James Moore, a distinguished scholar on Charles Darwin's life and work, thinks that Darwin was working within a theological framework, and that Darwin right up to the end of his life "half-believed in God." Really? Perhaps Professor Moore is unfamiliar with Darwin's autobiography in which Darwin notes that he came to regard Jesus Christ's apostles as simpletons for believing in miracles. People of that time were, Darwin wrote, "ignorant and credulous to a degree almost incomprehensible by us." Even as he unveiled a theory of nature as a blind and brutal force, he rejected Christianity as a "damnable doctrine."

Furthermore, in a note Darwin reminded himself that he better "avoid stating how far I believe in materialism." Odd that none of this came up in the broadcast. I tend to associate materialism with the idea that nothing exists that is not physical (materialism obviously rules out supernatural entities, such as God, that supposedly "exist" outside of space and time). Perhaps any theological language employed by Darwin was a rhetorical ploy? Lest he lose his Victorian audience (and his place within respectable society), perhaps Darwin made sure to conceal the profoundly anti-religious implications of his work, by presenting On the Origin of Species as an extension of the tradition of natural theology?

Once again both the host and guest seemed to be rather confused. Theistic evolution, the idea that an omnipotent God would need to use random mutations and natural selection to produce life is as about as meaningful of a concept as that of a square circle. Natural selection necessarily means that nothing outside of nature is necessary to explain it. Darwin's theory was and is revolutionary in part because it shows that humanity is not at the center of creation, and not its purpose either.

Perhaps little more than this muddle offered by Speaking of Faith can be expected. It appears to offer strongest corroboration for the biologist William Provine's infamous rule: if you want to marry Christian doctrine with modern evolutionary biology, "you have to check your brains at the church-house door."

Alan Partridge
Fargo, ND (KCCD, 90.3 FM)

Darwin, Newton, and Franklin (July 21, 2006)
I teach a course "Darwin, Franklin and Newton" at TARP (Temple Association for Retired Persons) in Philadelphia. (I am an engineer, retired from a career as an expert witness in physical causation.) By and large I concur, of course, with your newsletter. But, as I tell my students about my course on "Three Founding Fathers," what Darwin made credible (by dispensing with the need for miracles), and Franklin facilitated (since it was his demographic remark recited in Malthus which inspired Darwin), Newton had already made necessary (since Newtonian mechanics excludes miracles, or the direct action of the mind of man or of God upon matter).

None of the three set out to be an iconoclast; all resisted the idea when their studies led them there, and all tended to deism (not now, but then) instead. Franklin exemplified the life well lived almost absent cosmologic concerns — although while still young he did frighten himself, and almost argued polytheism, by considering the deterministic implications of causality. Darwin abstained, of course, from discussing ultimate origins, when the hand of God was somehow effective, he knew not how. But Newton was the true cosmologist when he postulated (subject to pragmatic confirmation), as an eternal and universal law, that nothing was happening, really, but bumps and attractions, necessarily mutual, between bits of matter. It nicely reduces everyday experience to principle.

So Darwin "merely" found a way to follow Newton within nature. But while strict application of Newton — whose laws define "the natural" — excludes what ostensibly violates those laws, commonly called "the supernatural," this does not exclude faith operating within those laws. For even they — the laws of Newton — demand faith; take them or leave them, at will. Newton left them himself, when he apparently (like Franklin) frightened himself with their implications. I will be listening on Sunday. Thanks for your applied efforts, on this topic and many others.

Albert Fonda
King of Prussia, PA (WRTI, 90.3 FM)

Formulating a Theology to Correspond (July 21, 2006)
"[Darwin] returned to an English society instituting workhouses and debtors prisons to hold social chaos at bay. Religious thinkers in his age were busily formulating a theology to correspond — an image of God who instituted poverty and misery as the price for sloth and vice."

This seems too much to me like those in the Evangelical community today who would define "compassion" as allowing the sinner to suffer the consequences of their sins until they repent. Thus they would only feed the hungry, cloth the naked, and heal the sick who have confessed their sin. It is with this meaning of compassion that "Compassionate Conservative" has been used of those who support the practice of leaving the poor to their own initiative believing that they will pull themselves up by their own bootstraps.

Elisabeth Kellogg
Minneapolis, MN (KNOW, 91.1 FM)