Socrates and Rembrandt: wisdom integrates fact, meaning, and value

                                                                                         In the Louvre hangs a Rembrandt painting titled Philosopher in Meditation.  The painting presents an old man, richly illuminated by golden light streaming through the window, in a room dominated by a sturdy and winding staircase leading to the floor above.  If we use this 18th century title for this 17th century painting, … Read more

A spiritual renaissance to break up the log jam of planetary problems

  Prophets, theologians, and secular idealists have proclaimed a glorious destiny for human history; but their visions and hopes seem discredited while we struggle through our logjam of biological, social, economic, and political problems. In order to break up the logjam, we need a world-wide moral and spiritual awakening.  The religious reason is that God … Read more

Love your neighbor . . . realistically!

            Freud provides another example of keen psychological observations mixed with needlessly anti-religious philosophy.  He challenges the religious idea, found in the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”  While Freud approved of altruism in certain circumstances, he saw the generalized call to “love your neighbor as yourself” as … Read more

Science, religion, and the Fatherhood of God

William Blake, The Ancient of Days Any fact that science truly discovers may be interpreted by philosophy as harmonious with any truth that religion proclaims.  Philosophy can harmonize scientific truth with spiritual truth because all truth is God’s truth.  When scientific discovery is mixed with an anti-religious philosophy, we can keep the discovery but abandon … Read more

A cosmic concept of evolution

Charles Darwin, 1869             In the final stage of scientific living we develop a perspective that integrates science with philosophy and religion.  This perspective centers on a concept of evolution.  The early concept of evolution introduced by Darwin has had difficulty entering the culture, partly because the term “evolution” has often been used to imply … Read more

Tornadoes in a friendly universe?

In his comment on the previous post, Julian invited us to share our answers to a question: How do we get to the point where our belief in the friendly universe is not shaken by natural cataclysms—earthquakes, tidal waves, tornadoes, and so on. My answer is that strong faith in a friendly universe is the … Read more

Fine-tuning of basic constants in the universe

To bolster a positive attitude toward the universe, we consider how physics supports life. Life as we know it requires a universe in which basic physical constants must be very precisely what they are; slight deviations would make life impossible.  It is as though Creative Intelligence “fine-tuned” four basic forces.  Gravitation is just strong enough … Read more

Is it a friendly universe?

As part of scientific living, we provision ourselves with a broad perspective by integrating inputs from science, philosophy, and religion into a broad concept of evolution.  This concept includes some idea of (1) the evolution of our universe from its origin down to the present and into the future; (2) biological evolution, including ecology and … Read more