You made me look him up (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Behe)... man, that irreducible complexity thing, what a crackpot theory that is. Was it you who brought up the God gap recently?
"God of the gaps", maybe-- the idea that anything we can't currently explain is evidence that God directly intervened. The problem being that as science progresses your God's job description keeps shrinking.
So most theologians who are not stupid tend to reject that idea, and see God's hand in the workings of the world-as-it-is, natural forces or no. I don't believe this, but I have no big problems with other people believing it, though that itself raises hard questions about divine justice and benevolence.
I think that a minimum of thought can lead a theist to see that science lets us know how God created us. To get as close as possible to his methods should bring more glory to God. Or maybe i'm just a deist sympathizer.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-08 02:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-07-08 03:00 am (UTC)So most theologians who are not stupid tend to reject that idea, and see God's hand in the workings of the world-as-it-is, natural forces or no. I don't believe this, but I have no big problems with other people believing it, though that itself raises hard questions about divine justice and benevolence.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-08 03:16 am (UTC)I think that a minimum of thought can lead a theist to see that science lets us know how God created us. To get as close as possible to his methods should bring more glory to God. Or maybe i'm just a deist sympathizer.
Divine justice, benevolence... ha. Just ha.