Despite many accusations, the author of John’s gospel is not strictly anonymous. After all, he refers to himself as “the disciple whom Jesus loved”. We have less certainty for the author of John’s gospel than the others, but textual and traditional evidence suggests the author is the Apostle John, son of Zebedee. Clues that suggest this are:
He is clearly an Israelite – the author’s knowledge of biblical feasts and institutions is detailed, along with Palestinian geography.
The “beloved disciple” is present at the last supper (13:23) and with the apostles after the resurrection (21:4-7)
“Beloved” suggests that he was in Jesus’ inner circle (this would be Peter, James and John, who were the only three that were renamed (Mark 3: 16:17))
Peter is distinguished from the beloved disciple in 20:2 and 21:20. James was martyred too early to be considered an author.
There is a close association between Peter and the “beloved disciple” (20:1-9), which is also mirrored in Luke 22:8 and Acts 3:1.
The attention to detail suggests that the author was an eyewitness –
“filled up to the brim” (2:7) at the wedding in Cana.
“barley” in 6:9.
“aroma filled the house” (12:3).
Lastly, early Christian writers testify with one voice that the author is John the son of Zebedee, such as Irenaeus and Clement of Alexandria
Some even claim that John was written by a community of believers, but the details given above suggest that there was at least one primary author.
…but a lot of scholars tend to date him later
We have a fragment of John’s gospel dating as far back A.D. 120, telling us that the gospel was written at least this early, but probably much earlier given that it would have needed to have time to gain popularity and circulate.
Secondly, Ignatius of Antioch seems to allude to the teaching of the fourth gospel in a collection of letters written at about A.D. 107. Ultimately, there is no real issue dating the gospel to even the 60s, but scholars tend to date it to the 90s. One clue pushing the date earlier would be the word ‘is’ used in 5:2 to describe the pool of Bethesda which was lost in A.D. 70 with the fall of Jerusalem – it wouldn’t make much sense to use the word ‘is’ to refer to something that is no longer intact.
General Hurdles for the skeptic
Why would a false author use the name of a Jewish tax collector (Matthew), or non-disciples (Mark, Luke) in an attempt to permeate a Christian message? Why not use the name of Peter, or James?
You could point to what are known by the Church as the ‘Apocryphal gospels’ as an attempt to provide reason to be sceptical about the authorship of the gospels, however, these were well known to be forgeries by the Church according to their usage, consistency, orthodoxy and authorship.
Further, none of them are known to be earlier than 150AD – as opposed to the synoptics which were penned almost a century before.
The earliest manuscripts of this Gospel are titled ‘According to Mark’ – which summarizes the uniform Church tradition that Mark, a disciple of Simon Peter, wrote the second Gospel. Mark was not an eyewitness of Christ’s public ministry he was a channel of apostolic tradition through Peter.
In the New Testament, Peter refers to his companionship with Mark in an amicable manner ‘my son Mark’ in 1 Peter 5:13. Further, interpreters have noted that the general outline of Mark’s gospel is similar to Peter’s presentation of the gospel in Acts 10:36-43. Outside the New Testament, multiple Church Fathers insist that Peter’s authority lies behind this Gospel. Papias (A.D. 130) describes Mark as the “interpreter” of Peter, while Irenaeus (A.D. 180), Clement of Alexandria (A.D. 200) and Tertullian (A.D. 200) echo this tradition.
Few details exist about the life and character of Mark. He is known by his Roman name “Mark” (Marcus in latin), but is sometimes called by his Jewish name “John” (Acts 12:25; 15:37). He is the cousin of the missionary Barnabas according to Colossians 4:10, and he was also an associate of the Apostle Paul (Acts 12:25) and a welcome companion on Paul’s first missionary journey (Acts 13:5). According to Paul’s estimation “he [Mark] is very useful in serving me” (2 Timothy 4:11), and Tradition states that after the martyrdom of Peter and Paul, Mark was the first to establish churches in Alexandria and northern Egypt.
These factors held together, especially with the unanimity of voices attributing this gospel make it difficult to contend that some ‘mysterious author’ penned this Gospel.
He was probably the first one to start writing too
Two main factors suggest that Mark completed his Gospel before A.D. 70 – within one generation of the events he records.
First, the Gospel itself points us in this direction. In Mark 13, Jesus prophesies the imminent destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple. This was fulfilled in A.D. 70, when the Romans violently destroyed the Holy City. Mark, however, makes no mention of this as a past event, nor does he give detailed information about the catastrophe that would indicate he was writing after the fact.
Second, prominent traditions in the early Church date Mark’s gospel in the 60s or even earlier. Both a second-century document, called the Anti-Marcionite Prologue, and Irenaeus (A.D. 180) state that Mark wrote soon after Peter’s martyrdom (~A.D. 67) – a tradition that still allows for a date in the late 60s. Clement of Alexandria (A.D. 200) on the other hand, maintains that Mark wrote his Gospel before Peter’s death. Still another witness, Eusebius (A.D. 340), fixes a date for Mark during the reign of Emperor Claudius, between A.D. 41 and 54. Although these varying traditions make it impossible for use to assign an exact date for the Gospel, they together suggest that Mark published his work sometime before A.D. 70. Many modern scholars likewise place the composition of Mark just before A.D. 70, though some put it just after this critical date.
Halfway there now.
Sources are linked throughout. It should be made clear that the arguments in this post are not at all my own and are, as I have said, taken from the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible (New Testament) by Scott Hahn and Curtis Mitch.
I thought it might be fitting to wrap up this series with a short post on Noah’s Ark. I think I’ve provided a faithful understanding of the Genesis story, and how well it coheres with what we know from the natural sciences, but it might be best to briefly give a less extravagant (yet still orthodox) understanding of Noah’s Ark – leaning heavily on work by John Walton and Andrew Loke. I’ll try to keep this post on the shorter side, since I’ve already dumped about 26000 words throughout the rest of this series.
There are two things to show here:
Thesis 1: A fair interpretation shows Ancient Near Eastern Hyperbole, but this does not contradict the Biblical Narrative
Thesis 2: There is some form of historical evidence for a local flood
Thesis 1:A fair interpretation shows Ancient Near Eastern Hyperbole, but this does not contradict the Biblical Narrative
I think that the title of this section more or less says it all but, essentially, hyperbolic language was very common in Ancient Near Eastern writing. We find similar exaggerations elsewhere in the Bible. Similarly:
The Annals of Sennacherib (who was an Assyrian King), often exaggerated his military victories – claiming to have destroyed 89 cities and 820 villages in Judah (which was likely overstated)
The Behistun Inscription is a monumental inscription by Darius the Great of Persia, and it details his conquests and suppression of revolts (also exaggerating the number of enemies defeated)
The Mesha Stele was a Moabite stone inscription by King Mesha of Moab, and it describes his rebellion against Israel – again, exaggerating the number of enemies defeated
Scholars know that the aforementioned are exaggerations through comparative analysis, archaeological evidence, corroborating sources, internal consistency and historical context, but the point to be made is that hyperbolic language is not foreign to Ancient Near Eastern literature. Of course the above are militaristic in nature but, plausibly, one could also see the Ark as a ‘war waged on the corruption of the Earth’.
Therefore, when reading Biblical language, we should ask ourselves what motivations (if any) might the author of Genesis have had for illustrating the flood as such. I, John Walton and other Old Testament Scholars (I am not one, to be clear), think rhetoric.
Quite clearly, the author of Genesis 6:5 intends to get across to the reader that (at the very least) the imago-Dei anatomical humans which (genetically), could have been all of remaining humanity by this point as I have argued in part 2. The point is to show that the world had been overwhelmed by Evil.
The sort of thinking that the Ancient Near East is the entire world likely does carry on into the New Testament. For example, Acts 2:5 could be supposing that Jews come from ‘every nation under heaven’, and Paul claims in Colossians 1:23 that he is proclaiming the gospel that has been proclaimed to ‘every creature under heaven’. With similar language being used in Genesis 7:19 – “all the high mountains under the entire heavens were covered”, I think we have sufficient reason to believe that the author of the flood narrative is using hyperbolic language to convey a true event.
Now, interpretatively speaking, we must note that such a position can still be maintained as an orthodox Christian. I am simply suggesting that the author intended more to convey a theological message rather than a historically-accurate one, and that such was the cultural norm of the day. Considering the author is writing in the period where hyperbolic language is normal for historical texts, along with numerology littered throughout, I don’t think this is an irrational position.
Thesis 2: There is some form of historical evidence for a local flood
It might come as a surprise to some, but multiple Ancient Near Eastern accounts detail flood stories of their own sort. One such example would be the Epic of Gilgamesh. John Currid, a scholar who has compared the two in his work ‘Against the Gods: The Polemical Theology of the Old Testament’, notes these similarities between the accounts:
Epic of Gilgamesh
Genesis
Divine Warning of doom (lines 20-26)
Divine warning of doom (6:12-13)
Command to build ship (lines 24-31)
Command to build ark (6:14-16)
Hero constructs ship (lines 54-76)
Noah builds ark (6:22)
Utnapishtim loads ark, including his relations and animals (lines 80-85)
Noah loads ark, including his family and animals (7:1-5)
The gods send torrential rains (lines 90-128)
Yahweh sends torrential rains (6:17; 7:1-12)
The floods destroy humanity (line 133)
The floods destroy humanity (7:21-22)
The flood subsides (lines 129-132)
The flood abates (8:1-3)
The ship lands on Mount Nisir (lines 140-144)
The ark settles on Mount Ararat (8:4)
Utnapishtim sends forth birds (lines 146-154)
Noah sends forth birds (8:6-12)
Sacrifice to the gods (lines 155-161)
Sacrifice to Yahweh (8:20-22)
Deities bless hero (line 194)
Yahweh blesses Noah (9:1)
It’s quite clear that with how well the details parallel, along with the structure and flow, that such overwhelming similitude cannot be explained as a result of mere chance or simultaneous invention.
One might suggest any of:
The two sources copied one another
The two used the same original source
They are separate accounts of the same event
(2) and (3) are quite plausible, and are not mutually exclusive. The Eridu Genesis is a Sumerian flood account that existed before either the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Genesis account. Since this is the case, this might provide evidence against (1).
Furthermore, it should be noted that the story of the Biblical flood is still markedly different in some respects from some of its contemporary counterparts. For example, the other sources tend to be more polytheistic (which is the case in Eridu Genesis), and the flood story of the Epic of Atrahasis gives the justification for the flood being something as silly as disturbing the sleep of the gods. This is a drastically different picture to the much more strictly monotheistic Genesis story, which quite directly points the blame at man’s corruption.
In terms of candidates, considering that my model is quite relaxed when it comes to affirming (temporally) exactly when the Patriarchs of Genesis emerge, I don’t really think it’s necessary to propose an exact date, but there are some potential candidates that some archaeologists have discovered, such as the:
Flood at Ur: Archaeological excavations at the ancient city of Ur, led by Sir Leonard Woolley in the 1920s, uncovered a significant flood layer. This flood is believed to have occurred around 2900 BCE.
Flood at Shuruppak: Excavations at Shuruppak, another ancient Mesopotamian city, revealed evidence of a major flood around the same period. Shuruppak is particularly interesting because it is associated with the Sumerian flood hero Ziusudra, who parallels Noah in many ways.
Flood at Kish: Similar flood deposits were found at Kish, dating to around 2900 BCE. These findings suggest that a large flood affected multiple cities in the region.
I have already affirmed in the previous section that the authors need not be talking about all anatomical humans, and considering the hyperbolic language used, possibly not even all imago-Dei humans). Therefore, I think I can hold to this being a historical event, simply on the reasons already given.
This has been a monumental project, that I’ve really enjoyed working on over three-or-four months. I think it’s been really helpful to give a (hopefully) strong and coherent understanding of the start of the Genesis story and show that it doesn’t conflict with modern findings. There was one topic that I thought about including in this section (the Nephilim) but I don’t think there’s much need, considering that my interpretations doesn’t lead to any theological issues ensuing from that topic. Further, its such an obviously unsettled issue that it didn’t make much sense to say much about a topic that would take months to research.
I hope this has been useful for anyone – whether you’re curious about the faith, wanting to learn about it, or just genuinely stumbled here by accident – let me know what you think below!
Thanks, Rookie
P.S: I think the next series is going to be even longer but i’ll be taking a short break, so expect the next post in about 6 weeks! 😊
Sources:
The Lost World of the Flood – John Walton
Evidence that Demands a Verdict – Josh and Sean McDowell
The second-last part of this series will be delving into what I like to call ‘science’s debt’. Some Christians nowadays are wary of ‘science’, because it’s often weaponized by ill-informed Atheists as something that is allegedly contrary to faith. Part of this stems from works reaching back to the late 19th Century by John William Draper and Andrew Dickson White. Draper argued that there had been a long-standing conflict between the human intellect and traditional religious beliefs. White argued that such “warfare” had been a significant factor in the development of modern science – but this theory is rejected by historians of science, and at the very least, with regard to Christianity, such claims turn out to be weak – and that’s what I’ll show in this blog post.
There are three main topics to cover in this post:
Science’s cloudy definition
Speedrunning Irrationality – Lesson 1: Scientism and Verificationism
The Modern Scientific Method’s debt
#1:Science’s cloudy definition
It would surprise most people to know that Historians and Philosophers of Science are not at all ‘clear’ on one unified, agreed-upon definition of what exactly ‘science’ is, or what really constitutes ‘scientific’. To most people, we would simply list the natural and social sciences as ‘sciences’, or ‘scientific’, but that doesn’t actually answer the question. What we are asking is ‘what makes something science?’ rather than ‘what are some examples of science?’. Examples are not definitions.
More formally, the problem stated is what is known as the ‘demarcation problem’ – the problem of “defining science and distinguishing or demarcating it from pseudo-science, metaphysics, history, religion, or other forms of thought or inquiry.”1
Typically, philosophers of science have tried to do this by studying the methods that scientists use to study nature – but that’s exactly where the trouble began. The problem was that ‘scientists’ in different fields use different methods – which is also why historians and philosophers of science tend to be more equipped to attempt to answer this question, given that they tend to have a more ‘big picture’ view of the field of inquiry.
Some sciences perform laboratory experiments, some name, organize and classify natural objects, some seek to discover natural laws, some attempt to reconstruct past events, some construct models – the list goes on.
There are a couple of stock objections to the idea that any theory of Intelligent Design could ever be scientific, so it would do to answer some stock objections:
God violates the laws of nature!
How so, which laws specifically, and how exactly do we know that he violated such laws? It’s well known that the laws we know of now didn’t really exist momentarily after the big bang, so what’s the issue if God did (and I’m not saying that he did) tweak them?
God is an unobservable entity!
Evolution itself requires unobservable intermediary forms of life. These forms are ‘postulated’
The Higgs-boson particle in the Large Hadron Collider cannot be directly observed because it is highly unstable and decays almost immediately. Scientists detect the particles resulting from its decay and use these traces to confirm the presence of the Higgs Boson particle.
It’s not testable or predictable!
I’ll have a little to say about testability in the next section, but it should be known, as I have said throughout, that I am taking an abductive (best-theory-given-the-data) approach. Specifically, when talking about the origin of the first organism, Intelligent Design doesn’t actually claim supernatural or law-breaking actions (as stated with the hyper-intelligent alien hypothesis)
As a matter of fact, the theory has predictive consequences about how life may look like, and the causal powers of physical or material mechanisms
Lastly, the reason I raise this point is to speak directly to those who claim that a design theory isn’t ‘scientific’. You’re free to make that claim, of course, but you also would need an agreed-upon, formal definition of ‘science’ (which you do not have) to make the claim actually sting. Of course, I would also need to have such definition myself if I were to claim that such theory was scientific, but I’m not necessarily bothered about doing that, because even if such theory weren’t scientific…
#2:Speedrunning Irrationality – Lesson 1: Scientism and Verificationism
Anyone that’s at least moderately involved in these sorts of topics has probably heard the atheist say something along the lines of “Science is the only way to truth” or “Scientific knowledge is the only important form of knowledge”. Both ideas essentially come from what is known as verificationism, which is the proposition that “a statement is only meaningful if it is either analytic or empirically verifiable”.
A quick run-down is in order:
Analytic statements are true by definition, because their truth is determined solely by the definitions of the words involved. For example, “humans are rational creatures” is an analytic statement, because it is part of the nature, or ‘essence’, of humans to be rational.
Synthetic statements are statements that are true depending on the state of the world – for example, “the cat is on the mat” is a synthetic statement – its truth value depends on the state of the world around you.
Empirically verifiable statements are subsets of synthetic statements – they are amenable to empirical verification (i.e., they can be tested and proven to be true)
You might have spotted a glaring issue with verificationism by now – i.e., it’s neither an analytic or empirically verifiable statement. This means that it is self-refuting – i.e., it does not meet it’s own standard, or it undermines itself.
But how bad can it get? The answer is pretty bad, because verificationism entails a scientistic (i.e., scientific knowledge is the only meaningful knowledge) take on reality. Take for example, the following argument2:
The predictive power and technological applications of science are unparalleled by those of any other purported source of knowledge.
Therefore what science reveals to us is probably all that is real.
Let’s rephrase it a little:
Metal detectors have had far greater success in finding coins and other metallic objects in more places than any other method has.
Therefore what metal detectors reveal to us (coins and other metallic objects) is probably all that is real.
It should be pretty clear the level of absurdity verificationist/scientistic thinking leads to, and a few examples of things the metal detector misses out are listed:
Statements about the past and future (especially historical methods of research)
Private, subjective, first person mental states, which scientific statements themselves are dependent on
Laws of nature and therefore mathematical axioms (science, or at the very least physics for example, presupposes these)
Metaphysical questions (especially ones telling us how to do science – the answer to the question “Why should I prefer the simplest explanation?” is a philosophical question, not scientific one)
Ethical questions, and other questions pertaining to moral responsibility.
Theological questions
What this means is that science cannot, even in principle, give you a complete description of reality. This is perfectly fine, because science was never supposed to do that in the first place.
#3:The Modern Scientific Method’s debt
Much of what I say here will be drawn from a dime of a video made about a year and a half ago by David Wood, but I’ll throw in some extra stuff as well. If you’re feeling lazy and don’t want to read, then I recommend you check it out.
The pioneers of the Scientific Revolution, which took place during the 16th century to the 17th century were all Christians – but why? Why did the scientific revolution ‘spring forth’ from the Christian society, and why would it be very difficult for it to have come from an atheist society?
Names such as Nicolaus Copernicus, Galileo Galilei, Johannes Kepler and Isaac Newton are quite famous today, but it’s not very common knowledge that all of these scientists were Christians.
An English philosopher and scientist, Francis Bacon, who was also Christian, might give us a clue as to the reasoning for this common denominator. He writes:
“Man by the fall fell at the same time from his state of innocence and from his dominion over nature. Both of these losses, however, can even in this life be in some part repaired; the former by religion and faith, the latter by arts and sciences”
More examples are in order. It was Johannes Kepler that said:
“I was merely thinking God’s thoughts after Him. Since we astronomers are priests of the highest God in regard to the book of nature, it benefits us to be thoughtful, not of the glory of our minds, but rather, above all else, of the glory of God.”
He saw divine order in the mathematical precision that described planetary motion, and the three laws he discovered that described that motion.
Most foremost, Isaac Newton argued thoroughly for design based on his discoveries in physics, biology and astronomy. He argued for the intelligent design of the eye in his work ‘Opticks’ and argued for design elsewhere in his work – the Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy (the principia), where he attributes the initial positioning of celestial bodies to the work of a designer.
Now we’ve got a clue – science was seen to be a religious activity. Scientists during this period believed three, Judeo-Christian, things:
There is a reasonable God
Who created a reasonable universe
Man, by use of his reason, could find out the Universe’s form
As a matter of fact, this kind of teleological thinking is even evident in the Bible. Romans 1:20, reads:
“For since the creation of the world his invisible attributes—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, because they are understood through what has been made. So people are without excuse.”
Now the answers to the questions “Why didn’t modern science develop in China?” or “Why did modern science develop at the time it did (~17th Century, not the ~15th Century)?” seem to have clearer answers. The notion that the universe is intelligible is a fundamentally religious idea – early scientists believed that a reasonable creator used mathematical principles to design it. They also believed that the pursuit of truth was ‘redemptive’ (i.e., good). For example, learning for the sake of learning is religious, as science was seen as a form of worship. For example, Copernicus’ groundbreaking work ‘On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres’ was dedicated to Pope Paul III, and in its preface he says:
“For who could set this luminary in this most beautiful temple and not admire the work of the Creator?”
It was around this time that marked the beginning of the scientific revolution. The Bible was seen as the book of God’s words, and the world (as shown by the passage of Romans 1:20 above) was seen as the book of God’s works. After the invention of the printing press in 1440, information travelled around much faster and literacy rates skyrocketed. The mass production of books meant that ideas were easier to share and created a period of inquiry and debate, which was instrumental to fostering an intellectual environment, which had matured well by the time of the scientific revolution in the next two centuries.
Years before this, in monasteries, monastic scholars Christians increased their understanding of the Bible by:
Hypothesizing
Testing that Hypothesis
Modifying that Hypothesis (as necessary)
These heavily influenced the methods of learning at institutions such as Oxford and Cambridge in the 12th and 13th centuries, which grew out of such monasteries, and by the 17th century, such method had become a standard method of scientific inquiry.
In fact, regarding Galileo’s ideas, the theologian Cardinal Bellarmine himself had made the following statement in 1615 in a public letter to Paolo Foscarini, a Carmelite friar who was a defender of Copernican ideas:
“If there were a true demonstration that . . . the sun does not circle the earth but the earth circles the sun, then one would have to proceed with great care in explaining the Scriptures that appear contrary, and say rather that we do not understand them than that what is demonstrated is false.”
He makes the point that it is not necessarily the case that the Bible is wrong, but just its interpretation.
Now, what of the naturalist that says “but surely science could have come to be from an Atheistic society?”
Most certainly not.
The Modern Scientific Method (testing hypotheses) presupposes that the world has an intelligible order, and the laws of Nature are put in place by a divine creator. If Naturalism were true, would you ever go searching for equations that you have no reason to even think are there? If Mathematics is a language that describes the world around us and makes it intelligible, then doesn’t it make sense to say that we are surrounded by words?
In essence, there are three things you need to believe to get Science off the ground:
The Universe can be understood
We are the sorts of things can understand it
It is good to understand it
Supposing Christian theism, all three of these premises are expected, but supposing naturalism, shouldn’t survival and reproduction be our one and only goal? After all, it was Darwin who said:
“But then with me the horrid doubt always arises whether the convictions of man’s mind, which has been developed from the mind of the lower animals, are of any value or at all trustworthy. Would any one trust in the convictions of a monkey’s mind, if there are any convictions in such a mind?”
I don’t think a conclusion is necessary this time 🙂
Sources:
Chapter 19 – Signature in the Cell, Stephen C. Meyer
0. Prologmena – Scholastic Metaphysics, a Contemporary Introduction – Ed Feser
If you’ve been paying good attention to my writings throughout this series, you may have noticed me consistently affirming that ‘there are things I do not think naturalism can explain’ – along with bits and pieces of reasons throughout. Of course, I have purely philosophical reasons, in addition to historical arguments for the resurrection and a testimony of personal experience to rationally justify my Christian belief. Aside from my last point, this specific post is largely aimed at providing mostly scientific (though largely philosophical at the end) reasons for which I do not hold to a Strong Naturalistic view of Evolution, but rather a model of Evolutionary Creation.
My reasons can be summarised as follows:
Cellular Functional Information and Abiogenesis
The Emergence of Sexual Reproduction
The Mind
Dominance
To be fair, point 1 could support a Deistic model, but when adding 2, 3, and 4 I think that, overall, my reasons are more expected from a more strictly judeo-Christian God.
#1: Cellular Functional Information and Abiogenesis
Quite uncontroversially, information can be defined as ‘a sequence of characters that produces some specific effect’. According to information theory, information and probability are inversely correlated. Although the longer a sequence of characters is, the more information-carrying capacity it has, it would also mean that it is less likely to convey meaningful content because it is more likely that it would contain useless characters.
For example, the sequence ‘mp’ doesn’t contain any useful information (at least, in the context of the formal English language), but all you need to do is switch the ‘p’ for an ‘e’ and all of a sudden the sequence not only carries information but meaning.
There are 262 two-letter, alphabetical sequences, and only a small fraction of these are actual formal English words. If you lengthen the word to something like ‘messy’, you do get something longer. However, presuming random selection, you also reduce the probability of landing on a formal English word (as there are now 265 possible combinations), showing the inverse proportionality.
Why is this relevant? I’m glad you asked.
It is quite well known that DNA is the information storage centre of the cell, but not many have stopped to think what exactly it means to be ‘information’. Abiogenesis, simply put, is the idea that life arose from non-life about 3.5 billion years ago on Earth. It tries to propose a natural explanation for the origin of such information, and Strong Naturalistic Evolutionists would essentially have to prove that the following stages are reproducible under prebiotic conditions:
The stages are explained as follows:
Inorganic Molecules: The starting point involves simple inorganic compounds like water (H₂O), carbon dioxide (CO₂), methane (CH₄), and ammonia (NH₃).
Simple Organic Molecules: These inorganic compounds combine under the right conditions (e.g., lightning, UV radiation) to form basic organic molecules like amino acids and nucleotides.
Polymerization: These organic molecules must link together to form more complex structures like RNA strands and proteins. This stage involves creating long chains from simpler building blocks.
Self-Replicating Systems: The emergence of molecules capable of self-replication (like RNA) marks a critical step. The “RNA World Hypothesis” suggests that RNA could store information and catalyze its own replication.
Protocells: Self-replicating molecules must become encapsulated within membrane-like structures, forming protocells that maintain an internal environment distinct from the outside.
Primitive Metabolism: These protocells need basic metabolic pathways to harness energy and sustain themselves, possibly involving simple redox reactions.
True Cells: Finally, these primitive systems evolve into the first simple cells, resembling prokaryotes, capable of growth, division, and evolution.
Proteins (stage 3) are large, complex molecules that are made up of amino acids that are joined up in a specific sequence, and this sequence determines the protein’s structure and function. These amino acids that constitute them are smaller organic molecules, and they are determined by a corresponding sequence of things called ‘codons’ in something else called messenger-RNA (mRNA) – more simply, you get a specific amino acid because of a specific sequence of mRNA, and this mRNA is formed by a transcription of DNA. DNA, specifically, depends on certain sequences of nucleotide bases – these are adenine [A], thymine [T], cytosine [C], and guanine [G]. The picture should be starting to clear up a little now, but essentially, our genome can be seen as one very long ‘word’ that specifies extremely complex behaviour within our bodies.
But wait, that’s not all.
Proteins aren’t two-dimensional. Their three-dimensional shapes exhibit complex shapes, irregular arrangements, and most importantly, specificity. This is to say, some features must either be exactly what they are or within very fine boundaries for the overall protein to function. But, remember, these things are all determined by a sequence of nucleotide base pairs in a given DNA sequence.
Hypothesis 1:Chance
Now, take all this dizzying complexity, and plug it into a ‘chance theory’ of abiogenesis, which is one of the two (or maybe three) real options open to the Strong Naturalistic evolutionist, we start to see some glaring problems.
Firstly, specificity requires the correct letter-by-letter creation of a protein, however, this seems very improbable presuming you are going with some form of primordial soup starting point – i.e., the idea that these organic molecules had somehow formed and ‘knocked into each other until something happened’.
Secondly, such formation also requires solely peptide bonds, which roughly halves the probability because non-peptide bonds also form. Another thing to note is that the subset of proteins that are functional among all the combinations of amino acids is extremely low.
Thirdly, well, let’s actually run the numbers:
Most functional proteins are made of hundreds of amino acids, with an average size of about 300 amino acids2 – but presuming amino acids in a prebiotic soup may be simpler – let’s take a number on the smaller side – 150.
As stated, peptide bonds between amino acids form with a probability of about ½, so the probability of an amino acid forming by chance is about 1 x (½)150 = 1 chance in 1045.
Next, in nature every amino acid found in proteins (with one exception) has a distinct mirror-image of itself. There is one left-handed version (L-form) and one right-handed version (D-form), called optical isomers. Functional proteins only tolerate left-handed amino acids, so we need to square the previous probability – to get 1 chance in 1090
Maxwell Professor of Molecular Biology at Biola University, Douglas Axe shared in 2007 his calculation of the ratio of (a) the number of 150 amino acid sequences that produce any functional proteins whatsoever to (b) the number of possible amino acid sequences of 150 amino acids to be 1 chance in 1074.
All we have to do is multiply these independent probabilities together – 1090 + 74 = 164. This is the probability of getting even one functional protein of modest length, from prebiotic soup.
With all of these charges, one could raise the point – “Surely given all the possibilities and chances in the universe, such things could happen?” It’s a fair question, so let’s look at what probabilistic ‘resources’ the universe has to offer.
We can do this by calculating the number of possible events that could have happened since the beginning of the universe. By doing this, we can establish an upper boundary for how many ‘event resources’ the observable universe could possibly work with:
There are about 1080elementary particles in the observable universe, and because there is an upper limit on the speed of light, only those parts of the universe that are observable (i.e., could have affected events on Earth) are relevant to this calculation – as otherwise would be presuming that some events can break lightspeed.
There are also about 1017 seconds that have passed since the Big Bang.
Due to the properties of gravity, matter, and electromagnetic radiation, physicists have determined that there is a limit on the number of physical transitions that can occur from one state to another within a given unit of time. According to physicists, a physical transition from one state to another cannot take place faster than light can traverse the smallest significant unit of distance – the Planck length (10-33 cm), which takes light 10-43 seconds to travel.
This would put an upper bound of 1080 + 17 + 43 = 140possible atomic events/collisions in the observable universe since the origin of the universe. Other calculations have been made, and this is a higher bound, but it won’t help the naturalists’ case.
Using these generous numbers that we have found, we notice that, by chance, the universe does not have enough opportunities (10140) to even compensate for functional proteins forming by chance alone (1 chance in 10164). This does not mean that this would be impossible, but it would mean that if it did happen, doing some simple statistical hypothesis testing would show that almost certainly there would have been some other cause ‘helping it out’.
Hypothesis 2:Necessity
A second hypothesis put forward is the ‘necessity’ hypothesis – i.e., that there are some biochemical laws that exert themselves upon matter to make it such that the first cell was physically ‘predestined’. It also claims that chemical processes are deterministic (i.e., always produce the same outputs given the same inputs), and it must prove a couple of things:
Reproducibility in Laboratory Conditions
That there are multiple pathways to life
One may ask – isn’t it sufficient to show just one pathway? In a sense, yes, however, this single pathway may just easily be dismissed as a fluke, rather than an inevitable result. If there are multiple pathways – even with different starting points or slightly different conditions – it supports the idea that life will emerge as long as basic biochemical/environmental criteria are met.
Predictive models: The hypothesis should produce models that predict the environmental conditions under which life is likely to arise
Universality of principles: The hypothesis would need to show that the principles leading to life are universal, applying not just to Earth, but any environment with similar conditions
Multiple models have been put forward to try to propose some form of necessity. Dean Kenyon and Gary Steinman co-authored Biochemical Predestination in 1969, proposing a deterministic model and theorizing that the specific properties of amino acids and other biomolecules drive them to self-organize into complex structures, but Kenyon later retracted his support for this idea, moving toward intelligent design.
Michael Polanyi, a philosopher and scientist, critiqued purely materialistic and deterministic models of life’s origin, arguing that life and biological information cannot be reduced solely to chemistry and physics – for example, the bonding properties of each nucleotide are specified below – the image is taken from Stephen Meyer’s book – Signature in the Cell:
Just as the properties of building blocks do not determine a building, the bases do not determine DNA, and indeterminacy is actually necessary for complexity, because determinism leads to repetitiveness, not specificity.
Another model proposed is by Stuart Kaufmann, who has proposed models based on the idea of self-organization, but Meyer says that Kaufmann’s model doesn’t properly answer the specificity of sequencing itself, but rather presupposes specificity (which is begging the question).
Therefore, necessitarian models do not sufficiently explain the data we have at hand, so the most popular approach nowadays is to merge hypotheses 1 and 2.
Hypothesis 3:Chance and Necessity
The most popular hypothesis today is what is known as the RNA world hypothesis. This hypothesis states that RNA molecules were the first to both store genetic information and catalyse chemical reactions.
Without getting too much into the weeds of things, the RNA world hypothesis needs to show five things:
The plausible prebiotic formation of nucleotides and their assembly into RNA.
The emergence of functional, self-replicating RNA molecules.
The stability and persistence of RNA in prebiotic environments.
The formation of protocells that could contain and protect RNA.
The transition from RNA-based life to the DNA-protein world.
However, the hypothesis faces significant challenges:
RNA molecules are hard to synthesize and easy to destroy, especially in aqueous environments, where it can easily degrade through hydrolysis – which means that it is very difficult to replicate such processes as would be expected in prebiotic scenarios.
RNA-based replication systems are also ridiculously hard and maybe even impossible to create. While some ribozymes have been shown to catalyze RNA replication in lab settings, fully self-sustaining RNA replication with high fidelity is far from being realized.
The hypothesis also doesn’t explain the origin of biological information. Remember that RNA already has functional information contained inside of it in its nucleotides. So, such models basically presuppose a mix of a random and necessitarian formation of such nucleotides and sequences.
In essence, even the RNA world hypothesis begs the question. If RNA itself needs functional information to form, then this model is almost certainly inherently incapable of explaining the origin of functional information without deferring to random natural processes – which, although necessary for complexity as we have seen, is incredibly improbable on its own.
Ultimately, whether “Chance and Necessity” is able to explain the emergence of life on Earth isn’t really a problem for my model at all. Since I am taking a more abductive approach, all I need to really show in this section is that even if it does, or somehow will in the future – the sheer improbability of these circumstances coming to be on their own is almost certainly enough to rationally justify, or lend credence to a conscious external source of information – especially since information almost always comes from such source. However low a probability someone would like to assign to such source is up to them – and whether they think this source is a super-intelligent alien is not really my concern, but I don’t think it can be reasonably driven as low as probabilities required by some form of chance hypothesis necessitated by naturalism’s view that the universe operates solely according to natural laws and forces. I think this is sufficient evidence to justify a belief in, at least, one supernatural initial miracle to get evolution started (if it even did) for my model.
#2: The Emergence of Sexual Reproduction
This point is something I’ve thought about and haven’t got a real source for, and not much will really be said here. The problem is as follows:
Naturalistic hypotheses almost always propose the formation of initial organisms that will reproduce via asexual means because sexual reproduction necessitates the existence of multiple organisms that ‘know’ about each other (to reproduce) – therefore needing them to account for at least two reproductively compatible species or organisms. Even if this is not the case, such processes must account for species that, at some point in the past, had some common ancestor that just ‘decided’ (in some way, either through chemical randomness or necessity) to start reproducing via sexual means.
One could propose that two separate ancestor species started copulating with each other and that the organisms on Earth that reproduce this way are descended from this species, but one also needs to account for the probability of such an occurrence given naturalism, given Earth’s conditions, given reproductive compatibility, given probability of ‘meeting’ (i.e., being in the same place at the same time) and other concerns such as survivability of offspring. At the very least, it seems like such an occurrence is much more probable under Theism (“it is not good for the man to be alone”).
There do exist proposed solutions to this problem, but it is certainly not yet solved. For example, the ‘gradual transition’ hypothesis and the belief that early eukaryotes are believed to have first reproduced sexually still suffer from questions relating to the origin of DNA, and specifically the DNA for such a process, which I have proposed above. Although the ‘Red Queen Hypothesis’ suggests that sexual reproduction likely helps species ‘keep up’ in the evolutionary arms race against rapidly evolving parasites and pathogens, the question being asked here is not whether this process is beneficial, but rather how it, presupposing only natural forces and laws, came to be at all. Gradual processes involving incremental steps toward full sexual reproduction such as gene transfer might provide some sort of explanation, but surely anyone can see that this seems to get dangerously close to the teleology and purposiveness of such biological processes which, again, seems vastly more probable under Theism.
#3: The Mind
Firstly, it should be noted that not all naturalists are ‘physicalists’. When it comes to predominantly Atheist viewpoints, there are ‘hierarchies’ of permissiveness when it comes to how ‘material’ people are about reality.
I’ll lean on a very smart Atheist philosopher, Graham Oppy, to define Naturalism for me:
“…there are two bits to naturalism…all of the causal entities that there are natural entities, and all the causal properties that there are natural properties…and the natural entities are just—the properties and entities that are amenable to study by the sciences, very broadly construed, right? So by “sciences,” I don’t just mean the formal sciences and the physical sciences, I mean the social sciences as well.”
For the sake of this post, we can limit the type of naturalism we are investigating to physicalists – those who believe that all that exists is the physical world. The distinction between physicalism and naturalism is this:
Physicalism states that reality is entirely physical, and therefore entails that reality can be explained by some ‘proper understanding’ of physics.
Reductive physicalists believe that everything can be ultimately reduced to physics and physical reality is all that exists.
Non-reductive physicalists believe that not everything cannot be ultimately reduced to physics, such as mental states or social phenomena – these phenomena are said to ‘emerge’ from physical processes.
Naturalism states that the only explanations are explanations afforded by the natural sciences, which could be biology, chemistry, or any other social sciences – not just limiting explanations to physics.
Now, it’s not for me to defend either of these positions, but the reason it is relevant this post is that there are a couple of things that naturalism needs to account for:
Intentionality: this would be the ‘directness’ or the ‘aboutness’ of thought toward some object/objective
Qualia: this would be the raw, qualitative, phenomenal ‘feel’ associated with experiences and other conscious mental states
Privacy: this is first person, privileged, subjective access to one’s own conscious states
Rationality: the ability to intellectually grasp abstract and universal concepts and propositions, and apply formal rules of inference
Now, we have already seen that, quite plausibly, the laws of biology cannot be reduced to pure physical phenomena (due to functional information), so it seems that mental properties, which are at least at that level, cannot be reduced to purely physical phenomena also. Therefore, I don’t really have much more to say directly to reductive physicalists.
Moving on to non-reductive physicalists, again, it seems like we don’t really have very good empirical evidence to verify at what point the mental phenomena above really begin to ‘emerge’ – what the dividing line is such that functional information simply ‘emerges’ from a structure or becomes irreducible (at least, presupposing a purely physical reality).
Furthermore, briefly, a physicalist view also seems to struggle empirically with distinguishing what parts of a causal process are actually relevant to an entire causal series. For example, presume that the mind is purely physical and every thought you have either (1) emerges from some neurons firing or (2) is directly caused by it. To what extent can we really say that these neurons were the sole relevant cause of the thought? Can we not say that the wind that blew, causing your eyes to look somewhere else caused a chain reaction that eventually led to the neurons firing is also equally relevant? In that case, to what extent can we really say that that which is ‘you’ is really just a biological substance – is it wrong to add the wind too? Why?
This seems to conflict with the reality of intentionality and qualia – the truly subjective feel of one’s experience and the directedness that we all experience. Worst of all, it seems to directly challenge the persistence of identity through time. In this case, how exactly would we be able to directly point at something essential that remains with you and makes you “you”, at any point in your life?
There are also difficulties in verifying the relationship between brain activity and mental activity, in that brain scans seem to necessarily struggle with accounting for mental processes. At most, brain scans might be just said to be able to explain the correlation between some phenomenological property and some given brain activity – but it is a large leap to claim that this is a causal relationship. For if it were, the Neuroscience community would likely be screaming ‘victory’ by now.
The points raised are similar to the ‘philosophical zombie’ argument that is popular in the field of the philosophy of Mind, which entertains the metaphysical possibility of beings that are physically identical to humans, yet do not experience consciousness. i.e.,
Premise 1: If it is conceivable that zombies could exist, then it is metaphysically possible that they exist.
Premise 2: If it is metaphysically possible for zombies to exist, then consciousness is not identical to or reducible to physical properties.
Conclusion: Therefore, physicalism is false because it cannot account for consciousness.
Now, one may doubt that conceivability entails metaphysical possibility – and I would actually agree with this person. I think imagination (which is like forming a material mental representation based on sensory information) entails metaphysical possibility, but not conception (which is just forming a notion or idea of something). However, simply the fact that my brain is not numerically identical (i.e., exactly the same as) to my mother’s, yet we both (arguably) experience mental phenomena shows that there is something common between human brains that likely allows for mental phenomena that likely can’t be reduced to physics, or purely emerges from physics. I suppose that the physicalist would need to show (at some point in the far future maybe) what such commonality is that entails such experiences. Now, whether the Zombie argument works isn’t really my point here – rather, I simply want to show the sheer difficulty the natural sciences have when it comes to explaining mental properties through physics or natural sciences alone – Theism seems to have much fewer problems.
As for Naturalism as a whole, well, I think the whole of point 1 can be devoted to providing an evidential argument against it. As I said in that section, if you wish to credit the beginning of humanity’s existence to a hyper-intelligent alien, that is up to you. However, I think later blog posts will help us to zero in on what kind of cause best explains other data.
The Naturalist could always object that ‘we don’t know enough yet’. Of course, but what we do know is that information does arise from conscious agents. Therefore, it seems to make sense that an agent that can impart information in another seems to be a better explanation for the origin of information than some non-conscious agent – especially since information generally degrades over time in a purely natural system – as stated by the idea of entropy in information theory:
As entropy increases, the system becomes less organized and more random, leading to the degradation of information content.
Lastly, a Naturalist also needs to explain our ability to grasp non-physical phenomena such as numbers, propositions, moral values, meaningful symbols and probably most interestingly, beauty – such as artistic beauty or music.
It seems quite evident that the pure probability of our dominance over other much-stronger and faster species presuming Strong Naturalistic Evolution and natural selection is very unlikely. When considering dangers, alongside natural disasters – it seems quite interesting that such a resilient, yet feeble species would eventually possess such a strong command over the natural world. Although intelligence is a very powerful trait, I suppose it is dubitable that intelligence alone (1) could have emerged naturally and (2) could have coupled itself so nicely with our other biological qualities to have us reign so supremely.
Ultimately, I think I have given good reason to support why a theistic model of evolutionary creation is preferable to a naturalist version. My argument has not been deductive, but rather abductive. I am not saying that naturalists will never be able to explain these things, but rather, that Theism will likely always provide a much better explanation for things such as the origin of DNA, the origin of sexual reproduction, mental phenomena, and our intellectual dominance.
If you’ve got any thoughts or objections, go ahead and leave them below!
Thanks,
Rookie
Sources:
Point 1 relies heavily on material taken from Signature in the Cell by Stephen C. Meyer
The 300 Amino Acid average is taken from Alberts, B., et al. “Molecular Biology of the Cell.” 6th edition. Garland Science, 2014