| I feel very uneasy about the word
evolution since it is so often employed to describe a
progression of life that developed without any intelligent
guidance at any point. While some Evangelicals may believe
in that kind of "unguided evolution," I would
rather just stay away from the word because I certainly
do not believe life could have arisen by a purely random
process even with the factor of "natural selection
of the fittest" thrown in as a guiding mechanism.
By contrast, I think develop is a nicer
word evolve since it does not tend to push us to believe
no guiding hand is involved. It clearly allows the involvement
of intelligence in the process. Thus, for example I
would prefer to speak of the development of the American
automobile in the 20th century rather than the evolu-
tion of the American automobile in the 20th century.
Since thousands of intelligent engineers were involved
at every moment.
But this attitude toward evolution
as a word is just my personal preference. I know that
in the English lan- guage a secondary use of the word
evolution is fairly common in processes where human
beings are involved with guiding hands. People do speak
of the evolution of the computer, for example, when
it is not at all a case where computers evolved without
guid- ance. And in this sense you could speak of the
evolu- tion of the American automobile.
However, one might read somewhere of
"The evo- lution of dogs from wolves and wheat,
corn, rice, and potatoes from almost inedible forms
of plant life." Such developments certainly took
place all right, but it is irretrievably true that those
derivations would not have happened had some very intelligent
human beings not been involved in the process--a use
of the word evolution, note, in the guided sense. Indeed
those developments may actually peg the time human life
appeared. But remember, this is not the usual use of
the word evolution. Intelligent external involvement
is not the most common usage of the word evolution.
Thus, if we recognize that evolution
usually means specifically "unguided" development,
we cannot then wisely speak of the evolution of either
dogs or potatoes because these were developments that
were definitely guided by intelligence, high intelligence,
clearly not unguided evolution. Intelligence was certainly
involved in the process.
Yet the ambiguity will continue to
exist. When you hear that "the Pope believes in
evolution" you really don't know whether he is
talking about a process that is guided or unguided.
For example, an older denomi- nation recently took a
poll of its members and found that 1) 99% believe "The
universe was created by God," and 2) 92% believe
that "Life is so complex that it has to be the
outcome of intelligent design," and yet 3) 85%
believe that "Evolution theory is compatible with
the idea of God as Creator."
In this case I feel sure that the people
who believe in unguided evolution, who are many, are
not many in this poll. Quite likely most of the 85%
are expecting intelligent guidance to be involved in
the process.
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