I love science. Total geeky love it. I took a college chemistry course for fun. Fun I tell you. I needed to spend some time around grownups so it was some random college course, knitting or cooking and I chose chemistry. See total science geek. Love it.
So why am I a starving artist instead of being in some high paid STEM field? That is too psychologically complicated for a blog post. I predict it would take a few good years of therapy to even figure it out. Anyway, back to the blog.
last night, as I was cooking and my son was busy with his math homework, we were watching
Why people laugh at Creationists http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vyd6om8IC4M on you tube. We like to watch these videos because, in all honesty, we love sarcastic humor. (Now you may have the idea that I am raising a mean sarcastic little bugger and I wouldn't blame you for having that idea but it is wrong. Mathew is know for being kind and sweet and there will be a future post all about that. )
I like sharing these videos with him for a few reasons. First he gets to hear both sides of the argument. Yes one side is ridiculed but they do a good job of actually presenting that side before they rip into it. Second he gets introduced to rational thinking and learns to identify some basic forms of rhetoric. I am not quiet ready to fully teach him about rhetoric but to live as a successful adult in this world, he is going to have to learn it. I have a feeling my little politician will love it as much as his nonconformist mother hates it. Yep rhetoric and statistics are the two things I know he will not full learn in school that I am really dreading having to teach. But it has to be done.
Anyway, back to the blog. So we are watching Ken Ham giving his usually yada yada and Mathew argues back at him, "There is no God evolution is true."
Normally I would tell him to leave it and finish his math but this crossed that old indoctrination line, so in I waded.
"Mathew, you don't have to be an atheist to believe in evolution."
He looked at me like I was crazy, "I am an atheist and evolution is true."
"But what about all your gods?" I thought about Santa Clause and realized that this year the jolly fat man would not be visiting our house. Mathew was leaving the age of belief and headed into a whole new world view. "Mathew you can believe in God and still understand evolution."
I remembered a discussion we had a few weeks ago about evolution. He had said that the gods had to do it because how else did the DNA knew what traits the animal would need. It took a good long time, lots of examples and diagrams as we tried to sort out random mutation from natural selection. It seems like a simple concept but there is a lot of causation to get pointed round the right way. I was not sure he had it all sorted and supposed we would have further discussions about it. "Lots of people believe in God and evolution." I was pleading I think. Not really ready for him to leave all the magic behind.
He looked at me. His mouth drawn in a tight line his eyes a little sad for his apparently stupid mom, "Mom, really, if God doesn't do evolution what is he doing up there?" and with that it was clear, my son has decided that he has no need for that particular hypothesis (God).
So maybe the creationist are right. Not about the reality of how the amazing diversity of life came to be here. About that they are defiantly definitively wrong. What they are right about is the threat that an understanding of evolution can be to faith. If your faith is stitched loosely to the mundane, to the animal caporal being that is us, understanding evolution could tear those threads. However, those who's faith reaches much deeper into the sublime, creative ethereal parts of our nature need not rankle at the idea of evolution.
So why am I a starving artist instead of being in some high paid STEM field? That is too psychologically complicated for a blog post. I predict it would take a few good years of therapy to even figure it out. Anyway, back to the blog.
last night, as I was cooking and my son was busy with his math homework, we were watching
Why people laugh at Creationists http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vyd6om8IC4M on you tube. We like to watch these videos because, in all honesty, we love sarcastic humor. (Now you may have the idea that I am raising a mean sarcastic little bugger and I wouldn't blame you for having that idea but it is wrong. Mathew is know for being kind and sweet and there will be a future post all about that. )
I like sharing these videos with him for a few reasons. First he gets to hear both sides of the argument. Yes one side is ridiculed but they do a good job of actually presenting that side before they rip into it. Second he gets introduced to rational thinking and learns to identify some basic forms of rhetoric. I am not quiet ready to fully teach him about rhetoric but to live as a successful adult in this world, he is going to have to learn it. I have a feeling my little politician will love it as much as his nonconformist mother hates it. Yep rhetoric and statistics are the two things I know he will not full learn in school that I am really dreading having to teach. But it has to be done.
Anyway, back to the blog. So we are watching Ken Ham giving his usually yada yada and Mathew argues back at him, "There is no God evolution is true."
Normally I would tell him to leave it and finish his math but this crossed that old indoctrination line, so in I waded.
"Mathew, you don't have to be an atheist to believe in evolution."
He looked at me like I was crazy, "I am an atheist and evolution is true."
"But what about all your gods?" I thought about Santa Clause and realized that this year the jolly fat man would not be visiting our house. Mathew was leaving the age of belief and headed into a whole new world view. "Mathew you can believe in God and still understand evolution."
I remembered a discussion we had a few weeks ago about evolution. He had said that the gods had to do it because how else did the DNA knew what traits the animal would need. It took a good long time, lots of examples and diagrams as we tried to sort out random mutation from natural selection. It seems like a simple concept but there is a lot of causation to get pointed round the right way. I was not sure he had it all sorted and supposed we would have further discussions about it. "Lots of people believe in God and evolution." I was pleading I think. Not really ready for him to leave all the magic behind.
He looked at me. His mouth drawn in a tight line his eyes a little sad for his apparently stupid mom, "Mom, really, if God doesn't do evolution what is he doing up there?" and with that it was clear, my son has decided that he has no need for that particular hypothesis (God).
So maybe the creationist are right. Not about the reality of how the amazing diversity of life came to be here. About that they are defiantly definitively wrong. What they are right about is the threat that an understanding of evolution can be to faith. If your faith is stitched loosely to the mundane, to the animal caporal being that is us, understanding evolution could tear those threads. However, those who's faith reaches much deeper into the sublime, creative ethereal parts of our nature need not rankle at the idea of evolution.