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CHANCE,PURPOSE, AND PROGRESS IN EVOLUTION AND CHRISTIANITY
Authors:Lucas J. Mix  Joanna Masel
Affiliation:1. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, , Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138;2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, , Tucson, Arizona, 85721
Abstract:
Evolutionary biology has a complex relationship with ideas of chance, purpose, and progress. Probability plays a subtle role; strikingly, founding figures in statistics were motivated by evolutionary questions. The findings of evolutionary biology have been used both in support of narratives of progress, and in their deconstruction. Likewise, professional biologists bring to their scientific work a set of preconceptions about chance and progress, grounded in their philosophical, religious, and/or political views. From the religious side, questions of purpose are ever‐present. We explore this interplay in five broad categories: chance, progress, intelligence, eugenics, and the evolution of religious practices, each the subject of a semester long symposium. The intellectual influence of evolutionary biology has had a broad societal impact in these areas. Based on our experience, we draw attention to a number of relevant facts that, while accepted by experts in their respective fields, may be unfamiliar outside them. We list common areas of miscommunication, including specific examples and discussing causes: sometimes semantics and sometimes more substantive knowledge barriers. We also make recommendations for those attempting similar dialogue.
Keywords:Determinism  epistemology  interdisciplinarity  nature of science  personhood  religion  teleology
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