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Using Imagination and Thinking |
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| Nipawin - November 21 - by: Mario deSantis | |
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absolute |
My head spins at a higher gear as I reflect on the recent educational and political controversies |
| about creationism and evolution. What has been bothering me is that the dogmatic and literal | |
| belief that the world was created in six days and that Sunday is a day of rest will further | |
| educational and social changes focused on the understanding that reality is an absolute entity. | |
| And therefore, our kids must learn this absolute reality mostly by memorizing and discerning | |
| what is absolutely right and what is absolutely wrong. In this absolute real world there is no | |
| room for thinking, imagining and learning; the reality is out there in front of you and you as a | |
| kid, or as an adult are going to be taught how to think and what to do(1). On the other hand, | |
| evolution has been equated to Darwin's Origin of Species and as a consequence life is nothing | |
| else but a struggle for the survival of the fittest. As I have already mentioned in previous articles, | |
| evolution has nothing to do with the work of Darwin, instead evolution (or life) can be | |
| explained as a biological phenomenon(2). | |
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theory |
Which theory is right and which theory is wrong? First of all, evolution and creation are theories, |
| and a theory is not either an absolute reality or a truth. What I am interested, is in finding out | |
| how I can understand better these two theories to have a better explanation of the world I live in. | |
| I have been lucky in this respect, because I just got one explanation from Michael Finley, a | |
| novelist, a technologist and a management scientist. In his recent newsletter(3), Finley writes: | |
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ambitious technologies |
When Adam and Eve were driven out of the garden, they knew nothing and had nothing. Imagine their desolation, having to overcome everything: Hunger. Ignorance. Disease. Powerlessness. Isolation... |
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now |
In few words, Finley theorizes that life is a biological phenomenon, with patterns and |
| relationships in the past, and with patterns and relationships in the now. The past is our | |
| evolutionary past, and the now is our creationism. Now, this explanation doesn't include | |
| the future, and therefore the future is for us to create through our imagination and our | |
| thinking. | |
| ------------References/endnotes: | |
| List of relevant articles http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign | |
| The stork brings babies and the Earth is flat, Joe Fiorito, October 31, 2000 National Post | |
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| Biology's Room With a View, Lloyd Fell and David Russell | |
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| Future Shoes: "Invisible Angels", November 18, 2000, Finley's Weekly Letter | |
| The people used in today's Adam and Eve illustration were borrowed from an Australian naturalism magazine web site. | |