0101 ‘Something’2, captured in the stories of Adam and Eve2, transforms Craig’s definition3 into an inquiry3.
The presence of the ancient Near East and Genesis 2:4-111 is located in the Ubaid, Uruk and Sumerian Dynastic of southern Mesopotamia. In particular, the historical Adam is united with a primeval… er… primordial trauma corresponding to the start of the Ubaid.
0102 At the time of Christ, no one knows this. Instead, everyone understands that Adam originates humanity’s tragic flaw. Adam and Eve are regarded as causes, in the scientific sense of the word, rather than signs.
0103 Today, I suggest that the stories ofAdam and Eve are signs of the start of the Ubaid. The Ubaid associates to the start of civilization of southern Mesopotamia. The Ubaid also marks the start of our current Lebenswelt and the beginning of the end of the Lebenswelt that we evolved in.
0104 In Part Two, Craig’s definition3 turns into an inquiry3.
The actuality2 of this inquiry3 concerns the contiguity between the archaeological periods of southern Mesopotamia2 and the Genesis Primeval History2.
The meaning1 and message1 remain the same. But, the presence1 corresponds to the start of our current Lebenswelt.Our current Lebenswelt manifests humanity’s tragic flaw, where humankind tends to destroy what God has made good.
0105 Here is a picture.
0106 Yes, our current Lebenswelt (of speech-alone talk and unconstrained social complexity) is not the same as the Lebenswelt that we evolved in (of hand-talk and hand-speech talk and constrained social complexity).
The hypothesis is scientific. A change in the way humans talk potentiates unconstrained social complexity, such as civilization.
0107 Yes, Craig’s failure to identify Adam with the start of the Ubaid stems from a failure in the scientific imagination.
Craig imagines that there is only one creation of humans.
The hypothesis of the first singularity changes all that.
0108 Consider two e-works for a direct discussion: The First Singularity and Its Fairy Tale Trace and Comments on Original Sin and Original Death: Romans 5:12-19.
Also consider a fictional account where the hypothesis is presented in dramatic form. An Archaeology of the Fall is accompanied by an Instructor’s Guide, for adults who want to lead discussion seminars for high school and college students.
0109 ‘Something’ that is captured in Genesis 2:4-11 and the origin myths of the ancient Near East is brought to consciousness in the New Testament (C’). The resurrection of Jesus calls all humankind, in our current Lebenswelt,because we are the ones who suffer from the tragic flaw originated by Adam. We are the ones who live in the Lebenswelt initiated by the Ubaid of southern Mesopotamia.
0112 This is the last blog concerning this particular book. I post this blog first, because WordPress places the latest blog closest to the top for each month. Chronologically, the first blog in a series appears last on the month’s list and the last blog eventually appears first. There is a certain logic to this, which I appreciate and adjust my posts accordingly. My goal is to limit my examinations to one-month duration.
0113 I summarize.
0114 First, Part Three of Craig’s book associates to Genesis 1:26, the intention of man. The time frame corresponds to the period after the domestication of fire and before the speciation of anatomically modern humans. Our religious sensibilities evolve during this period, as discussed in the e-masterwork, The Human Niche.
0115 Second, Part Two of Craig’s book attempts to define Genesis 2:4-11 as mytho-history. The attempt turns Craig’s definition into an inquiry concerning the first singularity. The first singularity associates to the start of the Ubaid culture of southern Mesopotamia. The hypothesis of the first singularity explains why our current Lebenswelt is not the same as the Lebenswelt that we evolved in. The consequences of the first singularity are captured by the stories of Adam and Eve. This is a theme in the e-masterwork, An Archaeology of the Fall, by Razie Mah, available at smashwords and other e-book venues.
0116 Third, Part One of Craig’s book sets a path to a category-based nested form, defining3 the stories of Adam and Eve2as emerging from (and situating) Jewish covenantal history (meaning1), the ancient Near East and Genesis 1-11 (presence1), and the notion that Adam originates humanity’s tragic flaw (message1). The categorical structure of definition is introduced in the e-masterwork, How to Define the Word “Religion”.
0117 Fourth, Part One presents ten family resemblances characterizing the term, “myth”. These family resemblances associate to all the elements in a three-tier interscope. The interscope is a relational structure, presented in the e-work, A Primer on Sensible and Social Construction.
0118 Fifth, Part Two fills in the interscope of myth with the ten family resemblances, leading to an understanding that Genesis 2:4-11 and the origin stories of the ancient Near East pertain to the same prehistoric events and processes, occurring during the Ubaid, the Uruk and the Sumerian Dynastic archaeological periods.
0119 Sixth, Part Three fails to capitalize on the fact that both the Genesis Primeval History and the origin stories of the ancient Near East portray a recent creation of humanity. This failure follows a lacuna in the modern discipline of Anthropology, which does not envision that our current Lebenswelt is not the Lebenswelt that we evolved in.
Why does modern Anthropology not register the first singularity?
Modern Anthropology self-identifies as science. Modern Anthropology belongs to the waning Age of Ideas.
The hypothesis of the first singularity belongs to the dawning Age of Triadic Relations. Peirce’s philosophy opens a new, semiotic consciousness. That consciousness calls for a postmodern Anthropology radically different from what modern intellectuals call “postmodern”.
0120 My thanks to William Lane Craig, for demonstrating the beauty of good English prose, even while missing the mark in his quest for the historical Adam.
0001 In this series of blogs, I examine John H. Walton’s book, The Lost World of Adam and Eve: Genesis 2-3 and the Human Origins Debate, published in 2015 by Intervarsity Press. John Walton is a Professor of the Old Testament and has published other commentaries.
0002 I examine this book from the point of views of (A) natural philosophy and (B) the hypothesis of the first singularity.
0003 From the first point of view (A), what Walton calls, “archetypal”, may also be construed as “noumenal”, as opposed to “phenomenal”. According to Comments on Jacques Maritain’s Book (1935) Natural Philosophy, modern science construes each thing as a noumenon and its phenomena. A noumenon is the thing itself. Phenomena are its observable and measurable facets. Science models phenomena. Science cannot address the noumenon, the thing itself.
0004 So, how we recognize noumena, things themselves?
Noumena are the subject of philosophical inquiry. Aristotle’s hylomorphe is the first step in philosophical inquiry. We perceive the thing itself, directly, as a dyadic relation containing two contiguous real elements. Aristotle calls the two real elements, matter and form.
What about the contiguity?
The contiguity will be placed in brackets.
I will use another one of Aristotle’s terms for the contiguity. The term has been the subject of a lot of wooly thinking. So, the choice is rich, in more ways than one.
0005 According to Charles Peirce, the category of secondness, the realm of actuality, consists in two contiguous real elements.
According to Aristotle, the hylomorphe is (basically) matter [substantiates] form. The verb, “substantiates”, is the same as the noun, “substance”.
Here is a picture.
0006 Human recognition of hylomorphes is immediate and intuitively natural.
Why?
We evolved to recognize noumena, things themselves.
This is how the ancient world thinks. Greek philosophers ask, “Why are there things instead of nothing?” The answer ends up with Aristotle’s proposal. The hylomorphe is the portal to natural philosophy. Natural philosophy considers things in themselves.
0007 Today, science-lovers fixate on phenomena, such as the observable and measurable aspects of a thing, called “original sin”. Then, they they build models for how Adam could be the direct cause of this thing.
In contrast, Walton argues that the civilizations of the ancient Near East look at this issue from the noumenal side. Adam is contiguous with what is wrong with the world. Paul wrestles with this hylomorphe in his famous letters to the Corinthians and the Romans.
0008 From the second point of view (B), Walton’s propositions appear more and more like a noumenon whose phenomena yield a novel scientific hypothesis. This novel hypothesis is formally proposed in the masterwork, An Archaeology of the Fall, available at smashwords and other e-book venues.
In 2015, John Walton and his collaborator, N.T. Wright, are not aware of this novelty. The hypothesis of the first singularity changes everything.
0009 In the conclusion, Walton states that his book demonstrates that Genesis 1 is concerned with God’s ordering of a grand sacred space with the goal of coming into relation with us. Genesis 2.4 starts with God planting humans within a sacred space, within the grand sacred space, only to find that we bite. We bite into the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Isn’t that smart?
0010 We deceive ourselves.
We introduce chaos into God’s order.
Oh, I meant to say, it is Adam’s fault.
0011 Weirdly, this sounds a lot like all the other origin stories of the ancient Near East, especially the ones recovered by archaeologists from royal libraries that burnt to the ground thousands of years ago. Cuneiform clay tablets fire into brick. The bricks retain their integrity even when buried by detritus. Then, they are excavated by modern archaeologists. Then, archaeologists miraculously find a way to read the script.
0012 Walton has the advantage of these archaeological discoveries. Walton has the advantage of new scholarship on Paul and the Jewish civilization during the Second Temple Period. Yet, he writes in the twilight of the Age of Ideas.
0013 This examination brings his propositions into the dawning Age of Triadic Relations.
Walton sets forth 21 propositions.To these, I attend.
Ancient documents simultaneously express esoteric and plain-speaking aspects.
They describe things unseen, as well as things seen.
0015 For sixteen centuries, interpreters of the Old and the New Testaments wrestle with both aspects, producing the great doctrines and codifying the contradictions inherent in Christian revelation.
Then, the sixteenth-century Reformers of northern Europe lobby to jettison the esoteric components and press for plain-spoken interpretations, that anyone can perform. They do so while retaining the great doctrines.
One hundred years of plain-speaking interpretations later, seventeenth-century Europeans encounter the arguments of the mechanical philosophers. Mechanical philosophers take plain-speaking to a whole new level. The scientific and industrial revolutions follow in the next two centuries.
0017 In the nineteenth century, archaeological excavations recover hundreds of thousands of cuneiform texts from tells (or “hills”) throughout the Near East. This inspires the inquiries that inform Walton’s book. How do reformers, in their plain-speaking tradition, confront this new evidence about the ancient Near East?
Ancient documents simultaneously express esoteric and plain-speaking aspects.
The esoteric aspects address those-in-the-know. The insiders hear one aspect.
The plain-speaking aspects address those-who-are-not-in-the-know. They are not exactly insiders. They are not outsiders, either. So, they need a plain message to grasp.
In the ancient Near East and in the Old Testament, the Hebrew terms for “creating” (bara) and making (asa) applies to establishing order by assigning roles and functions.
0019 In the modern world, “creating” and “making” concern material production of things, irrespective of roles and functions. Of course, moderns have the luxury of centuries of research into the material sciences. Modern science follows the dictates of the Positivist’s judgment, which includes the empirio-schematic judgment.
The Positivists take the plain-speaking approach out of the reformed churches and into the natural sciences. Mathematical and mechanical models eschew formal and final causalities (the stuff of roles and functions) and extol material and instrumental causalities (the stuff that one can explicitly abstract and specify).
0020 The empirio-schematic judgement does not apply to the old Hebrew terms. Therefore, the Positivists declare, “Genesis is not scientific.”
Walton tries to respond, “But, that is not the point of Genesis.”
Then, the Positivists persist, “Then, are you saying that Genesis is esoteric knowledge? If so, then plain-speaking interpretations of Genesis are not possible.”
0021 The Positivists, the heirs of the mechanical philosophers, place Walton in a difficult position. Walton belongs to a plain-speaking tradition. Positivists say that the only way to speak plainly, is to speak scientifically.
Walton replies, “Okay, let us look at the other appearances of the key words of Genesis 1, bara and asa, and fashion a scientific interpretation.”
0022 The results?
Bara means to create things with roles and functions.
Asa means to make things with roles and functions.
The ancients focus, not on material phenomenal reality, but on things themselves.
Here is a plain-speaking result that appeals to the science-minded.
0023 I would like to associate bara and asa to Aristotle’s hylomorphe, portrayed as an exemplar of Peirce’s category of secondness. Like the Latin term, esse, being as existent, bara associates to being [substantiates]. Like the Latin term, essence,asa associates to [substantiating] form.
I write esse as esse_ce, the complement of essence.
In the following figure, I portray the Hebrew terms.
0024 In sum, key Hebrew terms in Genesis associate to later Greek philosophical insights. Esse_ce (the fact that it exists) and essence (the fact that it has form) belong to the noumenon. The noumenon stands outside the empirio-schematic natural sciences. So, the noumenon is derided as “esoteric”. Yet, the noumenon, described as a hylomorphe, is the gateway to natural philosophy.
Genesis 1 concerns functional origins, not material origins.
0026 Positivists expropriate plain-speaking interpretations, the way of the Reformation. A plain-speaking interpretation must now be a materialist one.
I reply, “Scientific accounts are based on phenomena. Functional accounts address noumena. The entrance point to noumena, for Greek natural philosophy, is the actuality of the hylomorphe.”
0027 Here is a picture.
0028 Proposition three instructs me to consider the six days of creation in terms of hylomorphes.
0029 The first three days entail separation. Separation establishes order and function.
0030 For day one, the light and darkness (esse_ce) separate, yielding day and night (essence).
0031 Following the path established in A Primer on the Category-Based Nested Form, this actuality2 calls for a corresponding normal context3 and potential1.
Here is a picture.
0031 The triadic normal context of day one3 brings the dyadic actuality of light & dark [substantiates] day & night2 into relation with the monadic possibility of ‘something’1.
According to Walton, ‘something’1 is the role and function of time.
0032 The second day portrays a second separation. The waters above and the waters below separate, yielding the vault of the heavens, explicitly, and the location of the witness, on the other.
0033 Day Two3 is the normal conext3.
‘Something’1, according to Walton, is a living space for all creatures1.
Other words for ‘something1‘ are here, home and weather.
0034 The third day presents a third separation and a first constitution. The land separates from the seas. The hylomorphe is redundant. Land, sea [substantiate] land, sea.
Then, vegetative life appears.
0035 Day three3 is the normal context3.
‘Somelthing’1 includes all types of plants, especially familiar ones, as fondly described in detail in the Genesis text. Plants are food.
0036 Walton concludes that days one, two and three identify major features of human experience: time, weather and food.
Days four through six describe what happens next.
0037 In day four, God places luminaries in the heavens.
0038 In the normal context of day four3, these celestials signs have roles and functions1 that pertain to time (the potential1for day one3).
Day five portrays animal life in the sea and expands from there.
0039 In the normal context of day five3, aquatic life is available for food1. It is not life that humans can sympathize with. Fish are very different from humans.
0040 Land animal life appears in day six.
Indeed, humans are created towards the end day six.
No creature is more familiar to humans than humans.
0041 Surely, the Creation Story does not detail the phenomena of creation (that is, the stuff that science is interested in).
Rather, the Creation Story portrays the noumena of creation (and that is very curious, because it reads like an evolutionary scenario).
0042 Proposition four asks, “Why don’t we refer to Genesis 1 as the seven days of creation?”
0043 An obvious reply is that the key terms, bara and asa, operate during the six days and detail a sequence of noumena.
0044 God rests on the seventh day. The word, “rest”, means “a state of order”. If our cosmos is a temple, then on the seventh day, God takes up residence in His house.
In six days, God’s house is built and on the seventh, God makes it His home.
0045 As I see it, Walton’s discussion brings Genesis 1 as close to natural philosophy as the text permits.
In terms of category-based nested forms, each day manifests as a normal context3 and a potential1.
0046 These can be combined into a category-based nested form.
0047 Day seven virtually situates the six pairs of esse_ce and essence.
The Creation Story’s hylomorphe for day seven is typical for the ancient Near East.
0048 Day seven is the day of rest. Day seven is the day that God resides in the order that He establishes.
Walton notes that the day of rest is not a day of leisure. Instead, the seventh day is when we put down our own work in order to attend to God’s sovereign work. After all, the world that we call, “home”, turns out to be the house of God.
In the Creation Story, God’s declarations of goodness provide perspective.
0050 If day seven virtually situates days one through six and if the heavenly chorus proclaims the news of God’s domain, then when God declares, “it is good”, in the Creation Story, there is someone to receive the message.
Now, of course, some members of the angelic choir realize, “it is not good”, for them. From what I understand, this scenario defines the opening of John Milton’s masterwork, Paradise Lost.
0051 As far as the category-based nested form goes, God’s declaration caps the situation of day seven, as shown in the following interscope. The three-level interscope is presented in A Primer on Sensible and Social Construction, available at smashwords and other e-book venues.
0052 Walton writes that God’s declarations of goodness, which occur after each day (with one exception), must be understood in terms of lexical and contextual inquiry. This is the closest we can get to plain speaking.
Lexical inquiry explores the way that words are used. “Good” describes God. “Good” contrasts with “evil”. A good thing works the way that it is supposed to.
Contextual inquiry investigates the range of situationsin which a word appears. What would the negation of “good” look like? Well, Genesis 2:18 offers one example. God says that it is not good that man should be alone. Does that imply that there is something unworkable about Adam’s situation?
You bet.
0053 Walton tries to square the circle on day two, where there is no declaration of goodness. One reason is obvious. Both the waters above and the waters below are altered in subsequent days. The waters above are adorned when lights in the firmament become visible… er… are installed, in day four. The waters below separate into land and sea, in day three.
0054 But, that is not the controversy.
Today, many project all sorts of meanings, presences and messages into the word, “good”. These projections lead people to conclude that God’s creation is not good. I mean, why create the light and darkness before putting lights in the firmament? Why natural evil? Why are we born in pain? Why do we die in pain?
The thought-leaders of our current Lebenswelt spin fantasies around the word, “good”. They project perfection into the creation before the Fall. They project the absence of natural evil. They project a message of a bliss where no-one feels pain. They say, “If God’s creation does not satisfy the criteria that we project, then it is not ‘good’.”
0055 In response, consider this Jobian thought experiment.
I am in the city. I conform to my thought-leader’s world views. Creation is not good. We must constantly struggle to bring the goodness that “we” desire to life.
After the cognitive bubble of all projections pops, my world falls into ruin. I flee the city. I learn to live in the wild. I join others in a band of like-minded survivors. Life seems to be hard, but God provides. We learn to run with nature.
Sometimes, I have nightmares of the world that I used to live in, a world far from nature, a world full of pomposities imposing preposterous projections upon the word, “good”. I wake up and realize, “Right now, I live the way I evolved to be. I have never been so happy. Every night I see the stars. I follow the planets. I regard the moon. In their silence, they sing in unison. The heavens declare the goodness of the Lord.”