Science cannot stop trying to
prove the How of things, and that blinds these scientists to the awesome
intelligence that lies behind the design
A room full of slightly intoxicated men, high on
having witnessed Nazi immolation, gasped and started to grumble.
After all, Intelligent Design should not come up
at a screening of Raiders of the Lost Ark.
*
When I was seven a friend of my fathers had a
pirate copy of a movie we had never heard of. He clunked it into the top loader
VCR and smiled at us. It’s a bit scary
but you’ll be ok right?
Pirate videos were cool, they had playground
kudos. The cassette was black and unmarked. Anything could be on there. The VCR
whirred and the screen flickered and we watched Indiana Jones stride into South
America and redefine excitement.
A few weeks later Raiders came out at the cinema
and I saw it again and it was just as thrilling, if not more so. I’ve watched
Raiders at least once a year since, on VHS, on DVD, on Blu Ray, sober, alone,
with a room full of blokes all quoting lines, and finally at a special
screening with one of the cast in attendance.
In the years since the pirate vhs I had kids. My
son (Bear) came first and I resolved to show him various films – Ghostbusters,
Raiders, The Good The Bad & The Ugly and Jaws. I guess there’s misogyny in
this, but I grew up a boy so when I had a boy I knew what he would want to see.
To balance things out the other night my wife showed our daughter (Toes) Anne
of Green Gables and I was very confused.
Bear saw Raiders when he was 5, I told him it
was scary and that he wouldn’t be allowed to see the end. He pulled up his
blanket and we watched spiders, traps and Indy swinging towards a seaplane.
And then God came into it.
The Ten Commandments - Yes, the actual Ten Commandments. The original stone tablets that
Moses brought down out of Mount Horeb and smashed.
Bear was confused so I sketched the commandments
(delighted that he had no idea what they were). I explained at the time the
movie was set everyone believed in God, and when the movie came out most people
believed. God was in schools, movies and books so when I first saw Raiders I
had no doubt God existed,
Towards
the end of the film I flicked it off, assuring Bear that Indy won but that what
happened next was too scary for him. This made him obsessed and he asked for
the movie all the time. One day I inevitably forgot to flick it off before the
face melting and Bear ran through to us delighted he had seen the ending. His sister,
then 4, had seen it as well and found it hysterically funny.
Raiders
was still great, the God aspect was manageable and life was red wine and cheap
cheese.
Then
the special screening.
John
Rhys Davis (Indy’s sidekick Sallah) was attending for a Q&A after the movie
and it was lovely to see him walk on stage, older, fuller, but unmistakably
Sallah. He settled down and stated talking - I last saw the three Indiana Jones movies on the big screen years ago
with an audience in Thailand, it was a wonderful night watching the three......
wait, there is a fourth film now isn’t there? But I don’t ever want to see that
film again.
The
audience cheered and I wondered if I am the only person who likes the 4th
movie. He took questions and had us hooked. Then he was asked where the acting ability
comes from and things went awry –
Trying to distill such a thing….well
it reminds me of the problem with Science. The problem being the one question Science
cannot ever answer, but claims every day that it could, is - why does life
exist?
The audience (geeks) flinched as the bubble
we’d been in popped. It was like to the moment in a nightclub where the lights
are raised, the music switched off and you realise everyone looks sweaty.
Science simply cannot show why life
exists. He continued, clutching the microphone. Science
strives to show what there was at the moment of this Big Bang but not the time
before. And we must look before it. We must consider what there was. If we do
we see a wonderful theology, a beauty of metaphysics, of mystery. Science
cannot stop trying to prove the How of things, and that blinds these
scientists to the awesome intelligence that lies behind the design
Seats shifted, people coughed and mumbled.
I swigged the last of my wine, chewed the last of my biltong and stood up to
leave. Sallah smiled at us from the stage and continued down the Intelligent Design
rabbit hole.
I can do the side stepping around God when
watching the movies with my kids. It’s no different to explaining the presence
of dragons in How to Train Your Dragon
– it’s just a story, in this one dragon’s
exist.
It’s
just a story; in this one you can catch ghosts with vacuum cleaners on your
back,
It’s
just a story; in this one a man wearing human skin mask hacks up hippies.
It’s
just a story; in this one people believe God exists.
But Intelligent Design?
Listening to a conversation on Intelligent
Design is like being told to wear jam instead of deodorant. Or suggesting we should
replace thumbs with inflatable sheep. It just makes no sense.
So we left John to his intelligent design
and stumbled down the steps of the cinema. Beautiful women ran over to each
disgruntled geek and slipped their arms through ours. Mine was called Tiffany.
Tiffany: Hey, what happened? You don't look very happy.
Me: Fool. Religious fool!
Tiffany: What'd he say?
Me: An audience of geeks, he had no idea what he had in there.
Tiffany: Well, I know what I've got out here. Come on. I'll buy you a drink.
We walked into the night, arm in arm,
leaving Intelligent Design chattering away to a dwindling cinema audience of
science fans.
Me: Hey Tiff
Tiffany: Yes?
Me: I think we’re alone now
Tiffany: True, there doesn’t seem to be anyone around
*
Postlude –
So
the upshot was that I needed to know more about the history of the universe.
So
I read Big Bang – The Origin of the Universe by Simon Singh and am now well
versed in red shift galaxies, CMB radiation, pulsars and the Steady State /
Expanding Universe debate.
Thanks
to the book I also discovered this - A Ukrainian born scientist, George Gamow,
one of the pioneers of the Big Bang hypothesis, was renowned for his
occasionally off beat physics. He once argued that God lived 9.5 light years
from Earth. This was based on the outbreak of the Russo Japanese war in 1904 causing
churches across Russia to offer prayers for the destruction of Japan. 19 years
later the Kanto Earthquake struck Japan, causing the prayed for devastation.
Gamow
suggested God’s wrath was impacted by the speed of light and that the delay
between prayer and the earthquake could be used to determine the distance to
God’s home – 9.5 light years away.
The
last time I prayed I was 12 years old so my last prayer should have landed with
God when I was 21 with my return due when I was roughly 32.
My
final prayer, which I do remember quite well, was for Patsy Kensit to move in
next door and need me to hold a ladder while she changed light globes.
Thus
far, she’s a no show but just in case I have a ladder and some light globes and if she turns up I shall smile, doff my hat and say “Let there be light.”
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