by jimwalton » Tue May 21, 2019 10:05 am
> Your matter-of-factness is off-putting.
Sorry. I didn't mean to create that reaction. But since your premise was based on a false interpretation, thus possibly undermining the very foundation of your argument, I felt that honesty and forthrightness were the best approach. My apologies if it turned out to be off-putting for you.
> by achieving "knowledge of Good and Evil" outside the Logos
What do you mean by this? Heraclitus used "logos" for the principle that controls the universe, but this would have been unknown and not part of the picture for the writer of Genesis. The Stoics used "logos" for the soul of the world; Marcus Aurelius used *spermatikos logos* for the generative principle in nature, but these things would also have been foreign to the perspective and worldview of the writer of Genesis and therefore anachronistic and moot. The Apostle John applied "logos" to Christ, in a manner incompatible with the Stoics, portraying Christ as the incarnate God, the union of deity and humanity. But that has no pertinence to Genesis 2 either. We have to take Genesis 2 from the mouth of its author, in its cultural river, for his intent. So, what do you mean by this?
> men are tasked not only with building civilizations, but orienting the ontology of the Cosmos.
There's no Genesis injunction to accomplish either of these. Men are not "tasked" with building civilizations, but instead with "filling the Earth and subduing it." The decree is to function as co-regents with God—a mandate of fruitfulness and stewardship (in care), better thought of in terms of privilege rather than obligation.
Similarly, there is no mention of being tasked with orienting the ontology of the cosmos. Instead, the humans take upon themselves the prerogatives that belong to God alone: the source of order and wisdom.
> That is why the serpent said you will be like gods.
When the serpent promises God-likeness (Gn. 3.5), it is to be understood in terms of wisdom (in the ancient world, an epithet for God). Immortality and godlikeness were attained by gaining wisdom, not orientating the ontology of the Cosmos. God was not against them gaining wisdom. His concern was that they gain it in the proper manner, not by mutinously usurping it as their own prerogative. The picture painted by the serpent is that they can gain wisdom (the knowledge of good and evil, the ability to decide) by reaching out and taking it, appropriating it to themselves. Instead, God has planned that they gain it via relationship with Him.
I don't see anything in the text leading one to the analysis or conclusion that they are tasking with orienting the ontology of the Cosmos.
> The era of transhumanism simply brings the problematic of humans having the "judicial power to order Nature" into the realm of the human essence, so that now we are freely orienting Natural Law -- the task of godhood.
I can see what you're saying here, but the era of transhumanism at this point is enhancement, or possibly even juxtaposition, not replacement. At this point in time, and for the far-foreseeable future, transhumanism is still under the sovereignty, so to speak, of human design and will. It is not a relinquishing of our judicial power to order Nature.
> So perhaps it would be better to say, "Transhumanism is the meaning of the Tree of Knowledge in this technological era."
Uh, see, I don't agree with this either. The Tree of Knowledge was a mutinous usurping of divine prerogatives unto ourselves by inappropriate means. I just don't see where that has anything to do with transhumanism or our technological era. The rebellion at the tree of knowledge was a spiritual insurrection, a rebellion against God's explicit word and will, not an abrogation of judicial power to order nature.
> Just as the building of the Tower of Babel may have been the meaning of the Tree of Knowledge in a previous technological era.
The point of the Tower of Babel is different than the Fall in the Garden, though related to it. The prime offense of the Tower scene was trying to reestablish God's presence with flawed motives. In the rhetorical strategy of Gn. 1-11, Adam and Eve lost access to the presence of God by presuming to make themselves the center of order and wisdom. In Gen. 4 the sacrifices and even calling on the name of the Lord didn’t reestablish divine presence. Here the builders take initiative to reinitiate sacred space through the abiding presence of God, but they do it through (1) encroachment on divine prerogatives (similar to Gn. 3), (2) violation of boundaries between divine and human identities, and (3) the encroachment of disorder on the ordered realm. The Babel project, motivated by the Great Symbiosis (the gods help us when we help the gods), represented disorder in the divine and human interrelationships and resulted in God’s interruption of order by the confusion of languages.
The tower builders conceived of sacred space as focused on themselves—a repetition of the Garden of Eden scenario—thus forming an inclusio to Gn. 1-11. The motivation of the building project was for order determined by them and built around them.
> you are missing the crucial insight that to be like unto gods, knowing good and evil, precisely means sculpting the Natural Law by our own volition.
You are correct that we are in wide disagreement about this observation. to be like unto gods, humanity attempted to take upon themselves the divine prerogatives of being the source of order and wisdom. In the Scriptures, it had nothing to do with sculpting natural law.
> Since many of us, especially in the Enlightenment era, take human nature to be the ground of morality,
Yeah, and I don't. This position (human nature as the ground of morality) is very close to the mistake in the Garden: we take to ourselves what belongs only to God. Understanding human nature as the ground of morality is opposite the teaching of the Bible, which places the source of morality outside of humanity.
> ... to challenge human nature is essentially to "be like gods, knowing good and evil."
...which makes this incorrect as well, from a biblical viewpoint.
I don't see where "we are largely on the same page." In my perspective, the position you have taken is not one held or taught by the Bible or understood by Christian theology, and yet you have embedded it in Scripture. To me, as you can tell, this is both a distortion and a mistake, making Scripture say what it never intended to say and endorsing the opposite of what it actually attests.