Anthropogenesis and the Soul

IF 1.1 0 RELIGION
Terrence Ehrman, C.S.C.
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The science of evolution acutely raises the perennial question of humankind’s place in the world. How does the theological anthropology of humans as imago Dei relate to an evolutionary anthropology with human beings derived from ancestral hominid species? Evolutionary biologists disclose ever greater similarities and continuity between animals and humans. Is human distinctiveness simply continuous with other ancestral forms of life or is there any kind of discontinuity? The answers to these questions depend not only on zoological considerations but also on one’s philosophy of nature. The standard anthropology within the Catholic Church is the dual-origin model: the human body originates through evolution, but the human soul is directly created by God. This formulation, however, is not without difficulties, primarily for its seeming Cartesian dualism of a body and soul as distinct substances. This paper develops the anthropology of David Braine who, drawing upon Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, and Ludwig Wittgenstein, clearly situates humans as animals in great continuity with them. However, as linguistic animals who think in a medium of words, humans have a form of life—a soul—that transcends bodily processes. Braine’s anthropology provides a more coherent anthropology to understand the continuity and discontinuity of the human person in phylogenetic relationship to other species within an evolutionary perspective.
人类起源和灵魂
进化科学尖锐地提出了人类在世界上的地位这个长期存在的问题。将人类视为上帝意象的神学人类学,与将人类衍生自祖先原始人的进化人类学有何关联?进化生物学家揭示了动物和人类之间更大的相似性和连续性。人类的独特性与其他祖先的生命形式是连续的还是存在某种不连续性?这些问题的答案不仅取决于动物学的考虑,而且取决于一个人的自然哲学。天主教会的标准人类学是双重起源模型:人类的身体起源于进化,但人类的灵魂是上帝直接创造的。然而,这种表述并非没有困难,主要是因为它似乎是笛卡尔式的身体和灵魂作为不同的物质的二元论。本文发展了大卫·布莱恩的人类学,他借鉴了亚里士多德、托马斯·阿奎那和路德维希·维特根斯坦的观点,明确地将人类视为动物,与动物有着巨大的连续性。然而,作为以语言为媒介思考的语言动物,人类有一种超越身体过程的生命形式——灵魂。布莱恩的人类学提供了一种更连贯的人类学,从进化的角度来理解人类与其他物种在系统发育关系中的连续性和非连续性。
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来源期刊
Scientia et Fides
Scientia et Fides RELIGION-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
10.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: "Scientia et Fides" (SetF) is an open access online journal published twice a year. It is promoted by the Faculty of Theology of Nicolaus Copernicus University, in Torun, in collaboration with the Group of Research “Science, Reason and Faith” (CRYF), at the University of Navarra. The journal is characterised by the interdisciplinary approach, multiplicity of research perspectives and broad reflection on methodology as well as analysis of the latest publications on the relationship between science and faith. The tasks of the journal are perfectly expressed by the motto "Veritas in omnibus quaerenda est" ("to seek the truth in all things") from "De revolutionibus" by Nicolaus Copernicus. SetF aims to present rigorous research works regarding different aspects of the relationship between science and religion. For this reason, SetF articles are not confined to the methodology of a single discipline and may cover a wide range of topics, provided that the interdisciplinary dialogue between science and religion is undertaken. The journal accepts articles written in English, Spanish, Polish, French, Italian and German which will be evaluated by a peer-review process.
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