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Probe Ministries
Human Nature
Don Closson
Introduction
In the twenty-five years prior to 1993, the federal government
spent 2.5 trillion dollars on welfare and aid to cities. This was
enough money to buy all the assets of the top Fortune 500 firms as
well as all the farmland in America at that time.(1) As part of the
Great War on poverty, begun by the Johnson administration in the
1960's, the government's goal was to reduce the number of poor, and
the effects of poverty on American society. As one administration
official put it, "The way to eliminate poverty is to give the poor
people enough money so that they won't be poor anymore."(2) Sounds
simple. But offering money didn't get rid of poverty; in fact, just
the opposite has occurred. The number of children covered by the
Aid to Families with Dependent Children program has gone from 4.5
percent of all children in America in 1965, to almost 13 percent of
all children in 1991. One of the reasons for this increase has been
the rapid deterioration of the family for those most affected by
the welfare bureaucracy. Since 1960, the number of single parent
families has more than tripled, reflecting high rates of children
born out of wedlock and high divorce rates.(3) Rather than
strengthening the family in America and ridding the country of
poverty, just the opposite has occurred. Why such disastrous
results from such good intentions?
Part of the answer must be found in human nature itself. Might it
be, that those creating welfare policy in the 1960's had a faulty
view of human nature and thus misread what the solution to poverty
should be? In this essay I will look at how three different world
views--theism, naturalism, and pantheism--view human nature. Which
view we adopt, both individually and as a people, will have a great
influence on how we educate our children, how and if we punish
criminals, and how we run our government.
Christian theism is often chided as being simplistic and lacking in
sophistication, yet on this subject, it is the naturalist and
pantheist who tend to be reductionistic. Both will simplify human
nature in a way that detracts from our uniqueness and God-given
purpose here on this planet. It should be mentioned that the views
of Christian theists, naturalists, and pantheists are mutually
exclusive. They might all be wrong, but they cannot all be right.
The naturalist sees man as a biological machine that has evolved by
chance. The pantheist perceives humankind as forgetful deity, whose
essence is a complex series of energy fields which are hidden by an
illusion of this apparent physical reality. Christian theism
accepts the reality of both our physical and spiritual natures,
presenting a balanced, livable view of what it means to be human.
In this essay I will show how Christian theism, naturalism, and
pantheism answer three important questions concerning the nature of
humanity. First, are humans special in any way; do we have a
purpose and origin that sets us apart from the rest of the animal
world? Second, are we good, evil, or neither? Third, what happens
when we die? These fundamental questions have been asked since the
written word appeared and are central to what we believe about
ourselves.
Are Humans Special?
One doesn't usually think of Hollywood's Terminator, as played by
Arnold Schwartzenegger, as a profound thinker. Yet in Terminator
II, the robot sent back from the future to protect a young boy
asks a serious question.
Boy: "You were going to kill that guy!"
Terminator: "Of course! I'm a terminator."
Boy: "Listen to me very carefully, OK? You're not a terminator
anymore. All right? You got that?! You just can't go around killing
people!"
Terminator: "Why?"
Boy: "What do ya mean, Why? 'Cause you can't!"
Terminator: "Why?"
Boy: "Because you just can't, OK? Trust me on this!"(4)
Indeed, why not terminate people? Why are they special? To a
naturalist, one who believes that no spiritual reality exists,
options to this question are few. Natural scientists like
astronomer Carl Sagan and entomologist E.O. Wilson find man to be
no more than a product of time plus chance, an accident of mindless
evolution. Psychologist Sigmund Freud and existentialist
philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre agree, humankind is a biological
machine, perhaps slightly more complex than other animals, but
governed by the same physical needs and drives.
Yet as Mr. Spock of Star Trek fame put it in the original
Star Trek movie, logic and knowledge aren't always enough.
He discovered this by mind melding with V-GER, a man made machine
that, after leaving our solar system, evolves into a thinking
machine elsewhere in the galaxy and returns to earth to find its
creator.(5) If logic and knowledge aren't enough, where do we turn
to for significance or purpose? A naturalist has nowhere to turn.
For example, Sartre argued that man must make his own meaning in
the face of an absurd universe.(6) The best that entomologist E. O.
Wilson could come up with is that we do whatever it takes to pass
on our genetic code, our DNA, to the next generation. Everything we
do is based on promoting survival and reproduction.(7)
Pantheists have a very different response to the question of human
purpose or uniqueness. Dr. Brough Joy, a medical doctor who has
accepted an Eastern view of reality, argues that all life forms are
divine, consisting of complex energy fields. In fact, the entire
universe is ultimately made up of this energy; the appearance of a
physical reality is really an illusion.(8) Gerald Jampolsky,
another doctor, argues that love is the only part of us that is
real, but love itself cannot be defined.(9) This is all very
consistent with pantheism which teaches a radical monism, that all
is one, and all is god. But if all is god, all is just as it is
supposed to be and you end up with statements like this from the
Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh:
There is no purpose to life; existence is non-
purposive. That is why it is called a leela, a play. Existence
itself has no purpose to fulfill. It is not going anywhere--there
is no end that it is moving toward...(10)
Christianity teaches that human beings are unique. We are created
in God's image and for a purpose, to glorify God. Genesis 1:26
declares our image-bearing nature and the mandate to rule over the
other creatures of God's creation. Jesus further delineated our
purpose when he gave us the two commandments to love God with all
of our heart, soul, mind, and strength, and to love our neighbor as
ourselves. Romans 12:1 calls us to be living sacrifices to God.
Unlike naturalism or pantheism, the Bible doesn't reduce us down to
either just our material, physical nature or to just our spiritual
nature. Christianity recognizes the real complexity of humanity as
it is found in our physical, emotional and spiritual components.
Are We Good, Bad, or Neither?
To a naturalist, this notion of good and evil can only apply to the
question of survival. If something promotes survival, it is good;
if not, it is evil. The only real question is how malleable human
behavior is. B. F. Skinner, a Harvard psychology professor,
believed that humans are completely programmable via classical
conditioning methods. A newborn baby can be conditioned to become
a doctor, lawyer, or serial killer depending on its
environment.(11)
The movie that won "Best Picture" in 1970 was a response to
Skinner's theories. A Clockwork Orange depicted a brutal
criminal being subjected to a conditioning program that would
create a violent physical reaction to just the thought of doing
harm to another person. Here is dialogue between the prison warden
and an Anglican clergyman after a demonstration of the therapy's
effectiveness.
Clergyman: "Choice! The boy has no real choice! Has he? Self
interest! The fear of physical pain drove him to that grotesque act
of self-abasement! Its insincerity was clearly to be seen. He
ceases to be a wrongdoer. He ceases also to be a creature capable
of moral choice."
Warden: "Padre, these are subtleties! We're not concerned with
motives for the higher ethics. We are concerned only with cutting
down crime! (Crowd Applause) And with relieving the ghastly
congestion in our prisons! He will be your true Christian. Ready to
turn the other cheek! Ready to be crucified rather than crucify!
Sick to the very heart at the thought even of killing a fly!
Reclamation! Joy before the angels of God! The point is that it
works!"(12)
Stanley Kubrick denounced this shallow view of human nature with
this film, yet Skinner's behaviorism actually allows for more human
flexibility than does the sociobiology of E. O. Wilson, another
Harvard professor. Wilson argues that human emotions and ethics, in
a general sense, have been programmed to a "substantial degree" by
our evolutionary experience.(13) In other words, human beings are
hard coded to respond to conditions by their evolutionary history.
Good and evil seem to be beside the point.
Jean-Paul Sartre, another naturalist, rejected the limited view of
the sociobiologist, believing that humans, if anything, are
choosing machines. We are completely free to decide who we shall
be, whether a drunk in the gutter or a ruler of nations. However,
our choice is meaningless. Being a drunk is no better or worse than
being a ruler. Since there is no ultimate meaning to the universe,
there can be no moral value ascribed to a given set of
behaviors.(14)
Pantheists also have a difficult time with this notion of good and
evil. Dr. Brugh Joy has written,
In the totality of Beingness there is no absolute
anything--no rights or wrongs, no higher or lower aspects--only the
infinite interaction of forces, subtle and gross, that have meaning
only in relationship to one another.(15)
The Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh wrote,
I am totally passive. Whatsoever happens, happens. I
never question why, because there is no one to be asked.(16)
Christianity teaches that the universe was created by a personal,
moral Creator God, and that it was created good. This includes
humanity. But now creation is in a fallen state due to rebellion
against God. This means that humans are inclined to sin, and indeed
are born in a state of sinfulness. This explains both mankind's
potential goodness and internal sense of justice, as well as its
inclination towards evil.
What Happens at Death?
Bertrand Russell wrote over seventy books on everything from
geometry to marriage. Historian Paul Johnson says of Russell that
no intellectual in history offered advice to humanity over so long
a period as Bertrand Russell. Holding to naturalist assumptions
caused an obvious tension in Russell regarding human nature. He
wrote that people are "tiny lumps of impure carbon and water
dividing their time between labor to postpone their normal
dissolution and frantic struggle to hasten it for others."(17) Yet
Russell also wrote shortly before his death, "Three passions,
simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the
longing for love, the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for
the suffering of mankind."(18) One has to ask why he would pity
these self-centered lumps of impure carbon and water?
Most people over forty begin to question the nature and consequence
of death. Some become obsessed with it. A recent movie called
Flatliners focused on what death might hold for us. It
involved a number of young doctors willing to die temporarily, to
find out what was on the other side.
Young Doctor #1: "Wait a minute! Wait! Quite simply, why are you
doing this?"
Young Doctor #2: "Quite simply to see if there is anything out
there beyond death. Philosophy failed! Religion failed! Now it's up
to the physical sciences. I think mankind deserves to know!"
(19)
Philosophy has failed, religion has failed, now its science's turn
to find the answers. But what can naturalism offer us? Whether we
accept the sociobiology of Wilson or the existentialism of Sartre,
death means extinction. If nothing exists beyond the natural,
material universe, our death is final and complete.
Pantheists, on the other hand, find death to be a minor
inconvenience on the road to nirvana. Reincarnation happens to all
living things, either towards nirvana or further from it depending
on the Karma one accrues in the current life. Although Karma may
include ethical components, it focuses on one's realization of his
oneness with the universe as expressed in his actions and thoughts.
Depending on the particular view held, attaining nirvana is likened
to a drop of water being placed in an ocean. All identity is lost;
only a radical oneness exists.
Christianity denies the possibility of reincarnation and rejects
naturalism's material-only universe. Hebrews 9:27 states, "Just as
man is destined to die once, and after that to face judgment..." It
has always held to a linear view of history, allowing for each
person to live a single life, experience death, and then be judged
by God. Revelation 20:11-12 records John's vision of the final
judgment. "Then I saw a great white throne and him who was seated
on it. Earth and sky fled from his presence, and there was no place
for them. {12} And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before
the throne, and books were opened. Another book was opened, which
is the book of life. The dead were judged according to what they
had done as recorded in the books." All three versions of what
happens at death may be wrong, but they certainly can't all be
right! We believe that based on the historical evidence for
Christ's life and the dealings of God with the nation of Israel,
the Biblical account is trustworthy. We believe that those who have
placed their faith in the redemptive work of Christ on the cross
will spend eternity in glorified bodies worshiping and
fellowshiping with their Creator God.
Evaluation & Summary
In his autobiography, entomologist E. O. Wilson writes that as a
young man he accepted Christ as his savior, but because of what he
perceived to be hypocrisy in the pulpit he walked away from the
church shortly after being baptized. Later at Harvard University he
sat through a sermon by Dr. Martin Luther King Sr. and then a
series of gospel songs sung by students from the campus. He writes
that he silently wept while the songs were being sung and said to
himself, "these are my people."(20) Wilson claims to be a
naturalist, arguing that God doesn't exist, yet he has feelings
that he can't explain and desires that do not fit his
sociobiological paradigm. Even the staunchly atheistic Jean-Paul
Sartre, on his death bed, had doubts about the existence of God and
human significance. Naturalism is a hard world view to live by.
In 1991 Dr. L. D. Rue addressed the American Association for The
Advancement of Science and he advocated that we deceive ourselves
with "A Noble Lie." A lie that deceives us, tricks us, compels us
beyond self-interest, beyond ego, beyond family, nation, [and]
race. "It is a lie, because it tells us that the universe is
infused with value (which is a great fiction), because it makes a
claim to universal truth (when there is none), and because it tells
us not to live for self-interest (which is evidently false). `But
without such lies, we cannot live.'"(21) This is the predicament of
modern man; either he lives honestly without hope of significance,
or he creates a lie that gives a veneer of meaning. As William Lane
Craig writes in his book Reasonable Faith,
Man cannot live consistently and happily as though life
were ultimately without meaning, value or purpose. If we try to
live consistently within the atheistic world view, we shall find
ourselves profoundly unhappy. If instead we manage to live happily,
it is only by giving the lie to our world view.(22)
The pantheist is little better off. Although pantheism claims a
spiritual reality, it does so by denying our personhood. We become
just another impersonal force field in an unending field of forces.
Life is neither going anywhere nor is there hope that evil will be
judged. Everything just is, let it be.
Neither system can speak out against the injustices of the world
because neither see humankind as significant. Justice implies moral
laws, and a lawgiver, something that both systems deny exist. One
cannot have justice without moral truth. Of the three systems, only
Judeo-Christian thought provides the foundation for combating the
oppression of other humans.
In J.I. Packer's Knowing God, Packer argues that humans
beings were created to function spiritually as well as physically.
Just as we need food, water, exercise, and rest for our bodies to
thrive, we need to experience worship, praise, and godly obedience
to live spiritually. The result of ignoring these needs will be the
de-humanizing of the soul, the development of a brutish rather
than saintly demeanor. Our culture is experiencing this
brutishness, this destruction of the soul, on a massive scale. Only
revival, which brings about personal devotion to Jesus Christ and
the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, will reverse this trend. Since
we are truly made in God's image, we will find peace and
fulfillment only when we are rightly related to Him.
Notes
1. Stephen Moore, "The growth of government in America," The
Freeman, April (1993), 124.
2. Marvin Olasky, The Tragedy of American Compassion
(Washington, D.C: Regnery, 1992), 174.
3. William Bennett, The Index of Leading Cultural Indicators
(New York: Touchstone, 1994), 50.
4. Terminator II: Judgment Day (Carolco Pictures Inc.,
1991).
5. Star Trek: The Motion Picture (Paramount Pictures, 1980).
6. John Gerassi, Jean-Paul Sartre: Hated Conscience of His
Century (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989), 50.
7. Edward O. Wilson, On Human Nature (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1978), 3.
8. Brugh W. Joy, Joy's Way (Los Angeles: J.B. Tarcher, Inc.,
1979), 4.
9. Gerald G. Jampolsky, Teach Only Love (New York: Bantam,
1983), 52.
10. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, I Am the Gate (Philadelphia:
Harper Colophon, 1977), 5.
11. Leslie Stevenson, Seven Theories of Human Nature (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1987), 105.
12. A Clockwork Orange (Warner Bros. Inc., 1971).
13. Wilson, On Human Nature, p. 6.
14. Robert D. Cumming, The Philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre
(New York: Random House, 1965), 363.
15. Joy, Joy's Way, p. 7.
16. Rajneesh, I Am the Gate, p. 5.
17. Israel Shenker, "The Provocative Progress of a Pilgrim
Polymath," Smithsonian (May 1993), 123.
18. Ibid.
19. Flatliners (Columbia Pictures, 1990).
20. Edward O. Wilson, Naturalist (Washington, D.C.: Island
Press, 1994), 46.
21. William L. Craig, Reasonable Faith: Christian Truth and
Apologetics (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1994), 71.
22. Ibid., p. 70.
© 1996 Probe Ministries International
About the Author
Don Closson received the B.S. in education from Southern Illinois
University, the M.S. in educational administration from Illinois State
University, and the M.A. in Biblical Studies from Dallas Theological Seminary.
He served as a public school teacher and administrator before
joining Probe Ministries as a research associate in the field of education. He is the
general editor of Kids, Classrooms, and Contemporary Education.
He can be reached via e-mail at dclosson@probe.org.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit corporation whose mission is to reclaim the
primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through media,
education, and literature. In seeking to accomplish this mission, Probe provides
perspective on the integration of the academic disciplines and historic
Christianity.
In addition, Probe acts as a clearing house, communicating the results of
its research to the church and society at large.
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by
writing to:
Probe Ministries
1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100
Richardson, TX 75081
(972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
info@probe.org
www.probe.org
Copyright (C) 1996-2008 Probe Ministries
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Updated: 14 July 2002
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