2023/10/26

IS THERE A DISTINCTIVE QUANTUM THEOLOGY? - Poon - 2023 - Zygon® - Wiley Online Library

IS THERE A DISTINCTIVE QUANTUM THEOLOGY? - Poon - 2023 - Zygon® - Wiley Online Library





Zygon®Volume 58, Issue 1 p. 265-284
ARTICLE

Open Access

IS THERE A DISTINCTIVE QUANTUM THEOLOGY?
with Mark Harris, “Quantum Theology beyond Copenhagen: Taking Fundamentalism Literally”; Shaun C. Henson, “What Makes a Quantum Physics Belief Believable? Many-Worlds among Six Impossible Things before Breakfast”; Emily Qureshi-Hurst, “The Many Worries of Many Worlds”; Elise Crull, “Interpretation Neutrality for Quantum Theology”; Wilson C. K. Poon and Tom C. B. McLeish, “Is There a Distinctive Quantum Theology?”; and Ernest L. Simmons, “The Entangled Trinity, Quantum Biology, and Deep Incarnation.”

Wilson C. K. Poon, Tom C. B. McLeish
First published: 15 February 2023
https://doi.org/10.1111/zygo.12867
Citations: 1

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Abstract


Quantum mechanics (QM) is a favorite area of physics to feature in “science and religion” discussions. We argue that this is at least partly because the arcane results of QM can be deployed to make big theological claims by the linguistic sleight of hand of “register switching”—sliding imperceptibly from technical into everyday language using the same vocabulary. We clarify the discussion by deploying the formal mapping of QM into classical statistical mechanics (CSM) via the mathematical device of “Wick rotation.” This equivalence between QM and CSM suggests caution in claiming distinctiveness for quantum theologizing. After outlining two areas in which quantum insights nevertheless resonate with longstanding themes in theological reflection (hiddenness and visualizability), we suggest that both QM and CSM point to a theology of science in which scientists participate in the divine gaze on creation as imago Dei.

Introduction

Quantum mechanics (QM) has long fascinated people of faith who think about science's implications for religious belief, whether lay believers or theologians. In its hold on their imagination, QM outcompetes even Einstein's theories of relativity, which form the second component of the early-twentieth-century tripartite revolution in physics. The third component, classical statistical mechanics (CSM), seldom receives comparable attention except in specialist literature. In the world of “physics and religion,” quantum theologizing reigns supreme.i Indeed, as the centenary of Heisenberg's 1927 Uncertainty Principle approaches, interest in quantum theologizing may be accelerating—witness the symposium behind the present volume. A spate of books since the 1990s tells the same story.ii There is even a play, “God's Dice” (2019) written by atheist comedian David Baddiel about a quantum physicist finding God. Evidence for a renaissance in quantum theologizing also comes from a 2005 topical public lecture by the then Gresham Professor of Divinity, Keith Ward, on “Religion and the quantum world.” No wonder Mark Vernon (2013) says in the Church Times (italics ours), “The weird and wonderful world of quantum physics is becoming a spiritual resource, or so an increasing number of people claim.”

Our first objective is to understand this popularity of quantum theologizing. Drawing on quantum theologies from the beginning of QM and more recent literature, we tell a cautionary tale about a kind of linguistic sleight of hand that spawns a style of facile theologizing that obscures the real issues. We next turn to CSM. In an historical episode that is little, if at all, acknowledged in the science-and-religion literature, CSM was unified with quantum field theory in the 1970s. The resulting statistical field theory (SFT) has revolutionized the treatment of everything from the quark-gluon soup through high-temperature superconductors to polymers. We explain why bringing CSM in from the cold via SFT casts considerable doubt on claims of distinctive quantum contributions to theological understanding. Nevertheless, there are resonances between QM and well-known themes in theology; we outline two, before moving on to suggest why both QM and CSM point toward a participatory theology of science.
Register Switching in Quantum Theologizing

One of the earliest (and to date most sustained) attempts at quantum theologizing was from the Quaker Sir Arthur Eddington. After discussing QM in chapters IX to XII of his 1927 Edinburgh Gifford Lectures, Eddington gathers up the threads in Chapter XIII: “To put the conclusion crudely – the stuff of the world is mind-stuff,” and “the substratum of everything is of mental character.” He concludes that “[t]his view … perhaps relieves to some extent a tension between science and religion.” (Eddington 1928, 276, 281) These lectures hit home for many. Richard Conn Henry, a retired Canadian physics professor tells us that (italics original), “until quite recently, [I have] always been an atheist materialist.” However, after reading Eddington as a teenager and through forty subsequent years of teaching physics, Henry “gradually … realize[d] what Eddington realized at once: one must reject materialism, as there is no material.” The result is that “in 2004 – to my utter astonishment – … I turned into a theist. I became religious solely through study of physics.” (Henry 2007, vi)

Such bold claims for the theological impact of QM are made not just by physicists. In his Gresham Lecture,iii Keith Ward (2015) claims that “materialism has become quite a respectable thing to think [from Newton to Darwin], until you get to the twentieth century and quantum physics, and that destroys materialism completely. It's no longer possible intellectually and respectably to be a materialist after the rise of quantum physics.” Instead, QM supports idealism (mind over matter), because it gives “the observer” a central role. Ward goes on to argue that Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle decisively destroys determinism and brings back free will, while “quantum entanglement” destroys reductionism and replaces it by holism, because it shows that “everything is connected with everything else.” He concludes, “So, it's very hard for a quantum physicist not to believe in a God, and the ones who don't believe in God tend to say, ‘I'm not going to deal with these theories at all. I'm just going to do the experiments.’ That's always a possibility, but it's a betrayal of the scientific quest to understand what the world is really like. So, if some people are uncomfortable about God having become more important, that's tough, because that's the way quantum physics is.”

Even a cursory internet search shows how common such bold claims for QM on behalf of religious belief are (e.g., Thuraisingham 2019; Beliefnet 2022). Some contemporary commentators have obliquely registered their unease at this style of quantum theologizing. Thus, Mark Vernon (2013) counsels in the title of his piece in the Church Times (italics ours), “Quantum spirituality: tread softly.” He goes on to invoke John Polkinghorne (again, italics ours), “Physics is showing the world to be both more supple and subtle, but you need to be careful.” To understand what it may mean to “tread softly” in a “careful” approach to quantum god-talk, we analyze an instance where this advice is not heeded, how Keith Ward moves from QM to idealism and holism in his Gresham lecture.

Ward first explains, correctly, how entities in QM “are actually different when they're being observed and when they're not being observed.”iv In physics, saying that something is “being observed” simply means that a measurement has been registered by some apparatus. For an electron, this may be the “clicking” of a deliberately deployed Geiger counter, or a naturally occurring piece of fortuitously located “cathodoluminescent” mineral emitting a photon. Then, after explaining that an electron's wave function tells us about the probability of various observational outcomes, Ward concludes that electrons “only exist when you observe them.” Note how Ward has slipped from the passive “being observed,” with an unstated, “implied subject” that could have been a Geiger counter, to the active “you observe,” with a thinly veiled human subject. Before long, the question is raised, “Where is the electron when we're not looking at it?” “To observe” has now become “to look,” and the audience has joined the lecturer as the “we” who engage in the action. After expounding Bishop Berkeley's idealism, Ward tells us that “[electrons] only exist if you're looking at them … which collapses the probability wave into a particle. But then you gotta look at it to see that. So, if you're not looking, electrons don't exist; only probability waves exist.”

At the end of this sequence of linguistic somersaults, “observations” are now definitely carried out by human “observers” who “look.” Ergo, “[t]he whole of the material world is a construct of the mind. If this is right, materialism is not only dead, it's completely falsified.” After pressing home this vindication of idealism, Ward concludes, “What do you make of that? … Well, this shows that the whole reality is a construct of mind. It's constructed by mind. What mind could it be, then? The mind of God …,” quod erat demonstrandum!

What allows Ward to fast-track from QM to idealism is “register” switching (Agah 2004). Loosely, a “register” is a distinctive vocabulary for a particular context; it is distinguished from “style,” which is more concerned with grammar and higher-order structures. Crucially, one may sometimes switch register without any obvious switching of vocabulary. In these situations, unless great care is taken, both writer/speaker and reader/listener may get confused by the barely perceptible register change. This danger is very real, for example, in ecology, where everyday words like “habitat” have been coopted to have precise technical meanings (Adams 1997). On the other hand, register switching can generate humor. Anyone who chuckles at the headline “DOCTOR TESTIFIES IN HORSE SUIT” has succeeded in switching between legal and everyday register on seeing the word “suit.” (Bucaria 2004)

Ecologists borrow everyday words because they study entities that are often very familiar to the lay public. QM borrows everyday words for the opposite reason. Its abstract, mathematical content means that coopting everyday words is really the only option (unless, as Eddington (1948, 291) suggested, tongue in cheek, one borrows words from Lewis Carroll's nonsense poem Jabberwocky).v Almost imperceptible register switching is therefore a real temptation in speaking about QM. In Ward's fast-track demolition of materialism in QM's name, he starts by using the verb “to observe” (“being observed”) in a sense that is consistent with the professional register of physicists and philosophers, for whom this verb and its cognate noun (“observation”) is almost equivalent to the pair “to measure/measurement.” However, because QM has borrowed everyday words as jargon, Ward can slide imperceptibly from “observation” to talking about an “observer” who is “looking,” the latter being a verb that is almost never used in scientific register. By now, his audience is thinking not about inanimate measurement apparatus, but sentient humans, paving the way for Ward's coup de grâce to materialism: “this shows that the whole reality is a construct of mind. It's constructed by mind. … The mind of God.”
Ward (2015) similarly fast-tracks from quantum entanglement to holism:


Once two elementary particles have interacted … [t]hey remain entangled wherever they are … You can put this picturesquely but not inaccurately by saying everything that happens anywhere in the universe affects you. So, if a photon comes into existence a billion light years from here it affects you. Fortunately, you won't notice. But you are connected with it. … Interconnectedness, we're all connected. But it's actually part of quantum mechanics and an essential part of it.


It is because “entangle/entanglement” are everyday words that Ward can slide imperceptibly (but, despite his claim to the contrary, inaccurately) from a professional to an everyday register, and thence to a thumping Q.E.D. for holism. If the argument had been couched in the technical jargon of “many-particle quantum states” or “product Hilbert spaces,” it would have been clear that the photon materializing a billion light years from “you” is not entangled with “you,” because “you” and it have not interacted in the first place, and Ward's “argument” is actually a case of demonstrandum non demonstratur. Ward is by no means unique in register switching when discussing quantum entanglement. An author declares in Christianity Today, “Subatomic particles are not the only things that are entangled in our universe. So are we. We are entangled with one another …” (Looper 2017) Both claims in this quotation about entanglement are correct, but they deploy “entangled” in professional and everyday register respectively. The first therefore does not support the second, as the writer no doubt intended that it should.

Physicists warn students repeatedly against confusing professional with everyday register. Thus, an “observation” in relativity theory simply means a record of the space-time coordinates of an “event,” and does not involve anyone “looking.” Sober quantum theologians have similarly warned their readers that “the ‘involvement of the observer’ (in QM) refers to observation-processes and not to mental states as such.” (Barbour [1966] 1971, 287) Therefore, a facile, fast-track passage from QM to idealism that relies on sliding from professional to everyday register is a case of “jargon abuse” (Martinez 2020). Notably, an early critic of Eddington's book already directed her ire against the “casual misuse it made of everyday language, and … the much larger implications Eddington encouraged his readers to draw from it.”vi

In sum, the ubiquity of everyday words in quantum jargon facilitates the casual use of QM to make big theological claims. Once someone of the authority of Eddington has started the process, it became a case of “free for all.” The use of everyday words in QM is not, of course, Eddington's fault, because QM is arcane, even by the standards of theoretical physics. The trouble is that, as Bertrand Russell complains (and we agree), register switching enables “Eddington [to expound] … recent development [in physics] in a manner which conveys more of it to the nonmathematical reader than I should have supposed possible.” (Russell [1931] 1962, 81, 92)

Others were more careful. Niels Bohr warned that “words like phenomena and observation … are … used [by physicists] in a way incompatible with common language and practical definition,” and so “are apt to cause confusion” (Bohr 1958, 73). Nevertheless, one wonders whether he and others of his era such as Erwin Schrödinger (1935), who coined quantum “entanglement,” have thought through the potential dangers of register switching. This situation recalls Charles Darwin's Origin of Species. Literary scholar Gillian Beer, who describes what we call “register switching” as “metaphors … overturn[ing] the bounds of meaning assigned to them” in a professional register when they are redeployed in a popular register (Beer 2009, 50–51), is of the opinion that “it may be [Darwin's] disregard of the potential sociological applications of many of his terms [ = register switching] which makes them so uninhibitedly available for application” in sundry fields outside biology.
Quantum theologizing that relies on facile register switching brings religious belief into disrepute. It is unconvincing for most physicists, who spend much effort warning students against precisely such register switching. It is also unconvincing for philosophers. Susan Stebbing ([1937] 1944, 211–212), an atheist, ends her critique of Eddington the Quaker with this devastating observation:


Surely a view that finds a place for Mind in the universe only after the principle of uncertainty has been discovered or after abstruse physical speculations … is not a view that should commend itself to the earnest seeker after God, especially if that seeker be a Christian. At least, I should have thought not, were it not that Christian apologists have been so eager to wait upon the pronouncements of the physicists, so thankful to be assured that we put into Nature the laws we profess to discover …


Quantum theologizing need no rely on casual register switching. Other articles in this volume offer examples, such as the discussion by Qureshi-Hurst (2023) of the so-called “many-worlds interpretation.” However, space precludes engagement with such treatments.
CSM and Putative Quantum Uniqueness

Claims of victory for idealism over materialism or holism over reductionism on behalf of QM are often accompanied by the suggestion, for example, by Ward (2015) in his Gresham lecture, that QM is uniquely able to deliver this because it transcends the classical mechanics of either Newton or Einstein. Irrespective of whether QM indeed supports idealism or holism, the claim of quantum uniqueness needs scrutiny in the light of an area of classical physics that is seldom, if ever, discussed in the science and religion literature: CSM. Since the 1970s, physicists have known of a striking formal mapping whereby every problem in QM corresponds mathematically to a different one in statistical physics. Furthermore, CSM has long given an essential role to sentient observers in creating models of the world in the definition of “entropy,” one of its core quantities, quite independently of “observers” in QM. Any claim of putative quantum uniqueness must therefore be examined in the light of these developments.
Mapping QM to CSM
Beginning in the 1970s, physicists began to realize that apparently unrelated but equally intractable difficulties in quantum field theory and in CSM could be solved together using a surprising mathematical trick known as the “Wick rotation” (Fraser 2020). To understand the resulting unification, statistical field theory, we need the idea of a very basic quantity in QM, the propagator. In QM, the square of the propagatorvii gives the probability that a particle, starting at some point, should arrive at another point R away after time t. With the propagator in hand one can calculate predictions for any observable quantity modelled. Feynman found an appealing way to obtain the quantum propagator by performing a sum over all possible classical paths between these points, each path mathematically weighted by a quantity (technically, a “phase factor”) that involves an exponential function of �/ℏ, where ℏ is Planck's constant divided by 2π. Mathematically, the quantum propagator of a particle starting at some arbitrary origin and reaching position R at time τ looks like this
◂=▸,where the first symbol to the right of the equals sign is a stylized “S” denoting summing (or integrating) over all paths. The important feature for us is the combination �⁢�/ℏ in the rightmost bracket, where we find �/ℏ multiplied by the imaginary number �=−1, that is to say, a number whose square is −1. This operation of turning the “real time” into an “imaginary time”viii is called a Wick rotation because in a geometric representation of complex numbers (numbers of the form �+�⁢� where x and y are real numbers) as arrows on a plane, multiplication by i appears as a counter clockwise rotation by 90°.
In CSM, the basic mathematical object is the “partition function,” which involves a sum over all possible states of a system held at some fixed temperature T. In the partition function, the temperature occurs in the combination �⁢�, where k is Boltzmann's constant. The analogy between “paths” in QM and “states” in CSM involves substituting 1/�⁢� for �⁢�/ℏ in the propagator, giving the equation for the partition function in CSM. Symbolically, we have
◂→▸

For classical polymers (McLeish 2022), the abstract content of the Wick rotation becomes visualizable. The different states of a polymer, a long-chain molecule, are different configurations of a chain, which, in turn, are the very classical paths summed over in the quantum propagator. They range from the unique configuration of the chain being completely straight, to a multitude of coiled configurations. The partition function sums over all these different “paths.” The analogy with QM is completed when positions along the path map to corresponding imaginary times in the quantum propagator. The set of paths is representatively “explored” by a polymer molecule dynamically through random thermal motions—a physical process analogous to the entirely mathematical quantum sum, which has no physical interpretation (the often-used description “the particle goes along every path at once” does not bear up to scrutiny). When a system is in thermal equilibrium ( = macroscopically homogeneous and unchanging with time), the weighting of these paths, worked out by Ludwig Boltzmann and Josiah Willard Gibbs (Baierlein 1971), is controlled by the temperature through an exponential function of 1/�⁢�. A century later, Sam Edwards in the UK and Pierre-Gilles de Gennes in France first exploited this “trick” and opened up a new era for polymer physics, and earned de Gennes a Nobel Prize in 1991.

Many more (less transparent and visually striking) examples of such QM-CSM correspondence exist. The polymer case illustrates an important dissimilarity in the physics of the correspondence, which is that time-dependent processes in the QM realm map into thermal equilibrium (and so time-independent) systems in the CSM realm. Philosophical responses to this disjuncture differ widely. Fraser (2020) deduces that the Wick rotation is purely formal, implying nothing for the way the universe is. At the other end of this hermeneutical spectrum, Polyakov (1987), the leading field-theorist, conjectured that the meaning of the QM particle-CSM polymer correspondence arises “from the deep structure of space-time.”

The theological implications of this QM-CSM correspondence have been little discussed to date. To our minds, it minimally implies that one needs to be very careful in claiming any kind of unique quantum holism. Technically, using Wick rotation, a path-summing quantum system used to demonstrate entanglement/holism can be turned into a statistical mechanical state-summing system that, at least formally, possesses the same degree of entanglement/holism. More generally, there is a large literature (Gibb, Hendry and Lancaster 2019) discussing emergence and top-down causation that points to a statistical mechanical interconnectedness without appealing to any quantum weirdness. The same is true of any other candidate quantum result for theology. Even extremely strange consequences of quantum systems, such as the fractionally charged “anyons” that emerge in very cold many-electron systems confined to surfaces and threaded by magnetic fields, have at least a formal correspondence in the Wick-rotated and corresponding polymer system (McLeish, Lancaster and Pexton 2019). Recent work has pointed out that Long-Range (greater than molecular scale) Topological Order (LRTO, or “entanglement”) is a property of both many-particle QM and polymer CSM systems. This presence of irreducible long-range action, also often thought to be a unique feature of QM, furnishes a purely classical example of top-down causation (McLeish, Lancaster and Pexton 2019). This nonreductionist (since nonreducible) structure of some systems has naturally attracted theological comment (McLeish 2019). QM is therefore not unique in several salient ways: holism, irreducibility and top-down causation.
A Role for the Observer?

Theological and philosophical discussions often claim that QM offers a unique role for the observer. With Einstein's relativity, we are introduced to observer-dependent points of view; however, these can be reconciled by properly “transforming between frames of reference,” and all observers ultimately agree over all events. In QM, however, it is claimed that the “observer” can determine the outcome of experiments. We have argued that whatever the detailed philosophical meaning of this claim is, it only offers a “fast track to idealism” if one resorts to a linguistic sleight of hand.

On the other hand, it turns out that the description CSM offers of the natural world is indeed dependent on sentient observers. This arises from the core CSM concept of entropy, first introduced by Rudolf Clausius and others to describe the efficiency of turning heat flow into work (as in the steam engine), and then formulated statistically by Boltzmann (Baierlein 1971). Most university physics courses (and textbooks) today give the impression that the entropy is an unequivocal property of the physical world. However, Josiah Willard Gibbs, one of the inventors of CSM, has understood from the beginning that the entropy of a system is actually a description of the degree of ignorance that an observer entertains vis-à-vis the variables (“degrees of freedom”) describing the system (Jaynes 1957; Jaynes 1965; Baierlein 1971). Put another way, the entropy assigned by physical models of thermodynamic systems depends on how coarse- or fine-grained those models are, and is calculated by summing over all possible states of variables whose values are not known, or chosen to be ignored, by the observer constructing the model. It is therefore not surprising that the 1963 Nobel physics laureate Eugene P. Wigner, otherwise famous for his work in QM, once remarked, “Entropy is an anthropomorphic concept” (Jaynes 1965).ix

As an illustrative example, consider two observers of a quantity of gas. A “fine-grained observer” knows the trajectories and momenta of all the molecules. There are no coarse-grained variables, all values of classical quantities are known at each time; this observer assigns zero entropy to the gas. A second observer has access only to local densities of the gas (defined over some coarse-graining element of very many molecules) and their fluctuations, but not to the position of every particle. This observer does assign a finite entropy to the gas (it takes the form of a weighted sum of the logarithms of the local densities). Crucially, which observer is “correct” depends on what experiments one wants to model. Using the fine-grained entropy will predict the wrong outcomes in an ordinary laboratory experiment in which only the classical thermodynamic variables of pressure, volume, and temperature are accessed. The kind of muddle one could get into when entropy choice and experimental reality “cross wires” is nicely illustrated by colloidal crystallization, a beautiful phenomenon responsible for opalescence. A theory that assigns entropy to a fine-grained observer with access to the world of individual colloids rather than to the coarse-grained world of everyday experiments predicts (wrongly) that colloids do not crystallize (Cates and Vinothan 2015). In this sense, the way CSM describes everything from superconductivity to neutron stars is irreducibly observer dependent.

It might be objected that all that has been claimed is that the values of parameters and quantities differ for models of reality simply because of different choices made by the “observers” (defined carefully as those who make those models of the world, presumably after making measurements of it), and that this is a much weaker claim than the observer dependence in QM engendered by “wave function collapse” or whichever interpretation of QM one prefers. However, a moment's reflection will clarify that, in the QM case as well, the “world” or “reality,” however realist or idealist a philosophy one holds, is only ever accessed via model-interpreted observation. The nonlocal, top-down, “observer-dependent” nature of QM is no less a property of the model than in CSM. That is what “observer-dependent” means. Yet, this is still contested in QM, but not at all the case in CSM. We know of no other case in physics where the role of the model-choosing sentient physicist is as clearcut and has so far-reaching consequences.
Quantum Resonances

To summarize thus far, we first showed that many attempts to fast-track from QM to certain large theological claims rested on a flimsy foundation of linguistic sleight of hand made possible by the borrowing of everyday vocabulary for quantum jargon. We then discussed two areas (holism and observer participation) where the contribution of QM to theological discussions had been claimed to be distinctive, and found the claims overstated. Nevertheless, we do think that QM can contribute to the ongoing dialogue between science and religion. We now sketch out two such instances vis-à-vis the Judeo-Christian tradition without entering into detailed discussion.
Decoherence and Hiddenness

The everyday world that sentient observers inhabit is not quantum mechanically entangled. In this world, one has to look hard to see evidence of quantum effects. Why? The answer involves “quantum decoherence.”

Consider a less emotive version of Schrödinger's cat: a particle that is in a quantum state that can, loosely, be described as “both here ( = cat alive) and there ( = cat dead).” Formally, we prepare the particle in a quantum state, a mathematical object (a “Hilbert space vector”) |Ψ⟩, in which we cannot say for sure whether it is in the vicinity of position (say) −�0/2 or +�0/2, but only give some probability of it being in these two states. This is a wholly quantum mechanical scenario that will not “become classical” until there is a measurement of the particle's position, at which time we can say with certainty whether it is at +�0/2 or −�0/2 (“the cat is dead” or “the cat is alive”). Until then, |Ψ⟩ evolves deterministically according to the time-dependent Schrödinger equation. After an elapse of some time interval Δ⁢� since the state |Ψ⟩ was prepared, we can calculate the probability of the particle being at +�0/2 or −�0/2 exactly. Therein lies the conundrum of Schrödinger's cat: we can only give the probability of it being alive or dead, until an observation occurs.

States such as |Ψ⟩ are known as “coherent states.” Two subatomic particles are entangled if they are in a coherent state. Nonrelativistic coherent states evolve according to the time-dependent Schrödinger equation, whose solution allows us to calculate the probabilitiesx of obtaining various answers if we were to carry out a measurement at any time, provided that the state |Ψ⟩ remains completely isolated. Any interaction with the environment will lead, ultimately, to the loss of the state's coherent nature, a process known as decoherence. The typical time for this to occur is the “decoherence time,” ��.

To estimate ��, theorists have considered a simple model in which our ‘Schrödinger's particle’ interacts with a viscous environment at temperature T. A particle of radius a and mass m moving in such an environment will come to rest after a time of the order ◂≈▸. This so-called “relaxation time” offers a measure of the degree of interaction between the particle and its (viscous) environment. Wojciech Zurek (2002) has shown that the decoherence time of our Schrödinger's particle immersed in a viscous medium is ◂≈▸, that is, the relaxation time multiplied by some number. The number is the square of a ratio of two lengths, the so-called de Broglie thermal wavelength divided by the separation between the two possible positions of the particle in its coherent state.

Quantum effects become important if we confine a particle to a box of the size of the de Broglie wavelength or smaller. For an electron at room temperature, this is about 4 nm. A hydrogen atom is roughly 0.1 nm in diameter, so that we need QM to explain its workings. For an oxygen molecule or a nitrogen molecule at room temperature, λth is less than 0.02 nm. In the air we breathe, these molecules are separated on average by just over 300 nm, so that they do not confine each other enough to be quantum mechanical: air is a classical gas.

Returning to our model coherent state, for a “Schrödinger particle” of mass �=1 gram at room temperature in a state |Ψ⟩ with �0=1 centimeter, the numerical ratio ◂+▸≈◂◽˙▸. So, even if the interaction of this particle with its environment is so minimal that its relaxation time is of order of the lifetime of the present universe, or ◂≈▸ s, its decoherence time comes out to be of order ��≈◂◽˙▸ s, or about one-tenth the lifetime of the Higgs boson. The lesson is that in the macroscopic, centimeter-sized, world, decoherence is essentially instantaneous. For all practical purposes (and considerably beyond), the world we perceive is classical. Cats are never indeterminately alive or dead, whether observed or unobserved.

To see what it would take to make a “Mr Tompkins world”xi in which quantum weirdness is an everyday occurrence, consider the ratio ◂◽˙▸. If we want to consider particles separated by a macroscopic distance, say, x0 of the order of centimeters, then we need the thermal de Broglie wavelength to be also macroscopic to “within shouting distance,” say, about a micron (or ten thousandth of a centimeter), which is the length scale of objects just about visible in an optical microscope, so that the multiplier becomes one ten billionth (10−8). Then, a relaxation time �� of about a year, which still represents very weak interaction with the environment, will translate into a decoherence time of ��≈0.1 s—not that long, but long enough to win or lose an Olympic medal. To change the thermal de Broglie wavelength of a 1 gram particle (still considerably smaller than a cat!) at room temperature from its value in our world of just under 2×◂◽˙▸ cm to one micron, we need Planck's constant to increase by a factor of 1018 (a million trillion). However, Planck's constant, the speed of light and the universal gravitational constant together determine three fundamental quantities known as the Planck mass, Planck length and Planck time. The actual observed values of these quantities are “fine tuned” for the emergence of life on earth (Barrow and Tipler 1986, Chapter 5), so that increasing Planck's constant by a factor of a million trillion will rule out any Mr Tompkins to worry about an alternative world in which Schrödinger's cat is an everyday occurrence.xii

If we want sentient observers, therefore, the “fine tuning” argument dictates that the world they observe, the macroscopic world, must be a classical one in which quantum weirdness such as half-live-half-dead cats only occur in science fiction (or certain kinds of quantum theologizing). In the everyday world directly available to our senses, quantum effects rarely “leak through” very occasionally. Magnets constitute an exception: they depend on electrons possessing the property of “spin,” which emerges out of Dirac's relativistic QM. Otherwise, quantum weirdness is necessarily hidden to macroscopic sentient observers (using this word in the everyday register).

If that is the case, then we may draw a theological analogy. While the Judeo-Christian tradition believes in a God who acts in the (macroscopic) world of flesh and blood, with Christians claiming that the Son of God became “enfleshed” in the person of Jesus (John 1:14), it seems that, paralleling quantum hiddenness, it is necessary for such action to be largely hidden and not easily perceived by casual observers. That is why there are multiple pointers throughout the Old and New Testaments to the Deus absconditus, the God who is present through hiddenness, from Moses being only allowed to see YHWH's “back” on Mount Sinai (Exodus 33:18-20) through Isaiah's exclamation that YHWH is a hidden redeemer (Isaiah 45:15) to Jesus’ cry of dereliction on the cross (Mark 15:34) and his ascension at which “a cloud hid him” from the sight of the watching apostles (Acts 1:9). From henceforth, the life of the Christian disciple on earth “is hidden with Christ in God” (Col. 3:3). The frustration of living as the ekklēsia of such a hidden God comes out into the open in many places throughout the Biblical tradition, for example, in the plea from a prophet to his hidden God, “Oh that thou wouldest rend the heavens … [and] come down” (Isaiah 64:1, KJV).

However, to ask God to render the god-self entirely manifest in a way that will make all talk of the Deus absconditus redundant may well be tantamount to asking for an alternative creation that is incompatible with sentient flesh-and-blood creatures, just as asking for quantum-entangled cats entails ruling out any world in which cats of any kind is possible. In contrast to QM, however, Christians claim that when God makes all things new in the eschaton, overtly manifest divinity will become compatible with sentient creatures. In the new (kainos) Jerusalem, “the city has no need of sun or moon to shine on it, for the glory of God is its light, and its lamp is the Lamb” (Rev. 21:23); but that will require a new (kainos—new in kind) creation. To pursue this train of thought about quantum and divine hiddenness in detail is, however, beyond our scope.
Visualizability and Speakability

Ever since the beginning, the founders of QM have pondered how they should speak about their creation. For example, Bohr tells us that in QM, we have “a formalism which defies unambiguous expression in words suited to describe classical physical pictures” (Bohn 1958, 40). Bohr here raises not only the issue of the speakability (“words suited to describe”) of QM, but also of its visualizability (“physical pictures”). Theological thinkers have, of course, wrestled with the same issues vis-à-vis God for two millennia and more.

Take first the difficulty of speaking about God. Two classic strategies in dealing this difficulty are well illustrated by the opening of a well-known hymn: “Immortal, invisible, God only wise, in light inaccessible hid from our eyes.” There are two noteworthy features. First, God is spoken of in negative terms as being immortal and invisible. This way of god-talking through denial, belongs to a long tradition of apophatic theological teaching that recommends the via negativa (Turner 1995). Second, there is a paradoxical turn that perhaps familiarity has dulled: “in light … hid from our eyes.” Religious poets and theologians have always known that to speak of God necessitates the use of what Bishop Ian Ramsay has called “odd language” involving “logical improprieties,” such as “in light … hid from our eyes.” Interestingly, Ramsay points out that such linguistic “oddness” also occurs in science (Ramsey 1957, 47–48).

So, it appears that proper speech about the complex realities dealt with in either QM or theology must “[hold] the via positiva [which necessarily involves Ramsey's logical improprieties] in creative tension with the via negativa.” (Paul 2006): “Immortal, invisible … in light … hid from our eyes;” “an electron is neither a particle nor a wave … and it is both!” Faced with complexities, quantum or divine, a positivistic language that claims to eschew paradox and not balanced by a negative language of denial will, at best, breed confusion, and, at worst, wreak conceptual havoc, not only in the respective domains of science and theology, but in discussions of their relationship (Poon 2022).

Turning to visualizability, recall that for Bohr, there are suitable words “to describe” classical physics because it is associated with “physical pictures.” This recalls a famous argument between Heisenberg and Schrödinger (Miller 1986; de Regt 1997). The latter was motivated to invent his 1926 wave mechanical formulation of QM partly because of his dissatisfaction with the lack of Anschaulichkeit, or “visualizability,” in the 1925 matrix mechanics of Heisenberg, Born and Jordan. Heisenberg's dissenting response is his 1927 article announcing the Uncertainty Relation entitled “On the anschaulichen (‘visualisable’) content of quantum theory.”xiii

Interestingly, quantum pedagogues since this debate have mostly opted for Schrödinger's wave mechanics in introducing quantum arcana to beginners, precisely because of its intuitive “visualisability.”xiv Indeed, Bern Thaler (2000) from the University of Graz (where Schrödinger once taught) published a text describing computer animations in QM for undergraduate teaching. Thaler (2000, v) tells us that after showing a movie to his students, he will “explain step-by-step what can be learned from the animation,” and that each movie should “provide some motivation for the effort to understand the theory behind it.” In other words, the visualizations are not of quantum reality per se, because “behind” these lies “the theory,” so that a hermeneutic is needed in order for the student to “learn from” the visualizations.

This discussion about quantum Anschaulichkeit bears comparison with the iconoclastic controversy in eighth/ninth-century Byzantiumxv in which theologians debated the propriety or otherwise of pictorial representations of divine realities (Louth 2007). Byzantium eventually affirmed the value of icons, albeit carefully hedged with a nuanced hermeneutic (Evdokimov 1989). Visual representations are dangerous in both domains because they may be confused with reality—visualization becomes idolatry. Nevertheless, the affirmation of visualizability in either case is an important antidote against tendencies to cut loose from materiality—to treat QM as a purely mathematical construct when it is in fact one of the most successful physical theories for describing physical phenomena, or to overspiritualize Christianity, which Archbishop William Temple (1949, 478) once described as “the most avowedly materialist of all the great religions” because of the incarnation (John 1:14).xvi For further development of these thoughts and to set them in wider cultural and theological contexts, see Fuller and Jasper (2014).
Conclusion: A Participatory Theology of Science

We have seen that a good deal of linguistic sleight of hand since Eddington onward has been deployed to fast track from QM to some form of idealism, where the mind of some sentient “observer” is inextricably “entangled” with the nonsentient world being “observed.” The motivation presumably comes from a longstanding unease felt by many that classical, pre-QM science inhabits a universe in which there is no room for sentient beings, including the scientists who produced such a world picture in the first place. So, if the “fast track to quantum idealism” offered by Eddington, Ward and company is untenable, are we left with a universe with no room for sentient beings? Not necessarily. One could choose the “slow track” of careful, unglamorous argumentation to show why QM really does require the participation of sentient minds. Irrespective of whether such work will succeed—we ourselves are not yet convinced by any attempt to date—we want to close by sketching a “middle way.”

Recall first that there is a sense in which QM does highlight the role of sentient beings. The scientist's choice of experiments dictates whether the outcome should be modelled as a particle or a wave (but never both). We have also seen how the assignment of entropy in CSM depends on how coarse- or fine-grained our models are. What therefore QM and CSM both point to is not idealism (“mind over matter”) but participation. To unpack what we mean, we turn to the tradition of imago Dei.

What the imago Dei might mean has been long debated by Christian theologians. The attribution of rationality and morality are leading traditions. But a less-dominant strand takes the first Biblical divine act seriously (as, indeed, the last)—to create a world. If the primary act of God is to create a world, it is coherent to suggest that to “image God” means to create an image of the world. Humans as participative “created co-creators” is the main theme of, for example, the theologian Phillip Heffner (1993), but a more faithful imago Dei reading of sub-creation, or “imaged-creation” has the cocreators acting in the image of the Creator when they themselves create an image of the universe, rather than any aspect of or object within the universe itself. Arguably, “creating an image of the universe” through engagement with the first created universe is a strikingly faithful description of science as a human activity, and chimes well with our descriptions of both QM and CSM. Once QM and CSM are perceived not as direct visions of the universe itself, but as humanly created images of that universe, it becomes less surprising that sentient observers play active, rather than purely passive, roles.

The essential three-way relationality between Creator, human, and the material world that arises in all human observation and perception (including the pre-scientific), has been given aesthetic perspective by David Bentley Hart, who speaks of the “metaphysics of participation.” The sheer mystery of how human minds are able to participate in the rationality of creation, through the construction of images of that created order, both prior to and post perception, becomes a participation in the analogy of being, that itself explicates the notion of humans created in imago Dei. As Hart (2003, 311) puts it, “Between the desert of absolute apophaticism and immobile hypotaxis of absolute cataphaticism stands the infinity, the unmasterable parataxis, of analogy, at home in an endless state of provisionality and promise.” Hart explicates how we have no direct, imminent grasp of reality, nor is the world entirely hidden from us, but we participate in a “middle way” of access to the material world by analogy, perhaps pointing to a future that holds a closer and more intimate relationship. Just as in the case of iconography, it is important to know just how elevated, and at the same time how humble and inexact, our (scientific) images of the world are; both how powerful and so aporetic the notion of analogy in science as much as in theology.

But theological discussion of “participation” tends to stop there, without unfolding what participation at this level might mean. Our definition of “observer,” as one who creates, in image, a corresponding, quantitative and dynamic model of the world, unpacks what a creation theology of participation actually means in the light of modern science. It identifies the locus of Hart's “analogies” as the scientific models themselves. These created objects, whether in CSM or QM, sit before the observers in their mathematical, computational or visual form imaging their own creation in imago Dei, but at the same time apophatically related to the real world. The latter is accessed immanently via the models/images alone.

This account of a participative theology of science differs radically from “natural theology.” For in a relation of participative creation in imago Dei, the human gaze onto the world shares, by analogy and in image, at least the same “direction” as that of the divine. We gaze from the divine perspective, if not with the divine perspicuity. In this sense, an observer-dependent approach is perfectly opposed to any anticipation of perceiving the divine nature through the lens of the world, as in traditional natural theology. Rather, in this participatory picture in imago Dei, the divine gaze enters the world through the gaze and scientific labor of the human. Such a participatory theology of science, which resonates with QM and CSM alike, is both apophatic, in that God is hidden “behind” the human gaze onto the world, and cataphatic in its shared infinitude of possibility and promise, as well as the surprising divine immanence that this “geometry of participation” implies (McLeish 2014).

Finally, then, to return to the titular question, we find it hard to see what QM can offer to theology that is truly distinctive. In particular, claims that QM offers a unique way to reintegrate sentient observers into the scientific world picture are often based on not much more than repeated “register switching.” Moreover, we have reviewed how “QM-speak” can be formally transformed into the language of CSM, further undermining claims to distinctiveness. On the other hand, participation of sentient beings making choices, for example, whether to detect an electron as a wave or a particle, is built into the structure of QM. We have argued that CSM, born in the same era as QM, makes the same case even more powerfully in the way entropy is defined. Both QM and CSM point to a participatory theology of science, which provides a distinctive contribution to wider discussions of humanity as imago Dei. The way QM contributes to theologizing, therefore, will be as a part of science as a human endeavor, but as one of those parts that, like CSM, very insistently points to participation.
Notes
i Modern cosmology, with roots in general relativity but now joined with QM, perhaps competes with QM for attention.
ii A cursory online search uncovered some 10 items, for example, Boni (2016), Faries (2017), Goswami and Onisor (2019).
iii The “transcript” from the lecture website is not verbatim, but a formal write-up of similar material. We quote from the recorded version, which one of the authors transcribed.
iv We use underlining to highlight key linguistic moves.
v “Eight slithy toves gyre and gimble in the oxygen wabe” describes the configuration of electrons in the oxygen atom.
vi Beaney and Chapman's (2021) summary of Stebbing ([1937] 1944).
vii More precisely, the “squared modulus” of the propagator, which is in general a complex number.
viii Beware of register switching. “Real” and “imaginary” here have their strict mathematical senses of “real numbers” (everyday numbers) and “imaginary numbers” (multiples of �=−1).
ix Wigner, like Eddington, was a quantum idealist (we owe this observation to Prof. Mark Harris). On the role of observers, we believe that Wigner is a better guide for CSM than for QM.
x Loosely, the square of the wave function, technically the mathematical object ⟨Ψ|Ψ⟩.
xi In two popular science books by the noted physicist George Gamov ([1965] 1993), the title character Mr Tompkins enters dream worlds in which quantum mechanical or relativistic effects become everyday because of alterations in the fundamental constants of physics.
xii Gamov gave the initials C. G. H. to his Mr Tompkins, these being the standard symbols for the speed of light, the gravitational constant, and Planck's constant.
xiii For the Kantian overtones of this debate, see Holton (2016).
xiv Anschauliche is often rendered as “intuitive” in discussions about QM, for example, by Miller (1986).
xv Compare Holton (2016), who says in his 1927 article, “Heisenberg was … being an iconoclast, forbidding the realistic pictorial impetus, … as … had been done … in Byzantium.”
xvi Temple (idem) suggests that John chose the Greek word sarkx (flesh) “because of its specifically materialistic associations.”
Biographies


Wilson C. K. Poon is Professor of Natural Philosophy at the School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK; e-mail: w.poon@ed.ac.uk.


Tom C. B. McLeish is Professor of Natural Philosophy in the Department of Physics, University of York, York, UK; e-mail: tom.mcleish@york.ac.uk.

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Quantum Theology: Spiritual Implications of the New Physics : O'Murchu, Diarmuid: Amazon.com.au: Books

Quantum Theology: Spiritual Implications of the New Physics : O'Murchu, Diarmuid: Amazon.com.au: Books

1997 edition






Quantum Theology: Spiritual Implications of the New Physics Paperback – 30 April 2004
by Diarmuid O'Murchu (Author)
4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 67 ratings

From black holes to holograms, from relativity theory to the discovery of quarks, this book is an original and rich exposition of quantum theory and the way it unravels profound theological questions.
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Here, best-selling author Diarmuid O'Murchu presents a vision of the intersection of quantum physics and spirituality. It is now revised to reflect the most recent advances in physics. From black holes to holograms, from relativity theory to the discovery of quarks, this book is an original and rich exposition of quantum theory and the way it unravels profound theological questions.
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Spirituality
Science
Theology
Religion
Philosophy
Nonfiction
Catholic
 
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256 pages, Paperback

Published April 1, 2004



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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Crossroad Publishing Co ,U.S.; Revised, Updated ed. edition (30 April 2004)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 256 pages

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 67 ratings



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John Lawless
5.0 out of 5 stars Challenging and InspiringReviewed in the United Kingdom on 10 September 2019
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The writings of Diarmuid O'Murchu are a wonderful gift to us, insightful, at the cutting edge of theology and most of all “spiritual” in the broadest sense of that word. He is accomplished, having written at least 15 books to date as well as contributing to a wide range of journals. This is the third book I have read by this author and what strikes me about him is that over the years there has been a steady development in his thinking. As a social psychologist who has spent most of whose working life in social ministry, coming through his work is a synthesis of many academic disciplines which are inspired by his pastoral experience. This current book is no exception and is written and produced to a very high standard. It is fascinating, informative and provocative, challenging the atrophied structures of the church and the stagnation of thought in sections of contemporary theology. It is brave to make the links between the developments in cosmic physics/chaos theory/waves and particles and our understanding of God, the divine energy, the omega point of evolution, the dance of the universe. He alerts us to the probability that we are out of tune with the energies that formed and mould us but affirms that the universal search for meaning compels us to explore not just the physical world but, simultaneously, the mysterious forces of Eros. Inspiring and challenging. I liked this book so much that I have already pre-ordered his O’Murchu’s next book “When the Disciple Comes of Age”. Be prepared to be challenged.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Not for the faint hearted, but...Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 May 2016
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This is a heavy read, I'll be honest, and I struggled to finish it, so it's not one for the beach. However, if you are prepared to give it the attention it deserves, and prepared for the possibility that some of it will sail right over your head, you will find in it great inspiration and food for thought. For me, it became a springboard for similar reading.

3 people found this helpfulReport

Gregory Davidson
5.0 out of 5 stars Convergence among science, philosophy, and theology?Reviewed in the United States on 9 October 2016
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A wonderful exploration of what appears to be a growing convergence between science, philosophy, and theology (and perhaps even ontology) as we use quantum mechanics to delve deeper and deeper into the foundational workings of the universe. Truly fascinating, informative, provocative, and readable. O'Murchu takes these mind-bending topics and opens them up for everyone...though your head will still hurt as you try to take it all in. ;-)

10 people found this helpfulReport

patriciarae
3.0 out of 5 stars brilliant synthesis of faith and science, however...Reviewed in the United States on 7 May 2014
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Our book club chose this selection and we took about 7 weeks to discuss it slowly and in depth. It is not an easy read.. However for those interested in one of the cutting edge books on this topic, it is a good choice. Our entire book group felt glad we chose to "do" this book together. I cannot fathom reading it alone. The 3 stars are for my response and do not reflect anything negative about the author or the book.

7 people found this helpfulReport

George
4.0 out of 5 stars A great effortReviewed in the United States on 29 July 2003
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Like so many I know everything is in transition. The book gave me something to consider, of course he puts alot of political correct spins on it, feminism, anti industrial ya, ya, stuff. But the book does offer food for thought and I will look forward to viewing some more of his work in the near future.

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Johnny
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August 22, 2015
In Quantum Theology: Spiritual Implications of the New Physics, Diarmuid O’Murchu summarizes the move from a classical model of scientific knowledge to a more “wholistic” approach demanded by current understandings of quantum physics. Quoting Meg Wheatley (Harvard-trained expert in organizational behavior), he quickly establishes the reason this is significant for modern thinkers who are not necessarily in the so-called scientific fields. “I try hard to discipline myself to remain aware of the whole and to resist my well-trained desire to analyze the parts to death. I now look for patterns of movement over time and focus on qualities like rhythm, flow, and shape. …I know I am wasting time whenever I draw straight arrows between two variables in a cause-and-effect diagram. ….I realize more and more that the universe will not cooperate with my desires for determinism.” (p. 37)

Building on the concept of entanglement (“A manifestation of one quantum object, caused by our observation, simultaneously influences its correlated twin object—no matter how far apart they are--quantum action at a distance. (p. 29)), O’Murchu argues that the nature of reality demands “relationships” as opposed to causality (p. 36) and opens one up to a necessary “mystical receptivity.” (p. 38) He warns that the parameters of scientific observation may actually end up falsifying rather than verifying truth (p. 34).

Part of O’Murchu’s conceptualizing is unpacking what quantum theory means for everyday life. To do so requires metaphors and he chose dance and music. Why do we find that we “resonate” in conjunction with things that touch us, inspire us, or convince us? Isn’t it because we are finding a “harmony” with reality? Hence, “We can conceive of a universe in which the spheres themselves are dancing, and from the musical vibrations we are beginning to glimpse a whole new sense of what the universal life is all about. …The energy that animates and enlivens all of life may well be supersonically melodious, and the life force itself may be something more akin to an orchestra than to any spiral of subatomic particles.” (p. 55) In such a fashion, O’Murchu invites readers to a dance of participation in the universe rather than conquest or opposition. He advocates viewing the universe (or multiverse if such it may be) as “…not a landscape of facts or objects, but one of events, process, movement, and energy.” (p. 63)

Those wondering where the “physics” has gone will recognize where O’Murchu is going when one reads the discussion of field theory. O’Murchu even suggests that there are morphogenetic fields that allow for both stability and change. Indeed, he suggests this may be a more accurate understanding than “natural selection” as expressed by Darwin (p. 74). Then, he quotes Stephen Rose to just that effect when Rose writes of life that is “…autopoietically constructed through the interplay of i) physical forces, ii) the intrinsic chemistry of lipids and proteins, iii) the self-organizing and stabilizing properties of complex metabolic webs, and iv) the specificity of genes which permit the elasticity of ontogeny.” (p. 75)

The process of becoming, O’Murchu goes on to explain requires both continuity and change (sounds a lot like Freud in Chapter Four of Beyond the Pleasure Principle when he writes of both receptivity and resistance in the living cell/system) here and later in the book about the process of dissipation and integration (p. 179). This stability which, in turn, adapts, he calls morphic resonance after Rupert Sheldrake. And I loved the way he connected the monkey phenomenon (of changed eating habits in the monkey population of Japan—even when there was no physical contact—p. 75) from the 1950s in Japan conceptually with Jung’s collective unconscious (p. 76). Or even, perhaps, it may fit in with the idea of Wolfhart Pannenberg that field theory may be a scientific explanation of what the Judeo-Christian theology calls the Holy Spirit (p. 80). [Note: Pannenberg has a scientific background and has written prolifically while drawing from both of his formal studies in science and theology.]

The discussion considers the disappointment of scientists who discovered that quarks (and their opposites, leptons) refused to be broken apart as the building blocks of the universe but only survived in groups of two or three (p. 86). Naturally, this observation led O’Murchu to consider the Christian doctrine of the Trinity and Trinitarian formulations in Hinduism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, and even Ancient Egyptian religion (none exclusively Trinitarian, but having a dominant tri-partite expression—p. 88) and the necessity of a three-dimensional basis for the universe in terms of spatial survival and creative expression (more than three dimensions can create instability and two dimensions become so static and ordered that growth and movement aren’t possible—p. 89). So, we see how both comparative religion and the cosmos point to the idea “…that the essential nature of God is about relatedness and the capacity to relate, that the propensity and power to relate is, in fact, the very essence of God. …In the plain but profound language of the Christian Bible: God is love!” (p. 88)

After discussing the importance of relationships, there is an important caveat, “The more we try to invent community along specific lines—cultural, social, or religious—the more we endanger the possibility of its meaningful existence.” (p. 94) Rather, the essence of creativity and development is fluidity, flexibility, and process (p. 104) which allows both vague, chaotic realities and even “creative vacuum” as keys to self-organization within the meta-field of existence (p. 111). A quotation from Peter Coveney well illustrates this: “Chaos is just a special but very interesting form of self-organization in which there is an overload of order.” (p. 131)

Theologically, the book takes an interesting path in this section. “There is a paradoxical quality to black holes, whereby their destructive power of absorption seems to be a precondition for their life-giving power of ‘evaporation.’ …Perhaps here we have on a grand cosmic scale an insight known to mystics for centuries: abnegation is a precondition for fulfillment; struggle is a pathway to happiness; sickness is the shadow side of health; failure is success in disguise; Calvary precedes resurrection; darkness gives way to light.” (p. 135) Much like the Apostle Paul in Colossians, O’Murchu recognizes that there is no “newness” without a painful termination of the old (p. 141). Unfortunately, in seeking this “newness,” O’Murchu goes rather too far in his abnegation of the individual and defining individualism as always being part of the tyranny of power. He seems so optimistic about the eventual triumph of goodness in the universe; why isn’t he convinced of the ability for human individuals to change within those relationships held to be so important? That’s my problem with the direction of this book which holds so many great insights.

For me, Quantum Theology goes off the rails a this point. It is possible to become so syncretistic that there is no real distinction between any religions and so focused on “totality” that there is no longer any significance to an individual’s decisions. True, the neglect of relationship and identification with the universal “morphogenetic field” leads to a self-determination that can become self-diminution (p. 151), but does it have to do so? Isn’t there a balance between the search for enlightenment and light within this “field” and some sense of personal accountability and responsibility? I like O’Murchu’s concept of sound as a metaphor for cosmic origins and light as a metaphor for ultimate destiny (p. 171), but doesn’t he realize that even light can be refracted and distorted?

He states that only fundamentalists believe in a literal “end of the world” (p. 183), but doesn’t consider that there could be such a, pardon the expression, fundamental change that even if the universe continues, it might not be relevant to the type of life to which he is writing. I guess I’m just fundamentalist enough to believe that the “new heaven” and “new earth” could share some of the “morphogenetic field” of which O’Murchu speaks without being locked into the idea that world must continue as per our current experience or understanding. O’Murchu seems to expect some kind of evolutionary change which precludes a continuation of identity—not really taking into consideration his own science of “action-at-a-distance” where two particles, separated in space-time act the same when affected by a field of circumstances/observation.

Although the conclusion of this theology is about the need for love and follows Sally McFague’s idea of Trinity as Mother (Parent?) [agape—giving love], Lover [eros—relational/healing love], and Friend [philia—covenant, faithful, sustaining love] (p. 205), I felt like the strongest idea was his comparison (as with Teilhard de Chardin) of love as being like a fire “…with the paradoxical combination of warmth, tenderness, care, and closeness, on the one hand, and an enormous power for destructibility, on the other.” (p. 200) With all of his discussion of love, this book needed a little more talk about the danger of love contaminated by the self-determination of individuals seeking their own power and gratification in the name of love.

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Steven H
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September 9, 2023
A PRIEST LOOKS AT ‘THEOLGICAL’ IMPLICATIONS OF THE QUANTUM THEORY

Priest and social psychologist Diarmuid O’Murchu wrote in the Introduction to the Revised Edition of this 2004 book, “The original inspiration [for this book] goes back to 1990 when… I stumbled on a number of books popularizing the quantum theory for nonscientists like myself… my curiosity was quickened as never before. Many things began to fall into place and what till then were fragmented aspects of my experience and understanding of life began to cohere around a new vision…”

He states in the first chapter, “I open this book with an invitation: Come with me on a journey of exploration; let’s link arms in a trajectory whose direction and destiny we’ll discover as we go along. Enter into the experience of searching, seeking, exploring, and, I hope, discovering. Participate in the task rather than remain a mere observer… The journey is all about an EXPERIENCE; of a world awakening to its own inner meaning and mystery, a world we can no longer comprehend purely in scientific terms nor in exclusively religious dogmas, but in the emerging dialogue that enables both fields of learning to meet and interact in a new way, which I have chosen to call ‘quantum theology.’ … We are not journeying IN the universe but WITH the universe… We are parts of a whole, much greater than the sum of its parts, and yet within each part we are interconnected with the whole.” (Pg. 6-7)

He explains, “It seems important that we differentiate between ‘spirituality’ and ‘religion.’ Spirituality is inherent to the human condition… in my estimation, religion is not. Spirituality has an enduring quality… religion serves a transitory and temporary purpose. Theology, therefore, as that body of wisdom which seeks to explore ultimate meaning, has a great deal more in common with spiritual than with religion. Theology, as faith seeking understanding, belongs to the primal and primordial aspirations that underpin the search for meaning, predating religion by thousands of years.” (Pg. 14)

He laments, “Perhaps the greatest disservice that formal religion has rendered to our world is its tendency to disrupt the dance. It tried to project God out of creation into the ‘divine’ realms of the church (on earth) and heaven (in the world beyond). It has led us into a speculative, cerebral mode (of thought and action), which ultimately was not about devotion and worship, but an insatiable desire to control the capricious power of the Deity.” (Pg. 48)

He states is ‘first principle of quantum theology’: “There is more to our world than what can be perceived by the human senses or envisaged by the human imagination. Life is sustained by a creative energy, fundamentally benign in nature, with a tendency to manifest and express itself in movement, rhythm, and pattern. Creation is sustained by a superhuman, pulsating restlessness, a type of resonance vibrating throughout time and eternity.” (Pg. 55)

He continues, “In traditional theology, there tends to be an emphasis on the God who creates from nothing… and is therefore superior and external to the created order… In quantum theology, the creative potential emerges (evolves) from WITHIN the cosmos. God co-creates in conjunction with the evolutionary process.” (Pg. 56) Later, he adds, “the quantum theologian is concerned with church at the heart of the world rather than with church over against the world. And church is, first and foremost, community gathered around the exploration the articulation of a deep, spiritual yearning.” (Pg. 96)

He notes, “we offer another central element of quantum theology: Because the capacity to relate is itself the primary divine energy impregnating creation, we humans need authentic ecclesial and sacramental experiences to explore and articulate our innate vocation to be people in relationship.” (Pg. 96)

He asserts, “we live in an ALIVE UNIVERSE… what do we mean when we claim that the universe is alive?... We need to listen and be receptive to the evolutionary story itself. When we choose to listen, we begin to glimpse the deeper meaning, as it is manifested to us in that aspect of creation than we humans are most closely connected, namely, Planet Earth itself.” (Pg. 105)

He adds, “We conclude with another key principle employed by the quantum theologian: Our passionate desire to understand in depth will not be attained by intellectual prowess or technological achievement, but by immersing ourselves in the divine, evolutionary story and committing ourselves to the contemplation and narration of that story in each new epoch.” (Pg. 116)

He summarizes, “Quantum theology offers a very different set of insights: 1. Creation is an unbroken whole, a totality within which everything---including darkness, chaos, pain, and suffering---plays in independent role in the evolving cycle of creation and destruction… 2. Creation is essentially GOOD and not EVIL… 3. Much of the meaningless pain and suffering is directly, and often deliberately, caused by human beings… 4. Dualistic thought patterns, and the major institutions that thrive on dualistic value systems, exacerbate the meaninglessness of pain and suffering in our world… 5. … How the passion and death of Jesus atoned for human sin, in a once-for-all manner, is a cherished though poorly understood tenet of Christian theology.” (Pg. 141-142)

He adds, “quantum theology adopts the following statement as a key principle: Structural and systemic sin abounds in our world, often provoking people to behave immorally. To integrate the global shadow, we need fresh moral and ethical guidelines to address the structural and systemic sinfulness of our time. The formulation of these guidelines is as much a political as a religious obligation.” (Pg. 158)

He notes, “According to the old theology, in death, we humans became A-COSMIC, that is, cut off from the cosmos. In our new understanding, we become PAN-COSMIC; we enter into a new relationship with the WHOLE cosmos. In our earthly life, we were confined to one part of the cosmos, and to a constricted way of experiencing it. In death, we are released into a potential relationship with the whole of universal life.” (Pg. 181)

He argues, "Genitality is no longer reserved for heterosexual monogamous relationships, never mind for marital union. It has become a dimension of human intimacy in the many different situations in which people seek to express tenderness, affection, and mutuality. There seems to be an enormous reluctance to acknowledge this new development… Culturally, politically, and theologically, it has far more serious implications than the so-called sexual revolution of the 1960s.” (Pg. 202)

In an Appendix, he states al twelve of his ‘Principles of Quantum Theology’; for example, “Principle 1: Life is sustained by a creative energy, fundamentally benign in nature… Principle 2: Wholeness… is the wellspring of all possibility… Principle 3: Evolution is underpinned by a deep unfolding structure… Principle 4: The expanding horizon of divine belonging is the context in which revelation takes place… Principle 5: … we humans need authentic ecclesial and sacramental experiences to explore and articulate our innate vocation to be people in relationship… Principle 6: Ultimate meaning is embedded in story, not in facts… Principle 7: Redemption is planetary (and cosmic) as well as personal… Principle 8: Structural and systemic sin abounds in our world… Principle 9: … our final destiny… is that of enlightenment… Principle 10: The concepts of beginning and end, along with the theological notions ore resurrection and reincarnation, are invoked as dominant myths to help us … make sense of our infinite destiny in an infinite universe… Principle 11: Extinction and transformation… are central coordinates of cosmic and planetary evolution… Principle 12: Love is an independent life force, a spectrum of possibility ranging from its ultimate divine grandeur to its particularity in subatomic interaction. It is the origin and goal of our search for meaning.” (Pg. 209-214)

This book may interest those seeking an integration of theological concepts with quantum physics.


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Corey
100 reviews

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June 9, 2012
A very thought-provoking, provocative, and dense book that uniquely uses recent discoveries and theories within quantum science to build a systematic theology of human spirituality. I have not encountered anything like it before. I suspect that the book never hit popular markets due to its reliance on complicated concepts and largely undeveloped quantum science. However, I found it fascinating, and many of the author's conclusions ring true to experience. The author sees religion as "the greatest idolatry of all time" and the greatest impediment to human spirituality and connecting with the divine. He accurately observes that "formal religion is a recent visitor to Planet Earth." He explores the way in which quantum theory has done away with previous ideas of autonomy in nature, and explores how the interrelatedness and interdependence of all life has profound spiritual implications. A good read, but as other reviews have warned, don't expect to be able to digest it quickly.
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Harry Moore
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December 13, 2012
I believe that the relationship between science and theology needed to brought to the fore front of conversations. We spend lots of time trying to make sense of the both. Now for those who are new to the Idea of the special relationship, this combo can be a bit unnerving and feel that the purity of history of belief is tarnished, but I can say from personal experience and intuitiveness the topics are twins just realizing they have the common mother. We have an opportunity in this life time to give witness to the unique special entanglement as it unfold before our eyes.
The Author really brings light to the subject and the use of references is great! I have a tendency to read the references material if I like the Author. He hit a home run with me in this book.

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Michael Taouk
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February 20, 2013
The book seems to be written more for the benefit of readers with a theology background than anyone else. Anyone who has studied science beyond high school cannot avoid the beauty, mystery and majesty of the world around us. For those of us who have some understanding of science and also seek God, our perception of God is primarily shaped by our understanding of creation. As modern science moves forward, it points to a increasingly awesome God.

O'Murchu's focus on "Quantum Theory" is annoying, because Quantum Theory is only the tip of the iceberg. Perhaps theologians should study more science and less scripture :) .... I will continue reading ...

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Jodi
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February 15, 2009
Everything Father Diarmuid writes is a struggle for me to comprehend but the end result is one where I feel enhanced by a greater understanding of what God has done in His creative work.

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Susan Marrier
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April 12, 2018
I'd like to give this book a 4.5 rating. I don't know where to begin to review it, but I think it is a very important book for our times, very challenging in parts, but his conclusions are satisfying. I especially found it strangely comforting to realize that the universe has apparently always been dying and rising again, and that species rise and disappear, and that homo sapiens will do likewise, but the universe will go on without us, perhaps giving rise to another species on earth that will do a better job than we have, as we enter a larger consciousness. If interested, I recommend that you read the reviews of some of the other readers who are more articulate than I, and then get the book and read it through even if you do not understand all of it.
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David Corbet
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December 17, 2010
An excellent book and great introduction to the new roads that theology may be taking over this next century. We are standing at such a pivotal point, theologically speaking, it will be very interesting to see how the future unfolds as more and more theologians begin to reflect upon the changes in science and culture. This book is a great place to begin the reflection process. It will most definitely go on my "read again" pile. The best part of this book is the exhaustive bibliography at the back.

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Susan
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August 24, 2015
This is a great book that addresses how science, specifically quantum physics can and should impact one's spirituality. Understanding we are part of an infinite cosmos can certainly broaden one's understanding of who God is and the impact it has on one's response to that understanding.

There were a few points I would disagree, but being open to the dialogue is what is important ~ there is always room to learn and grow in understanding.
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Renee
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ReadJanuary 19, 2013
I love this book. An accessible insight intoa deep and powerful concept of spirituality.

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===
Quantum Theology
Spiritual Implications of the New Physics
By Diarmuid O'Murchu
Presents a bold theological map where science, religion, psyychology, cosmology and spirtuality all whirl together in a stirring dance of connections.
Book Review by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
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Theology has been infused with fresh potency thanks to liberation, feminist, creative, and multi-faith emphases. Now Diarmuid O'Murchu's Quantum Theology presents a planetary and personal portrait of life transforming life. The author, a priest and social psychologist living in London, spins out the quantum theory of physics into a multidimensional vision of reality that takes within its embrace relationship, story, the shadow, light, and love.

One of the most exciting chapters in this path-breaking theological work is on dance. O'Murchu sees movement built into the body and into the tapestry of evolution. Dance as scientific metaphor and as the pulse of creation incarnates the divine energy which animates all living beings. The quantum vision also affirms connections, speaks through stories, embraces the dark and chaos, and moves toward the light in mystical experiences and in enlightenment. O'Murchu has written a bold theological map which takes us into uncharted territory where science, religion, psychology, cosmology, and spirituality all whirl together in a phantasmagorical dance.

===

ON FEBRUARY 23, 2007 ⋅ POST A COMMENT

Diarmuid O’Murchu: Quantum Theology: the Spiritual Implications of the New Physics. (Some rough notes)

’If there is enough matter in the universe gravity will stop this present expansion process and the universe will start contracting and will end up in a Big Crunch – a death by fire (heat death)… If there is not enough matter in the universe expansion wins and the universe will expand forever. As it expands the energy gets dissipated and the temperature decrease until it reaches the absolute zero of temperature when everything comes to a stand still. We have a freeze death… – Professor M. M. Ninan

“We are driven back . . . to God alone as the basis of final hope, so that our own and the universe’s destiny awaits a transforming act of divine redemption.” — John Polkinghorne

~~~

A social psychologist and member of the Sacred Heart Missionary Congregation, Fr. Diarmuid O’Murchu (pronounced DYAR-mid O-MOOR-who; it’s Irish for Dermot Murphy) has worked in both Ireland and England as a counselor in schools and with married couples, the HIV-infected and the bereaved. Born and raised in a rural Irish village, he currently resides in London. His books are enormously popular with progressive Catholic spiritual searchers worldwide.

O’Murchu says his religious questioning began with and still takes its direction from the search for meaning he finds within the troubled souls of his clients, who struggle with addictions and against despair. He believes that the sex abuse we see in the church and elsewhere is really about dishonored spirituality and creativity. Frustration leads to exploitation. When spirituality is not recognized and pursued, then we get sex addiction and other compulsive behaviors.

“Ours is a culture rife with addiction because we are deprived of mysticism. In the Catholic church also we have had what I call ‘celibate rationality.’ This legacy from several centuries in our theology maintains that God has nothing to do with sexuality, so celibates shouldn’t either. It counsels us to transcend eroticism and passions, not integrate them responsibly into our living. This old view of celibacy is crippling and destroying people’s lives.”


Here, from O’Murchu’s Appendix (‘Principles of Quantum Theology’) – according to many Amazon.com reviewers a good place to start to understand all this – is my summary of O’Murchu’s summary the key 12 QT principles:

1. God (a human term we should use sparingly) is creative energy, pulsating restlessly throughout time and eternity

2. Wholeness = the wellspring of all possibility (but note that the whole is always greater than the sum of its parts)

3. Evolution is underpinned by a deep unfolding structure, characterized by design and purpose

4. All creatures are invited to engage co-creatively in the expanding horizon of divine belonging

5. The capacity to relate is the primary divine energy impregnating creation, so we humans need authentic ecclesial and sacramental experiences to explore and articulate our innate vocation to be people in relationship

6. Ultimate meaning is embedded in story, not in facts

7. Redemption is planetary and cosmic as well as personal

8. We need fresh moral guidelines to address the structural and systemic sinfulness of our time

9. We are primarily beneficiaries of light, not of darkness

10. The concepts of beginning and end, along with the theological notions of resurrection and reincarnation, are invoked as dominant myths to help us humans make sense of our infinite destiny in an infinite universe

11. Extinction/transformation (Calvary/resurrection) are central coordinates of cosmic evolution

12. Love is an interdependent life force… ranging from its ultimate divine grandeur to its particularity in subatomic interaction. It is the origin and goal of our search for meaning.

~~~

Now, I’m only an amateur theologian, and I have no credentials as a scientist. I’m one who barely knows a quark from a black-hole – and so I was soon out of my depth in this book. But if the spirituality that is appealing to seekers today embodies global, inclusive, co-operative, egalitarian, and feminine values, and if O’Murchu speaks to/for all this, then we’d better try to get some sort of handle on it. O’Murchu says we should stop thinking of God as a supernatural Being located outside the universe. Instead, we should think of the universe itself as a pulsating, vibrant dance of energy alive with benign and creative potential in which God calls to us from within, not without.

He says we should stop thinking of ourselves as created beings, and see ourselves instead as woven into the fabric of a dynamic, evolving and self-renewing universe in which we must play our part or become extinct. The damage we are doing to the planet and to other life forms may leave the universe no choice but to spit us out, as it has done to countless species before us.


Paternalistic organized religions/cultures are part of this destructive apparatus, so part of the solution is the adoption of a more feministic, holistic spirituality, independent of organized religion. During an earlier visit to Australia, he told The West Australian (10 September 1994) that Christianity had gone wrong at the time of St Paul, who “switched the emphasis of the Gospel message from ‘kingdom’ to ‘church’.” The resulting Church, he said, had too much focus on “the preservation of patriarchal and centralized structures and beliefs.” But when did the rot originally set in? A long time ago: after the agricultural revolution about 10,000 years ago, humans began to “carve up Planet Earth into what we now call nation states and ethnic subdivisions” and eventually “invented systems of belief (called religions) to validate our anthropocentric insatiable instinct to divide and conquer the whole creation.” Prior to the emergence of “formal religion”, there had been a veritable Eden where “we humans lived and behaved within a spiritual sense of connectedness with planetary and universal life.”

So “religion could well be the most destructive and outrageous form of idolatry that our world has ever known.” The solution to this “crisis of faith” for O’Murchu is to “bring the planetary-cosmic aspect into conscious awareness.” To gain insights into this “new cosmology”, we should study the works of Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry to learn “that creation itself is the primary revelation of God for us.”

In a quantum world dogmas should serve only as “pointers to a deeper truth, the totality of which is never fully grasped.” In defense of Trinity, he says: ‘…the three-dimensional nature of space is an inherent quality of cosmic interdependence… In two-dimensional space, objects settle down to rest into stable orbits, whereas those interacting in three dimensions show a unique complexity and a potential for novel behavior as they weave in and around each other. Of the entire range of conceivable dimensions only one number… is amenable to life [– three]. Any choices above three make it impossible for planets to remain at proper distances from their suns. Anything below three scrambles the orderly communication so crucial to living beings. For gods and creatures alike, three seems to be a number of immense cosmic significance… I suggest that the doctrine of the Trinity is an attempted expression of the fact that the essential nature of God is about relatedness and the capacity to relate, that the propensity and power to relate is, in fact, the very essence of God…’


Further: “Our very constitution as human beings is our capacity to relate, and in our struggle to do so authentically we reveal to the world that we are made in the image and likeness of the Originating Mystery, whose essential Trinitarian nature is also that of relatedness.”

CONSERVATIVE CRITIQUES

Conservatives (see, for example, the article in the online website Theopedia) accuse O’Murchu of ‘overlaying old familiar New Age spirituality with a thin veneer of science jargon, and suggests that science gives us no choice but to recognize it as true enlightenment. The reality is that O’Murchu’s Quantum Theology is neither science nor theology; it is one man’s breathless sales pitch for a rather typical post-Christian spirituality.’

For example:

’He encourages the reader to set aside all critical thinking: “And please leave at home your religious and scientific ideologies along with the dualisms you have inherited, which you tend to use to divide life into right and wrong, earth and heaven.”’ [p. 7]

‘[He] is unapologetically anti-Christian, suggesting that Christianity (and all organized religion) should be abandoned: “What we cannot escape is that we as a species have outlived that phase of our evolutionary development and so, quite appropriately (it seems to me), thousands of people are leaving religion aside…” [p. 13]

’He explicitly rejects creation ex nihilo asserting instead a form of panentheism: “In quantum theology, the creative potential emerges (evolves) from within the cosmos.”’ [p. 56]

’He rejects not only the authority of the Bible, but even its significance: “Quantum theology abhors the human tendency to attribute literal significance to the sacred writings of the various religions.”’ [p. 57]

On the other hand Quantum Theology received widespread support from liberal Christians, particularly within the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches in North America. For example:

* The National Catholic Reporter gave the book a positive review, noting “…quantum theology tells us that the birth of the Buddha, the emergence of Hinduism, the journey of Judaism, and the person of Jesus do not exist in isolation from each other.”

More… http://www.theopedia.com/Quantum_theology ~~~

To my knowledge, O’Murchu has not been censured by the Vatican. Which is hard to believe when one of its high profile priests make such assertions as “Theology is about opening up new horizons of possibility and alternate meaning, and not about consigning truth to specific dogmas, creeds or religions” or his bold re-imaging of the persons of the Trinity as ‘Mother, Lover and Friend.’ The highest-level Catholic critique I could find is that of the Spanish Bishops (see http://www.catholic.org/featured/headline.php?ID=3211)

They don’t like O’Murchu

* suggesting that religious men and women “should leave the Church and take on a non-canonical status” since “the values of the Religious life belong to a more ancient pre-religious tradition”

* ‘dismissing Christian revelation and its ecclesial transmission… locating the starting point of his thesis in the “specialists” whom he believes have discovered the essential features of the “primordial vision,” and in whose writings we “have all the ingredients of a new cosmology”


* stressing the natural “unity” of the cosmos as against the patriarchal “duality” of the Hellenistic and Christian traditions

* suggesting that “creation itself [is] our primary and primordial source of divine revelation”

* believing that “Iiminality does not need formal religion” (p. 61), and that the Church is really nothing more that a dispensable obstacle

* (this one is terrifying for the established Catholic Church): ‘The vow of chastity acquires the new name of a “vow for relatedness” – “a call to name, explore and mediate the human engagement in intimate relationships, within the changing circumstances of life and culture” (p. 107). This ultimate framework is the pre-patriarchal culture, where sexual intimacy is linked neither to monogamous matrimony (which according to Father O’Murchu is a medieval and Tridentine construct) (p. 106), nor to reproduction (p. 108), nor to a dualism of the sexes (p. 110). Religious men and women with their vows “for relatedness” are supposed to work toward a sexual life that is not repressed by Christianity or patriarchalism and which will be “mediated in a breadth of relationships, rather than in a depth of relatedness.” This will be “more about the release of creativity, passion and spirituality than about human reproduction” (p. 109), and about the assimilation of the “creative upsurge taking place in the inner being of many persons” that Father O’Murchu calls the “androgynous experience” (p. 110), in other words: homosexuality.’

* (In case you didn’t get the implications of O’Murchu’s notion of celibacy): ‘This sexual life of religious men and women, undertaken in “service to the world,” will be concretely expressed primarily in the “paradox” of the celibate life, but will not automatically exclude any of the above-mentioned genital relationships’…’This is not an attempt at compromise …, but an aspiration to remain as open as possible to the changing nature of human sexuality” (p. 112).

BACK TO QUANTUM THEOLOGY

Diarmuid O’Murchu begins his system with synergy, the principle that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. He’s offering, not a set of answers, but an invitation to explore.

O’Murchu quotes Neils Bohr: “Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it.” The quantum is the smallest measurable amount of energy – actually a minuscule bundle of energies. And everything we can touch and see is alive with billions of dancing quanta. They do not work by cause and effect. Rather “Everything is affected (rather than caused) by everything else. “Thou can’st not stir a flower without disturbing a star” (Francis Thompson). The paradoxical result is that “There is motion, but there are no moving objects” (36). And O’Murchu is eloquent about the pulsating restlessness of cosmic dancing. “There are no dancers, there is only the dance” and “We experience a sense of being danced rather than we ourselves performing the dance” (39-49).

A book can fail to answer a question, and yet succeed by putting you on the scent of something interesting.

So here’s a marvelous teacher distinguishing between religion and spirituality, championing imagination over intellect, attributing the origins of patriarchalism to the agrarian rather than the industrial revolution, proposing an evolving rather than a mechanistic cosmos.


I picked this up somewhere on the Web: ‘How scary this becomes for the guardians of truth in our world. Those who hunger for patriarchal certitude, whether in religion or science, who seek objective verification and the guarantee of divine veracity, become petrified and defensive. New vision is always a threat to the status quo, and predictably the visionaries will be ridiculed and ostracized to varying degrees. Meanwhile, the search goes on, and the dream unfolds; to borrow a biblical phrase: the Spirit blows where she wills … and I suspect she always will.”

O’Murchu expresses admiration for the writings of Matthew Fox and his view that creation was the “primary divine revelation”. No one belief system, he said, had a monopoly on truth, which continually unfolds in an evolutionary fashion. He’s in tune with the New Cosmology explored by people like Brian Swimme, Thomas Berry, and Rosemary Radford Ruether. He also praises the Latin American Basic Ecclesial Communities as a key to his vision of the future.

(O’Murchu has published a sort of followup book, in which he applies the principles described in Quantum Theology to Jesus Christ and his teachings: Catching Up with Jesus: A Gospel Story for Our Time. )

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Here’s a suggested bibliography if you really want to pursue all this further (sorry, I missed recording the website where I found this list):

Berry, Thomas. 1987. Thomas Berry & and the New Cosmology, edited by Anne Lonergan. Mystic, CT: Twenty-Third Publications.

_____ 1988. The Dream of the Earth. Sierra Club Nature and Natural Philosophy Library.

Berry, Thomas, C.P. in Dialogue with Thomas Clarke, S.J. 1991. Befriending the Earth. Mystic, CT: Twenty-Third Publications.

Brungs, Robert, SJ. 1997. A Review of Quantum Theology by Diarmuid O’Murchu. Review for Religious, July-Aug. 1997, p. 440.

Craig, William Lane. 1998. “Design & the Cosmological Argument” in Dembski, William A., Editor. Mere Creation: Science, Faith & Intelligent Design. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press.

Davies, Paul. 1990. “What Caused the Big Bang? in Physical Cosmology and Philosophy by John Leslie. NY: Macmillan Publishing Co.

Deltete, Robert, “Hawking on God and Creation” in Zygon, Dec., 1993, pp. 485-506.

Ferris, Timothy. 1998. The Whole Shebang. Phoenix.

Folger, Tim. 2001. “Quantum Shmantum” in Discover, Sept. 2001, p. 37-43.

Fox, Matthew. Original Blessing, Bear & Company, 1983, p. 316.

Freedman, David. “The Mediocre Universe” in Discover, February 1996, pp. 65-75.

Guth, Alan. 1997. The Inflationary Universe: The Quest for a New Theory of Cosmic Origins. Reading, MA: Helix Books, Addison-Wesley.

Hawking, Stephen. 1988. A Brief History of Time.

_____ 1993. Black Holes and Baby Universes. NY: Bantam.

“How Did the Universe Begin?” in Scientific American. Jan. 2000. p. 68.

Isham, C.J. 1993. “Quantum Theories of the Creation of the Universe” in Quantum Cosmology and the Laws of Nature. Berkeley, CA: The Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences.

Lemley, Brad. 2002. “Guth’s Grand Guess” in Discover, April 2002, p. 32-9.

Linde, Andrei. 1994. “The Self-Reproducing Inflationary Universe” in Scientific American, Nov. 1994, p. 48-55.

O’Murchu, Diarmuid. 1997. Quantum Theology. Crossroad Publications.

_____ 2002. Evolutionary Faith: Rediscovering God in Our Great Story. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books.

Peebles, P. James E. 2001. “Making Sense of Modern Cosmology” in Scientific American. Jan. 2001, p. 54-5.

Sachs, Mendel. 2000. “Will the 21st Century See a Paradigm Shift in Physics from the Quantum Theory to General Relativity?” in Revue Internationale de Philosophie 2/2000, p. 351-368.

Sarna, Nahum M. 1983. “Understanding Creation in Genesis” in Is God a Creationist?, edited by Roland Mushat Frye. NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons.

Schmitz-Moormann, Karl. 1997. Theology of Creation in an Evolutionary World. Cleveland, OH: The Pilgrim Press.

Studer, James N. “Consciousness and Reality: Our Entry into Creation” in Cross Currents. Spring 1998, p. 15.

Swimme, Brian. 1987. “Science: A Partner in Creating the Vision” in Thomas Berry & and the New Cosmology, edited by Anne Lonergan, Twenty-Third Publications.

_____ 1996. The Hidden Heart of the Cosmos. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books.

Tipler, Frank. 1994. The Physics of Immortality.

Toolan, David. 2001. At Home in the Cosmos. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books.

Tryon, Edward P. 1990. “Is the Universe a Vacuum Fluctuation?” in Physical Cosmology and Philosophy by John Leslie. NY: Macmillan Publishing Co.

Vawter, Bruce. 1977. On Genesis: A New Reading. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., Inc.

_____ 1983. “Creationism: Creative Misuse of the Bible” in Is God a Creationist?, edited by Roland Mushat Frye. NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons.

Weinberg, Steven. 1993. The First Three Minutes: A Modern View of the Origin of the Universe. BasicBooks.

_____ 2002. Interview in Discover, May 2002, p. 18.

White, Michael and John Gribbin. 1992. Stephen Hawking: A Life in Science. A Dutton Book.

Websites:

http://www.innerexplorations.com/chtheomortext/origin.htm

http://www.acns.com/~mm9n/quan/index.htm

A review by Robert Brow (http://www.brow.on.ca) January 2001

http://www.brow.on.ca/Articles/OMurchu.htm

http://www.catholicnewtimes.org/index.php?module=articles&func=display&ptid=1&aid=35

Rowland Croucher

February 2007

===

cover image Quantum Theology
Quantum Theology
Diarmuid O'Murchu. Crossroad Publishing Company, $19.95 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-8245-1630-7
Postulating a new theology is, by any standard, no mean feat. Attempting to define, as O'Murchu valiantly does, a theology that embraces the latest advances in quantum physics can only be considered a task of Herculean proportions. While well-intentioned and well-researched, this book extrapolates farther and farther away from quantum mechanical insights into realms which, at times, are quite speculative in order to create a basis for a quantum theology. For example, O'Murchu begins his system with synergy, the principle that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, a principle that is not inherently a quantum mechanical conclusion at all. O'Murchu gives his argument sharper focus when he describes Stephen Hawking's concept of the birth of the universe, and he does a workmanlike job of creating what might best be called a cosmological theology. Unfortunately, the author's circuitous prose is difficult to follow. However, putting O'Murchu's audacious work into perspective, even Roger Penrose, in his Shadows of the Mind, admitted he was challenged to find a basis for consciousness in quantum mechanics. Finding a basis for God in quantum mechanics may be something else altogether. (Jan.)

===
Review of Quantum Theology. Spiritual Implications of the New Phyics by O Murchu, D
UM King

Institute for Advanced StudiesDepartment of Religion and Theology
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article (Academic Journal) › peer-review

 Overview
Translated title of the contributionReview of Quantum Theology. Spiritual Implications of the New Phyics by O Murchu, D
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)125 - 125
Number of pages1
JournalPriests and People
Volume12/3
Publication statusPublished - 1998
Bibliographical note
Title of Publication Reviewed: Quantum Theology. Spiritual Implications of the New Phyics
Author of Publication Reviewed: O<acute> Murchu<acute>, D
Other: Volume March 1998

===

2023/10/25

BUSHIDO: THE CREATION OF A MARTIAL ETHIC IN LATE MEIJI JAPAN by OLEG BENESCH

BUSHIDO: THE CREATION OF A MARTIAL ETHIC IN LATE MEIJI JAPAN 

by OLEG BENESCH 

 BUSHIDO: 메이지 일본 말기의 무술 윤리 창시 - OLEG BENESCH

A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES (Asian Studies) 

THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) 

FEBRUARY 2011 

© Oleg Benesch, 2011 

알라딘 이전에 구매하셨던 상품들입니다.

알라딘

 이전에 구매하셨던 상품들입니다.

지금 주문하시려는 상품 중 아래의 상품은 지난 구매 내역에 있는 상품(들)입니다.
재차 주문하려는 상품이 맞는지 확인하세요. 주문하신 내역에 있었던 이 상품들을 이번 주문에도 포함하시려면 바로 ‘주문과정 계속하기’ 버튼을 누르시면 됩니다.
주문하실 필요가 없는 상품은 ‘삭제’버튼을 누르신 후 ‘주문과정 계속하기’ 버튼을 누르시면 삭제한 상품을 제외하고 주문됩니다.


(단, eBook은 반드시 삭제해주세요.)

 

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