进化论与科学本质》读本:一个基督徒的视角

Keith B. Miller
{"title":"进化论与科学本质》读本:一个基督徒的视角","authors":"Keith B. Miller","doi":"10.56315/pscf12-23miller","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"READINGS ON EVOLUTION AND THE NATURE OF SCIENCE: One Christian's Perspective by Keith B. Miller. Morgantown, PA: Mastof Press, 2022. 224 pages. Paperback; $20.00. ISBN: 9781601268129. *Keith B. Miller has dedicated his career to conducting paleontological and geological research and teaching at a public university. In addition to his many contributions to the geoscience literature and his activity in professional societies, he has contributed multiple provocative articles that advanced faith and science dialogue, many in Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith. Readings on Evolution and the Nature of Science: One Christian's Perspective is a collection of sixteen of Miller's articles published between 1993 and 2018 and one previously unpublished manuscript. The articles are clustered among five sections that represent the foci of Miller's writing and public address. *In The Nature of Science section, Miller addresses misunderstandings of science held by the public. He describes how misconceptions have been promoted by traditional young earth creationists and intelligent design advocates who have great contemporary influence on churches, seminaries, local school boards, and state legislatures. In footnotes to the first article, \"The Similarity of Theory Testing in the Historical and 'Hard' Sciences,\" Miller reveals that the integrity of historical science (such as geology and paleontology) was debated in the development of Kansas science education standards. Drawing from the philosophy of science and using examples from geology, he defends historical science as not different from \"hard\" science in its predictive and explanatory power. *While evolution is the volume's overarching theme, in the second article Miller examines science's nature as applied to the public debate over anthropogenic global warming. He recognizes widely held misconceptions of science that fuel the rejection of controversial theories such as climate change and evolution. These include misunderstandings of fact and theory and the misconception that \"unproven\" theories should not become the basis for public action. To demonstrate the importance of scale and context in theory making, Miller presents actual data sets revealing patterns of global environmental change at different scales and timeframes. Incidentally, those climatic patterns up to 2012, the year of the article's original publication, have persisted since with increasingly observable and negative consequences. Finally, Miller considers the widespread rejection of scientific consensus motivated by religious, economic, political, or philosophical interests. *Two articles in this section focus on evolution as science, written to scientists and science educators likely holding an evolutionary view. In \"The Misguided Attack on Methodological Naturalism,\" Miller rejects the intelligent design (ID) movement's claim that methodological naturalism (MN), the presupposition that limits science's purview to natural phenomena, is effectively the denial of the existence and action of God. Miller identifies that MN originated as an attempt by a Christian philosopher to limit science from transgressing upon questions more appropriately pursued by the arts, theology, and philosophy. \"Ironically, by rejecting methodological naturalism, ID advocates have ended up supporting the very scientism that they claim to want to fight against\" (p. 26). The article continues with a critical overview of the ID movement and perceived implications for science practice and education. While located in the Evolution and Theology section of the book, this article pairs well with \"Design and Purpose within an Evolving Creation,\" in which Miller addresses claims about MN and evolutionary science by Phillip Johnson (1940-2019) and the ID movement. Miller's article was originally contributed to Darwinism Defeated? (Vancouver, BC: Regent College Publishing, 1999), a book that captured the debate between ID-anti-evolutionists and evolutionary creationists following the publication of Johnson's provocative Darwin on Trial (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1991). This section concludes with Miller's PSCF article, \"Doubt and Faith in Science and Religion\" (PSCF 70, no. 2 [2018]: 90-100), examining how both doubt and faith are relevant, even necessary, in both paths for pursuing truth. *Articles in the Evidence for an Evolving Creation section provide compelling examples of transitional forms and ancestral relationships in the history of life. Two serve as direct responses to claims that the Cambrian \"explosion\" is fatally problematic for evolutionary theory because so many different forms appeared so suddenly upon the first appearance of invertebrate groups (the Cambrian Period is dated between 542 and 490 million years ago). Miller describes the difficulty of assigning founding species early in life's history to taxonomic groups and provides examples of metazoans older than the Cambrian showing a progressive, rather than sudden, increase in body plan complexity. Miller presents a well-illustrated and well-referenced overview of the Precambrian fossil record. He argues that the \"explosion\" extended over 20 million or more years, preceded by at least 40 million years of increasing complexity among soft-bodied metazoans. *\"Common Descent, Transitional Forms, and the Fossil Record\" is a clearly written and amply illustrated defense of evolution, highlighting different groups of mammals living on Earth over the past some 250 million years and their probable tetrapod ancestors. Miller \"climb[s] down the tree of life\" to demonstrate how increasingly older ancestors of living mammal groups become more difficult to distinguish from the oldest ancestors of other groups. \"Countering Common Misconceptions of Evolution in the Paleontology Classroom\" is written for college-level instructors, including an innovative cladogram construction exercise involving dinosaur taxa to demonstrate how evolutionary relationships are determined. Miller emphasizes that presenting scientific concepts in their historical context is an effective way to counter mistaken views that students bring to the classroom. *The nexus of Evolution and Theology is addressed with four articles (including one described above). In \"Theological Implications of an Evolving Creation,\" Miller explains that the evolutionary history of life is consistent with creation's integrity, enormity, and goodness; the immanent and progressive nature of God's creative activity; and the image of God in creation. \"An Evolving Creation: Oxymoron or Fruitful Insight?\" returns to the nature of science and theology, with an emphasis on exploring ways to diminish the conflict view of science and faith. The section's final article, \"God, Evolution, and Becoming Man\" was written for seminarians and describes the fossil record of hominins (modern humans and closely related extinct species), demonstrating potential evolutionary relationships using paleontological, genetic, and inferred behavioral comparisons. Miller comments on implications for the meaning of imago Dei and our understanding of body and soul. *The Problem of Evil section opens with the theological implications of natural hazards. Miller questions if natural catastrophes are a consequence of the Fall described in Genesis 3, satanic manipulations of nature, or generally reflect God's judgment on sinful humankind. Considering the testimony of the Psalms and other biblical narratives, he concludes that post-Fall creation is good. As well, the geologic record reveals that severe natural events occurred with regularity before the Fall. Disturbances we perceive as hazards are essential to the maintenance of natural systems (the natural order). Past attempts to control hazards, such as wildfire suppression, coastal modifications, and flood control often make those hazards worse. Biblical concepts of environmental stewardship can be applied in order to live in harmony with creation. *\"'And God Saw That It Was Good': Death and Pain in the Created Order\" addresses the question of \"natural evil\" that leads to unbelief when unresolved, \"as it was for Darwin, himself\" (p. 198). Miller reviews traditional and novel approaches to theodicy. Recognizing that crucified Christ participates in the suffering and death of his creation, Miller proposes that \"physical death, pain, and suffering are opportunities for the expression of Christ-like character\" (p. 205). Miller draws insights on the problem of evil from J. R. R. Tolkien's Silmarillion and Lord of the Rings in the section's final essay. *Science as Christian Vocation is an article co-authored with Ruth Douglas Miller, \"Staying on the Road Less Traveled: Fulfilling a Vocation in Science.\" The Millers encourage students and early career scientists to look to their faith, in its teaching and traditions, to motivate and guide their work in ways that glorify God and further his kingdom. *Throughout, Miller is keen to avoid the sacred/secular dichotomy, believing that God \"has a claim on all aspects of our lives\" (p. 1). Professors at some Christian colleges are required to write a \"faith and learning\" paper in order to achieve tenure, an onerous task for those not used to engaging theology in their professional work. Here, Miller has written seventeen such papers while employed by a \"secular\" university! Science educators can benefit from reading Miller's work to develop a sound understanding of the purviews of science and theology applicable to topics such as origins, climate change, and public health. I assigned multiple articles found in this volume as reading in several of my college courses. Remarkably, Miller was often three to five years ahead of resurging interest in many of these topics among evangelical scholars. Rather than re-publishing separate articles with modest overlap in material coverage, Miller might have organized the material into a unified text that could reach a wider or more targete","PeriodicalId":53927,"journal":{"name":"Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith","volume":" 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Readings on Evolution and the Nature of Science: One Christian’s Perspective\",\"authors\":\"Keith B. Miller\",\"doi\":\"10.56315/pscf12-23miller\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"READINGS ON EVOLUTION AND THE NATURE OF SCIENCE: One Christian's Perspective by Keith B. Miller. Morgantown, PA: Mastof Press, 2022. 224 pages. Paperback; $20.00. ISBN: 9781601268129. *Keith B. Miller has dedicated his career to conducting paleontological and geological research and teaching at a public university. In addition to his many contributions to the geoscience literature and his activity in professional societies, he has contributed multiple provocative articles that advanced faith and science dialogue, many in Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith. Readings on Evolution and the Nature of Science: One Christian's Perspective is a collection of sixteen of Miller's articles published between 1993 and 2018 and one previously unpublished manuscript. The articles are clustered among five sections that represent the foci of Miller's writing and public address. *In The Nature of Science section, Miller addresses misunderstandings of science held by the public. He describes how misconceptions have been promoted by traditional young earth creationists and intelligent design advocates who have great contemporary influence on churches, seminaries, local school boards, and state legislatures. In footnotes to the first article, \\\"The Similarity of Theory Testing in the Historical and 'Hard' Sciences,\\\" Miller reveals that the integrity of historical science (such as geology and paleontology) was debated in the development of Kansas science education standards. Drawing from the philosophy of science and using examples from geology, he defends historical science as not different from \\\"hard\\\" science in its predictive and explanatory power. *While evolution is the volume's overarching theme, in the second article Miller examines science's nature as applied to the public debate over anthropogenic global warming. He recognizes widely held misconceptions of science that fuel the rejection of controversial theories such as climate change and evolution. These include misunderstandings of fact and theory and the misconception that \\\"unproven\\\" theories should not become the basis for public action. To demonstrate the importance of scale and context in theory making, Miller presents actual data sets revealing patterns of global environmental change at different scales and timeframes. Incidentally, those climatic patterns up to 2012, the year of the article's original publication, have persisted since with increasingly observable and negative consequences. Finally, Miller considers the widespread rejection of scientific consensus motivated by religious, economic, political, or philosophical interests. *Two articles in this section focus on evolution as science, written to scientists and science educators likely holding an evolutionary view. In \\\"The Misguided Attack on Methodological Naturalism,\\\" Miller rejects the intelligent design (ID) movement's claim that methodological naturalism (MN), the presupposition that limits science's purview to natural phenomena, is effectively the denial of the existence and action of God. Miller identifies that MN originated as an attempt by a Christian philosopher to limit science from transgressing upon questions more appropriately pursued by the arts, theology, and philosophy. \\\"Ironically, by rejecting methodological naturalism, ID advocates have ended up supporting the very scientism that they claim to want to fight against\\\" (p. 26). The article continues with a critical overview of the ID movement and perceived implications for science practice and education. While located in the Evolution and Theology section of the book, this article pairs well with \\\"Design and Purpose within an Evolving Creation,\\\" in which Miller addresses claims about MN and evolutionary science by Phillip Johnson (1940-2019) and the ID movement. Miller's article was originally contributed to Darwinism Defeated? (Vancouver, BC: Regent College Publishing, 1999), a book that captured the debate between ID-anti-evolutionists and evolutionary creationists following the publication of Johnson's provocative Darwin on Trial (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1991). This section concludes with Miller's PSCF article, \\\"Doubt and Faith in Science and Religion\\\" (PSCF 70, no. 2 [2018]: 90-100), examining how both doubt and faith are relevant, even necessary, in both paths for pursuing truth. *Articles in the Evidence for an Evolving Creation section provide compelling examples of transitional forms and ancestral relationships in the history of life. Two serve as direct responses to claims that the Cambrian \\\"explosion\\\" is fatally problematic for evolutionary theory because so many different forms appeared so suddenly upon the first appearance of invertebrate groups (the Cambrian Period is dated between 542 and 490 million years ago). Miller describes the difficulty of assigning founding species early in life's history to taxonomic groups and provides examples of metazoans older than the Cambrian showing a progressive, rather than sudden, increase in body plan complexity. Miller presents a well-illustrated and well-referenced overview of the Precambrian fossil record. He argues that the \\\"explosion\\\" extended over 20 million or more years, preceded by at least 40 million years of increasing complexity among soft-bodied metazoans. *\\\"Common Descent, Transitional Forms, and the Fossil Record\\\" is a clearly written and amply illustrated defense of evolution, highlighting different groups of mammals living on Earth over the past some 250 million years and their probable tetrapod ancestors. Miller \\\"climb[s] down the tree of life\\\" to demonstrate how increasingly older ancestors of living mammal groups become more difficult to distinguish from the oldest ancestors of other groups. \\\"Countering Common Misconceptions of Evolution in the Paleontology Classroom\\\" is written for college-level instructors, including an innovative cladogram construction exercise involving dinosaur taxa to demonstrate how evolutionary relationships are determined. Miller emphasizes that presenting scientific concepts in their historical context is an effective way to counter mistaken views that students bring to the classroom. *The nexus of Evolution and Theology is addressed with four articles (including one described above). In \\\"Theological Implications of an Evolving Creation,\\\" Miller explains that the evolutionary history of life is consistent with creation's integrity, enormity, and goodness; the immanent and progressive nature of God's creative activity; and the image of God in creation. \\\"An Evolving Creation: Oxymoron or Fruitful Insight?\\\" returns to the nature of science and theology, with an emphasis on exploring ways to diminish the conflict view of science and faith. The section's final article, \\\"God, Evolution, and Becoming Man\\\" was written for seminarians and describes the fossil record of hominins (modern humans and closely related extinct species), demonstrating potential evolutionary relationships using paleontological, genetic, and inferred behavioral comparisons. Miller comments on implications for the meaning of imago Dei and our understanding of body and soul. *The Problem of Evil section opens with the theological implications of natural hazards. Miller questions if natural catastrophes are a consequence of the Fall described in Genesis 3, satanic manipulations of nature, or generally reflect God's judgment on sinful humankind. Considering the testimony of the Psalms and other biblical narratives, he concludes that post-Fall creation is good. As well, the geologic record reveals that severe natural events occurred with regularity before the Fall. Disturbances we perceive as hazards are essential to the maintenance of natural systems (the natural order). Past attempts to control hazards, such as wildfire suppression, coastal modifications, and flood control often make those hazards worse. Biblical concepts of environmental stewardship can be applied in order to live in harmony with creation. *\\\"'And God Saw That It Was Good': Death and Pain in the Created Order\\\" addresses the question of \\\"natural evil\\\" that leads to unbelief when unresolved, \\\"as it was for Darwin, himself\\\" (p. 198). Miller reviews traditional and novel approaches to theodicy. Recognizing that crucified Christ participates in the suffering and death of his creation, Miller proposes that \\\"physical death, pain, and suffering are opportunities for the expression of Christ-like character\\\" (p. 205). Miller draws insights on the problem of evil from J. R. R. 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Science educators can benefit from reading Miller's work to develop a sound understanding of the purviews of science and theology applicable to topics such as origins, climate change, and public health. I assigned multiple articles found in this volume as reading in several of my college courses. Remarkably, Miller was often three to five years ahead of resurging interest in many of these topics among evangelical scholars. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

米勒描述了将生命早期的始祖物种划分为分类群的困难,并提供了比寒武纪更古老的后生动物的例子,这些后生动物显示出身体结构复杂性的渐进增加,而不是突然增加。米勒对前寒武纪的化石记录进行了详实的概述。他认为,“爆炸”持续了2000万年或更长时间,在此之前,软体后生动物的复杂性至少增加了4000万年。*《共同的血统、过渡形式和化石记录》是一本文字清晰、插图充分的进化论辩护书,突出了过去2.5亿年间生活在地球上的不同哺乳动物群体及其可能的四足动物祖先。米勒“顺着生命之树往下爬”,展示了哺乳动物群体越来越老的祖先如何变得越来越难以与其他群体最古老的祖先区分开来。《在古生物学课堂上驳斥进化论的常见误解》是为大学水平的教师编写的,其中包括一个涉及恐龙分类群的创新的梯形图构建练习,以演示进化关系是如何确定的。米勒强调,在科学概念的历史背景下提出科学概念是一种有效的方法,可以对抗学生带到课堂上的错误观点。*进化论和神学的关系用四篇文章来阐述(包括上面描述的一篇)。在《不断进化的造物的神学含义》一书中,米勒解释说,生命的进化史与造物的完整性、巨大性和善良性是一致的;上帝创造活动的内在性和进步性;以及上帝在创造中的形象。《不断进化的创造:矛盾修饰法还是富有成效的洞察?》一书回归科学和神学的本质,重点探索如何减少科学与信仰的冲突观点。该部分的最后一篇文章“上帝、进化和成为人”是为神学院学生写的,描述了古人类(现代人和与之密切相关的灭绝物种)的化石记录,通过古生物学、遗传学和推断行为的比较,展示了潜在的进化关系。米勒评论了上帝意象的含义以及我们对身体和灵魂的理解。*邪恶的问题部分以自然灾害的神学含义开始。米勒质疑自然灾害是创世纪第3章中描述的堕落的结果,还是撒旦对自然的操纵,或者通常反映了上帝对有罪的人类的审判。考虑到诗篇和其他圣经故事的见证,他得出结论,堕落后的创造是好的。此外,地质记录显示,严重的自然事件有规律地发生在秋天之前。我们认为是危险的干扰对维持自然系统(自然秩序)是必不可少的。过去控制灾害的尝试,如扑灭野火、修改海岸和控制洪水,往往使这些灾害更加严重。为了与受造界和谐相处,我们可以应用圣经中环境管理的概念。*“上帝看到它是好的”:创造秩序中的死亡和痛苦”解决了“自然邪恶”的问题,当未解决时导致不信,“就像达尔文自己一样”(第198页)。米勒回顾了传统的和新颖的神正论方法。认识到被钉在十字架上的基督参与了他所创造的苦难和死亡,米勒提出“身体上的死亡、痛苦和苦难是表现基督般的品格的机会”(第205页)。在最后一篇文章中,米勒从托尔金的《精灵宝钻》和《指环王》中汲取了对邪恶问题的见解。*科学作为基督徒的职业是一篇与露丝·道格拉斯·米勒合著的文章,《走在人迹罕至的路上:履行科学的职业》。米勒夫妇鼓励学生和早期职业科学家在其教义和传统中寻找他们的信仰,以激励和指导他们的工作,以荣耀上帝并扩展他的国度。*自始至终,米勒都极力避免神圣/世俗的二分法,相信上帝“对我们生活的方方面面都有要求”(第1页)。一些基督教学院的教授为了获得终身教职,被要求写一篇“信仰与学习”的论文,对于那些不习惯在专业工作中涉及神学的人来说,这是一项繁重的任务。在这里,米勒在受雇于一所“世俗”大学期间已经写了17篇这样的论文!科学教育工作者可以从阅读米勒的作品中受益,以发展对科学和神学适用于起源、气候变化和公共卫生等主题的范围的正确理解。我把这本书中的多篇文章作为大学课程的阅读材料。 值得注意的是,米勒常常比福音派学者早三到五年重新燃起对这些话题的兴趣。米勒可能会将材料组织成一个统一的文本,以达到更广泛或更多的目标,而不是重新发布材料覆盖范围适度重叠的单独文章
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Readings on Evolution and the Nature of Science: One Christian’s Perspective
READINGS ON EVOLUTION AND THE NATURE OF SCIENCE: One Christian's Perspective by Keith B. Miller. Morgantown, PA: Mastof Press, 2022. 224 pages. Paperback; $20.00. ISBN: 9781601268129. *Keith B. Miller has dedicated his career to conducting paleontological and geological research and teaching at a public university. In addition to his many contributions to the geoscience literature and his activity in professional societies, he has contributed multiple provocative articles that advanced faith and science dialogue, many in Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith. Readings on Evolution and the Nature of Science: One Christian's Perspective is a collection of sixteen of Miller's articles published between 1993 and 2018 and one previously unpublished manuscript. The articles are clustered among five sections that represent the foci of Miller's writing and public address. *In The Nature of Science section, Miller addresses misunderstandings of science held by the public. He describes how misconceptions have been promoted by traditional young earth creationists and intelligent design advocates who have great contemporary influence on churches, seminaries, local school boards, and state legislatures. In footnotes to the first article, "The Similarity of Theory Testing in the Historical and 'Hard' Sciences," Miller reveals that the integrity of historical science (such as geology and paleontology) was debated in the development of Kansas science education standards. Drawing from the philosophy of science and using examples from geology, he defends historical science as not different from "hard" science in its predictive and explanatory power. *While evolution is the volume's overarching theme, in the second article Miller examines science's nature as applied to the public debate over anthropogenic global warming. He recognizes widely held misconceptions of science that fuel the rejection of controversial theories such as climate change and evolution. These include misunderstandings of fact and theory and the misconception that "unproven" theories should not become the basis for public action. To demonstrate the importance of scale and context in theory making, Miller presents actual data sets revealing patterns of global environmental change at different scales and timeframes. Incidentally, those climatic patterns up to 2012, the year of the article's original publication, have persisted since with increasingly observable and negative consequences. Finally, Miller considers the widespread rejection of scientific consensus motivated by religious, economic, political, or philosophical interests. *Two articles in this section focus on evolution as science, written to scientists and science educators likely holding an evolutionary view. In "The Misguided Attack on Methodological Naturalism," Miller rejects the intelligent design (ID) movement's claim that methodological naturalism (MN), the presupposition that limits science's purview to natural phenomena, is effectively the denial of the existence and action of God. Miller identifies that MN originated as an attempt by a Christian philosopher to limit science from transgressing upon questions more appropriately pursued by the arts, theology, and philosophy. "Ironically, by rejecting methodological naturalism, ID advocates have ended up supporting the very scientism that they claim to want to fight against" (p. 26). The article continues with a critical overview of the ID movement and perceived implications for science practice and education. While located in the Evolution and Theology section of the book, this article pairs well with "Design and Purpose within an Evolving Creation," in which Miller addresses claims about MN and evolutionary science by Phillip Johnson (1940-2019) and the ID movement. Miller's article was originally contributed to Darwinism Defeated? (Vancouver, BC: Regent College Publishing, 1999), a book that captured the debate between ID-anti-evolutionists and evolutionary creationists following the publication of Johnson's provocative Darwin on Trial (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1991). This section concludes with Miller's PSCF article, "Doubt and Faith in Science and Religion" (PSCF 70, no. 2 [2018]: 90-100), examining how both doubt and faith are relevant, even necessary, in both paths for pursuing truth. *Articles in the Evidence for an Evolving Creation section provide compelling examples of transitional forms and ancestral relationships in the history of life. Two serve as direct responses to claims that the Cambrian "explosion" is fatally problematic for evolutionary theory because so many different forms appeared so suddenly upon the first appearance of invertebrate groups (the Cambrian Period is dated between 542 and 490 million years ago). Miller describes the difficulty of assigning founding species early in life's history to taxonomic groups and provides examples of metazoans older than the Cambrian showing a progressive, rather than sudden, increase in body plan complexity. Miller presents a well-illustrated and well-referenced overview of the Precambrian fossil record. He argues that the "explosion" extended over 20 million or more years, preceded by at least 40 million years of increasing complexity among soft-bodied metazoans. *"Common Descent, Transitional Forms, and the Fossil Record" is a clearly written and amply illustrated defense of evolution, highlighting different groups of mammals living on Earth over the past some 250 million years and their probable tetrapod ancestors. Miller "climb[s] down the tree of life" to demonstrate how increasingly older ancestors of living mammal groups become more difficult to distinguish from the oldest ancestors of other groups. "Countering Common Misconceptions of Evolution in the Paleontology Classroom" is written for college-level instructors, including an innovative cladogram construction exercise involving dinosaur taxa to demonstrate how evolutionary relationships are determined. Miller emphasizes that presenting scientific concepts in their historical context is an effective way to counter mistaken views that students bring to the classroom. *The nexus of Evolution and Theology is addressed with four articles (including one described above). In "Theological Implications of an Evolving Creation," Miller explains that the evolutionary history of life is consistent with creation's integrity, enormity, and goodness; the immanent and progressive nature of God's creative activity; and the image of God in creation. "An Evolving Creation: Oxymoron or Fruitful Insight?" returns to the nature of science and theology, with an emphasis on exploring ways to diminish the conflict view of science and faith. The section's final article, "God, Evolution, and Becoming Man" was written for seminarians and describes the fossil record of hominins (modern humans and closely related extinct species), demonstrating potential evolutionary relationships using paleontological, genetic, and inferred behavioral comparisons. Miller comments on implications for the meaning of imago Dei and our understanding of body and soul. *The Problem of Evil section opens with the theological implications of natural hazards. Miller questions if natural catastrophes are a consequence of the Fall described in Genesis 3, satanic manipulations of nature, or generally reflect God's judgment on sinful humankind. Considering the testimony of the Psalms and other biblical narratives, he concludes that post-Fall creation is good. As well, the geologic record reveals that severe natural events occurred with regularity before the Fall. Disturbances we perceive as hazards are essential to the maintenance of natural systems (the natural order). Past attempts to control hazards, such as wildfire suppression, coastal modifications, and flood control often make those hazards worse. Biblical concepts of environmental stewardship can be applied in order to live in harmony with creation. *"'And God Saw That It Was Good': Death and Pain in the Created Order" addresses the question of "natural evil" that leads to unbelief when unresolved, "as it was for Darwin, himself" (p. 198). Miller reviews traditional and novel approaches to theodicy. Recognizing that crucified Christ participates in the suffering and death of his creation, Miller proposes that "physical death, pain, and suffering are opportunities for the expression of Christ-like character" (p. 205). Miller draws insights on the problem of evil from J. R. R. Tolkien's Silmarillion and Lord of the Rings in the section's final essay. *Science as Christian Vocation is an article co-authored with Ruth Douglas Miller, "Staying on the Road Less Traveled: Fulfilling a Vocation in Science." The Millers encourage students and early career scientists to look to their faith, in its teaching and traditions, to motivate and guide their work in ways that glorify God and further his kingdom. *Throughout, Miller is keen to avoid the sacred/secular dichotomy, believing that God "has a claim on all aspects of our lives" (p. 1). Professors at some Christian colleges are required to write a "faith and learning" paper in order to achieve tenure, an onerous task for those not used to engaging theology in their professional work. Here, Miller has written seventeen such papers while employed by a "secular" university! Science educators can benefit from reading Miller's work to develop a sound understanding of the purviews of science and theology applicable to topics such as origins, climate change, and public health. I assigned multiple articles found in this volume as reading in several of my college courses. Remarkably, Miller was often three to five years ahead of resurging interest in many of these topics among evangelical scholars. Rather than re-publishing separate articles with modest overlap in material coverage, Miller might have organized the material into a unified text that could reach a wider or more targete
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