Saturday 8 December 2012

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and the future of human evolution


Pierre Teilhard Chardin and the future of human evolution
1.      Introduction
In Christian theology, one of the most pertinent questions which have remained mysterious is the issue of creation. The origin of the world and the human being as put in the Bible has been incomprehensible in a concrete point of view. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin is one of the theologians who have reflected on the interaction of science and religion in this big question of creation.
Before the world was made, he chose us, chose us in Christ, to be holy and spotless, and to live through love in his presence, determining that we should become his adopted sons, through Jesus Christ. (Eph. I, 4-5). These powerful words of St. Paul in his first letter to the Ephesians, I think, best characterize the spirit of Teilhard the Chardin, his idea of man and man's place in the universe, and of the common goals of humanity.
His works combine faith in human effort and in human progress with faith in God. It is a spirituality that finds God in and through the world; a spirituality which is based in the theology of Christ as the center of the universe[1]. We acknowledge that Teilhard’s thoughts are very complicated and that it is not easy to present all his ideas as much as evolution is concerned. In this paper, we have taken as task to present, in the limits of our capacity, the understanding of the future of evolution in the ideas of Teilhard de Chardin.
Recognizing the immensity and the complexity of the theme we have chosen in his thought, we would like to focus on his conception of evolution,  his understanding of human intelligence and cosmic intelligence and lastly on his Christian theory the Omega Point.
2.      The development of Teilhard’ s conception of evolution
If, as the result of some interior revolution, I were to lose in succession my faith in Christ, my faith in personal God, and my faith in the Spirit, I feel that I should continue to believe invincibly in the world. The world (its value, its infallibility and its goodness) that, when all is said and done, is the first, the last and the only thing in which I believe. It is by this faith that I live. And it is to this faith that at the moment of death, rising above all doubts, I shall surrender myself.[2]
What is evolution for Teilhard de Chardin? It seems that, for him evolution is not what ordinary people think habitually. Evolution is not the gradual transformation of fish to reptiles, reptiles to mammals, and so on. In his magnum opus, Teilhard writes: "Is evolution a theory, a system or a hypothesis? It is much more: it is a general condition to which all theories, all hypotheses, all systems must bow and which they must satisfy henceforth if they are to be thinkable and true. Evolution is a light illuminating all facts, a curve that all lines must follow. Evolution is a current to which matter takes the form of increasingly complex organisms...The consciousness of each of us is evolution looking at itself and reflecting upon itself[3].
Converting everything to evolution, Teilhard de Chardin tries to prove that life didn't emerge by accident, but was a product of evolution. And man has his own place in the evolution of the universe. First of all, universe is not static. That is, there is no permanence in it. Everything is in the constant process of change, and a particular kind of change - evolution. He says: “everything that up to then we regarded and treated as points in our cosmological constructions became instantaneous sections of indefinite temporal fibers. To our opened eyes each element of things is henceforth extended backwards and tends to be continued forwards. In this new perspective the world appears like a mass in process of transformation[4].
How did man come to be, asks de Chardin. And the only plausible conclusion he can make is that human being is a link in a chain of evolution. As a paleontologist, biologist, and philosopher, he says that the best we can say about the advent of life is that life properly speaking begins with the cell. And that, in accordance with our theoretical anticipation of the reality of a pre-life, some natural function really does link the mega-molecular to the micro-organic both in the sequence of their appearance and in their present existence.[5] In other words, man came into being in the world just like any other species of life. The cell is the natural granule of life in the same way as the atom is the natural granule of simple elemental matter.[6]
In his development of the theory of evolution de Chardin situates the human evolution in the realm of spirituality. He talks of evolution of spiritual state which is unlimited, progressing to higher and higher states. Personality is one of the stages in the evolution of the spirit. Its goal is monocentrism - being conscious of being One with the All, and actual unification of all conscious entities into One Whole. This is the true goal of human soul - union into One with the All. Teilhard points out, that we are always in the presence of the All, which is the sum total of all conscious energies of the universe. All the conscious energies of the universe are directed towards the common goal – evolution.[7]
His theory culminates in the state of being ourselves. In the mind of Teilhard, to be fully ourselves is in the opposite direction, in the direction of convergence with all the rest, that we must advance towards the “other”. The peak of ourselves, the acme of our originality, is not our individuality but our person; and according to the evolutionary structure of the world, we can only find our person by uniting together. There is no mind without synthesis; the element only becomes personal when it universalizes itself.[8]
This understanding of the evolution of human being leads him to the notion that man is not the center of the universe as once we thought in our simplicity, but something much more wonderful--the arrow pointing the way to the final unification of the world in terms of life. Man alone constitutes the last-born, the freshest, the most complicated, the most subtle of all the successive layers of life....The universe has always been in motion and at this moment continues to be in motion. What makes the world in which we live specifically modern is our discovery in it and around it of evolution....Thus in all probability, between our modern earth and the ultimate earth, there stretches an immense period, characterized not by a slowing-down but a speeding up and by the definitive florescence of the forces of evolution along the line of the human shoot."[9]
Throughout this process, there have been critical starting points which account for the uniqueness of both life over matter and the human being as a person with an immortal soul over all other life forms. Unlike Thomas Huxley, Ernst Haeckel and Charles Darwin, Teilhard claimed that the human being is separated from the great apes (orangutan, chimpanzee, and gorilla). Obviously, for the Jesuit priest, the process of evolution has not been a continuum: from time to time, evolution has crossed critical thresholds resulting in the emergence of qualitatively different manifestations of matter as greater consciousness or spirit. Unlike all other forms of life, he believed that the human being has an immortal soul.[10]
"Man is, in appearance, a 'species,' no more than a twig, an offshoot from the branch of the primates--but one that we find to be endowed with absolutely prodigious biological properties”[11]
For Teilhard, all physical and spiritual matter existed from the beginning in an embryonic state. There is only one creative act of God, which is still happening and will always continue to happen. Such a view reflects the concept of God exercising an all-pervading control of the world, in effect a constant state of intervention. Teilhard's position is a matter of faith rather than of science. While he is a critic of the static world-view, and an advocate of a more dynamic view of the world, he contradicts this attitude by the adoption of faith position which is essentially based on a static world view. [12]
3.      Human intelligence and its amplification into a cosmic intelligence
Going back to the historical background of this notion of human and cosmic intelligences, de Chardin situates this in the period of enlightenment where the scientific inquiry became the controlling human preoccupation. Men looked at the earth in its physical reality and projected new theories of how it functioned. The celestial bodies were scrutinized more intently, and all of this led o an awareness that the human mind was advancing.[13]
In this line, Teilhard is one of the first to articulate transhumanist themes. Transhumanists advocate the ethical use of technology for human enhancement. Teilhard's writing likewise argues for the ethical application of technology in order to advance humanity beyond the limitations of natural biology. Teilhard explicitly argues for the use of both bio-technologies (e.g., genetic engineering) and intelligence technologies, and develops several other themes often found in transhumanist writings. He discusses the emergence of a global computation-communication system. He advocates the development of an egalitarian global society. He was almost certainly the first to discuss the acceleration of technological progress to a kind of Singularity in which human intelligence will become super-intelligence. He discusses the spread of human intelligence into the universe and its amplification into a cosmic-intelligence.[14]
For Teilhard, we no longer have the functional initiation techniques whereby the vision and values of earlier generations were transmitted to succeeding generations. There is an abiding need to assist a succeeding generation to fulfill its proper role in the ongoing adventure of the earth process. There is a need for the program to aid the young to identify themselves in the comprehensive dimensions of space and time.[15] We are, at the very moment, passing through a change of age. The age of industry, of electricity, and of machine where the future will decide what is the best name to describe the era we are entering. Now, words are meaningless. What matters is the certainty of the future; the evidence that at the coast of what we do, life is taking as step, and a decisive step in us and in our environment.
Like a son who has grown up, we are discovering that something is developing in the world by means of us, perhaps at our expense. And what is more serious still is that we have become aware that, in the great game that is being played, we are the players as well as being the cards and the stakes. Nothing can go on if we leave the table. What is the minimum requirements to be fulfilled before we can say that the road is open is that we should be assured the space and the chances to fulfill ourselves, that is to say, to progress still we arrive at the ultimate limits of ourselves. [16]
Teilhard’s call to build the future and to inspire the energies for that future is an essential part of the educational vision needed in our time. As Thomas Berry has noted, we will be unable to make the necessary changes without a clear analysis of the global challenges faced by human community and without a sufficiently comprehensive historical and geological context, namely a planetary perspective.[17]
As educators, we are challenged to motivate the next generation of students to go beyond the technological trance of a consumer society toward creating mutually beneficial human-Earth relations. This requires an understanding of Earth’s evolution within the context of the universe story. It calls us to see our role at a critical moment in history as a determining factor in the future course of evolution itself. We are a planetary species that can move toward the enhancement of life or its radical diminishment for future generations.[18]
4.      Teilhard’ s Christian Theory of the Omega Point
            We have seen and admired with Teilhard de Chardin that evolution is an ascent towards consciousness, where the evolving being should culminate forwards in some sort of supreme consciousness, containing the highest degree, the perfection of our consciousness. To understand this difficult theory, one should first understand what he says about the Ego and the All. For Teilhard, every consciousness has three fold properties:
·        Every consciousness centers everything partially upon itself
·        Every consciousness is able to center itself upon itself constantly
·        Every consciousness is able to be into association with all the other consciousness in order to form a super-centration.[19]
      Trying to avoid all confusions which can arise if one conceives this super-centration as the fusion of all consciousnesses into one like a drop of water in an ocean or like a dissolving gain of salt in water, Teilhard leads his thought in the the line of summation of consciousnesses. For him, the Ego consciousness does not lose its outline, on the contrary, the more other it become in conjunction, the more it finds itself as self. Thus it would be a mistake to represent Omega to ourselves simply as a center born of the fusion of elements which it collects, or annihilating them in itself. By its structure, the Omega can only be a distinct Center radiating at the core of a system of centers; a grouping in which personalization of the All and personalizations of elements reach their maximum.[20]
      This is how Teilhard develops an Omega Point Theory (OPT) which claims that the universe is evolving towards a godlike final state. He says: “evolution moves inexorably toward our conception of God, albeit never reaching this ideal”. For him, the cosmogenetic process has both purpose and meaning because it is moving toward an ultimate goal, which he terms Omega. In this respect his version of creation story once again diverges from Darwinian account by incorporating eschatological elements from the Christian tradition. It is only at the end that creation will attain completeness. Teilhard presents the already long history of complexification of matter and consciousness of spirit as evidence of the purposeful pertaining present in the evolutionary movement and as proof of final meaningfulness.[21]
      In addition to this, the energy that moves the cosmogenetic towards the Omega Point is love. He says: “Expressed in terms of internal energy, the cosmic function of Omega consists in initiating an maintaining within its radius the unanimity of the world. But could it exercise this action if not in some sort of loving and lovable aspects at his every moment? The Omega could never even so much as equilibrate the play of human attractions and repulsion f it did not act with equal force, that is to say with the same stuff of proximity in love.[22]
      De Chardin takes his understanding of love from the Gospel. “We know for certain, from our Lord's own words that we must love our neighbor as ourselves.” for him, it is impossible to love others without moving nearer to them and to Christ. He is convinced that love is the strongest, most universal, and most mysterious of cosmic energies. The cosmic energy of love is, in essence, the attraction of each element of the universe toward the Omega. “The cosmic sense is a love; it cannot be something else. It is a love because it is directed to a unique and complementary object of a personal nature. It must be a love for its role is to dominate by bringing everything to fulfillment.[23]
            For Teilhard, the ongoing spiritual evolution of our species is moving toward an Omega Point as the end-goal or divine destiny of human evolution on this planet. His theism maintains that God-Omega is one, personal, actual and transcendent. In the last analysis, the God-Omega and the human Omega Point will become united in a mystical synthesis of spiritual unity. From his own convictions, the Omega Point is autonomous, transcendent and somehow divine. It is God himself. He says: “Omega is not, in this view, a simple future point of convergence but a now-existing God. We can see now that the universe makes evolutionary progress because it is drawn by a transcendent God.”[24]
            Grounded in agapology and centrology, Teilhard's interpretation of evolution claims that the human layer of consciousness engulfing our earth is becoming a collective brain and heart that will, in the future as a single mind of persons, detach itself from this planet and, transcending space and time, be immersed in God-Omega; the end-goal of evolution is a final creative synthesis of humankind with the universal God-Omega. It is a movement in both directions forward and upward to reach a mystical union with God-Omega (the beginning and end of cosmic evolution).
            At this point Teilhard founds his understanding of Christianity. He focuses on finding the true religion which will incorporate the evolutionary movement. For him, Christianity appears as a central phylum of human evolution and as conscious of finding itself in intimate relation with a spiritual and transcendent pole of universal convergence.[25] He understands the Christian God not as a center, fusing and dissolving whatever reaches him, but, as a focus of personalization. He is like love which brings two beings together where one does not absorb the other, but rather, is united to produce a more fulfilling relationship between two separate entities attracted by its power. The essence of Christianity, as Teilhard points out, is a belief in the unification of the world in God by the Incarnation. This is the basic idea of the Gospels.
5.      Conclusion
            We have many reasons to read the works of Teilhard de Chardin. He founds his ideas in the Christian theology from creation to the Pascal mystery. Constructing his thought about Christian evolution he takes the line of Aristotle. Aristotle, some three hundred years before Christ, noted the fact that everything which existed in the world was contingent, that is, it depended on something else for its existence. From the contingent nature of everything in the world he argued that there had to be a non-contingent or self-existent entity, a God, to account for those contingent things. While God could not create another god, He could initiate a process which could possibly lead to the self-creation of such an entity. [26]
             Taking him as transhumanist, he develops ideas within a Christian context. Teilhard shows how one might develop a Christian transhumanism. Although some may be inclined to react negatively to any mention of Christianity, he is convinced that transhumanism and Christianity are not essentially enemies. They share some common themes. He argues that Christ is at work in evolution, that Christ is at work in technology, and that the work of Christ ultimately aims at the perfection of human biology.
            So far, peak of evolution is what Teilhard calls a reflective thought - human consciousness. And the process of evolution is far from being over. So, what kind of union would it be? Teilhard maintains that the ultimate union of all consciousness into super-consciousness is a union by differentiation, where the whole does not destroy, but emphasizes the elements it swallows. This is the only kind of union that is possible. The union between mankind and God is the goal of evolution, the necessary outcome of the evolution of what Teilhard calls the spirit of the earth - collective consciousness of mankind. The goal of each human soul is to overcome the resistance of material plurality and to unite the spirit of the earth to God, into One[27]
The study of Teilhard builds bridges to liberal and progressive forms of Christianity. Teilhard believed that science and technology have positive roles to play in building the City of God in this world. A study of Teilhard’ s work may help transhumanists to explore the ways that transhumanism can obtain support from Christian millenarianism. Teilhard believed that everyone has a right to enter the kingdom of heaven – it isn’t reserved for any special sexual, racial, or economic elite. A study of Teilhard’s writings can help transhumanism embrace a deep conception of social justice and expand its conception of social concern. A study of Teilhard can help transhumanists make beneficial conceptual, and even political, connections to progressive Christian institutions.
While Aristotle was able to argue from the world up to God, he was unable to argue his way back down again from God to the world. God had to be perfect, but the world was obviously imperfect. Why would a perfect God make an imperfect world? Aristotle could not find a satisfactory explanation for our imperfect world.
There is a possible resolution to this problem.. Such a process of self-creation would have to be largely free from Divine interference, and would have to have the potential to lead to the production of an entity similar to God.
He was the first to understand the universe as an evolutionary process of ever increasing complexity and ever increasing consciousness, moving from Alpha, the beginning, to Omega, the final consummation. But he also saw matter as always imbued with spirit, which emerged from time to time through certain thresholds.
Role of morality, for Teilhard, is to compel the individual to free his autonomy and personality to the uttermost. The goal of religion is to make sure the progress of life goes on, the evolution continues. Since the progress of science, it's becoming more and more obvious that, I'm quoting, to be alpha and omega, Christ must, without losing his precise humanity, become co-extensive with the physical expanse of time and space. In him, personality expands (or rather centers itself) till it becomes universal (91). This is the true God of mankind, this is the God for Teilhard, the God of progress, of evolution, God-unifying principle.[28]






[1]             Robert L. FARICY, Teilhard de Chardin’s theology of the Christian in the world (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1967), p. 33.
[2]             Pierre Teilhard Chardin, “How I believe”, in Chrstianity and Evoluton (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971), p. 99.



[3]             Robert L. FARICY, Teilhard de Chardin’s theology of the Christian in the world (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1967), pp. 36-37.
[4]             Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper Torch book, 1965), p. 47.
[5]             Idem, p. 83.
[6]             Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man, p. 79.
[8]             Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper Torch book, 1965), p. 263.
[10]          Kelly Anthony B. (1999A) The Process of the Cosmos USA Dissertation.com http://www.dissertation.com/library/ 1120605a.htm
[11]          Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, Man's Place in Nature: The Human Zoological Group (New York: Harper & Row, 1966), pp. 15, 25.
[12]          Kopp Joseph V. (1964) Teilhard de Chardin Explained Cork, Mercier Press; http://www.quodlibet.net
[13]          Arthur Fabel and Donald St John (eds), Teilhard in the 21st Century. The Emerging Spirit of Earth (New York: Maryknoll, 2003), p. 79.
[15]          Arthur Fabel and Donald St John (eds), Teilhard in the 21st Century. The Emerging Spirit of Earth (New York: Maryknoll, 2003), pp. 86-87.
[16]          Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper Torch book, 1965), pp. 230-231.
[17]          Thomas Berry, The Dream of the Earth (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988), p. 18.
[18]          Arthur Fabel and Donald St John (eds), Teilhard in the 21st Century. The Emerging Spirit of Earth (New York: Maryknoll, 2003), pp. 89-90.
[19]          Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper Torch book, 1965), p. 259.
[20]          Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper Torch book, 1965), p. 262.
[21]          Arthur Fabel and Donald St John (eds), Teilhard in the 21st Century. The Emerging Spirit of Earth (New York: Maryknoll, 2003), p. 29.
[22]          Teilhard de Chardin Pierre, The phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper Torch book, 1965), p. 269.



[23]          Robert L. FARICY, Teilhard de Chardin’s theology of the Christian in the world (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1967), pp. 185-187.
[24]          Robert L. FARICY, Teilhard de Chardin’s theology of the Christian in the world (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1967), p. 78.
[25]          Robert L. FARICY, Teilhard de Chardin’s theology of the Christian in the world (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1967), p. 82.
[26]          Anthony B Kelly, Aristotle, Teilhard de Chardin, and the Explanation of the World Quodlibet Journal: Volume 2 Number 1, January 2000
[27]          Helmut de. Memories of Teilhard de Chardin. Trans. J. M. Brownjohn. New York: Harper and Row, 1964.



[28]          Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre. Hymn of the Universe. Trans. S. Bartholomew. New York: Harper and Row, 1965.







No comments:

Post a Comment