Science, Scripture and Some Trouble with Camels

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There’s been a lot of fuss recently over camel bones found in the Aravah Valley in Israel. Two archaeologists from Tel Aviv University have dated the bones, which were found in an ancient copper smelting site, to the last third of the 10th century BC and claim that this represents the earliest appearance of domesticated camels. While their article doesn’t discuss how this relates to the Biblical accounts, the University’s press release states that their findings ‘further emphasize the disagreements between Biblical texts and verifiable history’. This led to articles in Time (The Mystery of the Bible’s Phantom Camels), The New York Times (Camels Had No Business in Genesis) and elsewhere.

The story seems simple. Camels first appear in the Bible in Genesis at the time of Abraham long before the archaeologists tell us domesticated camels first appeared in Israel. A straightforward conflict between science and the Bible with science winning as usual.

How should we react to stories like this? The first thing is not to jump to extreme and hasty conclusions. On the one hand, this includes not simply dismissing the Bible and, on the other hand, not simply dismissing science. One obvious question to ask is whether there really is a serious problem. We can’t simply assume that there must be just because a news item claims there is – it is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the journalists might have got a bit carried away!

We also need to ask whether the alleged conflict is really doing justice to what the Bible says and what the scientific evidence shows? Even if the answer turns out to be ‘yes’ and there is no obvious way to resolve the conflict immediately, it still doesn’t mean that we are forced into deciding between science and the Bible. Perhaps we just don’t have all the evidence yet. Scientists often find themselves having to deal with apparently conflicting information and have to live with not being able to resolve it for a period of time.

There’s no difficulty in admitting that we don’t have all the answers. Perhaps thinking about the problem more will help or new evidence will shed more light. In the history of apparent conflicts between the Bible and archaeology, this approach seems to work quite well. For example, the existence of Belshazzar in the book of Daniel had long been questioned since his name did not appear in ancient records until the Nabonidus Chronicle was discovered which indicated that he was the effective ruler when his father, Nabonidus, spent 10 years in Arabia.

Back to the camels. Is the conflict as clear cut as the news items suggest? No. First of all, consider the scientific side of the story. The straightforward part concerns the dating of the bones. Let’s also assume that the distinction between domesticated and wild camel bones is straightforward. The argument that these were the first domesticated camels in Israel seems much less clear. It is based on the coincidence of a reorganization of the copper industry in the region occurring at the same time as the first appearance of domesticated camels in the same region and the hypothesis that the two events were linked, with the camels being introduced to improve efficiency. It’s not at all clear how persuasive this hypothesis is. At the very least, it seems questionable and certainly open to revision in light of new evidence.

Even if everything is granted so far, you might still wonder how the archaeologists could be so sure that there could not have been earlier domesticated camels elsewhere in Israel just because no earlier domesticated camel bones were found at their site. Absence of evidence of domesticated camels is not necessarily evidence of their absence. It could be evidence of their absence in some cases. Presumably, if camels were used in large numbers at the sites in question, evidence of their existence would be expected. But what about elsewhere in Israel if they were not found in large numbers? In this case it isn’t at all clear evidence of their existence would be expected, so the fact that we don’t have any such evidence isn’t surprising.

And what about the Biblical side of the story? As Dr. K. Martin Heide, of Philipps University Marburg, an expert on Semitic languages and cultures, points out:

The Genesis narrator does not claim that the camel was in wide use in the 2nd millennium BC. To the contrary, while Abraham and Jacob had camels (probably Bactrian, or double-humped, camels that were available in Mesopotamia), Isaac, who stayed in Canaan most of his time, seems to have used no camels. In addition, the final retreat of Jacob with his family to Egypt was all done on donkeys. … Only later, in the first millennium BC, when camels came to be exploited in the well-organized infrastructure of an established kingdom, can we expect to find archaeological footprints of their use.

In other words, the Bible gives us no reason to expect that there would be archaeological evidence of camels at the time of the patriarchs and so the fact that we don’t have any hardly constitutes evidence against the Biblical narratives.

It might be claimed that the problem is not just that domesticated camels were not in Israel at the time of Abraham, but that camels were not domesticated until much later. However, it is the dromedary (singled-humped) camel, which was the focus of the Tel Aviv study, that appears not to have been domesticated until later. There appears to be good evidence that the Bactrian camel was domesticated much earlier and was present in Mesopotamia at the time when the Bible indicates Abraham left Mesopotamia for Canaan.

In conclusion, it isn’t clear what all the fuss was about. No doubt there are plenty of unanswered questions about the domestication of camels, their first appearance in Israel and how this relates to the Old Testament narratives, but as is usually the case when it is claimed that science has disproved the Bible, it turns out that there really isn’t much of a problem at all.

 

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The Case for God in Seven Minutes or Less….

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While taking part in a debate on the existence of God at the Literific Society at Queen’s University Belfast, I had to give a seven minute speech. (This is slightly different from what I actually said since I tried to include some responses to objections that had been raised.) 

In claiming that there is a God, I am not claiming that we can logically establish the existence of God with complete certainty. Rather my claim is that on the basis of various features of the world around us, it is more reasonable to believe in God than not. Just as scientists appeal to evidence rather than proof for their theories so I will appeal to various features of the universe and our existence in it as evidence for God.

A number of features of the universe are not at all surprising if there is a God but very surprising if atheism is true.

1. Order in the universe

There is a great deal of order in the universe. Why is the universe like this? Much of the order can be described in terms of laws of science which can be expressed in the language of mathematics, but what needs explaining is why the universe can be described by such laws. Why is it like that in the first place?

From an atheistic perspective, there doesn’t seem to be any good reason to expect so much order, it would just be a ‘happy accident’.

But if God exists, the order in the universe wouldn’t be at all surprising. It certainly wasn’t a surprise to the founders of modern science. They expected to find order in the universe precisely because they believed it was the work of a rational Creator. Since the order is what we’d expect if there is a God, but not what we’d expect if there is no God, the order in the universe provides evidence in favour of God.

2. Fine-tuning of the universe

A whole range of physical quantities are just right for life to exist. If they were slightly different life would be impossible. For example, if the ratio of the electromagnetic and gravitational forces differed by about 1 part in 10^40 then stars such as the sun, which are capable of supporting life, could not exist. Many examples of fine-tuning could be provided and so the evidence of fine-tuning is widely accepted by atheists and theists alike.

What’s the best explanation for the evidence?

Clearly chance is hopeless as an explanation. Some suggest that our universe is just one of many universes comprising a multiverse. This “multiverse hypothesis” requires sufficiently many universes with different physical constants so as to almost guarantee that at least one universe would be suitable for life. The idea is that all of these universes have different values for the constants and since there are so many of them (perhaps infinitely many) some happen to be suitable for life just by chance.

However, a multiverse would just push design back to the level of the multiverse itself ; it would raise the question of how the multiverse came about in such a way as to make life inevitable. There are a number of reasons for thinking that such a multiverse would be more probable given design. One reason is that inflation theory,  at present a key component of favoured mechanisms for generating multiple universes, seems to require fine-tuning.  Furthermore, very specific background laws, such as gravity, and physical principles, such as the Pauli exclusion principle, would need to be in place to support life.

There is no reason to expect a finely tuned universe if atheism is true. By contrast, fine-tuning wouldn’t be at all surprising if God exists since it is a very precise example of the sort of order we’d expect to find in a universe created by God. Fine-tuning therefore provides strong evidence for the existence of God.

3. Beginning of the Universe

According to the best scientific evidence, our universe began in an extremely hot and dense state approximately 13.8 billion years ago. In the standard big bang theory, the universe emerges from a state known as a singularity, which is a boundary of both space and time. In other words, according to this theory, the universe had a beginning.

Many rival theories have been proposed, but some have been refuted and most are highly speculative and have no clear evidence in their favour. Also, research by three leading cosmologists, Borde, Guth and Vilenkin, places considerable constraints on attempts to avoid a beginning. Based on the best evidence available, there is plenty of reason to affirm that the universe had a beginning.

Now if the universe had a beginning, this raises an enormous problem for atheism. It’s highly implausible, to believe that a universe could come into existence, uncaused out of absolutely nothing. For this reason, a beginning to the universe is extremely surprising if atheism is true.

By contrast, it is not at all surprising if God exists and is what many theists have traditionally affirmed. Once again, this means it provides strong evidence for the existence of God.

4. Morality

Whether we believe in God or not, we all know that certain types of behaviour are morally wrong, murder and rape being two obvious examples. The challenge is to make sense of morality from an atheistic perspective. I think there are two issues here.

The first concerns the existence of objective moral values (such as goodness and justice) because it’s far from clear where these fit in to an atheistic universe, especially if everything is just the result of blind, purposeless physical processes.

The second problem relates to moral obligations. The laws of morality are real and binding. But from an atheistic perspective, why do we have such obligations? It’s very difficult to see why morality should always override considerations of self-interest if atheism is true.

If God exists, the picture is very different. Objective moral values make sense because they are grounded in the character of God. Similarly, moral obligations arise because God requires us to live according to his standards.

So moral values and obligations make perfect sense in a universe created by God, but do not fit easily into an atheistic universe. For this reason morality provides further evidence for the existence of God.

Conclusion

It would be very easy to get the impression from a debate like this, that when it comes to God, it is all about weighing up intellectual arguments for and against. As a Christian, I believe that the purpose of our existence is a personal, transforming knowledge of God, who is the source of goodness, beauty, justice and love. And that this transforming knowledge of God is possible through the person of Jesus.

That is why this debate about the existence of God is so important. I’ve presented four features of the universe that provide evidence for God – i) the order in the universe, ii) the fine-tuning of the universe, iii) the beginning of the universe and iv) the existence of moral values and obligations. I submit that overall there are very good reasons to believe that there is a God.

Further reading:

Evidence for God: Design (Part 1 – Order in the Cosmos)

Evidence for God: Design (Part 2 – Fine-Tuning of the Cosmos)

Evidence for God: Design (Part 3 –Life on Earth)

The Evidence for God: Morality

In the Beginning …

 

 

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