Aug 13 2013
August 2013 Newsletter
Next Meeting
David Kitchingman
What can we learn from traditional societies?
Thursday, 22nd August
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We Start With…
A two minute period of silence.
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From the Chair
Sir Lloyd Geering’s address on 1st August was a remarkable occasion. With nearly 30 members of Dunedin SoF, and over 30 visitors, we had a very good audience for this world-class thinker and presenter. Lloyd spoke for an hour on the widest range of history, theology, evolution, and scientific thought. He then explained his address was three chapters of his most recent book ‘From the Big Bang to God’ which I now have in front of me. It has eleven chapters, and is in three parts, from which you’ll see the breadth of the thinking he has developed over his 95 years:
- The evolution of the physical universe
- The evolution of the human thought world
- The human situation
Sir Lloyd is hugely generous with his time, and we were very honoured to have had this opportunity to hear him. I’d like to thank all members at the meeting for their help in welcoming guests and assisting in making the meeting run smoothly.
Last Meeting
Lloyd was clearly very much at home amongst friends if one were to judge from the number of hugs and kisses exchanged, as well as the smiles and warm welcoming handshakes all around.
His message was as clear as a bell. We are all fairly well aware of the transition from polytheism to monotheism and the idea that “God is in charge” which can lead to a disconnect between humans and the natural world. A god which created everything and which regulates the earth, and all life on it fulfills the desire to have a “theory of everything” and takes substantial responsibility away from the humans that live on the earth.
Lloyd argued that the idea of God was great as it gave rise to modern science, but that idea needs to be revisited. It is not so much that God is dead, but the old IDEA of God which is dead.
It is up to US to mobilise and tackle the great problems facing the earth now:
- The destruction of Mother Earth by placing great strains on her ecology: rapid population growth together with uneven distribution of the food supply, pollution of our land, rivers and oceans, changes in climate caused by humans and the ripping out of earth’s resources as if they were inexhaustible.
- Militarism: including the existence of enough weapons to annihilate the earth’s population several times over, along with global terrorism, if not in the name of religion, then in the name of greedy warring political factions.
- Global pandemics such as The Black Death and Spanish ‘flu in the past – SARS, AIDS, avian ‘flu.
- Economic destitution caused by the aggregation of wealth and power into the hands of fewer countries and fewer people within them and the denial of democracy to ensure fairness.
If we fail, the earth will still be here, along with the bacteria and many insects and plants, but there may well be no human life as there is now. No use either in saying “bring it on, I’m going to a better life in the next world” – that’s a figment of our imagination too.
Next Meeting
“What can we learn from traditional societies, and particularly from traditional religions?”
His presentation will be a selective response to the publication this year of Jared Diamond’s The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn From Traditional Societies?
Diamond, an American polymath professor, is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the influential million-copy-bestseller Guns, Germs and Steel, and Collapse, a number one international bestseller.
Diamond’s latest book draws heavily on his intimate association with New Guinea over nearly fifty years. David, having himself spent some time in New Guinea, has been impressed by the book’s broad scope and penetrating insights. The session will touch on varied topics, such as child-rearing and old age, and peace and war, but will focus more on what we might be able to learn from traditional religions, which, like so much else within traditional societies, “ruled” the world until virtually “yesterday”.
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