4.8 • 729 Ratings
🗓️ 29 November 2022
⏱️ 73 minutes
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This lecture was given on October 14, 2022, as part of the Thomistic Circles conference entitled, "Life in the Cosmos: Contemporary Science, Philosophy, and Theology on the Origin and Persistence of Life on Earth(and Beyond?)." The two-day conference at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington, D.C. featured a stellar, cross-disciplinary lineup of speakers: scientists Jonathan Lunine (Cornell University) and Maureen Condic (University of Utah), philosopher Christopher Frey (University of South Carolina), and theologian Fr. Mauriusz Tabaczek, O.P. (Angelicum). This conference is part of the Thomistic Institute’s Scientia Project. For more information on upcoming events, please visit our website at thomisticinstitute.org About the speaker: Christopher Frey is an associate professor in the department of philosophy at the University of South Carolina. Prof. Frey works primarily in Ancient Greek philosophy, especially Aristotle’s natural philosophy and metaphysics. He is writing a book entitled The Principle of Life: Aristotelian Souls in an Inanimate World. It concerns the distinction between the animate and the inanimate, the unity of living organisms, nutrition, birth, death, and, more generally, what one’s metaphysical worldview looks like if one takes life to be central. He also works in contemporary philosophy of perception and mind and has written extensively on the relationship between the intentionality and phenomenality of perceptual experience. In addition to these two main areas of research, he has secondary projects in metaphysics, the philosophy of action, Medieval philosophy, Early Modern philosophy, and the history of analytic philosophy.
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0:00.0 | This talk is brought to you by the Thomistic Institute. |
0:04.1 | For more talks like this, visit us at tamisticinstitute.org. |
0:11.7 | So before I moved to South Carolina, I was a professor at the University of Chicago, |
0:16.5 | and I lived in walking distance to its Museum of Natural History, the Field Museum. |
0:22.5 | It's made it a frequent destination for me and my young children on cold weekend days. |
0:28.3 | They like the dinosaurs. |
0:31.0 | Like many museums of natural history, it contains a Hall of Evolution. |
0:36.7 | The Hall's meandering path traces life's development |
0:39.1 | on Earth from its origin in the Archaean the Eon to the present day. I guess that's the second week |
0:45.1 | of September till the end of the year, as we just learned. Now, the final exhibit writ large |
0:50.8 | on the far concave wall of an otherwise empty and darkened room, it attempts |
0:55.8 | to capture the grandeur of our current chapter. Darwin's words occupy its center, says, |
1:02.9 | From so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful and wonderful have been and are being |
1:08.7 | evolved. And the quote surrounded by just dozens of circular backlit pictures that testify to the diversity Darwin praises. |
1:18.6 | The tree of life's full breath from the simplest unicellular organism to the smiling face of a human child is on display. |
1:25.6 | So in a single gaze, you see ferns, flowers, and fungi, |
1:29.8 | spider, snakes, and seahorses. |
1:33.0 | But what does this display present to us? |
1:36.6 | Why should we consider activities as diverse as an amoeba dividing, |
1:41.4 | a saffron crocus blooming, a Bengal tiger stalking its prey, a human being |
1:46.6 | contemplating the heavens to be manifestations of a single thing, namely life. Now we've come to |
1:54.1 | understand that there's a profound historical continuity that underlies this diversity. |
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