I'm not familiar with this Native American myth, but if read Genesis from a philosophical perspective, Genesis mirrors not only the language of modern quantum physics (both Genesis and Stephen Hawking contend that the universe was created "out of nothing"), but also subsequent philosophy. For example, God's name Yahweh translates "I am" or "I am what exists without cause." Thus, Genesis posits that the universe was created out of nothing by the First Cause, Yahweh, that which exists without prior cause, while many modern quantum physicists contend that the "First Cause" were the laws of science. If you understand God as the objective source of all truths, then saying that the "First Cause" was the law of science rather than God really is different language describing the same concept.Skjellyfetti wrote:And many Native American myths describe the world as covered in water in the beginning and the first creatures being water creatures, etc. Which is the way modern science understands the beginning of life. Just coincidental.JoltinJoe wrote:What's certainly worth discussing is that Genesis described the creation of the universe as the process by which God made "order" out of "chaos." Those are precisely the terms used by modern quantum physics to describe the process by which our universe formed.
What the present debate boils down to is whether the "order" we observe is intended by the First Cause, or a random result of the impersonal laws of science.
Genesis is an allegorical tale, but the language and concepts of its text are consistent with philosophy and science which follow it, and Genesis can be viewed as a philosophical expression of how what is came to be.





