The Genesis According to Spiritism
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The Genesis, Miracles and Premonition According to Spiritism (La Genése, les Miracles et les Preditions selon le Spiritisme in the original French) was the last book published (1868) by Allan Kardec, just before his death. It tries to reconcile science and religion and develops a series of important scientific and philosophical topics, relating them to Spiritism.
[edit] Contents
The Genesis contains diverse articles on the creation of the universe, the formation of the world, the origins of spirits and the role of divine intervention in the order of nature.
It is divided into three parts, each apparently unrelated to the others:
- The Genesis According to Spiritism (12 chapters)
- Miracles According to Spiritism (3 chapters)
- Predictions According to Spiritism (2 chapters)
The final chapter ("The Time is at Hand") is not related to either of the three parts.
The mentioned division is an indication that the three parts were meant to be published as separate works, but ended up together for some reason, maybe because Kardec realised that he was not going to have enough time to finish them[citation needed].
[edit] The Genesis
The first, and longest, part tries to reconcile religious tradition about the creation with recent discoveries of science regarding the universe and the origin of life. The convergence proposed by Kardec is not far from Intelligent Design, though Kardec never claimed that any actual "signature" of the Creator had been or could ever be found. However, he uses a lot of space (the first six chapters) to introduce Spiritism itself as a religion.
The chapters of the first part are:
[edit] Character of Spiritist Revelation
Kardec argues that Spiritism is a "third" revelation (the first being that of God to Moses and the second, the coming of Christ), though it possesses some novel features that make it "more than just a religion". This first chapter is a thorough rationalisation of the Spiritist theory and an attempt to justify it in face of harsh criticism:
This whole chapter takes for granted that Spiritism has become a widely-known and widely-criticised movement.
[edit] God
More about the Spiritist view of God.
[edit] Good and Evil
Good and evil are seen as inherent to human nature because they are both manifestations of our pursuit of perfection. "Good" things come from the use of intellect while "bad" things come from the prevalence of instinct; which leads to the conclusion, not present textually in Kardec, that nature, being unintelligent is inherently "evil" (or at the very least, unmoral).
[edit] The role of science in the Genesis
Argues that scientific avancement is ultimately a human attempt to understand God and that the conflict between religion and science exists because most religions have surrendered to the will of power while science is blind to the spirituality of man. Preconizes a harmony of science and religion.
[edit] Ancient and modern views of the world
Explains that the (mis)conceptions about the world originated from the scarcity of information available to man in the past and that, as science advances, our worldview will change dramatically, affected by it.
[edit] General Uranography
An essay, attributed to the spirit of Galileo presents a description of the universe as understood at the time. Contains some interesting insights which were either original or very novel:
- that there are regions in space that are empty of stars (the space between the galaxies, which is called "deserts of space"),
- that countless of other planets existed beyond our solar system,
- that the Milky Way was only one of many other galaxies,
- that most planets, if not all, were inhabited;
- that planets are not immutable, but change over long periods of time and eventually disappear.
[edit] General Geological Sketch of the Earth
Attempts to reconcile the then recent science of geology with legends from the Bible and from other ancient peoples. Accepts the flood as fact and ignores ice ages, actually attributing as evidences of the former phenomena that are now known to have been caused by the later.
[edit] Theories on the formation of the Earth
Challenges, debunks or doubts many other oddball theories that circulated among theosophists and occultists of the time. An entire section is dedicated to explain that the Earth does not have a "soul" (which apparently was a notion quite accepted then).
[edit] Revolutions of the Globe
Describes cataclysms that affected life overall, failing to mention any that was not already know at the time.
[edit] Genesis of Life
Describes how life on Earth could have formed. This chapter is particularly sore for Spiritists because it actually accepts spontaneous generation as fact: a phenomenon that took place every day (which was according to mainstream scientific thinking of that time, only to be displaced decades later by the work of Louis Pasteur).
[edit] Genesis of Spirits
Explains how spirits were (and are) created and to what purpose.
[edit] Moses' Genesis
Explains why the tale of the creation found in the book of Genesis is contradicted by science.
[edit] The Miracles
The second part explains what a miracle is and discusses under which conditions it should happen.
[edit] Character of a Miracle
After describing what a "miracle" should be (both according to the popular conception and the theology of Christianism, Kardec argues (with the Spirits on his side) that such a thing does not and cannot exist:
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- "...considering that God does not do anything for fancy, we are inclined to the following opinion: As miracles are not necessary for the glory of God, nothing in the Universe ever goes against the laws of nature. God does not work miracles because, as His laws are perfect, He has no reason to derogate or suspend them. If facts are found that we cannot understand, it is just because we are in want of the knowledge necessary to understand them."
[edit] The Fluids
What "fluids" are and how they work. How they can sometimes work what looks like miracles in our eyes.
[edit] Miracles of the Gospels
Why and how did Jesus work wonders. This chapter states that most of the "miracles" narrated by the gospels were either natural phenomena or manifestations of spirits.
[edit] The Predictions
The third and shortest part deals with the possibility of foretelling the future, its possible consequences for mankind, and why God would allow it to happen.
[edit] Theory of Prescience
What is and what is the purpose of.
[edit] Predictions in the Gospels
This chapter looks quite sketchy, merely presenting the predictions picked from the gospels without much elaboration on their purpose or interpretation.
[edit] The Time Is at Hand
The final chapter, one of the last things Kardec published in life, is in itself a sort of prophecy about the future of spiritism, containing the following claims:
- That the world was (is) going to suffer the most dramatic change it ever experienced, and that this change would not be a cataclysm but the complete disruption of the beliefs of man, prompting for the establishment of a new faith, capable of harmonising with science, to prevent science "alone" from leading mankind to madness.
- That the changes would affect the world as a whole and blur the borders between nations and peoples.
- That the crisis would lead to great advancement of mankind, eliminating most causes of suffering and turning our planet into a higher type of world (most Spiritists believe our world is one of punishment for morally debased, but intelligent spirits).
- The crisis will prompt for a redefinition of many keystones of man's political organisations in terms of ethics.
- After the crisis (or as a consequence of it) man will be bodily different from its current shape.
- After the crisis there will not be any organised religions left, people will be all either free-thinkers or theists and most will believe the central tenets of Spiritism.
- We won't be able to detect the changes while they happen because they will be deep, but slow, and will take centuries to fully develop. Future generations will look unto us as an era of permanent turmoil, but not all of us will live realising this.
- Most of the push for the change will not come from scientific improvement, but from moral progress.
[edit] Overall Merit
The book suggests a large amount of research effort on the part of Kardec and is generally considered the best written of his books, despite being dated in a number of places. Although considered one of the five fundamental works of spiritism, it is the least popular of them.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Genesis According to Spiritism by Allan Kardec (PDF file, use Adobe Reader)