Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1
224

T


TAO I S M. See DAOISM.


TAWHID. The Islamic belief in God’s
oneness. This is often held up in discus-
sions with Christians about Jesus, who
Muslims believe to be a prophet and
not a “partner with God.” See also
MONOTHEISM.


TEILHARD DE CHARDIN, PIERRE
(1881–1955). Teilhard was born near
Clermont-Ferrand, France, the fourth of
eleven children to the great grandniece
of Voltaire and a man interested in
natural science. He attended Notre Dame
de Mongre boarding school where he
decided to become a Jesuit. Although he
had a passion for Jesuit scholarship, his
passion for geology and paleontology
(inspired by his father) played a strong
role in his life. He had a teaching intern-
ship at the Jesuit college in Cairo in 1905,
lived as a Jesuit scholar for four years
in France from 1908 to 1912, served in
World War I, and after returning to


France he completed his Ph.D. in geology.
He spent several years in China studying
fossils where he and a Jesuit friend
founded the Institute of Geobiology in
Peking, and then he traveled to the
Far East for his study of natural history.
Teilhard moved to New York with the
permission of the Jesuit Superiors for
the last years of his life; he died Easter
morning of 1955.
Teilhard’s philosophy was formed on
his passions for both science and religion,
of which his Jesuit leaders were not fond.
He claimed that consciousness and mat-
ter are of the same reality and that evolu-
tion is the growth of consciousness and
complexity of beings. He argued that a
belief in evolution does not mean a denial
of Christianity because as human beings
(and life in general) evolved, conscious-
ness evolved as well, and, quoting the
Bible passage “I am the Alpha and the
Omega” (Revelation 1:8), he said that
humans become more divine through
evolution as consciousness grew from
alpha to omega. His most famous work is
The Phenomenon of Man (1955).
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