Hi, all -
I’ve been thinking about this one, for a couple of days. Just wondered if any of you would like to discuss the implications or inferences of today’s technology, in the light of the early Industrial Age quip, “Deus ex Machinus”.
Also, we could discuss the inferences and implications for the early Industrial Age, of that quip.
To get off the topic somewhat, Dietrich Bonhoeffer used the term in one of his writings, in “Texts - Letters from Prison”, when he wrote …
“Religious people speak of God when human knowledge (perhaps simply because they are too lazy to think) has come to an end, or when human resources fail - in fact it is always the
deus ex machina that they bring on the scene, either for the apparent solution of insoluble problems, or as strength in human failure - always, that is to say, exploring human weakness or human boundaries. Of necessity, that can only go on only till people by their own strength push these boundaries somewhat further out, so that God becomes superfluous as a
deus ex machina. I’ve come to be doubtful of talking about any human boundaries (is even death, which people now hardly fear [my comment - Bonhoeffer was writing towards the end of the war, and death was a common spectacle in Germany at that time], and is sin, which they now hardly understand, still a genuine boundary today?)”
What the technological revolution has done is to remove “God” as the anwer to more and more questions and problems. Medicine has almost doubled Western life expectancy since the time of Bismarck for example. We fly from continent to continent in hours, have landed on the moon, psychiatry explains more and more about mental illness, and so on.
That doesn’t mean we know all the answers. But ancient man looked at lightning and thought it the sign of Thor. Modern man looks at it as an electrical discharge. What Bonhoeffer was thinking about was that Christianity was becoming in a sense, “religionless”, as God as a “deus ex machina” was being pushed further and further out of the scene. He himself was in prison, charged with being in involved in a conspiracy to kill Hitler, and as it turned out was executed not long before the end of the war. God did not intervene in the form of a “deus ex machina” to prevent his execution either.
Or as he put it somewhere else, God allowed his creature, Man, to “push Him out of the world on a cross”.
Of course Bonhoeffer was Protestant, and could not therefore simply identify with the Church, as Catholics tend to do. But he definitely had something to say.
What technology is doing, more and more, is to remove God from the theatrical prop, but at the same time makes Man more and more accountable for his own ethical, or non ethical behaviour.