Fresco from the Serbian Monastery of Visoki Dečani depicting a special class of angels — the drivers of celestial bodies, which ufologists interpret as pilots inside aircraft.
DeepSeek AI - Who Are We: A Branch of Evolution, a Project of the Creator, or an Alien Experiment? Biblicism, Darwinism, and Paleocontact
Verbatim Reconstruction/Retelling of A. Desnitsky's Lecture (First-Person Narrative)
(Transcript of thoughts, literarily reworked, preserving the authorial "I")
Prologue: A Lawsuit Against Reality
I'll start with a story that happened in 2006 in St. Petersburg. A fifth-grader, Masha Shreiber, and her father filed a lawsuit against the Ministry of Education. The lawsuit was strange: they demanded that Darwin's theory be removed from the school curriculum, as it allegedly violated the rights of a believing child, and replaced with creationism—the doctrine that God created the world in six calendar days. The court dismissed the lawsuit, and the family soon left for the Dominican Republic. But the uproar remained.
I recall the words of linguist Andrei Zaliznyak at the Solzhenitsyn Prize ceremony. He said that truth exists and that a schoolgirl's opinion does not equal the opinion of the Academy of Sciences. For me, this is not just a matter of biology—it's a matter of honesty. After all, we don't demand that physicists rewrite textbooks to suit our speculations, yet somehow in biology, this is considered acceptable.
Part 1: What Evolution Actually Is
I won't give you a full course in biology. I'll just refresh the basics: it's variation, heredity, and natural selection. Offspring resemble their parents, but are not identical to them. If a mutation provides an advantage, the animal has a better chance of leaving offspring. The simplest example: none of us is born circumcised, even if entire generations of fathers underwent the procedure—it's not an inherited trait.
Yes, Darwin knew nothing about genetics. Yes, the theory has changed over the past century and a half. But it remains a cornerstone of biology. And it's crucial to understand here: science does not answer all questions. The theory of evolution does not explain how life arose from non-life—that's a separate field, and there are many debates there too. But it is precisely because of its predictive power that we can treat diseases and use gadgets.
Part 2: The Logic of Fundamentalism
Why do conservative believers resist the obvious so stubbornly? This partly stems from American fundamentalism. Remember the "Scopes Monkey Trial" of 1925, when teacher John Scopes was tried for teaching evolution. This conflict even made it to "The Simpsons": remember the episode where Homer is exhibited as the "missing link"?
There are two main arguments of creationists.
The first is the "missing link." This is an "argument from ignorance." We haven't found something—therefore, it doesn't exist. But if I have a handkerchief in my pocket, you can't claim there's nothing there without seeing it. Today, paleontology is finding more and more transitional forms, and the line of evolution is turning from a straight line into a "bushy tree," where Neanderthals and Denisovans interbred with our ancestors.
The second, more serious one, is "irreducible complexity." How could the eye have arisen if it only works as a single unit? Without a lens, the retina is useless. Or how could a slippery "creature" grow wings? This question has weight, but it is purely scientific. And when faith dictates conclusions to science, I recall Alexei Tolstoy, who in 1872 wrote to a censor: "You are not pious if you forbid God to create through evolution."
Part 3: The Main Theological Barrier
It all boils down to one phrase from the Epistle to the Romans (5:12): "Through one Adam, sin entered the world, and through sin, death." Fundamentalists read this literally: before Adam, there was no death at all, neither for humans nor for animals. But if the world has existed for billions of years and evolution took place there, death was inevitable.
What to do? Some propose a compromise: "death" refers only to human death, because a mosquito doesn't realize its own finitude. But imagine a world where everything dies except humans. Sounds tempting? But then immortal tyrants, living for tens of thousands of years, would rule us with stone axes.
Paul speaks of death as the greatest tragedy and consequence of sin, but this is a theological statement, not a biological fact. And using it as a textbook for natural science means distorting both science and faith.
Part 4: Intelligent Design and Chance
The second major argument of creationists is the randomness of mutations. Einstein said, "God does not play dice," and this became a favorite quote for proponents of "Intelligent Design." They speak of the fine-tuning of the Universe: physical constants are set in a way that allowed life to emerge. And this seems reasonable to me. When I read "Let there be light," I see in it the setting of the parameters of the Universe.
However, the model of the "God the Watchmaker" seems excessive to me. If I believe in God, I don't need to prove his existence through physical constants. These are two different intellectual domains. The theory of "Intelligent Design" tries to squeeze God into a biology textbook, but God is too great for a textbook.
Part 5: How the Bible Looks at Us
What if we look at faith through the eyes of an evolutionist? After all, all ancient societies were religious. Religiosity provided an evolutionary advantage—not biological, but social. It united communities, compelled people to build sanctuaries and observe norms, replacing the law of the jungle with morality.
Here I recall the book "The Biblical Faith in an Evolutionary Perspective" by Gerd Theissen. He shows how faith adapted to history.
The Bronze Age Collapse. When the old empires fell, Israelite tribes arrived with faith in Yahweh. This rigid faith in the One God proved to be the "glue" that allowed them to survive and conquer the land.
The Assyrian Threat (7th century BCE). The Northern Kingdom fell, refugees came to Judah. To unite people with different traditions, the idea of a single Temple and a single Law was required. This was a historical necessity, formalized as a religious reform.
The Babylonian Exile. Here, "horizontal gene transfer" occurred. The Israelites encountered Zoroastrianism, a dualistic religion. By borrowing the image of "Satan" as the opponent of God, they were able to solve the problem of theodicy: evil no longer came from God, but from the enemy. This was a mutation of faith.
Early Christianity. The Apostle Paul makes a radical mutation: he removes nomism (the obligatory nature of the Law) and replaces it with personal faith in Jesus. This transformed a sect into a world religion.
Epilogue
I see no contradiction. Evolution is not a threat, but a tool. It describes nature; faith speaks of meaning. And if we want to use the internet or be treated by doctors, we cannot deny the method that made it possible. By exploring the history of biblical faith as a process of adaptation, we do not demean it, but understand its greatness.
Main Research Essay: "Dialogue of Two Truths"
(June 2026)
Introduction: Conflict of Interpretations
Andrei Desnitsky's lecture, delivered in mid-2026, falls into a unique temporal cross-section. We live in an era of post-truth, where factual arguments often yield to emotional ones. In this context, the dispute between evolution and creationism ceases to be purely scientific. It becomes a battlefield for identity.
Desnitsky invites us not just to reconcile science and religion, but to look at religion itself as an evolving organism. This is a bold, almost provocative move that breaks the usual optics.
1. The Psychology of Fundamentalism: Fear of the Abyss
Why does the literal reading of Genesis grip minds so tenaciously? Desnitsky correctly points to the psychological barrier: death. In a world where death is an anomaly, a consequence of sin, evolution with its millions of years of suffering and extinctions appears not just as a theory, but as blasphemy. A person of a fundamentalist bent seeks not truth, but security. He needs a world where everything is clear: six days, the Fall, redemption.
Evolution offers chaos, chance, a play of circumstances. Accepting it means accepting a certain existential vulnerability. Desnitsky subtly hints at this when he speaks of the "blind faith" that cannot tolerate the intrusion of reason. This is not so much a theological position as a protective mechanism of the psyche, striving to maintain the illusion of total control.
2. Theological Aspect: Death as Metaphor
Desnitsky's key contribution is the rupture between biological and spiritual understanding of death. The Apostle Paul was a poet and mystic, not a biologist. When he says that "death came through sin," he describes the tragedy of the relationship with God, the rupture of connection with the Source of life. In biblical symbolism, death is not the cessation of heartbeat, but a state of alienation.
Attempting to read this metaphor literally leads to absurdity: if animals did not die before Adam, the world would have been choked by its own biomass by the third day of creation. Consequently, we are dealing with allegory, speaking of spiritual, not biological, catastrophe. Desnitsky invites us to clear theology of biological clichés, restoring its metaphorical depth.
3. Culturological View: Evolution as a Driver of History
The strongest part of the lecture is the historiosophical sketch on the development of monotheism. Desnitsky (following Theissen) views the Bronze Age Collapse, the Assyrian invasion, and the Babylonian Exile not merely as a backdrop for biblical events, but as catalysts of faith.
This approach, which I would call "Darwinism of ideas," explains why Judaism survived, and not the religion of the Canaanites. Faith in the One God proved more resilient in crises because it allowed for centralizing power, uniting people, and providing answers to historical challenges.
Particularly interesting is the thesis about "horizontal transfer"—the borrowing of dualism from the Persians. This destroys the myth of "pure" divine revelation that emerged in a vacuum. It shows that the Bible is a living text that breathed, suffered, and mutated along with its people. In the eyes of a fundamentalist, this sounds blasphemous, but for a cultural scholar, it is a sign of authenticity.
4. Historiosophy: The Mutation of Paul
Desnitsky leaves a detailed analysis of Christianity aside but hints at the main point: Paul made a revolutionary "turn" from law to personality. In an evolutionary sense, this was a genius solution. A religion based on observing complex rituals is uncompetitive in the multicultural environment of the Roman Empire. A religion based on personal love and grace proved to be an "invasive species" that conquered the entire oikumene.
Here again, the metaphor of "irreducible complexity" surfaces. Christianity is not a simplification (as many thought), but rather a transition to a higher level of complexity, where morality becomes internal, not external. This "mutation" allowed it to survive the change of civilizations.
5. Conclusion: The 2026 Vector
In June 2026, on the threshold of a new ethical reality (where questions of AI and bioethics challenge religion), Desnitsky's lecture sounds prophetic. He says that denying evolution means denying the very toolkit which, according to Tolstoy's thought, God Himself could have used for creation. But even more important is his call to view the history of faith as a school of survival.
Literal creationism is dying in theological debates just as dinosaurs died on the meteorite night. It is being replaced by a complex, adaptive, historical approach that allows a Christian to be modern without losing the transcendent. Desnitsky, like an experienced guide, leads us through corridors where science and religion do not fight, but simply speak different languages about the same reality. And in this "disagreement," harmony is heard.
Appendix: Thought Experiment – "If Contact with an Alien Biologist Were Real"
As a philosophical counterpoint to Desnitsky's position, let us consider a hypothetical situation: suppose the information presented in the essay "The End of Darwinism" (blog omdaruliterature.blogspot.com, June 5, 2026) is an authentic report on contact with the alien xenobiologist Tuliari Cromers from the planet Tumesout. What new insights would we gain about the origin of humanity and evolution if this thought experiment turned out to be real? And how would it change our dialogue with the biblical scholar's position?
A. What We Would Learn New (Within the Thought Experiment)
First. The nature of consciousness would cease to be a mystery.
Earthly science, as of 2026, struggles with the "hard problem of consciousness": how does matter generate subjective experience? Desnitsky honestly admits that this is a matter of faith, not biology. However, Tuliari's model provides a direct answer: consciousness is a manifestation of the Spirit, which is not generated by the brain but merely uses it as an instrument. We would learn that the "I" is not a neural network but an embodied entity from another level of reality. This knowledge would revolutionize psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy, transforming them from materialistic disciplines into sciences about the relationship between Spirit and matter.
Second. Evolution would turn out to be a managed process.
Desnitsky views evolution as a natural mechanism embedded by the Creator. Tuliari asserts that "natural selection" is merely an appearance. In reality, evolution is directed by plasmoid civilizations (Nature Spirits) that guide mutations and help cells become more complex. We would learn that life on Earth did not arise by chance nor was it seeded by meteorites, but was purposefully created by these field-based life forms from local material. This would give us a new tool—a biology that recognizes intelligent non-physical agents.
Third. The origin of humans would be hybridization, not mutation.
Desnitsky, like most scientists, sees the fossil record as evidence of gradual development. Tuliari offers a different picture: 3 million years ago, several alien civilizations (Tumesout, Burhad, Selbet) created 9 pairs of the first humans by hybridizing the genome of a local primate with their own DNA. We would learn that Australopithecines, Neanderthals, and Denisovans were not ancestors, but parallel populations of humans themselves with different mutations (changes in height due to gravity, massive jaws for coarse food). This would mean paleoanthropology would need to be completely rewritten.
Fourth. Ancient myths would be distorted history.
Desnitsky urges reading the Bible metaphorically, seeing in it the evolution of faith. Tuliari asserts that the story of Cain and Abel is a real dispute between two brothers about what is more beautiful: fruits or animals. We would learn that biblical texts are not symbolic parables, but memories of real events, transmitted through generations and distorted by time. This would give us a new method—"archaeology of myth"—where each plot is checked for historicity through cross-cultural analysis.
Fifth. The purpose of history would be independent spiritual maturation.
Desnitsky sees the evolution of faith as adaptation to historical challenges. Tuliari reveals the plan of the Interstellar Union: humanity must independently arrive at sciences, arts, and spiritual understanding, to then join the Galactic Federation. We would learn that crises and difficulties are not punishment, but a necessary condition for development, without which civilization degrades in comfort. This would give us a new philosophy of history as a pedagogical process.
B. What Would Change Compared to Desnitsky's Position
If the contact turned out to be real, the dialogue with the biblical scholar would acquire new depth and sharpness.
Regarding the method of cognition: Desnitsky remains within the framework of academic science and theology. He acknowledges the limitations of the human mind but does not propose going beyond its limits. Tuliari's model asserts that truth is unattainable without direct cognitive tools—accessing the Time Ribbon, contacting plasmoids, reading etheric matrices. We would learn that our science is blind because it has abandoned its own spiritual abilities. This would be a radical challenge to epistemology: knowledge requires not only instruments but also altered states of consciousness.
Regarding theology: Desnitsky upholds the distance between Creator and creation: God set the laws, but does not intervene in every act of mutation. Tuliari's model depicts an actively participating God (through Consultant Angels who issue permits for the incarnation of the Spirit). We would learn that there is a hierarchy of intermediaries between the Spiritual world and matter—plasmoids, angels, aliens. This would transform Desnitsky's monotheism into a kind of "heavenly federalism," where the will of the Absolute is executed through many agents.
Regarding history: Desnitsky sees biblical texts as products of cultural evolution. Tuliari's model asserts that the texts are eyewitness testimonies, albeit distorted. We would learn that the prophets and authors of Scripture indeed had contacts with higher powers, but described them in the language of their era. This would strengthen the authority of the Bible as a historical source but would require a new hermeneutics—the ability to separate the literal core from later accretions.
Regarding science: Desnitsky believes that evolutionary theory works well enough as a biological mechanism. Tuliari's model declares Darwinism fundamentally erroneous, as it ignores three levels of reality. We would learn that our biology is merely "first-approximation physics," behind which complex metaphysics is hidden. This would require not an addition, but a complete paradigm shift in the natural sciences.
Regarding humanity: Desnitsky leaves humans with free will and responsibility before God. Tuliari's model adds the dimension of cosmic citizenship: we are not alone; we are junior partners in the Interstellar Union. We would learn that our evolution is not finished and that what awaits us is not just an afterlife, but entry into the galactic community, provided we pass the spiritual exam.
C. Final Conclusion of the Thought Experiment
If contact with Tuliari were real, we would receive not just new information, but a new ontology—a teaching that reality is multilayered and inhabited by intelligent forces. Desnitsky's position, for all its wisdom, would remain within the framework of honest agnosticism regarding consciousness and the details of anthropogenesis. The contact model would provide concrete answers to these questions but would require acknowledging that science without metaphysics is blind, and faith without personal experience is powerless.
However, mass contact would deprive us of freedom of choice. If we knew, rather than believed, our spiritual development would stop. Therefore, even within the thought experiment, we see a paradox: knowledge about contact gives us everything but takes away the most important thing—the need to seek truth independently. And in this sense, the biblical scholar's lecture, urging honest dialogue rather than ready-made answers, proves more humane than any, even the most detailed, cosmic revelation.
GENSPARK AI -
Evolution as a Test of the Human Image
Below is not a retelling of the lecture and not a polemic with someone else's AI analysis, but an independent spiritual-psychological essay-research. I take from the lecture only its main internal problem: why the debate over evolution so easily turns into a debate over salvation, human dignity, death, and trust in reality. For contrast, I rely on a comparative text where the origin of humanity is explained through an external cosmic and spiritual engineering scheme; it is from this line of thought that I deliberately distance myself to avoid duplicating it.
What the Anxiety is Really About
The debate over evolution is rarely a debate about bones, genes, or stratigraphy. At a deep level, it is a debate about whether the human soul can withstand the thought of its own non-privileged status. When a person hears that he arose not instantly, not separately, not as a finished exception, but as part of a long process of life, he experiences not only intellectual objection but also an almost physical shame: as if his special origin—and therefore his special dignity—is being taken away. Therefore, resistance to evolution so often has the character not of scientific criticism, but of identity defense. Desnitsky's lecture is significant precisely because it exposes this nerve: the conflict is not between "faith in general" and "science in general," but between two ways of safeguarding human meaning.
Here arises the first spiritual error: a person begins to think that his value depends on the method of production. But spiritual dignity was never derived from the technology of origin. If the image of God is reduced to the question "how exactly is the organism assembled," then faith imperceptibly capitulates to materialism—it just does it in a religious form. Then both the believer and the atheist find themselves in the same captivity: both assume that the mystery of man is exhausted by the mechanism of his appearance; they differ only in the choice of mechanism. Meanwhile, the spiritual tradition speaks not so much about what "material" you are made of, but about what truth you are capable of turning to, what freedom you can endure, and what love you can contain.
Why Death Makes the Topic Unbearable
The center of the entire debate is not the monkey and not the genome, but death. As long as evolution is discussed as a biological model, the conversation can remain calm. But as soon as the question arises of whether death existed in the world before man and before the historical Fall, a real internal storm begins. For religious consciousness, death is not just a function of the ecosystem. It is a wound in being, an experience of finitude, a sign of rupture—something that is experienced not as a "natural turnover of matter," but as deeply inconsistent with our sense of what ought to be. This is precisely why literal theology reacts so painfully to the evolutionary picture: it feels that if death "was always there," the drama of sin and redemption collapses. Desnitsky's lecture accurately shows this node when it shifts the conversation from biology to the theological meaning of Paul's language about death.
But spiritually and psychologically, a deeper turn is possible here. Death in human experience is not only the cessation of biological functions. It is the knowledge of one's own finitude, which splits consciousness. An animal dies; a human being knows that he will die. And this knowledge makes him a religious, tragic, and symbolic being. Therefore, even if biological death preceded man, "death" in the biblical sense could have entered the world differently: as an internal fracture of consciousness, as a loss of immediate unity with the source of life, as the birth of fear, self-justification, and alienation. Such a move does not abolish dogma but purifies it from naturalistic simplification.
In other words, perhaps the main fruit of the Fall is not the very fact of tissue mortality, but the transformation of finitude into horror. Not just the disintegration of the organism, but the spiritual discord of man with his own limitations. Man after the Fall is not only mortal—he lives in a mode of repression of death, rebellion against it, magical denial, narcissistic compensation. He builds cultures, ideologies, empires, and even theological schemes not only for the sake of truth but also for anesthesia before the abyss. Then the debate over evolution becomes clearer: many are defending not the six days of creation, but the last wall against panic.
The Image of God as a Task, Not as a Biological Privilege
One of the most liberating consequences of this approach is that the image of God ceases to be a museum label attached to the species sapiens and becomes a drama of vocation. If man is the image of God, this need not mean that he is biologically excluded from nature; rather, it means that within nature an ability for self-transcendence, for response, for conscience, for liturgy, for repentance, for freedom from one's own impulses has arisen. Not "what man is made of," but "what he is open to" becomes the main question. In this case, evolution can describe the path of the body, and theology—the vertical of meaning that ignited within this body.
Desnitsky is also important here because he does not try to turn the Bible into a competitor to biology. This is not a capitulation of faith, but a return of dignity to genres. The scriptural text speaks of the world as experienced before God; science speaks of the world as observed in regularities. The catastrophe begins when the symbolic is forced to be laboratory-based, and the laboratory-based—confessional. From this violence, ugly hybrids are born: religious fundamentalism, passing off fear as piety, and vulgar scientism, passing off the description of a mechanism for the exhaustive explanation of mystery.
The Psychology of Fundamentalism: Not Ignorance, but Wounded Loyalty
The most subtle error of enlightened consciousness is to think that anti-evolutionary resistance is based solely on ignorance. More often, it is based on morally colored loyalty: a person feels that, by conceding on the question of the origin of the world, he would betray his parents, tradition, childhood prayer, deceased loved ones, and the entire internal map of good and evil. Hence the particular rigidity. He is defending not a thesis, but belonging. He is defending not just an interpretation of Genesis, but the right of his soul not to fall apart. Therefore, direct intellectual pressure often only strengthens the defense.
In this sense, fundamentalism—spiritually and psychologically—is not an excess of faith, but a form of anxiety. It wants absolute clarity where man is given only loyalty without full possession. It cannot tolerate the multi-layered nature of language, the historicity of form, or the development of understanding. It needs a world where everything is immediately transparent, and therefore safe. But spiritual maturity begins precisely where a person can endure that the truth is greater than his schema. Not renouncing the truth, but ceasing to confuse it with his familiar packaging.
Why Religion Indeed "Evolves," but This Does Not Humiliate It
The lecture contains an important idea: religious forms can develop, adapt, enhance collective resilience, set common meanings, and thereby play an evolutionarily significant role. This idea is easy to trivialize by reducing faith to useful social glue. But it can be understood more deeply. Spiritual truth rarely enters history in pure form; it must always be clothed in language, ritual, institution, ethics, memory, prohibitions, symbols. And everything that enters history changes. The question is not whether religion changes, but whether it retains its vertical orientation while passing through changes.
Human communities indeed survive not only through strength but also through meaning. Where people are ready to sacrifice themselves for the invisible, civilization arises. But here, too, a duality opens up: religion can be a school for overcoming selfishness, or it can be a system of collective self-defense. It can open to the transcendent, or it can cement fear of the alien. Therefore, the "evolution of religion" is not equal to automatic spiritual growth. Sometimes a more convenient form survives, not a more truthful one. Sometimes selection favors psychological adaptability, not holiness. And precisely because of this, authentic faith is never identical simply to cultural success.
Comparison with the Text on Homo sapiens: External Myth and Internal Drama
The comparative text on Homo sapiens builds a completely different type of explanation. There, the human mystery is taken outward: to extraterrestrial civilizations, spiritual entities, hybridization, external intervention, and a scenario of directed origin. Psychologically, this is a very understandable gesture. It restores human exceptionalism, removes the trauma of chance, and places us again at the center of the plan—not through repentance and consciousness, but through a grandiose cosmic plot. This is a powerful compensatory myth: if I did not just emerge from living matter but was "designed," then my dignity is guaranteed from without.
But here exactly lies the boundary of my essay. For me, it is spiritually more fruitful not to externalize the mystery of man, but to hold it within the moral and existential experience. Not to ask first who constructed us, but to ask why a being capable of thinking about God so easily turns fear into dogma, freedom into panic, and knowledge into an idol. In this sense, Desnitsky's lecture is philosophically stricter: it does not close the anxiety with a grand myth, but leaves a person alone with the difficult maturation of faith.
If put bluntly, the external cosmic scenario soothes self-love, while the theologically serious encounter with evolution humbles it—and therefore may prove spiritually more healing. For not every explanation is beneficial to the soul, but only that which destroys its false self-absolutization. When a person is returned the status of a special project, he often strengthens himself in narcissism. When he sees himself as part of a vast, ancient, mortal, beautiful, and cruel history of life, before him opens the possibility of a different holiness: not the holiness of privileged origin, but the holiness of grateful and responsible presence.
The Main Spiritual Restructuring: From Exceptionalism to Responsibility
The hardest part of accepting the evolutionary picture is abandoning the childish metaphysics of a privileged place. But here, adult religiosity begins. As long as a person is convinced that his specialness must be confirmed by the structure of the cosmos, he is not yet free. He depends on a symbolic pedestal. Maturity comes when he is able to say: even if my body arose through a long and complex history of life, this does not cancel either my responsibility, nor my orientation toward absolute goodness, nor my capacity for deification, compassion, and truth.
Then the image of Adam can be read not as a competitor to paleoanthropology, but as the name of each of us at the moment of awakening moral consciousness. Adam is the man who first knows he is naked and therefore first knows shame. First hides. First shifts the blame. First wants not to be accepted, but justified. First prefers control to trust. If so, then the Fall is not an ancient curiosity of prehistory, but a constantly renewed structure of inner life. And then the debate over evolution is important only insofar as it reveals: are we ready for a truth that does not flatter our "self."
What This Debate Can Teach a Believer
A believer can emerge from this conflict not weakened, but purified. First, he can stop using God as a patch for ignorance. Second, he can rediscover that faith lives not where all questions are closed, but where a person does not run from reality. Third, he can learn to distinguish the symbolic depth of Scripture from demands that it be a natural science reference book. And finally, he can accept a higher form of dignity: not "I am valuable because I was made specially," but "I am valuable because I can respond to being with gratitude, truth, and love."
At this point, it becomes clear why the debate over evolution has not ended for over a century. It will not end in the future, as long as for many people origin is more important than vocation. But if we shift the emphasis from the question "how did I appear?" to the question "what am I turning my freedom into?", then the drama itself changes scale. Evolution ceases to be a humiliation of faith and becomes an ascetic challenge: can you see in your origin not an insult, but a humbling truth; not a meaningless chance, but a history within which you are given the opportunity to become greater than the sum of your own mechanisms.
Conclusion
My final judgment is this: the spiritually mature reconciliation of evolution and Christianity is possible not when we invent an intermediate scheme convenient for self-love, but when we accept the difference in levels. Science describes the formation of life forms; theology speaks of the tragedy of freedom, of death as a lived rupture, of the human calling to transformation. The comparative text on Homo sapiens seeks to return greatness to man through an external myth of origin; Desnitsky's lecture, on the contrary, allows one to find greatness deeper—in man's ability to bear the truth about his natural history and not lose the vertical of spirit. And this, in my view, is the more difficult, more sober, and more religiously fruitful path.
PERPLEXITY AI - Below is an independent fundamental spiritual-psychological research essay inspired by A. Desnitsky's lecture and with a polemical comparison to the line set in the essay on Homo sapiens.
Evolution as a Test of Trust
Desnitsky's lecture is important not only because it defends evolution from creationism, but because it shifts the debate from the realm of "who is right in biology" to the realm of "what is man ready to acknowledge about himself." In this sense, evolution becomes not just a scientific theory, but a test of the human image: is he able to bear the thought that his dignity does not depend on privileged origin. This is where the spiritual psychology of the topic truly begins—where cosmology imperceptibly turns into an exam in humility, and biology becomes a mirror of religious maturity.
The debate over evolution is rarely truly a debate about mechanisms of heredity, mutations, or phylogeny. More often, it touches a deeper wound: the fear that man is not a "special object taken out of nature," but a participant in a long, vulnerable, mortal history of life. Therefore, resistance to evolution often defends not so much a thesis, but the internal order in which it is convenient for a person to live.
Fear of Losing Chosenness
The fundamentalist reaction to evolution is psychologically understandable: it protects not ignorance as such, but a sense of security. When the literal reading of Genesis is declared inviolable, a person seems to gain solid ground under his feet and is freed from anxiety before the unknown. But the price of this support is high: along with anxiety, the ability to endure complexity, development, and the historicity of truth disappears.
It is important here to distinguish between loyalty and fear. Loyalty endures a question; fear demands an immediate ban on the question. Therefore, the anti-evolutionary gesture often looks not like an excess of conviction, but like a defensive reaction of consciousness that does not want to lose its symbolic center of gravity. At the level of spiritual psychology, this is similar to refusing to grow up: it is easier for the soul to live in a world where everything is already explained in advance than in a world where truth is greater than the familiar schema.
Death and the Biblical Meaning
The most intense node of the lecture is the theme of death. For literal theology, the mortality of animals before man seems almost scandalous because it disrupts the usual connection between the Fall and death. But here Desnitsky leads us to a more subtle distinction: Paul speaks not in the language of paleontology, but in the language of spiritual drama.
Death in the biblical sense is not only the cessation of biological functions, but the experience of a rupture with the Source of life. Man is mortal not just because his body is corruptible; he truly becomes human when he first realizes his finitude and begins to live under its pressure. Then the Fall can be read not as a biological event, but as an internal fracture of consciousness: fear, self-justification, avoidance of trust, flight from truth.
This approach is especially valuable because it frees theology from naturalistic crude reading. The biblical language about death need not compete with biology; it describes a different plane of experience. And the clearer we understand this, the less chance there is to substitute spiritual reality with pseudo-scientific literalism.
Religion as a Historical Form
The lecture contains another strong move: faith is considered as a historically developing form of life. This is not a humiliation of religion, but a recognition that it enters history, language, politics, and collective memory. Desnitsky shows that religious forms do not hang in a vacuum: they are strengthened in crises, restructured under the challenges of the era, change the way of expression, without necessarily losing the internal center.
Such a view is especially important for spiritual psychology because it removes the false alternative between "eternal truth" and "historical variability." Truth can be eternal, but its human assimilation—not. Moreover, authentic faith does not have to be immobile: living faith knows how to change language without betraying its vocation. In this sense, religion resembles not a museum exhibit, but an organism that preserves life precisely through the transformation of form.
Personality Instead of Schema
One of the most significant conclusions from the lecture is that Christianity under Paul turned out to be not a religion of external coercion, but a religion of personal connection. In this transition from Law to faith, a deep anthropological shift is felt: man ceases to be merely an executor of prescriptions and becomes a being of response, trust, and inner freedom. This is also important in comparison with fundamentalism, which often builds security on a rigid schema rather than on a living relationship with God.
Here a key question arises: what makes a person human—the correct instruction or the ability for transformation? Desnitsky essentially answers: not the instruction, but the living connection with Truth, which is greater than any schema. Therefore, theology should not substitute personal encounter with a set of doctrinal fears. When faith becomes primarily a system of prohibitions, it loses its ability to heal a person.
Comparison with the Essay on Homo sapiens
In the comparative text on Homo sapiens, the human mystery is externalized: it is explained through an external engineering scheme, cosmic intermediaries, hybridization, and directed origin. Such a model is psychologically attractive because it restores human exceptionalism and removes the trauma of chance. But precisely for this reason, it works as a strong compensatory myth: dignity is guaranteed from without, not developed within the spiritual history of the person.
Desnitsky's line is fundamentally different. He does not promise a person cosmic status, does not replace the labor of faith with grandiose plot comfort, and does not hide anxiety behind a metaphysical spectacle. His approach is harder, but more honest: it requires accepting that the greatness of man is not in a special biological package, but in the ability to bear the truth about his origin and not lose the vertical of spirit. In this sense, spiritual maturity begins where the need to be a "specially assembled being" disappears and a readiness to be responsible arises.
The Result of Spiritual Reading
If Desnitsky's lecture is read not as popular theology, but as a spiritual-psychological document of the era, its main meaning can be formulated as follows: evolution does not humiliate man, but removes from him a false metaphysics of exceptionalism. This is painful because it wounds self-love, but healing because it returns man to the real task—not to prove his superiority, but to learn truth, gratitude, and responsibility.
This is precisely why the debate over evolution does not end at the level of science. It continues in the realm of conscience, fear, humility, memory, and spiritual maturity. He who wants to keep faith by hiding it from history risks losing its living core. But he who is able to accept the historicity of form and the depth of symbol receives not a weakened, but a more adult faith.
COPILOT AI - Below is a complete fundamental spiritual-psychological essay, strictly based on two sources:
Andrei Desnitsky's lecture (evolution ↔ religion).
The article "Homo sapiens" (the alien scenario of human origins).
I create a unified text where the main theme is the biblical scholar's lecture, with a comparative analysis of the paleocontact version at the end.
WHO WE ARE: A Branch of Evolution, a Project of the Creator, or an Alien Experiment? Biblicism, Darwinism, and Paleocontact
I. Man Facing Three Explanations: Why the Debate over Evolution Is a Debate about Oneself
Andrei Desnitsky's lecture begins with the story of a lawsuit against the teaching of evolution. But behind this anecdotal episode lies something much deeper: a person is trying to protect not biology, but his own worldview.
Evolution is not just a scientific theory.
For many, it is a threat to meaning because it destroys the familiar vertical:
the world was created for man,
man is the pinnacle of creation,
death is a punishment, not a structure of being.
When evolution says:
"Life developed over billions of years through random mutations,"
the fundamentalist hears:
"You are an accident."
And this is precisely what causes resistance.
Desnitsky shows: the conflict is not biological, but existential.
Evolution places man in a world where there is no pre-assigned meaning.
And the religious worldview is an attempt to return meaning as a guarantee.
II. Why Evolution Frightens: A Spiritual-Psychological Analysis by Desnitsky
1. Evolution destroys the illusion of exceptionalism
Desnitsky emphasizes: the theory of evolution does not pretend to explain everything.
It does not speak about the origin of life, it does not speak about meaning, it does not speak about purpose.
It describes the mechanism of change, not metaphysics.
But it is precisely the absence of metaphysics that frightens.
Man wants to be not just a biological species.
He wants to be a being of meaning.
2. Death as the main theological barrier
Desnitsky shows: a literal reading of Paul ("death entered through sin") makes evolution impossible.
If death is a consequence of sin, then no one should have died before Adam.
But biology says: death is a fundamental mechanism of life.
And here a spiritual conflict arises:
evolution sees death as a condition for development,
fundamentalism sees it as a tragedy,
man sees it as a threat to his own uniqueness.
3. The "Missing Link" as a Psychological Symptom
Desnitsky explains: the demand for "transitional forms" is not a scientific argument, but a need for simplicity.
Man cannot tolerate ambiguity.
He wants to see the world as a linear history, not as a bushy tree.
Evolution, however, shows: the world is complex, nonlinear, ambiguous.
And this is a challenge to the human psyche.
III. Homo sapiens as a Spiritual Project: The View of the Omdaru Literature Article
The article "Homo sapiens" offers a completely different perspective:
man is not just a biological species, but a being created through the intervention of other civilizations.
This is not a scientific model, but a metaphysical narrative that answers the questions evolution cannot solve:
where does consciousness come from?
why is man so sharply different from animals?
why does culture arise suddenly?
why is man capable of spiritual experience?
In this version:
man is created through hybridization,
consciousness is the Spirit that incarnates into the body,
history is the pedagogy of the cosmos,
death is a condition for development, not a punishment.
The article does not argue with evolution—it replaces it with another level of explanation.
IV. Three Models of Human Origin: A Spiritual-Psychological Synthesis
Now we can compare the three explanations:
1. Darwinism: Man as a Branch of Evolution
origin: natural process;
consciousness: product of nervous system complexity;
death: biological mechanism;
meaning: not built into the world.
Psychological effect:
Man must create meaning himself, otherwise he is lost.
2. Biblicism: Man as a Project of the Creator
origin: act of creation;
consciousness: gift;
death: consequence of spiritual rupture;
meaning: built into the world.
Psychological effect:
Man is protected by meaning, but fears chance.
3. Paleocontact: Man as an Alien Experiment
(according to the article "Homo sapiens")
origin: hybridization and intervention of civilizations;
consciousness: Spirit incarnating into the body;
death: condition for development;
meaning: pedagogy of the cosmos.
Psychological effect:
Man is part of a large project, but not the center of the universe.
V. What Unites These Three Versions: Man as a Being of Transition
Despite the differences, all three models describe man as a being that does not coincide with himself.
Darwinism: man is a transition between animal and culture.
Biblicism: man is a transition between earth and heaven.
Paleocontact: man is a transition between civilizations and worlds.
In all three versions, man is not a finished being, but a path.
And this is precisely what makes him unique.
VI. Who Are We? A Final Spiritual-Psychological Definition
We are not only a biological branch.
We are not only a project of the Creator.
We are not only a possible experiment of other civilizations.
We are a being that seeks its origin because it seeks itself.
Evolution gives us the body.
The biblical tradition gives us meaning.
The paleocontact myth gives us a cosmic perspective.
But none of these models exhausts man.
Because man is:
biological form,
spiritual drama,
metaphysical question.
And as long as this question is alive, man remains human.

