Robert M Price is the author. He has a PhD in theology and has been a pastor. It's not clear to me from his
short biography exactly where he stands on religion now, although it says he still attends church. He wrote an article,
Apex or Ex-ape, for the Jan/Feb 2010
Humanist discussing Genesis and evolution. He bases his interpretation of Genesis on the structuralism of anthropologist
Claude Levi-Strauss.
While he still attends church, his interpretation of genesis is far from where I would expect most Christians to be. I am curious as to what the Christians on the board think of his interpretation. It seems to me that he accepts Genesis as a myth that discloses deep-seated psychological concerns of humanity.
A brief excerpt of his essay:
It’s no use to pretend that the theory of evolution poses no challenges to the traditional Christian conceptions at any point. Certainly it does. And responsible Christians will not simply close their eyes and hope it will go away. And as believers rethink their faith in the light of new knowledge, that faith changes, grows, and—yes—evolves.
And so, having stressed that it is foolish as well as religiously unnecessary for believers to fight against the evident truth of evolution, I would now like to demonstrate a fascinating irony, namely how Genesis itself provides the most basic clue for understanding the deep anxiety that produces fundamentalist anti-evolutionism. To do this I must dip into the work of the recently deceased and highly celebrated anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss.
...
And, ironically, that’s not the only place we witness it. For is not the anxiety of the fundamentalist who opposes Darwinism the same fear? For evolution would erase the impassible barrier between the human race and the other animal species. And fundamentalists are loathe to admit that we have the ape and the amoeba for our cousins. They deny the earthly origin and kinship of the human race, preferring to believe humanity a special creation of God over and above the swarming legions of animals. And the political-educational fracas we now witness is more of the Cain-and-Abel strife that the myth says results from this denial.
Seventy-seven years ago, atheist author H.P. Lovecraft wrote prophetically of the fundamentalist “future-shock” reaction to evolution. We do well to take his words to heart:
The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each training in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little, but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality and of our frightful position therein that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety
of a new dark age.
Price sees the words of Lovecraft as applying to fundamentalists. I think they apply to humanity as a whole.