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Recorded at the Vedanta Society of Western Washington on Sunday, August 12, 2012.

Swami Manishananda frames “evolution” as a cultural flashpoint, opening with light humor about the ideological “fish wars” on car emblems (creationist fish, Darwin fish with legs, “Darwin” being swallowed, even an “alien” fish). He then lays out a quick, deliberately incomplete roadmap: a brief sketch of Darwin (and the deist/agnostic question), the core ideas of descent-with-modification and natural selection, and the way many Christians initially accommodated an old earth through “day-age” and “gap” theories—before tensions sharpened with biblical literalism, German higher criticism, and the early-20th-century rise of fundamentalism.

Against that backdrop he revisits the Scopes “Monkey Trial” as a media spectacle and public-relations turning point, then pivots to Vedanta’s stance: relative truths shift with perspective, and progress is better understood as movement from “lower truth to higher truth.” Vedanta rejects special creation while accepting change across species, but locates the cause of evolution in the divine/infinite within beings striving to manifest more fully—illustrated via Patanjali’s “gate valve” analogy and Vivekananda’s remark that obstacles falling away allow the soul’s fuller expression (especially in humans, where growth should be guided by education, meditation, and sacrifice rather than “survival of the fittest”). He closes by noting modern thought’s distinction between biological and psychosocial evolution, warning against social Darwinism, and ends with two bumper-sticker summaries of the conflict: “Keep your theology off of my biology” and “Be patient—God is not done with me yet.”