ya, no need to apologise. i have been quite intrigued by this thread during the course of this last week. some super cool points brought up.
and i also read portions of all the links you posted. thanks for those. as has already been brought out, i had to adopt the "presumption cap" approach to the material. sort of like reading fantasy novels. "okay, well, here are the implicit assumptions of the inhabitants of planet X, so this is what they might be trying to comes to grasp with", or in the implied opposite: "these organisms truly have an incredible grasp on the supreme weirdness of existence." if i struggle with the latter, it's because the former seems more parsimonious.
however, indeed, in order to discuss the subject, one needs a vocabulary in it. based on the definitions of theology i find on princeton wordnet and wikipedia, i think that the discussion of evolution might actually even fall under the philosophical umbrella of theology for the time being, because evolution does have an effect on theology. theology is after all a reasonable and rational discussion about God. if a scientific theory had philosophical implications about the christian God's roll in the process of biology, then it must bear testimony in fact, so that its implications may be clear in the whole debate. and yes, there is debate as to the manifest reality of most christians idea(s) of God. so much so that biology plays a roll in the theology department, since the auspices of theology are so vast. but when the umbrella begins to show so many holes in it as a result, of even simple reason, one would have to wonder when the study of theology will have been forever merged with the study of mythology. none the less intriguing though.
what was not always evident is if theology should play a part in the biology department. i would say only as a case study, and not as a discipline, lol, sorry. which brings us back to the question of whether theological knowledge is orginating from inside us or from outside us. considering how dark and mangled our psychological past as mammals must be, my vote is for 'inside' pending any new understanding about the difference between outside and in. none the less beautiful though.
that said, change the definition/assumptions of/about "god", and theology (or discussion thereof) changes radically too. and i certainly do not bemoan thinking caps!
but anyways, thanks for the links ross!
tetra