# James N. Gardner

*1946–2021*

**James Nelson Gardner** (May 5, 1946 – April 10, 2021) was an American lawyer, complexity theorist, and author whose cosmological speculations placed intelligence at the generative center of the universe itself. A Yale College and Yale Law School graduate, he served as a U.S. Supreme Court clerk and Oregon state senator before devoting much of his intellectual life to a far more expansive question: why does the universe appear so precisely calibrated to produce life and mind?

Gardner’s answer, developed across peer-reviewed articles in *Complexity* and the *Journal of the British Interplanetary Society* and popularized in his books *Biocosm* (2003) and *The Intelligent Universe* (2007), was the “Selfish Biocosm” hypothesis. He argued that life and intelligence are not Darwinian accidents but are hardwired into cosmic evolution—that the universe’s bio-friendliness is the inheritance of a long lineage of intelligences who, in reaching the apex of their development, reproduced the cosmos itself by spawning “baby universes” endowed with the same life-generating properties. In Gardner’s vision, the destiny of highly evolved intelligence is nothing less than the infusion of the entire universe with life and the ultimate act of cosmic creation.

For those who hold that intelligence is eternal and that divine creativity operates through natural processes, Gardner’s cosmology resonates with striking depth. The arc of his thought—intelligence as not merely a product of the cosmos but its architect and heir—maps naturally onto the Mormon transhumanist conviction that humanity’s progression toward Godhood is a real, physical, and cosmologically significant endeavor. Gardner did not speak in theological terms, but his insistence that the emergence of mind is the universe’s most consequential fact, and that sufficiently advanced intelligence becomes a creative force on a universal scale, opens conceptual ground that faith traditions oriented toward theosis and eternal progression have long inhabited from a different direction.

## Quotations

- Freeman Dyson has famously written that the idea of sufficiently…