jstockPeople are so cynical. What is in a name? A rose by any other name would smell as sweet, my friend. Actually it was just a typo. Osama has been around in the news much longer than Obama, so my fingers have typed his name more times and hence remember his name's spelling more readily.But my enthusiasm for Obama is quite genuine, regardless of the coincidental similarity of names. Barrack Obama seems like a real person, honest, principled.And I hope he wins the Democratic nomination.I also like Huckabee for many of the same reasons I have given for liking Obama. The differences in their respective ideologies doesn't bother me given how both men are honest and statesmanly.posted 01/29/2008 at 17:40:23
Okay, I voted for Bush twice and I'm glad I did. And I do not discount Osama because black people in South Carolina voted for him. Indeed, the way I look at the numbers, a whole bunch of whites seem to have voted for him too.Would you have had South Carolina's black voters stay home?Duh.Hooray for Osama. I hope it gives him tons of momentum for the race ahead. Right now, this citizen who voted for Bush hopes mightily that Obama wins the Democratic nomination. I'm still undecided regarding who I'd like to see win on the Republicans side. I could vote for Obama. And even if I vote against him, he might win anyway. And I'd much rather that he was the Democratic winner than dreary Hillary.So, you see, my friends, if a supporter of President Bush can get excited about Obama, maybe South Carolina's black voters merely reflect the demographics of their state. But their support for him does not mean that they voted "on race." Maybe they just like the guy. Like I, just like the guy.What's so hard to believe about that? posted 01/26/2008 at 20:45:33
The "Soul Hypothesis" (Part 2)
I have a metaphor worthy of a Muse. A spider weaves a web without being taught. It is just encoded with the knowledge. Today we'd say it was programmed for web building. What are human beings programed to do? What is the web we weave? To know that we cannot turn our gaze away from myth. Quite the contrary, to find out we have to look into myth with the greatest care and lively perception.BUT! Once looking into the myth, there's always the "danger" of being persuaded by it. If your kids read Milton in college, there's always a danger of their becoming Christians since Milton meant his poem to be persuasive, and the "myth" of Christianity ITSELF means to be persuasive. It is paraphrasing Socrates in the Phaedrus (?) "an intelligent word ... that can defend itself and knows when to speak and when to be silent." Things like myth are not ineffectual because they appeal to us at the deepest levels of our being. Anyone who thinks Homer's Gods and Goddesses are old hat, just hasn't read Homer laterly. Enter into that world and its effects come alive again.So, goodness gracious Wondering, what shall we do? Should we, as in Plato's Republic, ban the poets from the City? Because there will always be those who listen to their music and will be swept away by it ....posted 01/31/2008 at 19:26:57
Thought experiment: assume Jung is right. Examining the contents of religion is like looking at data encoded on a micro-chip (the chip being our DNA and the architecture of mind). Surely such information about us would reveal something about our external circumstances (evolution, fate, intelligent design, whatever name you give it). We do not just toss that information away because some of it is offensive. posted 01/31/2008 at 19:19:30
Wondering,I missed the party, but reading your most recent posts set me thinking ....Actually we agree about religion's needing a shaking and that one who genuinely believes one's faith is true need not fear doubts. Religion needs to be open to criticism if it's an active, living thing and certainly there are churches that stiffle inquiry. But I cannot go so far as to connect religious belief to all the kinds of things that go wrong sociologically, even when they are done in religion's "name," since one has to admit the possibility that not all claims are equally valid. One's profession of faith could be bogus.But even were I willing to champion reason to the extent that you do, I would still urge caution in eliminating religion -- for one would have to examine religion's contents first to know what was being lost. Carl Jung (and later Joseph Campbell) persuasively demonstrated that different stories arise within cultures that are completely cut off from each other. So the Mayans had myths/religious ideas that parallel elements of Christianity, or Egyptian religion or whatever. Jung argued -- somewhat more controversially -- that the similarities derive from an "archetype" that is somehow intrinsically part of the psyche.If Jung is correct one would expect atheism to take on some of the qualities of a religion -- eventually. The "stealth religion" blog alleged something like that though I don't recall a reference to Jung. Such a manifestation of resurgent myth would not necessarily be recognized as such by its adherents -- it might appear "rational" and seamlessly connected to other "rational" assertions -- myth in reason's garments.I think the more prudent move therefore is to take religious motivation as a fact about human beings (whatever else Muse might believe it is). If we examine religion's contents and make them part of our meditation, we learn more about the humans.posted 01/31/2008 at 19:18:41
Dap, Dap, Dap. posted 01/31/2008 at 18:59:51
stevesrantI thought at first you were kidding about the Shroud/Leonardo connection. But your serious? It's not a claim that art historians would find persuasive. Leonardo is a famous name being attached to a controversial object, but there's nothing to indicate that he had anything to do with it. posted 01/31/2008 at 18:48:29
Actually mine's 10, but the toys still abound. posted 01/31/2008 at 11:37:29
I've just popped by at the moment and must go without being able to say much. But I will say this we agree upon one thing: religious people need to "be shaken up." And I'm trying to shake up some atheists also. (A whole lot of shaking going on.)That would be an incredibly healthy thing in my view. But more on that later.Muse posted 01/31/2008 at 11:36:30
And did you find any? posted 01/31/2008 at 11:32:28
I'll take marshmellows. Just in case. posted 01/31/2008 at 11:30:37
You're a born moderate! posted 01/31/2008 at 11:28:32
Goodness, you talked of much besides me. How shall I ever catch up? And quantum mechanics! Ooh la la. I never even took high school physics.Of course, HS has started recommended books again. I think he has stock in Amazon. posted 01/31/2008 at 11:27:53
To all my atheist friends, you are SO serious! But don't ever change. Don't ever change! God loves you just the way you are!Hit it, Ella --http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4md2q-hEEo&feature=related posted 01/30/2008 at 19:00:17
I was addressing nypoet22, but goodness the machine has put me way down here!Molecules are nice too. But, yes, we are more than their sum. posted 01/30/2008 at 18:42:10
Wondering thinks people who believe these ideas are motivated by fear. That may sometimes be true, though I think in that case fear becomes a helpful tool. I see motivation coming from joy also. I know my own belief in God arises from joy not fear. posted 01/30/2008 at 18:40:55
Sadly we have digressed since Plato. He was one smart dude.We don't think so much anymore. We have iPods. posted 01/30/2008 at 18:38:12
You're left handed? That's gotta be significant. Right hemisphere dominant, ey? Guess that would make you right-wing? (I knew it!) posted 01/30/2008 at 18:33:35
Oh, by the by, Milton and Augustine are unavailable. They are vacationing in the Bahamas for a while. posted 01/30/2008 at 18:29:32
"Here" by the way, is Muse's backyard, not your postings where no one at all raised this interesting mathematics that I now add! posted 01/30/2008 at 18:27:54
Well in my chorus, I sang about Obama (realizing that Bush's music isn't popular anymore). But as someone here observed, we have about 300 million people in the US. The campaign has settled around four or five now (Hillary, Obama, Huck, Romney and McCain). "Can't we do any better?" was the poignant question just asked. Hmm. It is intriguing.Elsewhere I observed you correcting someone about evolution (whether random or no). Not being a scientist or mathematician I must demure, but let's assume randomness. Pure randomness, like billiard balls rolling round and bouncing where they will. I'm thinking we could pick four or five people (by lottery) and do almost as good -- maybe better -- than we do in the typical political campaign. Meaning no respect to the current quintet!I'm back! posted 01/30/2008 at 18:26:54
Hello Wondering! It's nice to feel needed! You have finally asked the question I've wondered quite often myself regarding many of your remarks: "Why does it mean so much to me?"Solve that one, and you will have really come far. Self-knowledge. Who could ask for anything more.Have you any idea why the debate about God is so important to you? posted 01/30/2008 at 18:21:39
stevesrantI've come late to the table, and haven't read half the fine things people have said (gosh, you have all written volumes!) but I would just like to applaud this wonderful idea "that big mind is an invention because I cannot show it to you or because there is no evidence for it, I agree. If you want to experience it you must stop the dialogue we all have with ourselves." I think that so many fine distinctions are being applied in arguments that sometimes hinge around practical consequences. If letting go of words sometimes provides one access to other sensibilities, then it does. I once saw a film of a famous ice skating team in rehearsal. They choreographed every movement carefully -- first without skates. Later the rehearsed bits. Eventually they put the whole thing together. At some point, comes a performance when all the repetitions and taking apart, having served their purposes, these two skaters let themselves "go" to simply and seamlessly perform the piece. The elegance and unity of that goes beyond the planning. Some element of surendipity comes along and lifts up the well-orchestrated task and makes it poetic. After that, who really cares what to call it? posted 01/30/2008 at 18:18:57
Wondering, my friend, father of a three year old, is it? Explain to me what is childish about being a child? Or an adult? In childhood we learn more rapidly than at any other period of life. We experience the world more imaginatively than we will ever do again. Mother Nature herself seems of the opinion that childhood is essential. Watch your little one and you'll note that there are times that a kid simply cannot not play. My daughter goes into "spells" of make-believe that she is loathe to interrupt for anything. Not only do children play, all the other mammals also play. A big cat learns the serious lessons of lion or tigerhood by first chasing its own or a litter mate's tail.Childhood is serious business!So, why must we go through it? What essential element of life does it provide for human endeavor ever afterwards? Hum? posted 01/30/2008 at 18:08:26
"aka kindness, forgiveness, happiness, love for family and our fellow man has been deemed primitive and weak" as I understand it (according to others, I've never read Nietzsche, this was precisely his criticism of Christianity -- that it focused upon the weak.I'm glad someone mentions music. Muses are very fond of music (for obvious reasons), and I've been listening to "Ma Philosophie" lately (in my eternal quest for fluency in French -- Hope springs eternal!)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7poE_nPXb2k posted 01/30/2008 at 17:08:23
I must respectfully disagree as firmly as I can. Au contraire, fulano, a whole branch of human experience is dedicated to the task of "becoming human," that branch of knowledge aptly called the Humanities. posted 01/30/2008 at 17:03:59
IS IT PROPER? Dear Dap, you should have asked the Muse. This has Muse written all over it. Miss Manners and I are "like that."Yes, of course, it is proper to perpetuate false information. What has got into you boys. So, when my daughter is old enough to hear a young man say,"I'll call you" what, pray, am I supposed to do? Have him arrested? I will gently advise her not to sit beside the phone. But the young man must be allowed to have his little fib. And all the other fibbers of other stripes also.Such is life. Meanwhile the rest of us (while observing the MOST scrupulous manners) must endeavor not to be particularly gullible.Any more questions, Dap? posted 01/30/2008 at 17:02:03
HeevenSteven, If you're going to talk mechanics, I'm going to have to return to my second chorus of "I loved George Bush sooo much, ooh, ooh, ooh, and I'm an Obama supporter now, baby, yes I am, ooh ooh...."You know the Muse has enough trouble balancing a check book. Really. Just stop it. You're giving me a headache.Nevertheless, as you yourself so wisely and elegantly noted: quite apart from the "how" of the mind in whatever bio-chemical-mechanical way it works, certainly the mind's CONTENTS which are not bio-chem-mec anything also matter.Math is math (hormones, neurons and sparkplugs aside).And math is damned hard too! posted 01/30/2008 at 16:55:17
Would a Christian fundamentalist with a rubber duckie help? (My daughter's toys ... they're scattered everywhere beside the keyboard.)Hey, Dap.posted 01/30/2008 at 16:49:05
State of the Climate
I either goofed (nah, cannot be) or else there is a sort of reference to Vulcan (God of the Forge?) -- I don't know -- I could google it. But then so can you.Scientists were once so awfully fond of Greek and Roman mythology -- not so much anymore.I suspect Mr. Spock of the Starship Enterprise is a latter day version of that.Cheers posted 01/29/2008 at 17:34:33
Hello HeevenSteven,Gracious you've already got me reading so many things! Meanwhile Realpolitic (below) has discovered that I'm spelling-challenged, too, as well as illiterate.But you know I'm very much in favor of "green" products, of being thrifty and all that. And I really believe the Global Warning Whiners (addressing Realpolitic now) would get more of what they claim they want if they sought consensus rather than a war of words.Hope you and the other atheists are all well. Have kept you all in my thoughts (and prayers too -- but mums the word on that!)Muse posted 01/29/2008 at 17:27:49
I knew global warming was nonsense when my daughter's third grade teacher, in reaction to an unseasonably warm day, remarked "Drat that Global warming."Mr. Gore knows (as perhaps Senator Hart also knows) that climate change may or may not be real. It's a question for scientists whether the microscopically small data we have about the earth's climate (over its estimated 4.5 billions years) represents a pattern. A pattern, period, quite apart from human activities.US Brit and others will call you "right wing" if you so much as sniff at the term "global warming," but the truth is that Climate science is a brand, spanking new baby of a scientific discipline.Various natural events, like vulcanism, mess with the atmosphere a whole lot more than does anything coming from the San Diego Freeway. And the earth has survived. (Of course there was that unfortunate thing with the dinosaurs, the details of which are still emerging.)Hey look, you don't have to be "left wing" (whatever that means) or "right wing" (ditto) to believe in conserving nature. Everybody likes to breath clean air.You guys can begin cleaning up your personal act anytime you like. Please do. And definitely make your carbon footprint as small as you please. I'm not exactly living high on the hog over here. Only difference between you guys and me is I'm not whining so much about it.Cheers. posted 01/27/2008 at 19:03:17
I keep wondering, apropos the "deniers," what has happened to science after being hijacked by politicians and members of the hipster class.Scientists (once upon a time) were SUPPOSED to be deniers par excellence. They had a name for it. They called it Skepticism. posted 01/27/2008 at 18:52:29
I have figured out what your problem is and am happy to report that you're not alone. The problem is that when you try debating with "the right" you're basically talking to yourself. I know this because, strictly speaking, "the right" doesn't exist. (It's an abstraction.) So what you should do is try talking to actual human beings.I'm pretty sure you'll get better results, especially if you can manage to be polite (hint: you might wish to eliminate or at least greatly curtail your discussion of genitals).So try talking to someone persuasively, someone who is real, breathing, who can reply in kind, and let's see what happens! Good luck, dear. posted 01/27/2008 at 18:48:28
If Men Could Get Pregnant, Abortion Would be a Sacrament
It is tragically sad that some women define the essence of being a woman by their "right" to kill their own unborn child.Please do not include me in your definition.My life has meaning that does not depend upon killing someone else.The girls you say "disappeared" for their abortions might have had their lives transformed in ways they could not imagine by the presence of their children in their lives. THAT describes my experience. My daughter is the best thing that has ever happened to me.Having a child is a great honor conferred by God (or nature is you prefer), it is nothing less that responsibility for a human being.That a great many women can no longer understand that shows how much abortion has killed not just the children but the human heart. posted 01/22/2008 at 19:30:00
Stoned and Drunk and Messing with Tigers
I hope the comment was helpful, but if I add a coda it would be this: that the concept of "cool" is not something the kids invented. They get it from the culture. As a parent, I would not reinforce it.As to "peer pressure," it's not just about kids. Adults live with peer pressure all the time. We learn by imitation, and "peer pressure" reflects an individual's dependance upon others. But it's obviously also essential for a person to be able to stand up for oneself, which involves sometimes needing to resist the pressure applied by others. Adolescents need help finding an internal anchor for their ideas, their morality, their decisions. So teaching them "uncoolness" (feel free to call it something else) is merely teaching them to honor their own integrity as individuals: in short you are teaching courage.posted 01/22/2008 at 18:29:10
Re: When does the bravado become uncool? Why does anything have to be cool? Somehow the idea of hipness has become the essential thing. I don't know exactly when this happened. Anybody know? I haven't always been paying attention. But now one hears this word, presumed to mean something to adolescents, used by grey haired types who ought to have formed more discriminating means of commentary.While I do not remember what my parents or other adults babbled to me in my infancy, I notice that parents (and teachers) seem universally to use (in this country anyway) the epithet "cool" as their unique form of praise, and the pattern begins before the kid can talk. One might reasonably wonder why little "Johnny" needs to be indoctrinated into the identification of the "cool" from his (or her) earliest moments of awareness. Why??For some adults, a rich English vocabulary of evocative words is reduced to nearly this one syllable by which one "emotes" (?) one's only permissible comment, one which must be applied to nearly any situation: "cool."It annoys me to no end, and I say this as a lifelong fan of Miles Davis. Well, there has to be a reason why we use this term as routinely as Osama bin Laden says "Allāhu Akbar." Evidently it is our religion. Well, somebody's, not mine. Do not indoctrinate your children into the idea that they must be "cool." Rather encourage them to be as "uncool" as they please. Urge them to cultivate "uncoolness" by being all the myriad things that people used to be prior to the invention of "cool."Better still, when they are on the threshold of adulthood, encourage them to take the next step. Encourage them to grow up. posted 01/20/2008 at 14:07:53
There was an old lion in the Afghanistan zoo that was killed as somebody's mis-guided "political" act. I am not sure why the recent US tiger mauling death of the teenager has captured so much attention except for its being unusual. Teenagers die in significant numbers behind the wheel annually ever since the advent of the automobile, a fact that bio-fuels or other "green" policies will not mitigate. Before the automobile, testosterone took its toll in other ways.I am not willing to indite the whole society, though I think Modern America's love affair with adolescence sends unfortunate signals to the more gullible among young males.It is possible for teenage males to begin assuming something like real manhood, though most people define manhood in sexual terms (sadly). Redefine manhood as responsibility and, who knows, we might even find that "abstinence only" works rather more than now. Such a change would benefit young women as much as young men, taking the sexual pressure off young women of defining their self-esteem in sexual terms.We don't appeal strongly enough to the idealism of the young. Their idealism is by nature strong, but the fashionable factoids and truisms undermine it at every turn. And then, eventually, it's rather too late. posted 01/19/2008 at 12:57:14
The Virtues of Silence
I have been using Bach elsewhere on Huff Po as evidence for God's existence. I'm not sure whether I've convinced any of the atheists yet, but then possibly they haven't spent time listening to Bach despite the fuss I make about him.Then, too, I'm not sure how old the atheists here are. While Bach can be appreciated at any age, the older you are, I think the more you recognize the flow of life in his music. Anyway, how I wish we could drag the other Huffers over here. While they are getting so hot under the collar over politics, they remain unaware (?) that the most essential things in life happen as a serious and thought-filled vibration in the air! However, as an old saying has it: you can lead a one to Angela Hewitt, but you cannot make them listen. posted 01/20/2008 at 15:06:24
When Men Become Primates
Caveats noted. HOWEVER, I really do have an excellent rapport with cats. Muse posted 01/22/2008 at 18:07:04
klmebaneWith due respect I was using the term "Marines" to stand for all American soldiers, the use of the term refers to their role as expeditionary forces.I hear the emotion in your remarks and respect them, but you are applying very literal terms to what I said, as for instance regarding "Islamic terrorism, a term which is not meant to slander Muslims but merely to identify which religion-region-ethnicity-etc that the war is being fought against.I agree that expecting soldiers to be peacekeepers confuses their mission and puts an additional psychological burden on soldiers.I would argue that the US was not forcing democracy on the Iraqis, but opening a chance for them to assume it for themselves. Certainly, however, for women living in fundamentalist Muslim cultures, "by force" is the only way democracy could be available to them since they are virtual prisoners within their own systems.Your views and mine are obviously not easily reconcilable and so it is. But if you read through the entire exchange between Sprinkle and I, you see how much we "argued" points of view, but along the way we trade (I think) some interesting ideas. It was for me one of the most enjoyable exchanges I've experienced on Huff Po, and I learned quite a bit and feel myself rather indebted to Sprinkle's elucidating ideas.You do not have to agree with people to learn from them.Best wishes,Muse posted 01/22/2008 at 18:03:25
But, Dap, people disagree about all sorts of things. Expecting complete unanimity of opinion strikes me, at the very least, as kind of boring. In any case, my beliefs are what they are and I cannot change them just to suit the atheists. I'm not sure if the fellow above was serious or making a joke, but to fear discussion is to hold to a weak faith, whether it's faith in God or belief in a scientific viewpoint or anything else. If it cannot stand up to scrutiny, what is one to conclude? posted 01/22/2008 at 17:47:25
klmebane, DapMuse was making a joke. You are supposed to laugh! You're not cooperating! Klmebane is unaware that I'm already on record as saying that the atheists at Huff Po are the best ever. I find them very fair and kind. (And open minded most of the time.)Cheers. posted 01/21/2008 at 20:30:35
DapYou're so hard on poor Muse, who is thoroughly opposed to witch-burning (I'm also already ON RECORD as being against the virgins into volcanos thing, ask HS.) Meanwhile I'm developing a good rapport with cats. (Still working the lions.)Agape! posted 01/21/2008 at 20:28:26
klmebaneI don't believe that God wants anyone to surrender their intelligence. Why should we have been rendered intelligent just to toss reason away. But not everybody's a genius. It's the nature and the beauty of faith that it can touch anyone, brilliant or ordinary or mentally challenged.Still, the "greats" of the worlds' religions were people of considerable intellect. Augustine, Jerome, Aquinas, et al, in for instance Christianity. (I'm not knowledgeable about the other religions to address their "greats.")The Bible itself is not exactly an easy read. And if you want a very challenging book by a great intellect read Milton's Paradise Lost. But be ready to work. It's long, complex and filled with allusions to 17th c intellectual hot topics that are not so self-evident to 21st c readers.Anyways, I'm sure you have your reasons for your not being religious. I think religious people have to respect that -- the integrity of others.Best, Muse posted 01/21/2008 at 20:24:00
klmebaneI agree we should not sell the animals short. But let's not sell the humans short either.Best,Muse posted 01/21/2008 at 20:17:45
DerikHow kind of you to reply so thoughtfully. My point was the multiplicity of religions does not demonstration that God does not exist. Actually it might seem to argue the exact opposite: that humans in every era, all over the planet, have had intimations of God points to something, or else our senses fail us. What they disagree about are particulars, which indeed is very significant -- though many religions that might seem radically different seen from the perspective of their "details" share all kinds of underlying similarities. Carl Jung, Joseph Campbell and others have done some remarkably insightful research in this area.People toss around words like "magic" without thinking much about what they mean. I don't think religious ideas benefit from literal interpretations. Literary strategies (such as one uses to understand poetry) get you farther in interpreting religious texts and ideas.However, I can appreciate that science works on an opposite principle -- that of using words narrowly, when possible, to refine meaning into very precise channels.As to faith itself: I would liken it to creativity in science. The idea that leads to the splendid mathematics often comes from invisible sources. Ramanujan thought his ideas came from a Hindu deity. I'm not suggesting he was correct, but very significantly he did not know how he was getting the mathematics he was using. His not-knowing does not, however, hinder the mathematics from being correct. Scientists can have "hunches" that lead to further scientific insight. Similarly people thinking in spiritual terms can also have hunches about the nature of spiritual things.I just think you'd do well to be more open to the intellectual content of serious religious ideas, as well as to the ameliorative affects of ordinary everyday religion among ordinary folks.Best, Muse posted 01/21/2008 at 20:16:14
I prefer the cha cha, myself. posted 01/21/2008 at 19:59:39
PaxChristiActually I've always had a pretty good rapport with cats.I cannot tell if your comments are intended to be humorous or what.Assuming you're genuine, I would argue that people have to be able to have conversations in good faith if they are ever to learn anything. Christians are included in the learning curve right along with everyone else.And if you don't talk to the atheistis how can you share your faith? "...[B]e ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you...."It seems reasonable to me to have faith in God's ability to protect you while you're having a conversation about your faith. That's what having faith is about -- that you don't have to be afraid.Best,Muse posted 01/21/2008 at 19:59:08
What am I even saying, "almost willing," heck I'm totally willing to credit you with Western Civ. Period.From across the pond, Muse posted 01/19/2008 at 18:10:56
Well, knowing that your a Brit I certainly don't want to stir up old arguments, though most of us have gotten past "the British are coming!" When we hear that now, we think it good news indeed. The whole question of old real estate claims is a tough one certainly. Interesting that you include my items as ones among the recent events. Given that modern Israel was formed in 1948, the events of the seventies are ones I'd called "old." But I'll not quibble about terms.Airplanes seem to figure significantly in the Arab imagination as durable symbols and while security measures related to air travel stiffen, terrorists still seems to prefer attacking aviation whenever possible.Your other point was about Communism. That would be an issue about which we agree.Unfortunately, whenever neighbors develop enough culture to have different styles of clothing and different eating habits, they seem to start plotting each others' doom. It's really not good.Could we (now I mean even particularly Americans) have NOT interfered with the Middle East? As soon as we stepped foot on Arab soil we were in some measure interfering.But now that I know you're British, I find it more difficult to argue. Anybody -- however remotely -- associated with Jane Austen and John Cleese is a friend of mine. I'm almost willing to give you Brits credit for "Civilization As We Know It." Best, Muse posted 01/19/2008 at 17:58:49
Woah! Don't mess is HS! posted 01/19/2008 at 17:32:24
You make some delightfully insightful observations! posted 01/19/2008 at 17:14:43
We've have strayed far from the topic, haven't we? We began by arguing whether terrorism could compare with war in terms of destruction.I think the real point is that terrorism leads to war. Each one of many incrementally worsening attacks against the West made the Iraq war more likely. Saddam was not involved in 9/11, but had there been no 9/11, there would have been no Iraq war --at least not on Bush's watch. Indeed, had there been no 9/11, it's questionable whether Bush would have been reelected. (But let's not yank the chain of conspiracy theorists.)Well, I suppose it's your serve. But let's not get carried away. Best wishes, Muse posted 01/19/2008 at 16:49:57
SprinkleI might have implied you were being fashionable in blaming the US. It is fashionable. Of course, this being the internet you could be from any place and my assumption that you're an American was wrong. But does it follow that you haven't benefited from the American Revolution? The US is the oldest modern democracy, and so its health or success does impact the rest of the world. As to terrorism, evidently we're not going to agree on definitions. Yes, terrorism is on the rise. It does however have a much longer history than you allow. I'm thinking about things like the Lockerbie explosion of 1988 killing 270 people, the 1972 killing of 11 Israeli Olympic athletes, the October 1985 hijacking of the Achille Lauro cruise ship when terrorists kill a disabled wheelchair bound American tourist, 69-year-old Leon Klinghoffer, as well as less well publicized events within the Arab world against moderate Arab targets.Ends do not justify means and these attacks were completely unjust. posted 01/19/2008 at 16:41:43
"If it were not for the very real resentment," you do not think Bin Laden would be so influential. The rise of Bin Laden has its own casuality that may have little to do with any of the rest. Had he not been heir to a tremendous fortune, he would not have had the influence he does/did. Had Sayyid Qutb stayed in Egypt, married, been less uptight history might have played out rather differently. Had the Soviets not invaded Afghanistan, and etc. The US (under the Clinton administration) was passionately in pursuit of a peace between Israel and Palestine even while Bin Laden and Co. were plotting their attack on the World Trade Center. They had already destroyed two African embassies and bombed the USS Cole. So obviously peace between Israel and Palestine was not high on their list, though Bin Laden has always used the Palestinian cause to stir his pot.The idea of nationhood does not have validity for him. The earth belongs to Allah, the whole region of the Mediterranean all the way to Spain rightfully belongs to Islam. Even over here we are supposed to learn the Koran, and I don't know about you, but I am supposed to don a veil, a burka, or whatever.However, if Bin Laden's father had not become very rich working for the Saudi royal family things might have been quite, quite different. He has spurned his wealth. But it had to be there first before it could be spurned, didn't it? posted 01/19/2008 at 16:28:01
Sprinkle,I figured I'd get another volley in our tennis match. Your first paragraph:Well, you raise in interesting point, though the "Middle East" is obviously not a problem you and I will solve with our debate.Notably, the European Jews would perhaps not have needed an Israeli state had they not been treated so shabbily in their European countries. So some unjustifiable means and ends can have far reaching consequences -- a point that you were trying to make earlier. However, Israel is historically a Jewish homeland of very ancient pedigree. In any case, it is a democracy and has opened itself to Jews from all over the world. But Isreal would, I think, have possibly welcomed Arabs also if it were not under threat. You cannot realistically expect Israeli Jews to include Muslims into their culture if it means their own destruction. posted 01/19/2008 at 16:16:19
Religions are not spiritual at all. In the plural, how is "it" anything but an abstraction? And as to what individual believers find of worth in their myriad different dogmas and rituals, how are you in any position to know? Don't you think it's a bit of a stretch to judge the spiritual condition of billions of other people that you don't even know. Got to tell you, AlphaDoc, you're sounding a little haughty.The feeling of superiority is very much evident in your own remarks. posted 01/19/2008 at 15:48:55
I'd be curious what aspects of Dawkins's biological statements you think demonstrate anything substantive about religion (or perhaps even about biology). I once began reading "The God Delusion." However I'll admit I didn't get very far into it. His arguments lacked any substance that I could find. He doesn't so much make a weak argument as make no argument at all.I lack information to judge whether his biology is scientific (there's not a lot of biology in his book). His commentary on religion, though, is definitely not scientific. It is rhetorical. And it's rather weak and paltry rhetoric at that.But if you can provide actual quotes that show otherwise, I'd be interested to see them. posted 01/19/2008 at 15:45:40
HeevenStevenSomewhere around here I referred to atheism as one of the religions. And I got caught by Dap.And now he's threatening to feed me to the lions. Yikes.Muse (here kitty, kitty) posted 01/19/2008 at 15:36:17
Nommo and Merlin7I said I don't believe without evidence, however I am not claiming that my evidence would be persuasive for you. Actually my strongest evidence for God is also personal and not something I'm going to publish even under a pseudonym.But I think the question here -- it is the issue you raised Merlin7 -- is how my belief harms you.Living in a free society, I'm permitted my belief in God and you're permitted your opinion that religion is superstition. That's the whole point of a free society being free: that individuals find their own path to truth. posted 01/19/2008 at 15:33:37
Our inference in the Middle East does, I grant, factor into their anger. However our interference is not all negative. Putting McDonalds into Saudi Arabia is something we could have done without. But our support for Isreal, as a democratic country, serves our own national interest. And by far the great threat the West poses to the Middle East is feminism, an ideology which completely undermines the foundation of their present culture.Bin Laden's political, religious philosophy grows out of the writings of Sayyid Qutb who formed his own anti-Western animosity by witnessing church suppers in Colorado in the late 40s.The Middle East does have its own history and not everything that happens there (or elsewhere) is a reaction to US policy. Though al Quida is, oddly, a reaction of sorts to mid-western mores of the innocent Truman era, strange as it may seem. If a "Leave it to Beaver" world was beyond the pale, one can only imagine the reaction to the contemporary chronicles of Brittany and Madonna.In any case, it's helpful to recall that Bin Laden's idea of the well run state was Afghanistan under the rule of the Taliban. Kind of puts it into perspective. posted 01/19/2008 at 12:15:22
Sprinkle,When a truck bomb that explodes outside a Shite Mosque, a bomb that has been put there by Sunnis, that is not Uncle Sam's fault. Nor is it a credit to Saddam that by killing Shites himself, he kept the rest of Sunni anger at bay. Unfortunately, it's fashionable to blame every bad thing that happens around the planet on the US, but the conflicts between various Muslim groups have long histories going back to before there even was a US. We are seeing the coincidence of very old animosities with 21st century technology.Jihad against the West is fairly novel. Terrorism against Islamic targets is not new. Most terrorism prior to the first al Quida was directed at moderate Arab nations. It wasn't as newsy an item at the time, and terrorism has become progressively more sophisticated and deadly.I won't argue that the US military isn't a very formidable force. But the US military has goals, ones which don't include attacking civilians. posted 01/19/2008 at 12:15:03
DerikApropos: "Let us for sake of arguement, say that god exists. Then, I am now faced with figuring out which one. i.e. Jewish, Christian, Moslem, Hindu, Buddhist (yup, they have a not-god as opposed to no-god), and whatnot'I'm glad you raise this excellent question, however I am wondering how you think the question is answered in regard to science, a discipline where exactly the same problem of multiple theories arises. In physics "super-string" theory there are a whole bag full of theories, different ones dependent upon different numbers of dimensions and different ways of solving equations. [String theory has as yet no coroborating experimental data to support any of its competing theories.]So should the scientists just say, "this is too hard," pack up their cookies and go home?What's the difference? posted 01/19/2008 at 11:06:57
Theses headlines come from today's Washington Post on line:Bush urges fast tax aid to boost economy.Egypt to rule on phone-message divorce.Chess genius Fischer dies.DHS to unveil new disaster response plan.Did it. And I don't see that "belief in the supernatural with no evidence whatsoever to justify such belief" plays any role in the headlines.Merlin7, dear. You haven't provided any evidence yourself. I for one do not believe in the supernatural "with no evidence." I have evidence. So I'm not going to "move beyond religion." I have religion and reason. As I see it, though, you haven't quite got reason yet. If you had, there wouldn't be a blank "tah dah!" between your first paragraph and your last.You still need to do your homework. Lots of homework.posted 01/19/2008 at 11:01:07
You can judge Mother Theresa in her own words if you think judgment is necessary.http://florida.x-to-y.info/video_cbLS-vivKf0.htmlThen compare her with her critic.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PY8fjFKAC5kWhich one do you think exhibits more peace of mind and more integrity? posted 01/19/2008 at 10:43:52
dissolvethecorporationRegarding "inevitability" -- your assertion needs a little evidence to back it up. Inevitably, human beings get into conflict. Human beings are granted the ones who practice religions. But they also play Monopoly. Perhaps we should get rid of board games. It might be that they provoke delusions of grandeur.Bach wrote mountains of some of the world's best music as an outpouring of religious faith. Michelangelo painted the Sistine ceiling. Faith has inspired literature, science (cranky Newton was nonetheless very religious), medicine, and innumerable other great good achievements. Show me the atheist who is writing some great string quartets and get back to me. posted 01/19/2008 at 08:51:29
Third grade teachers use threats of fear and would use Hell also if they had it available as a resource (something that perhaps the NEA should look into). But every major religion has a vision of an ideal that attracts believers. Your idea of a typical church is about 100 years out of date. A lot of people wander into church merely to socialize. It's an impure motive perhaps, but not such a bad one. Curiosity is a motive. Need and loneliness are motives. I think there are as many motives as there are individual people. As for fairy tales, even fairy tales have a deeper meaning for whoever chooses to look more closely into them. What's wrong with creating meaning through stories? posted 01/18/2008 at 21:20:33
Better warn the lions that I'm a vegetarian. They'd get more protein by eating the atheists. Sly Dapper Dap. posted 01/18/2008 at 21:14:16
SprinkleThe uniforms signal to someone that a military operation is in progress. I suppose one could say that it provides a warning and a chance to stay alive to those of good will. But a suicide bomber purposely tries to look like everybody else in order to kill innocent parties.I do not accept that Iraqi deaths are "ultimately" tied to the invasion. Iraq had plenty of death going on before the Marines showed up. Indeed, the Marines are working to restore order.The American Revolutionary War of which I presume you are now a beneficiary lasted 6 years. Too bad you won't allow Iraqis their own shot at freedom.Islamic terrorism has been plenty bloody for a very long time and grows increasingly violent. Maybe you need to do some remedial research. Evidently you weren't paying attention prior to Iraq. Oh, by the way, I wouldn't assume that the Islamic terrorists are "done." posted 01/18/2008 at 21:12:55
Your doing the same thing Hitchens does, applying your ideology to Mother Theresa. Maybe it wasn't poverty she was trying to eradicate. After the Indians are well-off, I suppose they can find meaning in watching television and going shopping. She saw in their poverty something that Hitchens cannot see: an opportunity to offer love, a kind of love that has nothing to do with self. What Mother Theresa chose to perpetuate was a spiritual vision of life that goes beyond the pocket book and the transient moment. posted 01/18/2008 at 21:05:48
I think your indignation is misdirected. One can admire animals and still recognize the fundamental dis-similarity between human beings and other primates, unless of course your primates have developed the string quartet. At best your comments pay tribute to the beauty of nature. At worst they ignore science, history, art, mathematics and all the ways that humans are very un-animal-like and somewhat "God" like. posted 01/18/2008 at 21:02:19
I think he's trying to show that human failings are not the fault of any one group, that everybody shares some blame. And every faith (I'll include atheism as one of the faiths, hoping my atheist friends will forgive the analogy) -- every faith has its core truths too.It's a glass half empty, half full, kind of thing. The point is that religions need to continually renew themselves, make sure they are doing all that they can do to make the glass's contents something that is healthy to drink. posted 01/17/2008 at 20:20:11
You are conveniently conflating numbers here. Many of Iraqi deaths in the fighting are the result of terrorism. Huge numbers of Iraqi deaths are the result inter-Arab terrorism. Also, there is enormous difference between a soldier wearing a uniform and a combattant who looks just like everybody else and who strikes without warning. And the danger is chiefly felt by a civilian population.You seriously need to rethink this. Your bias makes your mathematics meaningless. posted 01/17/2008 at 20:14:14
That's unfair. These are just labels. To put an equal sign between Bush, who you don't like, and every Christian is ridiculous. I voted for Bush and respect the role his faith has played in his decision making. But we are not clones. (See Alec Baldwin today for the whole clone thing. And Bon Apetite!)PS, eat local, support sustainable agriculture and small, diverse farming, check out the farmer's markets and learn how you can make a difference in your own community. Plant a garden! Befriend wild animals. Sometimes to make "progress" means rediscovering the beauty of the past. posted 01/17/2008 at 19:31:15
Amen posted 01/17/2008 at 19:23:15
Pride goeth before a fall. The other primates aren't destroying the planetary habitat. What's so superior about our present situation, post-Descartes? I'd say, "It's a fine mess we've gotten ourselves into." Though I'm not sure the other primates will be laughing after we've driven them into extinction. posted 01/17/2008 at 19:20:14
ForwardtoYesterdaySeeing humans as "just animals" completely ignores, by what one takes to be almost a willful blindness, what animals are and what human beings are while we're discussing being and essence....Human beings are the only creatures that are paving planet earth, going to war,killing their offspring before birth, polluting the air, constantly dissing each other and gradually eliminating biodiversity. In fairness they are also the only ones doing the cha cha, studying black holes, curing diseases,and planting gardens.I cannot even imagine by what means you wisk all this aside in favor of the song of evolution. Are we randomly fated to write poetry or wreck havoc with the planet?Unlike the animals, human beings are purposeful, purpose-creating creatures. We don't "have" to do anything that we do. We choose. And what we have chosen, we can unchoose.Ever seen a detour sign? That's one of man's remarkable creations: the sign that tells you to turn around when the path ahead is not working.posted 01/17/2008 at 19:15:43
These are your definitions of religion. What makes you suppose they have any relevance for religious people. I don't observe my fellow Christians being motivated by fear of punishment, unless by that you mean their own wounded sense of integrity when they act wrongly. And what makes that so different from the motivations of non-religious people, who also have ethical motives and a sense of conscience?posted 01/17/2008 at 19:01:24
I wouldn't assume so readily that the "flaws" that Hitchens used to slander Mother Theresa were ever true at all. Certainly Hitchens is incapable of, for instance, understanding that money has a completely different meaning for someone like Mother Theresa. Take her accepting money from disreputable sources -- perhaps Mother Theresa was not concerned about Hitchenian categories of worthiness. Seeing the God can sanctify life changes the worth and meaning of everything. She not only saw the worth of India's most desperate poor, she saw the worth of corrupt rulers and believed that God could redeem them both. posted 01/17/2008 at 18:57:48
New Menu in Capitol Cafeterias Ruffles Conservative Feathers
sheila,That you believe what you believe is not remarkable. However, you're not likely to find evidence to the contrary as long as you cling to your dogma. Which was my point.The majority of this country's 300 million people want clean air, kindness, land stewardship, quality of life. Even the filthy rich wish to continue breathing. How many greedy rich people can there be? And when their toilets stop up, they will need a plumber. But the plumber cannot unstop the toilet if he cannot eat, live, breath and thrive. (Plumbing is also, notably, one of those jobs that will never be outsourced overseas.) The moral damning of abstract "others" is just bigotry mixed with fantasy. After you've insulted people who disagree with you, you can't seriously believe them likely to consider, let alone, adopt your ideas. Hence, one can only conclude that persuasion is NOT your principle objective. Feeling passionate, morally superior and justified can be a motive too. Unfortunately, feelings are not solutions.Cheers, Muse posted 01/22/2008 at 19:05:44
I wish people on both sides would stop trying to politicize things like food, clean air, morality, kindness.There are, believe it or not, some things that most people agree on, if you seek agreement. [Well, except for people who LIVE to disagree.]If the diners at the cafeteria like the food, they'll buy it and that's great. If the cafeteria encourages recycling and wise energy policy, so much the better. If the conservative talking heads are trying to politicize this, shame on them. To the extent that you are doing the same thing, shame on you.It's time to seek the moderate center in American politics. It's past time. All this arguing is bad for the national digestion. posted 01/19/2008 at 12:28:17
Oh, No! Are Biofuels Just Garbage?
RTIIII am not aware that anybody "runs" Christianity, except God -- and he's not the one with the asphalt. Sorry the Christian brand is a turn off for you, but you aren't giving other religions much credit if you are suggesting that they don't also have ideas of proper stewardship, since I'm quite sure they do.Meanwhile, ecology is a problem in countries that have barely heard of Christianity. It's pretty much of an equal opportunity problem and it requires an equal sharing of responsibility. posted 01/22/2008 at 19:11:02
RTIIII am not aware that anybody "runs" Christianity, except God -- and he's not the one with the asphalt. Sorry the Christian brand is a turn off for you, but you aren't giving other religions much credit if you are suggesting that they don't also have ideas of proper stewardship, since I'm quite sure they do.Meanwhile, ecology is a problem in countries that have barely heard of Christianity. It's pretty much of an equal opportunity problem and it requires an equal sharing of responsibility. posted 01/18/2008 at 20:39:12
The fuel question misses a much larger problem. Energy policy in this country is the epitome of not seeing the forest for the trees (well, except for the fact that we're cutting all the trees down ....)Friends, no matter what you use for fuel, I don't care if the most pristine oxygen/nitrogen mixture perfect for breathing is the bi-product of the combustion, it still doesn't solve the problem of roads. We are paving every square foot of the planet because of our notion that every man, woman and child (think kid's ATVs) has to have wheels. Where do the animals live (or are animals permitted to live?) when we eliminate all their habitats? People are worried about polar bears ... where I live "ordinary" North American mammals like deer, possom, foxes, racoons, beavers are finding fewer and fewer places to live. Soon "bio-diversity" in the mid-Atlantic will consist of cats, dogs and squirrels.This could be the bi-partisan issue that it once was if Democrats and Republicans could ever stop loathing each other long enough to ask some really deep "quality of life" questions, such as: how much shopping can human beings really do?Some people need to stay home, walk, enjoy nature. But walking can be as hazardous to humans as it is to animals.We hear a lot on Huff Po about casualities in Iraq, but all the death in Iraq hardly compares to the mortality figures from highway deaths in any typical year. Why aren't people stirred up about that? posted 01/17/2008 at 18:19:36
The FDA's Dangerous Cloned Beef Decision
This sounds good, but you're over-looking something very basic: real food doesn't come with labels. We're so used to food coming in a package that we've forgotten this.Fruits and vegetables don't grow with labels. And cows, chickens and pigs aren't born with labels. But the farther we are from where food is produced, the more we need the label. Get closer to the farm and you reduce your reliance on the labels. Yes, of course, we need them! But do you see my point?Gardening is still a satisfying thing. Even if it's just one potted something in a kitchen window. I guess I'm talking about a relationship to things. Our food economy can change. It won't happen over night. But the more we rethink the whole question of what food is, how it connects us in society, what it means to share a meal around a table, to pick up some soil and realize that we depend upon the health of this dirt for our health -- well all that kind of thing moves us in a better direction. posted 01/19/2008 at 14:18:53
I'm a vegetarian, but you could not pick me out of a carnivore lineup. Don't know who your ghosts are, but I'm eating a very delicious and varied diet. And I'm very sturdy.It's not just for rabbits anymore! posted 01/19/2008 at 14:08:03
Great! But it still affects you whether you eat it or not. The mass production of beef takes land away from other kinds of farming. Chicken excrement (sorry to have to bring this up) from chicken farms has been polluting the Chesapeake Bay (my region) and hurting the natural species of animals who call the Bay their home throughout the Bay watershed.The effects of these things branch out. But wisdom is wisdom. Whenever we do things smart, the smart effects fan out too.So, everybody needs to look at this regardless how they eat and realize that the way we feed ourselves affects other aspects of our lives -- and affects the animals too! posted 01/19/2008 at 14:03:54
What makes you think we are not worried about genetically alterred veggies. We are worried. And we should be worried. posted 01/19/2008 at 13:57:42
dsgeorge, You put the word "engineered" into quotes. And wisely, you did. Shaping breeds of corn by polination is not the same thing as alterring its basic genetic structure. In contrast, the genetic modification of species is an entirely new endeavor whose long-term consequences are completely unknown. Many are the old fashioned man-made intrusions into Nature that have gone awry. What makes you think that the most radical interference in natural processes won't be expontially worse? However by the time we know why we should not be tampering with life, we will be already suffering the unfortunate consequences.posted 01/19/2008 at 13:56:31
And if I did resume eating meat, it would be nice to know that the animals were healthy without being fed hormones, were living in a clean natural environment, and that they got a chance to just be themselves before they were slaughtered. A chicken needs to be a chicken if human beings are going to really be human beings. posted 01/19/2008 at 13:44:02
Michie62 I hope people are heeding your advice. When they do buy foods closer to the farm, they benefit themselves and the farmer both in numerous ways: in more nutritious, better tasting food, in economic benefit to their region, in better land use policies, and in the satifaction of living a more ethical life. Organic meat from small farms costs more than its factory-produced alternative, but you get what you pay for. What's more, the fact is that people eat too much meat: they eat more protein than their bodies are designed to metabolize. Having to pay more for meat can translate into healthier eating habits: into eating less meat and eating meat in a more "natural" diet of moderation and balance.Obesity is going to be one of the number one killers of the present generation if folks don't start changing their habits fast. The price tag for obesity-related deaths in adults and children is going to affect health care costs for everybody, fat or slim. And the hidden costs of having a huge segment of our population hopelessly "out of shape" is going to catch up with us in more ways than we can imagine. This is one issue where making progress involves taking a U-turn, relearning our natural relationship to the land. How we eat reveals a lot about our relatedness to the rest of the planet. Fixing our eating habits can be a first step toward fixing our estrangement from Nature. We don't have to live life in a "shop until you drop" kind of way. It's possible to find meaning in small things. And it can begin right at the dinner table! We need a more Spartan life -- one of eating lean and eating smart. I'll confess that I'm a vegetarian, but the meat eating habits of others impacts me, too, since the monoculture approach to modern food has a ripple affect through the whole economy. posted 01/19/2008 at 13:43:45
People do have a say. You can vote. And you can support farmers who produce organic, natural products and boycott those who don't. posted 01/18/2008 at 20:50:57
Splashy, It's another reason for people to support local farmers and the growing movement toward smaller scale, sustainable, closer to the consumer farming. When you are getting food from local suppliers you can ask them up front what they do and don't put into foods. I recommend everybody look into the "Edible" communities, regionally published magazines that are leading the way toward making food natural again! posted 01/18/2008 at 20:49:25
Mr. Fitz,I respectfully disagree. Decisions to smoke, engage in drunken debachery, or to eat oneself into obesity, etc., might seem like "personal behaviors," but each one leads to public health consequences. And everybody, particularly those who made other choices, end up footing the bill.Similarly, one beef producer's decision to use clones is not an isolated decision. Taking the scenerio already mentioned as one instance, a herd of clones having the same vulnerability to a particular disease organism could by virtue of their numbers alone impact how non-cloned animals come into contact with disease, or could provide a vector for a particular organism to develop heightened virulence.I'm asking myself what are the perceived benefits of this technology? The inherent dangers of monoculture are fairly obvious.It looks to me like a move similar to the one that created mad cow disease, a virtually man-made disease caused by feeding herbivores to each other -- something that would never have occured in nature!Buyer beware. Diners beware!posted 01/17/2008 at 18:01:22
Ignoring Iraq: Why Has it Become the Forgotten Issue of the '08 Race?
The democrats should ignore the Iraq war since they have already eliminated from their contest the only candidates with any genuine experience in foreign policy. posted 01/19/2008 at 11:11:43
Atheism as a Stealth Religion III: Four Questions and Six Possible Answers
But the Christian assertion is that God cares about the whole of creation ... knows when the sparrow falls. posted 01/17/2008 at 20:03:47
Dapper Dap,What a lovely, thoughtful ... essay... I guess that's what it is really. You raise so many ideas that I'm really quite at a loss to comment. I would need to "muse" over them quite a bit more than I can just now, writing with one foot out the door. Perhaps some of the others will. I'll post this also at the top of the page hoping they'll scroll down and find your remarks.People are affected certainly by which door they enter ideas. I was not raised a Christian, which no doubt alters the ways I see it.Anyway I have been very intrigued, at times moved, by the comments of the atheists even while not sharing their perspective.As to science, I think Dr. Wilson would get more mileage from his ideas by narrowing the focus a lot. But then I don't know what his purpose was in creating the blog, perhaps to gauge the reactions of this audience to the topic in its most general terms.I think each person has to find his own way with honest inquiry and so perhaps the atheists have to be atheists and I have to be a Christian. It is certainly enlightening -- there's a word we all like -- to hear these various ideas batted back and forth.Agape. Muse posted 01/17/2008 at 11:09:46
Dapper Dap,What a lovely, thoughtful ... essay... I guess that's what it is really. You raise so many ideas that I'm really quite at a loss to comment. I would need to "muse" over them quite a bit more than I can just now, writing with one foot out the door. Perhaps some of the others will. I'll post this also at the top of the page hoping they'll scroll down and find your remarks.People are affected certainly by which door they enter ideas. I was not raised a Christian, which no doubt alters the ways I see it.Anyway I have been very intrigued, at times moved, by the comments of the atheists even while not sharing their perspective.As to science, I think Dr. Wilson would get more mileage from his ideas by narrowing the focus a lot. But then I don't know what his purpose was in creating the blog, perhaps to gauge the reactions of this audience to the topic in its most general terms.I think each person has to find his own way with honest inquiry and so perhaps the atheists have to be atheists and I have to be a Christian. It is certainly enlightening -- there's a word we all like -- to hear these various ideas batted back and forth.Agape. Muse posted 01/17/2008 at 11:09:19
If God exists and created the humans, believe me, he has a sense of humor. posted 01/16/2008 at 17:51:11
Thursday, January 31, 2008
wondering
Super-organism. Look at that word. Can a half dozen authors (or less) be called a "super"-organism?You are kidding yourself if you think "New Atheism" is a movement, let alone a religion. Where are the drooling minions, marching the streets with images of His Most High Richard Dawkins held aloft? Wilson has a bone to pick with Dawkins that has nothing to do with atheism - don't be seduced by the superorganism bit.When someone founds a New Atheist commune, I'll shut up and bow before your infinite wisdom.posted 01/28/2008 at 17:34:38
Ahh, the superorganism answer. Hmmm... I wonder why we should not be surprised? (And no wonder you oppose Richard Dawkins so stridently, that old Selfish-Gene numbskull.)I know that you have more articles to follow, but I hope you will address a few points:You may make the case that New Atheism is a superorganism, but how does that make it a religion? Do naked mole rats practice a religion?If you are going to try and make the case that New Atheism is a superorganism, that would beg the question : shouldn't a SUPERorganism consist of MANY sub-units? You've identified Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens (and maybe a handful of others) as New Atheists. Where are their minions? Can a half dozen cells make a superorganism? Hey, I go to all the atheist lodge meetings, and I have yet to see anyone wearing a "Dawkins Is God" T-shirt.Does every widely shared idea constitute a superorganism? Perhaps you stake your claims on the basis of book sales. Well, Harry Potter books sell more than Dawkins, et. al., and I don't think you want to make the case that "Potterism" is a superorganism, or a religion. Do religions really spread non-violently? Seems Christianity didn't really take off until it got the backing of the Roman emperor who then proceeded to persecute competing religions such as Manichaism. And as the big C spread across Europe, it was certainly unwise for the individuals of any nation to cling to the old ways once the king had adopted the new religion (just ask the Cathars). Oh, and you might ask the natives of the New World how much choice they had when Christianity arrived. Islam owes as much to the sword as to Muhammad (thank you, internet anonymity). I wonder how many mosques the non-violent Hindus have burnt down? Even non-proselytizing religions such as Judaism have bloody episodes in their past. I think you need to provide more evidence (perhaps a side article?).posted 01/28/2008 at 16:48:10
The "Soul Hypothesis" (Part 2)
No. I'm starting to doubt this evolution stuff.;)posted 01/31/2008 at 11:44:07
Hey, I think I did answer it - see my second point. But I'll give it another go:I love my species. I love this planet. I want to see both of them progress positively. THAT is what drives me.I honestly see religion as a threat and a dead-end. It enslaves my species to the irrational. To me it is as morally repugnant as slavery or child abuse. Religion is the enemy of humanity.It's difficult for someone who is religious to understand that. It amounts to such an attack on one's sense of self that it angers and frightens True Believers. Sorry. But you need to be shaken up. Religious people hold religion to be beyond criticism - to be untouchable. But if you truly believed that your religion was the Truth, then you would not be frightened by doubt. The venom that most believers throw at atheists is telling - you *know* it's all just a house of cards. Remember the story of the little boy who is the only one to tell the Emporer he has no clothes?I said I didn't want to "convert" anyone - but I do want atheists to inject their views into the discussion. Hopefully an open-minded believer will be inspired to start that last leg of the spiritual journey. But that's not even important. If atheists sat on the sidelines - just laughing at all the True Believers bowing and scraping to their white-bearded sky-daddy - and said nothing, then that would be the height of nihilism. We atheists must act because we see the futility, danger, and inhumanity of religion.posted 01/31/2008 at 10:16:16
Hey, Muse! We were wondering when you would show up.It may please you to know that I champion childhood - I am male after all. (I tell everyone that I am raising 3 boys - my wife tells everyone she is raising 4.) But children believe all manner of strange things - "step on a crack, break your mother's back", boogymen in the closet, Santa lives, the Easter Bunny lives, etc. This is because they assign a little angry god to every phenomenon they encounter. They don't have the cognitive abilities nor experience to differentiate between probable truth and obvious fiction.Here's the interesting point: most children eventually decide they want to become adults. Adulthood marks a time when we begin to coalesce these disparate godlings (cracks, dark closets, etc.) into a more cohesive form. Somewhere in Huffpo I have a piece about the hierarchy of religious belief (check my profile).The journey from childhood to adulthood (whether actual or metaphysical) involves necessary changes to our cognitive, moral, and spiritual levels of development. Unlike Peter Pan, no one really wants to stay a child forever - its just not that fun. In fact, staying a child forever would be a nightmare (check out stories like Harlan Ellison's "Jefty is Five", or Gunther Grass' "The Tin Drum").But please don't think of me as a cold-hearted meanie with no sense of humor. You should have seen me and the lads "digging for dinosaur bones" in our flower garden yesterday.posted 01/31/2008 at 09:47:07
Your opening sentence raises a side issue I would like to address:You are correct in admonishing us (HS, Dap, and me) for "ganging up" on MTG. I have felt that way too sometimes (ModerationMuse, where are ya?). Speaking for myself, I know I must always step back and ask, why am I engaging in this debate? Why does it mean so much to me?First, I recognize that we are all on the "journey". Each of us must come to our own understanding of these issues ON OUR OWN. Beating you over the head with a baseball bat will not turn you into a baseball player - the same is true for these arguments. Even though it happened to me at a young age, I know that I came to atheism only after careful contemplation - no one led me to that choice. And I do not expect to "convert" others.But it is important to put these ideas out there (my second point). For one thing, just as my ideas have been sharpened by debating on Huffpo (and elsewhere), the debate gets folks on the other side of the issue to think about their position as well - to hone their arguments. (And perhaps it may cause someone to begin that journey to atheism.) Also, I think these ideas do matter - religious ideas play a crucial role in our political lives, and if someone like myself feels we must be wary of these influences, it my duty to say so.Hope that wasn't too far off topic.posted 01/28/2008 at 10:28:06
I like this.Yes, much of religious thought (notions of souls, gods, or uber-minds) seems to be driven by navel-gazing. It amounts to saying, "The universe must care about ME!" Or, "There must be some greater purpose to all this, because I am so wonderful." Or, "I am SO important, that I must live forever."You will only attain enlightenment when you conclude that each of us is a tiny, tiny part of a much greater universe - and it is ridiculous to think that the universe takes any notice of us. You suddenly realize that what really matters are the people you love and who love you - and by extension, your own species and planet. It centers you in the here-and-now, and makes you face up to reality responsibly and honestly. There is no supreme being marking down your every cough and giggle. There is no glorious after-life with 72 virgins waiting to tend to your every need. There is no ghostly "soul" to make you bigger than you already are. Stop looking out the meta-physical window waiting for the supreme mailman to arrive.posted 01/28/2008 at 06:26:18
As always, definitions trip us up. What I meant to imply when I said, "...the set of traits required for being human", was : "...the set of traits required for each of us to be a positive contributor to the human community." I still wonder if you accept Deepak's notion of "soul". Does the "soul" represent something outside the brain? What evidence is there of this, besides your own fervent hopes? What will happen to your "soul" when you die? You may not want to debate what a "soul" is, but then you cannot make lofty pronouncements about it either - if you will not allow us to define or set parameters for this concept. then "soul" will forever remain a personal notion, useless for discussion.posted 01/27/2008 at 21:59:24
You are correct - I should have limited myself to addressing "souls". It was late, and I mis-wrote.Let's try again : So your argument amounts to : "You had better leave open the possibility of SOULS because you never know... wouldn't you PEOPLE WHO DON'T BELIEVE IN SOULS be pissed if you found out (somehow) that souls actually exist and you were in denial all along."Do you not see the absurdity of your argument? It it is a laughable idea to someone who DOES NOT BELIEVE IN SOULS. It's like me saying to you, "You'd better wear these special anti-Bigfoot underwear when you go out into the woods, because you never know..."You even ask us to, "...imagine there's something that's worth a lot more than $1000" Yeah, that's all we can do - "imagine" the soul concept just as we imagine unicorns and fairies - because, like these, the soul is an invention of the human mind. This "soul" acts as a convenient security blanket when you're all by yourself having Deep Thoughts. posted 01/27/2008 at 07:49:48
"soul aka kindness, forgiveness, happiness, love for family and our fellow man"So "soul" is just your name for the set of all human traits you see as positive or good. I don't think that's what Deepak meant - see his list of "soul qualities", above. I am what some would call a "strong" atheist - I deny not only the existence of gods, but the existence of any aspect of the supernatural (including souls). And yet, I recognize kindness, forgiveness, happiness, love for family, and love for our fellow man as positive and worthy of admiration and emulation. What you have identified as "having a soul", is actually the set of traits required for being human.posted 01/27/2008 at 07:32:50
Too true, friend HS! I have posited under another comment section that if the supernatural existed, it could never reveal itself. Every phenomenon we experience is of the natural world - should any aspect of the supernatural attempt to manifest itself, it would immediately become observable and measurable, thus rendering it non-supernatural. A miracle is nothing more than an effect for which we do not yet know the cause. The obvious conclusion to this thought experiment is to realize that gods, souls, and uber-minds are merely inventions of the human brain. Like fairies and gnomes and dragons, they may have helped primitive man make sense of his world - but today they are simply dangerous remnants of our past, like your appendix. It speaks to the mental health of our species that so many still cling to these childish notions.posted 01/27/2008 at 00:55:35
What is this thing you have experienced as a "soul"? Is it euphoria, awe, wonder, love? All of these things and more can be generated by drug use.The human brain is a wondrous thing - it can give rise to philosophers, artists, and scientists. But it can also give rise to schizophrenics. It may serve as a convenient security blanket to believe that you have a "soul". But it's just your fear of death or loneliness that drives you. To one who still clings to the childish notions of god or souls or uber-minds, it must be very terrifying indeed to contemplate an existence without those things - it is like staring into the void. And yet you will not acheive true enlightment until you let those crutches go and stand up for yourself.posted 01/27/2008 at 00:40:49
So your argument amounts to : "You had better leave open the possibility of god because you never know... wouldn't you atheists be pissed if you died and found yourself in front of a petty, jealous Santa-god? Boy, you'd catch it in the pants then!"Do you not see the absurdity of your argument? Not only does that imply that your god is nothing more than a mafia boss who must be appeased at all times, but it is a laughable idea to someone who has already rejected the notion of god. It's like me saying to you, "You'd better wear these special anti-Bigfoot underwear when you go out into the woods, because you never know..."Only when you embrace atheism will you become a fully realized human being. Only then will you be able to face the Big Questions with honesty and your own cognitive abilities. Only then will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion - rather than a morality based on the threat of a supernatural spanking.Why do you wish to see our species forever enslaved to irrationality? Remember : the slave often learns to love the slave-master, but he is still a slave.posted 01/27/2008 at 00:30:47
"The list of soul qualities is a familiar one:The soul is your connection to God or the divine. The soul is the source of existence.The soul is the seat of bliss or eternal happiness.The soul exists beyond death; it is the seed of immortality.These aren't propositions to which a person can simply say yes or no."Ummm....No.No.No.No.You seem to be making this stuff up as you go along. There is no soul, there is no god, there is no uber-mind.posted 01/26/2008 at 00:54:39
I'm a Man of Faith, You're a Crackpot
This has to be the most hilarious article I have read on Huffpo for some time. You're dumping on Scientology for believing in (1) resurrection after death and (2) the existence of magical "ghosts" (Thetans) which take over our bodies. Your dumping on Mormonism for (3) claiming divine revelation for its holy books and because its adherents (4) wear special holy items and (5) alter their diet.Hmmm.... (1) Christians believe JC rose from the dead (not to mention Lazarus, who did it BEFORE Jesus), (2) Most Western religions believe in ghosts that inhabit our bodies... they're called "souls", (3) Western religious tradition teaches that its holy books were divinely inspired, (4) do you wear a cross around your neck? Do you know any Christian who does?, and (5) up until recently, most Roman Catholics did not eat meat on Friday (and Ultra-Orthodox Jews have a whole laundry list of food no-no's).Seems that you don't like Christians or Jews very much, either. (I think we already know your opinion of Muslims.)posted 01/24/2008 at 13:12:56
The eight-legged god
Sure, you could call the universe "god", but then "god" is just another word for universe and has no special meaning. Unless you want to anthropomorphize all of reality, the real question is, "Is there anything outside of the universe (i.e., the supernatural)?" Assume the supernatural "exists". How would we ever know? As soon as the supernatural interacted with reality, it would become observable and measurable - i.e., part of reality. If the clouds parted and some giant Monty-Pythonesque head appeared, bellowing for our worship, what would that prove? That a large tyrranical being with the ability to move clouds existed. If I am right, then there is no experience that will ever prove the existence of god. Suppose a large, super-intelligent being appeared claiming to be god. Our experience of that being would be merely that of a large, super-intelligent entity existing in the universe - nothing more. Given time, we could develop technology that would mimic any act performed by that being. Any "supernatural" aspect of that being would remain unseen and not a part of our experience - i.e., effectively non-existent. All a miracle is, is an effect for which we do not yet know the cause. The situation is much like Descartes' dualism problem - Descartes (much like Deepak Chopra) wanted to separate the mind and the body, but he realized such a separation gave rise to conundrums not easily resolved. Descartes and his followers had to invent all manner of contortions to try to fix the problem. If you want to believe in some aspect of "god" separate from reality, that aspect will forever remain unknown - the best you can do is make it up. Because no empirical evidence of god is possible, god as supernatural being must be an invention of the human mind. So why bother?posted 01/24/2008 at 00:03:17
Why I Wrote "The Great Awakening"
The religious experience in human beings can be viewed as a hierarchy, with at least 4 levels:Level I (the lowest level) comprises the polytheistic religions, where we assign a little angry god to every phenomenon - a rain god, a sun god, a god of war.Level II is acheived when we coalesce all these godlings into one EXTERNAL god - making it easier to know who to grovel before. Traditional Western religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) are stuck at this level. This level would seem to be an improvement over polytheism, but this one external god is still a petty, angry, (usually male) tyrant sitting on a cloud throwing lightning bolts. Level III is to INTERNALIZE god - to find god in each of us. People who have acheived this level recognize the absurdity of a white-bearded superman, but they still need the security blanket of belief. Buddhists (though probably not Buddha himself) and some modern Western religionists (moderate christians and the like) are stuck here.Level IV (the highest level) is to drop the need for the god concept altogether - i.e., to choose atheism. The Buddha acheived enlightenment when he attained this level. The fourth level is reached when you realize that every version of the supernatural is unnecessary - whether god is external or internal doesn't matter.Only when you reach this fourth level will you begin to face up to the Big Questions with honesty and your own cognitive abilities. Only then will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion - rather than the threat of a supernatural spanking. Only by embracing atheism will you become a fully realized human being.When you finally come to atheism, you will look back on religion with incredulity - you can only shake your head and laugh. This is why the Buddha is often depicted as laughing. But dropping the need to believe in god can be the most difficult thing you will ever do. Remember : The slave often comes to love the slave-master, but he is still a slave. Good luck on your journey.posted 01/23/2008 at 11:46:23
Atheism as a Stealth Religion III: Four Questions and Six Possible Answers
Touche!posted 01/17/2008 at 10:29:03
Touche!posted 01/17/2008 at 06:46:26
Nice, Dap. You echo a question I posed to a True Believer on Huffpo long ago : if you woke up tomorrow and realized that god did not exist, would you cease to be a moral person? Would you steal and kill and trample your neighbors flowers just because the threat of a supernatural spanking had been taken away? I now add your idea to that question : if you woke up tomorrow without god, would that song you sing along to in your car every morning move you any less? Would you not still lose yourself in a painting? In fact, you would come to love your fellow human beings even more. Suddenly you realize, "A human being created that. A human being moved me to tears with their song or painting." Muse, you often cite Milton, et al., as examples of the positive influence of Christianity on Western civilization. Is it not possible that what you are actually praising is the innate creativity, brilliance, and beauty of human beings. As far as I know, god never held a paint brush or strummed a guitar.posted 01/16/2008 at 09:42:00
I know - God doesn't have much of a sense of humor, does he? posted 01/16/2008 at 09:25:11
Sorry, the first post wasn't coming up, so I repeated it. There oughta be some way to edit your own posts after they are sent.posted 01/15/2008 at 20:32:20
Interesting, isn't it, how two implacable foes such as we (just kidding) can sometimes come together in agreement. You believe that these books will have less relevance in 10 years because they are wrong. I believe these books will have less relevance in 10 years because THERE IS NO NEW ATHEISM MOVEMENT.posted 01/15/2008 at 20:16:38
Interesting, isn't it, how two implaccable foes such as we (just kidding) can come together in agreement. You believe that these books will be less relevant in 10 years because they are wrong. I believe these books will be less relevant in 10 years because THERE IS NO NEW ATHEISM MOVEMENT.We (the author and those posting comments) are a community deeply concerned about these questions. It is easy for us to become myopic. While we debate the coming "great struggle" between atheism and religion in the 21st century, a leading candidate for president in the GOP is Mike Huckabee. Joe Six-pack doesn't even know who Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens are. I think we are in danger of missing the forest for the trees. It bears repeating: THERE IS NO NEW ATHEISM MOVEMENT.posted 01/15/2008 at 19:25:30
Aargh! I mangled the second paragraph under "1. Atheists". The last sentence should read, "...and second, what she represented seems more like a cult-of-personality than atheism."Take heed all ye who would comment: Author, proof-read thyself.posted 01/15/2008 at 11:44:50
Prof. Wilson,In the spirit of proposing questions and possible solutions, I hope you will indulge me:Q1) Is New Atheism a movement?Q2) If it is not a movement, can it be a religion?For an idea to become a movement, it must have leaders and followers. You have identified the leaders (the holy triumvirate), but who are the followers? They would seem to originate from two populations, which we shall now consider:1. Atheists (those who do not believe in a supernatural entity). Do atheists in general champion Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens as the voices of leadership? If so, what evidence is there to support this? It can't be the fact that their books are best-sellers - Harry Potter books sell better, yet no one is making the claim that "Potterism" is a movement. And yes, other atheists do defend these authors on Huffpo (and elsewhere) when under attack. But can these defenders be said to be followers? Are their world-views or daily activities significantly changed by these books?I mean, I'm a card carrying member of my local atheist lodge (tee hee) and I go to all the meetings and rallies, but I never see a "Dawkins for President" button on any lapels. Atheists are largely individuals that would seem best suited for identifying blind faith movements - I don't think they will fall into lockstep with anyone. You mentioned Ayn Rand in your first article - first, her "movement" can hardly be said to have been terribly influential, and second, what she was represented seems more like an Earth-bound cult-of-personality than atheism.2. True Believers (those who believe in a supernatural entity). Do you honestly believe that hordes of religionists are going to convert to atheism on the strength of these books? Can we dispense with this possibility?So where's the movement? Messrs D., H., and H. are provocative - they stir the pot. But in 5 years, 10 years, will anyone cite these books as still influential? We shall see...posted 01/15/2008 at 10:47:53
I was writing this in haste. The line, "But this only works if Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens truly constitute all of atheistic thought." should read, "But this only works if Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens have undue influence over atheistic thought."Remember that the intent of these authors is to be provocative. They are not writing for the consumption of other atheists - we don't need to be told why it's good to be an atheist, we already are. I don't think their books are best-sellers based on the buying power of atheists in the US.posted 01/14/2008 at 23:30:09
Wow, I am not that well-read in evolutionary biology (a shortcoming I must correct), so I had no idea that Messrs Wilson and Dawkins have a history of dispute outside of their views on atheism. Could this all be due to the disagreement between the gene-based vs. group-selection camps? H1, above, would suggest that. Which is not to suggest that Wilson's evolutionary views are wrong - how would I know? But it does color the argument differently.posted 01/14/2008 at 18:28:40
Too true. One of the problems with positing a supernatural is that the supernatural, if it existed, would be totally unknowable. As soon as the supernatural tried to reveal itself in nature, it would become observable and measurable. Even if the clouds parted and a Monty-Python-esque face appeared and commanded us all to bow before him, what would that prove? That a being with the ability to part clouds and yell really loud existed?All a miracle is, is an effect for which we currently lack knowledge of a cause.posted 01/14/2008 at 15:01:46
Nicely put. Another term for this is anthropomorphizing - "If bad things happen to me, then somebody in control must have it out for me." For primitive human beings, that thinking may have helped to temporarily plug holes in their understanding. You can imagine how such thinking would lead to behavior that attempted to appease the gods - animal sacrifice, body modification, diet, prayer. For modern human beings, anthropomorphizing the universe amounts to navel-gazing - "The universe cares about ME."posted 01/14/2008 at 14:49:50
Excellent! I like your approach, and agree with most of your ideas. I would like to see you address a few of the following issues, however:I still think you are confusing atheism as a specific idea about the existence of god with the statements of just THREE strongly opinionated authors. If you had said, "Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens are trying to establish a stealth religion", and backed it up with examples, then you might have an argument. But atheism didn't start with these three. It's like disagreeing with the methods of Al Sharpton, then using that opinion to make the blanket statement that the Civil Rights movement has gone off the rails.If atheism is a stealth religion, which of these explanations works for atheism? What you seem to be identifying as a religion in this article, is the belief in supernatural agents. This differs from your use of the term when you label atheism a stealth religion - there, if I read you right, a religion is any set of beliefs that inform our world-view. "Ah," you say, "What about H2? Are not Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens profiting from atheism?" But this only works if Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens truly constitute all of atheistic thought.Who decided that these six explanations for the existence of religion are the only possible ones? For that matter, why are each of these six plausible? You don't like it when others make definite pronouncements about religion, so why are your six choices more valid then others? I've got to run. More later...posted 01/14/2008 at 13:38:32
"I Know I'm Right, So Why Be Fair?"
You said, "That is why we call people like him a fundamentalist atheist ..."No, you call Dawkins a fundamentalist atheist because it makes a convenient sound-bite and confuses the argument. I dismiss the existence of Santa Claus out of hand - does that make me a fundamentalist "anti-Santa-ist"? Do I have to prove the non-existence of Santa? Dawkins is a STRONGLY OPINIONATED atheist, not a fundamentalist atheist. In point of fact, there is no such thing as a fundamentalist atheist. But its a waste of pixels to argue this point anymore. Let me leave you with this: if the existence of god were somehow proven to all human beings, and if someone then continued to deny the existence of god, THAT would be a fundamentalist atheist.posted 01/13/2008 at 20:22:14
Hey, HS! Yep, Sheldrake finds what he expects to find. For a brief, critical blurb about Sheldrake, check out the Skeptics Dictionary at skepdics.com.posted 01/13/2008 at 20:07:05
Atheism as a Stealth Religion II: Let's Get Real
By your own admission, you do not believe in an external, a priori god. Parse it any way you want, that means you have willfully chosen a belief system based on what you know to be a fiction. I don't have words for what I feel about this - it's like staring into the void. How can god be either end of a metaphor if god doesn't exist? You are not using god as a metaphor - you're simply attaching the word "god" to things.And a culture-myth you know to be baseless is called a fairy-tale.Consider these questions:Where will you go when you die? Metaphorical heaven? Mythical heaven? Do you pray? To whom (or what) do you pray? "Oh, Holy Metaphor, we beseech thee..."What is the source of your morality? A figure of speech? A desert fairy-tale set down by primitives 2000 years ago?Why have you chosen to believe in a myth you know to be a fantasy? Convenience? Peer pressure? To get a job promotion? And then you imply that many (most?) modern Christians share your definition of god. I hope not. I would not want to live in a world which exhibited such mass psychosis.I think I'm going to avoid Huffpo for a while. Coming back here to debate with people who willing adopt a fiction as their world-view makes me queasy.HeevenSteven, good luck. Keep up the good fight.posted 01/08/2008 at 01:03:22
You may be right, but I think it's something else. I think Mr. Wilson is objecting to a few strongly opinionated atheist authors citing science and reason in their books about atheism. Period. Like our friend, Zanti, he wants atheism to be a simple skeptical response to theism - the only thing atheists are allowed to say is, "Prove it." Then they are never allowed to say anything more on the subject.This is an attempt to close off atheism as a cognitive dead end. But no claim exists in a vacuum. A perfectly legitimate question for any atheist is, "OK, there is no god. Now what are the implications of that fact? And, why is the god concept so prevalent in human beings?" Are atheists not allowed to speculate on that? Mr. Wilson seems to be of the opinion that any use of science or reason, beyond simply saying "Prove it", is outside the bounds of atheistic thought, and constitutes a "stealth" religion when it appears.posted 01/07/2008 at 10:01:17
Yes, Zanti is an atheist who is afraid of admitting it. This is a direct quote from our friend Z (see our debate below): "If the belief in a god or gods is literal--i.e., if we truly believe in an invisible being pulling the marionette strings of eternity, then we're making one hell of a fantastic claim, yes.I, on the other hand, claim (along with a great many Christians) that God is a metaphor, a culture-wide myth, a human construct."And, most odd of all:"By the way, when atheists ask me the standard 'Why don't you believe in Zeus?' question, I respond that Zeus isn't the popular god of the moment."So apparently, Zanti's religious belief is based on numbers - if fewer people in the US believed in the Christian god, then he would also stop believing in that god. Weird, no?Zanti's thinking seems dangerous to me. Such people are easily swayed by ANY culture-wide myth, like fascism. Am I being to harsh?posted 01/07/2008 at 09:42:30
I sat at my computer for 10 minutes after reading your comment not knowing what to say. All this time you've been defending something you KNOW to be a fairy-tale just because it is widely popular. It's like believing in Harry Potter just because so many people have read the book. You actually admit, "By the way, when atheists ask me the standard 'Why don't you believe in Zeus?' question, I respond that Zeus isn't the popular god of the moment." And if Bozo the Clown was the popular god of the moment, you would be a Bozo-ian? Probably go around with a big red nose and a Seltzer bottle just to prove your faith.If god is just a culture-wide myth, then what do you REALLY think will happen to you when you die? What is the ultimate source of your morality? Did Jesus actually live - and if so, was he divine? I don't deny that a myth can contain certain truths about the human condition. Myths can be an effective way of conveying information (Little Red Ridinghood probably started out as a cautionary tale about little girls trusting strangers). But even if everyone else thinks they are true, YOU are your own person. Based on sales of the Weekly World News, belief in UFOS and Bigfoot and Batboy is pretty wide-spread in our culture - do you believe in these, too?If belief in god were to drop below 50% in the US population, would you give it up as well? It could hardly be considered to be culture-wide at that point. If you moved to a Muslim country, would you start believing in Allah? Here are some other culture-wide and historically common traits of human beings:SexismRacismChild AbuseRapeViolenceHow many of these will you adopt as your own just because they seem intrinsic to the human condition?I must say that I am done with this "debate". I've got more important things to do.posted 01/07/2008 at 06:20:47
"On what basis can it make that claim?"I think I addressed that in the paragraph that followed. But just to be clear: religions require their adherents to base their world-view on fantasy (i.e., the belief that the phenomena of nature are due to unseen chimeras). THAT IS IRRATIONAL. Yes, the antithesis of religion is reason. If atheism is the rejection of religion, then atheism can lay claim to that which religion is not."...your brand of atheism..."What? How many types are there? " 'Their position (singular)'? Which would be...?"That the supernatural (gods, uber-mind, Santa) exists. Simple enough?"No, not unless you're making the same assertion. When I said that the burden of proof works both ways, I mean that it applies to the respective claims of both sides."You lost me here. OK, I don't believe in Santa. Is the burden of proof on me? Why do you not see the analogy? Let's say you're bald. You reveal this fact by saying, "I do not have hair." Would it not be absurd of me to say, "No. You have hair. It's just bald hair." Why do you get to say, "No. You have a belief system. It's just unbelief belief."posted 01/06/2008 at 23:05:19
You agree with me! Your words: "A skeptical stance does not constitute a belief system that is in any way equivalent to the claim being challenged. ...In a perfect world, atheism functions totally (or primarily) as a skeptical response to claims made on the behalf of religion. It does not share the burden of proof attached to religious claims so long as it addresses those claims without making *equivalent* counter-claims of its own."That's the whole ball of wax. That's the point I've been trying to make. Thank you.You may find this astonishing, but I have never read anything written by Dawkins, Harris, or Hitchens about atheism. Not because I dismiss them out of hand, but I've never felt the need to. As another commenter mentioned on Huffpo recently, I do not need anyone to tell me how to be an atheist - I already am. Now, if particular claims made by any of these authors in their books seem questionable, then of course you may bring up those points for debate. If Dawkins has made the claim that religion is a virus (and is not just using that phrase as a metaphor), then you have every right to expect him to back it up. But you have made a blanket statement about atheism (it being a belief system) that you now seem to want to restrict to particular claims made by a few atheist authors. It occurs to me that what you may actually be claiming is that EVERY human thought requires some level of "belief" - that truth is subjective, and any external truths (if they exist) are ultimately unknowable. Fair enough, but I think that takes us far afield of the current discussion. As HeevenSteven has pointed out (somewhere along this chain of commentary), we may need to define our terms more clearly. As HS has also mentioned, I'm starting to get a headache, too.posted 01/06/2008 at 22:35:53
Wow, it's right here: "Why demand proof for one and not the other? Because the first claim is fantastic and, if true, requires that we alter our universal perspective just a tad."And belief in gods is not fantastic? Why not?posted 01/06/2008 at 22:06:29
You're right, I should have left predestination off the list. Not only is it not something to be condemned over, but predestination (and the related topic of free will) is still an open question (and probably will always be).Free will may very well be an illusion. Personally speaking, I hope not. But consider the following example: A woman is standing in front of an open closet full of blouses. Choosing which one she will wear today may seem like a perfect example of the exercise of free will. And yet, so many pre-existing conditions can influence that choice : the woman's mood, her favorite color, the length of her arm, whether she is right-handed or left-handed, etc. The sensation of free will may be nothing more than the inability to determine the probability of each potential outcome - either because too many variables effecting the situation are at work, or because some of those variables are unknown to the chooser.posted 01/06/2008 at 21:48:41
I don't know how well read you are regarding Augustine and his times, but the young Earth idea was controversial even then. The Greeks and others already believed in a much older Earth.You haven't addressed Augustine's polemics against the Manichaeans, which is the position I find most troubling. Are you not aware of the RC church's views on this matter? Labelling a group of people Manichaeans (even long after the last follower of Mani could be found in the West) was a very serious charge, and usually led to persecution. We largely have your boy A to thank for that.posted 01/06/2008 at 20:14:36
Augustine of Hippo was a full-fledged Manichaean who CONVENIENTLY converted back to his mother's Christianity in 387 AD. Why conveniently, you ask? Because in 382, the Roman emperor, who was beginning to come under the sway of the Christians, declared that Manichaeans should be put to death.Augustine then proceeded to severely attack the Manichaeans in his writings. Those writings became RC doctrine right up until our time. Those writings led directly to the later persecution of the Bogomils, Cathars, and others accused by the RC church of being Manichaeans. (The crusade against the Cathars in southern France was particularly cruel and bloody).In addition, from Augustine we have such nonsense as:young Earth creationism (the Earth is less than 6000 years old), original sin (he believed that unbaptized babies go to hell), and predestination (i.e., the opposite of free will - although the RC church did one of its frequent "move-the-goal-posts" contortions to say that, no, Augustine really did believe in free will after all).In my estimation, Augustine was a nut.posted 01/06/2008 at 02:07:51
You say, "Atheism IS a belief system--the 'absence of belief isn't belief' idea is nonsense."In other words, the absence of belief IS belief.And, the absence of pain is pain. The absence of fear is fear. The absence of love is love. Ridiculous enough, yet?Let's use an analogy: Suppose the belief in the existence of fairies is called "fairy-ism". Most of my neighbors are devout "fairy-ists". If I do not believe in fairies, then I would be an "a-fairy-ist". Now are you going to argue that refusing to acknowledge the existence of fairies is a belief system equivalent to "fairy-ism"?See, the problem with leaving the belief-door open for one type of fantasy character (god) is that the door must then stay open for EVERY other fantasy. If I am not allowed to challenge the belief that god exists, then I must also respect the belief in: human beings being the descendents of space aliens, reality being nothing more than the dream of a cosmic sleeper, Chopra's uber-mind, and every other crazy idea that human beings have ever concocted about the supernatural. By your argument, none of them can be proven, and none of them can be disproven. They are all perfect and unassailable. The only alternative is to prove that your personal god concept is somehow different from all other belief. posted 01/05/2008 at 22:22:14
Well of course an INDIVIDUAL can be an atheist and irrational at the same time. But I see nothing wrong with ATHEISM laying claim to (pure) reason. At its core, atheism says one thing: god (i.e., the supernatural) does not exist. If atheists in general adopt this idea, it logically follows that atheists will view religions as irrational - i.e., religions require their adherents to base their world-view on fantasy (i.e., the phenomena of nature are due to unseen chimeras). And because atheists wish to differentiate themselves from these god-based belief systems, they will want to claim rational thinking (at least in this arena) as their own.I think any atheist would be swayed by a religionist if the religionist would provide just one scrap of empirical evidence for their position. One scrap. Atheists are not close-minded dogmatists, contrary to this author's view and your own. In fact, most of us arrived at our conclusions by examining the notion of god with honesty, openness, and intelligence. I.e., we thought about it.And the burden of proof argument... come on. My 3-year-old is firmly convinced that a fat man in a red suit comes into our house every Dec 25th to leave toys behind. I won't disavow him of this belief for a few more years, but I'm pretty sure he's wrong (especially when I look at my post-holiday bank account). Now I view belief in god as being no different from belief in Santa (two all-powerful fantasy characters who bestow or withhold rewards based on the perceived behavior of their minions). But by your argument, the burden of proof as to the existence of Santa lies on both my child and ME. Get it?posted 01/05/2008 at 19:24:29
Wow. I have re-read this post many times, and I have no idea what you are trying to say.Let's take this: "I clearly define a stealth religion as any belief system that distorts the facts of the real world (yes, there is a real world out there, and it does not include people sitting on clouds) for the purpose of motivating a given suite of behaviors." Now how in the world does atheism (which you label a stealth religion) distort the facts of the real world? Are you implying that the existence of gods is a proveable fact, and atheism distorts this? I am at a loss.Then this gem, "There are impeccable reasons for distrusting statements cloaked in the authority of science and reason, no less than the flag and the cross." I am stunned. If you're going to toss science and reason into the irrational-belief-system pot with religion and nationalism, then we might as well go back to living in caves. Do you even know what science is? This is EXACTLY the argument used by religionists to attack atheism. Then the weirdest of all, "No, I am not accusing the New Atheists of having a hidden fascist agenda, but..." Oh, what an old trick, the back-hand compliment. It's a favorite ploy of unscrupulous politicians - "Now I'm not sayin my opponent is a womanizing commie, but..."You, of course, will paint this as a New Atheist (whatever that is) attack, but I must say you come across as an agnostic, not an atheist. What are you really asking of atheists? - tolerance of religion? keep our minds open to the supernatural? keep quiet and sit on our hands? I just don't understand a self-described atheist claiming atheism constitutes a religion - the very thing he supposedly rejects. Somebody help me out here - am I missing something?In the end, what seems to motivate your argument is anger at other prominent atheists for being too strongly opinionated. Did they steal your thunder? Get over it.posted 01/05/2008 at 01:59:06
The "Soul Hypothesis"
Deepak, do you know what a cirular argument is? You say, "Behave as if you have a soul. Do this for long enough time to gather evidence that your hypothetical soul does in fact correspond to reality as you experience it." So by analogy I could do this for other personal beliefs: "Behave as if you are a psychopath. Do this for a long enough time until your hypothetical psychotic behavior does in fact correspond to reality as you experience it."Get it? You can't make up the soul concept, assign every thought and action to this fantasy, then say, "Why looky here, I did all these things so my soul really does exist." Sure, the phenomena you ascribe to your soul do in fact exist, but they arise for entirely different reasons. You prove nothing this way.That is NOT how science works. It is hard to believe you don't realize this. Besides, how can I act as if I have a soul before I know what a soul is! Do you mean act morally? That just implies that I have a moral code which guides my actions, not a soul.An then there is this, "As children we acted as if our parents loved us and wanted to protect us. Life then went on to inform us if our assumption was true." And what do you say to victims of child abuse? Do you think they will trust that their a priori assumptions necessarily cause the phenomena that they then observe?posted 01/04/2008 at 12:51:25
When Religion Becomes Superstition
Wouldn't it have made a more compelling story if Jesus had actually managed to sway the Romans through the persuasiveness of his arguments? (But then we wouldn't have that great torture movie "The Passion".) If Jesus hadn't died, would humanity still have been "saved"?posted 01/03/2008 at 11:47:45
So the Romans - mere human beings - killed your god. Pretty weak god, if you ask me.posted 01/03/2008 at 09:22:41
You mean Shm-ley B-teach?posted 01/02/2008 at 20:55:14
Funny... I thought the missing vowel was an A.posted 01/02/2008 at 20:51:33
It seems that an omnipotent god could have found a better way to "save" mankind than to kill his own offspring. What a strange, primitive religion.posted 01/02/2008 at 20:48:48
Whitewashing and Cherry Picking Religion
I hope folks are still coming back here...So to be without belief is belief. And to be without pain is pain. And to be without love is love. Need I go on? If you told me you were bald and lacked hair, I wouldn't tell you, "No, you have hair, it's just bald hair". Somehow, though, you can't seem to see how that same idea applies to belief/unbelief. I tell you I don't believe in god, and you say, "No, you do believe, you just have unbelief belief."A couple of other points:First you say this, "Most believers don't say their belief system differs from other belief systems." Then you say this, "A Christian can say they believe this is God, but that belief over there is wrong, while some of it may be correct." I almost got whiplash following that one. Go ask people like Pandu, or Deepak Chopra, whether their belief systems differ from Christianity (and also from each other).Does Santa Claus exist? My 3 year old thinks so. By your argument, "Both are simply beliefs. Neither need be proven." I guess I'll have to go on letting him believe in Santa until he's 20.It just dawned on me that there may be another reason why we go round and round on this without reaching any concensus: Are you trying to say that EVERY human thought is a belief (i.e., an act of faith on the part of the thinker)? Are you making the point that truth is subjective, and external truth (if it exists) is unknowable? That is an entirely different argument (and I think my keyboard is about to spontaneously combust).posted 01/06/2008 at 02:45:41
Nicely said, HS, and I might add:Because there is no empirical evidence of gods (or the supernatural), the only source for the god concept is the human mind. As we all know, the human mind is responsible for many fantastical notions: fairies, Santa Claus, chupacabras, the uber-mind - the list is endless. No one ever challenges you to prove Santa doesn't exist. You are free to reject unproven fantasies any time you wish. If a True Believer is going to insist that atheism is a belief system just because atheists cannot prove the non-existence of god, then they must show how the god concept differs from any of these other fantasies. I am as free to reject the notion of god as I am to reject the existence of the Loch Ness monster or Bigfoot.THE BURDEN OF PROOF IS ON THE TRUE BELIEVER.p.s., Have you read Eric Hoffer's "The True Believer", yet? THAT'S my bible (Hee, hee).posted 01/04/2008 at 19:13:55
Excellent article! Well said.posted 01/02/2008 at 15:43:05
Faint Light for the New Year
Or man created gods as a place holder until science could take over.posted 01/01/2008 at 17:12:02
Hmmm...You know what else has always been a part of our nature?MurderRape Child AbuseSexismRacism SlaveryUniversality is not a very convincing argument for keeping any of these.P.S. Science is the anti-thesis of religion. Calling science a religion is just a sound-bite meant to confuse the argument (by trying to define your opponent as no different from yourself) and meant to anger rational folks (by accusing your opponents of being the thing they most despise - irrational). If you really feel science is a bugaboo like christianity, next time you get sick or injured, stick to prayer instead of modern medicine. Oh, and instead of typing these messages on a computer keyboard, try sending them by telepathy.posted 01/01/2008 at 17:09:51
Apart from god, humanity will stand up and face the universe with honesty and clarity.Apart from god, human beings can begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.Apart from god, we just might survive as a species.Apart from god... which one by the way?posted 01/01/2008 at 13:49:59
You say, "The drama of religion versus science is so yesterday."Except that it's not. Consider some of the recent ways in which religion has intruded itself in our daily lives: The Terry Schiavo case (a personal tragedy the conservative religious nuts in Congress couldn't help sticking their noses into)Attempts to repeal abortion lawAttempts to demonize stem-cell researchWithholding from gay Americans the right to marryAttempts to keep the teaching of evolution out of our schools (or at least insert intelligent design)Here we are in the 21st century, and everything from the war in Iraq (viewed by many influential conservative leaders in the U.S. as a war against Islam) to whether or not a crucifix in urine can be displayed as art are still important to most Americans. We are as primitive in our thinking today as people were in the 16th century.Science doesn't have an agenda - but religion does. Religion insists on keeping us enslaved to the irrational. That is the only way it can survive. posted 01/01/2008 at 13:44:21
What are you talking about? This is the most far-right-wing country in the developed world - it is deeply, irrationally conservative and religious. Sure, in THEORY it's secular, but (unfortunately) in practice it is wholly religious. No atheist politician could get elected to office - in fact, we swear them into office with one hand on a bible! Atheists don't control any form of the media - point out one TV show or major movie that contains a blatantly atheist message. Just because most folks don't go around in sack-cloth scourging their backs with cat-o-nine-tails, doesn't mean this country lacks for religious belief.Honestly, the policies you point to as destructive are largely Republican policies - like failure to provide assistance to the poor. And what political party ties itself most closely to religion?Atheists don't run the show. If this country is a mess, it's you religionists who are to blame.posted 01/01/2008 at 10:11:42
No Evangelicals in Foxholes
Interesting. So you voluntarily chose to move the source of your morality from internal to external - highly unusual. I've often thought that the only way someone could change from an atheist to a believer would be if they experienced some tragedy so horrific that their mind just snapped and they turned for comfort to the security blanket called god. I asked the following question in another post that you can check out below: This vision of Krishna took place entirely within your own mind - I assume no one else witnessed this wonder, and that Krishna didn't leave behind any physical evidence like a gum wrapper or a cigarette butt. So how can you justify using a personal vision as evidence of the existence of god? You cannot share this vision, so how am I to judge its validity or whether it actually occurred? If I have a vision of an obese purple woman with a monkey's head who shoots pencils out of her nose, and reveals herself to be god, is my vision not as valid as yours? How many human beings throughout history, do you think, have had false visions of god - and how would they know?posted 01/03/2008 at 14:59:39
How big was Krishna's pen when he (she?) wrote the Bhagavad-gita? Probably a mile long.Don't you realize that your vision was entirely personal and took place inside your mind only? It can never be shared with anyone else, so what good is using it as evidence? Even if I were to magically see Krishna or Allah or Zeus, that experience of god would be mine alone - I would never presume to think that anyone else should just take my word for it. How many human beings, do you think, have had false visions of god? If I dream of a 500 foot tall goat with a fish-head who tells me to go about naked and singing show tunes, is that vision any less valid than yours?posted 01/02/2008 at 13:29:30
You don't get it? The god concept is a figment of the human mind - there is no empirical evidence for gods. The god concept is as valid as Santa Claus or Bigfoot. Do you keep an open mind as to Santa's existence just because some five-year-olds believe in him? Since god is purely an invention of the mind, it can be rejected just like any other fantasy.Visions are notoriously faulty. Is not Krishna sometimes a trickster? Maybe it was an enticement to seduce you from the true path to wisdom. Or perhaps a bad piece of chutney before bed.The religious experience in human beings can be viewed as a hierarchy, with at least 4 levels: The lowest level comprises the polytheistic religions, where we assign a little angry god to every phenomenon - a rain god, a sun god, a god of war, or even the Ganges River (sound familiar?). The second level is acheived when we coalesce all these godlings into one EXTERNAL god - traditional Western religions seem stuck at this level. But this one external god is still a petty, angry, (usually male) tyrant sitting on a cloud throwing lightning bolts. The third level is to INTERNALIZE god - Buddhists (though probably not Buddha himself) and some modern Western religionists (moderate christians and the like) are stuck here.The fourth level is to drop the need for the god concept altogether - i.e., atheism. This is probably when the Buddha acheived enlightenment. This fourth level (atheism) can be seen to be a logical outgrowth from the third level - if god is in everything, then god is everything and nothing. In other words, god just becomes another word for the universe. The universe is not a manifestation of god - it simply is what it is.When you finally come to atheism, you will look back on religion with incredulity - you can only shake your head and laugh. But dropping the need to believe in god can be the most difficult thing you will ever do. Good luck on your journey.posted 01/02/2008 at 13:17:44
Once you become the Buddha (i.e., acheive enlightenment), you stop being a Buddhist (i.e., a believer in legends).posted 12/30/2007 at 07:55:38
David, great article. However, a mini-debate I am having with another commenter under a different article on Huffpo has got me thinking about this very subject. You are more than certainly correct about some religionists: they fail to accept that any human being can be without "faith". But I think most of the time accusing atheists of being fundamentalist has a more nefarious intent.Choosing to call atheists fundamentalists (i.e., calling atheism a religion), when you know otherwise, serves two purposes: First, it is done in the hopes of confusing the argument. If you can successfully define your opponents as being no different from yourself, you disarm them. It's like a member of the KKK trying to justify their extreme position by pointing out that some blacks hate whites. Second, it is a thinly veiled attempt to anger atheists. What better way to goad your opponents than to accuse them of being the very thing they most despise. The Republicans are notorious for this - for example, accusing the Dems who want to bring the troops home and out of harm's way of not supporting the troops.And like Republicans, True Believers are not very good at thinking for themselves. When one of them comes up with what they think is a devastating sound-bite, like calling atheists fundamentalist, the rest parrot that comment without being able to justify it. No surprise that Republicans love True Believers.posted 12/29/2007 at 16:40:33
This argument is absurd. You seem to be rejecting logic, math, and science out of hand. By your argument, reason and science are made up belief systems just like religion, so why believe in anything? And yet you sit there typing on a product of science, confident that your ramblings will be "magically" transmitted to the world. When did you abdicate your humanity? Human beings have a large powerful organ in their heads called a brain. We are creatures of reason - if you choose to reject that, then you side with illogic and insanity.posted 12/29/2007 at 01:57:44
Buddha was clearly an atheist. Did that also make him a nihilistic materialist? You seem intent on being a poster child for Mr. Horton's essay - by your standards, if atheism is NOT a religion, then it must be worthless.Atheism is the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. Only when you have given up the need to believe in the supernatural will you be able to examine the Big Questions with honesty and your own human cognition. Only by choosing atheism will you be able to begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.Why do you insist on enslaving yourself (and the rest of humanity) to the irrational? Buddha recognized the futility of believing in spiritual chimeras - gods, if you like. You will never acheive enlightenment so long as you cling to irrational beliefs.posted 12/29/2007 at 01:44:44
The 7 Habits Of Highly Spiritual People
Here's something else to chew on...I believe that human religious experience can be seen as hierarchical, with at least four levels: At the lowest level are the polytheistic religions - this is where we assign a little angry god to every phenomenon that we observe: a sun god, a rain god, a god of war. Next, are those religions which coalesce these disparate godlings into one EXTERNAL god which rules over all creation. The Western religious tradition seems stuck at this level - they bray over and over again that there is only one god, but he remains a petty little male tyrant sitting on a cloud somewhere throwing lightning bolts. The third rung on the ladder is to INTERNALIZE god - to believe that god is in all of us (and in everything). Buddhists (but possibly not Buddha himself) and modern Western religious practitioners (moderate Christians and the like) have risen to this level. And the fourth level is atheism. The last step on the spiritual journey is to drop the need for the god concept altogether. I think this is when the Buddha acheived enlightenment. This final level of spiritual growth follows directly from careful consideration of the third level - if god is in everything, then god is everything and nothing. God is just another word for the universe, and ceases to be important. The universe is not a manifestation of god - the unverse simply is what it is.Just my two cents.posted 12/30/2007 at 02:06:52
Aargh! My computer really mangled the punctuation in that last post.I am not so sure that my assertion that the god concept is a human invention is dogmatic. Consider: there are no external phenomena that suggest the existence of gods or the supernatural - if so, cite one. In fact, by definition the supernatural would be entirely unknowable - as soon as the supernatural manifested itself in nature, it would become measurable, quantitatively or qualitatively. Thus god cannot be observed. So what is the source of the concept of god? There is only one option left. The human mind is a wonderous thing, capable of infinite invention. Is it really so hard to see that anthropomorphizing the universe would be but a small thing for our minds to do?I take issue with one other comment: "To not believe in the possibility of something because there is no empirical evidence is antithetical to the scientific mind." Actually science reserves acceptance of new theories until experiments or observations are made which provide proof. For example, one of the fallacies of the anti-evolution crowd is that evolution is just an unproven theory - in fact much evidence exists to support it (the fossil record, genetics). And even those theories which remain unproven but which influence science (string theory, for one) must satisfy certain basic conditions: being logically consistent and not refuting previously made measurements or observations. But most importantly, science still reserves acceptance of unproven theories, like string theory, no matter how beautiful they are.posted 12/30/2007 at 02:00:25
Aha, a believer in Chopra's uber-consciousness! You say, "I simply think that 'our' intelligence is not a singularity, but is instead a dim awareness of the unfathomable intelligence that manifests existence."Please elaborate - what experiences (or learned information) have led you to this conclusion? Is it just an idea that makes you feel good about your existence? Talk about narcissism.You object to phrases like "a shame". Must no one ever express an opinion? You confuse strong opinion with fundamentalism. Here is Merriam-Websters" definition of fundamentalism: "a movement or attitude stressing strict and literal adherence to a set of basic principles". So application of the term would seem to depend on the existence of a set of basic principles.Hate to tell ya, but there is no atheist bible. This cannot be emphasized enough: THERE IS NO ATHEISTIC DOGMA. And you don"t get around this fact by saying, "but atheism stresses strict adherence to the fact that god does not exist " failing to leave open the possibility that She does." Why not?, you ask. Well, I"ll tell ya.The god concept is an invention of the human mind " it simply serves as mental plaster to temporarily fill the holes in our understanding. It played a useful role for our primitive ancestors who needed to find some explanation for the seemingly cruel and capricious phenomena they witnessed. But we are no longer primitives. There is no empirical evidence for gods or the supernatural. As a consequence, believing in gods has as much credibility as believing in fairies or the Loch Ness monster. Would you argue that someone who does not believe in Santa Claus is a fundamentalist? Must we leave open the possibility that he really does exist just because some human beings believe in him?posted 12/29/2007 at 15:27:51
And what language would you find acceptable from an atheist? Is there a rule book? Please cite those examples where I come across as "devout". Having strong opinions does not make one devout or fundamentalist.By extension, are you put off by a True Believer who sounds logical or rational? Must a True Believer always come across as a schizophrenic nut-case? If an atheist must never sound "devout", it follows that a religionist must never sound "moderate".In a concurrent article on Huffpo, David Horton makes the point that True Believers tar atheists with the religion brush because they cannot accept a human being who does belong to some form of religion. I think its something else. Calling atheists devout or fundamentalist serves two purposes: first, it is an attempt to confuse the argument. By accusing your opponents of being no different from yourself, you disarm them - it's like a member of the KKK trying to justify their beliefs by pointing out that some blacks don't like white people. Second, it's a thinly veiled attempt to anger atheists. What better way to raise the bile of someone than to accuse them of being the very thing they most despise.Please do respond. You should answer three questions: How may atheists discuss their views without sounding "devout"? (Cite examples where I used this language in my post.) By extension, what language do you accept from True Believers - must they ALWAYS sound devout? And what is your real motivation for making this charge - are you really confused by what atheism means, or are you just trying to goad atheists without actually defending your side?posted 12/29/2007 at 09:34:30
Cute. But your senses do record sound and gravity. They are measurable.A more apt comparison would be that between god and fairies, or god and the Loch Ness monster. Empirical evidence is what is lacking in these cases. (Ooh, I forgot about those grainy photos of flippers rising out of the water.)posted 12/28/2007 at 21:22:36
Atheism is the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. Why do you insist on enslaving yourself to the irrational? Let go of the silly need for the supernatural, and stand up and become a human being.Only when you become an atheist will you be able to face the Big Questions with nothing more than your own cognitive abilities. Only then will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.How dare you belittle the morality of others simply because they do not share your personal god-belief. If you really feel that the claims of mere human beings to know anything about spirituality are worthless, then why are YOU commenting here? YOU should be silent on the subject as well. You know the saying: doctor heal thyself.Religion is the enemy of mankind. But I know how difficult it is to let go of that crutch. Remember: the slave may come to love the slavemaster, but he is still a slave.posted 12/28/2007 at 17:18:24
Realizing that you meant to be humorous, I went back and re-read the article. I found this comedic gem:"They Say Yes More Than They Say No.Naysayers are a downer. 'No' closes our hearts like cholesterol. (Naturally, this excludes saying 'No' to drugs or other self-destructive, noxious or illegal behaviors.) 'Yes' affirms life. People always would rather hear yes rather no. Unless it's when you ask your doctor, 'Do I have herpes?' "Priceless! "They say yes more than they say no" followed by "Do I have herpes?" Hee hee! Watch out Christian girls - if you say yes too often, you'll be visiting the doctor on a regular basis.posted 12/28/2007 at 17:02:33
Pandu, you're a card.Under another article you mentioned actually having seen Krishna, to which I ask: How do you know? Is not one aspect of Krishna as a trickster? Perhaps it was just an enticement to seduce you away from the true path - the path that leads to atheism.posted 12/28/2007 at 16:49:23
You're wrong.Atheism is the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. The Buddha attained true enlightenment when he left the supernatural behind. For this, he is rightly praised.The CORE beliefs of Buddhism - the ideas most directly attributable to the source - are a guide for living in the here and now. There is no reference to the supernatural.But the Buddha also knew how difficult it is to become an atheist - more importantly, how difficult it is to become one who does not believe in the supernatural at all. Witness yourself how difficult it is for you to leave behind the need to believe in gods.As for any reference to the supernatural (or Buddha's divinity) in Buddhist writings, these were later additions - mud thrown onto the teacher's message by less than enlightened followers. Thus Buddhism became a religion. A shame, really.posted 12/28/2007 at 16:44:00
I thought this article was serious, until I read this:"Have you noticed? Santa ho-ho-ho's his way down the chimney. The Dalai Lama giggles his way to enlightenment. Alfred E. Neuman has that eternal grin. The Laughing Buddha is, well, laughing. Spiritual people are happy."Santa and Alfred E. Neuman. Rich.posted 12/28/2007 at 16:30:33
They Still Deliver My Mail on Yom Kippur
I repeat: Krishna is also a trickster. How can you be sure it was the real Krishna and not an enticement to seduce you away from the true path.I thought I saw Hanuman once, but then he flung poo at me.posted 12/21/2007 at 18:18:21
Yes, there are at least 3 problems that I can see with being a "moderate" believer:First, the problem of fuzzy belief. Every religion that I am aware of has an accepted canon - its holy books. It seems that most moderate believers do not want to be painted with the "literalist" brush. But then, which parts of the canon do you choose to believe? Do you really get to pick and choose passages? If you are a moderate christian, do you believe Jesus woke up the dead? Is the Bible the word of god revealed to a select few? Today we would call people who hear god lunatics. By narrowing your focus to just those parts of the canon which meet modern acceptability, you remove the divinity from Jesus.Second, the "Tower of Babel" problem. By molding the religion of your choosing to your own personal needs and morality, you make your interpretation unique to you. How then is communal religious practice possible? Oh sure, your idea of god may overlap with someone else's in broad ways, but dig deep enough, and you will find differences with the other's notion of god. Thus god just becomes the adult form of the childhood imaginary friend - no one else can see YOUR imaginary sky-daddy, but they humor you that he exists. Also, why adopt a religion at all if you are just going to force it to conform to the ideas and morality that you already possess?Third, the problem of appeasing the fundies. Slice it any way you want, if you are going to attach the label of "Christian" to yourself, then you are giving tacit support to the most virulent of your Faith. Otherwise, you will find yourself saying, "I am the REAL christian, not those other guys." If you oppose fundamentalist christians, then why label yourself with the same name as they? Being a little bit religious is like being a little bit pregnant.posted 12/21/2007 at 14:37:04
Ah, but Krishna is also a trickster - perhaps it wasn't Krishna you saw at all, but an enticement to seduce you away from the true path to knowledge. You never can know for sure with visions. Hee hee.posted 12/21/2007 at 14:07:39
Other characteristics of human societies that have existed throughout time and nearly universally (thus qualifying as traditions) include: slavery, the secondary status of women, homophobia, racism, child abuse.Do you see no harm in continuing these traditions either? (And don't say, "but not in America!" Ask a women, or black, or gay, or Muslim living in this country how enlightened America is. Or just look at our history.)posted 12/21/2007 at 10:13:50
Atheism marks the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. The last step on the spiritual journey is to let go of the supernatural entirely. Buddha was an atheist, you know - and for that, he is rightly venerated.Only when you let go of the need for a sky-daddy to hold your hand will you begin to stand up and become fully human. Only then can you face the Big Questions with honesty and your own cognitive abilities. Only then can you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.Letting go of an irrational belief system (racism, sexism, nationalism, religion) can be the most difficult thing you will ever do - you have tied your self identity too tightly to these irrational modes of thinking, and to challenge them can feel like an attack on your core sense of self. But you must try to break free of the chains of illogic. The future of our species and planet may depend on it.Remember: the slave may come to love the slavemaster, but he is still a slave.posted 12/21/2007 at 10:06:08
Religion is the enemy of mankind. Religion enslaves human beings to the irrational. It is as morally repugnant as slavery, rape, or murder. I love my species and wish it to be all that it can. As an atheist, I cannot sit idly by and watch the evil of religion go unopposed.posted 12/20/2007 at 20:33:36
The truth is your Faith (as opposed to your faith) most likely has given sanction to its practitioners to go on murderous rampages in the past - the Crusades, Inquisition, etc.posted 12/20/2007 at 13:31:39
So it's not slavery that is bad, it's the slavemasters.Without the illogic of christianity, these politicians could not pander to it.posted 12/20/2007 at 13:28:04
JustAnotherJoe, what nonsense. Are you suggesting that your belief system is somehow divorced from how you treat other people? To cite one example, a vast number of Americans believe their religion gives them the right to discriminate against gays - are their beliefs really unimportant?posted 12/20/2007 at 12:50:54
Absolutely perfect!Thank you.posted 12/20/2007 at 10:37:32
Onward Christian Soldiers
You say, "Fundamentalists are those who refuse to accept that their models might, in any significant way, be incomplete or mistaken. Besides certain Christians and Muslims (but not the majority in either case), there are fundamentalist atheists..."NO, no, no! Can't we put this silly "fundamentalist atheist" BS to bed?Let's take your assertion that fundies are people who refuse to accept that their models might be incomplete or mistaken. By implication, this means that atheists must always keep open the option that god exists - in other words, to be agnostics. But "god" is an invention of the human mind - the god concept is mental plaster used to fill the holes in our understanding so we don't feel so scared at night. Gods are security blankets for adults. There is no empirical evidence for gods. Let god show herself but once, and there would be no atheists. Should I also have to accept that fairies or UFOS or unicorns may exist just because someone else believes in them?What people really mean when they use a term like "fundamentalist atheists" is that they wish atheists would just shut up and go away. They object to anyone with strong anti-god views from speaking their mind. Answer this question objectively: What influence do atheists have on our culture? Virtually none - no atheist can get elected to political office, no atheist message is apparent on TV or in movies. Irrational religion is the norm - no one questions it. So why are you so scared of a few atheists speaking their minds? Can't your god take it?No group has ever waged war or oppressed the True Believing masses in the name of holy Atheism. Oh, I know some religionista is going to shout, "But what about the commies?" The communists were just as religious as anyone else - they simply replaced heavenly deities with Earth-bound cults of personality. In the end, worshiping Stalin is no different from worshiping Santa-god.posted 12/19/2007 at 09:50:51
You say, "...Godless, cynical atheists, like most of you, with no moral compass."You've got it upside-down. MORALITY BASED ON THE FEAR OF A SUPERNATURAL SPANKING IS NO MORALITY AT ALL.Religious "morality" is just a response premised on the fear of god's wrath or the promise of heavenly reward (you know, like 70 virgins). It's behavior modification, not morality. Whack a dog on the nose with a newspaper, and he will "choose" to stop peeing on the carpet - but does the dog exhibit moral thinking? The threat of hellfire and brimstone may prevent you from sleeping with your neighbor's wife - but is that morality?Atheism is the highest form of spiritual development in human beings. Only when you give up the need for a sky-daddy to hold your hand will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion. Until then, you are not fully human.posted 12/19/2007 at 09:22:52
Celebrating The Spirit Of The Season
"Do you think God can be understood by mundane human intelligence?"Since "god" is an invention of human minds, all of the essence of the god concept is held within those minds.Your question only has meaning to those accept the god concept a priori - i.e., True Believers. But god - a truly empty nothing of a word - does not exist without human minds to make him/her up.posted 12/17/2007 at 14:58:54
Romney's Founders
"However the God question is not as myriad as you make it sound. At its simplest it's either/or. Each side, mathematically speaking, has a 50 percent chance of being correct."Urgh... I teach mathematics, including a course in probability and statistics - and I can point out two fallacies in your statement. The first is the notion that the "god question" is measurable. Sure, if you could take a random sample of universes and count the number of universes with gods and the number without gods, you could establish a probability - but I think you see the impossibility of that. The second fallacy is the notion that all either-or choices are 50-50. Rainfall on any given day in the future is an either-or choice - either it rains or it doesn't. So is the chance of rain tomorrow 50%? I don't know where you live, but where I live, rain does not fall on half the days of the year.As for who has the burden of proof in the "god question", I am surprised that you cannot follow my argument. Let me try again: if I told you I believe a 3-headed woman with green skin lives on Mars, even though I've never seen her, what would your reaction be? By your logic, you would have to accept (or at least, respect) my belief as valid because you could no more disprove it than I could prove it. But lacking empirical evidence, my claim is just a whimsy - a figment of my imagination. The burden is on me to prove my assertion. You should not be expected to travel to Mars to verify that no such woman exists.posted 12/12/2007 at 23:47:39
Oh sure, there was a momentary blip of sanity when a handful of liberal views snuck into this bible-thumpin, gun-totin, far-right-wing country - "crazy lefty" stuff like the civil rights movement. But since then, this country has slid right back into the crapper.And gay marriage in the 1960s? I missed that one.posted 12/12/2007 at 23:19:46
modsmuse, You say, "The burden of proof is on whoever is making an assertion, regardless what the content of the assertion is."If true, do you not recognize the "Tower of Babel" that would create? If every assertion, for or against, is equally valid, then the universe is truly schizophrenic. If I assert that the moon is made of cheese, how do you counter it? Forget the photos of astronauts cavorting on the moon - everyone knows the moon landings were filmed in a hangar at Area 51. So, my assertion is as valid as your counter assertion - or maybe you agree the moon is made of cheese?Think about what this does to religion. Let's say we both believe in god. Although our conceptions of god might overlap in many significant ways, we would never be in 100% agreement as to the Almighty's nature - I might picture my god as having a little less hair or a bigger nose. Well, since both images are equally valid, this implies two gods - in fact, as many gods as there are believers. Then why discuss religion at all? Your beliefs about your personal god would have no meaning in anyone else's world, and communal religious experiences would cease to be possible.When one invents a fantastical notion of any sort, it cannot be the burden of others to disprove it. Hey, I've got a unicorn in my backyard, no kidding. And aliens abduct me every night, and my mom's a bigfoot. Go ahead, prove me wrong.posted 12/11/2007 at 23:37:00
It's not the atheist's burden to prove that god does not exist. It's the True Believers burden to prove that he/she does. Human beings invented the concept of god based on their own cognitive shortcomings - believing in god is not the result of empirical observations. So why does an atheist have to disprove a chimera? My 3-year-old is convinced a fat guy with a white beard and a red suit enters our house each Christmas to leave toys behind. Now although I do not believe in Santa, I will not try to convince him otherwise for a few more years. By your argument, I can no more prove that Santa doesn't exist any more than my child can prove he does. So denying Santa is merely an appeal to "faith"?If you really are an atheist, you should know better.posted 12/11/2007 at 15:21:05
Why do you insist that liberal values have taken over in the US? Its actually the other way around.Since the late 1960s we have seen in this country: Nixon elected twice, Reagan elected twice, Bush Sr. once, and (this one blows my mind) Dubya twice. We have seen the rise of the religious right, widespread opposition to gay marriage, and continual attacks on abortion rights. Environmental protections have been all but dismantled, nearly every sector of the economy has been deregulated, unions are in decline, and most citizens have brain-washed into believing that paying even a penny of tax is submitting to Satan.It's the right that has triumphed. If America is in a mess, it's your mess.posted 12/11/2007 at 15:09:59
Ah, the teleological argument. Question: could the universe be even more orderly? If so, then this is hardly the best of all possible worlds, and our creator is not so benevolent after all.Human beings are an evolutionary product of THIS universe. As such, the "beauty" and "order" human beings think they are seeing is actually a reflection of the fact that WE were designed by the universe - the universe was not designed for us. Stop navel-gazing.If the universe consisted of a different set of physical laws and cosmological constants, then we would be a product of that universe instead. Why, I bet we would think THAT universe was perfect, too! Finding order and beauty in an environment you were designed for is NO proof of an intelligent designer.Consider these absurd observations:Fish need water to breathe, and where do you find fish? In water!The chlorophyl in plants requires sunlight to manufacture energy - and the sun rises every morning to shine on plants!Every time I wash my car, birds poop on it!Miracles all.posted 12/11/2007 at 09:45:56
Sherri Shepherd Doesn't Get That Whole BC Thing, Insists "Jesus Came First"
You're both doing it to each other! Anyone who writes comments here is trying to prove their superiority to people who can't write.Oh no, now I'm doing it too!posted 12/05/2007 at 10:28:16
Ahh, the superorganism answer. Hmmm... I wonder why we should not be surprised? (And no wonder you oppose Richard Dawkins so stridently, that old Selfish-Gene numbskull.)I know that you have more articles to follow, but I hope you will address a few points:You may make the case that New Atheism is a superorganism, but how does that make it a religion? Do naked mole rats practice a religion?If you are going to try and make the case that New Atheism is a superorganism, that would beg the question : shouldn't a SUPERorganism consist of MANY sub-units? You've identified Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens (and maybe a handful of others) as New Atheists. Where are their minions? Can a half dozen cells make a superorganism? Hey, I go to all the atheist lodge meetings, and I have yet to see anyone wearing a "Dawkins Is God" T-shirt.Does every widely shared idea constitute a superorganism? Perhaps you stake your claims on the basis of book sales. Well, Harry Potter books sell more than Dawkins, et. al., and I don't think you want to make the case that "Potterism" is a superorganism, or a religion. Do religions really spread non-violently? Seems Christianity didn't really take off until it got the backing of the Roman emperor who then proceeded to persecute competing religions such as Manichaism. And as the big C spread across Europe, it was certainly unwise for the individuals of any nation to cling to the old ways once the king had adopted the new religion (just ask the Cathars). Oh, and you might ask the natives of the New World how much choice they had when Christianity arrived. Islam owes as much to the sword as to Muhammad (thank you, internet anonymity). I wonder how many mosques the non-violent Hindus have burnt down? Even non-proselytizing religions such as Judaism have bloody episodes in their past. I think you need to provide more evidence (perhaps a side article?).posted 01/28/2008 at 16:48:10
The "Soul Hypothesis" (Part 2)
No. I'm starting to doubt this evolution stuff.;)posted 01/31/2008 at 11:44:07
Hey, I think I did answer it - see my second point. But I'll give it another go:I love my species. I love this planet. I want to see both of them progress positively. THAT is what drives me.I honestly see religion as a threat and a dead-end. It enslaves my species to the irrational. To me it is as morally repugnant as slavery or child abuse. Religion is the enemy of humanity.It's difficult for someone who is religious to understand that. It amounts to such an attack on one's sense of self that it angers and frightens True Believers. Sorry. But you need to be shaken up. Religious people hold religion to be beyond criticism - to be untouchable. But if you truly believed that your religion was the Truth, then you would not be frightened by doubt. The venom that most believers throw at atheists is telling - you *know* it's all just a house of cards. Remember the story of the little boy who is the only one to tell the Emporer he has no clothes?I said I didn't want to "convert" anyone - but I do want atheists to inject their views into the discussion. Hopefully an open-minded believer will be inspired to start that last leg of the spiritual journey. But that's not even important. If atheists sat on the sidelines - just laughing at all the True Believers bowing and scraping to their white-bearded sky-daddy - and said nothing, then that would be the height of nihilism. We atheists must act because we see the futility, danger, and inhumanity of religion.posted 01/31/2008 at 10:16:16
Hey, Muse! We were wondering when you would show up.It may please you to know that I champion childhood - I am male after all. (I tell everyone that I am raising 3 boys - my wife tells everyone she is raising 4.) But children believe all manner of strange things - "step on a crack, break your mother's back", boogymen in the closet, Santa lives, the Easter Bunny lives, etc. This is because they assign a little angry god to every phenomenon they encounter. They don't have the cognitive abilities nor experience to differentiate between probable truth and obvious fiction.Here's the interesting point: most children eventually decide they want to become adults. Adulthood marks a time when we begin to coalesce these disparate godlings (cracks, dark closets, etc.) into a more cohesive form. Somewhere in Huffpo I have a piece about the hierarchy of religious belief (check my profile).The journey from childhood to adulthood (whether actual or metaphysical) involves necessary changes to our cognitive, moral, and spiritual levels of development. Unlike Peter Pan, no one really wants to stay a child forever - its just not that fun. In fact, staying a child forever would be a nightmare (check out stories like Harlan Ellison's "Jefty is Five", or Gunther Grass' "The Tin Drum").But please don't think of me as a cold-hearted meanie with no sense of humor. You should have seen me and the lads "digging for dinosaur bones" in our flower garden yesterday.posted 01/31/2008 at 09:47:07
Your opening sentence raises a side issue I would like to address:You are correct in admonishing us (HS, Dap, and me) for "ganging up" on MTG. I have felt that way too sometimes (ModerationMuse, where are ya?). Speaking for myself, I know I must always step back and ask, why am I engaging in this debate? Why does it mean so much to me?First, I recognize that we are all on the "journey". Each of us must come to our own understanding of these issues ON OUR OWN. Beating you over the head with a baseball bat will not turn you into a baseball player - the same is true for these arguments. Even though it happened to me at a young age, I know that I came to atheism only after careful contemplation - no one led me to that choice. And I do not expect to "convert" others.But it is important to put these ideas out there (my second point). For one thing, just as my ideas have been sharpened by debating on Huffpo (and elsewhere), the debate gets folks on the other side of the issue to think about their position as well - to hone their arguments. (And perhaps it may cause someone to begin that journey to atheism.) Also, I think these ideas do matter - religious ideas play a crucial role in our political lives, and if someone like myself feels we must be wary of these influences, it my duty to say so.Hope that wasn't too far off topic.posted 01/28/2008 at 10:28:06
I like this.Yes, much of religious thought (notions of souls, gods, or uber-minds) seems to be driven by navel-gazing. It amounts to saying, "The universe must care about ME!" Or, "There must be some greater purpose to all this, because I am so wonderful." Or, "I am SO important, that I must live forever."You will only attain enlightenment when you conclude that each of us is a tiny, tiny part of a much greater universe - and it is ridiculous to think that the universe takes any notice of us. You suddenly realize that what really matters are the people you love and who love you - and by extension, your own species and planet. It centers you in the here-and-now, and makes you face up to reality responsibly and honestly. There is no supreme being marking down your every cough and giggle. There is no glorious after-life with 72 virgins waiting to tend to your every need. There is no ghostly "soul" to make you bigger than you already are. Stop looking out the meta-physical window waiting for the supreme mailman to arrive.posted 01/28/2008 at 06:26:18
As always, definitions trip us up. What I meant to imply when I said, "...the set of traits required for being human", was : "...the set of traits required for each of us to be a positive contributor to the human community." I still wonder if you accept Deepak's notion of "soul". Does the "soul" represent something outside the brain? What evidence is there of this, besides your own fervent hopes? What will happen to your "soul" when you die? You may not want to debate what a "soul" is, but then you cannot make lofty pronouncements about it either - if you will not allow us to define or set parameters for this concept. then "soul" will forever remain a personal notion, useless for discussion.posted 01/27/2008 at 21:59:24
You are correct - I should have limited myself to addressing "souls". It was late, and I mis-wrote.Let's try again : So your argument amounts to : "You had better leave open the possibility of SOULS because you never know... wouldn't you PEOPLE WHO DON'T BELIEVE IN SOULS be pissed if you found out (somehow) that souls actually exist and you were in denial all along."Do you not see the absurdity of your argument? It it is a laughable idea to someone who DOES NOT BELIEVE IN SOULS. It's like me saying to you, "You'd better wear these special anti-Bigfoot underwear when you go out into the woods, because you never know..."You even ask us to, "...imagine there's something that's worth a lot more than $1000" Yeah, that's all we can do - "imagine" the soul concept just as we imagine unicorns and fairies - because, like these, the soul is an invention of the human mind. This "soul" acts as a convenient security blanket when you're all by yourself having Deep Thoughts. posted 01/27/2008 at 07:49:48
"soul aka kindness, forgiveness, happiness, love for family and our fellow man"So "soul" is just your name for the set of all human traits you see as positive or good. I don't think that's what Deepak meant - see his list of "soul qualities", above. I am what some would call a "strong" atheist - I deny not only the existence of gods, but the existence of any aspect of the supernatural (including souls). And yet, I recognize kindness, forgiveness, happiness, love for family, and love for our fellow man as positive and worthy of admiration and emulation. What you have identified as "having a soul", is actually the set of traits required for being human.posted 01/27/2008 at 07:32:50
Too true, friend HS! I have posited under another comment section that if the supernatural existed, it could never reveal itself. Every phenomenon we experience is of the natural world - should any aspect of the supernatural attempt to manifest itself, it would immediately become observable and measurable, thus rendering it non-supernatural. A miracle is nothing more than an effect for which we do not yet know the cause. The obvious conclusion to this thought experiment is to realize that gods, souls, and uber-minds are merely inventions of the human brain. Like fairies and gnomes and dragons, they may have helped primitive man make sense of his world - but today they are simply dangerous remnants of our past, like your appendix. It speaks to the mental health of our species that so many still cling to these childish notions.posted 01/27/2008 at 00:55:35
What is this thing you have experienced as a "soul"? Is it euphoria, awe, wonder, love? All of these things and more can be generated by drug use.The human brain is a wondrous thing - it can give rise to philosophers, artists, and scientists. But it can also give rise to schizophrenics. It may serve as a convenient security blanket to believe that you have a "soul". But it's just your fear of death or loneliness that drives you. To one who still clings to the childish notions of god or souls or uber-minds, it must be very terrifying indeed to contemplate an existence without those things - it is like staring into the void. And yet you will not acheive true enlightment until you let those crutches go and stand up for yourself.posted 01/27/2008 at 00:40:49
So your argument amounts to : "You had better leave open the possibility of god because you never know... wouldn't you atheists be pissed if you died and found yourself in front of a petty, jealous Santa-god? Boy, you'd catch it in the pants then!"Do you not see the absurdity of your argument? Not only does that imply that your god is nothing more than a mafia boss who must be appeased at all times, but it is a laughable idea to someone who has already rejected the notion of god. It's like me saying to you, "You'd better wear these special anti-Bigfoot underwear when you go out into the woods, because you never know..."Only when you embrace atheism will you become a fully realized human being. Only then will you be able to face the Big Questions with honesty and your own cognitive abilities. Only then will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion - rather than a morality based on the threat of a supernatural spanking.Why do you wish to see our species forever enslaved to irrationality? Remember : the slave often learns to love the slave-master, but he is still a slave.posted 01/27/2008 at 00:30:47
"The list of soul qualities is a familiar one:The soul is your connection to God or the divine. The soul is the source of existence.The soul is the seat of bliss or eternal happiness.The soul exists beyond death; it is the seed of immortality.These aren't propositions to which a person can simply say yes or no."Ummm....No.No.No.No.You seem to be making this stuff up as you go along. There is no soul, there is no god, there is no uber-mind.posted 01/26/2008 at 00:54:39
I'm a Man of Faith, You're a Crackpot
This has to be the most hilarious article I have read on Huffpo for some time. You're dumping on Scientology for believing in (1) resurrection after death and (2) the existence of magical "ghosts" (Thetans) which take over our bodies. Your dumping on Mormonism for (3) claiming divine revelation for its holy books and because its adherents (4) wear special holy items and (5) alter their diet.Hmmm.... (1) Christians believe JC rose from the dead (not to mention Lazarus, who did it BEFORE Jesus), (2) Most Western religions believe in ghosts that inhabit our bodies... they're called "souls", (3) Western religious tradition teaches that its holy books were divinely inspired, (4) do you wear a cross around your neck? Do you know any Christian who does?, and (5) up until recently, most Roman Catholics did not eat meat on Friday (and Ultra-Orthodox Jews have a whole laundry list of food no-no's).Seems that you don't like Christians or Jews very much, either. (I think we already know your opinion of Muslims.)posted 01/24/2008 at 13:12:56
The eight-legged god
Sure, you could call the universe "god", but then "god" is just another word for universe and has no special meaning. Unless you want to anthropomorphize all of reality, the real question is, "Is there anything outside of the universe (i.e., the supernatural)?" Assume the supernatural "exists". How would we ever know? As soon as the supernatural interacted with reality, it would become observable and measurable - i.e., part of reality. If the clouds parted and some giant Monty-Pythonesque head appeared, bellowing for our worship, what would that prove? That a large tyrranical being with the ability to move clouds existed. If I am right, then there is no experience that will ever prove the existence of god. Suppose a large, super-intelligent being appeared claiming to be god. Our experience of that being would be merely that of a large, super-intelligent entity existing in the universe - nothing more. Given time, we could develop technology that would mimic any act performed by that being. Any "supernatural" aspect of that being would remain unseen and not a part of our experience - i.e., effectively non-existent. All a miracle is, is an effect for which we do not yet know the cause. The situation is much like Descartes' dualism problem - Descartes (much like Deepak Chopra) wanted to separate the mind and the body, but he realized such a separation gave rise to conundrums not easily resolved. Descartes and his followers had to invent all manner of contortions to try to fix the problem. If you want to believe in some aspect of "god" separate from reality, that aspect will forever remain unknown - the best you can do is make it up. Because no empirical evidence of god is possible, god as supernatural being must be an invention of the human mind. So why bother?posted 01/24/2008 at 00:03:17
Why I Wrote "The Great Awakening"
The religious experience in human beings can be viewed as a hierarchy, with at least 4 levels:Level I (the lowest level) comprises the polytheistic religions, where we assign a little angry god to every phenomenon - a rain god, a sun god, a god of war.Level II is acheived when we coalesce all these godlings into one EXTERNAL god - making it easier to know who to grovel before. Traditional Western religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) are stuck at this level. This level would seem to be an improvement over polytheism, but this one external god is still a petty, angry, (usually male) tyrant sitting on a cloud throwing lightning bolts. Level III is to INTERNALIZE god - to find god in each of us. People who have acheived this level recognize the absurdity of a white-bearded superman, but they still need the security blanket of belief. Buddhists (though probably not Buddha himself) and some modern Western religionists (moderate christians and the like) are stuck here.Level IV (the highest level) is to drop the need for the god concept altogether - i.e., to choose atheism. The Buddha acheived enlightenment when he attained this level. The fourth level is reached when you realize that every version of the supernatural is unnecessary - whether god is external or internal doesn't matter.Only when you reach this fourth level will you begin to face up to the Big Questions with honesty and your own cognitive abilities. Only then will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion - rather than the threat of a supernatural spanking. Only by embracing atheism will you become a fully realized human being.When you finally come to atheism, you will look back on religion with incredulity - you can only shake your head and laugh. This is why the Buddha is often depicted as laughing. But dropping the need to believe in god can be the most difficult thing you will ever do. Remember : The slave often comes to love the slave-master, but he is still a slave. Good luck on your journey.posted 01/23/2008 at 11:46:23
Atheism as a Stealth Religion III: Four Questions and Six Possible Answers
Touche!posted 01/17/2008 at 10:29:03
Touche!posted 01/17/2008 at 06:46:26
Nice, Dap. You echo a question I posed to a True Believer on Huffpo long ago : if you woke up tomorrow and realized that god did not exist, would you cease to be a moral person? Would you steal and kill and trample your neighbors flowers just because the threat of a supernatural spanking had been taken away? I now add your idea to that question : if you woke up tomorrow without god, would that song you sing along to in your car every morning move you any less? Would you not still lose yourself in a painting? In fact, you would come to love your fellow human beings even more. Suddenly you realize, "A human being created that. A human being moved me to tears with their song or painting." Muse, you often cite Milton, et al., as examples of the positive influence of Christianity on Western civilization. Is it not possible that what you are actually praising is the innate creativity, brilliance, and beauty of human beings. As far as I know, god never held a paint brush or strummed a guitar.posted 01/16/2008 at 09:42:00
I know - God doesn't have much of a sense of humor, does he? posted 01/16/2008 at 09:25:11
Sorry, the first post wasn't coming up, so I repeated it. There oughta be some way to edit your own posts after they are sent.posted 01/15/2008 at 20:32:20
Interesting, isn't it, how two implacable foes such as we (just kidding) can sometimes come together in agreement. You believe that these books will have less relevance in 10 years because they are wrong. I believe these books will have less relevance in 10 years because THERE IS NO NEW ATHEISM MOVEMENT.posted 01/15/2008 at 20:16:38
Interesting, isn't it, how two implaccable foes such as we (just kidding) can come together in agreement. You believe that these books will be less relevant in 10 years because they are wrong. I believe these books will be less relevant in 10 years because THERE IS NO NEW ATHEISM MOVEMENT.We (the author and those posting comments) are a community deeply concerned about these questions. It is easy for us to become myopic. While we debate the coming "great struggle" between atheism and religion in the 21st century, a leading candidate for president in the GOP is Mike Huckabee. Joe Six-pack doesn't even know who Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens are. I think we are in danger of missing the forest for the trees. It bears repeating: THERE IS NO NEW ATHEISM MOVEMENT.posted 01/15/2008 at 19:25:30
Aargh! I mangled the second paragraph under "1. Atheists". The last sentence should read, "...and second, what she represented seems more like a cult-of-personality than atheism."Take heed all ye who would comment: Author, proof-read thyself.posted 01/15/2008 at 11:44:50
Prof. Wilson,In the spirit of proposing questions and possible solutions, I hope you will indulge me:Q1) Is New Atheism a movement?Q2) If it is not a movement, can it be a religion?For an idea to become a movement, it must have leaders and followers. You have identified the leaders (the holy triumvirate), but who are the followers? They would seem to originate from two populations, which we shall now consider:1. Atheists (those who do not believe in a supernatural entity). Do atheists in general champion Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens as the voices of leadership? If so, what evidence is there to support this? It can't be the fact that their books are best-sellers - Harry Potter books sell better, yet no one is making the claim that "Potterism" is a movement. And yes, other atheists do defend these authors on Huffpo (and elsewhere) when under attack. But can these defenders be said to be followers? Are their world-views or daily activities significantly changed by these books?I mean, I'm a card carrying member of my local atheist lodge (tee hee) and I go to all the meetings and rallies, but I never see a "Dawkins for President" button on any lapels. Atheists are largely individuals that would seem best suited for identifying blind faith movements - I don't think they will fall into lockstep with anyone. You mentioned Ayn Rand in your first article - first, her "movement" can hardly be said to have been terribly influential, and second, what she was represented seems more like an Earth-bound cult-of-personality than atheism.2. True Believers (those who believe in a supernatural entity). Do you honestly believe that hordes of religionists are going to convert to atheism on the strength of these books? Can we dispense with this possibility?So where's the movement? Messrs D., H., and H. are provocative - they stir the pot. But in 5 years, 10 years, will anyone cite these books as still influential? We shall see...posted 01/15/2008 at 10:47:53
I was writing this in haste. The line, "But this only works if Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens truly constitute all of atheistic thought." should read, "But this only works if Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens have undue influence over atheistic thought."Remember that the intent of these authors is to be provocative. They are not writing for the consumption of other atheists - we don't need to be told why it's good to be an atheist, we already are. I don't think their books are best-sellers based on the buying power of atheists in the US.posted 01/14/2008 at 23:30:09
Wow, I am not that well-read in evolutionary biology (a shortcoming I must correct), so I had no idea that Messrs Wilson and Dawkins have a history of dispute outside of their views on atheism. Could this all be due to the disagreement between the gene-based vs. group-selection camps? H1, above, would suggest that. Which is not to suggest that Wilson's evolutionary views are wrong - how would I know? But it does color the argument differently.posted 01/14/2008 at 18:28:40
Too true. One of the problems with positing a supernatural is that the supernatural, if it existed, would be totally unknowable. As soon as the supernatural tried to reveal itself in nature, it would become observable and measurable. Even if the clouds parted and a Monty-Python-esque face appeared and commanded us all to bow before him, what would that prove? That a being with the ability to part clouds and yell really loud existed?All a miracle is, is an effect for which we currently lack knowledge of a cause.posted 01/14/2008 at 15:01:46
Nicely put. Another term for this is anthropomorphizing - "If bad things happen to me, then somebody in control must have it out for me." For primitive human beings, that thinking may have helped to temporarily plug holes in their understanding. You can imagine how such thinking would lead to behavior that attempted to appease the gods - animal sacrifice, body modification, diet, prayer. For modern human beings, anthropomorphizing the universe amounts to navel-gazing - "The universe cares about ME."posted 01/14/2008 at 14:49:50
Excellent! I like your approach, and agree with most of your ideas. I would like to see you address a few of the following issues, however:I still think you are confusing atheism as a specific idea about the existence of god with the statements of just THREE strongly opinionated authors. If you had said, "Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens are trying to establish a stealth religion", and backed it up with examples, then you might have an argument. But atheism didn't start with these three. It's like disagreeing with the methods of Al Sharpton, then using that opinion to make the blanket statement that the Civil Rights movement has gone off the rails.If atheism is a stealth religion, which of these explanations works for atheism? What you seem to be identifying as a religion in this article, is the belief in supernatural agents. This differs from your use of the term when you label atheism a stealth religion - there, if I read you right, a religion is any set of beliefs that inform our world-view. "Ah," you say, "What about H2? Are not Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens profiting from atheism?" But this only works if Dawkins-Harris-Hitchens truly constitute all of atheistic thought.Who decided that these six explanations for the existence of religion are the only possible ones? For that matter, why are each of these six plausible? You don't like it when others make definite pronouncements about religion, so why are your six choices more valid then others? I've got to run. More later...posted 01/14/2008 at 13:38:32
"I Know I'm Right, So Why Be Fair?"
You said, "That is why we call people like him a fundamentalist atheist ..."No, you call Dawkins a fundamentalist atheist because it makes a convenient sound-bite and confuses the argument. I dismiss the existence of Santa Claus out of hand - does that make me a fundamentalist "anti-Santa-ist"? Do I have to prove the non-existence of Santa? Dawkins is a STRONGLY OPINIONATED atheist, not a fundamentalist atheist. In point of fact, there is no such thing as a fundamentalist atheist. But its a waste of pixels to argue this point anymore. Let me leave you with this: if the existence of god were somehow proven to all human beings, and if someone then continued to deny the existence of god, THAT would be a fundamentalist atheist.posted 01/13/2008 at 20:22:14
Hey, HS! Yep, Sheldrake finds what he expects to find. For a brief, critical blurb about Sheldrake, check out the Skeptics Dictionary at skepdics.com.posted 01/13/2008 at 20:07:05
Atheism as a Stealth Religion II: Let's Get Real
By your own admission, you do not believe in an external, a priori god. Parse it any way you want, that means you have willfully chosen a belief system based on what you know to be a fiction. I don't have words for what I feel about this - it's like staring into the void. How can god be either end of a metaphor if god doesn't exist? You are not using god as a metaphor - you're simply attaching the word "god" to things.And a culture-myth you know to be baseless is called a fairy-tale.Consider these questions:Where will you go when you die? Metaphorical heaven? Mythical heaven? Do you pray? To whom (or what) do you pray? "Oh, Holy Metaphor, we beseech thee..."What is the source of your morality? A figure of speech? A desert fairy-tale set down by primitives 2000 years ago?Why have you chosen to believe in a myth you know to be a fantasy? Convenience? Peer pressure? To get a job promotion? And then you imply that many (most?) modern Christians share your definition of god. I hope not. I would not want to live in a world which exhibited such mass psychosis.I think I'm going to avoid Huffpo for a while. Coming back here to debate with people who willing adopt a fiction as their world-view makes me queasy.HeevenSteven, good luck. Keep up the good fight.posted 01/08/2008 at 01:03:22
You may be right, but I think it's something else. I think Mr. Wilson is objecting to a few strongly opinionated atheist authors citing science and reason in their books about atheism. Period. Like our friend, Zanti, he wants atheism to be a simple skeptical response to theism - the only thing atheists are allowed to say is, "Prove it." Then they are never allowed to say anything more on the subject.This is an attempt to close off atheism as a cognitive dead end. But no claim exists in a vacuum. A perfectly legitimate question for any atheist is, "OK, there is no god. Now what are the implications of that fact? And, why is the god concept so prevalent in human beings?" Are atheists not allowed to speculate on that? Mr. Wilson seems to be of the opinion that any use of science or reason, beyond simply saying "Prove it", is outside the bounds of atheistic thought, and constitutes a "stealth" religion when it appears.posted 01/07/2008 at 10:01:17
Yes, Zanti is an atheist who is afraid of admitting it. This is a direct quote from our friend Z (see our debate below): "If the belief in a god or gods is literal--i.e., if we truly believe in an invisible being pulling the marionette strings of eternity, then we're making one hell of a fantastic claim, yes.I, on the other hand, claim (along with a great many Christians) that God is a metaphor, a culture-wide myth, a human construct."And, most odd of all:"By the way, when atheists ask me the standard 'Why don't you believe in Zeus?' question, I respond that Zeus isn't the popular god of the moment."So apparently, Zanti's religious belief is based on numbers - if fewer people in the US believed in the Christian god, then he would also stop believing in that god. Weird, no?Zanti's thinking seems dangerous to me. Such people are easily swayed by ANY culture-wide myth, like fascism. Am I being to harsh?posted 01/07/2008 at 09:42:30
I sat at my computer for 10 minutes after reading your comment not knowing what to say. All this time you've been defending something you KNOW to be a fairy-tale just because it is widely popular. It's like believing in Harry Potter just because so many people have read the book. You actually admit, "By the way, when atheists ask me the standard 'Why don't you believe in Zeus?' question, I respond that Zeus isn't the popular god of the moment." And if Bozo the Clown was the popular god of the moment, you would be a Bozo-ian? Probably go around with a big red nose and a Seltzer bottle just to prove your faith.If god is just a culture-wide myth, then what do you REALLY think will happen to you when you die? What is the ultimate source of your morality? Did Jesus actually live - and if so, was he divine? I don't deny that a myth can contain certain truths about the human condition. Myths can be an effective way of conveying information (Little Red Ridinghood probably started out as a cautionary tale about little girls trusting strangers). But even if everyone else thinks they are true, YOU are your own person. Based on sales of the Weekly World News, belief in UFOS and Bigfoot and Batboy is pretty wide-spread in our culture - do you believe in these, too?If belief in god were to drop below 50% in the US population, would you give it up as well? It could hardly be considered to be culture-wide at that point. If you moved to a Muslim country, would you start believing in Allah? Here are some other culture-wide and historically common traits of human beings:SexismRacismChild AbuseRapeViolenceHow many of these will you adopt as your own just because they seem intrinsic to the human condition?I must say that I am done with this "debate". I've got more important things to do.posted 01/07/2008 at 06:20:47
"On what basis can it make that claim?"I think I addressed that in the paragraph that followed. But just to be clear: religions require their adherents to base their world-view on fantasy (i.e., the belief that the phenomena of nature are due to unseen chimeras). THAT IS IRRATIONAL. Yes, the antithesis of religion is reason. If atheism is the rejection of religion, then atheism can lay claim to that which religion is not."...your brand of atheism..."What? How many types are there? " 'Their position (singular)'? Which would be...?"That the supernatural (gods, uber-mind, Santa) exists. Simple enough?"No, not unless you're making the same assertion. When I said that the burden of proof works both ways, I mean that it applies to the respective claims of both sides."You lost me here. OK, I don't believe in Santa. Is the burden of proof on me? Why do you not see the analogy? Let's say you're bald. You reveal this fact by saying, "I do not have hair." Would it not be absurd of me to say, "No. You have hair. It's just bald hair." Why do you get to say, "No. You have a belief system. It's just unbelief belief."posted 01/06/2008 at 23:05:19
You agree with me! Your words: "A skeptical stance does not constitute a belief system that is in any way equivalent to the claim being challenged. ...In a perfect world, atheism functions totally (or primarily) as a skeptical response to claims made on the behalf of religion. It does not share the burden of proof attached to religious claims so long as it addresses those claims without making *equivalent* counter-claims of its own."That's the whole ball of wax. That's the point I've been trying to make. Thank you.You may find this astonishing, but I have never read anything written by Dawkins, Harris, or Hitchens about atheism. Not because I dismiss them out of hand, but I've never felt the need to. As another commenter mentioned on Huffpo recently, I do not need anyone to tell me how to be an atheist - I already am. Now, if particular claims made by any of these authors in their books seem questionable, then of course you may bring up those points for debate. If Dawkins has made the claim that religion is a virus (and is not just using that phrase as a metaphor), then you have every right to expect him to back it up. But you have made a blanket statement about atheism (it being a belief system) that you now seem to want to restrict to particular claims made by a few atheist authors. It occurs to me that what you may actually be claiming is that EVERY human thought requires some level of "belief" - that truth is subjective, and any external truths (if they exist) are ultimately unknowable. Fair enough, but I think that takes us far afield of the current discussion. As HeevenSteven has pointed out (somewhere along this chain of commentary), we may need to define our terms more clearly. As HS has also mentioned, I'm starting to get a headache, too.posted 01/06/2008 at 22:35:53
Wow, it's right here: "Why demand proof for one and not the other? Because the first claim is fantastic and, if true, requires that we alter our universal perspective just a tad."And belief in gods is not fantastic? Why not?posted 01/06/2008 at 22:06:29
You're right, I should have left predestination off the list. Not only is it not something to be condemned over, but predestination (and the related topic of free will) is still an open question (and probably will always be).Free will may very well be an illusion. Personally speaking, I hope not. But consider the following example: A woman is standing in front of an open closet full of blouses. Choosing which one she will wear today may seem like a perfect example of the exercise of free will. And yet, so many pre-existing conditions can influence that choice : the woman's mood, her favorite color, the length of her arm, whether she is right-handed or left-handed, etc. The sensation of free will may be nothing more than the inability to determine the probability of each potential outcome - either because too many variables effecting the situation are at work, or because some of those variables are unknown to the chooser.posted 01/06/2008 at 21:48:41
I don't know how well read you are regarding Augustine and his times, but the young Earth idea was controversial even then. The Greeks and others already believed in a much older Earth.You haven't addressed Augustine's polemics against the Manichaeans, which is the position I find most troubling. Are you not aware of the RC church's views on this matter? Labelling a group of people Manichaeans (even long after the last follower of Mani could be found in the West) was a very serious charge, and usually led to persecution. We largely have your boy A to thank for that.posted 01/06/2008 at 20:14:36
Augustine of Hippo was a full-fledged Manichaean who CONVENIENTLY converted back to his mother's Christianity in 387 AD. Why conveniently, you ask? Because in 382, the Roman emperor, who was beginning to come under the sway of the Christians, declared that Manichaeans should be put to death.Augustine then proceeded to severely attack the Manichaeans in his writings. Those writings became RC doctrine right up until our time. Those writings led directly to the later persecution of the Bogomils, Cathars, and others accused by the RC church of being Manichaeans. (The crusade against the Cathars in southern France was particularly cruel and bloody).In addition, from Augustine we have such nonsense as:young Earth creationism (the Earth is less than 6000 years old), original sin (he believed that unbaptized babies go to hell), and predestination (i.e., the opposite of free will - although the RC church did one of its frequent "move-the-goal-posts" contortions to say that, no, Augustine really did believe in free will after all).In my estimation, Augustine was a nut.posted 01/06/2008 at 02:07:51
You say, "Atheism IS a belief system--the 'absence of belief isn't belief' idea is nonsense."In other words, the absence of belief IS belief.And, the absence of pain is pain. The absence of fear is fear. The absence of love is love. Ridiculous enough, yet?Let's use an analogy: Suppose the belief in the existence of fairies is called "fairy-ism". Most of my neighbors are devout "fairy-ists". If I do not believe in fairies, then I would be an "a-fairy-ist". Now are you going to argue that refusing to acknowledge the existence of fairies is a belief system equivalent to "fairy-ism"?See, the problem with leaving the belief-door open for one type of fantasy character (god) is that the door must then stay open for EVERY other fantasy. If I am not allowed to challenge the belief that god exists, then I must also respect the belief in: human beings being the descendents of space aliens, reality being nothing more than the dream of a cosmic sleeper, Chopra's uber-mind, and every other crazy idea that human beings have ever concocted about the supernatural. By your argument, none of them can be proven, and none of them can be disproven. They are all perfect and unassailable. The only alternative is to prove that your personal god concept is somehow different from all other belief. posted 01/05/2008 at 22:22:14
Well of course an INDIVIDUAL can be an atheist and irrational at the same time. But I see nothing wrong with ATHEISM laying claim to (pure) reason. At its core, atheism says one thing: god (i.e., the supernatural) does not exist. If atheists in general adopt this idea, it logically follows that atheists will view religions as irrational - i.e., religions require their adherents to base their world-view on fantasy (i.e., the phenomena of nature are due to unseen chimeras). And because atheists wish to differentiate themselves from these god-based belief systems, they will want to claim rational thinking (at least in this arena) as their own.I think any atheist would be swayed by a religionist if the religionist would provide just one scrap of empirical evidence for their position. One scrap. Atheists are not close-minded dogmatists, contrary to this author's view and your own. In fact, most of us arrived at our conclusions by examining the notion of god with honesty, openness, and intelligence. I.e., we thought about it.And the burden of proof argument... come on. My 3-year-old is firmly convinced that a fat man in a red suit comes into our house every Dec 25th to leave toys behind. I won't disavow him of this belief for a few more years, but I'm pretty sure he's wrong (especially when I look at my post-holiday bank account). Now I view belief in god as being no different from belief in Santa (two all-powerful fantasy characters who bestow or withhold rewards based on the perceived behavior of their minions). But by your argument, the burden of proof as to the existence of Santa lies on both my child and ME. Get it?posted 01/05/2008 at 19:24:29
Wow. I have re-read this post many times, and I have no idea what you are trying to say.Let's take this: "I clearly define a stealth religion as any belief system that distorts the facts of the real world (yes, there is a real world out there, and it does not include people sitting on clouds) for the purpose of motivating a given suite of behaviors." Now how in the world does atheism (which you label a stealth religion) distort the facts of the real world? Are you implying that the existence of gods is a proveable fact, and atheism distorts this? I am at a loss.Then this gem, "There are impeccable reasons for distrusting statements cloaked in the authority of science and reason, no less than the flag and the cross." I am stunned. If you're going to toss science and reason into the irrational-belief-system pot with religion and nationalism, then we might as well go back to living in caves. Do you even know what science is? This is EXACTLY the argument used by religionists to attack atheism. Then the weirdest of all, "No, I am not accusing the New Atheists of having a hidden fascist agenda, but..." Oh, what an old trick, the back-hand compliment. It's a favorite ploy of unscrupulous politicians - "Now I'm not sayin my opponent is a womanizing commie, but..."You, of course, will paint this as a New Atheist (whatever that is) attack, but I must say you come across as an agnostic, not an atheist. What are you really asking of atheists? - tolerance of religion? keep our minds open to the supernatural? keep quiet and sit on our hands? I just don't understand a self-described atheist claiming atheism constitutes a religion - the very thing he supposedly rejects. Somebody help me out here - am I missing something?In the end, what seems to motivate your argument is anger at other prominent atheists for being too strongly opinionated. Did they steal your thunder? Get over it.posted 01/05/2008 at 01:59:06
The "Soul Hypothesis"
Deepak, do you know what a cirular argument is? You say, "Behave as if you have a soul. Do this for long enough time to gather evidence that your hypothetical soul does in fact correspond to reality as you experience it." So by analogy I could do this for other personal beliefs: "Behave as if you are a psychopath. Do this for a long enough time until your hypothetical psychotic behavior does in fact correspond to reality as you experience it."Get it? You can't make up the soul concept, assign every thought and action to this fantasy, then say, "Why looky here, I did all these things so my soul really does exist." Sure, the phenomena you ascribe to your soul do in fact exist, but they arise for entirely different reasons. You prove nothing this way.That is NOT how science works. It is hard to believe you don't realize this. Besides, how can I act as if I have a soul before I know what a soul is! Do you mean act morally? That just implies that I have a moral code which guides my actions, not a soul.An then there is this, "As children we acted as if our parents loved us and wanted to protect us. Life then went on to inform us if our assumption was true." And what do you say to victims of child abuse? Do you think they will trust that their a priori assumptions necessarily cause the phenomena that they then observe?posted 01/04/2008 at 12:51:25
When Religion Becomes Superstition
Wouldn't it have made a more compelling story if Jesus had actually managed to sway the Romans through the persuasiveness of his arguments? (But then we wouldn't have that great torture movie "The Passion".) If Jesus hadn't died, would humanity still have been "saved"?posted 01/03/2008 at 11:47:45
So the Romans - mere human beings - killed your god. Pretty weak god, if you ask me.posted 01/03/2008 at 09:22:41
You mean Shm-ley B-teach?posted 01/02/2008 at 20:55:14
Funny... I thought the missing vowel was an A.posted 01/02/2008 at 20:51:33
It seems that an omnipotent god could have found a better way to "save" mankind than to kill his own offspring. What a strange, primitive religion.posted 01/02/2008 at 20:48:48
Whitewashing and Cherry Picking Religion
I hope folks are still coming back here...So to be without belief is belief. And to be without pain is pain. And to be without love is love. Need I go on? If you told me you were bald and lacked hair, I wouldn't tell you, "No, you have hair, it's just bald hair". Somehow, though, you can't seem to see how that same idea applies to belief/unbelief. I tell you I don't believe in god, and you say, "No, you do believe, you just have unbelief belief."A couple of other points:First you say this, "Most believers don't say their belief system differs from other belief systems." Then you say this, "A Christian can say they believe this is God, but that belief over there is wrong, while some of it may be correct." I almost got whiplash following that one. Go ask people like Pandu, or Deepak Chopra, whether their belief systems differ from Christianity (and also from each other).Does Santa Claus exist? My 3 year old thinks so. By your argument, "Both are simply beliefs. Neither need be proven." I guess I'll have to go on letting him believe in Santa until he's 20.It just dawned on me that there may be another reason why we go round and round on this without reaching any concensus: Are you trying to say that EVERY human thought is a belief (i.e., an act of faith on the part of the thinker)? Are you making the point that truth is subjective, and external truth (if it exists) is unknowable? That is an entirely different argument (and I think my keyboard is about to spontaneously combust).posted 01/06/2008 at 02:45:41
Nicely said, HS, and I might add:Because there is no empirical evidence of gods (or the supernatural), the only source for the god concept is the human mind. As we all know, the human mind is responsible for many fantastical notions: fairies, Santa Claus, chupacabras, the uber-mind - the list is endless. No one ever challenges you to prove Santa doesn't exist. You are free to reject unproven fantasies any time you wish. If a True Believer is going to insist that atheism is a belief system just because atheists cannot prove the non-existence of god, then they must show how the god concept differs from any of these other fantasies. I am as free to reject the notion of god as I am to reject the existence of the Loch Ness monster or Bigfoot.THE BURDEN OF PROOF IS ON THE TRUE BELIEVER.p.s., Have you read Eric Hoffer's "The True Believer", yet? THAT'S my bible (Hee, hee).posted 01/04/2008 at 19:13:55
Excellent article! Well said.posted 01/02/2008 at 15:43:05
Faint Light for the New Year
Or man created gods as a place holder until science could take over.posted 01/01/2008 at 17:12:02
Hmmm...You know what else has always been a part of our nature?MurderRape Child AbuseSexismRacism SlaveryUniversality is not a very convincing argument for keeping any of these.P.S. Science is the anti-thesis of religion. Calling science a religion is just a sound-bite meant to confuse the argument (by trying to define your opponent as no different from yourself) and meant to anger rational folks (by accusing your opponents of being the thing they most despise - irrational). If you really feel science is a bugaboo like christianity, next time you get sick or injured, stick to prayer instead of modern medicine. Oh, and instead of typing these messages on a computer keyboard, try sending them by telepathy.posted 01/01/2008 at 17:09:51
Apart from god, humanity will stand up and face the universe with honesty and clarity.Apart from god, human beings can begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.Apart from god, we just might survive as a species.Apart from god... which one by the way?posted 01/01/2008 at 13:49:59
You say, "The drama of religion versus science is so yesterday."Except that it's not. Consider some of the recent ways in which religion has intruded itself in our daily lives: The Terry Schiavo case (a personal tragedy the conservative religious nuts in Congress couldn't help sticking their noses into)Attempts to repeal abortion lawAttempts to demonize stem-cell researchWithholding from gay Americans the right to marryAttempts to keep the teaching of evolution out of our schools (or at least insert intelligent design)Here we are in the 21st century, and everything from the war in Iraq (viewed by many influential conservative leaders in the U.S. as a war against Islam) to whether or not a crucifix in urine can be displayed as art are still important to most Americans. We are as primitive in our thinking today as people were in the 16th century.Science doesn't have an agenda - but religion does. Religion insists on keeping us enslaved to the irrational. That is the only way it can survive. posted 01/01/2008 at 13:44:21
What are you talking about? This is the most far-right-wing country in the developed world - it is deeply, irrationally conservative and religious. Sure, in THEORY it's secular, but (unfortunately) in practice it is wholly religious. No atheist politician could get elected to office - in fact, we swear them into office with one hand on a bible! Atheists don't control any form of the media - point out one TV show or major movie that contains a blatantly atheist message. Just because most folks don't go around in sack-cloth scourging their backs with cat-o-nine-tails, doesn't mean this country lacks for religious belief.Honestly, the policies you point to as destructive are largely Republican policies - like failure to provide assistance to the poor. And what political party ties itself most closely to religion?Atheists don't run the show. If this country is a mess, it's you religionists who are to blame.posted 01/01/2008 at 10:11:42
No Evangelicals in Foxholes
Interesting. So you voluntarily chose to move the source of your morality from internal to external - highly unusual. I've often thought that the only way someone could change from an atheist to a believer would be if they experienced some tragedy so horrific that their mind just snapped and they turned for comfort to the security blanket called god. I asked the following question in another post that you can check out below: This vision of Krishna took place entirely within your own mind - I assume no one else witnessed this wonder, and that Krishna didn't leave behind any physical evidence like a gum wrapper or a cigarette butt. So how can you justify using a personal vision as evidence of the existence of god? You cannot share this vision, so how am I to judge its validity or whether it actually occurred? If I have a vision of an obese purple woman with a monkey's head who shoots pencils out of her nose, and reveals herself to be god, is my vision not as valid as yours? How many human beings throughout history, do you think, have had false visions of god - and how would they know?posted 01/03/2008 at 14:59:39
How big was Krishna's pen when he (she?) wrote the Bhagavad-gita? Probably a mile long.Don't you realize that your vision was entirely personal and took place inside your mind only? It can never be shared with anyone else, so what good is using it as evidence? Even if I were to magically see Krishna or Allah or Zeus, that experience of god would be mine alone - I would never presume to think that anyone else should just take my word for it. How many human beings, do you think, have had false visions of god? If I dream of a 500 foot tall goat with a fish-head who tells me to go about naked and singing show tunes, is that vision any less valid than yours?posted 01/02/2008 at 13:29:30
You don't get it? The god concept is a figment of the human mind - there is no empirical evidence for gods. The god concept is as valid as Santa Claus or Bigfoot. Do you keep an open mind as to Santa's existence just because some five-year-olds believe in him? Since god is purely an invention of the mind, it can be rejected just like any other fantasy.Visions are notoriously faulty. Is not Krishna sometimes a trickster? Maybe it was an enticement to seduce you from the true path to wisdom. Or perhaps a bad piece of chutney before bed.The religious experience in human beings can be viewed as a hierarchy, with at least 4 levels: The lowest level comprises the polytheistic religions, where we assign a little angry god to every phenomenon - a rain god, a sun god, a god of war, or even the Ganges River (sound familiar?). The second level is acheived when we coalesce all these godlings into one EXTERNAL god - traditional Western religions seem stuck at this level. But this one external god is still a petty, angry, (usually male) tyrant sitting on a cloud throwing lightning bolts. The third level is to INTERNALIZE god - Buddhists (though probably not Buddha himself) and some modern Western religionists (moderate christians and the like) are stuck here.The fourth level is to drop the need for the god concept altogether - i.e., atheism. This is probably when the Buddha acheived enlightenment. This fourth level (atheism) can be seen to be a logical outgrowth from the third level - if god is in everything, then god is everything and nothing. In other words, god just becomes another word for the universe. The universe is not a manifestation of god - it simply is what it is.When you finally come to atheism, you will look back on religion with incredulity - you can only shake your head and laugh. But dropping the need to believe in god can be the most difficult thing you will ever do. Good luck on your journey.posted 01/02/2008 at 13:17:44
Once you become the Buddha (i.e., acheive enlightenment), you stop being a Buddhist (i.e., a believer in legends).posted 12/30/2007 at 07:55:38
David, great article. However, a mini-debate I am having with another commenter under a different article on Huffpo has got me thinking about this very subject. You are more than certainly correct about some religionists: they fail to accept that any human being can be without "faith". But I think most of the time accusing atheists of being fundamentalist has a more nefarious intent.Choosing to call atheists fundamentalists (i.e., calling atheism a religion), when you know otherwise, serves two purposes: First, it is done in the hopes of confusing the argument. If you can successfully define your opponents as being no different from yourself, you disarm them. It's like a member of the KKK trying to justify their extreme position by pointing out that some blacks hate whites. Second, it is a thinly veiled attempt to anger atheists. What better way to goad your opponents than to accuse them of being the very thing they most despise. The Republicans are notorious for this - for example, accusing the Dems who want to bring the troops home and out of harm's way of not supporting the troops.And like Republicans, True Believers are not very good at thinking for themselves. When one of them comes up with what they think is a devastating sound-bite, like calling atheists fundamentalist, the rest parrot that comment without being able to justify it. No surprise that Republicans love True Believers.posted 12/29/2007 at 16:40:33
This argument is absurd. You seem to be rejecting logic, math, and science out of hand. By your argument, reason and science are made up belief systems just like religion, so why believe in anything? And yet you sit there typing on a product of science, confident that your ramblings will be "magically" transmitted to the world. When did you abdicate your humanity? Human beings have a large powerful organ in their heads called a brain. We are creatures of reason - if you choose to reject that, then you side with illogic and insanity.posted 12/29/2007 at 01:57:44
Buddha was clearly an atheist. Did that also make him a nihilistic materialist? You seem intent on being a poster child for Mr. Horton's essay - by your standards, if atheism is NOT a religion, then it must be worthless.Atheism is the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. Only when you have given up the need to believe in the supernatural will you be able to examine the Big Questions with honesty and your own human cognition. Only by choosing atheism will you be able to begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.Why do you insist on enslaving yourself (and the rest of humanity) to the irrational? Buddha recognized the futility of believing in spiritual chimeras - gods, if you like. You will never acheive enlightenment so long as you cling to irrational beliefs.posted 12/29/2007 at 01:44:44
The 7 Habits Of Highly Spiritual People
Here's something else to chew on...I believe that human religious experience can be seen as hierarchical, with at least four levels: At the lowest level are the polytheistic religions - this is where we assign a little angry god to every phenomenon that we observe: a sun god, a rain god, a god of war. Next, are those religions which coalesce these disparate godlings into one EXTERNAL god which rules over all creation. The Western religious tradition seems stuck at this level - they bray over and over again that there is only one god, but he remains a petty little male tyrant sitting on a cloud somewhere throwing lightning bolts. The third rung on the ladder is to INTERNALIZE god - to believe that god is in all of us (and in everything). Buddhists (but possibly not Buddha himself) and modern Western religious practitioners (moderate Christians and the like) have risen to this level. And the fourth level is atheism. The last step on the spiritual journey is to drop the need for the god concept altogether. I think this is when the Buddha acheived enlightenment. This final level of spiritual growth follows directly from careful consideration of the third level - if god is in everything, then god is everything and nothing. God is just another word for the universe, and ceases to be important. The universe is not a manifestation of god - the unverse simply is what it is.Just my two cents.posted 12/30/2007 at 02:06:52
Aargh! My computer really mangled the punctuation in that last post.I am not so sure that my assertion that the god concept is a human invention is dogmatic. Consider: there are no external phenomena that suggest the existence of gods or the supernatural - if so, cite one. In fact, by definition the supernatural would be entirely unknowable - as soon as the supernatural manifested itself in nature, it would become measurable, quantitatively or qualitatively. Thus god cannot be observed. So what is the source of the concept of god? There is only one option left. The human mind is a wonderous thing, capable of infinite invention. Is it really so hard to see that anthropomorphizing the universe would be but a small thing for our minds to do?I take issue with one other comment: "To not believe in the possibility of something because there is no empirical evidence is antithetical to the scientific mind." Actually science reserves acceptance of new theories until experiments or observations are made which provide proof. For example, one of the fallacies of the anti-evolution crowd is that evolution is just an unproven theory - in fact much evidence exists to support it (the fossil record, genetics). And even those theories which remain unproven but which influence science (string theory, for one) must satisfy certain basic conditions: being logically consistent and not refuting previously made measurements or observations. But most importantly, science still reserves acceptance of unproven theories, like string theory, no matter how beautiful they are.posted 12/30/2007 at 02:00:25
Aha, a believer in Chopra's uber-consciousness! You say, "I simply think that 'our' intelligence is not a singularity, but is instead a dim awareness of the unfathomable intelligence that manifests existence."Please elaborate - what experiences (or learned information) have led you to this conclusion? Is it just an idea that makes you feel good about your existence? Talk about narcissism.You object to phrases like "a shame". Must no one ever express an opinion? You confuse strong opinion with fundamentalism. Here is Merriam-Websters" definition of fundamentalism: "a movement or attitude stressing strict and literal adherence to a set of basic principles". So application of the term would seem to depend on the existence of a set of basic principles.Hate to tell ya, but there is no atheist bible. This cannot be emphasized enough: THERE IS NO ATHEISTIC DOGMA. And you don"t get around this fact by saying, "but atheism stresses strict adherence to the fact that god does not exist " failing to leave open the possibility that She does." Why not?, you ask. Well, I"ll tell ya.The god concept is an invention of the human mind " it simply serves as mental plaster to temporarily fill the holes in our understanding. It played a useful role for our primitive ancestors who needed to find some explanation for the seemingly cruel and capricious phenomena they witnessed. But we are no longer primitives. There is no empirical evidence for gods or the supernatural. As a consequence, believing in gods has as much credibility as believing in fairies or the Loch Ness monster. Would you argue that someone who does not believe in Santa Claus is a fundamentalist? Must we leave open the possibility that he really does exist just because some human beings believe in him?posted 12/29/2007 at 15:27:51
And what language would you find acceptable from an atheist? Is there a rule book? Please cite those examples where I come across as "devout". Having strong opinions does not make one devout or fundamentalist.By extension, are you put off by a True Believer who sounds logical or rational? Must a True Believer always come across as a schizophrenic nut-case? If an atheist must never sound "devout", it follows that a religionist must never sound "moderate".In a concurrent article on Huffpo, David Horton makes the point that True Believers tar atheists with the religion brush because they cannot accept a human being who does belong to some form of religion. I think its something else. Calling atheists devout or fundamentalist serves two purposes: first, it is an attempt to confuse the argument. By accusing your opponents of being no different from yourself, you disarm them - it's like a member of the KKK trying to justify their beliefs by pointing out that some blacks don't like white people. Second, it's a thinly veiled attempt to anger atheists. What better way to raise the bile of someone than to accuse them of being the very thing they most despise.Please do respond. You should answer three questions: How may atheists discuss their views without sounding "devout"? (Cite examples where I used this language in my post.) By extension, what language do you accept from True Believers - must they ALWAYS sound devout? And what is your real motivation for making this charge - are you really confused by what atheism means, or are you just trying to goad atheists without actually defending your side?posted 12/29/2007 at 09:34:30
Cute. But your senses do record sound and gravity. They are measurable.A more apt comparison would be that between god and fairies, or god and the Loch Ness monster. Empirical evidence is what is lacking in these cases. (Ooh, I forgot about those grainy photos of flippers rising out of the water.)posted 12/28/2007 at 21:22:36
Atheism is the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. Why do you insist on enslaving yourself to the irrational? Let go of the silly need for the supernatural, and stand up and become a human being.Only when you become an atheist will you be able to face the Big Questions with nothing more than your own cognitive abilities. Only then will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.How dare you belittle the morality of others simply because they do not share your personal god-belief. If you really feel that the claims of mere human beings to know anything about spirituality are worthless, then why are YOU commenting here? YOU should be silent on the subject as well. You know the saying: doctor heal thyself.Religion is the enemy of mankind. But I know how difficult it is to let go of that crutch. Remember: the slave may come to love the slavemaster, but he is still a slave.posted 12/28/2007 at 17:18:24
Realizing that you meant to be humorous, I went back and re-read the article. I found this comedic gem:"They Say Yes More Than They Say No.Naysayers are a downer. 'No' closes our hearts like cholesterol. (Naturally, this excludes saying 'No' to drugs or other self-destructive, noxious or illegal behaviors.) 'Yes' affirms life. People always would rather hear yes rather no. Unless it's when you ask your doctor, 'Do I have herpes?' "Priceless! "They say yes more than they say no" followed by "Do I have herpes?" Hee hee! Watch out Christian girls - if you say yes too often, you'll be visiting the doctor on a regular basis.posted 12/28/2007 at 17:02:33
Pandu, you're a card.Under another article you mentioned actually having seen Krishna, to which I ask: How do you know? Is not one aspect of Krishna as a trickster? Perhaps it was just an enticement to seduce you away from the true path - the path that leads to atheism.posted 12/28/2007 at 16:49:23
You're wrong.Atheism is the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. The Buddha attained true enlightenment when he left the supernatural behind. For this, he is rightly praised.The CORE beliefs of Buddhism - the ideas most directly attributable to the source - are a guide for living in the here and now. There is no reference to the supernatural.But the Buddha also knew how difficult it is to become an atheist - more importantly, how difficult it is to become one who does not believe in the supernatural at all. Witness yourself how difficult it is for you to leave behind the need to believe in gods.As for any reference to the supernatural (or Buddha's divinity) in Buddhist writings, these were later additions - mud thrown onto the teacher's message by less than enlightened followers. Thus Buddhism became a religion. A shame, really.posted 12/28/2007 at 16:44:00
I thought this article was serious, until I read this:"Have you noticed? Santa ho-ho-ho's his way down the chimney. The Dalai Lama giggles his way to enlightenment. Alfred E. Neuman has that eternal grin. The Laughing Buddha is, well, laughing. Spiritual people are happy."Santa and Alfred E. Neuman. Rich.posted 12/28/2007 at 16:30:33
They Still Deliver My Mail on Yom Kippur
I repeat: Krishna is also a trickster. How can you be sure it was the real Krishna and not an enticement to seduce you away from the true path.I thought I saw Hanuman once, but then he flung poo at me.posted 12/21/2007 at 18:18:21
Yes, there are at least 3 problems that I can see with being a "moderate" believer:First, the problem of fuzzy belief. Every religion that I am aware of has an accepted canon - its holy books. It seems that most moderate believers do not want to be painted with the "literalist" brush. But then, which parts of the canon do you choose to believe? Do you really get to pick and choose passages? If you are a moderate christian, do you believe Jesus woke up the dead? Is the Bible the word of god revealed to a select few? Today we would call people who hear god lunatics. By narrowing your focus to just those parts of the canon which meet modern acceptability, you remove the divinity from Jesus.Second, the "Tower of Babel" problem. By molding the religion of your choosing to your own personal needs and morality, you make your interpretation unique to you. How then is communal religious practice possible? Oh sure, your idea of god may overlap with someone else's in broad ways, but dig deep enough, and you will find differences with the other's notion of god. Thus god just becomes the adult form of the childhood imaginary friend - no one else can see YOUR imaginary sky-daddy, but they humor you that he exists. Also, why adopt a religion at all if you are just going to force it to conform to the ideas and morality that you already possess?Third, the problem of appeasing the fundies. Slice it any way you want, if you are going to attach the label of "Christian" to yourself, then you are giving tacit support to the most virulent of your Faith. Otherwise, you will find yourself saying, "I am the REAL christian, not those other guys." If you oppose fundamentalist christians, then why label yourself with the same name as they? Being a little bit religious is like being a little bit pregnant.posted 12/21/2007 at 14:37:04
Ah, but Krishna is also a trickster - perhaps it wasn't Krishna you saw at all, but an enticement to seduce you away from the true path to knowledge. You never can know for sure with visions. Hee hee.posted 12/21/2007 at 14:07:39
Other characteristics of human societies that have existed throughout time and nearly universally (thus qualifying as traditions) include: slavery, the secondary status of women, homophobia, racism, child abuse.Do you see no harm in continuing these traditions either? (And don't say, "but not in America!" Ask a women, or black, or gay, or Muslim living in this country how enlightened America is. Or just look at our history.)posted 12/21/2007 at 10:13:50
Atheism marks the highest level of spiritual development in human beings. The last step on the spiritual journey is to let go of the supernatural entirely. Buddha was an atheist, you know - and for that, he is rightly venerated.Only when you let go of the need for a sky-daddy to hold your hand will you begin to stand up and become fully human. Only then can you face the Big Questions with honesty and your own cognitive abilities. Only then can you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion.Letting go of an irrational belief system (racism, sexism, nationalism, religion) can be the most difficult thing you will ever do - you have tied your self identity too tightly to these irrational modes of thinking, and to challenge them can feel like an attack on your core sense of self. But you must try to break free of the chains of illogic. The future of our species and planet may depend on it.Remember: the slave may come to love the slavemaster, but he is still a slave.posted 12/21/2007 at 10:06:08
Religion is the enemy of mankind. Religion enslaves human beings to the irrational. It is as morally repugnant as slavery, rape, or murder. I love my species and wish it to be all that it can. As an atheist, I cannot sit idly by and watch the evil of religion go unopposed.posted 12/20/2007 at 20:33:36
The truth is your Faith (as opposed to your faith) most likely has given sanction to its practitioners to go on murderous rampages in the past - the Crusades, Inquisition, etc.posted 12/20/2007 at 13:31:39
So it's not slavery that is bad, it's the slavemasters.Without the illogic of christianity, these politicians could not pander to it.posted 12/20/2007 at 13:28:04
JustAnotherJoe, what nonsense. Are you suggesting that your belief system is somehow divorced from how you treat other people? To cite one example, a vast number of Americans believe their religion gives them the right to discriminate against gays - are their beliefs really unimportant?posted 12/20/2007 at 12:50:54
Absolutely perfect!Thank you.posted 12/20/2007 at 10:37:32
Onward Christian Soldiers
You say, "Fundamentalists are those who refuse to accept that their models might, in any significant way, be incomplete or mistaken. Besides certain Christians and Muslims (but not the majority in either case), there are fundamentalist atheists..."NO, no, no! Can't we put this silly "fundamentalist atheist" BS to bed?Let's take your assertion that fundies are people who refuse to accept that their models might be incomplete or mistaken. By implication, this means that atheists must always keep open the option that god exists - in other words, to be agnostics. But "god" is an invention of the human mind - the god concept is mental plaster used to fill the holes in our understanding so we don't feel so scared at night. Gods are security blankets for adults. There is no empirical evidence for gods. Let god show herself but once, and there would be no atheists. Should I also have to accept that fairies or UFOS or unicorns may exist just because someone else believes in them?What people really mean when they use a term like "fundamentalist atheists" is that they wish atheists would just shut up and go away. They object to anyone with strong anti-god views from speaking their mind. Answer this question objectively: What influence do atheists have on our culture? Virtually none - no atheist can get elected to political office, no atheist message is apparent on TV or in movies. Irrational religion is the norm - no one questions it. So why are you so scared of a few atheists speaking their minds? Can't your god take it?No group has ever waged war or oppressed the True Believing masses in the name of holy Atheism. Oh, I know some religionista is going to shout, "But what about the commies?" The communists were just as religious as anyone else - they simply replaced heavenly deities with Earth-bound cults of personality. In the end, worshiping Stalin is no different from worshiping Santa-god.posted 12/19/2007 at 09:50:51
You say, "...Godless, cynical atheists, like most of you, with no moral compass."You've got it upside-down. MORALITY BASED ON THE FEAR OF A SUPERNATURAL SPANKING IS NO MORALITY AT ALL.Religious "morality" is just a response premised on the fear of god's wrath or the promise of heavenly reward (you know, like 70 virgins). It's behavior modification, not morality. Whack a dog on the nose with a newspaper, and he will "choose" to stop peeing on the carpet - but does the dog exhibit moral thinking? The threat of hellfire and brimstone may prevent you from sleeping with your neighbor's wife - but is that morality?Atheism is the highest form of spiritual development in human beings. Only when you give up the need for a sky-daddy to hold your hand will you begin to develop a morality based on reason and human compassion. Until then, you are not fully human.posted 12/19/2007 at 09:22:52
Celebrating The Spirit Of The Season
"Do you think God can be understood by mundane human intelligence?"Since "god" is an invention of human minds, all of the essence of the god concept is held within those minds.Your question only has meaning to those accept the god concept a priori - i.e., True Believers. But god - a truly empty nothing of a word - does not exist without human minds to make him/her up.posted 12/17/2007 at 14:58:54
Romney's Founders
"However the God question is not as myriad as you make it sound. At its simplest it's either/or. Each side, mathematically speaking, has a 50 percent chance of being correct."Urgh... I teach mathematics, including a course in probability and statistics - and I can point out two fallacies in your statement. The first is the notion that the "god question" is measurable. Sure, if you could take a random sample of universes and count the number of universes with gods and the number without gods, you could establish a probability - but I think you see the impossibility of that. The second fallacy is the notion that all either-or choices are 50-50. Rainfall on any given day in the future is an either-or choice - either it rains or it doesn't. So is the chance of rain tomorrow 50%? I don't know where you live, but where I live, rain does not fall on half the days of the year.As for who has the burden of proof in the "god question", I am surprised that you cannot follow my argument. Let me try again: if I told you I believe a 3-headed woman with green skin lives on Mars, even though I've never seen her, what would your reaction be? By your logic, you would have to accept (or at least, respect) my belief as valid because you could no more disprove it than I could prove it. But lacking empirical evidence, my claim is just a whimsy - a figment of my imagination. The burden is on me to prove my assertion. You should not be expected to travel to Mars to verify that no such woman exists.posted 12/12/2007 at 23:47:39
Oh sure, there was a momentary blip of sanity when a handful of liberal views snuck into this bible-thumpin, gun-totin, far-right-wing country - "crazy lefty" stuff like the civil rights movement. But since then, this country has slid right back into the crapper.And gay marriage in the 1960s? I missed that one.posted 12/12/2007 at 23:19:46
modsmuse, You say, "The burden of proof is on whoever is making an assertion, regardless what the content of the assertion is."If true, do you not recognize the "Tower of Babel" that would create? If every assertion, for or against, is equally valid, then the universe is truly schizophrenic. If I assert that the moon is made of cheese, how do you counter it? Forget the photos of astronauts cavorting on the moon - everyone knows the moon landings were filmed in a hangar at Area 51. So, my assertion is as valid as your counter assertion - or maybe you agree the moon is made of cheese?Think about what this does to religion. Let's say we both believe in god. Although our conceptions of god might overlap in many significant ways, we would never be in 100% agreement as to the Almighty's nature - I might picture my god as having a little less hair or a bigger nose. Well, since both images are equally valid, this implies two gods - in fact, as many gods as there are believers. Then why discuss religion at all? Your beliefs about your personal god would have no meaning in anyone else's world, and communal religious experiences would cease to be possible.When one invents a fantastical notion of any sort, it cannot be the burden of others to disprove it. Hey, I've got a unicorn in my backyard, no kidding. And aliens abduct me every night, and my mom's a bigfoot. Go ahead, prove me wrong.posted 12/11/2007 at 23:37:00
It's not the atheist's burden to prove that god does not exist. It's the True Believers burden to prove that he/she does. Human beings invented the concept of god based on their own cognitive shortcomings - believing in god is not the result of empirical observations. So why does an atheist have to disprove a chimera? My 3-year-old is convinced a fat guy with a white beard and a red suit enters our house each Christmas to leave toys behind. Now although I do not believe in Santa, I will not try to convince him otherwise for a few more years. By your argument, I can no more prove that Santa doesn't exist any more than my child can prove he does. So denying Santa is merely an appeal to "faith"?If you really are an atheist, you should know better.posted 12/11/2007 at 15:21:05
Why do you insist that liberal values have taken over in the US? Its actually the other way around.Since the late 1960s we have seen in this country: Nixon elected twice, Reagan elected twice, Bush Sr. once, and (this one blows my mind) Dubya twice. We have seen the rise of the religious right, widespread opposition to gay marriage, and continual attacks on abortion rights. Environmental protections have been all but dismantled, nearly every sector of the economy has been deregulated, unions are in decline, and most citizens have brain-washed into believing that paying even a penny of tax is submitting to Satan.It's the right that has triumphed. If America is in a mess, it's your mess.posted 12/11/2007 at 15:09:59
Ah, the teleological argument. Question: could the universe be even more orderly? If so, then this is hardly the best of all possible worlds, and our creator is not so benevolent after all.Human beings are an evolutionary product of THIS universe. As such, the "beauty" and "order" human beings think they are seeing is actually a reflection of the fact that WE were designed by the universe - the universe was not designed for us. Stop navel-gazing.If the universe consisted of a different set of physical laws and cosmological constants, then we would be a product of that universe instead. Why, I bet we would think THAT universe was perfect, too! Finding order and beauty in an environment you were designed for is NO proof of an intelligent designer.Consider these absurd observations:Fish need water to breathe, and where do you find fish? In water!The chlorophyl in plants requires sunlight to manufacture energy - and the sun rises every morning to shine on plants!Every time I wash my car, birds poop on it!Miracles all.posted 12/11/2007 at 09:45:56
Sherri Shepherd Doesn't Get That Whole BC Thing, Insists "Jesus Came First"
You're both doing it to each other! Anyone who writes comments here is trying to prove their superiority to people who can't write.Oh no, now I'm doing it too!posted 12/05/2007 at 10:28:16
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