In the Humble Opinion of LittleBill, Socialist, Atheist, and Humanist
Better living without God?

Richard Dawkins says Religion is a dangerously irrational mirage.

Troy Jollimore's review of Dawkins's book, The God Delusion. Jollimore teaches philosophy at California State University Chico.

"He's a brilliant man," one of my colleagues once said of Richard Dawkins, "but so impolite." I agree, but think he chose the wrong conjunction: If I had to identify Dawkins' cardinal virtues, I would say that he is brilliant, articulate, impassioned and impolite. As Emerson famously said, "Your goodness must have some edge to it -- else it is none." "The God Delusion" is a fine and significant book, and this is largely due to Dawkins' willingness to employ the sharp edges of his intellect to cut through a paralyzing propriety whose main effect is to stifle conversations -- about religion, about intellectual responsibility, about politics -- that we very much need, at this particular moment in our history, to be having.

Some will accuse Dawkins of being not just impolite but also intolerant. He is indeed a kind of crusading atheist, and makes no bones about his opposition not just to religious extremism but also to all species of religious faith -- a phenomenon he regards as fundamentally irrational and deeply dangerous. Religious moderates, he points out, have an unfortunate tendency to lend their perceived legitimacy to more extreme faith-based positions. They do this in large part by encouraging the common belief that accepting religious claims in the utter absence of evidence, and treating them as immune to rational criticism, is perfectly reasonable behavior. Dawkins writes,

As long as we accept the principle that religious faith must be respected simply because it is religious faith, it is hard to withhold respect from the faith of Osama bin Laden and the suicide bombers.

The alternative, one so transparent that it should need no urging, is to abandon the principle of automatic respect for religious faith. This is one reason why I do everything in my power to warn people against faith itself, not just against so-called 'extremist' faith.
Elsewhere he approvingly quotes a statement from Jerry Coyne, University of Chicago professor of evolution and ecology, that
the real nature of the conflict ... [is] not just about evolution versus creationism ... To scientists like Dawkins and [E.O.] Wilson, the real war is between rationalism and superstition.
In a certain sense of "intolerance," this sort of view surely is intolerant of religious faith. And there is no question that it will make some people unhappy. (Others, by contrast, will take great delight in Dawkins' wit and wickedness; he is particularly amusing in his footnotes.) But the danger of offending someone is inherent in any exercise of free speech, particularly speech that is critical of society's sacred cows, and the idea of sacredness is surely the biggest sacred cow of all. Sadly, with respect to religion, tolerance of religious belief is taken to license a profound intolerance toward those who would question such belief. The result is a society in which important political and moral decisions are heavily influenced by voters' religious views but in which people whose lives and behaviors are restricted by these decisions are regarded as rude, subversive or downright immoral if they attempt to raise questions about whether "but I just believe it" (or the equally weak "but my holy book says so") really constitutes an adequate justification.

As Dawkins points out, criticizing someone's religion is almost universally regarded as offensive, whereas a believer's right to criticize behaviors of which they disapprove (homosexuality, promiscuity and any number of other examples) is not only protected but frequently lauded as an expression of religious freedom.

Dawkins is at his best in his exposure of one of the big lies of our time: the claim that there is simply no conflict between religion and science. This claim, which is rendered almost obligatory by the social pressure to tolerate all manner of religious beliefs, can be fleshed out in a number of ways: that science is based on evidence or reason, while religion is a matter of faith; that science answers the "what?" questions, while religion addresses the "why?" questions; that science concerns facts and religion values; and so forth. To borrow Stephen Jay Gould's fancy term, science and religion are "non-overlapping magisteria" -- two entirely distinct areas of inquiry, each with its own subject matter and its own methods of treating that subject matter.

Many find this a lovely thought. But the all-inclusiveness of what Dawkins wittily refers to as the "Neville Chamberlain school of evolutionists," no matter how well intentioned, must ultimately fail because religious believers are themselves committed in their daily lives to the very concepts of evidence and objective truth on which science is founded (we simply couldn't survive without them) and because the account of the universe revealed by the scientific research that proceeds on this foundation is one that leaves increasingly less room for anything recognizable as God.

Advocates of intelligent design are in fact correct to claim that Darwinian biology is not religiously neutral, just as its critics are entirely correct to point out that because intelligent design is presented as a scientific program -- its basis is the claim that there are good scientific reasons for dissatisfaction with the Darwinian position -- it must be evaluated scientifically (a test it spectacularly fails). There is no peculiarly religious "magisterium" within the bounds of which creationism, intelligent design or any other religious view can be legitimate, without its being more broadly legitimate: If the claim that complex life forms display the work of an intelligent designer is correct, then current biological theories are simply flat-out wrong, end of story.

This is true, moreover, whether the designer is pictured as directly creating the complex life in question or as simply guiding or initiating the process of evolution, for it is essential to evolution via natural selection that it is unsupervised, unguided and unintended. Once a designer is introduced, there is nothing left for natural selection to explain. And no intelligent designer -- unless it was a sadist -- would choose to work through such a tedious, inefficient and downright cruel method as natural selection.

Dawkins does not attempt, in this book, to summarize the vast array of experimental findings that support the plausibility of the Darwinian explanation. (Those who desire this might begin with his 1986 book, "The Blind Watchmaker.") Instead he sticks mostly to the conceptual level in an effort to explain why, given that the Darwinian story is indeed supported by the empirical evidence, it provides a much better explanation of the observable phenomena than does "the God hypothesis."

Step 1 of this effort is a whirlwind dismantling of many of the most influential arguments in favor of God's existence, including Aquinas' "first cause" arguments, Anselm's notorious ontological argument and the argument from experience. An entire book could easily be devoted to this topic -- indeed, whole shelves have been dedicated to the ontological argument alone -- but while some readers may find the treatments too quick or, on occasion, a bit glib, Dawkins' dispatchings of various fallacious "proofs" of God's existence are on the whole sensible, and in places quite insightful.

Step 2 deals with the "argument from improbability," which appears most commonly as the well-worn argument from design. The basic structure of the argument, in its traditional form, is admirably simple. Many things in the world appear to have been designed; it is highly improbable that apparently designed objects would occur in the absence of a designer; thus we can conclude that a designer exists. Multitudes of believers have found some version of this argument persuasive. But as Dawkins points out, the argument not only does not work, but it also actually suggests the opposite of what it is supposed to, for the simple reason that any designer capable of producing such complex and intricate mechanisms is at least as unlikely to have occurred on its own as are the mechanisms themselves. (In fact, because designers tend to be considerably more complex than their designs, the "natural" occurrence of the designer is presumably far less likely.) Moreover, the inference to a designer based in the improbability of complex life forms having happened by chance is based on a profound misunderstanding of evolution via natural selection, which, as Dawkins points out, is not in the relevant sense a process of chance:
No indeed, chance is not the likely designer. That is one thing on which we can all agree. The statistical improbability of phenomena such as Euplectella's skeleton is the central problem that any theory of life must solve. The greater the statistical improbability, the less plausible is chance as a solution: that is what improbable means. But the candidate solutions to the riddle of improbability are not, as is falsely implied, design and chance. They are design and natural selection. Chance is not a solution. ... Natural selection is not only a parsimonious, plausible and elegant solution; it is the only workable alternative to chance that has ever been suggested. Intelligent design suffers from exactly the same objection as chance. It is simply not a plausible solution to the riddle of statistical improbability. ... Any entity capable of intelligently designing something as improbable as a Dutchman's pipe (or a universe) would have to be even more improbable than a Dutchman's pipe. Far from terminating the vicious regress, God aggravates it with a vengeance.
"The God Delusion" ranges widely enough that I cannot hope to do justice to all its parts. For my own part, I was greatly cheered to discover that the commonly cited example of Albert Einstein as a scientist who believed in God is flatly contradicted by several of Einstein's own statements (he himself referred to the claim as "a lie which is being systematically repeated"). (The degree of religiosity of the Founding Fathers, it turns out, tends to be similarly overestimated.) I was intrigued by his presentation of John Hartung's argument that the New Testament, while representing a partial improvement over the Old, still falls well short of acceptable moral standards ("Love thy neighbor," it appears, applies only to members of the in-group of Israelites, and most expressly does not include heathens), and I was amused by Dawkins' demolishing of the idea of the Bible as a reliable source of moral guidance.
Do those people who hold up the Bible as an inspiration to moral rectitude have the slightest notion of what is actually written in it?
Indeed, it should be said that while it deals with matters of the utmost gravity and urgency, "The God Delusion," particularly in its early chapters, is a very funny book. To those readers tired of being told that they must bow respectfully before every absurd or bizarre superstition they encounter, and who worry about the effects of this atmosphere of hyper-tolerance on the health of our society, Dawkins' irreverent and penetrating work will seem a breath of fresh air.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

It is amazing how much respectful silence is awarded to promoters of the religious dogmas. Seemingly any other kind of philosophy is put to the test about it's validity and there is no hiding behind the artificial suitability obstacles set by the supporters. Regardles how hair brained any given idea is, it is tolerated and the debate strongly discouraged as long as it can be shown to be religious in it's nature. How did this came to be? How can this still be? How are our societies going to get the freedom not only of but from the religion? Way too much of our capacity is spent pondering issues which lead us nowhere. Might it be, that many of us are too much overwhelmed by the most profound questions of our existence and the realization that we don't yet have the defenitive answers leads us to leave it for the "supreme being" to deal with?

Vigilante said...

LittleBill,

The meaning and direction of the anonymous comment above is unclear to me. But it's clearly off topic and its continued presence is a barrier to the discussion I infer you want to encourage here. As such, it appears to be SPAM. If it were me, I'd delete the sucker, making sure I didn't get Pekka's by mistake!

DB Cooper said...

Recid.:
Who was Bush listening to when he appointed Rumsfeld? When he listened to Feith? When he sought out Kissinger? Wolfowitz? When he chose Cheney as his Vice-President? Who?
God!???

Muhammed Saeed al-Sahaf said...

Cheney.

LittleBill said...

Pekka-
Couldn't have said it better myself. Being almost obligatory to accept religious faith with deference is similar to accepting with deference the concept of patriotism when it comes to the philosophy (that's too intellectual in this case)the gut reasoning of Bully Bush.

Anonymous said...

Madam Proxy, it is an increasingly difficult task to show reverence to those whom deliberately have taken their religious belives out of their designated areas and entered them to the mainstream, nitty gritty of life.

Unholy and calculated manipulations in the areas, all the way from politics through science to commerce, surely wasn't the idea of the "founders" of the, for instance, Christianity. When our leaders start bypassing the worldly institutions in favour of their gods as a source of their worldly actions, it is time to wake up and realize the danger...nah, make it lunacy of it all. Makes one wish that there really was an eternal and a very hot place reserved just for their ilk!

Anonymous said...

Always deconstruct religion,

Never trust a priest.

Beach Bum said...

As one who from time to time polishes the backside of a pew I have to agree with Proxy in that I have to judge the person and not jump to conclusions. Would anyone question the nature of Jimmy Carter as a good man even though he is still a man of faith? Falling into the trap of lumping all people for one facet of their charater is the same as judging someone for whom they are attracted to or the color of their skin.

Anonymous said...

I have no problem with a person of religious convictions. Some of them I can even respect despite my total lack of calling.

However, to have one's religion as the all encompassing source and inspiration of governing brings no undertanding and repect from me. Isn't this excatly what the seperation of state and church was ment to represent? Isn't it also one of the reason you (as a nation) have decleared your displeasure towards those nations that are theogracies?

Jimmy Carter is most likely a good man and he followed mainly, for better or worse, input from his worldly advicers and the American people. To do it otherwise would be wrong, even if the source turns out to be god.

Beach Bum said...

However, to have one's religion as the all encompassing source and inspiration of governing brings no undertanding and repect from me. Isn't this excatly what the seperation of state and church was ment to represent?

Pekka you are completely right in that I do not want my political leaders looking to the Bible on how to govern. Bush went off the deep end with religion a long time ago and never came up for air.

GetaLife-ReadUrNews said...

On the irony of GOP bible-thumping hypocrisy, you might be amused by this incident in Colbert Report

Vigilante said...

Lil' Bill and Friends!
Speaking of the Colbert Report - Turn up your speakers and
Click on THIS!