Saturday 16 June 2007

Thoughts on Winston's The Story of God

A superficial wipe over the world's 'great religions.' Winston regurgitates the standard politically correct propaganda about various religions, pretending to know the core attributes of each one but failing miserabely to properly or fairly represent them. His essentialist historical perspective is particularly poor and uninformed.

Even further, he imposes a fashionable-but-absurd theological pluralism on every religion he analyses, thereby destroying them with the wrecking ball of oversimplification. He also feels at liberty to critique mainstream Christian doctrine (even though he himself is not a Christian), while leaving the doctrines of other religions alone. This habit is perhaps the most ridiculous and hypocritical activity of contemporary western thinkers. There is a ubiquitous belief that it is alright to criticize Christianity, but not acceptable to criticize any other theological or cosmological framework.

All Robert Winston does with this book is perpetuate the bigotry and thoughtlessness of political correctness and theological pluralism.

Sunday 13 May 2007

Drivel #1: "I Know How Religion Originated!"

No you don't, dipstick. This guy to the left, for example, is Richard Feynman -- (1) An extremely brilliant physicist, but (2) A crap social theorist. Read his short-sighted view on the origins of religion.

For example: "Durrrr, religion originated from the loss of a great chieftain, whose tribal leadership was sorely missed. The tribe, hoping for some kind of assistance, shouted the late chieftain's name during a risky battle and won. This led them to believe that even though their leader was dead, he could support them when they addressed him by name."

This is of course a possibility, and it seems to me likely to have contributed to the roots of some theological systems. But to say that all religions came from this kind of eventful cosmological shift is an extremely naïve and, frankly, childish presumption -- something similar to what Pascal Boyer argued in his silly book Religion Explained (2002). Freud also theorized, disastrously, about an Oedipal origin of religion. Emile Durkheim (1915) tried sociologically (a bit more compelling with his notion of the society and totemism, but nevertheless quite unsatisfactory), and James Frazer tried (magic), and Max Muller (linguistic permutations), and E.B. Tylor (dreams and outer-body experiences), etc, etc. Dawkins of course took a poke at it with his entirely lame 2006 The God Delusion (see below). Nobody has successfully identified the origin of religion, and if you think you have, you're your own fool.
I can only smirk and shake my head when I hear someone gurgle, "Religion originated from [mindless lame conjecture that I heard from some anti-religious propagandist]." Sucker.

NB: This is the beginning of a series I decided to do after dialoguing with dolts on a web forum. I want to help you to avoid saying stupid things about religion, and also to be able to correct others when they repeat these common assumptions (and they will). You too can fight against the drivel of the ignorant masses!

Tuesday 27 February 2007

Quit Calling Muslims "Fundamentalists"

Fundamentalism was a Christian movement in the United States during the early decades of the 20th century, largely reactionary against the rise of Darwinism and higher literary cricism of the Bible. It is earmarked by the 1910-1915 publication of a twelve-volume work called The Fundamentals which beckoned people of faith to affirm the authority of scripture over all other sources of knowledge, including of course natural science but also higher criticism of the Bible. It was a return to faith's "fundamentals." The movement accordingly called for a historical, literal interpretation of the book of Genesis. Read a pretty good article about it on americanscientist.org.

However this Fundamentalist movement was characterized by a selective method of biblical exegesis, assuming that there was only one way to interpret scripture literally (when in fact, as we realize now, there are many ways to interpret any text "literally" -- but I won't bother reviewing the hermeneutical theory behind that). Yet there were many other committed Christians in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who accepted Darwinian evolution as an insightful contribution to our understanding of how God created humankind. (For goodness' sake Darwin himself was a Christian and never ceased to be one!) But the Fundamentalists felt that this shift compromised the integrity of God's revelation, the Bible. Fundamentalism was a specifically Christian development contextualized in an age of increasing secularization and a perceived minimalization of scriptural importance. Notice: It had nothing to do with Islam!

First of all, the word "fundamentalist" is extremely problematic when it is lifted out of its original early 20th-century American context (read some of this history in the Wikipedia article; it states that the material's neutrality is contested but I feel it is a helpful overview). Apart from that group of Protestant Christians (who are now long gone), who does "fundamentalist" really describe, and how? What's the definition of "fundamentalism"? You cannot say that it is a literal interpretation of scripture; there are countless literal interpretations! Which one are you talking about? And look at the flip-side; even the most hard-core "fundamentalists" don't take all the Bible literally, otherwise they would think, for example, that God is comprised of minerals (Deuteronomy 32:4, "He is the rock..."). Fundamentalists are thus selective of which parts of the Bible they take literally (as anyone should be anyway -- and everyone is). So if you take at least some of it literally, are you a fundamentalist? Well, 99% of New Testament scholars, including even the most skeptical ones, take literally the following historically-loaded lines: "Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, when Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea, and Herod was tetrarch of Galilee, and his brother Philip was tetrarch of the region of Ituraea and Trachonitis, and Lysanias was tetrarch of Abilene, in the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, ... John, the son of Zacharias came into all the district around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins" (Luke 3:1-3). Most also take "Jesus settled in Capernaum, which is by the sea, in the region of Zebulun and Naphtali" (Matthew 4:13) and "after having Jesus scourged, they handed him over to be crucified" (Matthew 27:26) literally. Are they all fundamentalists?? "Fundamentalism" is a word riddled with vagaries.

Furthermore, which Muslims call themselves "fundamentalists"? I'll give you a hint: the numbe of Muslims who call themselves fundamentalists is the same as the number of people that Jesus killed. (For the scripturally illiterate, that's NONE... And I use this illustration for a point that I'll make in the next paragraph.) If Muslims don't label themselves fundamentalists, why should we fool ourselves by thinking there are some covert prohibition-era Protestants who have converted to Islam and brought their hermeneutics with them? Every group has a right to label itself. If we deny it that right, we have dubbed ourselves members of and authorities over that group -- and we are emphatically not. If you name a group something other than its self-chosen title, you have turned yourself into a propagandist. Example: Left-wing newspapers like the Associated Press and other media conglomerates like CNN have endorsed the epithet "anti-abortion" rather than calling the group what it calls itself (pro-life). Words with "anti" in them generally have negative connotations, and if you don't like a group that calls itself pro-life, then label them by what sounds pejorative, so that there is a negative emotion tied to the word. "Fundamentalism" also has a pejorative connotation, and is used almost solely to describe a group with which a journalist/writer/pundit disagrees, be it Christian or Muslim.

I've also heard some people associate fundamentalism with militant groups... but the movement in the early 20th century was anything BUT militant! It was a doctrinal and exegetical counter-cultural development. (See the first two paragraphs.) A proper definition of Fundamentalism can never include both the violent Islamic movements we see today and the early 20th century movement. They are different in almost every way. To call them both fundamentalist only causes embarassing confusion and misinformation.

This is largely because fundamentalism creates the illusion that taking the Bible "literally" incites similar behavior as taking the Qur'an "literally." We've already discussed the fallacy of assuming that there is only one literal interpretation of any text (there are always many literal interpretations), but further, Christian "fundamentalists" behave quite differently than Muslim "fundamentalists." The Muslim ones are willing to blow up civilians while they drink lattes in coffee shops and commute to work on buses. The Christian ones stand in front of abortion clinics trying to convince women of the beauty and wonder of bringing life into the world -- and they condemn the rare, fringe lunatics who have bombed them. (Can you think of a single Christian leader of any reputability who thinks it's okay to kill abortionists? Neither can I. Yet there are international Islamic organizations and even Islamic governmental leaders who openly justify suicide bombing.) The Muslim "fundamentalists" and the Christian "fundamentalists" are very, very different. ...But notice again -- NEITHER GROUP CALLS ITSELF FUNDAMENTALIST in the first place!

So to sum up the points I've made:
  • The Fundamentalist movement was a Protestant reaction to Darwinian evolution, German higher criticism, and other influences on Christian belief.
  • Apart from association with this historical movement, there is no consistent definition of "fundamentalism."
  • Muslim fundamentalists are different from Christian fundamentalists in almost every way. It's ridiculous to lump them together with the same term.
  • They don't call themselves fundamentalists in the first place, so it's irresponsible, presumptuous, deceptive, and arrogant of us to label them (much more to label them with something they aren't even associated with).
The word is useless. Stop calling Muslims fundamentalists.

Thursday 14 December 2006

Richard Dawkins: Making Atheism Even Stupider


Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology. -- Terry Eagleton

Intellectual Christians are Richard Dawkins' worst nightmare, because they embody everything Dawkins wishes Christianity weren't. -- Me.

I picked up Dawkins' book The God Delusion at Borders expecting to page through some fascinating and enticing reductionistic arguments against the possibility of divine activity in nature and in human experience. Instead, I found myself forcing down my vomit just long enough to finish the second chapter (after which I needed the toilet to purge). My I.Q. must have dropped a good five points, owing to exposure to such low-quality pretentious rubbish. Pass the Bertrand Russell, please! Dawkins' book is so unsophisticated it should replace The Adventures of Taxi Dog on every second grade reading list.

His arguments (if they can even be called such; they're more like polemics) are superficial at best. Over and over again he zeroes in on extremely negative samples of religious activity and pretends that they represent religion in general (see below for a similar error made by Sir Dufus Elton John). For example he discusses "the violation of childhood by religion," and of course only focuses on the dark misdeeds of religious zealots (whose behavior is even criticized by religious people!), and Dawkins completely forgets that, actually, secularism and atheism have been far worse for children as we have seen in the last century under Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, and even in the west as pop culture dismisses the emotional damage from early sexual activity and overlooks the destruction of two-parent families. But in order to fake his case Dawkins attacks only the very worst of religion, citing very often the dregs of the theistic barrel, the worst of the faithful, to drive his argument. He can't handle the reality -- the larger, fuller, more beautiful picture of religious thought and life. (I suspect because doing so would ruin his already pathetic book.)

As another example he includes as fodder for his argument is "a letter that so damningly exposes the weakness of the religious mind, it is worth reading twice" (p 16). But it seems like he read it a hundred times... and then somehow thought he'd read a hundred different treatises on theology and devotional material, and deluded himself into thinking he was then literate in religious philosophy. Dawkins' notion of the "religious mind" is in reality only the worst samples of religious thought.

As for the truly intelligent (and even mainstream) religious thinkers, he dare not engage them without extracting only very superficial versions of their arguments and then knocking down those straw men that he has just contrived. Oftentimes his writing dissolves into obnoxious ranting and regurgitations of the same complaints commonly babbled by people who don't understand Christianity. He may focus on a couple important theologians (like Richard Swinburne), but he selects only those against whom he feels the strongest. He barely touches upon the theologians who interact with both science and religion -- such as Alister McGrath and John Polkinghorne (or T.F. Torrence for that matter). He also fails to confront Gerald Schroeder, the Jewish physicist whose book The Science of God was compelling enough even to convince the famous atheist philosopher Antony Flew, who has now adopted a satisfied acknowledgement of God. Dawkins almost completely ignores them. I think I know why. I've read their (extremely insightful and informed) material, and it blows Dawkins' anti-religious prejudice out of the water. Dawkins is incapable of dealing with the progress made by such scientific theologians. This is in part because he severely lacks the credentials to understand the intellectual milieu in which they write. Here's an interesting chart:

AuthorScientific DegreeCredential in Religion
Alister McGrathD.Phil., Molecular Biophysics (Oxford)M.A. Theology, first-class Honours (Oxford)
John PolkinghornePh.D., Particle Physics (Cambridge)Honorary Doctorate, Theology
Gerald SchroederPh.D., Earth Science; Ph.D., Nuclear Physics (both at M.I.T.)Orthodox Judaism
Richard DawkinsD.Phil., Zoology (Oxford)

Missing something? It seems to me that McGrath and Polkinghorne are far more informed on the thinking that handles science and religion than is Richard Dawkins. I have friends here at Oxford (e.g. my colleague Adam Chapman) with degrees in physics and in theology, all of whom could thoroughly obliterate Dawkins' naive commentary on religion. So instead of engaging McGrath, Polkinghorne, Torrence, and Schroeder (et al), Dawkins argues mainly against minor, outmoded samples of religious thought. As a result his book is easy to criticize because his arguments are tissue thin and porous.

Furthermore Dawkins holds a low and utterly uninformed view of theology itself: "I have yet to see any good reason to suppose that theology (as opposed to biblical history, literature, etc.) is a subject at all" (p 57). Time to get reading, Dawkins. There are some incredibly smart and far more widely read scholars who have been scientists and theologians. (I've already proved this point above.) Don't McGrath and Polkinghorne have far better credentials to comment on the relationship between science and religion than does Dawkins, who has formal training only in biology?

Dawkins also embarks on speculation about "the roots of religion" (pp 162-207). I'll save everybody a lot of time with this humble insight: if you look for the origin of religion, you've shot yourself in the foot before you even begin. This is primarily because you've assumed religion is a simple, easily definable, universally scrutable phenomenon. Well it's not. Read E.B. Tylor, Freud, James Frazer, Emile Durkheim, and even recent authors like Pascal Boyer (whom Dawkins cites favorably!) and see each one fail flat in their attempts to identify the original prototype of religion. There is no grand general unified reality about religion, much less about its roots. Fortunately, most scholars are now owning up to this (e.g. Jonathan Z. Smith), though some did even as far back as the 60's (like E.E. Evans-Pritchard and Wilfred Cantwell Smith). You know what this means? Dawkins' thinking is fifty years out of date!

Dawkins is an evolutionary biologist (and indeed a fine one), but in this book he pretends to be a historian -- yet he can't distinguish data and reason from propaganda and conjectural whimsy! He also pretends to be a sociologist, but knows nothing about faith-based communities except trite, superficial, rhetorical complaints made against them. Dawkins should stick with what he knows, rather than run through a laundry list of topics on which he's hardly done any reading (as is evidenced by his reliance on quotations from debates and speeches). Dawkins' earlier books (such as The Blind Watchmaker) were decent because he wrote what he knew and explained concepts such as natural selection extremely well, especially for those untrained in the biological sciences. But his latest churn is a blind drift into uncharted territory about which he has hardly made any effort to navigate responsibly.

I think the most insightful review I have come across is that by Madeleine Bunting, a columnist for The Guardian (one of the UK's most liberal and popular newspapers). She writes:
Behind unsubstantiated assertions, sweeping generalisations and random anecdotal evidence, there's the unmistakable whiff of panic; [atheists] fear religion is on the march again.

There's an aggrieved frustration that they've been short-changed by history; we were supposed to be all atheist rationalists by now. Secularisation was supposed to be an inextricable part of progress. Even more grating, what secularisation there has been is accompanied by the growth of weird irrationalities from crystals to ley lines. As GK Chesterton pointed out, the problem when people don't believe in God is not that they believe nothing, it is that they believe anything.

There's an underlying anxiety that atheist humanism has failed. Over the 20th century, atheist political regimes racked up an appalling (and unmatched) record for violence. Atheist humanism hasn't generated a compelling popular narrative and ethic of what it is to be human and our place in the cosmos; where religion has retreated, the gap has been filled with consumerism, football, Strictly Come Dancing and a mindless absorption in passing desires. Not knowing how to answer the big questions of life, we shelve them - we certainly don't develop the awe towards and reverence for the natural world that Dawkins would want. So the atheist humanists have been betrayed by the irrational, credulous nature of human beings; a misanthropy is increasingly evident in Dawkins's anti-religious polemic and among his many admirers.

This is the only context that can explain Dawkins's programme, a piece of intellectually lazy polemic which is not worthy of a great scientist. He uses his authority as a scientist to claim certainty where he himself knows, all too well, that there is none.

Terry Eagleton has some insightful and incisive remarks for the bumbling atheist:
Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology.
Eagleton continues,
Dawkins considers that all faith is blind faith, and that Christian and Muslim children are brought up to believe unquestioningly. Not even the dim-witted clerics who knocked me about at grammar school thought that. For mainstream Christianity, reason, argument and honest doubt have always played an integral role in belief. (Where, given that he invites us at one point to question everything, is Dawkins’s own critique of science, objectivity, liberalism, atheism and the like?)
As if this weren't enough, another philosophical and theological heavyweight Alister McGrath (himself a microbiology Ph.D.) offers a response critiquing more Dawkins' very method:

You'll have to read the rest of Eagleton's review and McGrath's book (when it comes out) to see them blaze all across Dawkins' sloppy landfill. Even many of Dawkins' fellow atheists are embarassed at his empty, irresponsible rhetoric.

Alister McGrath discusses his realization of God in this lecture delivered to the Royal Society of Arts on 13 March 2006 (downloadable as PDF Here):
When I was an atheist, back in the late 1960s, everything seemed so simple. A bright new dawn lay just around the corner. Religion would be relegated to the past, a grim and dusty relic of a bygone age. God was just a cosy illusion for losers, best left to very inadequate and sad people. It was just a matter of waiting for nature to take its course. I was in good company in believing this sort of thing. It was the smug, foolish and fashionable wisdom of the age. Like flared jeans, it was accepted enthusiastically, if just a little uncritically.

I arrived at Oxford from school a Marxist, believing that religion was the cause of all the world’s evils. As an intellectual Darwinian, it seemed perfectly clear to me that the idea of God was on its way out, and would be replaced by fitter and more adapted ideas – like Marxism. I was a “bright”, to use Professor Dennett’s language.

But it didn’t work out like that. At Oxford – to my surprise – I discovered Christianity. It was the intellectually most exhilarating and spiritually stimulating thing I could ever hope to describe – better even than chemistry, a wonderful subject which I had thought to be the love of my life and my future career. I went on to gain a doctorate for research in molecular biophysics from Oxford , and found that immensely exciting and satisfying. But I knew I had found something better – like the pearl of great price that Jesus talks about in the gospel, which is so beautiful and precious that it overshadows everything. It was intellectually satisfying, imaginatively engaging, and aesthetically exciting.

But this raised questions for me. I had been taught that science disproved God. That all good scientists were atheists. That science was good, religion evil. It was a hopelessly simplified binary opposition, not unlike George Orwell, in Animal Farm: Four legs good, two legs bad. But it suited me just fine then.

Yet my new-found Christian faith brought a new sense of fulfilment and appreciation to my studies and later my research in the natural sciences. I saw nature as charged with the grandeur and majesty of God. To engage with nature was to gain a deeper appreciation of the divine wisdom. I gave up the sciences to read theology, but I still love the sciences, and follow the literature, especially in evolutionary biology. And above all, I have a passion for relating Christian theology to the natural sciences.
McGrath is Dawkins' worst nightmare, because McGrath is everything Dawkins wishes Christianity weren't.

Tuesday 5 December 2006

Want to sound ignorant? Denounce "Organized Religion."


Have a look at Elton John's tirade against "organized religion," as harangued in the Observer Music Monthly Magazine:

And a BBC article attempting to summarize his spew:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6140710.stm

He repeats a lot of the dopisms I hear often from people who don't have a clue about religion.

"Organized religion" is a favorite scapegoat of the typical ignoramus for so many problems in the world. It controls people. It causes wars. It promotes bigotry.

How myopic and pathetic. This is called anti-religious prejudice.

First of all, how can you make blanket statements about such a specious notion? In mathematics (and most natural sciences) there's a principle called significant figures. You should have learned about them in high school. If you have a number with very little precision, such as 1.5, and it interacts with a highly precise number like 2.7182818284... (this is Euler's number), the result cannot be any more precise than the least precise factor. Behold:

1.5 x 2.7182818284... = 4.1

The number 1.5 contains all numbers from 1.4500000000 through 1.54999999999; it represents the entire range. However, 2.7182818284 only represents one number (to ten decimal places). In the same way, "organized religion" represents a vast spectrum of institutions, and Elton John's single bloviation cannot deal with them all... yet he pretends to.

This isn't just mathematics; this is reasoning. "Organized religion" is a broad-brush epithet that lumps together all religious institutions from the Roman Catholic Church to the Hanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence to the Dalai Llama's authority over the Tibetan Buddhist sangha. How on earth can you make any -- ANY -- claim indicting all organized religion? Bring a claim and I'll show you a dozen exceptions. Nobody in academia with any reputability or scholastic integrity talks about "organized religion." Why not? Because you can't say anything about it at all! It's a contrived catch-all phrase used by uneducated anti-religious propagandists, and has no place in any intelligent discussion.

Be precise with your statements if you presume to make a serious critique. Elton John evidently acid-soaked his brain into a perpetual, swirling state of psychedelic delusion, like so many other basketcase damaged goods who stumbled glossy-eyed out of the hippy movement with an irrational antagonism toward anything resembling authority.

While "organized religion" is an empty, useless expression, we can talk about specific "religious organizations." You can criticize, for example, Opus Dei, the Catholic organization popularized by Dan Brown's anti-Catholic novel The Da Vinci Code. Careful, though, because you'll shoot yourself in the foot if you think you know a lot about it just by reading contemporary fiction. But if you do an honest study of Opus Dei, you can evaluate it intelligently. Then again -- an evaluation of Opus Dei as an organization is not an evaluation of each of its 85,000 members.

So let's assume that Elton John had an inkling of consciousness and said that religious organizations lacked compassion and turned people into "hateful lemmings." It's still ridiculous, because exceptions to this principle abound so much that the claim is outright false.

Are there, in fact, many Christian organizations that feed and educate the poor, shelter the homeless, build hospitals, inveigh against racism and sexism, etc, etc?

Take a look at this very brief, incomprehensive list:

The Salvation Army, Beyond Tears Worldwide, Christian Aid, Joy of a Child, The United Methodist Committee on Relief, Bread for the World, Feed the Children, International Orphans' Assistance, Christian Peacemakers International, Global MissionAir, Church World Service, Christian Reformed World Relief Committee, Adventist Community Service, HOPE Worldwide, Mennonite Economic Development Associates, Northwest Medical Teams International, International Christian Concern, Family Care Foundation, Christian Blind Mission International, Christian World Service, Samaritan's Purse, Global Aid Network, The Association of Evangelical Relief & Development Organizations, Mildmay HIV & AIDS Care, Healing Hands International, Dorcas Aid International, Hope for the Suffering, Operation Blessing International, Engineering Ministries International, Mission Without Borders International, Kingscare, World Hope International, Christian Relief Services, India Partners, Bright Hope International, Great Commission Air, For Haiti With Love, Eastern Europe Aid Association, Philanthropy, Dream Machine Foundation, Several Sources Foundation, Amazon Relief Project, Sewa Ashram, Nigeria Health Care Project, Partners International, United People in Christ, Caring for China, Global Samaritans, Camillian Task Force CTF, Beyond Borders, Interfaith Refugee Ministry, International D.O.V.E. Association, Aid to Russia and the Republics, ARRC, Global Harvest Outreach, The International Refugee Center of Dakar, Christian Mission Aid, HeartSprings International Ministries, Pamoja, and countless more.

...Still think "organized religion" is harmful? Bring your complaints, I'll be glad to respond.