Movie recommendation: True Grit

April 30, 2011 • 12:09 pm

I never saw the 1969 version of this movie—the one starting John Wayne as Rooster Cogburn—nor have I read the 1968 novel by Charles Portis, but I greatly enjoyed last year’s version by the Coen brothers. which I saw last night.

It won’t be too much of a spoiler to give the plot outline.  A 14-year-old girl, Mattie Ross (played by the wonderful Hailee Steinfeld), heads out west to avenge the murder of her father by the nefarious Tom Chaney (Josh Brolin).  With money obtained from the sale of her late father’s horses, she hires a frowzy and drunken U.S. Marshal, Rooster Cogburn (Jeff Bridges) to hunt the murderer down.  Mattie refuses to let Rooster go out alone, and doggedly rides with him into Indian territory, joined by a Texas Ranger named LaBoeuf (Matt Damon), who’s pursuing the same man for a murder in Texas.  They have a lot of “adventures”, or rather encounters, for the movie presents a panoply of oddballs and misfits, as one expects from a Coen movie.  The final encounter, and the movie’s denouement, is heartbreaking: perhaps the best part of the film.

What made this film for me, beside the wonderfully assured presence of Steinfeld, was the dialogue, which is at once stilted and mesmerizing. I suppose the Coens are here imagining a kind of  formalism that might have infected speech in the 1870s.  Whatever it is, it’s at first startling but then becomes immensely appealing to the ear. Here’s Mattie arguing with LeBoeuf about where Chaney should be brought to justice.  (You can find the whole script here).

MATTIE
When Chaney is taken he is coming
back to Fort Smith to hang. I am
not having him go to Texas to hang
for shooting some senator.
LEBOEUF
Haw-haw! It is not important where
he hangs, is it?
MATTIE
It is to me. Is it to you?
LEBOEUF
It means a great deal of money to
me. It’s been many months’ work.
MATTIE
I’m sorry that you are paid
piecework not on wages, and that
you have been eluded the winter
long by a halfwit. Marshal Cogburn
and I are fine.
(LeBoeuf stands.)
LEBOEUF
You give out very little sugar with
your pronouncements. While I sat
there watching you I gave some
thought to stealing a kiss, though
you are very young and sick and
unattractive to boot, but now I
have a mind to give you five or six
good licks with my belt.
(Mattie rolls away onto her side.)
MATTIE
One would be as unpleasant as the
other. If you wet your comb, it
might tame that cowlick.

The cinematography is wonderful, Damen and Brolin do a creditable job, and Bridges—well, who knows how much of that crusty “character” is really just himself—but does it matter?  And Steinfeld is worth the price of admission.  True Grit was nominated for ten Academy Awards: Wikipedia lists Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actor (Bridges), Best Supporting Actress (Steinfeld), Best Art Direction, Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Sound Mixing, and Best Sound Editing. (Unfortunately, the film didn’t nab a single one.)

This is not a great movie, but it’s a very, very good one, and I recommend it enthusiastically.

Steinfeld and Bridges

USA Today: Atheism is a superstition

April 30, 2011 • 5:17 am

This isn’t worth wasting a lot of time on, but it behooves us to keep up with the latest arguments against atheism.    Over at USA Today, America’s biggest-selling newspaper, there’s an anti-Gnu piece called “How Easter and Christianity undermine atheism.”  The author is one Anthony DeStefano, author of many saccharine religious books, including The Invisible World-Understanding Angels, Demons, and the Spiritual Realities that Surround Us.

Here’s his thesis:

Of course, it’s not quite fair to say that atheists believe in nothing. They do believe in something — the philosophical theory known as Materialism, which states that the only thing that exists is matter; that all substances and all phenomena in the universe are purely physical.

The problem is that this really isn’t a theory at all. It’s a superstition; a myth that basically says that everything in life — our thoughts, our emotions, our hopes, our ambitions, our passions, our memories, our philosophies, our politics, our beliefs in God and salvation and damnation — that all of this is merely the result of biochemical reactions and the movement of molecules in our brain.

What nonsense.

We can’t reduce the whole of reality to what our senses tell us for the simple reason that our senses are notorious for lying to us. Our senses tell us that the world is flat, and yet it’s not. Our senses tell us that the world is chaotic, and yet we know that on both a micro and a macro level, it’s incredibly organized. Our senses tell us that we’re stationary, and yet we’re really moving at incredible speeds. We just can’t see it.

This is remarkably stupid.  Yes, our eyes sometimes deceive us, but DeStefano doesn’t seem to realize that we’ve invented extensions of our senses that are precisely the reasons we know the earth is round and is moving.

But get this: although our senses are fallible, our revelations are absolutely accurate:

But the most important things in life can’t be seen with the eyes. Ideas can’t be seen. Love can’t be seen. Honor can’t be seen. This isn’t a new concept. Judaism and Christianity and Islam and Buddhism have all taught for thousands of years that the highest forms of reality are invisible and mysterious. And these realities will never be reducible to clear-cut scientific formulae for the simple reason that they will never be fully comprehensible to the human mind. God didn’t mean them to be.

Yes, DeStefano, in his arrogance, knows exactly what God intended. And what’s his ultimate evidence for the truth of religions? The fact that some of their dogma involves bad stuff:

Atheists, of course, claim that all of this is absurd. Christianity, especially, they say, with its belief in Easter and the Resurrection, is nothing but “wishful thinking” — the product of weak human psychology; a psychology that is so afraid of death that it must create “delusional fantasies” in order to make life on Earth bearable.

But is it wishful thinking to believe in hell, the devil and demons? Is it wishful thinking to believe we’re going to be judged and held accountable for every sin we’ve ever committed? Is it wishful thinking to believe the best way to live our life is to sacrifice our own desires for the sake of others? Is it wishful thinking to believe that we should discipline our natural bodily urges for the sake of some unseen “kingdom”?

And while we’re at it, is it wishful thinking to believe God wants us to love our enemies? For goodness sake, what kind of demand is that?

If human beings were going to invent a religion based on wishful thinking, they could come up with something a lot “easier” than Christianity. After all, why not wish for a religion that promised eternal life in heaven, but at the same time allowed promiscuous sex, encouraged gluttony, did away with all the commandments, and forbade anyone to ever mention the idea of judgment and punishment?

But if religions are man made, and largely about control of behavior, what better way to do it than to offer both a carrot and a stick?  The argument that an ideology or superstition must be true if part of it involves suffering is a novel one, but testifies no more to the truth of Christianity than to the “truth” of Stalinism or Nazism.

Grayling on Colbert

April 30, 2011 • 4:26 am

This week Anthony Grayling made The Big Time; that is, he appeared on The Colbert Report touting his humanist bible.   As usual, the spotlight is on Colbert (his schtick of talking incessantly is getting a bit old), but, as they say, there’s no such thing as bad publicity. Note that at 4:30 Anthony comes close to Sam Harris’s view that there are moral absolutes that are discernible from empirical observation.

At the end Grayling sums up the book’s theme: “Love well and be courageous.”  Sounds good, but what does it mean to love badly?

[vodpod id=ExternalVideo.994564&w=425&h=350&fv=autoPlay%3Dfalse]

Caturday felids: Sumatran tiger and clouded leopard cubs

April 30, 2011 • 4:04 am

Okay, your host cannot resist a tiger cub, and several of them opened their eyes for the first time two weeks ago at the San Diego Zoo.  They’re Sumatran tigers (Panthera tigris sumatrae), a subspecies found on the Indonesian island of Sumatra.  They’re the smallest of all the subspecies, and only about 300 remain in the wild.

And about a month ago, three clouded leopard cubs (Neofelis nebulosa) were born at the Nashville Zoo (see here and here for our previous discussions of these cats).  These ones sound exactly like squeak toys.

Update on Yokohamamama’s kitten

April 29, 2011 • 11:57 am

Yesterday I reported the discovery of a bedraggled orange (‘ginger’) kitten by Yokohamamama’s (Amy’s) son Koshi.  I’m happy to report that it’s been taken to the vet, given heartworm medication and its first shot, had its ears cleaned and, most important, been given eyedrops for its conjunctivitis, so that now his eyes are better (the cat proved to be male).  Over at her website, Amy reports on the kitten and shows lots of LOLzy photos, including its stint in a doll carriage.

I watched it frisking about on Skype this morning, and took a screenshot during one of its innumerable naps (I just noticed myself down in the corner looking pleased):

The Archbishop of Canterbury is a pompous old gasbag who doesn’t understand evolution

April 29, 2011 • 8:56 am

Speaking of old gits with unwaxed eyebrows, Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of All England, has a book review in the last Times Literary Supplement.  And although His Reverend has no apparent training in biology, he’s been chosen to pronounce on Conor Cuningham’s Darwin’s Pious Idea: Why the Ultra-Darwinists and Creationists Both Get it Wrong.   I can’t link to the review, as it’s not online, and I haven’t read the book, either.  Judging from reviews, it seems to excoriate evolutionists for thinking that Darwinism is a “theory of everything” and fundamentalists for espousing creationism.  It seems to be a book of accommodationism, showing how God might well have used evolution as his modus operandus, and arguing that there is no conflict between religion and Darwinism.  Perhaps those who have read it can give further information.

The Primate gives the book two opposable thumbs up, calling it “the most interesting and invigorating book on the science–religion frontier that I have encountered”.  The review is notable for two things.   The first is that the prose is absolutely dreadful; Williams writes like a theologian.  One example:

We have been led to assume that there is an irreducible distinction between the “hard” facts of physical interaction and the various decorative excrescences that we think of as mental realities. To understand the former, we are often told, is to understand that the foundational truth about the universe is material happening, described in a way that excludes anything we might call purpose. We must on no account tell teleological stories about the processes we observe – and, as Cunningham says, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that this proscription is there in some people’s minds chiefly in order to conserve the necessary clear blue water between science and any kind of theology.

Translation:  Mind/matter monists have a position based not on science, but on hatred of religion.  (“Clear blue water”?)

But buried within the leaden prose is a deep and abiding dislike for evolutionary biology and genetics in particular.  Despite his apparent comity with Professor Dawkins, Williams just hates the selfish gene.  And, to denigrate the gene-centered view of evolution, he drags in both C. S. Lewis (for crying out loud!) and Mary Midgley:

The gene has been presented as the irreducible monadic agent for biological science, but this begs important questions. We need to remember that the gene itself is part of the evolutionary story, not its sole motor (I was reminded of a passage in C. S. Lewis’s letters where he describes with relish hearing of a passionately enlightened schoolteacher who insisted to her students that all life forms descended from apes). If the only model for evolutionary logic we possess is the mythology of the selfish gene, we leave unanswered and unanswerable the question of the gene’s own history; quite apart from the problems in speaking of “selfishness” as the sole generator of development.

Umm. . . which evolutionist doesn’t recognize that the origin of genetic information, and how it interacts with proteins, is an intriguing but unsolved puzzle? But how does that denigrate evolution, which begins only after the first replicator has evolved? And what the bloody hell does the C. S. Lewis anecdote about apes have to with the gene? Finally, doesn’t the Great Primate recognize that he’s hoist with his own petard?  Let me rewrite the above:  “If the only model for God we have is the mythology given in the Bible, we leave unanswered and unanswerable the question of God’s own history.”  If the origin of the gene is a hard problem for biology, the origin of God is an insuperable problem for theology.

Here’s moar gibberish:

Perhaps more seriously, the presumption of an omnicausal gene leads into the fallacy soaked morass of “misplaced concreteness”. A gene is not a thing, not a biological billiard ball: it is a cluster of information carrying material. Its unity or identity is given by the nature of the information it carries; it does not exist as such independently of the chain of “instruction” in which it functions.

For the life of me, I don’t know what Williams is getting at.  The gene is a sequence of nucleotides that, in general, codes for a protein.  That protein does stuff in development.  How does that not make the gene something that exists independently?

And look out—here comes Midgley! (I suspect Williams gets the emphasis on “information” from the intelligent-design people.)

In ways closely paralleled in another recent essay, Mary Midgley’s The Solitary Self (2010), Cunningham deconstructs with ease the vulgar version of natural selection that is still tiresomely prevalent in popular science, noting the inescapable role in selection of co-operative and cumulative processes (he touches on the still contested idea of group selection in this connection), and the multiple and context-dependent meanings of “selection” itself.

The meaningless world of ruthlessly self-replicating monads is a fiction which has a corrosive effect on scientific research itself. . .

Yes, isn’t the idea of natural selection so tiresome? Especially the vulgar version—you know, the one that claims that cooperation and “cumulative processes” (whatever those are) can’t evolve?  LOL!  Is Williams’s sight so occluded by those eyebrows that he can’t see that cooperation is easily achievable by “vulgar” natural selection? And oh, that corrosive fiction of gene-based selection, which has been such an impediment in understanding evolution!

Williams’s big point, though, in which he appears to concur with creationists, is that he simply can’t fathom how mind can come from matter.  And he makes this point in various obscure ways:

. . . we have to reckon with the implications of rejecting the absolute dualism of genotype and phenotype, the mechanistic naturalism, which, as Cunningham shows, is simply the old dualism of mind or soul and body under a fresh guise. If matter is “mindless”, how is it that mind is produced? The mere appearance of this alien element during the evolutionary story is as unlikely and unattractive a model as the crude interventionism of the religious creationist.

Unlikely?  It happened, dude! Williams here, liberal and enlightened as he is supposed to be, is coming close here to Catholic Church’s stand that mind (or “soul”) must have been somehow injected into the human lineage by a loving God. And if it wasn’t directly injected into some hapless australopithecine (“Oh wow, I can think!”), then it was built into the evolutionary process by God in the first place.

In the end, Williams descends into postmodern gibberish:

We need to recognize that, if intelligible structure, developing and ordered complexity, is the story we have to tell, if the point of genes is to carry information, then the reality of the universe as we know it is suffused with the possibility of mind. Matter itself is pregnant with meanings, we might say – in the sense that the complexification of matter over the ages ends up in the phenomenon of consciousness. And a scheme that regards consciousness as a purely contingent thing – as it were, an accidental by-product of material processes with which it is essentially unconnected – has a lot of explaining to do; as Cunningham says, it begins to sound like the nineteenth-century zealots who believed that fossils were placed in the soil by the Devil to test our faith.

Doesn’t that mushy thought remind you of Karen Armstrong?

It’s strange: more and more scientists are seeing consciousness as a hard problem, but one that is in principle explainable.  After all, when you give someone an anesthetic, consciousness goes away.  When you take away the gas, it comes back. That means it’s a material-based phenomenon.  Yes, we do have a lot of explaining to do, but it’s not the kind of theological waffling that once invoked fossil-planting devils.  It’s scientific research, not apologetics.  Doesn’t Williams see the difference?

And, in a paragraph in which words and meaning have almost parted company, Williams sees the hand of God guiding evolution:

The possibility of a first-person perspective, if it truly emerges from the unfolding logic of material combination and recombination, simply tells us that the notion of a necessarily “mindless” matter is not sustainable. If the nature of a gene is to carry a message, it is the nature of the recipient vehicle in a new generation to be able to “understand” it. To adapt the famous remark about one mythological cosmology, it’s mind all the way down. Intelligence as we define it entails self-consciousness, the first-person perspective; but something seriously analogous to intelligence has to be presupposed in matter for the entire system of transmitted patterns and “instructions” to be possible.

Despite his association with Richard Dawkins, the Archbishop still doesn’t understand natural selection.  Let him officiate at weddings and give sermons, but Ceiling Cat keep him away from the TLS—and half-witted pronouncements about evolution.

And let’s add the Anglican Church to the list of those “sophisticated and liberal denominations” that claim to accept evolution but really don’t.