Francis Collins is ticked off at atheists

July 29, 2011 • 10:39 pm

Speaking at an editorial board meeting at USA TodayNational Insitutes of Health director Francis Collins, an evangelical Christian, has struck out at atheists. He’s particularly upset at some critical comments made by Steven Pinker that were first reported on this website.  Collins now argues that the conflicts between religion and science are “overstated.”

Asked about complaints from researchers such as Harvard’s Steven Pinker, over an avowed Christian heading a scientific agency, Collins said, “angry atheists are out there using science as a club to to hit believers over the head.” He expressed concern that prominent researchers suggesting that one can’t believe in evolution and believe in God, may be “causing a lot of people not familiar with science to change their assessments of it.”

“A person’s private beliefs should not keep him from a public position,” Pinker wrote in 2009. “But Collins is an advocate of profoundly anti-scientific beliefs, and it is reasonable for the scientific community to ask him how these beliefs will affect his administration,” he added. Collins later support for NIH human embryonic stem cell research later earned him more favorable reviews from scientists such as Alan Leshner of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

And Collins is still an advocate of profoundly anti-scientific beliefs, including the notion that the laws of physics indicate fine-tuning by a deity (the same one who freezes waterfalls in three parts), and that human morality—which he calls “The Moral Law”—can’t be explained by evolution, ergo Jesus. (I’m publishing a response to the latter idea within the next few days.)

I’m still awaiting evidence for Collins’s accommodationist claim that those who argue for an incompatibility between science and faith have turned many people away from science.  What we do know is that those arguments have turned many people away from faith, which is of course a good thing.

Collins has, of course, again overstepped his boundaries as NIH director. To see this, imagine if he was an atheist instead of a Christian, and “struck out at angry religious people” for trying to blur the boundaries between science and superstition. Imagine if he said that religious people were using Jesus as a club to hit the scientifically-minded over the head. Collins would be fired in a millisecond, and religious people would come down on him like a ton of bricks.  His ability to get away with this as America’s most famous government scientist shows the profound asymmetry between theists and atheists in America.

Here’s my response to Collins’s claim of science/faith comity, published last year in USA Today.

Rabbi Yoffie defends “religious” morality

July 29, 2011 • 10:05 pm

A week ago I criticized Rabbi Eric Yoffie for claiming that he gets his morality from religion, noting that the “morality” adumbrated in the sacred book of his faith, the Old Testament, is horrendous, condoning all sorts of acts that modern folks find immoral and repugnant.

Rabbi Yoffie has responded to me, agreeing that the morality given in the Bible was wrong, and noting that after due consideration, much pilpul, and lengthy weighing of subtle nuances, scholarly Jews have decided that God didn’t mean what he said in the Old Testament:

“Jerry Coyne’s response is not serious. His position: if you take the Bible seriously, that means accepting stoning and genocide. But as I wrote, my moral decisions derive from studying and considerin­g a 2500-year conversati­on among Jews and between Jews and sacred texts–one that involves not only considerin­g the Bible but the Talmud, the responsa and rabbinic literature in all of its richness. This is a literature that rejects stoning and genocide. It is also a literature that does not always arrive at a single conclusion­; nontheless­, by immersing myself in that literature and in a long tradition of thoughtful religious discussion­s, I am able to benefit from profound insignts and make moral judgments that I find far more compelling than those that derive from secular systems.”

I would argue that these revised moral judgments are in fact not based on religion, but on secular morality.  What the learned rabbis have done is simply realize that, by all human lights and standards, the stoning of nonvirgin brides, genocide, and murder of homosexuals is wrong.  But the Bible nevertheless says they’re okay!  The Old Testament, obviously, does not comport with our innate views of right and wrong—a secular morality that takes precedence over the pronouncements of God. Just because these moral judgments are made by a bunch of rabbis and religious Jews does not make them religious.

Similarly, if a Catholic layperson decides that using condoms or having extramarital sex don’t really constitute mortal sins, that doesn’t make those decisions “religious.”

St. Petersburg: The Hermitage

July 29, 2011 • 9:31 am

The internet in my hotel is wonky, so I dare not even try to upload photos.  Because of this, I’ll postpone my “holiday snaps” and commentary on this gorgeous city after I return to the U.S. on Wednesday.  But I did want to note that I spent four hours this morning in the Hermitage, the former palace of the Russian czars that has been converted into an art gallery.  It’s not as large as the Louvre, but is almost as exhausting, with a collection that ranges from ancient Egyptian art through the Impressionists (something the Louvre doesn’t have).

But you’ll see from the pictures I’ll post that the setting for the paintings is incomparably better in the Hermitage than the Louvre, for the imperial corridors and apartments have been restored to their former glory.  There are inlaid floors, ceiling frescoes and gilded plaster everywhere, and, because the paintings are mostly in exterior corridors, lots of natural light to view the paintings.  In fact, some of them aren’t even behind glass, so you can inspect, for example, the impasto of van Gogh from only a few inches away. (Given this people-friendly but painting-unfriendly presentation, and the lack of climate control in the building, I worry about the longevity of these artworks.)

And, unlike the Louvre, the Hermitage has a basement loaded with working cats, whose job is to keep the museum rodent-free.  Sadly, I didn’t see any of them, and, given the formality of this museum, I doubt that I’ll try.

Anyway, a while back I published a list of my ten favorite painters (and two wild cards), which follows:

1. Rembrandt
2. van Gogh
3. Picasso
4. Michelangelo
5. da Vinci
6. Dürer
7. Johannes Vermeer
8. Raphael
9. Caravaggio
10. Monet
11. Turner
12. Toulouse-Lautrec

Wild cards:

Kandinsky
Feininger

Paintings by #1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 9, and 10 were on view today.  There were a handful of lovely van Goghs that I hadn’t seen in reproduction, a ton of Matisses (not one of my favorites), at least 20 Rembrandts (including The Return of the Prodigal Son), and, best of all, two da Vincis. There was also a wonderful room of Kandinskys (my favorite Russian artist, though I’m having a look at Ilya Repin in the Russian Museum tomorrow), including his early representational work. I believe,though I’m not 100% sure, that Kandinsky was the first “modern” artist to create an abstract painting.

Based on my viewing today, I’m going to put the Hermitage in at least a tie with the Louvre as the world’s best museum of art (no, I haven’t seen them all, but I have been to many touted museums, including the Prado), and I want to revise my list of painters above.  I’m swapping da Vinci with Michelangelo. Only about a dozen authenticated da Vincis exist, and I’ve now seen more than half of them, unfortunately not including The Last Supper.  His paintings have an ineffable tenderness and humanity, combined with the most exquisite technique, that puts them in a class with Rembrandt (about whom I’ll have more to say—and show—when I get back).

My favorite da Vinci, which I’ve seen in the Louvre, is St. John the Baptist:

After gorging on this great art, I sought out my first meal on my own (up to now we’ve been fed, amply, by the organizers of our conference), and I wanted something Russian.  I managed to find a sort of Russian McDonalds that had fast but traditional foods, and consumed a blini (Russian pancake) filled with egg and shredded cabbage, and a big glass of kvass, a slightly alcoholic drink made from fermented rye bread.  I’ve always wanted to drink kvass, since it features largely in the work of Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky, and I found it tasty and refreshing.

As usual when I present a “favorite” list, I invite readers to weigh in with their own choices.  This time, why not list your five favorite artists?

UPDATE: I forgot to list my favorite painting, which I know I’ve mentioned before. It’s the Isenheim Altarpiece by Mathias Grünewald, and I’ve never seen it in person. Yours?

The importance of religiosity to US voters

July 29, 2011 • 4:58 am

by Sigmund

The Public Religion Research Institute is a Washington based group that describes itself as “a nonprofit, nonpartisan, independent organization dedicated to research at the intersection of religion, values, and public life”. Amongst its activities is the collection of data regarding religious views and opinions of the general public in the US. They recently carried out a telephone poll of a random sample 1012 adults in the US that provides some interesting data on just how important the general public currently regards the religiosity of politicians.

It’s a very brief survey, with only a few questions asked – mainly concerning the knowledge of members of the public about the religion of potential candidates for the upcoming 2012 Presidential election, namely Barack Obama, Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann.

The results are, unsurprisingly, that most people don’t have a good idea about the actual stated religion of any of the candidates (18%, for example, think Obama is Muslim – again, not a shock.)

The one result to note, however, is that of the question:
“How important is it for a candidate to have strong religious beliefs, regardless of whether those beliefs are the same as yours. Is it very important, somewhat important, not too important or not at all important?”

The results indicate that ‘very important’ and ‘somewhat important’ got the highest response (as expected for a US survey) with 30% and 26% respectively.

The surprising thing is that ‘not at all important’ is also 26%, with ‘not too important’ being 17%.

Considering that the USA public has in the past been shown a high importance in religiosity, particularly in regards its politicians, it is interesting that the proportion of the population that regards being religious is unimportant in a politician is currently not too far behind those who find it essential. With much higher levels of religiosity found in the elderly US population compared to the young  it is not out of the question that European levels of disregard for religiosity might be on the cards within the next generation on simple demographic grounds alone.

Squeeee – baby hippo underwater ballet (with added epistemological question)

July 29, 2011 • 2:19 am

by Matthew Cobb

This great video from San Diego Zoo. The calf is called Adhama, and she was 5 months old when this was posted at the end of June. She seems to be having fun. Or is she just learning how to swim? This comes back once again to the big epistemological question we’ve debated here many times: how could we know what an animal is feeling?

h/t: My ex-student Karlina Ozolina

Hitchens to receive Dawkins award

July 28, 2011 • 10:39 pm

Reader Sastra has informed me that Christopher Hitchens is scheduled to receive the Richard Dawkins award from the Atheist Alliance of America this October in Houston, Texas:

The Richard Dawkins Award has been presented annually since 2003 to notable individuals for their work on behalf of promoting atheism and freethought around the world.  Past recipients include Susan Jacoby, Bill Maher, Penn and Teller, Julia Sweeney, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Daniel Dennett, Ann Druyan, and James Randi.

This year, Richard Dawkins himself will present AAA’s Richard Dawkins Award to Christopher Hitchens, who may accept in person or in absentia as his schedule permits.

The last sentence is very sad.

UPDATE:  I note with pleasure, however, that Hitchens is still turning in his weekly column on Slate.

A bunch of atheists explain why we’re faithless

July 28, 2011 • 9:51 pm

Andrew Zak Williams’s piece on atheists and their reasons for godlessness has finally appeared in The New Statesman. (This is a companion piece to Williams’s survey in April of why prominent religious people believe in God.)

The new piece is in two parts. First are the short explanations written by public atheists, called “Faith no more.” All the usual suspects are there, including Richard Dawkins, A. C. Grayling (whose statement is a model of terseness), P. Z. Myers, Sam Harris, Philip Pullman, Stephen Hawking, Steven Weinberg, Ben Goldacre, Dan Dennett, Maryam Namazie, and me.

For almost all of us, it comes down to one thing: lack of evidence.  That’s true even for P. Z., who has previously argued that there is no evidence for a deity that he’d find convincing, since the whole idea of a god is incoherent:

I am accustomed to the idea that truth claims ought to be justified with some reasonable evidence: if one is going to claim, for instance, that a Jewish carpenter was the son of a God, or that there is a place called heaven where some ineffable, magical part of you goes when you die, then there ought to be some credible reason to believe that. And that reason ought to be more substantial than that it says so in a big book.

To me, at least, this part of P.Z.’s statement presumes that there could have been some evidence.

Others, like Sam Harris and Andrew Copson, adduce the palpable fact that religions are obviously human inventions.

A few highlights:  Richard Dawkins’s note on Cherie Blair:

Equally unconvincing are those who believe because it comforts them (why should truth be consoling?) or because it “feels right”. Cherie Blair [“I’m a believer”, New Statesman, 18 April] may stand for the “feels right” brigade. She bases her belief on “an understanding of something that my head cannot explain but my heart knows to be true”. She aspires to be a judge. M’lud, I cannot provide the evidence you require. My head cannot explain why, but my heart knows it to be true.

Why is religion immune from the critical standards that we apply not just in courts of law, but in every other sphere of life?

Michael Shermer:

“In the last 10,000 years there have been roughly 10,000 religions and 1,000 different gods; what are the chances that one group of people discovered the One True God while everyone else believed in 9,999 false gods?”

Bioethicist John Harris:

 A rational person does not waste time believing or even being agnostic about things that there are no good reasons to accept.

I was quite puzzled by Ben Goldacre’s statement, which asserts that he simply has no interest in the question.  It almost seems like an attempt to avoid taking a stand, except that Goldacre is no coward.  After all, there could have been a deity responsible for the universe—at least most humans think so—and that belief has conditioned a huge segment of human culture and behavior.  Why is it uninteresting?  If there’s no evidence for gods, well, then that’s a good reason to cease caring, but to not care a priori?

I think probably the main answer to your question is: I just don’t have any interest either way, but I wouldn’t want to understate how uninterested I am. There still hasn’t been a word invented for people like me, whose main ex­perience when presented with this issue is an overwhelming, mind-blowing, intergalactic sense of having more interesting things to think about. I’m not sure that’s accurately covered by words such as “atheist”, and definitely not by “agnostic”. I just don’t care.

I was deeply puzzled by Stephen Hawking’s statement:

I am not claiming there is no God. The scientific account is complete, but it does not predict human behaviour, because there are too many equations to solve. One therefore uses a different model, which can include free will and God.

“The scientific account is complete”?  Account of what?  It’s not even complete in physics!  And why on earth would our failure to make “equations” to solve human behavior (God help us, what an ignorance of biology the man has!) somehow allow models including not only free will, but God?  The statement is largely incoherent.

And, after laboring a long time on my own statement, I can only envy how well Anthony Grayling says it all in a single sentence:

I do not believe that there are any such things as gods and goddesses, for exactly the same reasons as I do not believe there are fairies, goblins or sprites, and these reasons should be obvious to anyone over the age of ten.

Several people, including me, mention the problem of evil, which can be “solved” by theologians only by the most circuitious and unconvincing logic.  Others take the Laplace stance: we don’t need God.

But go read them all, and take comfort that so many rational people have converged on the same reasons for atheism.  I haven’t had time to read the comments (I’m off to the Hermitage), but perhaps readers can highlight some of the better or funnier ones.

In a separate piece called “The invisible Big Kahuna,” Andrew Zak Williams summarizes the answers. Although I don’t know his own stand on religion (I didn’t ask him when he interviewed me), it seems that he’s sympathetic to atheism.  This is based on the peroration of his piece:

But if you rely on blind faith, what are the chances that you’re going to see the light?

For others, their religion satisfies them intellectually. Yet when they can’t reason their way past specific problems (say, suffering or biblical inconsistencies), their faith comes riding to the rescue. But faith is hardly a white horse: more like a white elephant, trumpeting a refusal to engage in debate as though it were something about which to be proud.

The atheists that I spoke to are the products of what happens to many intelligent people who aren’t prepared to take important decisions purely on faith, and who won’t try to believe simply to avoid familial or societal pressures. And as philosopher Daniel C. Dennett put it: “Why try anyway? There is no obligation to try to believe in God.”

And then, after quoting P.Z.’s very strong attack on religion, Williams simply says, “Amen to that.”