More atheist-bashing in Slate

January 8, 2014 • 4:01 am

One of my resolutions for 2014, which I’ll undoubtedly violate repeatedly, is to spend less time dissecting atheist-bashing articles, for the arguments against atheists are simply recycled endlessly. But even if I can’t keep my resolution, I’ll try to be briefer, as in the case of poet Michael Robbins‘s review in Slate of Molly Worthens’s new book Apostles of Reason, a history of modern evangelical Christianity.

Unfortunately, Robbins can’t stick to the book, but winds up using his article, “Your being here: the fundamental questions at the heart of the wars between fundamentalism and modernity,” to club atheists. Discussing a transformation among some evangelicals from “naive theism” to doubt that can shade into unbelief, Robbins simply goes off the rails:

One unfortunate consequence of this background shift is that as unbelief seems to more and more people the only plausible construal, they find it difficult to understand why anyone would adopt a different one. Thus “they reach for rather gross error theories to explain religious belief,” and we are subjected to ignorant books by the likes of Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, and Daniel Dennett. Take Dawkins on Thomas Aquinas, for example, a discussion so inept that it’s as if Noam Chomsky had decided to publish a primer on black metal. (See David Bentley Hart’s elegant demolition of Dawkins’ analysis in The Experience of God.)

The “undergraduate atheists,” as the philosopher Mark Johnston dubbed them in Saving God, have been definitively refuted by Hart, Terry Eagleton, Marilynne Robinson, Johnston himself, and others. As intellectual bloodbaths go, it’s been entertaining—like watching Jon Stewart skewer Glenn Beck. But of course Richard Dawkins is merely a symptom. I have encountered atheists who seem not only to have never met an intelligent, educated believer, but to doubt that such a creature could exist.

I don’t know what Robbins considers a “definite refutation” of “undergraduate atheists”, but I’ve read Eagleton and Robinson, and they have no new arguments for God’s existence—arguments that are, after all, the focus of New Atheism.  All they do is carp endlessly about how Dawkins and others don’t truly understand Sophisticated Theology™, as if that’s what most believers embrace. Please, Drs. Eagleton and Robinson (and, for that matter, Mr. Robbins), do tell us the definitive proofs of God’s existence that Sophisticated Theologians™ have adduced. Because if you don’t, then the simple request, “What reason do you have to think that?” is a definitive refutation of all religion, sophisticated or otherwise.

Yes, of course there are intelligent, educated believers, just as there are intelligent, educated creationists and homeopaths—but they all have at least one blind spot. Just because someone is intelligent and educated doesn’t automatically make all her arguments valid.

But Robbins’s big beef about the atheists is actually quite funny:

Such unbelievers seem to me to have missed something quite fundamental about the nature of being, as it appears to the human animal, something that the major theistic traditions attempt to address with rather more nuance and generosity than contemporary updates to logical positivism can muster. You don’t, obviously, have to believe in God to feel humbled and bewildered before what Heidegger called “the question of the meaning of Being.” (Indeed, I often think the notion of “belief” is more trouble than it’s worth.) But you do have to acknowledge that there is a question, “the major question that revolves around you,” as John Ashbery puts it: “your being here.” And you have to recognize that it concerns something outside the scope of the natural sciences.

If, as we suspect, there is no God, then—contra Robbins—there is no question of “the meaning of Being.” There is only the question of how things came to be. If you presume that that “means” something, then you’re presuming a Meaning-Giver, i.e., a god. Robbins tells us that we have to acknowledge that that’s an important question, but I dismiss it as a Deepity.

I also reject his insistence that we “have to acknowledge that the question is meaningful” or that it has an answer “outside the scope of the natural sciences.”  Those sciences tell us how the universe came about (the Big Bang, which may be one of many Big Bangs that created other universes), and they certainly tell us how humans and other species came about, via evolution.  Yes, it’s humbling to realize that a simple naturalistic process can evolve a fly out of nonliving matter, or that physical processes can bring a universe into being, but my real humility is not before the meaningless Big Questions, but before the authority of fact.

Theistic traditions try to imbue humanity with Purpose and Meaning, but to do so they do what they must, which is to make up stuff about gods. Robbins apparently considers this admirable. But what would really be admirable is to finally expose theology and “major theistic traditions” for what they are: fictions that once served as explanations to our prescientific ancestors, but are now passé, and whose embrace should embarrass a thinking person. As for nuance and generosity, well forget about them, for they’re trumped by the truth. It’s not “generous” to cater to beliefs that are not only unfounded, but imposed on others who reject them.

To that end I’ll quote from an email I got this morning from a Christian who pretended to be interested in whether one “kind” of animal could evolve from another (he had apparently seen Ray Comfort’s new film, “Evolution vs. God: Shaking the Foundations of Faith”). After I spent several emails giving him the explanation that it takes millions of years to create a new “kind” of animal (whatever “kind” means), showing him examples of evolutionary transitions between fish and amphibians, mammals and reptiles, birds and mammals, explaining that we can’t observe major evolutionary transitions over a human lifetime, and finally referring him to several books about fossils, the Lying Christian dropped his cover and got to the point in a followup email:

I want to tell the following things because I care about you and others. I care about where you will go when you die. Isn’t it worth thinking about? The Bible says that God “has put eternity in our hearts” and “For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse”. Also, “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness”. Don’t suppress the truth or God’s Word.

“Unrighteousness” is lying, cheating, fornication, adultery, hate and many others.  [JAC: clearly my correspondent, who lied about his motivations, is guilty of “unrighteousness.” He’s going to Hell LOL!]

The Bible also says “And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. For everyone practicing evil hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed. But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his deeds may be clearly seen, that they have been done in God”. Because God loves us so much He sent Jesus to die on the cross to take the punishment for your sins, to declare us not guilty, so we wouldn’t have to go to Hell. Please consider God’s free gift of salvation from Hell. I am pleading with you to give God a chance. Just be as honest and open as you can. God is “rich in mercy” and if you turn from your sins and trust in Jesus, God will forgive you, save you and give you eternal life. The Bible says, “You shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free.”

Kind Regards,
[Name redacted]

Why don’t I ever learn that these people are not sincere?

The writer was not an American but a Kiwi—from New Zealand (Ray Comfort’s birthplace). It’s time for Robbins to understand that this is how most believers see their faith, not through the beer glasses of Terry Eagleton, Karen Armstrong, or Marilynne Robinson. And this is how discerning the “Meaning of Being” makes people behave.

I showed Chief Editor Hili-Cat Robbins’s article, and this was her reaction:
P1050184

Readers’ wildlife photographs: Green heron and hooded merganser

January 8, 2014 • 1:30 am

Reader Pete Moulton took these lovely bird photos in Arizona. The notes below are his, and you can click on both photos to enlarge them.

Here are a couple of photos from my home patch in Phoenix that you might like. The little Green Heron is my all-time favorite avian subject, which I’ve probably mentioned before. The duck is a drake Hooded Merganser, which has been present at the same pond for about the last three weeks. He’s a bit of a rockstar, and dozens of birders have been to see and photograph him.

Green heron (Butorides virescens):

GRHE.6-29-13_Papago Pk_8914

Hooded merganser (Lophodytes cucullatus), male. Now that’s a duck!

HOME_12-21-13_Papago Pk_3772

I’ll add a photo of the female merganser (from Wikipedia) to show the striking sexual dimorphism:

800px-Hooded_Merganser,_female

Dobrzyn: Tuesday in the country with Hili

January 7, 2014 • 1:21 pm

The weather was excellent again today: 12°C and sunny. It’s been a day of work interspersed with noms and, of course, the Queen:

Hili asleep

Hili even found her way into my room for a bit—a rare occurrence.

Hili in my room

Lunch was sliced peppers, a very thin sausage (I can’t remember its name) and metka, a soft, spreadable pork sausage that, I believe, is uncooked. It’s like pate, and is slathered on bread:

Lunch

After lunch, Hili insisted that we all get back to work, and resumed her job as Chief Editor of “Letters from Our Orchard.

Hili supervising

In the afternoon, Fitness, the black cat who lives upstairs, was let out (he doesn’t go out much when it’s cold). Fitness and Hili absolutely despise each other, which is why they are never let out at the same time. The following two videos demonstrate this animosity. As an experiment, Andrzej carried Fitness to the windowsill when Hili was watching.

Hili and Fitness, part 1

Hili went nuts, and I was told that her owners had never heard such sounds coming from her mouth.

Hili and Fitness, part 2

Of course Hili is very brave when she’s behind a pane of glass, but had she been outside she would have run for the hills.

My TAM interview, part 3

January 7, 2014 • 11:01 am

Here’s the last bit of the three-part interview I did at the July TAM with Joel Guttormson, Outreach and Event Coordinator for the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science.

By the way, since I’ve read Addy Pross’s short book What is Life? How Chemistry Becomes Biology, I’ve realized that abiogenesis (the origin of life from nonlife) and the subsequent evolution of life are really not separate issues, for abiogenesis surely involved the same kind of competition between replicating systems that characterizes things we’re comfortable calling “alive.”

Christmas trees are like catnip to Linton lions

January 7, 2014 • 8:12 am

I haven’t the slightest idea where Linton is in England, but I’ve posted a fair number of items from the Linton Zoo. (I’m sure readers will enlighten me.) Here, thanks to the feline-finding tenacity of Matthew Cobb, is a video of the lions at Linton going nuts when they get some recycled Christmas trees:

The BBC News describes the fun:

A pair of African lions have gone wild for Christmas trees after a Cambridgeshire zoo appealed for people to donate them for recycling.

The trees are being reused by Linton Zoological Gardens as big cat toys, bio-fuel and, if they still have roots, to enrich the zoo’s enclosures.

Manager Dawny Greenwood said the scented trees are “almost like catnip” for the resident big cats.

She added: “They just love the trees, it gives them hours of fun.”

Catnip, sometimes known at catmint, is a plant of the mint family and can cause many cats euphoria.

The zoo’s tigers and snow leopards also play with the trees, those that are “beyond their best” are used for the zoo’s bio-burner.

“This provides additional heating and hot water to help run our zoo at this very expensive, cold time of year,” said Ms Greenwood.

It’s a shame, though, that these magnificent beasts, evolved to roam free, are reduced to rubbing against Christmas trees. If I had my way, zoos wouldn’t be allowed to have beasts like these unless they were severely endangered.

If you live near Linton, take your tree there and help keep the lions from being bored.

Douthat responds to me, decries materialism again

January 7, 2014 • 5:45 am

At his own New York Times “opinion blog”, Ross Douthat has responded to my New Republic column (based on a piece I wrote here) criticizing his own “Christmas column.” You may remember that dreadful piece in which Douthat dissed secularism as a “rope bridge flung across a chasm” that “wafts into a logical abyss.”

He also claimedthat there were serious cracks in materialism—cracks apparently illustrated by philosopher Tom Nagel’s unevidenced evocation of a teleological force in biology, as well as by Steve Weinberg’s correct claim that we don’t yet understand everything about physics.  That was Douthat’s sole evidence that the materialist paradigm is about to disintegrate.

Doubthat’s “Christmas” column was a desperate defense against the inroads of secular reason against his beloved Catholicism, but New York Times readers weren’t fooled (see the “reader’s choice” comments at the end of his column: they’re nearly all critical and anti-religious).

In his new piece, “The confidence of Jerry Coyne,” Douthat continues his cluelessness by trying to show that my materialism is inconsistent in two respects and overconfident in another. His arguments:

1.  If I think the “self” is an illusion, I have no justification for saying that I have a “purpose.” 

Douthat:

So Coyne’s vision for humanity here is heroic, promethean, quasi-existentialist: Precisely because the cosmos has no architect or plan or underlying purpose, we are free to “forge” our own purposes, to “make” meaning for ourselves, to create an ethics worthy of a free species, to seize responsibility for our own lives and codes and goals rather than punting the issue to some imaginary skygod. (Ayn Rand could not have put it better.) And these self-created purposes have the great advantage of being really, truly real, whereas the purposes suggested by religion are by definition “illusory.”

Well and good.  But then halfway through this peroration, we have as an aside the confession that yes, okay, it’s quite possible given materialist premises that “our sense of self is a neuronal illusion.” At which point the entire edifice suddenly looks terribly wobbly — because who, exactly, is doing all of this forging and shaping and purpose-creating if Jerry Coyne, as I understand him (and I assume he understands himself) quite possibly does not actually exist at all? The theme of his argument is the crucial importance of human agency under eliminative materialism, but if under materialist premises the actual agent is quite possibly a fiction, then who exactly is this I who “reads” and “learns” and “teaches,” and why in the universe’s name should my illusory self believe Coyne’s bold proclamation that his illusory self’s purposes are somehow “real” and worthy of devotion and pursuit?

Douthat sees this as a “contradiction.”  Apparently his notion of “purpose” involves something given by Almighty God, and therefore whatever motivates the collation of atheistic neurons that feels itself to be Jerry Coyne cannot have a “purpose.” But of course Jerry Coyne does exist as an identifiable physical entity that feels itself to be an agent. That agency is an illusion: there is no little person in my brain that directs the activity of my neurons. There is no Coyne “soul” separate from those neurons, and neither is there a Douthat “soul.” But there still is a human being that bears my name and has desires and feelings different from those of other beings. These are certainly as “real” as any other feeling. And why should we believe Douthat’s bold proclamation that his body harbors a soul given by God, and that his God-given purpose is “real”? Perhaps Douthat should first give us evidence for his God before we take his purpose as more real than mine.

Further, as I and others maintain, our sense of agency is a remarkable illusion confected by evolution through the arrangement of our neurons. It may well have been a feature that was evolutionarily advantageous, and installed by natural selection. And that evolved collection of neurons, with its sense of agency, takes pleasure in certain things and feels it has goals.  That those feelings and goals are an inexorable result of our genes and environments is discomfiting to some, but that’s where the evidence points.  And while those goals are more complicated than those of, say, a squirrel, whose “purpose” is to reproduce, gather nuts, and bask in the sun, they all come down to whatever motivates an evolved organism—from the simple goals of simple organisms to the complex goals of complex organisms with complex brains.

Douthat doesn’t like this because he wants there to be a Douthat Soul that has a “purpose” bestowed by a celestial deity.  But there’s simply no evidence for that.  He wants there to be more than materialism, but there’s no evidence for that, either. We have no need of such hypotheses, except as childish desires for a father figure and an afterlife. Imagine a Martian zoologist observing a Catholic mass for the first time and trying to understand it. I suspect it would come off as some kind of adult game.

2. If we are evolved beings, then there is no justification for being moral.

Coyne proposes three arguments in favor of a cosmopolitan altruism, two of which are circular: Making a “harmonious society” and helping “those in need” are reasons for altruism that presuppose a certain view of the moral law, in which charity and harmony are considered worthwhile and important goals. (If my question is, “what’s the justification for your rights-based egalitarianism?” saying “because it’s egalitarian!” is not much of an answer.)

The third at least seems to have some kind of Darwinian-ish, quasi-scientific logic, but among other difficulties it’s an argument that only holds so long as the altruistic choice comes at a relatively low cost: If you’re a white Southerner debating whether to speak out against a lynching party or a Dutch family contemplating whether to hide your Jewish neighbors from the SS, the respect factor isn’t really in play — as, indeed, it rarely is in any moral dilemma worthy of the name. (And of course, depending on your ideas about harmony and stability, Coyne’s “harmonious society” argument might also seem like a case against opposing Jim Crow or anti-Semitism — because why rock the boat on behalf of a persecuted minority when stability and order are the greater goods?)

The first two arguments are not at all circular, but the results of reasoning and evolution.  I’ve often said that I don’t know how much of human morality comes from natural selection’s instilling in us certain behaviors and feelings, and how much is due to reason. But I am virtually certain that none of it is due to God.

I want to live in a society where people are treated fairly and in which, if I were disadvantaged, people would try to help me. For it is only an accident of history that has made me more advantaged than others. Acting altruistically is what I consider “moral,” though I’d prefer to use the term “good for society as a whole.” Yes, that is a form of consequentialism, but in the end one has to decide “oughts,” and it’s always a judgment call.

But it’s better to make a judgment call based on science, observation, and reason than on the dictates of a fictional being. We are evolved social beings that have been bequeathed big brains by natural selection, and can reason about what kind of society we want. The answer about why we should be altruistic or compassionate is not “because it’s egalitarian,” but because it’s better for all of us if we increase well-being. (I don’t think that’s all there is to “morality”, but to a large extent I see Sam Harris as right. Although morality is not objective, it almost always comports with “do what increases well being.”) And, at any rate, answering “Why be altruistic?” with “Because God wants us to be” is hardly more satisfying.

As for “stability and order” being the greatest goods, we now realize that if one buys such stability at the cost of disenfranchising groups of people for no discernible reason, that creates a society in which the disorder remains, but is hidden and suppressed. The stability and order are illusory, for there is instability and disorder in people’s minds, and the general well-being could be greater.  Finally, not all evolved “moral intuition” is useful in today’s world, for we no longer live in the small social groups that dominated 99% of our evolutionary history. Xenophobia, for instance, may be one such vestigial behavior.

3. I’m too confident about the ultimate victory of secular reason.

Douthat:

Finally, I enjoyed Coyne’s parting sally:

“Douthat is wrong. The cracks are not in the edifice of secularism, but in the temples of faith. As he should know if he reads his own newspaper, secularism is not cracking up but growing in the U.S. He and his fellow religionists are on the way out, and his columns are his swan song. It may take years, but one fine day our grandchildren will look back on people like Douthat, shake their heads, and wonder why some people couldn’t put away their childish things.”

For a man who believes in “a physical and purposeless universe” with no room for teleology, Coyne seems remarkably confident about what direction human history is going in, and where it will end up. For my part, I don’t make any pretense to know what ideas will be au courant a hundred years from now, and as I said in the column, I think there are all kinds of worldviews that could gain ground — at the expense of my own Catholicism and secular materialism alike. (Right now, the territory around pantheism and panpsychism seems ripe for further population, but that’s just a guess.) But I suppose it’s a testament to my own childish faith in the “neuronal illusion” that is the human intellect that I can’t imagine a permanent intellectual victory for a worldview as ill-served by its popularizers as atheism is by Jerry Coyne.

Well, the fate of secularism hardly depends on my efficacy as a small-time writer! Of course Douthat doesn’t really conceive of his faith as childish, but if that’s the case, and he’s a public intellectual, let us hear the reasons for his belief, and why he’s so sure that Catholicism is the “right” belief rather than Islam. For, if he’s made a mistake in that case, he’ll burn in hell forever.

All I know is what I see and what I discern from history, and in this I’ve been influenced by Steve Pinker’s book The Better Angels of Our Nature.  There does seem to be a pattern in human behavior that, while not completely smooth, is moving towards an appreciation for the sufferings of others, whether those others be women, gays, minorities, children, or animals. And religion is clearly on the wane. It was unthinkable to not be a Christian in Europe three centuries ago, but now in many parts of Europe belief in God is a minority view. It is now unthinkable that, at least in Western countries, child labor, public torture of animals as public amusement, and slavery will ever return.  (Yes, bullfighting and fox-hunting are on the way out). Or that Douthat’s Catholic church could put heretics to the stake. Or does he think that an Inquisition is just as likely as the demise of Catholicism?

Of course it will take centuries to dispel the illusion of the supernatural, but in the end I think the lack of evidence will triumph over wish-thinking. I am not 100%, but the evidence is more on my side than Douthat’s. “Pantheism” in many cases is just another word for “atheism,” and panpsychism—the view that mind permeates the universe—seems silly, even if it’s touted by Thomas Nagel. 

In the end, Douthat, like many, is simply uncomfortable with a materialist worldview, and wants desperately for there to be More Than That. He yearns for a teleological or divine force that, he thinks, will give our lives real purpose and meaning, and serve as a ground for morality. The lack of evidence for such a force must surely disturb him a bit. If it doesn’t, he’s not thinking.

h/t: Greg Mayer