Richard Dawkins - Anti -Christ or Great Thinker?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (2808 of them)

xxpost-Yeah, but Einstien didn't waste away his life chewing over the idea.

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:13 (eighteen years ago)

As with the other Dawkins thread, I'm still utterly unclear why anyone needs to be an expert on individual theologians to write off the belief in God. Theologians don't deal with proofs that would satisfy anyone looking for scientific evidence - which is, rather clearly, Dawkin's point of attack.

milo z, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:13 (eighteen years ago)

lots of stupid people on this thread

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:14 (eighteen years ago)

also, milo otm.

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:15 (eighteen years ago)

for instance, that book where he tries to argue that we should find the impersonal, mechanistic operations of the universe sublime and beautiful. it's soul crushing, why cant he admit that?
-- ryan (ryan), Monday, November 17, 2003 1:23 AM (3 years ago) Bookmark Link

like was this guy kidding? lol sad sack

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:16 (eighteen years ago)

He also doesn't give any credit to organized religion's remarkable role in preserving and fostering scientific thought - without the Catholic Church we would in all likelihood have no records of large swathes of western knowledge, from Plato and Aristotle on down. Religion gave us literature and printing. It's played a unique role in developing the idea of basic human rights, etc. For him its all just "who are these silly savages believing in the all-powerful sky god, what a bunch of morons" - its a deeply arrogant reductionism at work.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:16 (eighteen years ago)

shakey: giving credit to an organization for doing worldy, non-religious things doesn't mean you can't also think their belief system is a sham

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:17 (eighteen years ago)

their = its

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:18 (eighteen years ago)

I'm still utterly unclear why anyone needs to be an expert on individual theologians to write off the belief in God.

because its fucking lazy - you don't think, over the thousands of years of human thought, that Dawkins' line of attack has ever been considered/discussed/refuted by the very people who are obsessed with this particular idea?

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:18 (eighteen years ago)

He also doesn't give any credit to organized religion's remarkable role in preserving and fostering scientific thought - without the Catholic Church we would in all likelihood have no records of large swathes of western knowledge, from Plato and Aristotle on down.

You mean, without Islam...
But Dawkins would merely reply that it was organized Christianity that played a role in losing that information to start with - and that the Church, from the Dark Ages onward has hardly been a proud supporter of scientific progress. It takes some difficulty to say (with a straight face) that without the Catholic Church we'd never have, say, learned of evolution, doesn't it?

As to the initial quote -

He's half right about where you could stick theologians, he just phrases it badly. I doubt that he'd argue that people wishing to study the nature of religion/religious traditions/mythology wouldn't have a place in the liberal arts.

He's saying that when you approach the subject as true believers, when 'teaching' has elements of 'witnessing,' you aren't participating in any kind of dialogue that would belong in another academic discipline.

milo z, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:19 (eighteen years ago)

shakey: giving credit to an organization for doing worldy, non-religious things doesn't mean you can't also think their belief system is a sham

that's totally true - but Dawkins doesn't stop at calling the belief system a sham, he actively accuses it of being the source of human misery. The very first page of the intro to his book introduces the oft- and very easily discredited canard that religion has been responsible for the vast majority of violence and oppression.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:20 (eighteen years ago)

So Augustine found physical evidence of the existence of God?

milo z, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:22 (eighteen years ago)

It's not lazy to not read up on a bunch of theologians if you're coming to the table with the assumption that NOTHING they can say will persuade you (<--- that's the lazy part): it's an efficient use of your time.

xp ah, I haven't read the God Delusion. I stick mostly to his science-y stuff.

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:22 (eighteen years ago)

I like the idea that we'd somehow have missed the idea of printing without religion.

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:22 (eighteen years ago)

But Dawkins would merely reply that it was organized Christianity that played a role in losing that information to start with

This is not historically accurate. It wasn't Christians that regularly sacked Rome and essentially destroyed the Empire.

It takes some difficulty to say (with a straight face) that without the Catholic Church we'd never have, say, learned of evolution, doesn't it?

Depends how far you want to draw the line - if you want to draw the line between Aristotle and Darwin, the Church is right in the middle.

He's saying that when you approach the subject as true believers, when 'teaching' has elements of 'witnessing,' you aren't participating in any kind of dialogue that would belong in another academic discipline.

I don't disagree with this at all, dogmatists are no use in any kind of rational debate. But again, Darwin doesn't stop with a specific brand of belief - he writes off ALL belief.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:23 (eighteen years ago)

I like the idea that we'd somehow have missed the idea of printing without religion.

religious impulse is essentially at the root of the written (and, much later, the printed word). before it, based on all the available archaeological evidence, people didn't have anything they felt compelled to write about.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:24 (eighteen years ago)

As with the other Dawkins thread, I'm still utterly unclear why anyone needs to be an expert on individual theologians to write off the belief in God. Theologians don't deal with proofs that would satisfy anyone looking for scientific evidence - which is, rather clearly, Dawkin's point of attack.

you dont have to be an expert on individual theologians to write off a belief in god, but you DO have to be an expert to write off "theology" as a discipline

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:24 (eighteen years ago)

and honestly why is he trying to separate out "organized religion" from any number of belief systems that have contributed to shitty things in history?

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:25 (eighteen years ago)

So Augustine found physical evidence of the existence of God?

hey read him and find out. it'll be like a whodunit mystery!

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:26 (eighteen years ago)

eligious impulse is essentially at the root of the written (and, much later, the printed word). before it, based on all the available archaeological evidence, people didn't have anything they felt compelled to write about.

-- Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, October 2, 2007 9:24 PM (40 seconds ago) Bookmark Link

^^^ stupid. like, seriously dude?

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:26 (eighteen years ago)

xp to max

because he has an axe to grind, duh.

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:26 (eighteen years ago)

i just hate the idea that we can separate out "organized religion" from a whole multitude of institutions and belief systems that make peoples' lives suck

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:27 (eighteen years ago)

and honestly why is he trying to separate out "organized religion" from any number of belief systems that have contributed to shitty things in history?

I think the answer is clearly that he has an agenda - an agenda borne of years of fending off really ludicrous attacks from ignorant people professing to be religious (creationists, etc.)

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:27 (eighteen years ago)

river wolf show me evidence of writing that predates religion

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:27 (eighteen years ago)

also, as an evolutionary biologist, i imagine he's constantly pitted against the very religious and the very stupid. mainstream christianity would maintain that everything that he's doing is a sham, so it's not entirely shocking that that's where he's going to focus his ire.

xp

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:28 (eighteen years ago)

i mean for what its worth without christianity the enlightenment that dawkins is so fond of would likely not exist, both in the sense that it was a reaction to christianity and in the sense that it appropriated a lot of christian concepts and ideas

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:28 (eighteen years ago)

xp but ugh thats like me writing off the entirety of ev. bio because i think that dawkins is a fucking prick

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:29 (eighteen years ago)

Shakey, we didn't lose knowledge entirely because of the fall of the Roman Empire. The Christians set out from the start to eliminate (or co-opt) competing mythologies and belief systems - which included those nasty Greek and Roman pagans.

"Depends how far you want to draw the line - if you want to draw the line between Aristotle and Darwin, the Church is right in the middle." - and where do all the other Christian sects (the vast majority of which cannot exist without the Medieval church) fit into this line?

"But again, Darwin doesn't stop with a specific brand of belief - he writes off ALL belief." - in this specific instance, he writes off supernatural belief as an academic discpline deserving of a (in Dawkin's eyes secular) university's time.

milo z, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:29 (eighteen years ago)

oldest alphabet in the world = Egypt.

gee I wonder what they were writing about.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:29 (eighteen years ago)

i think we all learned pretty early on that the crusades/fred phelps/the inquisition do not represent all of christianity--that there are in fact a multitude of ways to BE a christian or BE religious, not all of which require you to hate evolution or women or gays

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:30 (eighteen years ago)

correlation does not equal causation, shakey. that writing was invented at the same time as religion (or even as a direct result of religion) doesn't mean that "writing" as an activity owes it's "existence" or whatever the fuck to religion.

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:30 (eighteen years ago)

and honestly why is he trying to separate out "organized religion" from any number of belief systems that have contributed to shitty things in history?

Because (organized) religion, supernatural belief, etc. are his targets.

Why didn't lawyers suing Big Tobacco also fuck with McDonald's? It wasn't on their plate.
Why do liberals primarily point their ire at Dubya rather than Congressional Democrats? Because he's the target in front of them.

milo z, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:31 (eighteen years ago)

(btw I am not a fan of the Catholic Church AT ALL and Milo is completely correct - I just think its important in the context of this argument to be cognizant of its central role in Western thought)

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:31 (eighteen years ago)

or, rather, that no one would have ever written about anything ever if we didn't also believe in God.

that alphabets were invented part and parcel with organized religion has waaaaaay more to do with the "organized" part than it does with the "religion" part.

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:32 (eighteen years ago)

re: religion and writing--lets not forget that "religion" means something very different to ancient egyptians than it does to us

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:32 (eighteen years ago)

dawkins is a fucking prick

THAT's my main problem with the guy, also with Hitchens when he gets on the subject. I don't have as much contention with the guy's particular opinions so much as the way he expresses them. I did get a kick out the jokes South Park made about him.

kingfish, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:32 (eighteen years ago)

i.e. religion was NOT separate from art/philosophy/literature or whatever

xpost to myself

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:33 (eighteen years ago)

Because (organized) religion, supernatural belief, etc. are his targets.

yeah but i think what im trying to say isnt that he should attack all bad things but that you cant really separate out religion from capitalism or philosophy or science, so games like "WOW WHAT WOULD IT BE LIKE WITHOUT CHRISTIANITY PROBABLY A LOT BETTER HUH" are just totally useless

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:34 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, the church was just the dominant institution of the times. Fuck all to do with the fact it was a religious organization. On the flip side, the same goes for wars. I disagree with Hawkins on that.

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:36 (eighteen years ago)

re: religion and writing--lets not forget that "religion" means something very different to ancient egyptians than it does to us

ironically, Dawkins would probably not entertain the value of such a distinction, since its all just bullshit to him.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:36 (eighteen years ago)

for instance, that book where he tries to argue that we should find the impersonal, mechanistic operations of the universe sublime and beautiful. it's soul crushing, why cant he admit that?
-- ryan (ryan), Monday, 17 November 2003 01:23 (3 years ago) Bookmark Link

it's fine with me that life is essentially meaningless, it would do my head in if there was some sort of grand scheme or "purpose". as it stands, life is just a bit of a lol, innit.

max r, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:36 (eighteen years ago)

whether it's separate or not is missing the point, you guys!

shakey is trying to tell me that w/o religion we never would have gotten around to writing shit down?? that's preposterous! writing as a social innovation has more to do with how people organized themselves. religion had a great deal to do with that, but privileging it as the sole source of cultural innovation is retarded.

xp

river wolf, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:37 (eighteen years ago)

xpost-Amen

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:37 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, the church was just the dominant institution of the times. Fuck all to do with the fact it was a religious organization.

yes the fact that it was dominant has nothing to do with the fact that it was religious and that its power was based upon the strength of its spiritual arguments. Constantine just converted for the hell of it etc.

wtf

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:38 (eighteen years ago)

it's fine with me that life is essentially meaningless, it would do my head in if there was some sort of grand scheme or "purpose". as it stands, life is just a bit of a lol, innit.

-- max r, Tuesday, October 2, 2007 2:36 PM (37 seconds ago) Bookmark Link

fwiw this is a "religious" position (more or less) held by a fair number of ppl, incl. spinoza

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:38 (eighteen years ago)

shakey is trying to tell me that w/o religion we never would have gotten around to writing shit down?

I didn't say anything of the kind - I simply pointed out the facts and drew a connection. Writing developed hand in hand with religion. To say it would've developed WITHOUT religion is purely hypothetical and also unprovable.

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:39 (eighteen years ago)

I can't believe the first 10-odd posts on this thread.

R U EVEN SRIUS

roxymuzak, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:39 (eighteen years ago)

multi-xpost - I'm not entirely sure that Dawkins does look at religion in a vacuum. But if you trace back western culture far enough and find that the root for much economic/political belief is grounded in particular religious codes/beliefs - wouldn't it make sense to make those your target?

Once you break down the reliance on the 'man behind the curtain' you can then start to work on the damage wrought.

milo z, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:39 (eighteen years ago)

well youre all sort of right but guys dont you see that the point is that "religion" and "organized" religion arent static categories?? they mean v. different things to different people at different times and painting them all as loonies is fucking preposterous!!

max, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:40 (eighteen years ago)

Well if it was mainly the fact that they were religious which made them the dominant institutions, why aren't they the dominant institutions still?

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 21:40 (eighteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.