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Tuesday, May 15, 2007 | Reason : Commentary | print version Print | Comments

Document Christopher Hitchens is Not Great

by Jeffrey Robbins, The Huffington Post

Thanks to Florian Widder for the link.

Reposted from:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeffrey-robbins/christopher-hitchens-is-n_b_48452.html
Jeffrey Robbins
In what is perhaps one of the stranger reviews from The New York Times Book Review, Michael Kinsley writes adoringly of Christopher Hitchens, the man and the phenomenon, but little about the book in question. In the review, Kinsley tells us about Hitchens' sparkling conversation, that he is a "principled dissolute, with the courage of his dissolution: he enjoys smoking and drinking, and not just the reputation for smoking and drinking -- although he enjoys that too," and that "he is productive to an extent that seems like cheating: 23 books, pamphlets, collections and collaborations so far; a long and often heavily researched column every month in Vanity Fair; frequent fusillades in Slate and elsewhere; and speeches, debates and other public spectacles whenever offered." From this introduction, the review then turns on the following line: "The big strategic challenge for a career like this is to remain interesting, and the easiest tactic for doing that is surprise." For Kinsley, Hitchens' latest book, God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, is interesting precisely because it bucks Hitchens' recent trend towards the right.

Though it was meant as an endorsement, it was hardly a compliment considering Hitchens' fall from grace for many of us on the left.

Nevertheless, like Kinsley, I too have a certain affection for Hitchens, not for the man so much as the role he plays as our public gadfly. Even with his stubborn defense of the war in Iraq, he makes us think by exposing our platitudes for what they are. But unlike Kinsely, I simply do not find anything of interest in this latest work. Both the book and the publicity tour have failed Kinsely's all important strategic challenge. Hitchens' arguments are entirely predictable, following a common pattern, whether in the recent crop of popular attacks on religion from those such as Sam Harris or Richard Dawkins, or the more ancient lineage represented proudly by those such as Voltaire, Sigmund Freud, Friedrich Nietzsche, Bertrand Russell, et al.

After all, is anyone really surprised to learn that the historic faiths are guilty of self-contradictions, that religious fanatics are prone to violence, and that all religions have a human origin? There was a time when these observations were truly radical and provocative. But between then and now a gulf of religious scholarship and critique have transpired, heightening our awareness and forcing any religious devotee not only to learn the truths of his or her tradition, but also to rethink the nature of religious truth. Most (with the exception of fundamentalists) would now concede that religions are true not in the same way that science or mathematics are true, but more in line with the way a Picasso portrait conveys a subjective truth that belies the merely representational. For instance, except for the most literally minded, the Bible is not proven untrue or unreliable because it has two contradictory stories of creation in the first two chapters of the Book of Genesis, or because it has four different portraits of Christ included within the New Testament. On the contrary, an appreciation of these variances -- even contradictions -- are essential to understanding the particular nature of truth that belongs to the religious. It is precisely this insight that gives rise to contemporary hermeneutical philosophy, in which the contemporary theorists echo the claim made by Nietzsche over a century ago -- namely, "there are no facts, only interpretations."

Borrowing from that great philosophical gadfly Nietzsche even further, he is famous for his proclamation that "God is dead." But as many contemporary theologians and philosophers of religion now tell us, the death of God immediately implies the death of the death of God as a movement, or as a dogmatic expression of atheism. In other words, to speak of the death of God need not be an anti-religious rant; rather, it might very well be a religious expression of faith. Gianni Vattimo, a contemporary hermeneutical philosopher from Italy and former member of the European Parliament says this best when he writes that the death of the moral-metaphysical God "liquidates the philosophical basis for atheism." This is not to say that all beliefs are equal, that there is a moral equivalence between religion and science, or that it makes no difference whether one sticks one's head in the sand living in some pretend reality verses being on a painstaking search for the truth. But it is to say that we are all potential idolaters, and that idolatry comes in many different forms with the religious being the most recognizable and thus easiest to target.

In short, this book by Hitchens is disappointingly lazy. If I had my druthers, I would much prefer the nuance from someone like Freud, who almost a century ago chronicled how religious ideology was a human projection, how it functioned as an infantile neurosis, and how it stifled our psychological and moral development. Even with all that, Freud reminds us in The Future of an Illusion that religion is not all bad: "Religion has clearly performed great services for human civilization. It has contributed much towards the taming of the asocial instincts. But not enough." It is precisely this honest critical assessment in contrast to Hitchens' bombast that we need today.

For examples of this honest critical assessment of the meaning, as well as both the strengths and limitations, of religion in today's world, I would recommend my book with Gianni Vattimo and John Caputo entitled After the Death of God, except that one can find a similar sentiment marked in almost any other current work in philosophy of religion. The point is, this critically aware, thoughtful, and politically engaged faith is out there for anyone who has grown weary with the old clichés -- in other words, for exactly the sort of someone we once thought Christopher Hitchens was.

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1. Comment #40877 by maton100 on May 15, 2007 at 6:39 am

 avatarBut why bother with the strength exploration of religion when what is "decent" in it is already obvious? Any moral parable does not justify the fact that it is fiction treated as fact.

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2. Comment #40886 by discipline on May 15, 2007 at 6:54 am

"Most (with the exception of fundamentalists) would now concede that religions are true not in the same way that science or mathematics are true..."

"Most"?

Robbins needs to step outside his liberal/moderate/intelligensia circles and see the real America. Over 30% identify themselves as evangelical Protestants -- that's 100 million people. The debate is certainly not over for them.

America is dangerously close to becoming a fundamentalist Christian theocracy and moderates/agnostics like Robbins need to stop apologizing for the religious. The time for being polite is over.

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3. Comment #40888 by jerbreck on May 15, 2007 at 6:55 am

This review smelled somewhat rank from the beginning. Particularly when he asks if anyone is surprised by the fact that "all religions have a human origin". Either he lives in a much more enlightened part of the world than I do, or he surrounds himself with his own kind because rarely do I encounter these types.
The kicker comes at the end, however, with an explicit endorsement of his own book. That kind of underhandedness subtracts credibility from his entire article. Either leave your own book out of this or mention it at the beginning that this part of your book campaign.

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4. Comment #40903 by nancy2001 on May 15, 2007 at 7:25 am

What a self-serving load of poppycock.

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5. Comment #40905 by doctor_regtools on May 15, 2007 at 7:26 am

I wish these people would come up with more interesting headlines than replacing 'God' with the author of the book they are reviewing.

I think this title is a little unfair as I don't believe Christopher Hitchens claims to be great, or that there are millions of people claiming he is.

Other Comments by doctor_regtools

6. Comment #40919 by Yorker on May 15, 2007 at 7:50 am

I didn't read this. I consider any person lacking the imagination to come up with a better title than a denigration of a person not claiming to be great, to be unlikely to have anything valuable to contribute.

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7. Comment #40922 by CF1 on May 15, 2007 at 8:02 am

Groan.........now I have to copy & paste my comment from McCullough's piece:

Robbins' title of this is: "Christopher Hitchens is not Great".

In case you hadn't noticed, Christopher Hitchens does not claim to be great. The Abrahamic god however does claim to be great, yet he is not. He is a murderous crybaby whos explosive rage demands bloodshed when not worshipped. Then again, I wonder if it's possible that this particular god (one of thousands) is merely a construct of a primitive, petty, superstitious bunch of goat-herders. Hmmm?

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8. Comment #40923 by flyingscot on May 15, 2007 at 8:02 am

 avatarTouche Yorker!

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9. Comment #40942 by Pi Guy on May 15, 2007 at 8:26 am

Hitchens' seemingly ambiguous right/left positions highlight another problem: namely that there's more than one dimension to the Conservative/Liberal dichotomy.

For example, one could be fiscally conservative (ie: in favor of smaller government, against welfare and other publicly funded social programs) but socially liberal (ie: supporting the expansion of people's rights), a philosophy commonly referred to a Libertarianism. But that's even unreasonably limiting, as political ideologies exist in many dimensions, way more than the two even cited above.

Robbins's oversight is that, when he notes that
"...it bucks Hitchens' recent trend towards the right."
then follows later with
"...Hitchens' fall from grace for many of us on the left."
he's assuming that there is only one way to be a leftist/liberal ("our" - Robbins' - way) or conservative ("their" way) as though there's no room for people who actually think for themselves on the political spectrum.

I don't support the war but Hitchens has his reasons. Judging from his writing and recent interviews, it seems likely that he's spent far more time actually thinking it over than I. On the other hand, I fully endorse his view of religion. The point is, Hitchens is an extremely smart man who spends a lot of time researching and thinking big thoughts, more than most of us (see American Idol, Paris Hilton), and should be given credit - nay, extolled - for exercising his right to Free Thought (the main precursor for memes expressed by exercising our freedoms of speech, assembly, and the press) and challenging people to think.

Other Comments by Pi Guy

10. Comment #40971 by arildno on May 15, 2007 at 9:14 am

"..but also to rethink the nature of religious truth. Most (with the exception of fundamentalists) would now concede that religions are true not in the same way that science or mathematics are true, but more in line with the way a Picasso portrait conveys a subjective truth that belies the merely representational."

Which shows how idiotic the author is, and the theologians he admires are.

They are completely woolly-headed, and don't know the difference between "what makes me feel good" and "what is true".

Either Jesus was resurrected after death, or he wasn't.
There is no wiggling room here, however good you feel about his resurrection.


By confusing these issues on "truth", religionists are able to protect their mind parasite, and that is the real reason why they choose to pervert their rational faculty in this manner.

Other Comments by arildno

11. Comment #40986 by MarkSmith on May 15, 2007 at 9:33 am

 avatar
After all, is anyone really surprised to learn that the historic faiths are guilty of self-contradictions, that religious fanatics are prone to violence, and that all religions have a human origin?


The answer is "yes," enough of those fanatics exist to elect a like-mindedless president; enough to create a horrible, two-thousand year old atmosphere of scientific, social, and sexual repression; enough to imprison people for victimless crimes; and to teach our children garbage in school. Our descendants will see this as barbaric, just as we now see slavery.

What an elitist, or uninformed, or just plain stupid question.

Have you imagined what life might be like without religion's unabashed support of in-group out-group hatred; its vicious suppression of science and free inquiry; its damaging of children with fear and descriptions of hell; its indoctrination of young adults just when they need to be learning critical thinking?

The list goes on and on - and you're bitching at Hitchens?

Your criticism might be valid were you reviewing a history book written in some future time when religion's transgressions have long since been halted and healed and forgotten. But they have not. If you disagree, just touch your penis - feel a tinge of guilt, right?

I greatly enjoyed the book - Hitchens reminds me a bit of Wilde. I actually had that post-read depression one sometimes gets after a wonderful story, still wanting more. As to his originality, his experience with and knowledge of Mother Teresa is just one example.

And as with the writings of Dawkins, Harris, Dennett, etc., I find new ideas in each, as I'll bet does a whole generation of readers.

Further, considering the ground covered by the three most recent books on the subject, I think Hitchens did damn well. Bravo! Our wits are all the sharper for it, and the book brings us closer to the tipping point when rational discourse becomes accepted in American public life.

Finally, I think your review would be more fitting if you were to turn around 180 degrees and give it instead to the religious community. Now there's a group in dire need of originality - still looking for meaning in a bronze age myth, unable to turn to their neighbor and say instead, "I have faith in you!". What a tragedy, like your review.

Other Comments by MarkSmith

12. Comment #41035 by Geoff on May 15, 2007 at 11:33 am

 avatar"...understanding the particular nature of truth that belongs to the religious."

That made me laugh.

Other Comments by Geoff

13. Comment #41049 by Bremas on May 15, 2007 at 12:23 pm

discipline post 2
"The time for being polite is over." Yea

I've been engaging people every chance I get on these issues. I continuously hear the same bullshit out of people that I otherwise like and get along with. We had to come from somewhere... This country was founded.... Because I do....

Blah

Other Comments by Bremas

14. Comment #41103 by krogercomplete on May 15, 2007 at 1:49 pm

"Most (with the exception of fundamentalists) would now concede that religions are true not in the same way that science or mathematics are true, but more in line with the way a Picasso portrait conveys a subjective truth that belies the merely representational."


I hear this a lot from religious liberals, and the substance of it seems almost identical to what Atheists like Hitchens are arguing: God is a creature of the subjective. Man created God, and if God does exist anywhere, it is in our heads (the same place our impressions of Picasso's portraits reside). Sometimes I get the feeling that religious liberals are no different than atheists, they are just fond of religious language. Then again, I have not read any of the contemporary philosophers of religion cited by the reviewer.

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15. Comment #41160 by perkyjay on May 15, 2007 at 3:01 pm

There was a parallel in Hollywood, years ago, for people who write critiques of The God Delusion, God is not great,Letter to a Christian Nation etc.etc. The writers,(Dawkins et al) are seen in the way as Jesse James, Wyatt Earp etc. were viewed by budding gunfighters, who couldn't wait to get a notch in their gun for offing a notable
opponent. The only problem is that the people who write critiques of works on atheism are only firing blanks.

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16. Comment #41161 by perkyjay on May 15, 2007 at 3:01 pm

There was a parallel in Hollywood, years ago, for people who write critiques of The God Delusion, God is not great,Letter to a Christian Nation etc.etc. The writers,(Dawkins et al) are seen in the same way as Jesse James, Wyatt Earp etc. were viewed by budding gunfighters, who couldn't wait to get a notch in their gun for offing a notable
opponent. The only problem is that the people who write critiques of works on atheism are only firing blanks.

Other Comments by perkyjay

17. Comment #41379 by jonecc on May 16, 2007 at 3:32 am

The thing which annoys me about the kind of argument this guy makes is the way they try to smuggle beliefs through the evidence gatecheck under the cloak of art. He says his religion is more like Picasso, the other day a British vicar said his was like a Shakespeare play.

To stretch the metaphor, we need to shine the X-ray machine on that kind of thing. Are you making claims about the world, or just about the events inside your own head? If you're having your own private shadow play, have fun. If you're saying there's a spiritual aspect to the actual physical world, prove it.

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18. Comment #41392 by jonecc on May 16, 2007 at 4:31 am

If you come to the UK, see our glorious Natural History Museum in London. There's a good one in Oxford, as well (and probably other places - we like that kind of thing, which is why everyone's favourite living Briton is David Attenborough).

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19. Comment #41393 by jonecc on May 16, 2007 at 4:32 am

Sorry, put the last in the wrong thread.

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