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Saturday, October 25, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments |

Document 'People say I'm strident'

by Decca Aitkenhead, The Guardian

Reposted from:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/oct/25/richard-dawkins-religion-science-books

He sold 1.5m copies of The God Delusion, and this week stumped up £5,500 for atheist adverts. So why does Richard Dawkins think science is losing its war with religion?

One evening in 2006, at a colleague's house, I met a friend of her teenage daughter. He was intellectually curious, and obviously bright - but implacably loyal to his parents' born again Christian faith. We spent pretty much the whole evening arguing with the poor boy, appealing to his logic and reason - all to no effect. There must, we despaired, be some seminal atheist text we could refer him to. We just couldn't think of one.

But lo - ask, and ye shall receive. Not a month later, Richard Dawkins published The God Delusion, a scorching manifesto for secularism. Even by the standards of Dawkins' 1976 bestseller, The Selfish Gene, it was a spectacular success, with sales exceeding 1.5m.

This week, as Dawkins retires from the Charles Simonyi professorship for the public understanding of science, the Oxford post he has held for 12 years, you might expect him to feel that the secular, scientific cause to which he has devoted his career is winning. On Tuesday, campaigners announced plans for an atheist advertising campaign to appear on the side of buses with the message: "There is probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life." The campaign, which was launched by TV comedy writer Ariane Sherine, blogging on Commentisfree.co.uk, hoped to raise £5,500 from supporters, which Dawkins had pledged to match with his own money, but by yesterday public donations had already raised more than £96,000.

In the same week, immigration minister, Phil Woolas, predicted that constitutional reforms would banish bishops from the House of Lords within the next 50 years, and record numbers of new maths and science undergraduates were reported. Even in America, the religious right seemed to be losing its grip.

But when I ask Dawkins, now 67, if he feels that public understanding of science has improved during his career, he looks doubtful. "I would say that when my academic career began there was probably just as much ignorance - but less active opposition [to science]. If you were to actually travel around schools and universities and listen in on lectures about evolution you might find a fairly substantial fraction of young people, without knowing what it is they disapprove of, think they disapprove of it, because they've been brought up to."

Does he attribute that to lower standards of scientific education, or to the rise of religious fundamentalism? "Oh," he says without hesitation, "I think it's due to greater religious influence."

In Dawkins' view, there is a battle taking place in Britain between the forces of reason, and religious fundamentalism and it is far from won. He is one of its most famous and prolific combatants - but the question might be whether he is among its most effective. The God Delusion's stated aim was to "convert" readers to atheism - but he admits that as a proselytising tool it has broadly failed. "Yes," he smiles. "I think that was a bit unrealistic. A worthwhile aim, but unrealistic."

In fact, Dawkins has been described as "the biggest recruiter for creationism in this country". Critics accuse him of an imaginative failure when it comes to human nature's susceptibility to the comfort of irrational thought. They say his intellectual intolerance alienates people, and have questioned his wisdom in attacking a target such as the comedian Peter Kay, for admitting to finding faith comforting. "How can you take seriously," Dawkins notoriously scorned, "someone who likes to believe something because he finds it 'comforting'?"

When Sherine approached him about funding for the atheist bus, the wording he preferred for the advert was "There is almost certainly no God". Wouldn't this just infuriate believers, and put off potentially sympathetic agnostics? In the end they agreed on "probably".

"Yes, yes, I know," Dawkins interrupts. "I know. People say I'm shrill and strident."

Dawkins has a theory about this, which is very persuasive. "We've all been brought up with the view that religion has some kind of special privileged status. You're not allowed to criticise it. And therefore, if you offer even a fairly mild criticism, it really does sound strident, because it violates this expectation that religion is out of bounds."

But even so, from a purely strategic point of view, why doesn't he therefore take more care to be ...

"Conciliatory?"

Well, yes. If people find the certainties of his intellectual style off-putting, why doesn't he try and make himself seem a little less intimidating

"Well, this is a thing that worries me," he says earnestly. "Yes. And I meet it all the time. And it's by far the most intelligent criticism that I meet. I suppose there are two different ways of doing it, and I'm extremely happy if other people do it that way. Dan Dennett's Breaking The Spell at least sets out to do that, to be seductive - is that the word? Not quite, but to seduce the reader in. And I can do that. I know how to do it." He pauses to reflect. "But I seem - I seem to have lost patience."

In actual fact, though, he does take enormous care throughout the interview to be patient. Although he regards it as "clearly wicked" to call the child of Catholic parents "a Catholic child", he quickly adds, "it's equally wicked to say this is an atheist child. I would never say that." He can't help adding, "Of course, some people would say all babies are atheist, because they don't believe in anything." But when I ask if he'd say that, he considers for a moment before replying, "Well, I'm not sure that's a very sensible way of putting it actually."

Does he worry that the calibre of undergraduates is falling, as access to university is extended? "I've got to be terribly careful not to sound like an old fogey here. When I first started tutoring in the 1960s it was a great joy to me, to get enthusiastic pupils who were really keen and interested and a tutorial would be a real meeting of minds and a real conversation. That good feeling about it seemed to gradually disappear. But I would hesitate to blame the students for that, it could be that I was just growing jaded."

Like most rationalists, Dawkins tends to invoke people's innate intelligence, and attribute their flawed ways of thinking to ignorance rather than stupidity. "But I don't have any evidence," he concedes. "I could be wrong. It's a kind of ideal. It's a sort of bending over backwards." People might just be stupid, I suggest. "They might be, yes," he agrees cautiously. "But at least my saying that ignorance is no crime is my defence against the charge of arrogance. Because if you tell people they're stupid, that certainly isn't the way to win friends and influence people."

Dawkins once described the British Airways employee dismissed for wearing a gold cross to work as having "the stupidest face". Did he regret saying it? A slightly naughty smile flickers over his face.

"Well ... well ... yes, I do really. Yes. That was an unguarded moment. Although I think I said stupid-looking. Did you see the photograph of her? I think if you look up the story, and they've got the photograph ... " He checks himself, and stops. "But this is unkind."

Before meeting Dawkins, I'd worried that he might be so intellectually impatient as to be crushing. The impression instead is more like that of a lion who has given himself strict instructions to behave like a pussy cat - which is both a relief, and just slightly disappointing.

Does he ever, I ask, envy people who believe in God?

"No." He shakes his head firmly. Even though faith is said to be so famously comforting?

"You see," he says, "I'm so eager to say well maybe it is comforting but so what? I suspect that for every person who is comforted by it, there will be somebody else who is in mortal fear of it." Does he not envy those who manage not to find God mortally fearful?

"If I envied them that, then I'd have to envy people who are on some drug, which just makes them feel good. So to the extent that religion's comforting, it's probably not ..."

Dawkins likes to joke that old people go to church because they're "cramming for the final". He never worries that one day in old age he may wake and find himself feeling drawn towards faith, though. If he did, he would put it down to senile dementia. He seems much more worried about spurious reports of a fictitious deathbed conversion being put about by his enemies after he dies. He is probably not joking at all when he says "I want to make damn sure there's a tape recorder running for my last words."

Comments 1 - 50 of 408 |

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1. Comment #271147 by kram50 on October 25, 2008 at 11:04 am

 avatarI'm losing my patience too Richard...I want to fast forward things and see how it all turns out!

We need bus adds in Canada as well!

Other Comments by kram50

2. Comment #271156 by rapidflex on October 25, 2008 at 11:13 am

 avatarMr. Dawkins should start a worldwide campaign against ignorance. Judging from the overwhleming response "Atheist Bus Campaign" have received, I am sure Mr. Dawkins will receive more than enough funds for any campaign he embarks on.
And he should not avoid his policy to "Take the bull by the horns".
Mr. Dawkins worldwide campaign hopefully would lay emphasis on
" Child indoctrination = Child abuse".

Other Comments by rapidflex

3. Comment #271163 by Dr Doctor on October 25, 2008 at 11:19 am

 avatarDawkins critics are sounding shrill and strident. The way I look at it after reading thousands of comments most of which leapt to Richards' defense is that this is a short term set back.

He gets in the first punch, they reel, they build a strategy of trying to discredit him and "dead agent" him in the minds of his target audience.

Thing is, that strategy only works for a short period of time, a "yeah whatever" effect starts to take whenever that criticism is made. Eventually.

But how to shorten this lead time to balance?

Two ways I can think of:

1. Provoke the religious apologists to become even more shrill.

2. Don't provoke, just mock them and predict their response before they make it.

One of the highest ranking comments on one of the threads over on the Guardian was a send up of the shrill militant atheist argument.

Religion has a choleric temper, irritate it.

Other Comments by Dr Doctor

4. Comment #271166 by curly on October 25, 2008 at 11:20 am

 avatarMaybe the only way to get faith heads to convert is to suggest to them that they will only truly understand atheism after they have experienced some form of atheistic revelation. Well it works for faith.

Other Comments by curly

5. Comment #271169 by Quetzalcoatl on October 25, 2008 at 11:25 am

 avatarDr Doctor-

2. Don't provoke, just mock them and predict their response before they make it.


Easy enough. All their responses seem to be simply variations on common themes. It's been a long time since I heard anything new from those who are attempting to counter what Dawkins has to say.

Other Comments by Quetzalcoatl

6. Comment #271171 by notsobad on October 25, 2008 at 11:25 am

 avatar
"We've all been brought up with the view that religion has some kind of special privileged status. You're not allowed to criticise it. And therefore, if you offer even a fairly mild criticism, it really does sound strident, because it violates this expectation that religion is out of bounds."

This is an observable fact.
It's the same with other topics people are brainwashed to consider untouchable, such as patriotism.

Other Comments by notsobad

7. Comment #271179 by Dr Doctor on October 25, 2008 at 11:36 am

 avatarAlso Richard sounds slightly despondent in this article, but I can't help thinking that the situation would be much worse without the work that he has put in since he graduated.

Other Comments by Dr Doctor

8. Comment #271180 by Enlightenme.. on October 25, 2008 at 11:37 am

 avatarComforting?

Heaven? I never found that to be the remotest bit convincing, even as a child, when told my grandad had 'gone to heaven', and I would see him again someday, I could smell BS.

Hell? John Lennox's kind of comforting?
That six million Jews are avenged with Hitler roasting on a spit?

Again, I smelt BS from the off.

Comforting:
"record numbers of new maths and science undergraduates were reported"
Perhaps there's hope for us after all!

Other Comments by Enlightenme..

9. Comment #271189 by HourglassMemory on October 25, 2008 at 11:45 am

I sure do understand his frustration.

Other Comments by HourglassMemory

10. Comment #271205 by Wosret on October 25, 2008 at 11:55 am

 avatarYeah, sometimes I think it might be cool to not be constantly worried about something bad happening to me, but then I fear that my being cognizant of this helps in the prevention of bad things from happening to me.

So the bliss of ignorance (or delusion) may carry a heavy prize.

Other Comments by Wosret

11. Comment #271217 by D'Arcy on October 25, 2008 at 12:03 pm

 avatarIn a way Richard is in a no win situation, a bit like Darwin was. If he is accused of being "shrill" and "strident", it is because of the message he conveys. Cleopatra ( as per Shakespeare) may have punished the messenger about Mark Antony's mis-doings, (i.e. getting married, but not to her), but it is hardly a fitting way to further human knowledge.

Where is the so-called middle ground between faith and non-belief? Richard should stick to his line: (my paraphrase) " I respect that you hold those views, but I have no reason to believe they are true".

Other Comments by D'Arcy

12. Comment #271219 by root2squared on October 25, 2008 at 12:04 pm

 avatarDamnit, he's just being honest. If all atheists were strident instead of "respectful" and "considerate", we would make a lot more progress.

Other Comments by root2squared

13. Comment #271234 by scottishgeologist on October 25, 2008 at 12:18 pm

 avatarI'd like to pick up on something RD says in this piece:


If you were to actually travel around schools and universities and listen in on lectures about evolution you might find a fairly substantial fraction of young people, without knowing what it is they disapprove of, think they disapprove of it, because they've been brought up to


(I am assuming that RD is talking about the UK here, correct me if I am wrong)

I'd like to know WHO these young people are. Which "faith community / communities" are we talking about

Are they UK born and bred or immigrant'

We are always being told, and the figures bear it out, that christianity is on the wane in the UK. So if these young people are christian, one would expect their influence to wane also

I am just wondering if this is another example of the "polarisation" that is happening. Where, if you "go to church" you are more likely to be evangie and/or conservative.

Or is it simply a case that the evangies are getting more shrill and strident'

:-))
SG

Other Comments by scottishgeologist

14. Comment #271246 by Matt H. on October 25, 2008 at 12:31 pm

 avatarPeter Kay has nothing on Ricky Gervais.

Good interview, though.

Other Comments by Matt H.

15. Comment #271265 by a non e-moose on October 25, 2008 at 12:45 pm

I wasn't sure the bus campaign was a good idea, but it seems to be generating a lot of good discussion.

Other Comments by a non e-moose

16. Comment #271266 by alan baylis on October 25, 2008 at 12:48 pm

7. Comment #271179 by Dr Doctor


but I can't help thinking that the situation would be much worse without the work that he has put in since he graduated.




We can take that as an absolute fact. :)

Other Comments by alan baylis

17. Comment #271277 by Quine on October 25, 2008 at 12:55 pm

 avatarOn the next bus, I would like to see:

"Raising children to believe what is not true is child abuse."

Other Comments by Quine

18. Comment #271278 by TurkishAtheist on October 25, 2008 at 12:57 pm

 avatarBesides some handful people I think human race becoming dumber by the day, we have more stupid people right now than 20 years ago, more religious nut jobs taking over governments, they are spreading like disease.

Other Comments by TurkishAtheist

19. Comment #271283 by Ochiudo on October 25, 2008 at 1:02 pm

 avatar[quote] [quote]"We've all been brought up with the view that religion has some kind of special privileged status. You're not allowed to criticise it. And therefore, if you offer even a fairly mild criticism, it really does sound strident, because it violates this expectation that religion is out of bounds." [/quote]

This is an observable fact.
It's the same with other topics people are brainwashed to consider untouchable, such as patriotism. [/quote]

Interestingly, that is a local problem. Try being a patriot in germany, for example, and you'll most likely wake up in a hospital. But
what you're saying is quite generally true for democracy; even though it is a system far from being perfect we are not encouraged nor allowed to even try of thinking something new...

Other Comments by Ochiudo

20. Comment #271284 by javb222 on October 25, 2008 at 1:03 pm

 avatarEDIT: In my experience (as someone who abandoned faith), moderates are unconvincing and open to the (correct) accusation that they are hypocrites. What worked for me were the clear and well delivered rhetorical lines of Sam Harris and the cognitive dissonance caused by the Selfish Gene vs Harun Yahya. So I think it's good to be blunt.

Other Comments by javb222

21. Comment #271306 by asyouwere on October 25, 2008 at 1:23 pm

 avatarIn a recent interview, Richard was touted as "… possibly the world’s most famous atheist." From some in the audience we would hear "Gasp! Not an atheist
"!!

I know the subject has been broached before, but to the religious of the world the word "atheist" is pejorative at the very mention. Like the comedienne who didn’t believe in god, and it was okay with her mother as long as she wasn’t an atheist.

The faithful are inured from childhood to throw up a wall of deaf ears to anyone defining themselves with that term. There are a great many folks that simply are unable to even begin to engage in any rational discussion on any subject with anyone they understand to be atheist. Richard himself has bemoaned the allusion of vileness and evil many cultures attach the word. But for those cultures, any insinuation of godlessness has that consequence.

Realizing that it is almost impossible to spontaneously bring a word into the lingua franca, how might we define ourselves in a way that has less historical association with the iniquity of your everyday, run-of-the-mill heretics and blasphemers?

Other Comments by asyouwere

22. Comment #271321 by Andrew Mackay on October 25, 2008 at 1:37 pm

 avatarWe should be more strident and not mealy-mouthed - particularly with regard to the bus advert.
It would have more impact if it said
THERE IS NO GOD, STUPID!

Other Comments by Andrew Mackay

23. Comment #271323 by D'Arcy on October 25, 2008 at 1:39 pm

 avatarAs a Godless heretic myself, what kind of pussyfoot "middlegroud" description of me would be preferred? "99% agnostic?", "militant atheist?", "atheist fundamentalist?". My own preferred description of my viewpoint is evolutionary materialist.

God has no place in my world.

Other Comments by D'Arcy

24. Comment #271329 by David A Robertson on October 25, 2008 at 1:48 pm

Just wondering - how did the debate with Lennox in Oxford go? Disappointed that there has been no mention of this repeat Huxley/Wilberforce clash here.

As regards Scottish Geologists comment - there is no doubt that there is an increased interest in the young (18-30). I find it very difficult to get older people to come to church or debate but the 18-30 age group are much more open minded. At the Hitchens/Lennox debate I sat in front of an older couple who before the debate opined that of course the older people would be religious and the younger ones atheist. In fact - when it came to voting it looked to me as though the vast majority of those supporting Lennox were younger.

Richards thoughts on why this is happening are interesting. I think he has either actually helped us (unwittingly) or does not understand what causes people to turn to God.

Other Comments by David A Robertson

25. Comment #271330 by dochmbi on October 25, 2008 at 1:49 pm

 avatarChild indoctrination is the most important issue in my opinion. There should be a campaign against it and it should say something like "freedom of the mind is a human right, say no to indoctrination".

Other Comments by dochmbi

26. Comment #271333 by Steve Zara on October 25, 2008 at 1:52 pm

Comment #271329 by David A Robertson

turn to God.


Sorry, what God? You only think he "might" exist. I admire you for admitting your apparently new-found agnosticism. Perhaps you are one of the older doubters of which you write?

Other Comments by Steve Zara

27. Comment #271336 by asyouwere on October 25, 2008 at 1:54 pm

 avatar23. Comment #271323 by D'Arcy on October 25, 2008 at 1:39 pm


"My own preferred description of my viewpoint is evolutionary materialist".

Hmmm... not too shabby.

Edit: Doesn't bring any god-ness into it at all.

Other Comments by asyouwere

28. Comment #271338 by Layla Nasreddin on October 25, 2008 at 1:56 pm

 avatarFrom the article:
Does he worry that the calibre of undergraduates is falling, as access to university is extended? "I've got to be terribly careful not to sound like an old fogey here. When I first started tutoring in the 1960s it was a great joy to me, to get enthusiastic pupils who were really keen and interested and a tutorial would be a real meeting of minds and a real conversation. That good feeling about it seemed to gradually disappear. But I would hesitate to blame the students for that, it could be that I was just growing jaded."


THIS is the part of the article I want to know more about. How, specifically, have things changed in this regard? Are students less curious, less argumentative, less impressive intellectually, what? Or is it more that, having taught so long, he's "seen it all before" or something of that nature?

Other Comments by Layla Nasreddin

29. Comment #271342 by gazzaofbath on October 25, 2008 at 2:03 pm

 avatarI don't know about anyone else but I was just a little disappointed with this interview in The Guardian. I read through it first thing and thought "is that all"?

I was hoping the interviewer would cover more ground. Something on his track record of science education, including the well known books (though she may be a Guardian 'arty' type who hasn't read them!); his broader views on science, life, state of country; his plans for the future (and not just his last words - some way off I hope!).

Maybe its scope was meant to be a little limited but I would have hoped that a good interviewer could have probed a bit more - just for my interest!

Other Comments by gazzaofbath

30. Comment #271347 by BillySands on October 25, 2008 at 2:09 pm

 avatar
what causes people to turn to God


Vulnerability, indoctrination and the need to feel special.

You want debate? Why do you never debate here? Lets do the virgin birth "prophecy" or the "fall" right here, right now! (Pause for anticipated silence).

Would you let an atheist come to your sunday school every week and present an alternative to your mythology? (How many people attend your crutch on a sunday any way?)

Other Comments by BillySands

31. Comment #271364 by Quine on October 25, 2008 at 2:26 pm

 avatarWhile you are here, David, whence evil?

Other Comments by Quine

32. Comment #271376 by MaxD on October 25, 2008 at 2:37 pm

 avatarDavid Robertson informs us of a new trend.
s regards Scottish Geologists comment - there is no doubt that there is an increased interest in the young (18-30). I find it very difficult to get older people to come to church or debate but the 18-30 age group are much more open minded.


To which I say, har de har har.
"There is no doubt." How do we know there is no doubt? He, David Robertson, finds it hard to get older people into his church or debate. Hmmm where is your statistical analysis that shows there is no doubt that 18-30 year olds are much more open minded, and open to this possible god?

Other Comments by MaxD

33. Comment #271382 by Contrivanced on October 25, 2008 at 2:41 pm

 avatarI like his thoughts on 'comforting'.
Heroin would be comforting to a heroin addict wouldn't it'

Other Comments by Contrivanced

34. Comment #271393 by scottishgeologist on October 25, 2008 at 2:52 pm

 avatarTo be fair to David, I would probably go along with his 18-30 thing. (Hey isnt there a club called 18-30 that does wild holidays'.....)

Anyway, a lot of these "trendy" evangie churches are very active and successful in towns and cities where there are Universities. The church that David referred to on another thread that raised 400K is very much a "student" church. So is David's "daughter" church in St Andrews.


My own experience of evangelical churches (in Scotland anyway) is that the bigger "successful" ones always sem to have a lot of students and often a lot of those students are from overseas.

I think I may just have answered my own question on another thread.......

Older people on the other hand tend to be a bit "nominalist" (My granny went to church, so did my mother, so how can I not go....')

And there is no doubt that a lot of churches DO offer a welcoming, friendly environment. For the new kid in the big Uni town, well, that might be a good thing esp since they probably came from the sort of wealthy middle class background that "went to church" anyway - in other words pre-programmed.

:-))
SG

Other Comments by scottishgeologist

35. Comment #271399 by MaxD on October 25, 2008 at 2:58 pm

 avatarBut here is David again popping in and then not engaging in the discussion. This approach is tedious in the extreme.

Other Comments by MaxD

36. Comment #271401 by Mark Jones on October 25, 2008 at 3:01 pm

 avatarComment #271329 by David A Robertson


Just wondering - how did the debate with Lennox in Oxford go? Disappointed that there has been no mention of this repeat Huxley/Wilberforce clash here.


There have been a couple of comments from people who were there; they said that Dawkins won the debate! I'm sure you would accept the verdicts of rd.net followers as the truth without knowing what others thought? :-)

It's interesting what you say about the age groups. Some might say that is another worrying sign of anti-intellectualism. Open-mindedness takes many forms (there's another thread that points this out) and it's ironic that you are looking for one form of open-mindedness whilst the sceptical are looking for another.

Other Comments by Mark Jones

37. Comment #271407 by D'Arcy on October 25, 2008 at 3:08 pm

 avatarWee Flea asks:
Just wondering - how did the debate with Lennox in Oxford go?


Sorry David, I haven't a clue. You'd better get on your hotline to God to find out.

I find it very difficult to get older people to come to church or debate but the 18-30 age group are much more open minded.


Ahh well then David, you got all us atheists on the run then haven't you! Is this supposed to be some sort of argument about the veracity of Christianity? Billy Sands sees more young people at the Celtic match in one game than you see all year. That doesn't make you wrong, after all Galileo was in a minority of one, and it turns out he was pretty accurate! The numbers argument is a non argument, as is the argument "from authority". Einstein was also in a minority of one, but the force of his ideas persuaded others. You and I are both free to challenge Einstein's ideas, but you had better know what they are before you start.

Other Comments by D'Arcy

38. Comment #271416 by Mark Smith on October 25, 2008 at 3:21 pm

David Robertson
Richards thoughts on why this is happening are interesting. I think he has either actually helped us (unwittingly) or does not understand what causes people to turn to God.

Another snipe and run?
In case you are staying this time, what do you think 'causes people to turn to God'?

Other Comments by Mark Smith

39. Comment #271420 by j.mills on October 25, 2008 at 3:29 pm

 avatar
[RD said:] "I would say that when my academic career began there was probably just as much ignorance - but less active opposition [to science]. If you were to actually travel around schools and universities and listen in on lectures about evolution you might find a fairly substantial fraction of young people, without knowing what it is they disapprove of, think they disapprove of it, because they've been brought up to."


Thing is, the total number of believers can fall while the evangelical number rises. That would lead to more "active opposition" even if atheism was more widespread.

Other Comments by j.mills

40. Comment #271423 by David A Robertson on October 25, 2008 at 3:37 pm

Sorry Mark - not cut and run - will get back to your comments later - I'm off to bed. But just found the following. A bit surprised that it has not appeared on RD net yet. This from the Spectator -

"On Tuesday evening I attended the debate between Richard Dawkins and John Lennox at Oxford’s Natural History Museum. This was the second public encounter between the two men, but it turned out to be very different from the first. Lennox is the Oxford mathematics professor whose book, God’s Undertaker: Has Science Buried God? is to my mind an excoriating demolition of Dawkins’s overreach from biology into religion as expressed in his book The God Delusion -- all the more devastating because Lennox attacks him on the basis of science itself. In the first debate, which can be seen on video on this website, Dawkins was badly caught off-balance by Lennox’s argument precisely because, possibly for the first time, he was being challenged on his own chosen scientific ground.
This week’s debate, however, was different because from the off Dawkins moved it onto safer territory– and at the very beginning made a most startling admission. He said:
A serious case could be made for a deistic God.
This was surely remarkable. Here was the arch-apostle of atheism, whose whole case is based on the assertion that believing in a creator of the universe is no different from believing in fairies at the bottom of the garden, saying that a serious case can be made for the idea that the universe was brought into being by some kind of purposeful force. A creator. True, he was not saying he was now a deist; on the contrary, he still didn't believe in such a purposeful founding intelligence, and he was certainly still saying that belief in the personal God of the Bible was just like believing in fairies. Nevertheless, to acknowledge that ‘a serious case could be made for a deistic god’ is to undermine his previous categorical assertion that
...all life, all intelligence, all creativity and all ‘design’ anywhere in the universe is the direct or indirect product of Darwinian natural selection...Design cannot precede evolution and therefore cannot underlie the universe.
In Oxford on Tuesday night, however, virtually the first thing he said was that a serious case could be made for believing that it could.
Anthony Flew, the celebrated philosopher and former high priest of atheism, spectacularly changed his mind and concluded -- as set out in his book There Is A God --  that life had indeed been created by a governing and purposeful intelligence, a change of mind that occurred because he followed where the scientific evidence led him. The conversion of Flew, whose book contains a cutting critique of Dawkins’s thinking, has been dismissed with unbridled scorn by Dawkins – who now says there is a serious case for the position that Flew now adopts!
Unfortunately, so stunning was this declaration it was not pursued on Tuesday evening. Instead, Dawkins was able to move the debate onto a specific attack on Christian belief in the divinity of Jesus, which is a very different argument and obscured the central point of contention – the claim that science had buried God. The fact that Dawkins now appears to be so reluctant publicly to defend his own position on his own territory of scientific rationalism – and indeed, even to have shifted his ground – is a tribute above all to the man he was debating once again on Tuesday evening.
Afterwards, I asked Dawkins whether he had indeed changed his position and become more open to ideas which lay outside the scientific paradigm.  He vehemently denied this and expressed horror that he might have given this impression. But he also said other things which suggested to me that some of his own views simply don't meet the criteria of empirical evidence that he insists must govern all our thinking.
For example, I put to him that, since he is prepared to believe that the origin of all matter was an entirely spontaneous event, he therefore believes that something can be created out of nothing -- and that since such a belief runs counter to the very scientific principles of verifiable evidence which he tells us should govern all our thinking, this is itself precisely the kind of irrationality, or ‘magic’, which he scorns. In reply he said that, although he agreed this was a problematic position, he did indeed believe that the first particle arose spontaneously from nothing, because the alternative explanation – God -- was more incredible. Later, he amplified this by saying that physics was coming up with theories to show how matter could spontaneously be created from nothing. But as far as I can see – and as Anthony Flew elaborates – these theories cannot answer the crucial question of how the purpose-carrying codes which gave rise to self–reproduction in life-forms arose out of matter from which any sense of purpose was totally absent. So such a belief, whether adduced by physicists or anyone else, does not rest upon rational foundations.  
Even more jaw-droppingly, Dawkins told me that, rather than believing in God, he was more receptive to the theory that life on earth had indeed been created by a governing intelligence – but one which had resided on another planet. Leave aside the question of where that extra-terrestrial intelligence had itself come from, is it not remarkable that the arch-apostle of reason finds the concept of God more unlikely as an explanation of the universe than the existence and plenipotentiary power of extra-terrestrial little green men?
The other thing that jumped out at me from this debate was that, although Dawkins insisted over and over again that all he was concerned with was whether or not something was true, he himself seems to be pretty careless with historical evidence. Anthony Flew, for example, points out in his own book that Dawkins’s claim in The God Delusion that Einstein was an atheist is manifestly false, since Einstein had specifically denied that he was either a pantheist or an atheist. In the debate, under pressure from Lennox Dawkins was actually forced to retract his previous claim that Jesus had probably ‘never existed’. And in a revealing aside, when Lennox remarked that the Natural History Museum in which they were debating – in front of dinosaur skeletons -- had been founded for the glory of God, Dawkins scoffed that of course this was absolutely untrue.
But it was true. Construction of the museum was instigated between 1855 and 1860 by the Regius Professor of Medicine, Sir Henry Acland. According to Keith Thomson of the Sigma XI Scientific Research Society, the funds for the project came from the surplus in the University Press’s Bible account as this was deemed only appropriate for a building dedicated to science as a glorification of God’s works. Giving his reasons for building the museum, Acland himself said that it would provide the opportunity to obtain the
knowledge of the great material design of which the Supreme Master-Worker has made us a constituent part...The student of life, bearing in mind the more general laws which in the several departments above named he will have sought to appreciate, will find in the collections of Zoology, combined with the Geological specimens and the dissections of the Anatomist, a boundless field of interest and of inquiry, to which almost every other science lends its aid : from each Science he borrows a special light to guide him through the ranges of extinct and  existing animal forms, from the lowest up to  the highest type, which; last and most perfect, but pre-shadowed in previous ages, is seen in Man. By the aid of physiological illustrations he begins to understand how hard to unravel are the complex mechanisms and  prescient intentions of the Maker of all; and  he slowly learns to appreciate what exquisite  care is needed for discovering the real action of even an apparently comprehended machine.
Truth is indeed the crux of the matter – but Dawkins seems to understand the word rather differently from the rest of us.The great question, however, is whether his own theory is now in the process of further evolution -- and whether it might even jump the species barrier into what is vulgarly known by lesser mortals as faith."

Other Comments by David A Robertson

41. Comment #271442 by Mark Jones on October 25, 2008 at 4:00 pm

 avatarComment #271423 by David A Robertson

This is the article by Melanie Phillips in the Spectator, which was posted on another thread and discussed a little. I don't think we've had a response from Professor Dawkins to this yet?

I've rarely read anything by Melanie Phillips that I've agreed with. Interesting that she furnishes evidence about the foundation of the Natural History Museum (I'm sure RD would admit he was wrong, if he was) but none for the God she believes in.

Other Comments by Mark Jones

42. Comment #271443 by Vaal on October 25, 2008 at 4:01 pm

 avatarAh David

Let me have a guess. That gumph was written by Melanie Phillips, perchance?

My goodness, and there you were admonishing me for not checking my sources, and yet you are a bedfellow of the "to say the least" scientifically challenged Melanie Phillips. I thought you had a little more intellectual honesty than that, to swallow all the remarkable mental gymnastics that is a hallmark of Mrs Phillips mad pedantry.

Well, this time we had some people on this site who did go to the lecture, so I will be interested in hearing, first hand, on what they say about the lecture to see how that corresponds to the article above.

EDIT: Ah, Anthony Flew, that old chestnut. What a surprise.

Other Comments by Vaal

43. Comment #271444 by Enlightenme.. on October 25, 2008 at 4:09 pm

 avatarRobertson, you seem to be obsessed with accounting today..

Are you sure you aren't measuring things by the wrong criteria?

"not cut and run"

No, just cut and paste..
;)

(But that's ok, I s'pose, in this instance)

Other Comments by Enlightenme..

44. Comment #271446 by scottishgeologist on October 25, 2008 at 4:15 pm

 avatarVaal

Yes, Melanie "Creationist" Phillips - the UK's answer to Anne Coulter.

http://www.melaniephillips.com/articles/archives/000756.html

Grim......

:-)
SG

Other Comments by scottishgeologist

45. Comment #271447 by Dhamma on October 25, 2008 at 4:19 pm

 avatarTo me it appears that in the past few years atheism and theism have polarized themselves more. That's probably because we atheists have stopped being so damn respectful to the theists.

Obviously it's made religion a hot topic, and when the common man starts discussing religion I think god is a very appealing and pleasant thought.

Nonetheless, I do believe we will "win" the war in the end. The more science progresses, the more people will question their faith.

God pretty much faded away in my country. The majority of Swedes were religious only 50 years ago, and today, due to wealth(less concern), education and above all, no religious propaganda machine, we are almost free from god.

Other Comments by Dhamma

46. Comment #271449 by Hellene on October 25, 2008 at 4:26 pm

40. Comment #271423 by David A Robertson

Melanie Phillips. Ok, on my no fly list.

Other Comments by Hellene

47. Comment #271452 by Titania on October 25, 2008 at 4:34 pm

 avatar40. Comment #271423 by David A Robertson

I put to him that, since he is prepared to believe that the origin of all matter was an entirely spontaneous event, he therefore believes that something can be created out of nothing -- and that since such a belief runs counter to the very scientific principles of verifiable evidence which he tells us should govern all our thinking, this is itself precisely the kind of irrationality, or ‘magic’, which he scorns. In reply he said that, although he agreed this was a problematic position, he did indeed believe that the first particle arose spontaneously from nothing, because the alternative explanation – God -- was more incredible. Later, he amplified this by saying that physics was coming up with theories to show how matter could spontaneously be created from nothing. But as far as I can see – and as Anthony Flew elaborates – these theories cannot answer the crucial question of how the purpose-carrying codes which gave rise to self–reproduction in life-forms arose out of matter from which any sense of purpose was totally absent. So such a belief, whether adduced by physicists or anyone else, does not rest upon rational foundations.


Rev. Robertson, I attended the Origins Conference sponsored by The Skeptics Sociey earlier this month at Caltech. http://origins.skeptic.com/downloads/2008_Conference_Brochure.pdf I hope the videos will be up soon. Several excellent scientists spoke and, unfortunately, had to condense complex scientific research into about an hour each.

The scientists in attendance would tend to support Professor Dawkins in these matters. Donald Prothero spoke on The Origin of Life and the Cambrian explosion. Dr. Prothero is Professor of Geology at Occidental College and Lecturer in Geobiology at Caltech. He is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of 21 books and almost 200 scientific papers, including five leading geology textbooks and three trade books. He has served as an associate or technical editor for Geology, Paleobiology, and Journal of Paleontology. He is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America, the Paleontological Society, and the Linnaean Society of London. His latest book is Evolution: What the Fossils Say and Why it Matters.

Dr. Prothero explained the evidence for how life probably arose from inorganic matter. I am happy to send you a copy of his book, gratis.

Dr. Sean Carroll, Dr. Paul Davies and Dr. Leonard Susskind, all physicists, discussed the latest in cosmological research and there is evidence that our universe could have arisen from what we call nothing (a quantum bubble exploding in another universe). There is zero evidence that a supreme being was required. I am happy to send you copies of their books and papers, again, gratis. The subject is fascinating, I am sure you will agree. As I said, I hope the videos will be posted soon so you can hear their lectures for yourself. Think about it, why would the existence of a Supreme Being be more likely than the existence of matter alone? Please tell us any evidence you have that a Supreme Being exists. I really am curious about this.

I hope you have the time to respond to my post.

Other Comments by Titania

48. Comment #271453 by Hellene on October 25, 2008 at 4:36 pm

45. Comment #271447 by Dhamma

"... we are almost free from god."

That's a great quote for a T-Shirt.
Or the side of a bus.

Other Comments by Hellene

49. Comment #271457 by Hellene on October 25, 2008 at 4:45 pm

47. Comment #271452 by Titania

Titania,

My daughter made me aware of this one:

http://www.snagfilms.com/films/watch/the_end_of_america/

worth the watch.

Other Comments by Hellene

50. Comment #271459 by Ed-words on October 25, 2008 at 4:48 pm

The Comfort Tables


- - -(gives comfort to a/an)- - -



alcohol - - - - - - - alcoholic

heroin - - - - - - - drug addict

gambling - - - - - - compulsive gambler

food - - - - - - - obese person

sex - - - - - - -- - -sex addict

work - - - - - - - - -workaholic

prayer and Bible - - -religiholic

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