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Saturday, May 12, 2007 | Reason : Commentary | print version Print | Comments |

Document Dawkins transcendent

by Ruth Gledhill, The Times Online

Reposted from:
http://timescolumns.typepad.com/gledhill/2007/05/dawkins_transce.html

Richard Dawkins


Richard Dawkins had requested no photographer for our interview at his Oxford home last week, so instead artist Paul Winner came along and produced this numinous illustration. The results of the interview appeared in T2 today, as the cover, which was thrilling for me. Bloggers are already following it up, with one describing it as "refreshing". There's also a lively debate going on Dawkins' own site. More links to Dawkins copy on the TimesOnline Faith Page. (Updated: If you go here and scroll down, you will see a videolink.)Moby Dick
The Mobius Strip
It was when the company who made The Root of All Evil for Channel 4 employed me as the fact checker for the documentary that I was alerted to the atheistic crusade about to be unleashed upon the western world and conceived a desire to interview Professor Dawkins. At about the same time, I dreamed a nickname for Dawkins, Mobius Dick. This is a reference to the two-dimensional Mobius Strip with its infinite edge, and the story of Moby Dick, the white whale who survives repeated attempts to hunt him down and kill him, and then turns on his attackers, destroying them.

I was expecting an angry man, impatient of my own unsophisticated faith. I was so nervous I tried first a bipartite approach, and wanted to take along a colleague who is an Oxford graduate. He resisted this suggestion. So I sort of smuggled in Paul, who read law at Oxford, as back-up in case I got stuck. But in the end I needn't have worried. When I finally went along last week to interview him I found an urbane, charming and ophisticated professor manifesting just a little of the anger against religion for which he is known, and I have to confess that much of that anger is justified.

What he is is passionate for what he describes as "the truth". Because he has aimed his writing, most notably in The God Delusion, at the fundamentalists he so detests, it carries something of the tone of the very preaching he decries. But with the rare and hugely appreciated luxury of being able to talk to him at depth, I had the privileged opportunity of being able to explore precisely what he does and does not believe. And what emerged was a man whose mind is not at all closed to the possibility of the transcendent. I would say - and indeed I did say this to him - that if some of our more intelligent and liberal Church of England and Episcopal bishops were quizzed in detail about what they really believed, and if they gave truthful replies, they might not be that far from the doctrine Dawkins is propagating. Indeed, I might go so far as to say that here we have a man who is in danger of founding a new religion of his own, a religion we might want to call Dawkinism.

Growing Up in the Universe DVD set

We spoke for 90 minutes. It was one of the most absorbing conversations I've ever had. The day before we met, I had received by email a promotion from the Richard Dawkins Foundation for a new DVD series for children, Growing up in the Universe. It looked superb, and I will buy a set for my young son. I told Dawkins how similar it was to receiving text from a religious company, the accompanying blurb almost like a creed. "You're very close to being right," he admits. How could I be more right? "To be spot-on would be to say that this had nothing to do with the sort of religion which believes in a divine creator who forgives sins, answers prayers and listens to your inner-most thoughts, cares about your sex life does all the things that the Christian God is supposed to." It would be a "mysterious beyond-present comprehension, physics of the future."

He has no name for it. "It's hard to have a word for it because part of it lies in the future. For example it would be hard to ask a medieval peasant for a word that sums up Boeing 747s and computers and televisions." He is indeed convinced that future physicists will discover something "at least as wonderful as any god you could ever imagine." So why not call it God? "I don't think it's helpful to call it God." Ok, but what would "it" be like? "I think it'll be something wonderful and amazing and something difficult to understand. I think that all theological conceptions will be seen as parochial and petty by comparison to it."

He also talked about the nature of the universe, confessing that he can even see how "design" by some gigantic intelligence might come into it. "But that gigantic intelligence itself would need an explanation. It's not enough to call it God, it would need some sort of explanation such as evolution. Maybe it evolved in another universe and created some computer simulation which we are all a part of. These are all science fiction suggestions but I am trying to overcome the limitations of the 21st century mind." He adds: "Whatever it is it's going to be grander and bigger and more beautiful and more wonderful and it's going to put theology to shame."

Alister McGrath, author of The Dawkins Delusion, is among those who have attacked his "ideological fanaticism." Dawkins responded graciously to this and this provoked further correspondence in The Times letters page. McGrath also wrote an earlier piece for our Credo columna recent series of sermons preached by Nicholas Sagovsky, canon theologian at Westminster Abbey.

For now, I thought it would be fun to explore whether "gigantic intelligence" fitted with any of the 72 names for God listed in the Hebrew Bible.

For this, I consulted my Orthodox Jewish friend Irene Lancaster, an academic and fellow blogger who last year made aliyah to Haifa and who is a regular commentator here. She is currently teaching a university course which addresses this very subject. She tells me: "There are supposed to be 72 names of God. The words in the Bible represent all sorts of things, not because Judaism is pagan at heart, but because of our own limitations. Hence, God of war, God of the field, gods (elohim), which also stands in for 'judges', God's representatives on earth. Then there is the name YHVH, which is unpronounceable as it is only made up of vowels, meaning 'becoming'. That is, 'I am that I am' at the burning bush is really, 'I shall be that I shall be'. And Rashi says that that implies that God will be with us in all our troubles."

This means that the transcendent God is actually the one who is with us, while the God Elohim of every day is more one of justice, not so much love.

Maimonides in his Guide for the Perplexed said you can only talk about God in negatives, or what he isn't. I myself am a member of the Church of England, but a pretty ignorant one. When pressed on my belief, I always tell my inquisitors: "The only thing I know absolutely for certain about God is that I'm not it." After speaking to Professor Dawkins I had another insight. I knew he wasn't it either, even though I have no doubt of his "gigantic intelligence". But the Jewish view, from which we derive our Christian theology, is certainly that God created the world, maintains it and is with us at all times, even if He is unknowable. Irene speculates that the fact that there isn't a Jesus figure in Judaism probably encouraged the development of Kabbalah in which the sephirot are "forces" representing various attributes, based on the Book of Chronicles.

These include from, Crown, Wisdom, Understanding, Knowledge, Loving Kindness, Severity, Beauty, Foundation, Glory, Victory and Earth. These also relate to the letters of the Hebrew alphabet and to characters in the Bible. Joseph would be Yesod, foundation; Jacob would be Tipheret, beauty. Abraham represents loving kindness and Isaac severity. Jacob is a merger of both and is of course Isaac's son. By coincidence Irene's husband Brian Lancaster, who runs an MSc in consciousness and transpersonal psychology and who holds the country's first chair in transpersonal psychology at John Moore uni in Liverpool, has put much of this in his book, Essence of Kabbalah. Irene says: "Dawkins' description is definitely Jewishly OK, whether he likes it or not. Dawkins has tried to describe some sort of power, even intelligence, which does not include the word 'God.' The word for the Lord in Hebrew is Y-H-V-H-, which is a transliteration of the consonants in Hebrew which sound like vowels. This was before vowels came into use around the 7th or 8th centuries CE.

Maimonides talks about what God isn't and says that we cannot describe the entity which God is. That is why in Hebrew a circumlocution is used, called 'Ha-shem', meaning 'the name'. In other words, if you named that power, you might fall into the trap of thinking you really understood it."

Maimonides lived from 1135 to 1204 and influenced Thomas Aquinas and the whole Christian tradition. "So what Dawkins is describing here is the Jewish concept of God the creator," says Irene. As Professor Dawkins said at the end of our interview, there seemed to be very little we did not agree on. He just refuses to call it God. I still maintain, though, after our conversation, that he would be a worth recipient of the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion. By making the religious among us examine and question our beliefs, he has brought about more progress than he might care to understand.
Holocaust memorial
(Incidentally, Paul Winner also came with me to Rome, where he sketched the Pope and Rowan Williams, and has done a number of other drawings of top religious people. He has also been employed as the Government's official Holocaust Memorial Day artist and on a number of other projects. We are at present seeking a publisher for a book we are writing together, People of the Book.)

Bloggers discussing this include The Stuff of Life here and here, calling for the article to be "canonised"! Globalclashes critiques a "sugary excerpt".

Comments 1 - 17 of 17 |

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1. Comment #39820 by uriel on May 12, 2007 at 3:32 am

What a load of preposterous and ridiculous playing with meaningless words. She should shut up and go read Spinoza and get a clue about what kind of 'God' Dawkins is talking about.

And really, current science already makes religion look laughably parochial and petty, no need to idly speculate about future physics we really know nothing about.

And what is most important, unlike religion, we know science is based on reality, but please, lets keep science-fiction speculations out of this discussion.

After reading this interview and watching the last interview in Canadian tv, I think Richard has become way too soft on religious nonsense, and too willing to go along with silly and naive speculative games that only provide cover for the self-delusion of religious minds.

Other Comments by uriel

2. Comment #39849 by stuartM02 on May 12, 2007 at 5:19 am

Ermmmmmm, what???

That was a load of cobblers. She seems to have read her own previous artical based on the interview, which wasn't bad although a little muddled - then gone away and projected here own belives onto the artical and decided to go to town on it.

If she writes a 3rd one, I'll bet RD will become a Christian.

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3. Comment #39853 by Logicel on May 12, 2007 at 5:23 am

 avatarstuartM02 wrote, if she writes a 3rd one, I'll bet RD will become a Christian.
_____

On the 4th article, RD will convert from Christianity to Islam.

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4. Comment #39857 by Logicel on May 12, 2007 at 5:43 am

 avatarAs Russell Blackford mentioned on another thread, Ms Gledhill would be a nice person to have a conversation with. And I certainly hope Ms Gledhill had a chance of reading Blackford's limerick addressed to her.

Moderates who are familiar with a range of religious beliefs as Ms Gledhill is, are often gracious, making conversations pleasant and enjoyable but hardly ever fruitful. They have this uncanny protean ability to adjust an atheist's viewpoint to fit into their religious framework. Though a protean ability could be praised for its flexibility, again, the nifty little saying, "Don't have such an open mind, that your brains fall out" comes to mind.

RD is enamoured with and enthralled by nature, not the supernatural. Never has he ever given the slightest indication that he is interested in the supernatural. One can be flexible, but also consistent.

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5. Comment #39900 by Janus on May 12, 2007 at 8:29 am

 avatarThere's intellectual dishonesty as practiced by creationists... it's easy enough to recognize: Quote mining, misreprentation of the words of famous scientists, outright lies and misinformation. And then there's intellectual dishonesty as practiced by post-modernistic moderate religionists, who muddle up and dilute the meaning of words so much that there's almost nothing recognizable left. Demand an interpretation of a religious text from a dozen of these religious believers, and you'll get a dozen completely different messages with absolutely nothing in common. In their own way, they're as dogmatic in their beliefs as the fundamentalists. It's just that where the fundies refuse to let their beliefs be altered by evidence by denying it exists, the moderates refuse to let their beliefs be altered by evidence by denying that there is anything to be altered.

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6. Comment #39905 by the great teapot on May 12, 2007 at 8:40 am

I have to admire her honesty.
Usually when someone professes to being ignorant it is false modesty.

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7. Comment #39907 by Jerome on May 12, 2007 at 8:48 am

 avatarI was amused by the comments, but for those who have not seen the article she wrote and the interview with Prof Dawkins -
http://timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article1767506.ece

Might be worth linking that rather than her blog entry?

j x

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8. Comment #39919 by Thor on May 12, 2007 at 9:34 am

 avatarJerome,

considering the rush of new articles on Dawkins or Atheism in general - and we should all be happy about the publicity - it is understandable that you overlooked it, but this has been up since May 9 here:
http://richarddawkins.net/article,1018,n,n

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9. Comment #39963 by Toivo on May 12, 2007 at 11:54 am

The article says: "He has no name for it. "It's hard to have a word for it because part of it lies in the future. For example it would be hard to ask a medieval peasant for a word that sums up Boeing 747s and computers and televisions." He is indeed convinced that future physicists will discover something "at least as wonderful as any god you could ever imagine." So why not call it God?"

- This is amazing stuff. Why the need to label anything we don't know or any sense of mystery we may have as 'God'? Couldn't it be perhaps that this is a method of self-deception: if you can label something that is real 'God' (e.g. as in the laws of physics are real or that there are genuine mysteries in the world or that it's a fact that people have a moral sense), then you trick your mind into believing that "God" somehow "exists" and your "faith" is "secured". Suddenly all the things that you have always imagined about God (that it's invisible, ghost-like, extremely human-like but not human, father-figure who has created everything by magic with "intent" and "purpose", and who loves you and cares about you) are "validated", since after all, 'God' is real. Are some people really THIS STUPID that they don't realise that you cannot drag the old definition/meaning of a word with you when you REDEFINE it (if you'd redefine the word 'God')? If you redefine a word, it simply goes (or should go) without saying that any old meanings/definitions are erased from the word. Also, if you just add a new definition/meaning to a word (like some people may do with 'God'), that's fine AS LONG AS you make sure both you and your audience know precisely which of the DIFFERENT meanings you refer to (to avoid equivocation and irrational, vague pseudo-reasoning), e.g. a theist agreeing with an atheist what 'God' means a moral sense (and so "God" exists) and going from there to "prove" that "God" created the universe, there is an afterlife etc. implicitly using the usual sense of the word 'God'.

Also, why does Irene Lancaster say: "Dawkins has tried to describe some sort of power, even intelligence, which does not include the word 'God.' " ??

Unless Richard Dawkins has suddenly changed dramatically from the person I know him as (which is quite unlikely) (but please correct me if I'm wrong), he has (most likely) never tried to describe "some sort of power, even intelligence" as Irene most likely means it. Sure, he has talked and written extensively about awe towards the universe, life and ourselves, about us having a sense of mystery and the unknown, about science having great potential to reveal great things about the universe, etc. But I suspect it was never the kind of "power, even intelligence" that Irene is after. I don't think she uses that phrase to mean science (understood as a collective activity by humans) or humans (as a species), which could be called, trivially, a "power" or an "intelligence" (although you'd still have to stretch the definitions of those words to get there). It seems that Irene thinks RD is talking about (or "believes" in) some sort of "power" or "intelligence" that's ACTUALLY just another name for the god(s) some people (or even Irene?) have believed in for centuries: the cosmic ineffable, mysterious "power" or "intelligence"…who "designed" the universe and all life with certain "purpose" in mind and made it "for" humans, answers prayers and cares about humans and their sex lives (so it's not *that* ineffable all the time). Perhaps people like Irene (some theists or deists?) think that (but they will *never* say this): "Ok, perhaps we were wrong about some things, perhaps God didn't create all life as it appears now, perhaps the Earth is old, perhaps the Earth isn't the centre of the Universe, but still we weren't wrong about the most central thing. See, it wasn't all delusion after all? See, people didn't waste their lives believing in fairy tales and brainwash their children into believing myths, lies and non-sense as knowledge. It's all right; it's all good and fine after all. God exists. I have a purpose. I'm being taken care of. There's somebody out there who knows all the answers and who loves me. What a relief."

I don't know what Irene (or theists or deists) actually think when they sometimes seem to insist that there is some "intelligence" or "power" and that science "reveals" it and that Richard Dawkins would try to describe it. But it's non-sense and it's irritating. I wish they'd stop doing that.

Other Comments by Toivo

10. Comment #40043 by keith on May 12, 2007 at 8:00 pm

 avatarMuch more to the point and of far more importance, what was Richard thinking of when he bought that donkey shown in the picture? Had he just come back from his holidays in Ibiza?

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11. Comment #40068 by Liveliest Crib on May 13, 2007 at 1:27 am

So, to paraphrase........

You know, when I went to interview Richard Dawkins, I was expecting a raging bull of a man, who would hurt my feelings and call me stupid, and assert that there just can't be any god, and that only stupid people believe in god. But he was actually gentle, and happy to answer my questions.

So I got to talking to him in depth, and it was engaging, and it turns out he's not 100% sure of himself on this, and is willing to admit we'll discover things in the future that might amaze the people of today. Couldn't that be god? Of course it could. So there has to be a god, and Dawkins seems like he has his own religion, but for some reason won't call it god. Still, though, there is indeed transcendence, right?

I don't know much about god, but I know I'm not god, and neither is Dawkins, but god is out there somehow, and we all agree, even these atheists, apparently. Sort of. But I'm glad people are listening to all of this, and maybe Dawkins even helps faith and has faith of a sort. And backdrop to the glockenspiel when the furry morphs g'nundenbratz.


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12. Comment #40076 by seals on May 13, 2007 at 2:58 am

 avatarRe: Comment #40043

Much more to the point and of far more importance, what was Richard thinking of when he bought that donkey shown in the picture? Had he just come back from his holidays in Ibiza?


from the other Ruth Gledhill article May 9 -

In the background, as we speak, are the carved wooden fairground figures collected by his wife, Lalla (Ward), daughter of the seventh Viscount Bangor and known to Doctor Who fans as Romana.

Maybe this is the explanation? but I dont think the drawing is "numinous" (should it be?) at least not what I understood by the word, or even a likeness! Baffling.

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13. Comment #40086 by pewkatchoo on May 13, 2007 at 3:42 am

 avatarShe is getting worse, not better. Her previous comments were more rational, now she is worried that she is letting her faith down. This points even more towards her having a crisis.

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14. Comment #40087 by Logicel on May 13, 2007 at 3:47 am

 avatarNumen can mean creative genius, so Ms Gledhill's description of the drawing done by the artist Paul Winner as numinous is capturing her opinion of the quality of his drawing.

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15. Comment #40107 by arildno on May 13, 2007 at 6:03 am

It is saddening, but not surprising, to see how her mind virus is poisoning her rational thought processes from the first article to this one.

In the intervening period she has managed to convince herself that this "nice man" isn't really against her religion, in fact, isn't he almost saying the same things as theologians she admire?
So this nice man is religious, too, and she can go on blithely believing as she always have. He wasn't a threat to her mind parasite after all.

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16. Comment #40141 by MAS2007 on May 13, 2007 at 10:28 am

 avatarMakes me want to have my DNA altered, so I can claim I'm another species.

Talk about being able to compartmentalize.

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17. Comment #40149 by the great teapot on May 13, 2007 at 10:58 am

I don't think this one is compartmentalising.
I think there are some seriously crossed wires in there.
I hope she paid for the interview.

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