Finally finished this book and as I've said before, I'm not really impressed. His style is readable and not overly intellectual, so as a reader he has an agreeable tone or voice, but what he had to say greatly overshadowed any skill in writing he displayed. I don't have much to say about these last couple chapters so this entry will definitely be more brief than previous entries.
Chapter 7 more or less continues on a theme that religion is bad. His stated point is that he's trying to prove we don't in actuality, even Christians, get our morality from the Bible. For this point he brings out yucky (for a lack of a better term, my word not his) stories from the Bible. Claiming that these sad stories are proof that we don't actually read this Bible from which we claim to get morality. The interesting thing about this hit me when I thought about, for whom is he really writing this? Anyone who has even a modicum of knowledge of the Bible, or really anyone who reads these scripture will clearly see that these are not, as Dawkins seems to be claiming, people or moral stories that the Bible is teaching us to emulate. They're clear examples of negative stories. He claims that the scripture has only two ways it can teach morals: "One is by direct instruction, for example through the Ten Commandments ... [t]he other is by example: God, or some other biblical character, might serve as ... a role model" (pg.237). Again showcasing his lack of philosophical training he sets up a beautiful false dichotomy in that (I only removed slight points that don't have any bearing on the statement), the introduction to chapter seven. Really, those are the only two ways the Bible can be looked at as a source of inspiration? What about negative examples? What about simple historical records? What about parables that aren't out-and-out direct instructions?
One of the things I noted is that in all these supposedly terrible stories that he cherry picks for examples of bad things in the Bible, he often sums up sections with some vague reference to "modern ethicists" or "modern moralists." He's calling upon these silent (absent) authorities to pass judgement on small sections of an entire work. Who are these supposed authorities, and from whence do they derive their morality? Are they their own source of moral authority? Do they call upon the majority opinion? Is utility their authority? Dawkins hasn't given any arguments for utilitarian means to divine morality, just categorically denies any deontological or authoritarian source for morality.
Another point that I'd like to make in regards to Dawkins' attempts to interpret scripture, comes from both professor Peter Kreeft and scripture itself. Prof. Kreeft talked about this in the first lecture I listened to on the Philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, and it was something like a defense of why he's a good source for knowledge about Aquinas, though it might seem he'd be biased because Aquinas is his favorite philosopher. Something to the effect of, whom would you rather call on to give a lecture on the moon landing: an astronaut/or scientist that was involved in the program and has devoted his/her life to the efforts? Or the preeminent lunar landing sceptic (if there is such a thing as a preeminent fool)? So, who do you want to explain the Bible to you? This man Dawkins who, apparently thinks the entire thing is a waste of paper, with a few exceptions of literary prowess that is in the text? Or an actual Bible scholar who has actually studied the text his/her entire life? There's also this great quote that displays his ignorance where it comes to the content of the Bible: "Then too, there is improved education and, in particular, the increased understanding that each of us shares a common humanity with members of the other races and with the other sex - both deeply unbiblical ideas that come from biological science, especially evolution" (pg. 271, emphasis mine). Really? Adam and Eve ring a bell anyone? Of course Dawkins claims that any theologian worth talking to, claims that Genesis 1 is just a nice allegory that can be discarded as just fantasy. Which, as I actually agree, opens up the text to a personal/anyone's interpretation. Basically, if you claim any part of the text is allegorical (that isn't clearly indicated as such, e.g. Proverbs and parables), you open it up to subjective cherry-picking of any portion to discard. You don't like the Bible's teaching on X, well, just claim that portion of the text is allegorical or for whatever reason not applicable (contrary to the rest of the text), and you're golden. Want to claim misogyny is biblical? Take a few verses out of context and you can "prove" anything you want.
In general I do not recommend this text, though, if you are a Christian like me with some understanding of apologetics and philosophy, your faith might be strengthened (as mine was) seeing these weak arguments. Basically, if this is the best arguments against God, belief in God is truly the more reasonable option.
My thoughts on philosophy, language learning, photography, theology, and life in general. All are welcome! I hope my random ramblings can somehow improve your life. I'm really only writing for my own benefit, as a journal of sorts. Hope you enjoy.
Showing posts with label Richard Dawkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Dawkins. Show all posts
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Sunday, December 8, 2013
The God Delusion Book Review Part 2 Ch. 4-6
Sorry for the delay in getting to this next section of my review of The God Delusion but I've been busy editing a new book by the author of Notes from Afghanistan.
Back to The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. If you're interested part one is here.
First off, in my review of the first three chapters I talked about how there's no real argument given, or at least not much of an argument given. Mostly just blustering and casually brushing aside arguments for god, well, in chapter four Dawkins finally gives his argument for "why there almost certainly is no god." He attacks the "Ultimate Boeing 747" concept as fallacious, citing Natural Selection as NOT blind chance, rather a step-by-step ascent of "mount improbable." He also, rightfully attacks the concept of "god of the gaps."
I don't hold to Dawkins' intimation that theists/religious people are afraid of or somehow all have enmity towards science. He says again and again that theist love these gaps in scientific knowledge and that theists cling to things that science cannot (yet) explain. Again, bad logic in over-generalization/stereotyping. Just because there have been instances of people that feel that way and their foolishness has been put on display doesn't mean that theists are all foolish when it comes to science. I don't claim any special knowledge when it comes to science/mathematics I've never had an interest in them (above a cursory curiosity). I prefer philosophy, logic, language, linguistics, etc. Just because I have faith doesn't mean that I'm afraid of a scientific explanation, but that's not what Dawkins gives. He doesn't give "scientific" explanations for these "gaps" he gives atheistic speculations. The gaps that even Dawkins admits science cannot bridge are the formation of life, the formation of the eukaryotic nature of cells, and the emergence of consciousness. But, in answer to all these gaps, his argument is the Anthropic Principle.
So, if you're not familiar let me sum up the anthropic principle as Dawkins describes it, though he calls the principle to action in all the cases where science cannot give an answer. It's something like this, given the number of stars we know exist, even with a one in a billion chance for life to evolve on a planet (though I've read the odds are actually in the trillions), given the estimate of a billion-billion planets in the universe it had to happen, not once but many times. There are several problems with this idea. I'm not a mathematician so I could be wrong on this, the issue is probability. Take a coin toss. If you flip a coin 100 times you should get 50 heads/50 tails. However, you could flip a coin 1,000 times and get heads every time. Odds don't mean that if you do something enough times all the options will present themselves, just that they should or are like to present themselves. So, it holds that even with a billion-billion possibly earth-like planets, life could have only happened one time and only here on this planet. Philosophically the anthropic principle is even more fallacious.
The anthropic principle set out as a philosophical idea sounds something like this:
Moving on to chapter five about the roots of religion Dawkins again displays his prejudice: "...it only raises the question of why a mind would evolve to find comfort in beliefs it can plainly see are false" (pg. 168). He then tries to give his Darwinian evolutionary explanation of how religion could have come about. He starts off with the idea that we've evolved in such a way that obedience of one's elders is a good thing. The older people obviously know how to survive and if one listens to the elders' advice one will (presumably) survive better but here's how religion comes into play from that notion. "The child cannot know that 'Don't paddle in the crocodile-infested Limpopo,' is good advice but 'You must sacrifice a goat at the time of the full moon, otherwise the rains will fail,' is at best a waste of time and goats" (pg. 176). One of the many problems with this theory, is where did the elder get that idea? There cannot be an infinite regress. Someone accidentally sacrifices a goat on the full moon and the rains came, or someone didn't happen to have a goat on a full moon and there was a drought? How could a primitive mind, that can't recall enough data to make even basic tools be asked to recall and relate one day with a whole season wherein the person probably would have died. How does that lead to survival? Someone who accidentally sacrificed a goat and then lived through a season with rain survives and passes down this superstition? I have serious doubts in all these kinds of speculative answers because I see this kind of statement all the time, not just in Dawkins' writing.
The problem in this whole bit about the evolutionary source for religion, which he gives similar guesses in later portions of the text for other questions, but I'll deal with the idea in general here. All these guesses or theories about evolutionary processes bringing about X result, boil down to this type of argument: 1) this is how X trait could have been passed on through evolutionary natural selection ∴/therefore 2) it was passed on through natural selection. Basically, if I can explain how something could have happened without god, that's how it must have happened. I saw this in two different YouTube (two links "You" and "Tube") videos about the beginnings of the universe (though neither mentioned god). They basically laid out how the universe could have expanded from a subatomic particle that popped into existence from nothing with such and such characteristics, then ballooned out to become the entire universe. They (both videos) seemed to be speaking authoritatively about these theories, like, this is a possible explanation of how it could have happened without citing god, therefore it must be correct.
The same fallacious thinking is apparent in Dawkins' writing, here's how it might have happened without god, therefore that's what happened. I like the original Ockham's Razor argument as it was explained to me many years ago: you walk into a room and the window is open, you ask yourself why the window is open. There could have been a microburst of wind that happened to blow at just the right angle to open the window, or there might have been an earthquake that shook in just the right manner to rattle the window open, or on and on, but the most basic answer, that is someone left it open, is the correct answer. So, I ask you, in all this theorizing, if such and such variables might have come aligned at just the right way to bring about X trait is the more simple answer, or is it more simple to say, Someone put them that way? Not that postulating a Supreme Being is more simple in every instance, but in this particular argument, it seems to be straightforward.
Sorry for the length but I only have one more chapter to cover!
In chapter six Dawkins seeks to provide an answer to the idea of mankind being good without God. As such, he starts off with pointing out the evil in the letters that he and fellow atheists have received from religious people. Don't get me wrong I hate seeing things like this and I wish I could have worked with those people on how to rewrite their grievances without insults. Nevertheless, they're out there. I'm not going to argue that religious people are all civilized that's clearly not true. I'm not even going to try to narrow the definition of "true religion" that's just a no-true-scotsman fallacy. The only thing I have to say is to not judge religion by the outspoken few that give it a bad name.
There is one letter that Dawkins attempts to address that claims that evolutionary theory leads to nihilism. He rebuffs the claim by throwing out there that natural selection is not random. I think he's missing the point of the issue. It's not whether the evolutionary process is random (which by the way it requires at least random mutations, so there is an element of randomness in the whole theory) or not; the issue is whether it's a guided process or unguided. It's about purpose, meaning, and goals. Not about randomness. Natural selection has no goal, no guiding principle other than basic survival. As such it is hopeless despite how Dawkins brushes that claim aside.
Dawkins offers a guess about how natural selection could lead to kindness to one's kin, but then kills his goal of giving meaning within the natural selection schema by likening any altruism outside one's own kin to an accident. I ca't that one could accept this kind of argument. Basically, he's saying that while we're not produced via random processes our kindness to anyone other than kin (which is logical), is accidental. Tell me how this doesn't have a nihilistic conclusion? "We can no more help ourselves feeling pity when we see a weeping unfortunate (who is unrelated and unable to reciprocate) that we can help ourselves feeling lust for a member of the opposite sex (who may be infertile or otherwise unable to reproduce). Both are misfirings, Darwinian mistakes: blessed, precious mistakes" (pg. 221). Tell me how a mistake is better than random when it comes to showing purposefulness.
On thing occurred to me as I was reading his claim about determining that we all have a shared moral compass because of the evolutionary process, I thought of the "famous violinist" argument for abortion. Based on simple moral tests, we see that everyone agrees one should submit to helping the helpless. The analogy holds absolutely no weight in the argument about abortion, but it does point to the idea that people often agree on ethical dilemmas. I love the mention of Harvard biologist Marc Hauser mentioned on page 222 and following. It's proving C.S. Lewis' arguments from Mere Christianity one survey respondent at a time. Again Dawkins shows prejudice and dogmatic thinking and shows why he and most of those he references should not be trusted: "For Kant it was a moral absolute. For Hauser it is built into us by our evolution" (pg. 224). If one starts off with the dogmatism that there must be no god and that everything is explicable by evolution/natural selection, of course your conclusion is going to agree.
Plantinga calls this sophomoric philosophy (I didn't read that review in full before starting my reading/review, I'll probably read it when I'm done with the book), but here's another example from the latter portion of ch. six: "The main conclusion of Hauser and Singer's study was that there is no statistically significant difference between atheists and religious believers in making these judgements. This seems compatible with the view, which I and many others hold, that we do not need God in order to be good - or evil" (pg. 226). So many problems with this and I've taken up way too much of your time so I'll try to be brief. First, attacking religion is a strawman. The issue isn't religious faith, it's the existence or non-existence of a deity. So, saying that either side of the issue is good or bad has nothing to do with the actual question. Secondly, and he attempts to make some response to this, is that the question isn't about the ethical or unethical behaviour of people. The issue is moral objective standards. He takes a stab at that question, but more or less brushes it away as not really at stake here. He claims to answer it in the following chapter but after a small sneak peak, he's more or less going to stay on the track that religious people do bad things therefore religious belief is actually negative towards being good. He's already hinted at that conclusion by pulling out statistics relating the conservative states in the US versus the liberal states in crime statistics. Wow, talk about twisting statistics to suit one's needs. Basically, his argument was something like, there is a higher crime rate in certain cities within predominantly contain Republican Party voters, therefore religious people are actually more evil than atheists. As to the concept of absolutist morality, he basically brushes it aside because he's believes in a consequentialist view of morality, so seeking a moral absolute is unnecessary.
Back to The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. If you're interested part one is here.
First off, in my review of the first three chapters I talked about how there's no real argument given, or at least not much of an argument given. Mostly just blustering and casually brushing aside arguments for god, well, in chapter four Dawkins finally gives his argument for "why there almost certainly is no god." He attacks the "Ultimate Boeing 747" concept as fallacious, citing Natural Selection as NOT blind chance, rather a step-by-step ascent of "mount improbable." He also, rightfully attacks the concept of "god of the gaps."
I don't hold to Dawkins' intimation that theists/religious people are afraid of or somehow all have enmity towards science. He says again and again that theist love these gaps in scientific knowledge and that theists cling to things that science cannot (yet) explain. Again, bad logic in over-generalization/stereotyping. Just because there have been instances of people that feel that way and their foolishness has been put on display doesn't mean that theists are all foolish when it comes to science. I don't claim any special knowledge when it comes to science/mathematics I've never had an interest in them (above a cursory curiosity). I prefer philosophy, logic, language, linguistics, etc. Just because I have faith doesn't mean that I'm afraid of a scientific explanation, but that's not what Dawkins gives. He doesn't give "scientific" explanations for these "gaps" he gives atheistic speculations. The gaps that even Dawkins admits science cannot bridge are the formation of life, the formation of the eukaryotic nature of cells, and the emergence of consciousness. But, in answer to all these gaps, his argument is the Anthropic Principle.
So, if you're not familiar let me sum up the anthropic principle as Dawkins describes it, though he calls the principle to action in all the cases where science cannot give an answer. It's something like this, given the number of stars we know exist, even with a one in a billion chance for life to evolve on a planet (though I've read the odds are actually in the trillions), given the estimate of a billion-billion planets in the universe it had to happen, not once but many times. There are several problems with this idea. I'm not a mathematician so I could be wrong on this, the issue is probability. Take a coin toss. If you flip a coin 100 times you should get 50 heads/50 tails. However, you could flip a coin 1,000 times and get heads every time. Odds don't mean that if you do something enough times all the options will present themselves, just that they should or are like to present themselves. So, it holds that even with a billion-billion possibly earth-like planets, life could have only happened one time and only here on this planet. Philosophically the anthropic principle is even more fallacious.
The anthropic principle set out as a philosophical idea sounds something like this:
1) It is highly improbable that life could exist without outside interventionReally? Putting it another way: life could exist without god, we're alive, therefore it did. The amazing thing to me is that he doesn't just use this principle for the alignment of planets to set up a planet on which life might evolve (the so-called, Goldilocks zone). He applies this principle to all the mysteries of science! Like the Big Bang, why are the cosmological constants in perfect setting to allow for a universe that is capable of producing planets that are capable of producing life? As a side note I watched an interesting (banned) TED talk that claims they might not be constant after all. There's no need to ask "why" because we're here, therefore it must have happened. This particular use of the principle might strike people as odd, because think about it, to apply the principle there must be millions to billions of options, or at least enough that the odds are overcome; this means that there must be millions upon millions of universes, either in the past, or multiverses/parallel universes.
2) We're here, alive, thinking about that probability
∴/therefore
3) It must have happened
Moving on to chapter five about the roots of religion Dawkins again displays his prejudice: "...it only raises the question of why a mind would evolve to find comfort in beliefs it can plainly see are false" (pg. 168). He then tries to give his Darwinian evolutionary explanation of how religion could have come about. He starts off with the idea that we've evolved in such a way that obedience of one's elders is a good thing. The older people obviously know how to survive and if one listens to the elders' advice one will (presumably) survive better but here's how religion comes into play from that notion. "The child cannot know that 'Don't paddle in the crocodile-infested Limpopo,' is good advice but 'You must sacrifice a goat at the time of the full moon, otherwise the rains will fail,' is at best a waste of time and goats" (pg. 176). One of the many problems with this theory, is where did the elder get that idea? There cannot be an infinite regress. Someone accidentally sacrifices a goat on the full moon and the rains came, or someone didn't happen to have a goat on a full moon and there was a drought? How could a primitive mind, that can't recall enough data to make even basic tools be asked to recall and relate one day with a whole season wherein the person probably would have died. How does that lead to survival? Someone who accidentally sacrificed a goat and then lived through a season with rain survives and passes down this superstition? I have serious doubts in all these kinds of speculative answers because I see this kind of statement all the time, not just in Dawkins' writing.
The problem in this whole bit about the evolutionary source for religion, which he gives similar guesses in later portions of the text for other questions, but I'll deal with the idea in general here. All these guesses or theories about evolutionary processes bringing about X result, boil down to this type of argument: 1) this is how X trait could have been passed on through evolutionary natural selection ∴/therefore 2) it was passed on through natural selection. Basically, if I can explain how something could have happened without god, that's how it must have happened. I saw this in two different YouTube (two links "You" and "Tube") videos about the beginnings of the universe (though neither mentioned god). They basically laid out how the universe could have expanded from a subatomic particle that popped into existence from nothing with such and such characteristics, then ballooned out to become the entire universe. They (both videos) seemed to be speaking authoritatively about these theories, like, this is a possible explanation of how it could have happened without citing god, therefore it must be correct.
The same fallacious thinking is apparent in Dawkins' writing, here's how it might have happened without god, therefore that's what happened. I like the original Ockham's Razor argument as it was explained to me many years ago: you walk into a room and the window is open, you ask yourself why the window is open. There could have been a microburst of wind that happened to blow at just the right angle to open the window, or there might have been an earthquake that shook in just the right manner to rattle the window open, or on and on, but the most basic answer, that is someone left it open, is the correct answer. So, I ask you, in all this theorizing, if such and such variables might have come aligned at just the right way to bring about X trait is the more simple answer, or is it more simple to say, Someone put them that way? Not that postulating a Supreme Being is more simple in every instance, but in this particular argument, it seems to be straightforward.
Sorry for the length but I only have one more chapter to cover!
In chapter six Dawkins seeks to provide an answer to the idea of mankind being good without God. As such, he starts off with pointing out the evil in the letters that he and fellow atheists have received from religious people. Don't get me wrong I hate seeing things like this and I wish I could have worked with those people on how to rewrite their grievances without insults. Nevertheless, they're out there. I'm not going to argue that religious people are all civilized that's clearly not true. I'm not even going to try to narrow the definition of "true religion" that's just a no-true-scotsman fallacy. The only thing I have to say is to not judge religion by the outspoken few that give it a bad name.
There is one letter that Dawkins attempts to address that claims that evolutionary theory leads to nihilism. He rebuffs the claim by throwing out there that natural selection is not random. I think he's missing the point of the issue. It's not whether the evolutionary process is random (which by the way it requires at least random mutations, so there is an element of randomness in the whole theory) or not; the issue is whether it's a guided process or unguided. It's about purpose, meaning, and goals. Not about randomness. Natural selection has no goal, no guiding principle other than basic survival. As such it is hopeless despite how Dawkins brushes that claim aside.
Dawkins offers a guess about how natural selection could lead to kindness to one's kin, but then kills his goal of giving meaning within the natural selection schema by likening any altruism outside one's own kin to an accident. I ca't that one could accept this kind of argument. Basically, he's saying that while we're not produced via random processes our kindness to anyone other than kin (which is logical), is accidental. Tell me how this doesn't have a nihilistic conclusion? "We can no more help ourselves feeling pity when we see a weeping unfortunate (who is unrelated and unable to reciprocate) that we can help ourselves feeling lust for a member of the opposite sex (who may be infertile or otherwise unable to reproduce). Both are misfirings, Darwinian mistakes: blessed, precious mistakes" (pg. 221). Tell me how a mistake is better than random when it comes to showing purposefulness.
On thing occurred to me as I was reading his claim about determining that we all have a shared moral compass because of the evolutionary process, I thought of the "famous violinist" argument for abortion. Based on simple moral tests, we see that everyone agrees one should submit to helping the helpless. The analogy holds absolutely no weight in the argument about abortion, but it does point to the idea that people often agree on ethical dilemmas. I love the mention of Harvard biologist Marc Hauser mentioned on page 222 and following. It's proving C.S. Lewis' arguments from Mere Christianity one survey respondent at a time. Again Dawkins shows prejudice and dogmatic thinking and shows why he and most of those he references should not be trusted: "For Kant it was a moral absolute. For Hauser it is built into us by our evolution" (pg. 224). If one starts off with the dogmatism that there must be no god and that everything is explicable by evolution/natural selection, of course your conclusion is going to agree.
Plantinga calls this sophomoric philosophy (I didn't read that review in full before starting my reading/review, I'll probably read it when I'm done with the book), but here's another example from the latter portion of ch. six: "The main conclusion of Hauser and Singer's study was that there is no statistically significant difference between atheists and religious believers in making these judgements. This seems compatible with the view, which I and many others hold, that we do not need God in order to be good - or evil" (pg. 226). So many problems with this and I've taken up way too much of your time so I'll try to be brief. First, attacking religion is a strawman. The issue isn't religious faith, it's the existence or non-existence of a deity. So, saying that either side of the issue is good or bad has nothing to do with the actual question. Secondly, and he attempts to make some response to this, is that the question isn't about the ethical or unethical behaviour of people. The issue is moral objective standards. He takes a stab at that question, but more or less brushes it away as not really at stake here. He claims to answer it in the following chapter but after a small sneak peak, he's more or less going to stay on the track that religious people do bad things therefore religious belief is actually negative towards being good. He's already hinted at that conclusion by pulling out statistics relating the conservative states in the US versus the liberal states in crime statistics. Wow, talk about twisting statistics to suit one's needs. Basically, his argument was something like, there is a higher crime rate in certain cities within predominantly contain Republican Party voters, therefore religious people are actually more evil than atheists. As to the concept of absolutist morality, he basically brushes it aside because he's believes in a consequentialist view of morality, so seeking a moral absolute is unnecessary.
Thursday, November 14, 2013
The God Delusion Book Review Part 1 Ch. 1-3
So, I've read several reviews of this book and I've seen several reactions to this work, but I wanted to get it straight from the horse's mouth in a manner of speaking. So I'm reading The God Delusion, and I'll give you my notes.
Even in the preface Dawkins has already shown his prejudice. Obviously the title says a lot, "Delusion." He even mentions that psychologists asked him to change it because the word delusion is a scientific term and to apply it to the millions of people that believe in god wouldn't do justice to the word. Of course that doesn't seem to faze Dawkins and his writing about that almost seems boastful, like he's proud of the fact that he's insulted the majority of the world. How about this quote? "... I believe there are plenty of open-minded people out there: people whose childhood indoctrination was not too insidious, or for other reasons didn't 'take,' or whose native intelligence is strong enough to overcome it" (pg6). In case you didn't catch that, if you're open-minded or intelligent you'll give up anything you were taught about God in your childhood and be an atheist, like all the other smart people in the world.
How about this "gem"? Quote from a Roman Catholic bishop who wrote to Einstein, "...He is all wrong. Some men think that because they have achieved a high degree of learning in some field, they are qualified to express opinions in all." Of course, Dawkins' retort is a false analogy based on his presupposition that God is just as fanciful as fairies. Dawkins claims that theology isn't a "proper field" at all. I find this particularly interesting because I've heard a very similar comment levied against Dawkins. He's a world-renowned ethologist and evolutionary biologist, not a philosopher or theologian yet he's written extensively and authoritatively on subjects he has no (formal) education in. No offence to his brilliance in his fields, but what expertise does a animal behaviorist and evolutionary biologist have in the fields of philosophy of religion, theology, philosophy in general? Being brilliant in one particular field of knowledge doesn't give one authority to speak to all other fields of knowledge.
The biggest problem I have so far is that there haven't been any arguments (yet, he keeps hinting that they'll be proven in later chapters). Chapter one, the first section is simply a childish foot-stomping raving that when atheists say "god" they don't mean the word "god." Something akin to a child throwing a fit saying, "I did not say what you think I said!" Alright! When Dawkins and other atheists say "god" they really mean, uh, well... nothing really, they apparently mean force or nature or the universe, or whatever they want it to mean at that particular moment, but they most certainly do not mean a personal intervening god that is worthy of worship. Dawkins talks about how Einstein was NOT a theist as some theists claim, that he was actually a deist or pantheist. The only acceptable belief in god, to Dawkins, is the deists' god that creates the universe then leaves it alone and never interacts with it again; an invisible, intangible, inactive, uncaring, uninvolved, person-less, unintelligent being with no human characteristics at all. The deists' god is the same as the pantheists' god, an impersonal force that has nothing to do with humanity, that's the only acceptable god, one that has nothing to do with the universe.
Then in chapter one, section two, Dawkins offers a half-hearted attempt at an (advance) apology, which comes too late since the only thing he's said so far is that only intelligent people believe in either an impersonal god or that the universe is god, and by extension only idiots believe in a personal god. It's almost comical, Dawkins makes this claim that theists are always trotting out scientists, especially Einstein, that believe/believed in god and then dismisses it as a bad argument. Then, he turns the same fallacious argument around and uses it, saying that this or that brilliant scientist is atheist and the vast majority of Nobel prize winners in science have been atheists, on and on. I'm sorry, but if an argument is fallacious for one side of an argument, it's equally as fallacious for the opposing side. Think about it; if I say, "Thousands of people believe in pink unicorns, therefore I'm a pink unicorn." You cannot say, "Thousands of people don't believe in pink unicorns, therefore there's no such thing as pink unicorns." An appeal to the people or authority is a fallacy for either side.
In chapter two the insults just keep coming. Not only does Dawkins attack those that believe in a personal god, but he begins attacking anyone who believes that we cannot know whether or not there is a god, agnostics. As part of his disdain for agnosticism he attacks the concept of NOMA (Non-Overlapping MAgisteria). He, who has been continuously accusing God of evil acts and intentions, seems to be calling on god to prove himself. It's like Dawkins is calling upon god to submit to scientific inquiry or proof. It's like Dawkins is saying he expects this wicked, sneaky, conniving, evil, all-powerful entity to answer this puny ant's call. Reminds me of a quote from the 2012 Avengers movie, "The ant has no quarrel with the boot." (Don't misunderstand me, I'm not saying God is the boot looking to crush ants like us, merely that Dawkins is making god out to be this crushing, killing, evil boot character then complains when that entity doesn't kowtow to his demands for proof.) Dawkins, who is much less than an ant, is shaking his puny fist at a god he doesn't believe exists saying, "How dare you not prove yourself to me! How dare you presume to break the laws you set by performing miracles, but when I ask you're silent!"
I just finished reading Jenna Miscavige Hill's book about getting out of Scientology, and she had a quote that Dawkins would do well to listen to: "My parents were aware it was my choice to remain in [Scientology], but they also knew I was brainwashed. The last thing you want to tell a person who is brainwashed is that they are brainwashed." If Dawkins really wants to get through to us poor brainwashed theists, telling us we're brainwashed is definitely not the way to go.
Then on pg. 83 Dawkins quotes Norman Malcom in relation to Anselm's ontological argument, which seems to have a loophole in it about existence being more perfect than non-existence. "The doctrine that existence is a perfection is remarkably queer. It makes sense and is true to say that my future house will be a better one if it is insulated than if it is not insulated; but what could it mean to say that it will be a better house if it exists than if it does not?" The answer to this riddle seem painfully obvious. If you need/want shelter, it's much better to have a house that exists than one that doesn't.
In summation: the first three chapters and preface do nothing in the way of arguing against God; hopefully the actual arguments will begin in chapter four. The first three chapters have been nothing but blustering and casually brushing aside arguments for god. Even Aquinas' eloquently framed ways to God were poorly treated and no real arguments or counter-arguments have been made. These first three chapters can be summed up as such: Anyone who believes there is a God and anyone who believes that we cannot know if there is or isn't a god, is an idiot.
Even in the preface Dawkins has already shown his prejudice. Obviously the title says a lot, "Delusion." He even mentions that psychologists asked him to change it because the word delusion is a scientific term and to apply it to the millions of people that believe in god wouldn't do justice to the word. Of course that doesn't seem to faze Dawkins and his writing about that almost seems boastful, like he's proud of the fact that he's insulted the majority of the world. How about this quote? "... I believe there are plenty of open-minded people out there: people whose childhood indoctrination was not too insidious, or for other reasons didn't 'take,' or whose native intelligence is strong enough to overcome it" (pg6). In case you didn't catch that, if you're open-minded or intelligent you'll give up anything you were taught about God in your childhood and be an atheist, like all the other smart people in the world.
How about this "gem"? Quote from a Roman Catholic bishop who wrote to Einstein, "...He is all wrong. Some men think that because they have achieved a high degree of learning in some field, they are qualified to express opinions in all." Of course, Dawkins' retort is a false analogy based on his presupposition that God is just as fanciful as fairies. Dawkins claims that theology isn't a "proper field" at all. I find this particularly interesting because I've heard a very similar comment levied against Dawkins. He's a world-renowned ethologist and evolutionary biologist, not a philosopher or theologian yet he's written extensively and authoritatively on subjects he has no (formal) education in. No offence to his brilliance in his fields, but what expertise does a animal behaviorist and evolutionary biologist have in the fields of philosophy of religion, theology, philosophy in general? Being brilliant in one particular field of knowledge doesn't give one authority to speak to all other fields of knowledge.
The biggest problem I have so far is that there haven't been any arguments (yet, he keeps hinting that they'll be proven in later chapters). Chapter one, the first section is simply a childish foot-stomping raving that when atheists say "god" they don't mean the word "god." Something akin to a child throwing a fit saying, "I did not say what you think I said!" Alright! When Dawkins and other atheists say "god" they really mean, uh, well... nothing really, they apparently mean force or nature or the universe, or whatever they want it to mean at that particular moment, but they most certainly do not mean a personal intervening god that is worthy of worship. Dawkins talks about how Einstein was NOT a theist as some theists claim, that he was actually a deist or pantheist. The only acceptable belief in god, to Dawkins, is the deists' god that creates the universe then leaves it alone and never interacts with it again; an invisible, intangible, inactive, uncaring, uninvolved, person-less, unintelligent being with no human characteristics at all. The deists' god is the same as the pantheists' god, an impersonal force that has nothing to do with humanity, that's the only acceptable god, one that has nothing to do with the universe.
Then in chapter one, section two, Dawkins offers a half-hearted attempt at an (advance) apology, which comes too late since the only thing he's said so far is that only intelligent people believe in either an impersonal god or that the universe is god, and by extension only idiots believe in a personal god. It's almost comical, Dawkins makes this claim that theists are always trotting out scientists, especially Einstein, that believe/believed in god and then dismisses it as a bad argument. Then, he turns the same fallacious argument around and uses it, saying that this or that brilliant scientist is atheist and the vast majority of Nobel prize winners in science have been atheists, on and on. I'm sorry, but if an argument is fallacious for one side of an argument, it's equally as fallacious for the opposing side. Think about it; if I say, "Thousands of people believe in pink unicorns, therefore I'm a pink unicorn." You cannot say, "Thousands of people don't believe in pink unicorns, therefore there's no such thing as pink unicorns." An appeal to the people or authority is a fallacy for either side.
In chapter two the insults just keep coming. Not only does Dawkins attack those that believe in a personal god, but he begins attacking anyone who believes that we cannot know whether or not there is a god, agnostics. As part of his disdain for agnosticism he attacks the concept of NOMA (Non-Overlapping MAgisteria). He, who has been continuously accusing God of evil acts and intentions, seems to be calling on god to prove himself. It's like Dawkins is calling upon god to submit to scientific inquiry or proof. It's like Dawkins is saying he expects this wicked, sneaky, conniving, evil, all-powerful entity to answer this puny ant's call. Reminds me of a quote from the 2012 Avengers movie, "The ant has no quarrel with the boot." (Don't misunderstand me, I'm not saying God is the boot looking to crush ants like us, merely that Dawkins is making god out to be this crushing, killing, evil boot character then complains when that entity doesn't kowtow to his demands for proof.) Dawkins, who is much less than an ant, is shaking his puny fist at a god he doesn't believe exists saying, "How dare you not prove yourself to me! How dare you presume to break the laws you set by performing miracles, but when I ask you're silent!"
I just finished reading Jenna Miscavige Hill's book about getting out of Scientology, and she had a quote that Dawkins would do well to listen to: "My parents were aware it was my choice to remain in [Scientology], but they also knew I was brainwashed. The last thing you want to tell a person who is brainwashed is that they are brainwashed." If Dawkins really wants to get through to us poor brainwashed theists, telling us we're brainwashed is definitely not the way to go.
Then on pg. 83 Dawkins quotes Norman Malcom in relation to Anselm's ontological argument, which seems to have a loophole in it about existence being more perfect than non-existence. "The doctrine that existence is a perfection is remarkably queer. It makes sense and is true to say that my future house will be a better one if it is insulated than if it is not insulated; but what could it mean to say that it will be a better house if it exists than if it does not?" The answer to this riddle seem painfully obvious. If you need/want shelter, it's much better to have a house that exists than one that doesn't.
In summation: the first three chapters and preface do nothing in the way of arguing against God; hopefully the actual arguments will begin in chapter four. The first three chapters have been nothing but blustering and casually brushing aside arguments for god. Even Aquinas' eloquently framed ways to God were poorly treated and no real arguments or counter-arguments have been made. These first three chapters can be summed up as such: Anyone who believes there is a God and anyone who believes that we cannot know if there is or isn't a god, is an idiot.
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