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15 Jul 2008 09:58 pm
An Atheism Of Love
A reader wrotes:
I read your post entitled "Atheism Has Expelled Me" with great interest. But after reading the essay itself, I have to say it was painfully off the mark, in my view.
To me, atheism is a scientific argument with moral ramifications.
Theism is a theory that cannot be reasonably defended within the
paradigm our natural world. Just like no scientist would give any
consideration to people claiming that the sun revolves around the
earth. It's not matter of ridicule. It matter of understanding
hypothesis, observation, and conclusion. While this angers many
religious folk as somehow condescending, most atheists like Dawkins are
simply saying that based on our knowledge of the scientific method, one
cannot argue that the world was created in seven days, or that water
turned to wine, etc., etc. There is no malice intended. There is only
frustration at the number of people who can selectively relax their
notion of scientific rigor to allow for these supernatural beliefs.
Personally, I can understand anti-theism, and in many ways support it.
The reason has nothing to do with superiority or snobbishness. It pains
me in my heart to see the death and destruction that religion has
caused throughout history. It gives me anxiety to look at my one-year
old son and think that he'll be brought up in a society that doesn't
see any link between the erosion of critical thinking and the increase
in religiosity. People seem to need figures like bin Laden, Koresh,
Hubbard, etc., so they can point fingers and proclaim them to be
religious fanatics or "wackos". It makes the average moderate
Christian/Muslim/Jew/Hindu feel better about their faith. As if the
suspension of scientific thought that they exercise has absolutely
nothing to do the extremism that is built on the same principle. I am
not trying to lump everyone into the same group here, I'm just
attempting to explain how a scientist views this general line of
thinking as major threat to society. The slippery-est of slopes.
I sincerely believe that most atheism is spawned not out of hate and
elitism, but out of love. Atheists like me have simply lost all faith
that religion can exist without being used as a tool for justifying war
and subjugation. If it could, even scientists that cringe at the
thought of accepting supernatural beliefs would probably learn to
coexist peacefully with theism, given that many beliefs system also
catalyze acts of great compassion. But in the end, I'm torn as to which
notion is more naïve and idealistic: a world without theism or world in
which theism does not lead to human suffering.
I've discussed many of these issues in my debate with Sam Harris.
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