Sunday, April 20, 2008
Evidence, miracles and more
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You mention that it should be shameful to hold beliefs that are contrary to evidence. Fair enough, but--and this is a conversation we're in the middle of elsewhere--I honestly don't think any of my Christian beliefs are invalidated by, or incompatible with, anything science teaches. For example, I think it's no coincidence that Genesis described the creation in the same order as scientists describe evolution--to my eyes, Genesis is simply a quick, details-light way of describing the origins of life to an illiterate tribe of shepherds 4,000 years ago. As for miracles, well... I have an answer for you, but that's for another post. :)
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Re: Genesis. I guess it's just a shame that Genesis describes two incompatible versions of creation (man before plants, or plants before man?)
I would also hasten to perform what I term 'retroactive clairvoyance'; if you believe the Bible is correct AND is compatible with science, then I issue this challenge: make a positive prediction of some fact based on the Bible, and then test that hypothesis with science. If, for instance, you had said, in 1759, that Genesis suggests that all living beings are descended from a single common ancestor, which lived 3 billion years ago, and that the universe is at least 17 billion years old, while the Earth is at least 4 billion years old, then I might grant your argument. Darwin published 'On the Origin of Species' in 1859 (150th anniversary next yr), so you would have been 100 years ahead of him, and over 150 years ahead of Hubble, who showed that the universe is old & expanding.
Make predictions; don't try to shoehorn the Bible into science.
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I'm actually anxious to hear about your reconciliation between miracles and science.
However, we must remember, of course, that discussions of these types (i.e. what are, in essence, theological explanations for observed events in the physical world) are all contingent upon one major axiom: god exists.If god exists, then we should ask how miracles and science can be reconciled. If god does not exist (and you are aware on whom the burden of proof falls for such an assertion), then we may as well be discussing how Santa manages to make it into my house which has no chimney to speak of.
But I am very much awaiting your explanation.
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"Make predictions; don't try to shoehorn the Bible into science."
I think we're confusing two arguments here. I'm not arguing that Darwin's subsequent discovery proves that the contents of the Bible are true. (If that were my argument, you'd be right: I would need to make a Biblical prediction was later proven independently.) I'm arguing not that the Bible is true, but that it is not contradicted by science. If there is a reasonable way to read the Bible that is compatible with scientific knowledge, then Christianity and science are compatible. That doesn't mean Christianity is true, but it means that it *might* be true. There's an important difference between people who believe things that haven't been proven and people who believe things that have been disproven. The former are reasonable; the latter are wrong. I'm trying to argue that I'm in the former camp.
So all I have to do is show that there is a reasonable reading of the Bible that doesn't contradict the proven facts.
I think Genesis 1 is close enough: it's a good outline of the origins of the world that didn't require its original audience (a tribe of illiterate shepherds) to be able to count into the billions. It's certainly not as detailed as the scientific account, but it didn't really need to be: the Bible is primarily focused on the nature of God and His relationship with humankind. All other details, however interesting or useful they might be, are kind of peripheral. We don't need it to thoroughly explain the physical world: that's what science is for.
(As an aside: I don't see any reference in Genesis to man having been created before plants. If I've missed it, can you point it out for me?)
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Paul,
My error re: Genesis. It's been a while since I've read it, so I misremembered the error. The plants/man thing is fine. It is the animals/man order that is reversed in Genesis 1 and Genesis 2:
Genesis 1:25-27 (animals first)
And God made the beast of the earth after his kind, and cattle after their kind, and every thing that creepeth upon the earth after his kind: and God saw that it was good. And God said, Let us make man in our image.... So God created man in his own image.
Genesis 2:18-19 (humans first)
And the LORD God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him. And out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
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I wont go on with the Biblical contradictions; neither one of us (I think) see this as a major point. You're clearly ok with Genesis not being a literal account of creation, and I'm quite sure that the incongruent lineages of Joseph in the NT, as baffling as it is that the writers of the gospels couldn't get them right, wont phase you in the least.
Likewise, it doesn't concern me whether the Bible says this or that about god and what he wants for us; it doesn't matter if the Bible says Pi =3 (1 Kings 7:24). Even if the Bible said Pi = 3.14159, it wouldn't make a lick of difference. There's no evidence that the protagonist exists, and that, for me, is enough to relegate the Bible to the level of "fable"; nothing more. We take from it what we can, and move on; same as we do for Shakespeare (less, as it happens).
My problem is with those who demand respect for the belief that the Bible (or any other book) is anything more than this.
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I think you'll like (or possibly hate) my argument on miracles.
We haven't proven that miracles are impossible. Science, by definition, tests natural phenomena. We can design experiments for them: we control an independent variable and observe the effect on a dependent variable. When we observe a consistent result, we call it a natural phenomenon.
You and I both agree that what people call miracles don't happen naturally. Bodies, for example, don't rise from the dead under any natural conditions that we can identify. Certainly we can't make it happen. All we've proven, though, is that they don't happen naturally.
But miracles, by definition, are supernatural phenomena: they're what happens when some supernatural force causes a result that would not occur in nature.
In order to test whether miracles are possible, we would have to isolate this supernatural force as an independent variable: we'd have to bring it within our control. We can't do that. (You'd say that this is because God doesn't exist; I'd say that it's because God is, well, God. Either way, we can't control Him.)
So while science can demonstrate that plenty of things don't occur in nature -- e.g. people rising from the dead -- it can't demonstrate that they never happen. If they happen at all, they are caused by a force that we can't possibly isolate and test. And they don't happen in a consistent pattern that we can observe. We all agree that people don't rise from the dead under predictable and repeatable circumstances.
None of this proves that miracles happen. It just shows that science cannot prove them to be impossible.
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Not sure if there is more on your 'miracles' post, but I'll weigh in.
Matthew 17:20
For truly, I say to you, if you have faith as a grain of mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it will move; and nothing will be impossible to you.
Jesus is very clear that all prayers are answered, so long as faith is strong. That is, there are no restrictions on prayers being answered. He reiterates this later in Matthew:
Matthew 21:21
I tell you the truth, if you have faith and do not doubt, not only can you do what was done to the fig tree, but also you can say to this mountain, 'Go, throw yourself into the sea,' and it will be done. If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.
So Jesus is clear: anything is possible for the truly faithful.
But we see no evidence that this is so. This should be testable, in exactly the manner you state. Jesus says nothing like: 'your prayer will be answered, and miracles will happen, so long as you don't perform any controlled experiments to test my father's ability at this stuff'. By contrast, this is one part of the NT in which Jesus speaks clearly. All prayers will be answered. The lack of evidence that they are suggests Jesus is wrong.
Re: miracles such as resurrections, I actually agree with you, in part. Science is, absolutely, concerned strictly with naturalistic phenomenon. The supernatural, if it exists, is outside the realm of science. That is not to say that the existence of miracles or of god himself is not a 'scientific' question; god exists or he doesn't. Jesus was resurrected, or he wasn't. All perfectly reasonable, scientific questions.
But if Jesus' resurrection, or the answer of prayers, depends upon supernatural forces, then science cannot go there. Science assumes the existence of an objective, natural reality.
I cannot prove that miracles are impossible. All I can say is that the current evidence suggests that resurrections and virgin births are not possible by natural means. If we allow for the existence of the supernatural, then all bets are off.
But (you knew there was a 'but')...the burden of proof lies with you to prove that the supernatural exists, if you want to use it to explain an alleged miracle. If we allow for the supernatural, then literally ANYTHING is possible.
How odd it is, though, that the age of miracles coincided so nicely with the age of (relative) human stupidity and ignorance, which you have already admitted to in your posts re: Genesis. Is it more likely that supernatural forces exist and violate the physical laws of nature, or that 1st century Israelites were simply too ignorant of these natural laws to recognize that resurrection and virgin births were simply not possible?
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"There's no evidence that the protagonist exists, and that, for me, is enough to relegate the Bible to the level of 'fable'; nothing more."
I think we're getting to the heart of the matter now. My argument is basically this:
1) Nothing proves that the Bible is untrue. (My first several posts were aimed at this point.)
2) If we agree that it's at least possible for the Bible to be true, we can move on to talking about whether it actually is. (That's where I think you're going when you demand evidence.)
I disagree when you say there's no evidence that God exists. Not all evidence is testable: we rely on historical accounts to determine, say, when the Napoleonic wars occurred, or even to determine my birthday. The Gospels constitute testimony from four witnesses. In my line of work, that kind of evidence can get you put away for life. :)
I think your argument is really that you find the evidence unconvincing. That's fair, but it rules out strict atheism. Agnosticism, though...
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Paul, the evidence that the Napoleonic Wars took place, or heck, that World War II took place, is not on the same level as the existence for god. It is disingenuous (in the strictest sense of the word) to suggest otherwise.
Historical evidence is perfectly valid, of course. But every word of the Bible could be historically accurate, and this would still not provide one iota of evidence that (a) god exists, (b) that god is Yahweh, and (c) the acceptance of Jesus as one's personal saviour is the only path to heaven. Surely you can see this.
Let us call ourselves agnostic; fine. But let us also be clear about what we are agnostic. If we are agnostic about the Christian god, we must also, for the same reasons, be agnostic about Allah, or about Zeus, or about Poseidon, or the Flying Teapot. Those are things for which I also have no evidence of non existence, and for which I find the evidence wholly unconvincing. If we're looking for 'testimonial' evidence, we can find that in virtually every religion that has ever existed. Yours is no different than any other in this regard.
God, if he exists, should have no problem confirming his existence today; right now, in the room in which I sit. And he should be capable of doing so without leaving ambiguity about the evidence.
No atheist that I know of states that there is no god; we simply state that there is no evidence. So call me an agnostic if you'd like. But unless you are prepared to explain your agnosticism toward Islam, I'd prefer 'atheist', thank you very much.
As a defense lawyer, I'm sure you'd have no problem poking holes in the testimony of Mark, Matthew, Luke and John, seeing that they had a clear vested interest in getting their story accepted and believed. You'd also point out the glaring holes in their stories, and point out that not a single one of them lived during the time of the alleged 'incidents'.
You'd destroy them on the stand, I'm sure of it.
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You mention that the age of miracles coincided with an age of relative ignorance. This assumes that there are no recorded instances of miracles in recent years. In fact, there are several: Egyptians claim to have seen St. Mary appear in luminous form before a large crowd atop the dome of a church in the Cairo suburb of Zeitoun. (A number of the witnesses were apparently Muslim.) Other examples include run-of-the-mill healings -- a friend of my family's, after a period of fasting and prayer, was rid of leukemia in a sudden and medically inexplicable way. His doctors were baffled.
I'm not saying that either of these incidents were definitely miracles -- it's possible that they were natural but unexplained phenomena. I'd have to know more about the incidents to develop an opinion on either of them. But it's inaccurate to say that miracles are only said to have happened during a comparatively ignorant age.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Here's Mike's original post, followed by our subsequent comments. Mike's writing is in italics; mine isn't.
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This is digusting. Seriously.
An Afghan student and journalist has been sentenced to death .
And what did Sayed Perwiz Kambakhsh do to deserve this punishment? He was, according to the BBC, “downloading material from the internet relating to the role of women in Islamic societies.”
This, according to the Afghan courts, is tantamount to blasphemy, which, naturally enough, is deserving of the death penalty.
77 Canadian lives (and thousands from other nations) have been lost during the war in Afghanistan, and for what? So that we could replace one batch of religious nutcases with another? ‘Enduring Freedom’, my ass. No party will get my vote in the next election unless it calls for a withdrawl from this mess.
Why must we keep humanity, which is capable of so much, captive in arms of religious myth? Wake up, folks. It’s the 21st century here. Religion is not harmless; it is a powerful weapon precisely because the vast, vast majority of the world’s inhabitants cannot see its inherent ridiculousness. People are dying today because of differing opinions about the invisible sky monster. As Sam Harris has put it, if people were killing over the relative superiority of Windows Vista vs. MacOS X, or Apples vs. Oranges, it would be no less ridiculous than the situation in which we find ourselves.
It’s all fun and games to laugh at the stupidity of creationists, or make light of the beliefs that keep certain people from eating certain meats, or from flicking a light switch on certain days of the week. While our collective intelligence may be insulted (and, in the case of the ridiculous notion of creationism/ID, collectively reduced) by these things, they, in and of themselves, do little harm.
But let us not forget that this sorry exhibition is what religion is really all about. When you believe, really truly believe, that the creator of the universe is insulted by certain web pages, and that the mere viewing of this material constitutes the highest form of insult to the diety, nothing can convince you otherwise. And until such time as we, as supposedly intelligent, secular countries are prepared to stop killing ourselves to defend this barbarism, we will never escape the claws of religion. Until we are able to say “religion is bunk, and here’s why”, we will never be truly free.
Religious moderates have no excuse. They facilitate this madness by asking; no, demanding that we give “respect” to their views on the creator of the universe. Enough is enough.
Religion. poisons. everything.
-----Mike, I think your position is unfair to most people of faith.
I think I know your argument: if we have to respect "moderate" faith, on what grounds can we refuse to respect "extremist" faith? Either we accept both or we reject both.
I disagree. First, I don't demand that anyone accept my faith as true. The only respect I ask is the freedom to practice my beliefs insofar as I don't impinge on the freedoms of others. You can offer me that kind of respect without accepting the truth of any religion.
Second, we can distinguish between tolerant and intolerant faiths. My faith demands that I not only tolerate, but actively *love*, those who disagree with me. Intolerant extremism is wholly incompatible with the Christianity that I follow. You can respect that faith and utterly reject someone else's intolerant beliefs.
So to call my faith the thin edge of an extremist wedge is not merely unfair; it's inaccurate. No extremist could hide behind the beliefs that I, and many others, espouse.
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Paul,
First let me say that I'm always happy when you respond to my postings. I know that your arguments will be intelligent and well-thought out. I don't always get that from some.
That having been said, I completely disagree with your sentiment, and here's why.
I recognize that you, as an individual, do not demand that I accept your faith as being literally true, in the sense that "Mike is currently in England" is true. I should state that I absolutely support the freedom of religion; the ability of people to practice whatever religion they wish, so long, as you say, that this practice does not impinge upon the ability of others to do likewise (or to practice no religion). I believe strongly that people should be free FROM discrimination based on religion (though I don't necessarily believe that they should be free TO do what ever their religion commands, simply because it commands it...everyone should have to wear a motorcycle helmet and no one should be able to bring a knife to school, for instance).
I disagree with your point about tolerant vs. intolerant faiths. While it is true that at this point in history certain religions pose a greater threat to humanity than others, we should be very careful to point out why that is. Jainism, for instance, poses very little threat to humanity, because, while Jains believe some improbable things about the nature of the universe (based on no evidence), there is no tenet of Jainism that dictates the killing of apostates, non-believers, or homosexuals. On the other hand, both Christianity and Islam have specific teachings that dictate that one or more specific group of people should be put to their death for what they do or do not believe or practice. Leviticus and Deuteronomy are chock full of the most horrid things you can imagine, the Koran and Hadith likewise.
Now, at this point in history, as I said, one might argue that Islam is by far the greater threat to humanity relative to Christianity. I would grant this, in part, but not completely. You must remember that Islam has not had its reformation (nor is it likely to); it remains virtually unchanged since its inception, mainly because the Koran is held to be the inerrant word of god. Certainly it doesn't take much to interpret a great deal of the Koran as being wholly incompatible with freedom in the Western sense of the word, and many have done just this. I would not wish to be a homosexual, apostate, or non-believer on the streets of Riyadh or Tehran. Of course, all of the Muslims I have ever encountered have been wonderful, peaceful people, though all have been encountered in the context of a country that does not tolerate intolerance, leading me to wonder what I would encounter should our surroundings change. But make no mistake, the gaping hole in Lower Manhattan was created solely by people who believed that their Tuesday morning deeds would land them a preferential place in heaven. They felled those buildings because of faith; no other reason.
Christianity, by contrast, HAS had its reformation, and has had its books subjected to interpretation. The vast majority of Christians I have encountered (such as yourself) have been peaceful, wonderful folks. Although I know that the vast majority of people on the streets of Toronto or any Western city believe in the divinity of Jesus, I do not feel in the least bit frightened of them as a vocal non-believer.
Why the difference between my opinions of Christianity and Islam? Is it because one is intrinsically more tolerant than the other, as you contend?
No.
It is because you and most Christians have recognized that a literal interpretation of your religion's teachings is wholly incompatible with modernity. The reason you don't keep slaves (as the NEW Testament expressly allows and which Jesus never forbids) is that you know keeping slaves is wrong. Your reasons for knowing that are not a product of your faith, but are concessions to secularism. The teachings of your religion are clear; I should be put to death for using the lord's name in vain, and a whole host of other crimes against god; slaves can be kept. But I dont fear these things from Christians because most (but not all) have agreed to put certain elements of their faith aside in the interest of getting along with others. Many Muslims have not yet done so. These concessions are, once again, to secularism, not to religion.
But, Christianity does not get a free pass. Thousands of people will die in sub-Saharan Africa TODAY because of what two Christian men (Joseph Ratzinger and George W. Bush) believe about what the creator of the universe thinks about placing a thin piece of latex over one's penis. Those people are dying needlessly because the Catholic Church and US evangelical protestants believe that the cure is worse than the disease, despite real honest evidence that condom use is far more effective at preventing HIV infection than abstinence programs alone. If 'love' were at the centre of it, these guys would be dropping condoms from planes. The fact that they are not suggests ulterior motives to their (in)actions
Moreover, millions of people will needlessly suffer or die because the Christian US government official opposes the study of 2-day old piles of embryonic stem cells. Why do they do this? Because they believe the creator of the universe has imparted some special entity to these cells that somehow makes them different than every other cell we routinely harvest for research.
What ties all of this together is faith; the belief in things without evidence. Faith is completely anathema to the progress of humanity. We are what we are today, in every sense, because people have based their beliefs about physical reality on evidence. Yes, most of the triumphs of humanity have been made by people of faith, but their triumphs were in no way dependent upon their faith (nor, for most of human history, did they have a choice of whether to be 'faithful' or not...just as much of the world has little choice today).
I am being fair to all people of faith. I am well aware that one cannot lump all believers into one category. The actions of fundamentalists and moderates are completely different, and we should judge the people accordingly. But it is faith that underlies all of it. And religious moderates, by demanding not that their faith be practiced by everyone but that their faith be RESPECTED simply because it is faith, who facilitate the fundamentalists. It should, quite frankly, be shameful to hold beliefs that are incongruent with evidence. The fact that religious faith is one of our most cherished virtues (and the fact that you are likely taken aback by my saying that religious faith should be shameful to hold) is a testament to just how messed up we are.
You should be free to believe what you wish (in the sense that you should have the right to believe what you want), of course, but I must also be free to say you are wrong. You are, however, not free to believe what you want about the meaning of the word "north", for instance (not, at least, if you want to be part of rational discourse). If you dispute what the evidence tells us about "north", you should expect not to be taken seriously. The same standard should apply when you dispute what the evidence tells us about, say, the age of the universe, the common descent of all living things, or whether it is possible to perform miracles, answer prayers, or rise from the dead. The fact that it is not is scary to me.
In closing, Paul, I hope you don't find my tone too abrasive. It is not the faithful I distain, but faith itself. We should be able to see the difference.
I should also state again that I very much appreciate our online discussions. While our opinions differ wildly, I find our discourse stimulating and just plain fun.
M
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Mike, I love our discussions too. Thanks for your thoughtful response.
I don't agree with your claim that my tolerance is a concession to modernity and a departure from Christianity, though. There's language in the Old Testament that I'm still coming to terms with, but the message of Jesus is pretty simple:
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."
One thing I love about Christianity is that it operates on first principles like this. I think that shows a respect for the human capacity to figure out the details on our own. But I digress. My point is: when God Himself says that we are to love Him and love others, and that the whole system of religion and law rests on those principles, anything incompatible with love is incompatible with our faith.
So while I can't speak for anyone else's faith, I can say this for mine: the tolerance and love that I try (not without frequent failure, mind you) to espouse is not a departure from my faith, it's the very core of it.
(As for slavery in the New Testament, Jesus doesn't expressly forbid it--but I think the first principles that He laid out, as quoted in my earlier comment, do a good enough job of that.)
I agree with you that there are dangerous people who do awful things because they think God wants them to. I think it's sick that Christian extremists push condom-free 'abstinence' programs in Africa, seemingly not caring about the fact that this policy leaves a whole continent open to the ravages of AIDS. My response is that these people are misguided. But that doesn't invalidate the faith itself; it just means some people are wrong.
Like I said, I don't demand that anyone respect my faith; I only ask for the right to practice it peacefully. That gives no shelter to extremists.
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Paul,
You can cherry pick the Bible all you want; catch Jesus in half his moods, and be certain that yours is a religion of love and tolerance. I have no doubt that you, personally, are full of love and tolerance.
But:
If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination: they shall surely be put to death; their blood shall be upon them. - Leviticus 20:13
But forasmuch as he had not to pay, his lord commanded him to be sold, and his wife, and children, and all that he had, and payment to be made. - Matthew 18:25
So while I have no doubt that the Golden Rule was a wonderful teaching (which existed long before Jesus), it's lines like this:
Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword. - Matthew 10:34
that make it hard to accept Christianity as a purely peaceful path. You can ignore these parts, but that's only because your secularism is winning out over your faith.
"Like I said, I don't demand that anyone respect my faith; I only ask for the right to practice it peacefully. That gives no shelter to extremists"
But once you allow for the premise of belief without evidence; once you say that it is acceptable, as part of our societal discourse, to hold beliefs based on faith, then you legitimize faith. The 9/11 attackers were, based on this argument, actually BETTER Muslims than most, because they truly followed what is written in their holy books.
I hold that it is this legitimization of faith that is the real problem. Once we allow faith a place of privilege, all interpretations are valid. Fundamentalism may be less palatable than moderatism, but it is not less 'correct' if we allow for faith on first principles.
I'm glad you disavow what's going on in Africa. But Paul, it is our consistent support of religious faith that makes things like that possible in the first place.
Imagine a world in which all beliefs scaled with evidence; in this world, people who held beliefs contrary to evidence would be asked "why do you believe this?", and be held to answer for those beliefs before actions could be taken based upon them. In this world, the sub-Saharan Africa problem would not exist, because no one would be able to claim 'faith' as a legitimate reason for doing anything. The current US policy on Africa (and stem-cell research) is based entirely on faith.
You may disagree with those policies and actively work to have them removed, and that's great. But their root cause, the life blood of those policies, is the acceptance of faith as a virtue. Faith is necessary and sufficient for those policies, and only by de-legitimizing faith can we improve things.
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It's not necessary to cherry-pick from the Bible to see Christianity as a peaceful, tolerant faith. The Leviticus line about stoning homosexuals is from the Old Testament. It was clearly superseded by Jesus' teaching: he once prevented a stoning by saying that he who was without sin should cast the first stone. (John 8:7)
The passage about the slave (Matthew 18:25) doesn't endorse slavery at all. It's from a parable decrying hypocrisy. The character in the story happens to be a slave, but there's nothing there suggesting that slavery is acceptable. Read the rest of the chapter; it'll be clear.
Likewise, Matthew 10:34 ("I came not to send peace, but a sword") should be read in context. This is a passage in which Jesus tells his followers that they may be rejected by their loved ones for following him, and that they should be willing to pay that price. He's not advocating actual violence.
Of course, I'm sure there are some people who read the section literally and commit violence in Jesus' name. But the only way to reconcile the line about swords (which could conceivably be read as metaphor) with the line about the golden rule (which cannot) is to infer that the line about swords does not advocate actual violence. Given that this is the only reading that makes sense when read as a whole, and that it doesn't strain credibility to read it this way, we can conclude that Jesus is not advocating actual violence here. That squares not only with the golden rule, but with the rest of the non-judgmental, non-violent philosophy that he preaches elsewhere in the New Testament.
That's not to say there aren't misguided, violent people who believe they're doing God's work. But there is at least one credible reading in which Christianity -- all of it -- espouses love without exception.
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Paul,
There is no question that Jesus is, by and large, an excellent individual upon which to begin to build a philosophy of relationships with others (his failure to disavow slavery in Luke, notwithstanding).
The same can be said for numerous others throughout history, of course. The only difference is that Jesus has been elevated o a somewhat higher state than, say, Gandhi or Plato.
If we could simply accept that the Bible is just a book, with some bits thrown out for good measure, we might be on to something. We've done this with stories about Zeus, Poseidon, and Ra, but we cannot yet do this with the Bible for some reason.
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Mike,
Here's my response to your second point:
"I hold that it is this legitimization of faith that is the real problem. Once we allow faith a place of privilege, all interpretations are valid. Fundamentalism may be less palatable than moderatism, but it is not less 'correct' is we allow for faith on first principles."
As I understand it, your argument is this: faith equals belief without evidence. Some people believe, without evidence, that God wants them to make bad moral choices (such as flying planes into buildings). If we accept that it's legitimate to espouse harmless beliefs without evidence, we have no basis on which to challenge beliefs that lead to harm. Whereas if all beliefs were evidence-based, there would obviously be no basis for harmful beliefs such as those held by religious terrorists.
We both believe that some moral choices (such as flying planes into buildings) are bad. But what is the basis for that belief? It's not evidence-based. This is a normative, not an empirical, issue. If we disavow any beliefs that are not evidence-based, I can't see any room for moral judgment at all.
In other words: you can only argue that non-empirical belief leads to 'bad' acts if you have a standard for defining what a 'bad' act is. As far as I can tell, that standard can't be empirical. Which means you need a non-empirical belief in order to justify your argument against non-empirical beliefs.
I'm not saying your moral standard has to be religious. I'm just saying that we all have non-empirical moral beliefs. The fact that some are both perverse and ostensibly religious doesn't mean that we should avoid non-empirical belief. I'm not even sure we *can* avoid it, unless we disavow morality altogether. But your argument against non-empirical belief is a moral argument.
It's also fair to point out that there are plenty of non-religious moral beliefs that are just as cruel as those espoused by religious extremists. Pol Pot, for example, fervently believed that it was moral to slaughter the educated classes in order to establish an agrarian paradise. That's a fanatical moral choice that had nothing to do with religious belief.
So I think the enemy here is not faith per se. As I hope I've demonstrated, every moral system involves faith, if we define faith as non-empirical belief. The enemy is moral systems that allow or encourage cruelty. I think the best answer is to espouse moral systems that embrace love.
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Paul,
We can be moral beings without accepting anything on insufficient evidence. My point is that those buildings were felled by people who honestly thought that the creator of the universe wanted it to be so.
The decision to act with some sense of 'morality', whatever the origins of that morality, need not come without some basis in evidence. We can provide ample evidence that slavery, for instance, is morally wrong because it produces genuine harm against other human beings. If we, at first principles, state that 'doing no harm' is our ultimate goal, then we must accept that slavery is wrong, irrespective of what the creator of the universe does or does not want.
I also dispute whether the actions of the 9/11 attackers represented real 'moral' choices per se. They were entirely moral actions, within the confines of what those 19 people believed to be ultimately moral; indeed, what they did was the height of morality in their eyes.
But once again, I believe firmly that we can be moral beings without accepting anything on insufficient evidence. Philosophy can teach us a great deal, and while my knowledge of philosophical principles is admittedly rudimentary, I know enough to understand that we can make moral and ethical choices that are not, in any way, based upon beliefs about things about which we manifestly do not, and often cannot know.
Morality, as you say, need not spring from religion; religion is neither necessary nor sufficient for morality.
In the final analysis, the difference here is this: you feel that faith, when applied according to moral principles (which can be had without faith), can lead to good. I do not dispute this in the least. My retort, however, is that it is faith, and faith alone (whether it be in a deity, in the case of religion, or in a cult of personality, as we saw throughout the 20th century), that inspires the worst in people.
Our human triumphs have resulted from letting what we DO follow from what we KNOW. All that you speak of; morality, love, peace, can be had without claiming to know anything we do not, and perhaps cannot, know.
Your Pol Pot reference is a standard canard. You might also have tried Hitler or Stalin; those work too.
The gas chambers and the gulag are not examples of what happens when we demand too much evidence for things; too much rationality. The Khmer Rouge, the Nazis, and Stalin-era Communists may have been atheistic, but they were as religious as the most devout church. They worshiped people and beliefs without evidence. They were as faith-based as any religion that has ever existed
Faith is merely a subset of the true evil; dogma.
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Only if we start with the principle that it's wrong to harm others. Which, in itself, is not an empirical claim. My point is that all morality starts with non-empirical first principles.
Pol Pot did terrible things because his first principles ("We should have an agrarian society at all costs") collided with his entirely empirical belief that he'd need to kill a lot of people to make it happen.
It wasn't faith that led Pol Pot to slaughter his people: it was the moral conviction that agrarianism is more important than human life. You're correct in noting that this moral conviction is a belief without proof, but so is my moral conviction that human life is more important than agrarianism. Same with your own moral standards. My point is that political and religious extremists aren't dangerous because their believe things that are unproven; they're dangerous because their morality values certain goals more than it values human life.
Moral behaviour is the product of two things: moral first principles (which are never empirical) and a belief about the state of the world (which is sometimes empirical). If I start with bad first principles, I'm going to do terrible things even if my belief about the state of the world is entirely rational. For example, I may believe that it's ok to kill people to achieve my political goals (a moral principle), and I may correctly observe that I can't achieve my political goals without killing anyone (an empirical fact). The problem here isn't irrationality; it's bad morals. That has nothing to do with faith.
It's unfair, then, to blame faith for this kind of fanatical violence. It's just as much a secular phenomenon as it is a religious one.
Friday, June 29, 2007
Stanley Fish on Harris, Hitchens and Dawkins
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Is Religion Man-Made?
Sure it is. Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens think that this fact about religion is enough to invalidate its claims.
“[R]eligion and the churches,” declares Hitchens “are manufactured, and this salient fact is too obvious to ignore.” True to his faith, Dawkins finds that the manufacturing and growth of religion is best described in evolutionary terms: “[R]eligions, like languages, evolve with sufficient randomness, from beginnings that are sufficiently arbitrary, to generate the bewildering – and sometimes dangerous – richness of diversity.” Harris finds a historical origin for religion and religious traditions, and it is not flattering: “The Bible, it seems certain, was the work of sand-strewn men and women who thought the earth was flat and for whom a wheelbarrow would have been a breathtaking example of emerging technology.”
And, they continue, it wasn’t even the work of sand-strewn men who labored in the same place at the same time. Rather, it was pieced together from fragments and contradictory sources and then had claimed for it a spurious unity: “Ever since the nineteenth century, scholarly theologians have made an overwhelming case that the gospels are not reliable accounts of what happened in the history of the real world” (Dawkins).
Hitchens adds that “the sciences of textual criticism, archaeology, physics, and molecular biology have shown religious myths to be false and man-made.” And yet, wonders Harris, “nearly 230 million Americans believe that a book showing neither unity of style nor internal consistency was authored by an omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent deity.”
So there’s the triple-pronged case. Religions are humanly constructed traditions and at their center are corrupted texts that were cobbled together by provincial, ignorant men who knew less about the world than any high-school teenager alive today. Sounds devastating, but when you get right down to it, all it amounts to is the assertion that God didn’t write the books or establish the terms of worship, men did, and that the results are (to put it charitably) less than perfect.
But that is exactly what you would expect. It is God (if there is one) who is perfect and infinite; men are finite and confined within historical perspectives. And any effort to apprehend him – including the efforts of the compilers of the Old Testament, the New Testament and the Koran – will necessarily fall short of a transparency that will be achieved (if it is achieved) only at a future moment of beatific vision. Now – any now, whether it be 2007 or 6,000 years ago – we see through a glass darkly (1 Corinthians, 13:12); one day, it is hoped, we shall see face to face.
In short, it is the unfathomable and unbridgeable distance between deity and creature that assures the failure of the latter to comprehend or prove (in the sense of validating) the former.
O.L. (in a comment on June 11), identifies the “religion is man-made claim” as the “strongest foundation of atheism” because “it undermines the divinity of god.” No, it undermines the divinity of man, which is, after all, the entire point of religion: man is not divine, but mortal (capable of death), and he is dependent upon a creator who by definition cannot be contained within human categories of perception and description. “How unsearchable are his Judgments and his ways past finding out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his counselor” (Romans, 11:33-34). It is no wonder, then, that the attempts to contain him – in scriptures, in ceremonies, in prayer – are flawed, incomplete and forever inadequate. Rather than telling against divinity, the radical imperfection, even corruption, of religious texts and traditions can be read as a proof of divinity, or at least of the extent to which divinity exceeds human measure.
If divinity, by definition, exceeds human measure, the demand that the existence of God be proven makes no sense because the machinery of proof, whatever it was, could not extend itself far enough to apprehend him.
Proving the existence of God would be possible only if God were an item in his own field; that is, if he were the kind of object that could be brought into view by a very large telescope or an incredibly powerful microscope. God, however – again if there is a God – is not in the world; the world is in him; and therefore there is no perspective, however technologically sophisticated, from which he could be spied. As that which encompasses everything, he cannot be discerned by anything or anyone because there is no possibility of achieving the requisite distance from his presence that discerning him would require.
The criticism made by atheists that the existence of God cannot be demonstrated is no criticism at all; for a God whose existence could be demonstrated wouldn’t be a God; he would just be another object in the field of human vision.
This does not mean that my arguments constitute a proof of the truth of religion; for if I were to claim that I would be making the atheists’ mistake from the other direction. Nor are they arguments in which I have a personal investment. Their purpose and function is simply to show how the atheists’ arguments miss their mark and, indeed, could not possibly hit it.
At various points Harris, Dawkins and Hitchens all testify to their admiration for Shakespeare, who, they seem to think, is more godly than God. They would do well to remember one of the bard’s most famous lines, uttered by Hamlet: “There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”
Sunday, June 3, 2007
Suffixes and such
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Bias
It goes without saying that biases on either side of the divide can threaten the quality of an investigation, so it’s useful to know what they are. But there’s another reason to look at our biases: they tell us a lot about how we conceive of God.
I once had a professor who, apropos of nothing, asked why religious people often feel compelled to spread their faith. He found it offensive, and his theory was that they do it to score points with God or out of some sense of superiority: our team’s winning! I was too timid to say anything at the time, but my response was this: if you found the cure for cancer, you’d be running through the streets telling people about it. (Well, at least you’d try to get it published in a medical journal.) People of faith believe they’ve got the cure for death. That’s something you don’t keep to yourself.
I’ve met some atheists who don’t believe in God because they’re not convinced—they don’t think the evidence is there, and they’re not going to accept faith blindly. Fair enough. But as I said earlier, I’ve met others who would actually rather that there be no God. Why? I think it comes down to what you think God is, and what you think the consequences of faith may be.
I think most confirmed atheists (and a good many theists, for that matter) see God as a judge with some kind of “sin abacus” and faith as a list of rules that we all routinely break. If that’s my reference point, and if I’ve got even a modicum of self-awareness about my failings as a human being, I am going to be deeply invested in the position that there is no God. I’ve felt that way myself. When that was how I conceived of God, there were times when I thought it would have been better if he didn’t exist. (For one thing, I would have had a lot more sex a lot sooner.)
But if God is not a frowning judge in the sky, things change. If, like the people in my cure-for-cancer analogy, we see faith and God not as a series of prohibitions but as quite literally the cure for death—how could that not be attractive? Who wouldn’t want that?
I am, of course, vastly oversimplifying God and faith by describing them as “the cure for death.” So let’s expand the proposition a bit. Christians believe that God is an all-powerful being whose chief characteristic is complete and perfect love, and who for reasons unknown has decided to focus a great deal of attention on sharing that love with us. As C.S. Lewis put it, this includes the offer to “make the feeblest and filthiest of us into a god or goddess, a dazzling, radiant, immortal creature, pulsating all through with such energy and joy and wisdom and love as we cannot now imagine”.
This is the actual Christian view of God. Whether you believe in it is another story entirely, but if that’s the reference point, it becomes very strange and deeply irrational to prefer that it not be true.
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Cooking the books
One friend countered by saying that, if complex life is statistically improbable, then an even-more-complex designer must be that much more improbable. Someone replied that this counter-argument was invalid because probability doesn't apply to God. While natural phenomena are goverened by the laws of the universe and are therefore subject to probability analysis, a supernatural God (assuming one exists) would not be. Probability is a function of time, and since our universe exists in time, probability applies. Assuming that God exists outside of time, probability doesn't apply to Him/Her/It. So the unlikelihood of life does not demonstrate the unlikelihood of God.
"That's a very convienent argument," my friend said. In a nutshell, she accused theists of weaselling out of the conversation, applying the laws of the universe when they suited their purposes (proving the improbability of uncreated life), but ignoring those same laws when they didn't.
At the time, I conceded that although I was arguing in good faith, the argument did look convenient and there was no way to prove otherwise. But I've reconsidered.
If I had retroactively defined God to exist outside of time, it would have been fair to accuse me of cooking the definition so as to avoid the scrutiny of probability theory. But that definition of God is biblical - it's at least 3,000 years old. Probability theory first arose in the 16th and 17th centuries, so it's safe to say that the concept of an eternal God predates any probabilistic arguments about His existence. So it's not a clever dodge to say that God's putative eternal nature nullifies any argument as to the improbability of His existence. The argument is either true, or it's an interesting coincidence. Either way, it seems to predate its rhetorical usefulness, so at the very least it's intellectually honest.
As a sidebar, I should note that physics, too, requires that if the universe was created, its creator must be eternal. Modern physicists seem to agree that there was no such thing as time before the big bang. St. Augustine said the same thing 1600 years ago in his analysis of Genesis 1. That's not a proof for the existence of God, but it does suggest that if there was a creator, current science agrees with 3,500-year-old theology on one of the creator's fundamental attributes. Since the science came thousands of years after the theology, you can't accuse theists of cooking the books.
So I retract my concession.
Saturday, April 28, 2007
For starters
The driving force seems to be the notion that reason and science are incompatible with the notion of "God" as described by conventional religion. If the two are incompatible, then they make mutually exclusive claims about the nature of the universe, and therefore scientists and people of faith are at odds with each other. You see this dynamic in the debate over teaching evolution, and in books such as Dawkins' The God Delusion. Sometimes it gets nasty.
I think this is misguided. The reason-vs.-faith debate arises when people on both sides of the divide make extravagant claims that are either unnecessary or unsupported by their source materials. Stripped of extraneous, unnecessary and unsupportable claims, the two seem perfectly compatible.
My goal here is to flesh out this argument and foster an open, respectful discussion. Books and blogs on all sides are far too concerned with scoring cheap points and indulging in cathartic rants for any of us to learn anything from them. I'm interested in an intellectually honest debate, and I hope to learn something.
I'm also interested in talking about faith and reason in broader terms. I'm not a scientist, and it would be rank folly for me to dive headfirst into a discussion that's been ongoing for thousands of years and pretend to contribute much new knowledge. But I analyze and argue for a living, so I think I can make some useful comments about the classic arguments and about how the mind has plenty of room for the spirit and vice versa.
Full-disclosure-time: I'm a Christian. I think it would have been perverse for God to outift us with curiosity and reason and then expect us not to use it: hence science. I think that science and theology look at the same things from different angles, and that the apparent differences between them are either bad science, bad theology, or just parallax.
I also think that, while science and reason likely can't prove the existence of God, neither can they disprove it. What we're left with is this: God may exist. We may believe, disbelieve, or remain unconvinced. But given the claims that people of faith make about God, we can't afford to ignore the question. And while I don't know that reason can solve the issue, open discussion can get us a lot closer than most people think.
So that's my stance. I'm looking forward to hearing from people who disagree with me. It should be fun.