Category Archives: Religion & Atheism - Page 2

2011 World Humanist Congress

This weekend I attended the 2011 World Humanist Congress. I attended as a member of the Norwegian Humanist Association. The congress is held every third year by the IHEU, this year in Oslo Norway. The topic of this congress was «Humanism and Peace».

The congress was opened last Friday by the president of the IHEU, Sonja Eggerickx and the president of the Norwegian Humanist Association, Åse Kleveland. There were also a greeting by the Norwegian Crown Prince later on that afternoon.

There were also three opening talks, the first by Erik Assadourian from The Worldwatch Institute on the topic «The state of the world today». The next speaker was Johan Galtung, a controversial man with a controversial talk. He spoke on the subject of peace and conflict resolution and made some interesting points about seeing the legitimacy in claims of all parties in a conflict. He also made some strong claims about the US and Nato which were controversial and I could not agree with. The last, and in my opinion, best talk of the opening night was Richard Norman‘s, a British philosopher and humanist and author of the book «On Humanism» (a must-read for humanists). His topic was «Killing the innocent: Humanism and the Just War tradition» which was a very good talk. I’ll link the video as soon as proper ones are available (at the moment there are bad copies of the live stream available here).

Greg EpsteinDay 2, Saturday, had parallel running sessions. I myself attended a talk by Greg M. Epstein, the Harvard Humanist Chaplain. A talk titled «Good Without God in Action: Building Congregations and Mobilazing Community Service Among US Humanists». Epstein’s take on humanism and building communities is a different one than most, but I found his points interesting. The second talk was by Jeremy Gunn on freedom of religion, and the last of the morning sessions was by Lars Gule, a Norwegian philosopher and former activist. His talk was on «Totalitarian Ideologies and Political Religion: How to identify and defuse extremists views» and possibly one of the best talks I attended the entire conference. Again, I hope good quality videos will be posted.

PZ MyersAfter lunch I attended PZ Myers session on «Evolution, conflict and religion» and Judith Hand’s talk on «The Human Potential for Peace». Both very good. Hand talked about the evolutionary origins of violence and conflicts, but the conclusions she drew were not the ones we usually hear. Conflicts are not such a fundamental part of humanity as we’ve been led to believe according to her. The Saturday ended with an excellent dinner at the Oslo Opera House with beers on the town afterwards.

Sunday I have to admit I slept too long to attend the two earliest sessions, and only attended the debate on military service, the adoption of the resolutions and the closing ceremonies.

All in all an excellent congress with a lot of interesting people. I’m looking forward to see the talks I did not get the chance to attend, and of course looking forward to the next congress in 2014 in the UK.

More photos from the congress can be found here.

The Cosmological Argument

Interesting video from skydivephil called «Debunking the Kalam Cosmological Argument of William Lane Craig». This is not just debunking the silly argument “Nothing can come from nothing — uhm — except — uhm — God …”, but looking at the nature and physics of the Big Bang and explaining why the argument makes no sense in a (modern) scientific context.

Via Skepchick and Pharyngula

Dem Evangelicals …

Came across this interesting blogpost via PZ Myers’ blog. It is about some interesting results from «Pew Research Forum on Religion and Public Life» which had a survey of the opinions of evangelical leaders attending a conference last year. Leaders from all over the world were included and there are some interesting cultural differences noted in the blogpost. You can read about that there, but the point I found most interesting and disappointingly unsurprising was that fact that the rejection of evolution was almost complete. Given the option of Evolution (but not excluding God), Intelligent Design and traditional creationism, 47% chose creationism, 41% chose ID and only 3% chose evolution. The error margins are usually a few percent. The number of evangelical leaders who said it is not “essential to follow the teachings of Christ in one’s personal and family life” was also 3%, so clearly the error margins are in that range. It is disappointing that so many evangelical, near all, reject a well established and well proven scientific theory. The author of the blogpost concludes:

Rejection of evolution is not simply a theological side issue in evangelical Christianity, but appears to be a defining feature.

There are other interesting things gathered from this survey as well, about their attitude towards atheists for instance. Interesting read:

Full post: Evangelicals, evolution and atheism: the 2011 Pew Foundation survey

The complete theory of evolutio

Religion and Critical Thinking

Reading this blogpost (it’s in Norwegian) got me thinking a bit on the subject of religion and how it relates to critical thinking. Is religious belief irrational? Well, most of us, including maybe most religious people too, will agree that there are variations of for instance Christianity that are irrational or maybe weird or extreme. But what about non-extreme religion, like plain old traditional Christianity? Can we apply critical thinking to that? Yes, by the way, I will use Christianity as the religion I refer to in this post as it is the one that I know best, and the one that is relevant for my culture.

So, what is «Critical Thinking» anyway?

As Wikipedia defines it, critical thinking «generally refers to higher order thinking that questions assumptions». However the definition is not necessarily that precise as you will notice if you read the rest of the Wiki-page. Regardless, I will stick to this definition and append the definition of the scientific method as a way we could question assumptions. In other words, to accept a claim, we should generally require scientific evidence that the claim is true, or rather most likely true. Absolute truths are best left to those bold enough to claim them.

Critical thinking needs to be objective, or as close as it is humanly possible to get. In a scientific context, i.e. as in scientific research, this is usually achieved by collaboration and peer review. On a personal level it is not that simple. Changing ones mind about a subject you already have made your mind up about is not easy and often takes some time. As a critical thinker I find myself in that situation every now and then. I may have made up my mind about a subject based on an assumption, or based on the opinion of the person I first got the idea from. An example is the idea that chewing vitamin C when you’ve got the flu will make it go away faster. I used to believe that, can’t remember where I got it from, but I eventually found out it was not true. It wasn’t that hard to accept, but it didn’t happen instantly. More deeply held beliefs take longer to change as I will come to later.

Does this apply to religion?

The main requirement of the scientific method is that the claim or theory is falsifiable or refutable. This means that there is a conceivable way of proving the theory wrong. The main religious claims are generally not falsifiable. You cannot prove that God exist, nor can you prove that he does not exist. The claim is a matter of faith. Therefore such a claim falls outside the reach of the scientific method and thus religion is not a part of science aside from the study of religious belief itself of course. So is it possible to think critically about religion then? Most definitely.

My story about faith

Religious belief is based on a set of dogmas or assumptions which are supported by faith. I.e. you choose to accept them as truth despite any lack of empirical evidence. Most religious people have inherited their faith from their culture and/or their family, and so did I. This is quite evident when you look at the geographical and cultural distribution of the various major religions. This does not necessarily mean that every believer is a blind sheep following the flock. Many are convinced their faith is true based on personal experience which are often of a very emotional nature. Personal experience however is highly subjective and biased to your existing belief system and therefore an incredibly lousy basis for truth.

Others again decide to take one step further and study their religion in detail. That is what I attempted. I was raised a Christian, but as I grew older I found Christianity in practice to be too subjective and inconsistent. I found that people’s personal experience were not trustworthy as confirmation of the religious doctrines. So I decided to study at a Bible College for 2 years. Digging into the matter was exciting at first, but I soon realised that the reality of theology was even more shaky than my plain old trust in the religious authorities I grew up with. The Bible is a complex book with many many contradictions, historical and scientific inaccuracies and physical impossibilities. It has been edited by numerous people with varying ideological and political agendas, and even presents several religions rather than just the two I used to think. The whole historical narrative in the first half of the Old Testament turned out to be highly mythological and is to a large degree proven completely wrong by archaeological and historical evidence. So in other words, the Bible is not the authoritative word of God, but a book compiled by men over about a 1000-1500 years in the bronze age. The New Testament is equally a collection of books and letters with varying agendas and content. They are not in agreement, and have been edited to suit changes in religious practice. The authors of the gospels didn’t even know much about local geography and got a lot of details wrong. We can check these today, but what about all the details we cannot check? Are they also wrong?

Fine, so critical thinking pretty much rules out the authority of Christian scripture. But what about the idea of a God and the moral content of the Bible? Well, as for the moral content of the Bible, that is purely a matter of cherrypicking. It has many good passages and many horribly bad ones. That doesn’t make it irrelevant as a source of good ideas and nice quotes, but it disqualify it as a authoritative text on morals. As for the concept of God, that is a bit trickier. I find it pretty clear that the varying image of God found in the Bible is a pretty unimaginative and inconsistent description of an entity we would call God. I do not believe this God exist. However the philosophical theism or deism is not so straight forward to reject.

In earlier times the existence of a creating God was supposed based on observation of nature. It seemed implausible that it had come to be without someone making it so. This is what is known as the teleological argument (in a nutshell). A couple of centuries with scientific progress has rendered this argument more or less dead with the exception of fundamentalist religious people who argue for creationism and its derivative, intelligent design. Both of which are not science, but religion. This fact drastically reduce the plausibility of and even the need for a God or a theos. A creator has become redundant in science. There is therefore no need to believe in one other than for emotional reasons. God is reduced to some abstract idea of an uncaused cause or some universal force which is irrelevant to human life and existence. Of such an entity I am agnostic, not because I think it is likely to exist, but because I cannot argue that it does not exist. Both Einstein and the philosopher Spinoza talked about this kind of God. Einstein himself has been misquoted numerous times as arguing for the existence of God.

Conclusion

So there it is, a short version of my critical evaluation of Christianity, the religion I was brought up with. There is obviously a lot more to it than just this, but these are some of the main points. My point was to demonstrate that religion is subject to critical thinking as much as anything else in our life. The fact that the basic idea cannot be proven right or wrong does not disqualify it from critical scrutiny. It is also demonstrated that atheism and agnosticism is not a requirement for critical thinking, it is rather the other way around: Critical thinking often leads to atheism and agnosticism. I am not saying that religious people are incapable of critical thinking, on the contrary. They usually just choose not to apply the critical thinking to their religion, or at least not all of it. I know many intelligent people who are religious, even in science. I would say most people I know that are religious are also smart, and are critical thinkers in many respects, but the attachment to religion is deep and emotional and resists being scrutinised. The change for me took several years. It was not something I came to realise over night. But it eventually had to happen as I grew increasingly uncomfortable with the religion I inherited.

Hitchens’ Letter to American Atheists

Christopher HitchensChristopher Hitchens is probably one of the worlds most known atheists. He is a man with a sharp tongue and an equally sharp pen. He is the author of God is Not Great, in my opinion the best of the new series of atheist books that have come out the last decade. Hitchens is currently fighting cancer. He was supposed to appear at the American Atheist convention but due to his health could not. Instead he sent the following letter:

Dear fellow-unbelievers,

Nothing would have kept me from joining you except the loss of my voice (at least my speaking voice) which in turn is due to a long argument I am currently having with the specter of death. Nobody ever wins this argument, though there are some solid points to be made while the discussion goes on. I have found, as the enemy becomes more familiar, that all the special pleading for salvation, redemption and supernatural deliverance appears even more hollow and artificial to me than it did before. I hope to help defend and pass on the lessons of this for many years to come, but for now I have found my trust better placed in two things: the skill and principle of advanced medical science, and the comradeship of innumerable friends and family, all of them immune to the false consolations of religion. It is these forces among others which will speed the day when humanity emancipates itself from the mind-forged manacles of servility and superstitition. It is our innate solidarity, and not some despotism of the sky, which is the source of our morality and our sense of decency.

That essential sense of decency is outraged every day. Our theocratic enemy is in plain view. Protean in form, it extends from the overt menace of nuclear-armed mullahs to the insidious campaigns to have stultifying pseudo-science taught in American schools. But in the past few years, there have been heartening signs of a genuine and spontaneous resistance to this sinister nonsense: a resistance which repudiates the right of bullies and tyrants to make the absurd claim that they have god on their side. To have had a small part in this resistance has been the greatest honor of my lifetime: the pattern and original of all dictatorship is the surrender of reason to absolutism and the abandonment of critical, objective inquiry. The cheap name for this lethal delusion is religion, and we must learn new ways of combating it in the public sphere, just as we have learned to free ourselves of it in private.

Our weapons are the ironic mind against the literal: the open mind against the credulous; the courageous pursuit of truth against the fearful and abject forces who would set limits to investigation (and who stupidly claim that we already have all the truth we need). Perhaps above all, we affirm life over the cults of death and human sacrifice and are afraid, not of inevitable death, but rather of a human life that is cramped and distorted by the pathetic need to offer mindless adulation, or the dismal belief that the laws of nature respond to wailings and incantations.

As the heirs of a secular revolution, American atheists have a special responsibility to defend and uphold the Constitution that patrols the boundary between Church and State. This, too, is an honor and a privilege. Believe me when I say that I am present with you, even if not corporeally (and only metaphorically in spirit…) Resolve to build up Mr Jefferson’s wall of separation. And don’t keep the faith.

Sincerely

Christopher Hitchens

Christopher HitchensChristopher Hitchens