Author: Ophelia Benson

  • My stomach is mine, yours is yours

    It occurs to me that Sam Harris could have helped his case if he had stated his core claim more fully from the outset. His core claim omits the very thing that makes morality non-obvious and disputatious*.

    His core claim is

    For those unfamiliar with my book, here is my argument in brief:

    Morality and values depend on the existence of conscious minds – and specifically on the fact that such minds can experience various forms of well-being and suffering in this universe. Conscious minds and their states are natural phenomena, of course, fully constrained by the laws of Nature (whatever these turn out to be in the end).

    Therefore, there must be right and wrong answers to questions of morality and values that potentially fall within the purview of science.

    Yes but. Yes but you left the difficult part out.

    Morality and values depend on the existence of conscious minds and on the fact that each mind is separate from all others.

    The fact that each of us can directly experience only our own suffering and well-being is why we need morality and values at all; without that it would all be straightforward, like hunger prompting us to find and eat food.

    Morality isn’t about “if you’re suffering, try to stop.” We already know that! Morality is about “you’re fine but those people over there are starving, you should share your food with them, with the result that you are hungrier and they are rescued from starving.” And then about arguments over dependency and causation and responsibility and proximity and 50 million other things, many of which benefit from scientific input but few of which are simply settled (or in Harris’s word, determined) by science.

    Harris should have included that in his argument in brief all along.

    *Update: I think that’s not really the right word. I think that word applies to people who like to dispute, as with “litigious.” But “disputable” wasn’t exactly what I meant…so I used disputatious anyway, despite knowing it wasn’t really right. The really right word doesn’t exist, so I bent one, thus possibly creating confusion. Language is tricky. (No one has emailed me to say that’s the wrong word…I just felt like saying.)

  • Mubarak gives it up

    Protesters began hugging and cheering, shouting “Egypt is free!” and “You’re an Egyptian, lift your head”

  • Blackford on Beattie on Pigliucci on Harris

    We like our meta to be meta around here.

  • Helle Klein brands humanist criticism of ideas as islamophobia

    Published: 2011-01-23, Updated: 2011-01-24

    The past days saw the launch of the new culture magazine Sans. The theme [of the premier issue] is religious oppression of women, and the main article of the magazine is an interview of the American feminist and author Ophelia Benson, who in the book “Does God hate women?” charts how women’s human rights are violated within conservative religious traditions around the world.

    On the front page of Sans, which bears the headline “A God for women?”, we publish a picture of a woman dressed in a burqa.

    The magazine has barely left the presses before the Christian think tank Seglora Smedja, run by Helle Klein among others, brands Sans as islamophobic. Apart from a failure of research (Sans is published not by Humanisterna but by the Fri Tanke publishing house), Klein makes the following remarkable comment on the Seglora home page:

    The premier issue will be about religion and oppression of women, and the front page is graced by a woman in a burqa with the headline ‘A religion for women?’ embedded in the picture. As usual the criticism of religion receives an islamophobic subtext. Seglora Smedja will however put off a review of Sans until we have read the entire premier issue.

    Putting off the review until one has read the magazine is a friendly gesture, but it seems that one can render the judgement “islamophobic” by spinal reflex. Also note that one wrongly quotes the front page headline as “A religion for women?” (our italics). Maybe it’s case of a Freudian vision problem. Likely Seglora Smedja would prefer to see that we pointed to Islam as the only cause of the global oppression of women. Such a journalistic one-sidedness would make it easier to sow suspicions against Sans.

    If Seglora Smedja does in fact bother to read the magazine, one will see that we give our attention to religiously sanctioned opression of women within all the Abrahamic world religions, that is Judaism, Christianity and Islam. One example is the extreme abortion laws which characterize many Catholic countries and which take the lives of close to a hundred thousand women every year. Additionally we write about more subtle gender conservative patterns within the Swedish church and point out insidious difference feminism both in religious and secular forms.

    Undoubtedly the degrees of oppression run a wide gamut, and there is a multitude of different expressions of religious difference thinking surrounding gender, as well as religiously motivated violence and contempt directed at women in today’s world. Not all these expressions are grounded in islamism, as is made clear in our theme issue.

    At the same time we see no reason to deny that the most obvious forms of gender apartheid and the most egregious violations of womens’ humarn rights today take place in the name of Islam, as Benson too points out in her well researched book.

    It is indeed hard to find a more eloquent symbol for this reality than the burqa. The garment is – unfortunately – not a product of neurotic atheists’ brains, but one of the true faces of Islam in this world. Calling the burqa oppressive to women would be an understatement. Rather, the garment is symbolic of the total eradication of woman as a citizen, an individual and independent subject. Far from all Muslims embrace the extreme view of gender and sexuality that lies behind the insistence on the complete covering of women, but the garment is still an Islamic reality.

    It is, mildly put, disappointing that an authentic picture of this reality cannot be published without eliciting shouts about islamophobia from certain quarters, as if the burqa image were a caricature or montage.

    With Helle Klein’s definition one should be able to discern “islamophobic subtexts” not only in Sans’ cover image but in many documentary reports from the moslem world. As an example, SVT:s [Swedish government TV] news reports from Afghanistan must for consistency’s sake be branded as islamophobic, since it is the rule rather than an exception to see burqa clad women there.

    Sans’ theme issue contains a wealth of facts about religious oppression. We are now waiting with bated breath for Seglora smedja’s comment to this description of reality. Will the information be questioned? Will one deny, relativize, or perhaps try to tone down the seriousness of the situation?

    Presenting different facts or different evaluations of the facts is completely legitimate in a debate about the role of religions in society, but the reflexive charges of islamophobia are depressingly off target. They risk paralyzing the discussion of human rights in general and serious violations of women in particular.

    Maybe this is intentional. Let us not forget that the truths in the criticism of religion hurts. Perhaps particularly so for well-intentioned liberal theologists.

    Let us also not forget that those participants of the debate who would rather brand humanist criticism of ideas as islamophobic hand out their diagnoses from a particularly safe and protected corner of the western media landscape. Rather than opening their eyes to the unfathomable subordination and suffering of women in other parts of the world many choose again and again to try to silence the critics with imagined pronouncements of disease.

    The denial may be psychologically understandable, but it is intellectually and morally untenable.

    About the Author

    Translator’s note:  First, please note that I am not a professional translator. I have done my best, but may inadvertently have changed the authors’ intended meaning of the text in some places. I find myself constantly pulled between the goals of staying close to the original text on one hand, and writing reasonably idiomatic English on the other. But that must be the dilemma that faces all translators. The reader should always keep in mind that what they read may not be what the original author intended.
  • 3 doctors investigated in Bangladesh whipping death

    Justice Chowdhury ordered the religious affairs ministry to end funding for madrasas and mosques that issue fatwas. Yessssssss.

  • Vatican says no you can’t confess to your phone

    It has to be a priest. Phones can’t talk to god, stupid!

  • There is need for reflection

    Poor Ireland, it must be so disconcerting.

    The phenomenal economic boom over the past two decades, and the secularization that came along with it, allowed Ireland to think it was no longer what it once was: a backward land dominated and shaped by the Roman Catholic Church. But as the economy has crashed, the Irish have come face to face with their earlier selves, and with a church-state relationship that was and in many ways still is, as quite a few people in the country see it, perversely antimodern.

    It’s perhaps similar to being suddenly transported from a cosmopolitan liberal coastal city to a parochial conservative religious town in the hinterland.

    Only worse.

    As secularism advanced in other parts of the world, successive popes relied on Ireland as a bulwark and pushed Irish leaders to keep the church in the country’s structure. In 1977, Prime Minister Garret FitzGerald noted that in a private meeting, Pope Paul VI stressed to him “that Ireland was a Catholic country — perhaps the only one left — and that it should stay that way” and that he should not “change any of the laws that kept the republic a Catholic state.” That continues to this day, according to Ivana Bacik, a senator for the opposition Labor Party who has been a leader in the effort to extricate the church from the state. As she put it, “In no other European nation — with the obvious exception of Vatican City — does the church have this depth of doctrinal involvement in the affairs of state.”

    By what right? In other European nations, laws are generally changed or not changed by the legislators or people of those nations, not by different ones. It’s odd that the nation of “Vatican City” thinks it gets to tell the Irish PM what laws to change or not change. Odd but not surprising.

    Last summer, there was talk of a plan to divest the church of its control of state-financed schools, but when I asked a Department of Education and Skills spokeswoman last month what the department was doing, she gave me only the Catholic Church’s current position — that there is need for “reflection” on the issue — and actually referred me to the church for further information.

    Or reflection.

  • The diversity of medical practices and theoretical frameworks currently thriving across the world

    Alex Davenport went to the Science Museum (the one in South Kensington, you know), and found the 5th floor devoted to quackery.

    It matters because the SM is supposed to promote science and understanding, not fuel an ever increasingly tiresome debate between those that painstakingly research and collect data and those that appear to pick any old idea then try to convince people it works.

    That’s what I would have thought.

    The homeopathy stand tells the case study of a girl who had allergies from the age of 3-5 (what are these allergies?) and they say that she was cured by homeopaths.  That’s right, they categorically state that homeopathy helped her.

    Yikes.

    A museum staffer did a blog post in response, with an official statement from the museum.

    In our ‘Living Medical Traditions’ section of the Science and Art of Medicine Gallery we take an anthropological and sociological perspective on medical practices. We reflect patient experience in a global setting. We do not evaluate different medical systems, but demonstrate the diversity of medical practices and theoretical frameworks currently thriving across the world.

    Our message in this display is that these traditions are not ‘alternative’ systems in most parts of the world. Instead they currently offer the majority of the global population their predominant, sometimes only, choice of medical care. We do not make any claims for the validity of the traditions we present.

    Well not in the sense of having banners saying “This stuff really works!” – but what about that stand that says homeopathy cured a child of allergies? That looks like a claim for validity to my untutored eye. David Colquhoun was entirely unconvinced. So was Simon Singh. So were lots of other people.

    More via Martin Robbins.

  • A visit to the science wooseum

    The homeopathy stand tells the case study of a girl who had allergies from the age of 3-5 and they say that she was cured by homeopaths.

  • Homeopathy and other quackery at the Science Museum

    The museum has devoted a ‘small area’ of the gallery to ‘Personal Stories’ without clarifying that these do not lend alternative medicines any credibility.

  • “My mother and I became Faith and Blasphemy”

    She stood in the doorway: “If you go to the demonstrations  and get killed, I won’t come for your body.”

  • Ireland and the church

    As the economy has crashed, the Irish have come face to face with a church-state relationship that was and is perversely antimodern.

  • One Law for All holds “Enemies not Allies” seminar

    Far-right groups and Islamist groups deserve each other.

  • Mubarak may step down

    Hassan al-Roweni, an Egyptian army commander, told protesters in the square that “everything you want will be realised”.

  • Distortions

    Does Mary Midgley give Richard Dawkins a percentage? She certainly should. She’s making a full-time career of telling him to stop doing things he doesn’t do.

    Midgley’s new book continues her many years of taking neo-Darwinists to task because, she says, they distort the legacy of the great English naturalist who inspired them.

    Yes, many years. Many, many years. More than thirty of the bastards. She was told she had it all wrong the same number of years ago, but her new book continues the same old bullshit she was told was all wrong all those years ago. I’d say she owes Richard a cut.

    And what’s this crap about “distorting” Darwin’s “legacy,” anyway? Does she think Darwin wrote a gospel? Does she think Darwin’s work is supposed to be frozen in amber so that everyone can stand around and admire it, along with the work of Albert the Good and Gladstone and Isambard Kingdom Brunel? Darwin was a scientist. His work was and is supposed to be expanded, corrected, falsified, improved, used, stretched out of shape. It’s not a sculpture or a carpet, it’s a theory; it doesn’t need to be protected from the breath of the nasty modern sciencey types with their iPods and blue jeans and tendency to swear. Those nasty modern sciencey types are Darwin’s colleagues; he has a lot more in common with them than he has with obstinate one-idea (and that a wrong one) Midgley.

    Midgley argues that the neo-Darwinist perspective rests on an ethos of free-enterprise competition distorted by “the supposedly Darwinian belief in natural selection as a pervasive, irresistible cosmic force” that operates in social and metaphysical realms as well as in physical, biological ones. It results, she writes, in “unbridled, savage competition between the genes” that operates with mythic force within any individual body.

    Apparently she has learned nothing since 1979, the date of the original (widely-derided) paper. Her legacy is serenly undistorted – for what that’s worth.

  • Never mind Scientology, what about Catholicism?

    Is one any less ridiculous than the other?

  • So how about that Scientology piece?

    Is it the beginning of the end or just same old same old?

  • Lawrence Wright on Scientology

    Recruits had a sense of boundless possibility. Mystical powers were forecast; out-of-body experiences were to be expected; fundamental secrets were to be revealed

  • Salvation? There’s an app for that

    It lets you pick a commandment and tick off all your sins, keeping a running tally to bring into the confessional with you.

  • Harris and Pigliucci: On moral philosophy

    Say what you will, Sam Harris knows how to stir a hive and send its inhabitants into a positive buzz. Some of them will turn this into an opportunity to get some intellectual exercise. Others may fly into a frenzy and sting at anything and everything, eventually disembowelling themselves intellectually in the process. Of the first, Brother Blackford (to co-opt a recently Coyned soubriquet) is a prime example: his ruminations are clearly valuable to the discussion. But where clarity is its own reward, the contributions of others need to be carefully disentangled from their ill-conceived targets, in order that everybody may see clearly where they went off course. Massimo Pigliucci has thankfully supplied us with such an opportunity—one is tempted to say: again.

    This opportunity then is not one to defend Harris’s book, The Moral Landscape (TML); he is a big guy and can take care of himself (and his ideas). On the contrary, it is one to positively assert the values and proper methods of rational criticism—which, to get slightly ahead of myself, are fundamentally the same in philosophy as in science. Also, I might be able to slip one or two somewhat novel ideas into the discussion to try and help propel it forward.

    If philosophy’s goal is to teach us how to think well, then its first order of business is, in Wittgenstein’s words, “to make [thoughts] clear and to give them sharp boundaries”. At the heart of TML is the repudiation of the idea that facts and values live in different realms. That idea has often been equated with the is–ought problem, usually traced back to David Hume. In his review, Pigliucci takes the same road, asserting that Harris “spectacularly” fails to undermine the separation of facts from values.

    At this point, we would have to consider two things: is the supposed separation absolute, i.e. is there no conceivable way to get from one to the other; and if the separation is not absolute, what are the conditions that get us from one to the other. The first is easily settled, as even Hume takes pains to point out that, for the traversal to be successful, “’tis necessary that it shou’d be observ’d and explain’d; and at the same time that a reason should be given”. While a logical deduction may not be possible, other rational inferences are explicitly not ruled out—and it would be apposite to point out that any science of course relies on such forms of induction for its conclusions.

    That out of the way, the question becomes: how do we get from an ultimate goal to concrete instructions for action? Pigliucci thinks he has found an insurmountable stumbling block in that science cannot compel us to accept any criterion that we might use to judge an action moral: “science cannot make us agree on whether that particular criterion (pain) is moral or not.” But Harris is perfectly aware of this complaint:

    It is essential to see that the demand for radical justifiaction leveled by the moral skeptic could not be met by any branch of science. … It would be impossible to prove that our definition of science is correct, because our standards of proof will be built into any proof we would offer. What evidence could prove that we should value evidence? What logic could demonstrate the importance of logic? (TML, 37)

    This very closely follows John Stuart Mill’s views on the matter, expressed a mere 140 years earlier:

    Questions of ultimate ends are not amenable to direct proof. Whatever can be proved to be good, must be so by being shown to be a means to something admitted to be good without proof. The medical art is proved to be good, by its conducing to health; but how is it possible to prove that health is good? (Utilitarianism, Ch I)

    Science cannot show us what truth is, but it can show us what is true. Similarly, science cannot show why we should value well-being, but it can show us, and in that sense determine, what we should do in order to achieve it. This is not an over-reaching of science into fields where it does not belong. Also, Pigliucci’s accusation of “scientism” (a hopelessly ill-defined term, or as Dan Dennett says: nonsense) is miles wide of the mark:

    if we can define “science” as any type of rational-empirical inquiry into “facts” (the scare quotes are his) then we are talking about something that is not at all what most readers are likely to understand when they pick up a book with a subtitle that says “How Science Can Determine Human Values” (my italics).

    Three things. One, that definition of science is hardly controversial. Two, the assertion about readers’ presuppositions would need supporting evidence. And three, Harris explicitly deals with this objection—in the same note that Pigliucci quotes to support his charge of “scientism”:

    Granted, one doesn’t generally think of events like assassinations as “scientific” facts, but the murder of President Kennedy is as fully corroborated a fact as can be found anywhere, and it would betray a profoundly unscientific frame of mind to deny that it occurred. I think “science,” therefore, should be considered a specialized branch of a larger effort to form true beliefs about events in our world. (TML, 195n2)

    Contrary to Pigliucci’s assertion about what readers expect when picking up a science book, and contrary to the assertion that Harris’s conception of science is well out of the mainstream, we think of all sorts of disciplines as “sciences” (including, of course, all historical sciences, from history to palaentology). Moreover, we would also characterise the systematic inquiry into a murder as “scientific”—to quote Bertrand Russell, “Whatever knowledge is attainable, must be attained by scientific methods” (Religion and Science). To make matters worse, even Pigliucci’s attempted separation of philosophy from science is not successful—Russell, again, on the continuousness of the two:

    those questions which are already capable of definite answers are placed in the sciences, while those only to which, at present, no definite answer can be given, remain to form the residue which is called philosophy. (The Problems of Philosophy, Ch. XV)

    In a sense, then, philosophy is the rational exploration of hypothetical space, where science is that of real space. In its pursuit of truth, moreover, science necessarily generates its own values. Harris dutifully points this out in the Introduction of TML:

    the very idea of “objective” knowledge (i.e., knowledge acquired through honest observation and reasoning) has values built into it, as every effort we make to discuss facts depends upon principles that we must first value (e.g., logical consistency, reliance on evidence, parsimony, etc.). (TML, 11)

    This idea of “an ethic for science which derives directly from its own activity” is one that was possibly first elaborated on by Jacob Bronowski in 1956:

    The values of science derive neither from the virtues of its members, nor from the finger-wagging codes of conduct by which every profession reminds itself to be good. They have grown out of the practice of science, because they are the inescapable conditions for its practice. (Science and Human Values, 69)

    Which, incidentally, leads him to reject the idea of an is–ought problem outright: “‘Ought’ is dictated by ‘is’ in the actual inquiry for knowledge.” (Origins of Knowledge and Imagination, 129) This, of course, nicely ties in with what Jerry Coyne, among others, has maintained about the status of methodological naturalism as a principle in science, which has been falsely equated with religious dogmas—all of which is of some consequence in the accommodationism debate.

    What all this amounts to is another idea of Bronowski’s, a “social injunction”, as he calls it, and another stab at Hume: “We ought to act in such a way that what is true can be verified to be so.” (Science and Human Values, 66) Pigliucci’s review repeatedly runs afoul of this principle. The two most instructive cases will have to suffice to make this point.

    First, the use of painfully inadequate arguments, especially the appeal to authority. In reference to Harris’s well-argued consideration of lie-detecting neuroscience, Pigliucci has this to say: “If these sentences do not conjure the specter of a really, really scary Big Brother in your mind, I suggest you get your own brain scanned for signs of sociopathology.” That anyone, let alone a professor of philosophy, should literally argue, ‘If you don’t agree with me, you should get your head examined’, is deplorable.

    Second, inaccurate and misleading representation of what the other person says. Harris excuses his omission of philosophical jargon by (only half-jokingly, I suspect) asserting that it every piece of it “directly increases the amount of boredom in the universe” (TML, 197n1). Pigliucci says this amounts to a dismissal of all of metaethics, that Harris finds it boring, that TML as a whole “shies away from philosophy”. (And so on and all-too-predictably on.) Not only is this implausible even given the quote that Pigliucci used; Harris explicitly gives his reasons for “not engaging more directly with the academic literature on moral philosophy”: he arrived at his position not because of that literature, but for independent logical reasons; and he wants to make the discussion as accessible to lay readers as possible. Again, in such a way to distort a position beyond recognition is deplorable.

    Paraphrasing Wittgenstein, we can thus arrive at a simple philosophical injunction: ‘whereof one cannot speak fairly, thereof one should be silent.’ Which, it unfortunately needs to be added, is not to say that anybody should shut up. It is a friendly reminder, in the interest of all concerned, to raise your game.