Author: Ophelia Benson

  • M. Arouet

    Voltaire. The Philosophical Dictionary. Good read.

    What can be said in answer to a man who says he will rather obey God than men, and who consequently feels certain of meriting heaven by cutting your throat? When once fanaticism has gangrened the brain of any man the disease may be regarded as nearly incurable. I have seen Convulsionaries who, while speaking of the miracles of St. Paris, gradually worked themselves up to higher and more vehement degrees of agitation till their eyes became inflamed, their whole frames shook, their countenances became distorted by rage, and had any man contradicted them he would inevitably have been murdered.

    Sound familiar at all?

    There is no other remedy for this epidemical malady than that spirit of philosophy, which, extending itself from one to another, at length civilizes and softens the manners of men and prevents the access of the disease. For when the disorder has made any progress, we should, without loss of time, fly from the seat of it, and wait till the air has become purified from contagion. Law and religion are not completely efficient against the spiritual pestilence. Religion, indeed, so far from affording proper nutriment to the minds of patients laboring under this infectious and infernal distemper, is converted, by the diseased process of their minds, into poison. These malignant devotees have incessantly before their eyes the example of Ehud, who assassinated the king of Eglon; of Judith, who cut off the head of Holofernes while in bed with him; of Samuel, hewing in pieces King Agag; of Jehoiada the priest, who murdered his queen at the horse-gate. They do not perceive that these instances, which are respectable in antiquity, are in the present day abominable. They derive their fury from religion, decidedly as religion condemns it.

    The ‘respectable in antiquity’ thing is irony. Very Gibbonesque – which is to say, Gibbon’s irony was very Voltairean. Gibbon is a good read too.

  • ‘Teach the Conflict’

    No matter how bogus the conflict may be.

  • Save Berhanu Nega

    Ethiopian government arrested Nega and six others after protest over election irregularities.

  • Ellen Willis on Russell Jacoby on Utopianism

    We want more freedom, but we fear it.

  • Drunk Women Can be Raped With Impunity

    Old idea that one has to be conscious to consent no longer applies.

  • Boy Sits Still All Day, Draws Crowds

    Said to have been that way since May, but followers have been concealing him at night.

  • A Happy Tune

    Time for some heavy-duty mocking and sneering. At the Guardian’s ‘Islam Awareness Week’, for a start.

    Religious hate crime is on the increase in the UK, according to the latest Crown Prosecution Service statistics – a worrying trend that the government is attempting to tackle in its Racial and Religious Hatred Bill, which creates the new offence of incitement to religious hatred…Much of the Islamophobia experienced by young British Muslims is the result of a legacy of ignorance about the beliefs and practices of Islam.

    No doubt. But, sadly, some of it – depending on how the Guardian is defining ‘Islamophobia,’ of course – could also be the result of knowledge about some of the beliefs and practices of Islam. Especially if by ‘Islamophobia’ the Guardian means simply dislike or disapprobation of some of the beliefs and practices of Islam, that could well be the result of knowledge rather than ignorance. This article seems to assume that more knowledge of beliefs and practices of Islam will necessarily lead to increased admiration of them. But that is merely an assumption.

    The article points us toward this site where we find this lovely page on ‘Family Life’.

    It is usual for the men to meet at cafes or meeting places and women to meet together at one of their homes. It is rare for men and women to meet publicly. In the home visitors will be met by the man of the house, women stay in the background.

    Ah. In other words, it is usual for men to be able to go out in the world and to go wherever they like, and it is usual for women to be confined at home. Men act like grown-up people, women act like stupid frightened children. That is usual.

    On the seventh day of a baby’s life his or her hair will be shaved off and the equivalent weight of gold given to the poor. An offering follows. Two sheep if it is a boy and one if it is a girl.

    Because, of course, a boy is worth twice as much as a girl. Obviously.

    They are expected to work hard in school, can be treated quite strictly, (especially the girls), and expected to spend time with their families.

    A sinister note.

    Arranged marriages are usual with in a muslim community. Most young people are happy that their parents will make a good choice for them.

    Ah. Asked them, have you? Asked, especially, the women? Asked them with no men present? (No, of course not, because you can’t, so that’s out.) How exactly do you know, then? And why do you even think it’s likely?

    It is very unusual for a Muslim man to have more than one wife. He is able to have up to four but he must be able to provide fairly and equally for all of them. Occasionally it might happen that if a Muslim man’s wife cannot have children or she becomes very ill and needs looking after, then the man will take a second wife but it is not common.

    Oh is that how it works! Occasionally if a woman becomes very ill, her husband will take a second wife to look after the first one – I see! I didn’t realize that. What a charming custom. One wonders what the second wife gets out of it, but it’s certainly nice for the first one.

    Once a Muslim lady become a wife her first responsibility is to look after the home and family.

    And of course because of the arranged marriage thing, along with the being worth only one sheep instead of two thing, and the not being allowed to go out thing, a Muslim lady doesn’t really have the option of not marrying at all, so if she happens to be a person who doesn’t in fact want to look after a home and family, well that’s just too fucking bad, isn’t it.

    Divorce is not really acceptable to Muslims. It is considered to be the worst possible occurrence, it is distasteful and only allowed only in extreme circumstances though of course it is a legal option even if not a cultural one. If she is divorced a woman becomes the responsibility of the men in her family.

    And on those vanishingly rare occasions when divorce does happen, it is made beautifully easy because the man has only to recite the talaq three times and hey presto that is the divorce. (This rule does not apply to the woman.) The men in the family of a divorced woman are not always best pleased to see her, and are sometimes apt to kill her in a fit of temper when they think she might have done something to their honour by being a divorced woman. If she doesn’t have any men in her family, she starves, of course. And quite right too.

    So there you are, children; now all your nasty Islamophobia will go away, won’t it. A little knowledge works wonders.

  • If They Could They Would

    Hey, happy anniversary, Origin of Species. It was published on this date in 1859.

    Susan Jacoby writes in Mother Jones:

    When the Supreme Court…ordered two Kentucky counties to dismantle courthouse displays of the Ten Commandments, Justice Antonin Scalia declared that the Court majority was wrong because the nation’s historical practices clearly indicate that the Constitution permits “disregard of polytheists and believers in unconcerned deities, just as it permits the disregard of devout atheists.” The Constitution permits no such thing: It has nothing to say about God, gods, or any form of belief or nonbelief – apart from its absolute prohibition, in Article 6, against any religious test for public office and the First Amendment’s familiar declaration that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” From reading Scalia, a Martian (or polytheist) might infer that the establishment clause actually concludes with the phrase “free exercise thereof – as long as the faithful worship one God whose eye is on the sparrow.” The justice’s impassioned dissent…is a revealing portrait of the historical revisionism at the heart of the Christian conservative campaign to convince Americans that the separation of church and state is nothing more than a lie of the secularist left.

    Yet another reason truth matters. Historical revisionism is a fine thing – it is, as Eric Foner points out, what historians do – if it gets things right, but if it gets them wrong, it’s horrid. The kind that tells the truth about what happened at Nanjing and Auschwitz, in Armenia and Bosnia, is good; the kind that tells lies about it is bad. It’s no good pretending there is no difference, or that the difference doesn’t matter.

    The revisionist script goes something like this: The founders were devout men who based their new government on Christian teaching (the religiously correct invariably use the term “Judeo-Christian”); they were unconcerned about religious interference with government and cared only about government interference with religion; and, last but not least, there was no tension between secularism and religion in the nation’s halcyon early decades, because everyone accepted God as the source of civic authority.

    That bit about caring only about government interference with religion, not religious interference with government, is why we so often hear that fatuous (and ominous, and irritating) parrot-cry that Joe Lieberman is so fond of: ‘The founders gave us freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.’ Well at least that has the virtue of honesty – at least we know where we are with that. No, you don’t get to have freedom from religion, the government can force it on you if it feels like it. Sit still and be quiet.

    Confronted with the Constitution’s silence on divine authority, revisionists repeatedly fall back on the specious argument that since everyone took God’s omnipotence for granted in the 18th century, there was no need for the framers to make a special point of mentioning the deity. If that were true, there would have been no bitter debates in the states about the nonreligious language of the Constitution…It is ludicrous to suggest that men as precise in their use of words as Adams and Madison would, perhaps in their haste to get home to their wives, have simply forgotten to mention God.

    Besides which it’s not even true that everyone took God’s omnipotence for granted in the 18th century. There have always been atheists, and there were more of them than hitherto usual in the 18th century.

    Arguments relying on custom, bolstered by personal religious belief, have great potency when presented to a public with a shaky grasp of even the most fundamental facts of American history…”Oh! Lord!” Adams complained in 1817 to his old friend and rival Jefferson. “Do you think that a Protestant Popedom is annihilated in America? Do you recollect, or have you ever attended to the ecclesiastical Strifes in Maryland, Pensilvania, New York, and every part of New England? What a mercy it is that these People cannot whip and crop, and pillory and roast, as yet in the U.S.! If they could they would.” If they could they would. Wherever and whenever they could, they did – and that is why the revolutionary generation bequeathed the unique gift of a secular Constitution to future Americans.

    Let’s hope we can hang on to it.

  • Some Kinds of ‘Diversity’ are not Educational

    ‘Diverse’ accounts of origin of species don’t belong in science class, for instance.

  • It’s Islam Awareness Week, Children

    ‘The Muslim Council of Britain is an excellent first port of call.’

  • Intro to Islamic Family Life for Children

    It is usual for the men to meet at cafes and women to meet at home. Isn’t that lovely, children?

  • Vatican Bars Gays from Priesthood

    Unofficial translation of full text.

  • Naughty Marlowe, Naughty Tamburlaine

    What was that about self-censorship again?

  • Simulate This

    Mick Hartley commented on a review of Postmodern Psychoanalysis Observed yesterday. The review says some odd things.

    A key tenet of postmodernism is that both internal and external reality are social constructions, reflecting (among other things) an individual’s cultural background, his language and his past and present experience. In the empirical setting, postmodernism has led to a resurgence of constructivist research and an emphasis on cultural relativism in any discourse.

    Tenet. A key tenet. What is a tenet, anyway? Just kind of like an attitude? A hunch? A wild surmise? An ‘as if’? A sillybuggers idea that you know isn’t true but like to mess around with anyway? Something you like to say to make people roll their eyes and ask to see your travel papers? My Concise Oxford says it’s a principle, dogma, doctrine. Yeah, dogma – that fits. Because really – external reality is a social construction? Just like that? The objections to that are too obvious to be worth making – along the lines of ‘Okay, let’s see you jump off that building then.’ (Dawkins made the familiar observation about social constructionists at 30,000 feet.)

    It may be that what the reviewer means, and what some postmodernists mean, is that our ideas or knowledge or beliefs about external reality are social constructions – but then they really need to say that, don’t they. And it may also be that the reviewer and some postmodernists mean that external reality itself is a social construction – in which case they’re barking mad and not worth reading. And a third possibility is that they mean the first but say the second in order to confound and mislead the general public, in which case they’re posing irresponsible frauds and still less worth reading.

    In clinical setting, postmodernism has led to greater focus on narrative truth and skepticism regarding the relevance of objective research methods to all important psychological and psychopathological issues.

    Oh, has it. Has it indeed. How very convenient. Skepticism regarding the relevance of ‘objective’ research methods – because subjective, i.e. evidence-free hunch-based inner-knowledge-driven ‘research methods’ are so much better. Because ‘narrative truth’ i.e. whatever story anyone feels like telling is so much better than plain old non-adjectival truth. Narrative truth, story truth, fun truth, what I like to say truth, ego-puffing truth, dramatic truth, exciting truth, colourful truth – all so much better than the plain unadorned kind. Hooray for postmodernism.

    So to Baudrillard.

    All of our values are simulated. What is freedom? We have a choice between buying one car or buying another car? It’s a simulation of freedom.

    Really!? Is it! Nothing to do with – oh, let’s see – the freedom to talk to other people, even strangers, even people of (breathe deeply now, stay calm) the opposite sex? The freedom to work? The freedom to walk about in the world? The freedom to go to school, even to university, even to graduate school or law school or medical school? The freedom to read? The freedom to write? The freedom to say ‘No’ to a marriage to someone one doesn’t want to be married to? The freedom to walk around in the world with one’s entire head even including the face and the whole of the neck naked and unclothed and bare? The freedom to write poetry? The freedom to have a book of poetry published? The freedom to write a book of poetry and have it published and succeed and win a prize? The freedom to write a book of poetry and have it published and succeed and win a prize and not be murdered for it? Is that a simulation? I don’t know – I have all those freedoms, myself, and I have to say I don’t regard them as simulations. I might, if I didn’t know there are other people in the world – women, actually – who don’t have all those freedoms – who don’t in fact have any of them, not one – and who end up as bleeding heaps of flesh as a result – but I do know that, so I don’t.

    So I think Baudrillard is a damn fool for saying that. (It looks as if the interviewer thought so too. Good on her.)

  • Intelligent Design or Natural Design

    I’m going to begin by taking you on a personal tour of my own
    thinking about intelligent design over the past 60 years.

    It began in 1945 when I was a 14 year old at Mt Albert Grammar.
    Our Fourth Form English teacher decided we should learn the skills of
    debating. The topic chosen was “Creation versus Evolution”. And I, as an
    ardent young Baptist, volunteered, along with a Seventh Day Adventist,
    to take up the cudgels on behalf of Creation.

    But even before the debate began, I found myself cast in the role of
    devil’s advocate.

    While preparing, it dawned on me that the case against evolution
    foundered on an ambiguity between two meanings of the simple word
    “creation”: the concept of general creation, and the concept of special
    creation.

    To believe in the theological doctrine of general creation is merely
    to believe in a God who created the universe. Clearly, I could, without
    inconsistency, believe in general creation and also believe in the Theory
    of Evolution. I simply had to regard Darwinian natural selection as one of
    the laws of nature that God built into his creation.

    To believe in special creation is to believe in addition that God, in
    a series of subsequent acts, created the first living organisms and then, at
    different times, each of the different species.

    The God of special creation is an intervener in the operations of
    nature. The creator in whom I came to believe – for a while – is not.
    Making this simple distinction gave me temporary respite from the
    intellectual conflict in my mind at that time. I’d already become skeptical
    about the Genesis story of God’s recent rapid-fire creation. Like fifth
    century St. Augustine I concluded that these biblical literalists deserved
    to be “laughed to scorn” for their “utterly foolish and obviously untrue
    statements.”

    Adopting Augustine’s more figurative interpretation, I was able to
    reconcile my belief in intelligent design with belief in evolution.
    Renouncing the beliefs of theistic anti-evolutionists I adopted those of
    theistic evolutionists.

    So far, so good. But other questions soon arose.

    How about the doctrine of revelation, belief in which is a defining
    condition of being a theist? Could I really accept the Christian view that
    God had revealed himself in the words of the Old Testament prophets and
    the New Testament “Son of God”? Most of the stories had the quality of
    myth, not history. And many portrayed God as worse than Satan
    himself, his Son’s doctrine of hell-fire being most repugnant. Besides,
    why should I believe in this version of revelation rather than some other?
    There were numerous sacred texts, all claiming divine inspiration. If a
    supreme being existed and wanted to reveal himself to us, why didn’t he
    do so in an indisputably authoritative way? No rational answer being
    available to this or other questions I was asking, I soon came to abandon
    belief in all forms of revealed religion.

    Yet I still wasn’t ready to abandon the gods altogether. For a time I
    sought intellectual comfort in the best arguments of natural religion: the
    First Cause and Design arguments. Both have appeal to those who don’t
    believe in revelation but still believe there must be some sort of Supreme
    Being or Higher Power who made the universe the way it is.
    Without being aware of the fact, I was embracing the position of
    the deists – thinkers like Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, Voltaire, and
    David Hume – none of whose writings I’d yet read.

    But that embrace was brief. It didn’t take long to see that both their
    arguments faced the horns of a dilemma. Either the universe itself could
    exist without being designed or created, or the designing and creating
    deity must himself have been designed and created. So either we were left
    with the universe where we started or we launched ourselves on the path
    of an infinite regress.

    My mother, when I was but six years old, was flummoxed by my
    question, “Who made God?” Not surprising! You can’t explain why
    something exists rather than nothing by postulating the existence of
    something else as well. For then you’ve got two things whose existence
    demands to be explained. And appeal to a third, then a fourth, and so on,
    only increases the burden. Asking for explanations within the universe is profitable. But asking for explanations of the universe launches you on a quest for a cause that eludes you forever.

    The last residuum of my supernaturalistic beliefs eroded away
    about the same time. Having rejected the gods and devils of religion, I
    soon rejected all other beliefs in the paranormal: those countenanced by
    the Psychical Research Society – disembodied spirits, and the rest.
    Free at last, I embraced a wholly naturalistic ontology – a worldview
    that accepted the universe, it contents, and the laws of nature, as
    brute facts neither needing, nor capable of, further explanation. I had
    become an unabashed atheist (though a closet one while still living with
    my parents).

    That all occurred before my eighteenth birthday.

    Disenchanted with religion, I turned my interests to science and
    then to philosophy.

    I would happily have followed a career in science – especially
    Biology – had not the appeal of Philosophy been still stronger.

    The greatest philosophers in the analytic tradition (Aristotle, for
    example) aspired to the kind of wisdom that would enable them to put the
    competing demands of all belief-systems into some sort of perspective
    with a view to adjudicating between them. I shared their aspirations, and
    during my subsequent career as an academic philosopher developed some
    of the skills required for their achievement.

    Science, I came to realize, doesn’t rule out the possible existence of
    a supernatural world. It isn’t logically committed to metaphysical
    naturalism. But it is committed to methodological naturalism, the view
    that, in our attempts to understand how the world works, we should look
    for naturalistic explanations rather than taking easy recourse to
    supernatural ones. The successes of science in bridging the gaps that used
    to be plugged by the gods creates a strong presumption in favour of the
    idea that gods not only aren’t needed but don’t exist. It doesn’t prove, but
    it does probabilify to a high degree, the truth of metaphysical naturalism.
    And by the same token, it makes all supernatural beliefs highly
    improbable.

    In my own mind the battle over design had been fought and won. I
    subsequently looked on in dismay as the intellectual troglodytes of
    creationism – referred to as “Scientific Creationism” since the 60s – tried
    to resuscitate their old arguments, singling out remaining gaps in our
    understanding of biological phenomena as suitable places for inserting
    the hand of God. Why pick on the unknowns of evolution, I wondered?
    Why not invoke the almighty to explain what yet remained for science to
    discover about the precise mechanisms behind the occurrence of
    earthquakes, tsunamis, and hurricanes? Or diseases, for that matter? The
    Old Testament made God the direct cause of all such dread occurrences.
    Yet Creationists were silent on the issue.

    Over the years, I have increasingly come to appreciate the extent to
    which science gives evolutionary theory credentials as good as any other
    scientific theory. It rests on mutually supporting and interlocking
    empirical evidence drawn from a host of sciences: not just natural history,
    but cosmology, astronomy, physics, biochemistry, geology, plate
    tectonics, palaeontology, population genetics, ecology, anthropology,
    comparative anatomy, etc. Even Newton’s theory of gravitation and
    Einstein’s theory of relativity can’t claim such a broad interdisciplinary
    base.

    Evolutionary theory itself doesn’t pretend to explain biogenesis,
    how the first forms of life began. That is the province of other areas of
    science: organic chemistry and molecular biology among them. So far as
    I know scientists haven’t yet reached a consensus on which account will
    stand the test of scientific scrutiny. But there’s no good reason to suppose
    that present gaps in our understanding can’t be filled in future.

    Fast forward to the 1990s, and the latest kind of talk about
    intelligent design, sometimes referred to as “Intelligent Design Theory”
    (as if it were on a par with the grand theories of science) but nowadays
    more simply as “ID”.

    Contrary to many critics, the new ID movement isn’t merely a
    rehash of the earlier Scientific Creationism of Henry Morris and Duane
    Gish. ID’s high priests – the likes of lawyer Philip Johnson, biochemist
    Michael Behe, and philosopher William Dembski – have introduced new
    elements into the old debate.

    First, they have introduced an alleged criterion for determining just
    which phenomena call most loudly for the agency of intelligence.
    According to them the hand of an intelligent designer is needed to explain
    what they call the “irreducible complexity” of some organisms – those
    whose simpler parts, in their view, would not have had survival value and
    hence could not have been put together by the mechanisms of evolution.
    Alleged examples include biogenesis, the flagella of E. coli, and the
    human immune system.

    Second, the new ID “theory” has introduced – perhaps unwittingly –
    the possibility of a third theistic position between that of theistic
    antievolutionists who reject evolution in its entirety and theistic
    evolutionists who accept it in its entirety.

    Behe, for example, accepts the broad outline of evolutionary
    theory. He accepts the idea “that all organisms share a common ancestor”,
    for instance. But he insists that irreducible complexity can only be
    explained by the intervention of an intelligent designer. Behe accepts
    evolution so long as it is punctuated with acts of creation. His position
    can be described as that of a theistic quasi-evolutionist.

    The chattering classes seldom explore the details of Behe’s
    position. What matters to them is that here we have a biochemist
    proclaiming that no-one working in his discipline has managed to
    understand how life works at the molecular level. The result of their
    cumulative failure, Behe claims, “is a loud, clear, piercing cry of
    ‘Design’.” Continuing, he writes: “the result is so unambiguous and so
    significant that it must be ranked as one of the greatest achievements of
    the history of science.”

    As for just who did the designing, Behe is deliberately vague. His
    own candidate for that role is the God of evangelicals. But his highly
    generalized talk of a “designer” leaves it open as to which particular god
    or gods did the designing. Like his fellow ID proponents, he casts the net
    of verbal entrapment wide enough to snare the sentiments of anyone who
    merely thinks some “higher power” did it.

    Little wonder that ID has beguiled many who should know better.

    A case in point is that of Antony Flew, one of the icons of
    twentieth century atheism, a fellow-philosopher and – along with me and
    Richard Dawkins, Richard Leakey, and others – an Honorary Associate of
    the New Zealand Association of Rationalists and Humanists.

    To my dismay, Flew recently announced that he now believes in
    some sort of God. Why? Mainly because the claims of ID had convinced
    him that “It has become inordinately difficult even to begin to think about
    constructing a naturalistic theory of the evolution of that first reproducing
    organism.” His conclusion was that “intelligence must have been
    involved.”

    As for which intelligence did the designing, Flew has vacillated. He
    has flirted with a number of different candidates, the gods of pantheists,
    of deists, of theistic evolutionists, and of theistic quasi-evolutionists. He
    has even given hints of believing in the God of theistic anti-evolutionists
    by saying that the book of Genesis “might be scientifically accurate.”

    It seemed to me that Flew had lost his bearings. So, as an old
    acquaintance from the 1960s, I decided to tell him so. Hence my “Open
    Letter to Professor Antony Flew” now available on the Secular Web and
    about to be printed in the journal of the NZ Rationalists and Humanists.

    I mailed Flew an advance copy of my Open Letter, together with a
    covering note. I reminded him that famed Oxford philosopher Gilbert
    Ryle had been mentor to both of us and that Ryle used to talk of
    Philosophy as an exercise in “conceptual geography”, the exploration of
    the “logical liaisons” of various concepts, doctrines and theories. I
    therefore enclosed a copy of a logical map which I said “should enable
    you to keep clearly in view the way I see the conceptual terrain into
    which you have ventured (a terrain in which, I submit, you have lost your
    way)”.

    Click here for a PDF of the logical map.

    CONCEPTS OF DESIGN AND THEIR LOGICAL LIAISONS

    My map doesn’t tell you what positions on the terrain you should
    choose as the habitation for your beliefs. But it does tell you, once you
    have found your home, what you are committed to accepting and
    rejecting as a matter of logic and probability theory.

    Let’s begin with the position at the top left-hand corner of my map.

    Labelled “Natural design” this represents the set of beliefs of those
    who, like Richard Dawkins, believe that the natural world comprises all
    that exists and that the laws of nature that describe its operations suffice,
    by themselves, to design and produce all its complexities, from the first
    living creatures to its most complex structures like the human brain.
    Eighteenth century William Paley had argued that these could only have
    been produced by a Great Watchmaker. Dawkins argues to the contrary,
    that the laws of nature themselves – including those of evolution – have
    worked by themselves to produce all the wonders of nature before which
    we stand in awe. Nature is the designer: it is a “Blind Watchmaker” that
    has no prevision of its final product.

    Now let’s look at some of the logical liaisons between natural
    design and other theories.

    Note, first, that it is inconsistent (as shown by the crossed line)
    with all versions of intelligent design, such as those described in the
    rounded boxes to its right, plus a host of others that don’t usually feature
    in the current debate so are not depicted here.

    Note, too, that each of these different concepts of intelligent design
    is a logical contrary of each of the others. Hence all could be false.

    Obviously enough, belief in natural design implies (see the arrow)
    belief in metaphysical naturalism, a world view whose ontology
    comprises all and only the set of natural (physical/material) objects, their
    simple and emergent properties and relations. Naturalism has no room,
    for instance, for the idea that our minds could survive our bodily deaths.
    To suppose the contrary would be to commit what I call the “Cheshire
    Cat” fallacy, as depicted in Lewis Carroll’s story of the cat that faded
    away until only its grin remained. As if a grin could have substantial
    existence independent of the physical face of which it was a property!

    Although naturalism is incompatible with belief in supernatural
    gods it isn’t incompatible with a certain kind of “god”-talk, e.g., the so-called
    “God” of pantheists such as the seventeenth century philosopher
    Spinoza and latter-day physicists Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking.
    They, however use the term in a semantically deviant way. For them God
    is identical with nature. Thus, when asked whether he believed in God,
    Hawking answered: “Yes, if by God is meant the embodiment of the laws
    of the universe.” The kind of design that pantheists admit, and before
    which they stand in awe, is precisely that of naturalist design. Hence,
    pantheists are metaphysical naturalists.

    Now let’s turn to Methodological Naturalism, i.e., the scientific
    method of searching for natural causes. Philosopher of science, Karl
    Popper, called it the process of conjecture and refutation. Likewise,
    immunologist and Nobel laureate Sir Peter Medawar described it as “the
    invention of a possible world, or of a tiny fraction of that world. The
    conjecture is then exposed to criticism to find out whether that imagined
    world is anything like the real one.”

    Religionists frequently object to the fact that science restricts itself
    to the search for natural causes only. Why, they ask, do scientists close
    their minds to the possibility of supernatural ones?

    There’s a very good reason. There are too many possible deities
    whose agency can be invoked. Infinitely many, in fact. Just think of the
    range of possibilities embraced within theism. Judaism, Christianity and
    Islam are just the start of it. Each has its own sects and offshoots. And
    more are in the making every day.

    Mind you, there are infinitely many possible natural agents that can
    also be imagined. So the difference doesn’t lie in mere numbers. It lies,
    rather, in the fact that naturalistic explanations are answerable to the
    tribunal of experience and that this tribunal eliminates any that don’t pass
    its tests. Supernaturalistic hypotheses, by way of contrast, simply don’t
    admit any evidence to count against them. But a hypothesis that’s
    compatible with anything and everything that might occur can’t explain
    why in fact this occurs rather than that. In order to be a candidate for scientific status, a hypothesis must be falsifiable. That is to say, it must be possibly false. Only then can the screening practices of science get rid of those hypotheses that are actually false, and thus bring us closer to the truth. There aren’t any such practices for the evaluation of
    supernaturalistic beliefs.

    Methodological naturalism has produced the whole panoply of
    empirically established facts and theories that we now draw upon to
    explain why the world works as it does. Supernaturalistic explanations
    have fallen by the way. The graveyard of the gods isn’t yet full. But gone
    are the deities of the ancient Egyptians, Vikings, Aztecs, and the like, all
    of whom once played a role in filling the gaps in human understanding of
    how nature works. Relatively few of those gaps are left. And filling them
    with any surviving gods won’t help.

    Like other scientific theories, evolutionary theory is falsifiable.
    Likewise, with prototype biogenetic theories. Both would be shown false,
    for example, if there were conclusive evidence of the universe having
    been created, as Lord Kelvin thought, somewhere between 20 and 400
    million years ago (about 98 million, he finally thought). For then there
    would not have been enough time for nature to do its work.
    That the universe has been in existence for probably 12-15 billion
    years, and the earth for about 4.5 billion years is now well attested.
    Hence the logical conflict between science and all those creation
    myths, including those of Maori and Aborigine, which commit
    themselves to more recent beginnings.

    Consider the creation myth of Scientific Creationists. By adding up
    all the “begats” in the Old Testament adherents of that myth calculate the
    beginnings of the universe at 4,000 BC, and that of Noah’s Flood at about
    2,400 BC.

    What can they say when confronted by evidence of the age of the
    cosmos and our planet? Or evidence that life began on earth over 4 billion
    years ago, that dinosaurs became extinct some 63 million years ago, and
    that fossils of our hominid ancestors have been shown by potassiumargon
    dating to be well over 3 million years old?

    They could, perhaps, say that all this evidence shows their beliefs
    to be false, hence falsifiable, and that it therefore qualifies on this score at
    least for the description “scientific”.

    But, of course, they don’t say this. Rather, they tack on an ancillary
    hypothesis that “saves” their story by making it unfalsifiable.
    They adopt the ploy of nineteenth century Philip Gosse and say
    that God created the universe with all this contrary evidence – all the
    accoutrements of grand deception – built into it. They can then say that
    God put the fossils, for example, in place so as to “test our faith”. It
    seems not to bother them that this hypothesis makes God the perpetrator
    of an enormous hoax as well. A great deceiver, not just a great designer.
    Of course, a God who would play that sort of mind-game could also have
    created the universe just two minutes ago, replete with all evidence to the
    contrary including our pseudo-memories of having been alive well before
    that. There’s no way to disprove that creation story either.

    Passing from such absurdities, let’s move on to the kind of
    intelligent design promoted by those I’ve called theistic quasievolutionists.

    How scientific is it? Although scientists can literally see
    complexity in the biological world, especially at the molecular level, they
    can’t, even metaphorically, see the irreducibility of any complex organs
    or organisms. Behe can’t produce empirical evidence of irreducibility. He
    therefore argues for it using linguistic legislation. So you don’t know how
    nature could have been assembled the parts of an organism exhibiting
    complexity? Label the complexity “irreducible” and attribute it to an
    intelligent designer.

    His argument is a bad one, a form of the Argument from Ignorance
    – a rehash of the “God of the Gaps” fallacy. Faith-based. Not evidence-based. In any case, the new ID “theory” doesn’t pinpoint the identity of the
    supposed designer. It could perhaps, as Dembski admits, be a space alien.
    Or, we might add, the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The vague postulate that
    the designer is some intelligent being or other isn’t falsifiable. So ID
    theory doesn’t even meet this requirement for scientific status.

    This brings us the position of those I’ve called theistic
    evolutionists. They don’t have a problem about accepting the findings of
    science in general or of evolution in particular. And they don’t lay claim
    to scientific status for the articles of their faith.

    But their position is still fraught with problems, especially that of
    competing revelations. Like all theists, they believe in an intelligent
    designer who reveals himself in some sacred text or other. But which
    text? The Bible? The Koran? The Book of Mormon? So many
    alternatives. And the choice between them is usually settled by unchosen
    circumstances of birth and upbringing.

    And there’s another problem. Suppose you’ve settled on the text
    favoured by most ID supporters: the Bible. Then, whether you’re a
    biblical literalist or figurativist, you’re faced with a dilemma. Either God
    doesn’t mean what he says in his texts, or he doesn’t know how to say
    what he does mean. So either his word can’t be relied on, or he’s
    linguistically incompetent. Neither quite fits with the theistic concept of a
    perfect being.

    Retreat from revelation, then, and opt for the simplest form of
    intelligent design, that of the deists.

    Two insurmountable problems remain.

    If you think an intelligent designer designed the universe, then how
    about the unsavoury aspects of his design? Disasters like earthquakes,
    tsunamis, and hurricanes. Distress, devastation and death caused by
    diseases like Alzheimer’s, cancer, and the ID theorists’ favourite: the E.
    coli bacterium. If complexity of design demonstrates supreme
    intelligence, then by the same token the “god-awful” nature of much of
    that design demonstrates supremely malevolent intelligence. Is that the
    concept of a designer that you want to subscribe to?

    And finally, there remains the design dilemma I talked about
    earlier. If you feel that rationality requires you to look for an explanation
    of the universe in a realm beyond it, then you’ll have to find an
    explanation of that other world as well. Or do you think you can stop just
    one tier up? We know that the spatio-temporal world exists. Why not stop
    there and accept it as a brute fact? Why postulate a creator and then –
    refusing to set foot on the infinite regress of explanations – take his
    existence, instead, as a brute fact? Isn’t it more comforting, as well as
    more rational, to believe in design by impersonal forces of nature rather
    than design by a personal deity who’s guilty of wanting it that way?

    Raymond Bradley is an Emeritus Professor of Philosophy in New Zealand.

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