Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Preach it, brother! A regular shower of blessings from Saint Charles Darwin

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Hiram Caton,  the retired Aussie political science prof who enjoys sending up the currently raging Darwin cult, writes to say that he has now drunk deep from the “clear-thinking oasis” available at Richard Dawkins’s site.

And he sends back this message to the peoples who still sit in darkness and have not yet seen the great light:

I just completed my pilgrimage to the ‘clear-thinking oasis’, as the shrine is called, the RichardDawkins.net. An inspiring, edifying experience that filled my cup with a rosary of blessings.

Marvellous portraits of Mr. Dawkins etched him indelibly on my mind. And the fulsome library of DVDs: The Enemies of Reason, the Root of All Evil, the Four Horsemen, and the most recent, The Genius of Charles Darwin, which takes novitiates into the inner sanctum–Richard Dawkins’ splendid library.

He shows us his first edition copy of The Origin of Species and whispers that it’s ‘not just the most precious book in my library, but the most precious book in the library of our species’.

I suddenly realized that it’s the TRUE holy book and that my Darwin doubts exploit the shadows between Reason and the Root of Evil, Superstition. I cleansed my mind by accepting that it’s Either/Or: Dawkins and Reason or THEM. The reward was immediate sense of exalted freedom!!

In addition to DVDs, the site offers novitiates a variety of charms and amulets that express the conversion to clear-thinking: T-shirts, bumper stickers, coffee mugs which convey the message of Dawkins’ outreach, the ‘Out campaign’ (copied from the gay/lesbian outing).

The message is simple: Look at me, I am a proud ATHEIST. Lots of potential here, like ‘I’m a SELFISH GENE’, or, ‘ABOLISH the Archbishop’. And the Four Horsemen? What or who could they be? Why none other than the Four Evangels–Dawkins, Dennett, Chris Hutchins, and Sam Harris, chatting about the evils of religion and the blessings of clear-thinking.

But wait: which one is Pestilence? which is Famine? Death? The acolyte’s acquired clear thinking is left to figure it out.

The active atheists assure us that understanding their gospel is easy. Thus, in the Genius of Charles Darwin, Dawkins interacts with school kids, shows them fossils, and tells them that natural selection is a simple idea that they can understand. That should be enough, but they persist in their faith.

The Four Horsemen also take this view: if you just impartially consider the facts, and refuse to comply with social demands, why you are free! This is pretty much a repetition of modern rationalist conviction, although the French enlighteners realized that if you want mass conversion, propaganda and the guillotine are helps. But isn’t something missing? Why is religion historically so ancient, and so persistent even when glamour icons from Madonna to Hugh Hefner market emancipated selfhood with huge success? Might there be an evolutionary explanation of religion that links it with human sociability and the ‘struggle for existence’? Dawkins thinks not. Natural selection has given us the big brain capable of emancipating ourselves from our apelike past: we use contraceptives to thwart the drive to reproduce. Well, not all evolutionists agree. There is another point of view at his own Oxford University, where the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion is in the midst of an extensive, well-funded investigation of the evolutionary origins of religion.

Let me wind this up with a quotation from Thomas Huxley that expresses the epitome of the clear-thinking oasis. In an essay, the Influence on Morality of the Decline in Religious Belief, Huxley delivers his acid judgment: ‘Few social evils are of greater magnitude than uninstructed and unchastened religious fanaticism; no personal habit more surely degrades the conscience and the intellect than blind and unhesitating obedience to unlimited authority’. This was written in 1877, after France’s revolutionary turmoils created secular fanaticisms able to surpass the religious variety.

And, like I always say, keep those shards and fetters coming!

Also, just up at The Post-Darwinist:

Darwin’s odd musings on circumcision: Believe whatever you like … he certainly did!

Preach it, brother! A regular shower of blessings from Saint Charles Darwin

Intelligent design and popular culture: Design acknowledged – embarrassingly – in stone

Expelled movie’s intelligent design theorists only the tip of the iceberg?

Intellectual freedom in Canada: Political science profs nervous about coming here …

Big new fossil find in northern Canada

Aussie prof on Darwin’s fibs

 

Comments
Denyse O'Leary (3), If you are correct, and IMO you are, a partial parallel might be the "hard problem" of the absence of perpetual motion machines.Paul Giem
August 27, 2008
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Yes, thanks, Matthew. The point you raise about early art is critical because, as Mario and I have discussed in The Spiritual Brain, the evidence suggests that human consciousness developed quite suddenly and did not go through a long Darwinian selection from ape to brute to oaf to somewhat-less-of-an-oaf-but-not-yet-a ... and so forth. That is part of the "hard problem" of consciousness, which is a hard problem in part because many workers are determined to find a solution that probably doesn't exist. That is, if - as I think likely - Somewhat-Less-of-an-Oaf-but-Not-Yet-a never actually existed AND we may not seek any other solution, the problem should be relabelled the "impossible" problem of consciousness. But remember who made it impossible - the materialists themselves.O'Leary
August 27, 2008
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http://creationsafaris.com/crev200808.htm#20080826a "Early Art Confounds Evolutionists" Another interesting article. It tells us that: “The fundamental importance of Chauvet is to show that the capacity of Homo sapiens to engage in artistic expression did not go through a linear evolution over many thousands of years,” says cave art expert Gilles Tosello of the University of Toulouse (UT), France. “It was there from the beginning”MatthewTan
August 26, 2008
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off topic http://creationsafaris.com/crev200808.htm#20080826a A number of interesting articles there: 1. "Human Skeletons Found in Sahara" - where you expect to find dinosaurs 2. "Flatlife Has More Genes Than It Needs" - front-loading of placozoan 3."Neanderthals Win Toolmaking Olympics"- the myth that the Neanderthal Man is less evolved or subhuman http://www.newscientist.com/channel/life/mg19926701.000-the-forgotten-scandal-of-the-soviet-apeman.html about man-ape hybridization experiment by Soviet Scientist inspired by Darwinism;MatthewTan
August 26, 2008
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