Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

A reply to Dr Dawkins’ September Playboy interview

Categories
Atheism
Culture
Darwinism
Philosophy
Religion
Science
science education
Society
worldview
Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

 

In an interview with Playboy, September just past, Dr Dawkins made some dismissive remarks  on the historicity of Jesus, in the context of having made similarly dismissive talking points about Intelligent Design.  As UD News noted:

PLAYBOY: What is your view of Jesus?

DAWKINS: The evidence he existed is surprisingly shaky. The earliest books in the New Testament to be written were the Epistles, not the Gospels. It’s almost as though Saint Paul and others who wrote the Epistles weren’t that interested in whether Jesus was real. Even if he’s fictional, whoever wrote his lines was ahead of his time in terms of moral philosophy.

PLAYBOY: You’ve read the Bible.

DAWKINS: I haven’t read it all, but my knowledge of the Bible is a lot better than most fundamentalist Christians’.

Since this matter is a part of the wider issues of atheism and its cultural agendas, which are often presented in the name of Science sez, I have now responded in some details, here.

On this wider cultural agenda of atheism issue, Lee Strobel’s video on The Case for Christ may also be of interest:

[vimeo 17960119]

One may wonder why such is relevant to an ID blog. Right from the very beginning, however, Darwin made it very clear that there was a wider socio-cultural, worldviews agenda connected to Darwin’s science. This may easily be discerned from his 1881 letter of reply to a man better known to history as Marx’s [de facto?] son-in-law, Aveling:

. . . though I am a strong advocate for free thought [–> NB: free-thought is an old synonym for skepticism, agnosticism or atheism] on all subjects, yet it appears to me (whether rightly or wrongly) that direct arguments against christianity & theism produce hardly any effect on the public; & freedom of thought is best promoted by the gradual illumination of men’s minds, which follows from the advance of science. It has, therefore, been always my object to avoid writing on religion, & I have confined myself to science. I may, however, have been unduly biassed by the pain which it would give some members of my family [–> NB: especially his wife, Emma], if I aided in any way direct attacks on religion.

The letter just cited makes it utterly clear that a key background motive for Darwin’s theorising on origins science was to put God out of a job, thus indirectly undermining the plausibility of believing in God.  In thinking and acting like this, he probably believed that he was championing enlightenment and science-led progress in their path to victory over backward, irrational but emotionally clung-to beliefs. And so his strategy was to lead in a science that was in his mind showing just how outdated and ill-founded the Judaeo-Christian theism that had dominated the West since Constantine in the 300’s was.

In short, there has always been an anti-Christian socio-cultural agenda closely tied to the rise of Darwinism. And, that has to be faced and is a legitimate part of the wider discussion, though of course — as my reply to Dawkins should make plain — it is tied more closely to principles of historical warrant than to science.

On the design issue Dawkins also raised during the interview, my 101 level response is here on.

A key point in that response is to take note of a basic problem, typified by prof Richard Lewontin (cf five cases in point here, including more details from Lewontin) who openly admitted to a priori evolutionary materialism in his NYRB review of Sagan’s The Demon-Haunted World:

. . . It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated . . . [[“Billions and billions of demons,” NYRB, Jan 1997.  Further excerpted and discussed here.]

Seminal ID thinker Prof Johnson”s reply in First Things that November is apt:

For scientific materialists the materialism comes first; the science comes thereafter. [[Emphasis original] We might more accurately term them “materialists employing science.” And if materialism is true, then some materialistic theory of evolution has to be true simply as a matter of logical deduction, regardless of the evidence. That theory will necessarily be at least roughly like neo-Darwinism, in that it will have to involve some combination of random changes and law-like processes capable of producing complicated organisms that (in Dawkins’ words) “give the appearance of having been designed for a purpose.”
. . . .   The debate about creation and evolution is not deadlocked . . . Biblical literalism is not the issue. The issue is whether materialism and rationality are the same thing. Darwinism is based on an a priori commitment to materialism, not on a philosophically neutral assessment of the evidence. Separate the philosophy from the science, and the proud tower collapses. [[Emphasis added.] [[The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism, First Things, 77 (Nov. 1997), pp. 22 – 25.]

So, while the scientific issues are central to UD’s purpose and are therefore given pride of place in our posts, wider concerns are also legitimately to be addressed, and we will not allow silly talking points about “Creationism in a cheap tuxedo” intimidate us from speaking to such issues.

For that matter, let us observe what that silly red-neck Bible-thumping Fundy — NOT, Plato had to say in solemn warning on the socio-cultural associations of evolutionary Materialism, in The Laws, Bk X, 2350 years ago:

Ath. . . . [[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [[i.e the classical “material” elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art, and that as to the bodies which come next in order-earth, and sun, and moon, and stars-they have been created by means of these absolutely inanimate existences. The elements are severally moved by chance and some inherent force according to certain affinities among them-of hot with cold, or of dry with moist, or of soft with hard, and according to all the other accidental admixtures of opposites which have been formed by necessity. After this fashion and in this manner the whole heaven has been created, and all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only. [[In short, evolutionary materialism premised on chance plus necessity acting without intelligent guidance on primordial matter is hardly a new or a primarily “scientific” view! Notice also, the trichotomy of causal factors:  (a) chance/accident, (b) mechanical necessity of nature, (c) art or intelligent design and direction.] . . . .

[[Thus, they hold that t]he Gods exist not by nature, but by art, and by the laws of states, which are different in different places, according to the agreement of those who make them; and that the honourable is one thing by nature and another thing by law, and that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.– [[Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT. (Cf. here for Locke’s views and sources on a very different base for grounding liberty as opposed to license and resulting anarchistic “every man does what is right in his own eyes” chaos leading to tyranny. )] These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might [[ Evolutionary materialism leads to the promotion of amorality], and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [[Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality “naturally” leads to continual contentions and power struggles; cf. dramatisation here],  these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is, to live in real dominion over others [[such amoral factions, if they gain power, “naturally” tend towards ruthless tyranny], and not in legal subjection to them.

 Just in case you think that is an improper, unwarranted projection unto Science from objectors to Darwin, let me cite the well known remarks by prof William Provine at the 1998 Darwin Day keynote speech at the University of Tennessee (this being his native state):

Naturalistic evolution has clear consequences that Charles Darwin understood perfectly. 1) No gods worth having exist; 2) no life after death exists; 3) no ultimate foundation for ethics exists; 4) no ultimate meaning in life exists; and 5) human free will is nonexistent . . . . 
 
The first 4 implications are so obvious to modern naturalistic evolutionists that I will spend little time defending them. Human free will, however, is another matter. Even evolutionists have trouble swallowing that implication. I will argue that humans are locally determined systems that make choices. They have, however, no free will . . . . Without free will, justification for revenge disappears and rehabilitation is the main job of judicial systems and prisons. [[NB: As C. S Lewis warned, in the end, this means: reprogramming through new conditioning determined by the power groups controlling the society and its prisons.] We will all live in a better society when the myth of free will is dispelled . . . .
How can we have meaning in life? When we die we are really dead; nothing of us survives.
Natural selection is a process leading every species almost certainly to extinction . . . Nothing could be more uncaring than the entire process of organic evolution. Life has been on earth for about 3.6 billion years. In less that one billion more years our sun will turn into a red giant. All life on earth will be burnt to a crisp. Other cosmic processes absolutely guarantee the extinction of all life anywhere in the universe. When all life is extinguished, no memory whatsoever will be left that life ever existed. [Evolution: Free Will and Punishment and Meaning in Life, Second Annual Darwin Day Celebration Keynote Address, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, February 12, 1998 (abstract).]
Such remarks find a striking parallel in Dawkins’ words in a 1995 Scientific American article:

Nature is not cruel, only pitilessly indifferent. This lesson is one of the hardest for humans to learn. We cannot accept that things might be neither good nor evil, neither cruel nor kind, but simply callous: indifferent to all suffering, lacking all purpose.

We humans have purpose on the brain. We find it difficult to look at anything without wondering what it is “for,” what the motive for it or the purpose behind it might be. The desire to see purpose everywhere is natural in an animal that lives surrounded by machines, works of art, tools and other designed artifacts – an animal whose waking thoughts are dominated by its own goals and aims . . . .

Somewhere between windscreen wipers and tin openers on the one hand, and rocks and the universe on the other, lie living creatures. Living bodies and their organs are objects that, unlike rocks, seem to have purpose written all over them . . . . The true process that has endowed wings, eyes, beaks, nesting instincts and everything else about life with the strong illusion of purposeful design is now well understood.

It is Darwinian natural selection . . . . The true utility function of life, that which is being maximized in the natural world, is DNA survival. But DNA is not floating free; it is locked up in living bodies, and it has to make the most of the levers of power at its disposal. Genetic sequences that find themselves in cheetah bodies maximize their survival by causing those bodies to kill gazelles. Sequences that find themselves in gazelle bodies increase their chance of survival by promoting opposite ends. But the same utility function-the survival of DNA-explains the “purpose” of both the cheetah [–> i.e. predator]  and the gazelle [–> i.e. prey] . . . .

The total amount of suffering per year in the natural world is beyond all decent contemplation. During the minute that it takes me to compose this sentence, thousands of animals are being eaten alive, many others are running for their lives, whimpering with fear, others are being slowly devoured from within by rasping parasites, thousands of all kinds are dying of starvation, thirst and disease. It must be so. If there is ever a time of plenty, this very fact will automatically lead to an increase in population until the natural state of starvation and misery is restored.

In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won’t find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but pitiless indifference . . . . DNA neither cares nor knows. DNA just is. And we dance to its music. [[ “God’s Utility Function,” Sci. Am. Aug 1995, pp. 80 – 85.]

[[NB: This article raises the issue of the problem of evil, here emphasising the problem of natural evil; probably the strongest argument in the atheists’ arsenal, but one that only works by implicitly assuming that good and evil, thus moral obligation, are real; while ducking the implication that the only valid worldview in a world in which OUGHT is real, is one that has a foundational IS that adequately grounds ought. And materialism — scientific atheism today, has no such is. So, the objecting atheist actually has no grounds to stand on to make the argument; his argument, in the end is self-defeating, and so the proper response is to insist that such an atheist face that issue before proceeding further. (Cf here for a preliminary discussion of the problem of evil from a Christian perspective.)]

So, it is entirely appropriate for us to respond to that wider view of science, society, worldviews and cultural agendas. It therefore seems to me that there are some serious issues that we need to ponder as we reflect on where our civilisation is heading at this time. END

_____________

F/N, Nov 6th: Given the onward attempted objections to the list of minimal facts and the failure to substantially respond to my onward rebuttals at 34 below, it is worth adding as a footnote from the linked post in my personal blog, the following summary of the criteria of authenticity, and a table that addresses how well ten skeptical theories from C1 – 21 can handle a key cluster of credible facts.

First, the criteria of high quality facts — while in many cases from antiquity, high quality sources do not meet such facts, the following are strong indicators of a credible claim:

  1. Multiple sources – If two or more sources attest to the same fact, it is more likely authentic
  2. Enemy attestation – If the writers enemies corroborate a given fact, it is more likely authentic
  3. Principle of embarrassment – If the text embarrasses the writer, it is more likely authentic
  4. Eyewitness testimony – First hand accounts are to be preferred
  5. Early testimony – an early account is more likely accurate than a later one

Second, the table that compares alternative explanations of four key credible facts that meet such criteria:

“Theory”
Match to four major credible facts regarding Jesus of Nazareth & his Passion
Overall score/20
Died by crucifixion
(under Pontius Pilate) at
Jerusalem
c 30 AD
Was buried, tomb was found empty
Appeared to multiple disciples,
many of whom proclaimed
& suffered for their
faith
Appeared to key
objectors who then became church leaders: James & Paul
Bodily Resurrection
5
5
5
5
20
Visions/
hallucinations
5
2
2
1
10
Swoon/recovery
1
3
2
2
8
Wrong tomb
5
1
1
1
8
Stolen body/fraud
5
2
1
1
9
Quran 4:155 -6: “They did not slay him, neither crucified him.” 1 1 1 1 4
 “Jesus never existed” 1 1 1 1 4
 “Christianity as we know it was cooked up by Constantine and  others at Nicea, who censored/ distorted the original record” 1 1 1 1 4
“What we have today is ‘Paulianity,’ not the original teachings of Jesus and his disciples” 2 1 1 2 6
Christianity — including the resurrection —  is a gradually emerging legend based on a real figure
5
1
1
1
8
Complete legend/pagan copycat (Greek, Persian, Egyptian, etc)
1
1
1
1
4

(I have given my scores above, based on reasoning that should be fairly obvious. As an exercise you may want to come up with your own scores on a 5 – 1 scale: 5 = v. good/ 4 = good/ 3 = fair/ 2 = poor/ 1 = v. poor, with explanations. Try out blends of the common skeptical theories to see how they would fare.)

Laying a priori anti-supernaturalism aside as a patent case of worldview level question-begging closed mindedness, the above table shows that there are two serious candidates today, the resurrection as historically understood, or some version of a collective vision/hallucination that led to a sincere (but plainly mistaken) movement.

The latter of course runs into  the problem that such collective visions are not psychologically plausible as the cultural expectations of a resurrection would have been of a general one in the context of the obvious military triumph of Israel. Nor, does it explain the apparently missing body. Moreover, we know separately, that the culturally accepted alternative would have been individual prophetic visions of the exalted that on being shared would comfort the grieving that the departed rested with God. So, an ahead of time individual breakthrough resurrection — even, one that may be accompanied by some straws in the wind of what is to come in fulness at the end — is not part of the mental furniture of expectations in C1 Judaism.  Where, hallucinations and culturally induced visions are going to be rooted in such pre-existing mental “furniture.”

So, it is in order to call for a serious rethinking on the part of Dr Dawkins and co.

Comments
Stepehen: re: 95: Your statement is,
No society has ever successfully managed a hundred or a thousand different moral codes at the same time. In the absence of an objective moral code, multiple personal codes of conduct come into conflict with each other, creating chaos.
The statement is false, as the counter-example of the United States (and a number of other countries) demonstrates. The United States, containing as it does a myriad of religions plus millions of atheists and agnostics who are ipso facto moral relativists does manage hundreds of different moral codes quite nicely. On the founding of the United States: It's quite a stretch to claim that the US was founded on Christian principles. I don't believe that Christ taught that governments should be representative democracies, nor did he mention separation of powers in his messages to his followers, nor freedom of religion, nor the right to bear arms, nor freedom of the press, nor the Electoral College. The founders were for the most part Christians, yes (as was everyone in those days), but the ideas that informed the founding of this country post date Christianity by almost two millennia. They came from Enlightenment thinkers like Thomas Hobbs, John Locke, and Thomas Paine, and were not part of traditional Christianity at all. These ideas were not objective morality, as you claim. Rather they were the particular beliefs of particular men and women. They were not shared by the majority of Christians at the time. They were relative to a minority of thinkers, some of whom happened to use them as a basis for the founding of this country (fortunately). There is no warrant to support the claim that they are universal law or objective morality.Bruce David
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
02:38 PM
2
02
38
PM
PDT
JWTruthInLove
How does USA handle homosexuality? How does Germany handle homosexuality? How does Uganda handle homosexuality?What’s the objective moral code here?
I am not clear on your meaning. What does "handle" mean? Did you have a specific policy in mind? What does Germany and Uganda have to do with my comment about the U.S. Declaration of Independence? What does "here" refer to in the context of the natural moral law?StephenB
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
02:34 PM
2
02
34
PM
PDT
@StephenB: Think about this one: How does USA handle homosexuality? How does Germany handle homosexuality? How does Uganda handle homosexuality? What's the objective moral code here?JWTruthInLove
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
02:00 PM
2
02
00
PM
PDT
@Bruce David: I see you're, as me, eager of love of truth. I often use the phrase "truth makes you free" -- because... it's the truth. :-) Daily meditation, unfortunately, is not enough to let God and his son into your heart. If you like you can visit this site, which provides you with the true Christian perspective on how to "get one" with God. There's tons of free text- and audio-material: http://www.jw.org The only direct line to god is reading and UNDERSTANDING the bible.JWTruthInLove
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
01:56 PM
1
01
56
PM
PDT
@StephenB: People of different creeds -- objectivists and relativists -- agree on things (see the Humanist Manifesto, Koran, ...).
choosing or inventing a morality that seems congenial with his inclinations.
You've just described the world. You've choseen your morality because it is more cogenial with your inclination (that is your religion).
... When multiple personal codes of conduct (varying forms of individualistic subjective morality) come into conflict with each other, creating chaos
See 91. Btw.: The civil law (as the bible!!) also uses fuzzy wordings because of the fact that moral code changes from time to time! The greatest nations on earth are ruled by warmongers. Morality is in decline. Our intellectuals have fallen for Satan's lies. Satan has "succesfully" ruled humans for 6000 years. Yet, according to you we're doing fine. Then why should god intervene (which he WILL do, soon)?JWTruthInLove
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
01:49 PM
1
01
49
PM
PDT
Mung: re. 71: Yes, it would be accurate to say that I am not a Christian. re. 86 & 92: Well, I believe that the love I experience, as well as the joy and love of truth, all are from God operating in and through me. In that sense, yes, I have a direct line to God. Beyond that, well, I am working on it (daily meditation and contemplation). What is the nature of your professed direct line to God?Bruce David
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
01:36 PM
1
01
36
PM
PDT
Bruce
So Stephen, do you live in the same country that I do (the United States)? I haven’t noticed any storm troupers knocking on my door warning me to amend my moral views to be more in line with the “most powerful members” of my culture, whoever they may be.
The United States civil codes are based on the objective natural moral law, as expressed in the Declaration of Independence ("The Laws of nature" and "Nature's God). That is why you are free to exercise your right to be who you are or to become who you want to be.
This is the most pluralistic country in the world. Every major religion and many of the minor ones are represented here. No one is demanding that they all abide by some standard “code of preference.”
You are obviously unaware of the founding code of your own country. The freedom that your refer to is possible because the unity of Christian principles, not moral relativism, informed the founding documents. True diversity is only possible in the context of unity. Unity without diversity is tyranny; diversity without unity is chaos. No other religion or world view other than Christianity provides for the inherent dignity of the human person and the derivative rights of diverse opinion, due process, self government. It's all based on the objective moral law.
Got any other arguments that demonstrate that “might makes right” follows from moral relativism?
I simply made a statement of fact and you unsuccessfully attempted to refute it by providing an example that proves my point. Obviously, you didn't know that the United States was founded on the Natural Moral Law. That's a lot to not know.StephenB
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
01:34 PM
1
01
34
PM
PDT
KF:
BD: Sadly, you have only managed to underscore the force of the reductio ad absurdum. Please, please, please think again. KF
KF, nothing in my thinking about these matters is absurd. With all due respect, the problem is that you fail to understand it. I attribute this to your commitment to the existence of objective morality, which is so strong that you cannot see beyond it. This phenomenon (being blinded by one's paradigms) is not uncommon, by the way.Bruce David
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
01:22 PM
1
01
22
PM
PDT
BD: Yet; in numbers. (Some laws and agendas being passed or pushed, unfortunately can easily open the gateway for such. And what agency was it recently noted as getting was it 175,000 bullets? Oh yes, Social Security Administration.) KFkairosfocus
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
12:59 PM
12
12
59
PM
PDT
Bruce David:
Do you have a direct line to God?
Don't you?Mung
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
12:49 PM
12
12
49
PM
PDT
Stephen B: re 76
“Might makes right” follows moral relativism as surely as the night follows the day. No society has ever successfully managed a hundred or a thousand different moral codes at the same time. In the absence of an objective moral code, multiple personal codes of conduct come into conflict with each other, creating chaos. To re-establish unity, the most powerful members of that culture seize control and intrude their code of preference, tyrannizing all competitors. There are no exceptions to the rule.
So Stephen, do you live in the same country that I do (the United States)? I haven't noticed any storm troupers knocking on my door warning me to amend my moral views to be more in line with the "most powerful members" of my culture, whoever they may be. This is the most pluralistic country in the world. Every major religion and many of the minor ones are represented here. No one is demanding that they all abide by some standard "code of preference." Got any other arguments that demonstrate that "might makes right" follows from moral relativism?Bruce David
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
12:41 PM
12
12
41
PM
PDT
Jerad
I just see most people not doing that. And so I keep wondering: if there is an OUGHT and it’s obvious and easy why isn’t it followed?
From a societal point of view, a good culture is one in which it is easy to be good and hard to be bad; a bad culture is one in which it is easy to be bad and hard to be good. From a personal point of view, it is often hard to do the right thing and easy to do the wrong thing. It's easier to be ruled by sexual passion than to control it. It's easier to kill a baby than to raise it. It's easier to pretend that no moral law exists than to change one's immoral behavior. It's easier to fall for a lie than to stand up for the truth. Everyone knows, or at least once knew, that objective morality is real. Unfortunately, those who stray from the truth and form bad habits by following their own way can lose their capacity to recognize that which was once obvious to them. Smart people can suddenly become dull witted when the subject matter turns to God and morality. One of the silliest things a moral relativist can do is to suggest that because many churchgoers who claim to believe in a moral code do not follow it, that same code must not exist. The reason it is a silly argument is that it assumes that those who are guilty of this kind of hypocrisy have violated the very same objective moral code that is being denied in the name of moral relativism.StephenB
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
10:54 AM
10
10
54
AM
PDT
Mung, BD and Jerad: All of us do (or, may) have a pretty direct line to God. Namely, a well adjusted, well cultivated conscience. Here, again, is Locke in the intro to the essay on human understanding, sect 5:
Men have reason to be well satisfied with what God hath thought fit for them, since he hath given them (as St. Peter says [NB: i.e. 2 Pet 1:2 - 4]) pana pros zoen kaieusebeian, whatsoever is necessary for the conveniences of life and information of virtue; and has put within the reach of their discovery, the comfortable provision for this life, and the way that leads to a better. How short soever their knowledge may come of an universal or perfect comprehension of whatsoever is, it yet secures their great concernments [Prov 1: 1 - 7], that they have light enough to lead them to the knowledge of their Maker, and the sight of their own duties [cf Rom 1 - 2 & 13, Ac 17, Jn 3:19 - 21, Eph 4:17 - 24, Isaiah 5:18 & 20 - 21, Jer. 2:13, Titus 2:11 - 14 etc, etc]. Men may find matter sufficient to busy their heads, and employ their hands with variety, delight, and satisfaction, if they will not boldly quarrel with their own constitution, and throw away the blessings their hands are filled with, because they are not big enough to grasp everything . . . It will be no excuse to an idle and untoward servant [Matt 24:42 - 51], who would not attend his business by candle light, to plead that he had not broad sunshine. The Candle that is set up in us [Prov 20:27] shines bright enough for all our purposes . . . If we will disbelieve everything, because we cannot certainly know all things, we shall do muchwhat as wisely as he who would not use his legs, but sit still and perish, because he had no wings to fly. [Text references added to document the sources of Locke's allusions and citations.]
KFkairosfocus
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
10:26 AM
10
10
26
AM
PDT
Jerad:
And so I keep wondering: if there is an OUGHT and it’s obvious and easy why isn’t it followed?
The question should be it's own answer. People are doing the easy thing. It's the hard thing they choose not to do. And your cherry-picking appears just a tad bigoted. The Black Book of Communism Democide The End of Commitment: Intellectuals, Revolutionaries, and Political Morality in the Twentieth CenturyMung
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
09:49 AM
9
09
49
AM
PDT
JWTruthInLove
Wouldn’t it be the same situation when people are sure that there’s an objective morality, but have different opinions of what the objective morality is?
Among those who accept the tenets of objective morality (Ten Commandments, Natural Moral Law, Sermon On The Mount, Beatitudes) there are no differing opinions on the basics. That is why they are called objective. They are not made up; they are recognized for what they are. Everyone, including society's leaders are supposed to follow them. Subjective morality is different because everyone feels free to go his own way, choosing or inventing a morality that seems congenial with his inclinations. When multiple personal codes of conduct (varying forms of individualistic subjective morality) come into conflict with each other, creating chaos, the most powerful members of that culture re-establish unity by seizing control and establishing their own subjective moral code of preference. That means that the people are held accountable to them, but they are held accountable to no one.
I don’t think there’s really a human solution to such problems.
The solution always take the form of a unifying civil law that decides who is going to be rewarded and punished and for what. That civil law, in turn, is always based on [a] the objective moral law, [b] the whims of the majority, or [c] the whims or religion of the ruling class. It is only in the case of [a] that all the people, including the rulers, are held accountable.StephenB
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
09:38 AM
9
09
38
AM
PDT
Bruce David:
Do you have a direct line to God?
Yes.Mung
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
09:32 AM
9
09
32
AM
PDT
Jerad: The right is not the easy. (Clausewitz said that in war everything is simple, but the simplest things are hard to do.) And, sadly, the powerful seldom seek to do the right instead of the advantageous. Even, in a nominally Christian polity. Never mind, the present post-Christian ones. KFkairosfocus
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
09:02 AM
9
09
02
AM
PDT
KF (83): I agree there are examples from all creeds and cultures. I somehow expect better of the Christians though. They read the same Bible you read and yet . . . I agree: we should love our neighbours as ourselves. I just see most people not doing that. And so I keep wondering: if there is an OUGHT and it's obvious and easy why isn't it followed? Just this last week a prison official was killed in Northern Ireland by partisan thugs just because he worked at a prison where Irish Republicans were trying to stage a no-wash protest. Sometimes I dispair greatly just observing those who have no excuse for not knowing what is right and just. It's easier for me to believe in relativism since it seems that's the way thing really work. Everyone thinks they're right.Jerad
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
08:13 AM
8
08
13
AM
PDT
Jerad: Yes, there were awful things done in the name of religion. Yes, there are awful things being done and also that were done in living memory in the name of secularist ideologies. Did you see that I spoke to both? Have you understood that I have repeatedly pointed out that while we are under moral government -- which you acknowledge by making appeals to outrage -- we face a common problem that we are finite, fallible, morally fallen/struggling, and too often ill-willed? Did you notice how I kept highlighting that power elites face the problem that power tends to corrupt and power without effective accountability corrupts without limit, so that by and large the great ones of history are bad men? Do you understand that a major reason for the rise of democracy was the idea that an informed public should regularly hold leaders to account for their stewardship? Have you seen that one of my concerns is that we have a modern media culture that is more inclined to manipulate than to soundly and fairly inform? Do you not see that -- given the grievous sins of post-Christendom -- the time for rhetorical games where one tries to discredit the Judaeo-Christian foundations of our civilisation by pointing to the sins of Christendom has long since passed? And, did you see that I pointed out that playing the invidious association game will go nowhere positive, but that it will distract from the key point? Again, why do we see the wars over the Cathars as having atrocious things done? Why do we see the Gulags and the Holocaust as awful? Why are there troubling questions over 53 million abortions since 1973 in the US and a global total that I have seen that I find it hard to believe? Again, because we realise that there is something that is recognisibly wrong. That is, that objective wrong and right exist. So, OUGHT is real. All this ends up highlighting is that we need an IS that grounds OUGHT in the foundation of our worldviews. And, BTW, here is the scriptural answer to what was being done the Cathar wars:
Rom 13: 8 Owe no one anything, except to love each other, for the one who loves another has fulfilled the law. 9 For the commandments, “You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You shall not covet,” and any other commandment, are summed up in this word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” 10 Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.
That's Paul. He was citing Moses:
Lev 19: 15 “You shall do no injustice in court. You shall not be partial to the poor or defer to the great, but in righteousness shall you judge your neighbor. 16 You shall not go around as a slanderer among your people, and you shall not stand up against the life of your neighbor: I am the LORD. 17 “You shall not hate your brother in your heart, but you shall reason frankly with your neighbor, lest you incur sin because of him. 18 You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against the sons of your own people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the LORD.
In so citing Moses, he was following Jesus:
Mt 22: 37 . . . “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. 38 This is the great and first commandment. 39 And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. 40 On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.”
KFkairosfocus
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
08:01 AM
8
08
01
AM
PDT
@StephenB: Wouldn't it be the same situation when people are sure that there's an objective morality, but have different opinions of what the objective morality is? Look: "(...) multiple personal codes of conduct come into conflict with each other, creating chaos. To re-establish unity, the most powerful members of that culture seize control and intrude their code of preference, tyrannizing all competitors. There are no exceptions to the rule." I don't think there's really a human solution to such problems. However Christians do know that a time will come when Christendom, Humanism and other religions will be destroyed and Jesus can claim his throne under his father to reestablish paradise on earth.JWTruthInLove
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
06:59 AM
6
06
59
AM
PDT
KF (80):
You are clipping a bit that seems to come from the wars with the Cathars, which fall into the same pattern. I should note that the fighting was started by the Cathars.
The Albigensian Crusade against the Cathars had one of its worst moments in the siege of Carcassonne in the early 1200s. It was also a horrible example of how people of faith can behave against their fellow human beings: Again from Wikipedia:
The Cathars spent much of 1209 fending off the crusaders. The leader of the crusaders, Simon de Montfort, resorted to primitive psychological warfare. He ordered his troops to gouge out the eyes of 100 prisoners, cut off their noses and lips, then send them back to the towers led by a prisoner with one remaining eye. This only served to harden the resolve of the Cathars. The Béziers army attempted a sortie but was quickly defeated, then pursued by the crusaders back through the gates and into the city. Arnaud, the Cistercian abbot-commander, is supposed to have been asked how to tell Cathars from Catholics. His reply, recalled by Caesar of Heisterbach, a fellow Cistercian, thirty years later was "Caedite eos. Novit enim Dominus qui sunt eius."—"Kill them all, the Lord will recognise His own." The doors of the church of St Mary Magdalene were broken down and the refugees dragged out and slaughtered. Reportedly, 7,000 people died there. Elsewhere in the town many more thousands were mutilated and killed. Prisoners were blinded, dragged behind horses, and used for target practice. What remained of the city was razed by fire. Arnaud wrote to Pope Innocent III, "Today your Holiness, twenty thousand heretics were put to the sword, regardless of rank, age, or sex." The permanent population of Béziers at that time was then probably no more than 5,000, but local refugees seeking shelter within the city walls could conceivably have increased the number to 20,000.
The Cathars were effectively eliminated within 100 years whereas the Waldensians were not persecuted for another 200+ years after that.
In other words,the issue is that we need to be MORE consistently and thoroughly moral, not less. The matter is not WHO is right, but WHAT is right, on what grounds.
I agree with you but there seems to be a wide variety of opinion of WHAT is right. And the opinions vary from place to place and from time to time.
This is a distinct tradition, with its own challenges, and to juxtapose like you did raises the question of invidious association that works rhetorically through guilt by psychological association and atmosphere poisoning.
I could pick any culture, just about any religious tradition. Maybe not the Quakers, they do seem pretty peaceful. I picked the Waldensian and Albigensian Crusades because I know something about them and I find them particularly abhorrent as they were perpetrated on 'fellow' Christians. And the imprecation to "Kill them all, the Lord will recognise His own" is surely one of the most heinous statements ever recorded. It makes me sick just thinking about it.
But the bottomline is that if we can recognise these wrongs as wrongs, then that means we imply that there are rights, and the possibility of being wrong when one imagines himself right. Familiar, doubtless from arithmetic. So, we are right back at the core issue: there is objective right and wrong, and we can recognise it by reference to core and self evident principles of morality tracing to our common human nature and experience of the world.
But the perpetrators of the European Crusades came from the same background and the same moral traditions as those they slaughtered. If there are objective morals and standards then how could they get it so terribly wrong in reference to their fellow countrymen?
So is what StephenB is highlighting: the US Abortion holocaust, sponsored by the institutionalised relativists, is now well past 50 millions. And that this is sold under the label of “a woman’s right to choose,” is both utterly cynical — for a right is a MORAL claim based on one’s inherent nature (and unborn babied credibly or at least arguably share that nature and so have a patent claim on the first right: life) — and hypocritical. For, if my right is to be recognised, I have a plain duty to recognise the rights of others who share the same nature.
Case in point: I agree with abortion on demand at least up to a reasonable threshold currently set at about 25 weeks I believe. Does that make me amoral? Wrong? I'm not some hideous, wicked person who thinks nothing of inflicting pain and agony on others. I'm highly educated and come from an American Christian background.
Too often the litanies of accusations against Christians in the contemporary USA, serve only to distract attention from those who are busily imposing her agendas that have led to this legalised slaughter of almost unprecedented proportions, and who are busy pushing for the legal distortion of the creation order nature of marriage, KNOWING that this will criminalise serious Christian faith and that Christians who are serious will take this as a hill to stand and die on. (And of course twisting morality about to project the smear term, bigotry, against those who stand for that which is patent from the order of creation, is just as cynical.)
If I disagree with you about abortion and gay marriage then I'm in the wrong? Your version of morals is correct and mine is incorrect? Are the people who murder abortion doctors right or wrong?
There is no excuse, especially knowing as well that what is being fatally undermined is the foundational institution for stable society, the family. Our civilisation is being weighted in the balance as we speak, and found sadly wanting. And, the vultures are circling. So, if you want to play at atmosphere poisoning, there are far closer examples to hand that run the other way.
There are examples in all cultures of course. I use the ones I am more familiar with.
That brings us to the focal issue, OUGHT is credibly real, and objectively identifiable in sufficient cases to make it clear that it is central. We therefore need to ask ourselves what sort of worldview foundation has in it an IS that can ground that OUGHT. The first candidate on the table is the inherently good Creator God. Is there another?
And who speaks for this Creator God in a voice and manner that we all can hear and not misinterpret? Unlike the Crusaders.Jerad
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
06:36 AM
6
06
36
AM
PDT
Jerad: You err on your history, but I must also note that it is possible to have Christians erring grievously in handling scripture and doing grave wrongs, without undermining the very premise by which we recognise such to be wrong: there is that which is objectively right and that which is objectively wrong. Which entails, that we can access adequate warrant to discern the two. Now, in the medieval period you advert to, and in the case of Torquemada and co, it is not the teachings of the scriptures on core ethics, but the imposition of power and the flying the false colours of godliness, that did the trick. Power, after all, tends to corrupt is proverbial. That is why St Francis rebuked the Crusaders by example, and it is why Torquemada was rebuked by the two leading saints in Spain at the time. Less saintly people were such that he had to be guarded by a troop. You are clipping a bit that seems to come from the wars with the Cathars, which fall into the same pattern. I should note that the fighting was started by the Cathars. Similarly, the wars over the Protestant reformation, were wars among stubborn power elites, not matters of serious and sober discussion of what is warranted. The list of wars started by power agendas and enforced by pride, stubbornness etc, is long. The American Civil War is but one example and should be contrasted with the case of how slavery was abolished in the British Empire with far less bloodshed. In other words,the issue is that we need to be MORE consistently and thoroughly moral, not less. The matter is not WHO is right, but WHAT is right, on what grounds. I have no brief to try to defend Islam, much less IslamIST radicalism. This is a distinct tradition, with its own challenges, and to juxtapose like you did raises the question of invidious association that works rhetorically through guilt by psychological association and atmosphere poisoning. Let's just say for the moment on Islam, that once M went to Yathrib and became a warlord (inter alia slaughtering an entire Jewish tribe of 600 - 900 men in the process and taking the women and children), his Medinan -- new name for Yathrib -- stances and teachings shifted sharply in ways conducive to that aggressive role. The key problem is that there is a principle of abrogation by which the Medinan teachings supersede the more irenic Meccan ones of the period before. But the bottomline is that if we can recognise these wrongs as wrongs, then that means we imply that there are rights, and the possibility of being wrong when one imagines himself right. Familiar, doubtless from arithmetic. So, we are right back at the core issue: there is objective right and wrong, and we can recognise it by reference to core and self evident principles of morality tracing to our common human nature and experience of the world. The fondness of too many secularists for one-sidedly pointing out that religious people and institutions have a history of being wrong even in gross ways, while failing to acknowledge what the ghosts of over 100 million victims of secularist regimes in the past century remind us of, is telling. So is what StephenB is highlighting: the US Abortion holocaust, sponsored by the institutionalised relativists, is now well past 50 millions. And that this is sold under the label of "a woman's right to choose," is both utterly cynical -- for a right is a MORAL claim based on one's inherent nature (and unborn babied credibly or at least arguably share that nature and so have a patent claim on the first right: life) -- and hypocritical. For, if my right is to be recognised, I have a plain duty to recognise the rights of others who share the same nature. As I am not an American, I can say plainly what I think. Too often the litanies of accusations against Christians in the contemporary USA, serve only to distract attention from those who are busily imposing her agendas that have led to this legalised slaughter of almost unprecedented proportions, and who are busy pushing for the legal distortion of the creation order nature of marriage, KNOWING that this will criminalise serious Christian faith and that Christians who are serious will take this as a hill to stand and die on. (And of course twisting morality about to project the smear term, bigotry, against those who stand for that which is patent from the order of creation, is just as cynical.) With that in focus, we can see such for what they are and brush aside all the atmosphere-poisoning talking points that try to belittle or denigrate or dehumanise and demonise the intended targets of the new pogroms to be. There is no excuse, especially knowing as well that what is being fatally undermined is the foundational institution for stable society, the family. Our civilisation is being weighted in the balance as we speak, and found sadly wanting. And, the vultures are circling. So, if you want to play at atmosphere poisoning, there are far closer examples to hand that run the other way. Instead, I suggest that we can focus on the core fact: by our behaviour and words, even those who espouse relativism, end up affirming or implying the objectivity of morality. That brings us to the focal issue, OUGHT is credibly real, and objectively identifiable in sufficient cases to make it clear that it is central. We therefore need to ask ourselves what sort of worldview foundation has in it an IS that can ground that OUGHT. The first candidate on the table is the inherently good Creator God. Is there another? Failing such, the choice of serious worldviews, worldviews we can live with as moral creatures, is set in the circle of theistic views or their near relatives such as Deism. Which means that materialistic views are off the table, for instance. (Which also means that today's institutionalised evolutionary materialism is counter to good community order. On the premise that truth is unified, those who advocate such in the name of science had better do some serious rethinking. Where also, we know that an obvious alternative, to see that the cosmos and certain features therein are replete with observable signs that on much testing reliably point to design, is by and large being suppressed not on evidence but on a priori imposition of evolutionary materialism.) KFkairosfocus
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
04:37 AM
4
04
37
AM
PDT
What I find hard to understand is how other Christians have distorted and used the same basic texts to oppress and slaughter those who disagree with them. And not only Jews or Muslims. If you are not aware of the persecution of the Waldensians I recommend you read up on it. The Wikipedia article is as good a place to start as any. Here is an excerpt from the section on The Piedmont Easter:
By mid-April, when it became clear that the Duke's efforts to force the Vaudois to conform to Catholicism had failed, he tried another approach. Under the guise of false reports of Vaudois uprisings, the Duke sent troops into the upper valleys to quell the local populace. He required that the local populace quarter the troops in their homes, which the local populace complied with. But the quartering order was a ruse to allow the troops easy access to the populace. On 24 April 1655, at 4 a.m., the signal was given for a general massacre. The Catholic forces did not simply slaughter the inhabitants. They are reported to have unleashed an unprovoked campaign of looting, rape, torture, and murder. According to one report by a Peter Liegé: "Little children were torn from the arms of their mothers, clasped by their tiny feet, and their heads dashed against the rocks; or were held between two soldiers and their quivering limbs torn up by main force. Their mangled bodies were then thrown on the highways or fields, to be devoured by beasts. The sick and the aged were burned alive in their dwellings. Some had their hands and arms and legs lopped off, and fire applied to the severed parts to staunch the bleeding and prolong their suffering. Some were flayed alive, some were roasted alive, some disemboweled; or tied to trees in their own orchards, and their hearts cut out. Some were horribly mutilated, and of others the brains were boiled and eaten by these cannibals. Some were fastened down into the furrows of their own fields, and ploughed into the soil as men plough manure into it. Others were buried alive. Fathers were marched to death with the heads of their sons suspended round their necks. Parents were compelled to look on while their children were first outraged [raped], then massacred, before being themselves permitted to die."
This was all sanctioned by Rome. Against other Christians in Europe. How am I to ever trust anyone who says they know THE moral code when that kind of surety leads to horrors like the above? What criteria can be used to be sure when people who use the same holy scripture are capable of such atrocities against their fellow believers? (Some of the Protestant countries tried to help, this was all part of the 120 years or so of religious wars that raged across Europe after Martin Luther nailed up his 95 protests.) How can we know what is true and right? Who has the right to say?Jerad
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
03:38 AM
3
03
38
AM
PDT
BD: Sadly, you have only managed to underscore the force of the reductio ad absurdum. Please, please, please think again. KFkairosfocus
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
03:10 AM
3
03
10
AM
PDT
To re-establish unity, the most powerful members of that culture seize control and intrude their code of preference, tyrannizing all competitors. There are no exceptions to the rule.
And without exception, the tyrannisers insist on the objectivity of their version of morality. To whit: Stalinism, and religions of all dominant varieties. ______ And today's versions of evolutionary materialist scientism, which absolutises their institutionalised preferences under the name of relativism and tolerance, similar to what happened under the French, German and Russian revolutions, just to highlight three. I note as well that the point of "objective" is that we may and do err. So, the issue of warrant comes to the fore. That which an ideologue announces as so, is not necessarily so. But, no one has yet bettered the premise that we are equally in the image of the inherently good Creator God, and so have a mutual duty of respect and neighbour love in light of that common nature. Hence the principles and rules that "the judicious" canon Hooker pointed to, and cited, even listing from Aristotle in Nicomachean Ethics. KFtimothya
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
02:28 AM
2
02
28
AM
PDT
Bruce David
That is simply incorrect. The truth is that each of us decides for himself what constitutes moral behavior. “Might makes right.” is one possible choice. But many—most, in fact—moral relativists do not choose that option.
"Might makes right" follows moral relativism as surely as the night follows the day. No society has ever successfully managed a hundred or a thousand different moral codes at the same time. In the absence of an objective moral code, multiple personal codes of conduct come into conflict with each other, creating chaos. To re-establish unity, the most powerful members of that culture seize control and intrude their code of preference, tyrannizing all competitors. There are no exceptions to the rule.StephenB
November 5, 2012
November
11
Nov
5
05
2012
01:21 AM
1
01
21
AM
PDT
Mung, I haven't read Philosophy of the Enlightenment, but I have read his Philosophy of Symbolic Forms, volume 3: Phenomenology of Knowledge. Really good stuff!Kantian Naturalist
November 4, 2012
November
11
Nov
4
04
2012
10:30 PM
10
10
30
PM
PDT
Stephen:
How do we settle that question except to appeal to a higher standard of objective truth as the final arbiter? I say love cannot be separated from truth, but you deny that any such objective truth exists. I rely on experience and the natural moral law that can judge the validity of any moral claim, but you rely solely on experience and justify your moral claims on that basis.
First of all, I do not justify "[my] moral claims". If you will read what I write carefully, you will see that I reject the validity of morality altogether. Rather, I advocate deciding what action to take in any given circumstance by asking and answering for yourself the question, "What would Love do now?" My philosophy transcends morality. And what, pray tell, is the source of this "natural moral law" of which you speak? Do you have a direct line to God? I submit that the source is you. You decide what natural law is and then proclaim it to be "objective truth". If you tell me that it is true because it is the result of reason, I would ask you what makes your reasoning power more accurate than the many other thinkers, at least as smart as you, in the history of Western philosophy who have used reason to arrive at different ideas from yours (I know that at most one of them can agree with you because they all disagree with each other!) If you have taken it whole cloth from some other thinker, then I would point out that it is you who have decided which particular thinker is correct. But however you have arrived at your particular formulation, it is you who have decided to accept that one and reject the many other candidates for moral law. In other words, you are the source of your moral judgments, just as we all are the source of ours. Each of us must ultimately decide for ourselves what, if anything, constitutes moral behavior. I know that you would like to have "a higher standard of object truth" when it comes to morality, but I'm afraid it doesn't exist. You're on your own, just like the rest of us.
If objective truth is not the final arbiter, then only one standard is left—might makes right.
That is simply incorrect. The truth is that each of us decides for himself what constitutes moral behavior. "Might makes right." is one possible choice. But many---most, in fact---moral relativists do not choose that option. Like my brother, the atheist, who is one of the kindest, most upright, and most honest men I know. He has clearly chosen a different standard for himself than "might makes right". There is nothing in moral relativism that imposes the standard of "might makes right". It's an option, I agree, but one seldom chosen, if you consider the population as a whole.Bruce David
November 4, 2012
November
11
Nov
4
04
2012
10:16 PM
10
10
16
PM
PDT
KN, Are you familiar with Ernst Cassirer? Just ordered his The Philosophy of the Enlightenment c.f. Kant's Life and ThoughtMung
November 4, 2012
November
11
Nov
4
04
2012
03:47 PM
3
03
47
PM
PDT
I tell my students that "relativism might be true for you, but it is not true for me." That usually gets some chuckles but the deeper lesson rarely penetrates -- that being that "relative" is a comparative term, e.g. "x is P relative to y", where y is some absolute.Kantian Naturalist
November 4, 2012
November
11
Nov
4
04
2012
03:42 PM
3
03
42
PM
PDT
1 4 5 6 7 8 9

Leave a Reply