Posts Tagged ‘Religion’

Agnosticism vs Atheism – A Semantics Game.

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Rather than focusing on far more pressing problems, like that of religious groups attempting to gain government funding for schools in which they can create tiny creationists, or the ongoing persecution of gay people by the religious establishment, the outspoken atheist community feels far more content to argue over what to call themselves half the time.

I’m not talking about Dawkins’ embarrassing “Brights” movement (though that is part of it) in which the noted evolutionary biologist became a PR consultant and tried to re-brand non-belief to make it more palatable. As surveys have demonstrated, the word atheist does carry a certain stigma (at least in the US) but attempting to play word-games in order to avoid possible connotations is the sort of thing done only by the deceitful. Atheism, in particular, is about accepting the wrinkled front of reality. So attempting to smooth it with a new title is dishonest, self-defeating and stinks of the sort of underhanded sleight of tongue that theistic philosophers use. Worst still, skeptics referring to themselves en mas as “bright” is dripping with the sort of arrogance that will surely put people off and actively fortify the perception of atheists as ‘elitist’ that a 2006 survey by the University of Minnesota identified.

Atheism plus hubris

Since the term “bright” fails at it’s purpose, its existence is ultimately redundant since atheism already has a ensemble of names, monikers and epithets that (save some minor nuances) mean effectively the same thing. People may bicker over the effectiveness of it’s use but nobody disputes it’s core meaning. Where this is valid contention, however, is in the differences between atheism and agnosticism. Valid though I call it, worthwhile it most certainly is not.

Religious agnostics are, according to the dictionary definition, people who believe that the mysteries of the universe (specifically pertaining to God and the origin of the universe) to be unknown and indeed unknowable; far more subtle than simply “not sure”. I don’t feel it’s to big a leap to word it thus: that agnostics are people who do not believe in God. Read what I said carefully, I did not say that agnostics say that there is no God, but that since they are not theists then they do not have a belief in a God.

Now let’s look at atheists, people who “disbelieve in the existence” of God. Most intellectually honest atheists will openly grant that they cannot prove that a supreme being of some sort does not exist, and thus do not claim certainty in it’s absence. To say it one “knows” there is no God is an untenable position, since the non-existence of any particular thing is an unfalsifiable hypothesis (even in the face of no evidence to begin with). We can conclude then that atheists are people who do not believe in God.

The confusion comes inevitably from the perception by some as atheists people who claim certitude as to the non-existence of a God, and for a cocksure few this may be the case, but as we’ve discussed most atheists agree this is a flawed position to hold. In practical terms, therefore, atheism and agnosticism are as good as identical. The discussion is a valid one, but it quickly devolves into arguing over definitions and since we’re not a group or collective this makes very little difference. The debate is a semantics game which, as we’ve seen, seldom reflects reality.

The agnostic AND atheist position

Ironically, this is basically the atheist AND agnostic position.

Most atheists of this ilk will tell you that strictly speaking they are agnostic atheists. If ‘atheist’ is taken in literal terms to mean someone who believes that there is no God, then the ingenuous majority who see the baseless rigidity in such a claim agree that the position they have requires this qualifier of ‘agnostic’. The reason why most agnostic-atheists don’t refer to themselves as such normally is partially down to the verbosity of such an title. But mostly because (like atheism) agnosticism also carries a connotation, one of being unsure, and while it’s true that atheists are not certain that there’s no God, they recognise that the same could be said about an infinite number of potential deities. There might be a God, there might not be, there could be the great Elbow-Horned Grumblesnitch but one doesn’t have to refer to themselves as being agnostic to that. So the term atheist is, in it’s most commonly used form, a perfectly apt name.

People argue over this triviality far more than they should (and inevitably someone will take issue with how I’ve represented them here), my point is that this is ultimately an irrelevant detail. You can call yourself an agnostic, you can call yourself an atheist, you can call yourself a Elbow-Horned Grumblesnitch for all I care. The point is we have far bigger problems at the moment. Regardless of your specific opinions or what label you give to them, we all share a common goal. We all work for the promotion of free thought, scientific inquiry and rationality. We all agree that dogmatic devotion to religious practices is dangerous and above all believe that we should all be united by our shared humanity rather than segregated along sectarian lines. Why must we divide ourselves this way?

When politicians stop trying to instigate religious morality and dogma as law, when gay couples can be openly so without fear of religious persecution, when pseudoscience is not trying to infiltrate schools, when religion has been emaciated to a quirky relic of a bygone age. Only then can we have this conversation, not before.

David Cameron’s counterproductive “Christian country” crack.

Saturday, December 17th, 2011

Christopher Hitchens has died after an 18-month battle with esophageal cancer. He was undoubtedly one of the best polemicists of our time and he will be missed. However, he of all people wouldn’t let mourning and sentiment get in the way of exposing hypocrisy where it is found; which leads me, regrettably, to the topic of this post.

Hitchens

In a speech to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible (itself a reprint to reaffirm an episcopal structure and with it the divine right of Kings: manipulated in translation for political purposes) in Oxford, Prime Minister David Cameron boldly claimed that, “We are a Christian country and we should not be afraid to say so.” On a strictly semantic basis, Cameron is right. The majority of the population are Christians, and Anglicanism is tantamount to a state religion in the United Kingdom. Thankfully we’ve had politicians that aren’t as dogmatic as in the US that have until now held a position of not “doing God”. For the most part we’ve upheld an implicit policy of keeping church and state separate, whereas in the US they’re doing a piss-poor job of upholding their explicit policy to this effect. Case in point, future ‘Political dipshits say the dumbest things‘ star and potential Presidential nominee Rick Perry…

Now, in his defence he was quick to clarify that he wasn’t trying to exclude or “do down” other faiths (or none), but really there’s very little way that boldly declaring one of the most diverse nations on the planet to be expressly Christian can be taken otherwise. It is distinctly divisive phraseology which a politician, were that not his meaning, would’ve known better to use. But I am now simply trying to second-guess Cameron’s meaning and ultimately irrelevant in the face of his other comments.

He continued to wax idiotic about how Britain should adopt ‘Christian morality’. I’m not going to be a baseless sensationalist and assert that this means Cameron wants to put those who work on the Sabbath to death (Exodus 35:2-15), nor that he wants women who are not virgins on their wedding night to be stoned by all the men of the city (Deuteronomy 22:13-22). However, for modern issues, putting Christian morality above all others is a dangerous tactic that retards social progress in favour of holding to dogma and tradition.

Surely if Cameron espouses Christian morality as our guide, then when the issue of gay rights is discussed, the Christian right that wants to deprive homosexuals the right to get married, evidently have the support of the Prime Minister and of scripture. What’s more, the source of this Christian morality that Cameron speaks so highly of says in no plainer terms that gay people should be put to death. The fact that we know that this is not a rule that Cameron wants to push just confuses the point further. Why is he promoting “Christian morality” if he will neglect to follow it’s most rudimentary tenants? At it’s core, “Christian morality” is merely human morality (evolved from thousands of years of living in tribes and groups upon whom your individual survival depends) with a few bizarre and grizzly additions that even the most devout Christian fails to observe; be it for social convenience, personal well-being or abhorrence to such acts. Cameron is ignoring all the things that make this morality uniquely Christian but still keeping the title.

What’s more, I for one balk at the idea of a legal system or social system or morality that is based on dogma. As social attitudes, as technology, as times change, our moral standards and our ideals will change. Within my father’s lifetime being homosexual was not only socially reprehensible but also illegal. Today it is, arguably, neither; social attitudes have mostly changed, no longer are gay couples vilified as promiscuous and immoral. It would be a very sorry state of affairs if in spite of this progress we were bound to an immovable, dogmatic legal system that lead to the arrest and execution of gay people. Cameron’s “Christian morality” is based on scripture, it is unchanging and dogmatic: it is, after all, the word of a perfect and infallible God. In my opinion, morality and the law should be based on rational discourse, open discussion, the cases made and a logical conclusion reached; can anyone seriously say they disagree?

Ultimately, Cameron’s point is perfectly benign. He wishes to promote a sense of shared humanity, kinship and co-operation. He wants us to do away with selfishness and consumerism of modern culture and adopt a sense of generosity, caring and all that lovely stuff. But he is foolish to think that this lies in one particular sect or tribe or cult. These qualities are part of human decency, and can be obtained through secular means without any need for dogma or scripture or some supernatural Father Christmas rewarding us for being good. But I rather fear that Cameron attributing the “best” morality to one cult will have a counterproductive effect, rather than promoting a sense of shared humanity he’s done little more than amplify the “us and them” mentality that the devoutly religious carry.

Happy Christmas, from an atheist.

P.S. To preempt the obvious question, yes I still call it Christmas. I don’t believe in Odin either but that won’t stop me from having a Wednesday; it’s cultural and convenient to call it Christmas. If we’re being particularly pedantic we should all refer to it as the Pagan Winter Solstice but that’s too much effort to explain.

Atheist film ‘The Ledge’ will only work if it’s also a good film!

Friday, July 1st, 2011

Movies relating to atheism and religion have always been an arena of both idiocy and disappointment. In general, attempts to misrepresent the non-religious come off as thinly-veiled evangelizing pieces; whilst scripts from our side carry a good story and message, but have been let down in the past by it’s execution.

The scientific, and atheistic, community collectively face-palmed at Ben Stein’s Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, which was most certainly the working title, in which the monotone professor from The Mask explained how any scientist who put forward an Intelligent Design (the “theory” that relies on magic) oriented paper was immediately chucked out of their institution. To show how fair and balanced this was, it was peppered with old film-reels of the Nazis, Hitler and the Holocaust; Stein never explained what their relevance was, but the implication was laid on thick, because that’s what propaganda does. Complete with token interviews with Richard Dawkins and PZ Myers with selective editing so obvious it can be seen from space. Incidentely, the studio that produced Expelled recently went bankrupt and had to sell the film rights, complete with all production materials (e.g. footage cut from the movie) to cover their debts. There was a murmur about TalkOrigins bidding to buy it, but nothing came of this and the film was ultimately “won” by an unnamed buyer for around $200,000. You’ve got to admit though, for all Stein’s idiotic displays, he has managed to work out how to be a moderately prolific actor (albeit almost entirely as brief background characters) with no acting talent, or ability to inflect his voice, whatsoever.

That's also the slogan to his clubhouse

Even fiction, such as 2009’s Creation, a biopic of Charles Darwin’s life as he struggles with the death of his daughter and the implications of his developing theory of evolution, can be touchy. Despite the film having surprisingly little to do with the theory, the lion’s share of the screen time exploring Darwin’s grief (the story being based on the book Annie’s Box by Darwin’s descendant Randal Keynes), the very thought of a film about Charles Darwin was enough to make most film distributors in the US resist showing it, fearing it would be too controversial. Every review written by an explicitly religious website talks less about the movie and more about the theory of evolution, in all cases failing to understand it and simply going on what they’ve been told by creationist preacher and noted soap-dropper Kent Hovind. The film itself is actually nothing special, it’s a visually amazing film with great cinematography, but the acting is sub-par.

The obvious religious imagery couldn't have helped, though

There was also Bill Maher’s Religulous, which was mostly just the American comedian and pundit knocking around the world looking at different religions, making a few (but too few) valid criticisms and mostly just taking the piss; very entertaining but a bit superficial. Not to mention the countless films made for or about religions, such as Kirk Cameron’s abysmal Left Behind, even the title is one big line-feed for the actor-turned-Evangelical-fuckwit to ham up.

Yes, this is what Kirk thinks evolution is

So it’s with a sense of unease that I read about a new film that will address this debate. Another descendant of Charles Darwin, Matthew Chapman, has written and directed The Ledge for release later this year, a film explicitly regarding atheism and the way that affects how one looks at life and death. I like that the atheist community is increasingly being represented, but that’s more of a feeling of empathy given that the atheist “controversy” is a much wider issue in the US than it is for me in the UK. It all depends on how the religious aspect of the story is addressed. From what little of the synopsis I’ve been able to find, it seems to be a Phonebooth-esque psychological thriller, though there’s certainly a religious aspect involved and, as it’s included in every synopsis I’ve read, this appears to be being emphasised. I suspect the dialogue in the film will make little reference to it, but it’s marketing is such that some people are now referring to it as “the Brokeback Mountain” moment of atheism, given what that film did for the gay rights movement. Good on you, New York, by the way.

I don’t know if this is the case, but I certainly think that any intellectually honest examination of religion, and those who lack a faith, can only be a good thing. Expelled did nothing to turn the opinions of normal people, only the zealots who wanted an excuse to hate “evolutionists” anyway, simply because of how transparent it was. I hope that the message in The Ledge is subtle (both to make it an enjoyable film and to stop it looking like propaganda) but clear, that it might make people think about this issue in more than the black-or-white/good-or-evil way that religious propagandists like Ben Stein wish to portray it.

If the film carries the “atheist” banner too highly, then it’ll put religious people off, it’ll put off the people who simply aren’t interested in the debate (let’s face it, if you’re not interested then this argument is tedious!), and it’ll come off simply as propaganda. That’s not to say the people behind the film should shy away from the message, far from it, but they need to understand that to portray the message you want to put across you have to get your audience interested, and then make them think.

Last ever blog post

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

Yes, you read the title correctly. Owing to circumstances beyond my control, I will never be able to write to this, or any, blog ever again. It’s not that I don’t want to, far from it. Nor is it that I don’t have the time to, though that’s been the reason for no recent posts in a slurry of time-consuming work that will shortly be alleviated. If it were up to me, I’d carry on spouting poorly written polemics on technology, literature, religion and other such stuff for the three of you that ever read this damn thing for the rest of my days. Sadly, it’s not up to me…because, well, you see…

The world is going to end.

Yes, I will never be able to write in this blog again because the rapture is coming. According to Christian radio host, self-appointed Biblical scholar and dehydrated Kenneth Williams lookalike, Harold Camping, has announced that the Bible predicts, indeed guarantees that the rapture will occur on May 21st 2011. This Saturday, as it happens, so good to see the Big Guy is doing it on the day when everyone’s off work.

Harold Camping

The rapture, according to Christian mythology, is the time when Jesus Christ will return to earth (making his “sacrifice” even more worthless in the process) and summon all the good and righteous Christians to take them away to the magical theme park in the sky. Common imagery of this event depicts piles of clothes being left behind, which both makes God a lecherous old bastard as well as meaning that there will be a lot of well-dressed hobos around after May 21st.

Meanwhile, all us sinning atheists, gays/lesbians, Muslims, Hindus, evolutionists and ducks will be left behind to bask in the horrible world without Christianity, wouldn’t that suck! Turns out it would, because God’s field-trip for all the good boys and girls will let demons and monsters and Jeremy Beadle into the human realm; as though Jesus was the sphincter of the H. P. Lovecraft universe. Us sinners will be tortured and tormented for a couple of months, before the sadistic Dumbledore in the sky finally hits the delete button and ends it all, according to Camping, on October 21st 2011.

Why does this mean this is my last blog post? Well, presumably if Harry is right I’ll be spending the next five months or so running like fuck and probably won’t have the time or motivation to take the piss out of religion.

And why wouldn’t Harold Camping be right? I mean, he’s studied the Bible closely, he found God’s hidden code and drawn out only one possible date, verified throughout scripture that this date, May 21st 2011, was the day of the rapture. It’s not like he pulled the same stunt and found out the rapture would occur 19 years ago and turned out to be wrong on that.

Ah.

Yep, Harry worked out the date of the rapture before, gathered up anyone stupid enough to believe him and spent months loudly proclaiming it to be so. When the world didn’t end when I was 18 months old, Camping chalked it up to a mistake on his part. Well, at least he took responsibility personally rather than trying to claim that God overslept that day or something.

Of course, I’m not even going to entertain the ludicous notion that this might actually be true. So it’ll be interesting to see if, unlike last time, when this rapture inevitably fails to occur, will the Campingites (yes, that’s what they’re calling themselves) spend as much money putting out a retraction, making apologies and publicising their mistake as they have to promote Judgement Day?

I hope the end of the world does come on Saturday, firstly because I’ve still got exams to do, but mostly so that we can spend five glorious months without these morons around.

Bliss.

Don’t Pray for Australia

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

One of Twitter’s current trending topics is #prayforaustralia in support of the floods that have been rampaging through Queensland and have already sadly claimed 15 lives. Though I agree with the show of support, I have to question the logic of using the word ‘pray’ when surely, if you subscribe to such a faith, some God or other has already decided to condemn them by sending the floods in the first place.

Here’s my response on Twitter, which I think aptly sums it up:

Yes, let’s #prayforaustralia; while we’re at it, let’s sacrifice a goat. Stop praying and actually fucking do something: http://bit.ly/L64utless than a minute ago via web

Prayer has a demonstrable effect at doing precisely nothing. There is no sense in wasting your time on your knees in prayer when you could be putting that time to good use by donating to aid charities helping in Australia, like the Australian Red Cross. These charities will provide food, medical supplies, clothes and shelter to those injured or made homeless by the floodwater. These charities have a much better track record than any God, who is after all (if you believe in him enough to pray about it) the bloke who sent the floods in the first place, right?

Prayer may make you feel better, it may make you feel like you’ve done your bit to help; they may even appreciate the gesture. But in the end, that’s all it is: a gesture. Don’t waste your time, do something meaningful, significant and demonstrably helpful.

Donate now.

Ground Zero Mosque – Actually, it’s neither.

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

I’m a student, and I know that we have a reputation for being a little bit detached from the reality. But as far as I’m aware the rules of spatial mechanics have remained unchanged (or is that why I can’t remember staggering home at three in the morning anymore?).

But apparentely not, as Park51 – a recentely planned building development in New York City, which is being referred by many as the ‘Ground Zero Mosque’ – has attracted more criticism from shouty, opinionated people than the average audience of the Jeremy Kyle Show. This is where the laws of physics appear to have been rewritten, as Park51 is actually two blocks away from the former location of the World Trade Centre, a full 0.2 miles according to Google Maps. The people criticising the mosque have been acting as though it’s a decadent, 300-foot monumental eyesore filling the exact space where the WTC was, with the bodies of dead US soldiers hanging from the rafters, complete with with the words ‘We Win, America!’ in big neon letters atop a statue of Osama Bin Laden fisting Uncle Sam. In reality, the artist rendition looks just like any old skyscraper you can name in New York City.

Park51

Yep, looks like a monument of the Islamization of The West to me.

What’s more, it’s not even a mosque. It’s a community centre, albeit a specifically Islamic one with a mosque inside. What’s the difference there between an Islamic and a Christian community centre? That might sound obvious, but only if you greatly generalise on Islam and fail to distinguish between extremists and moderates. Even if it were a dedicated mosque, the same distinction still applies.

I’ve also been told that the controversy has emerged because the collapse of the Twin Towers had rubble landing on the place where the not-mosque is planned. So, what? That fact is utterly meaningless unless the US want to change their foreign policy to a canine philosophy in which they indicate their borders by where they’ve pissed.

Think I’m exaggerating? Just look at the organisation “Stop Islamization of America” (SIOA), who view the not-ground zero not-mosque to be an indication of the Islamic invasion of the USA and an insult to all the soldiers who died. The SIOA claim to be “a human rights organization dedicated to freedom of speech, religious liberty, and individual rights” – judging by their actions and their name – unless you’re a Muslim.

I can see why it might be considered, at most, poor taste. But the vitrolic opposition to the not-mosque has gone far beyond arguing for respecting dead soldiers and have, rather paradoxically, sunk into a all-out display of religious intolerance.

There’s been some comparison with the ‘Draw Muhammed Day’ on Facebook, which is an interesting comparison but not in the way that the SIOA think. ‘Draw Muhammed Day’ was in response to threats by Islamic extremists towards the creators of ‘South Park’ who were poised to depict the prophet of the Muslim faith, which is against Islam. Those who participated in ‘Draw Muhammed Day’ did not do so for any Islamaphobic reason, it was a demonstration that free speech is non-negotiable: no-one is immune to criticism and you cannot bully people into silence through the threat of violence.

The SIOA believe that this is somehow testament to anti-Islam sentiment in the US but this is not the case. ‘Draw Muhammed Day’ was a defence of free speech, which is the complete opposite of what the SIOA is about. They want to prevent the building of the ‘Ground Zero Mosque’, even though doing so is explicitly against free expression and ignores freedom of religion, which was one of the founding principles of America.

I’m not taking the piss out of the attacks of September 11th because I’m not a completely heartless bastard. Nor am I taking the piss out of Islam — because I like my head — but this arguement is totally fucking ridiculous. It is not a mosque. It is not on ‘Ground Zero’. Blocking it’s building is against the freedom of expression and religion that the US is itself founded on and those very soldiers died defending. I can only conclude, therefore, that those opposing the not-mosque are doing so purely out of religious prejudice. Maybe that’s unfair, as simply the bandied-about name ‘Ground Zero Mosque’ immediately creates two misconceptions on this issue, but anyone willing to look into it for half a second can find the facts of the matter. So it’s really down to a combination of prejudice and ignorance — a lethal combination in any context.

UPDATE: Someone has just pointed out to me that this post is remarkably similar to an article by Charlie Brooker on the same issue. Brooker’s column is far funnier, uses similar techniques of hyperbole and ridiculing the pointlessness of the debate, and it was also done about two weeks ago. I actually hadn’t seen it before I wrote this post but it looks as though I’ve copied his points, just putting that out there.