Showing posts with label Atheism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atheism. Show all posts

The Dawkins Delusion

Do stop behaving as if you are God, Professor Dawkins

By ALISTER McGRATH
Daily Mail on-line
9th February 2007

He is a 'psychotic delinquent', invented by mad, deluded people. And that's one of Dawkins's milder criticisms.

Dawkins, Oxford University's Professor for the Public Understanding of Science, is on a crusade.

His salvo of outrage and ridicule is meant to rid the world of its greatest evil: religion. "If this book works as I intend," he says, "religious readers who open it will be atheists when they put it down." But he admits such a result is unlikely. "Dyed-in-the-wool faith-heads" (that's people who believe in God) are "immune to argument", he says.

I have known Dawkins for more than 20 years; we are both Oxford professors. I believe if anyone is "immune to argument" it is him. He comes across as a dogmatic, aggressive propagandist.

Of course, back in the Sixties, everyone who mattered was telling us that religion was dead. I was an atheist then. Growing up as a Protestant in Northern Ireland, I had come to believe religion was the cause of the Province's problems. While I loved studying the sciences at school, they were important for another reason: science disproved God. Believing in God was only for sad, mad and bad people who had yet to be enlightened by science.

I went up to Oxford to study the sciences in 1971, expecting my atheism to be consolidated. In the event, my world was turned upside down. I gave up one belief, atheism, and embraced another, Christianity. Why? There were many factors. For a start, I was alarmed by some atheist writings, which seemed more preoccupied with rubbishing religion than seeking the truth.

Above all, I encountered something at Oxford that I had failed to meet in Northern Ireland - articulate Christians who were able to challenge my atheism. I soon discovered two life-changing things.

First, Christianity made a lot of sense. It gave me a new way of seeing and understanding the world, above all, the natural sciences. Second, I discovered Christianity actually worked: it brought purpose and dignity to life.

I kept studying the sciences, picking up a PhD for research in molecular biophysics. But my heart and mind had been seduced by theology. It still excites me today.

Dawkins and I both love the sciences; we both believe in evidence-based reasoning. So how do we make sense of our different ways of looking at the world? That is one of the issues about which I have often wished we might have a proper discussion. Our paths do cross on the television networks and we even managed to spar briefly across a BBC sofa a few months back. We were also filmed having a debate for Dawkins's recent Channel 4 programme, The Root Of All Evil? Dawkins outlined his main criticisms of God, and I offered answers to what were clearly exaggerations and misunderstandings. It was hardly rocket science.

For instance, Dawkins often compares belief in God to an infantile belief in Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy, saying it is something we should all outgrow. But the analogy is flawed. How many people do you know who started to believe in Santa Claus in adulthood?

Many people discover God decades after they have ceased believing in the Tooth Fairy. Dawkins, of course, would just respond that people such as this are senile or mad, but that is not logical argument. Dawkins can no more 'prove' the non-existence of God than anyone else can prove He does exist.

Most of us are aware that we hold many beliefs we cannot prove to be true. It reminds us that we need to treat those who disagree with us with intellectual respect, rather than dismissing them - as Dawkins does - as liars, knaves and charlatans.

But when I debated these points with him, Dawkins seemed uncomfortable. I was not surprised to be told that my contribution was to be cut.

The Root Of All Evil? was subsequently panned for its blatant unfairness. Where, the critics asked, was a responsible, informed Christian response to Dawkins? The answer: on the cutting-room floor.

The God Delusion is similarly full of misunderstanding. Dawkins simply presents us with another dogmatic fundamentalism. Maybe that's why some of the fiercest attacks on The God Delusion are coming from other atheists, rather than religious believers. Michael Ruse, who describes himself as a 'hardline Darwinian' philosopher, confessed that The God Delusion made him 'embarrassed to be an atheist'.

The dogmatism of the work has attracted wide criticism from the secularist community. Many who might be expected to support Dawkins are trying to distance themselves from what they see as an embarrassment.

Aware of the moral obligation of a critic of religion to deal with this phenomenon at its best and most persuasive, many atheists have been disturbed by Dawkins's crude stereotypes and seemingly pathological hostility towards religion. In fact, The God Delusion might turn out to be a monumental own goal - persuading people that atheism is just as intolerant as the worst that religion can offer.

Alister McGrath is professor of theology at Oxford University. His new book The Dawkins Delusion?, co-authored by Joanna Collicutt McGrath, is published by SPCK at £7.99.

Maddy McCann

As I write, Madeleine McCann is still missing. Her abduction is a parent’s worst nightmare, and the attention given it has highlighted the pain that must be felt by innumerable parents in the developing world whose young ones are abducted for the purposes of slavery, war or worse.

It is when faced with such horrors that our initial instincts frame the question: “How could anyone believe in a loving God?” But I want to briefly and gently suggest that these horrors actually point in the other direction.

You see to ‘believe’ that there is no loving and so moral God has two particular consequences: The first is relativism, in which right and wrong, good and evil are simply what we (or today’s consensus) decide them to be. Assuming that there is no God to define or reveal absolute truth, morality is seen to be fluid. And at the very least this fosters a world where people are more ready to destroy the happiness of another for what “feels right” for them. The second is fatalism in which there is no acknowledgement of “right” at all. The infamous atheist Richard Dawkins recognises this, writing:
“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, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference.”
The thing is, few if any, live as consistent relativists or fatalists. We instinctively recognise that there are goods and evils that should be good and evil for all people and all time. Indeed, we can’t live without this being the case to some extent. Moreover, we find ourselves rightly outraged at wickedness and provoked by injustice. Yet these feelings have little warrant in the universe of Dawkins, whereas they find an explicable source if there is a loving God in whose image we have been made.

Having said this, Christians are convinced that belief in such a God rests on a firmer foundation than our instincts: Jesus – a man who claimed to be God on earth and who verified that claim with the profundity of his teaching, the supremacy of his character and his ability to do what only God could. It was this Jesus who taught that there will be an ultimate accounting for every act we do, and this Jesus who displayed the deepest love by dying to enable those who follow him to be forgiven their own wrongdoing and enter a perfected world to come.

This is not to say that questions do not remain about why this loving God might allow Madeleine’s abduction - but it is to recognise that he will not allow such things forever. Can I reassure you then? There really is hope.