Moniker wrote:beastie wrote:I haven't read the link yet but will. I can already say that I think Dawkins is a bit naïve and idealistic, as well. He seems to imagine that eradicating religion will cure the human species of the underlying problems that resulted in the creation of religion in the first place. Kind of a horse and cart problem.
This is where I see the problem, as well, beastie. We eradicate religion? So? That does nothing to change human nature that nutballs like to congregate with other nutballs and do wacky things.
Hi, marg, my comment was directed toward the notion of eradicating religion and not so much toward Dawkins.
From statements such as these I don't think it's unfair to think Dawkins would, indeed, be pleased to eradicate religion:
http://richarddawkins.net/article,93,Is ... rd-DawkinsWhich brings me to my point about mental child abuse. In a 1995 issue of the Independent, one of London's leading newspapers, there was a photograph of a rather sweet and touching scene. It was Christmas time, and the picture showed three children dressed up as the three wise men for a nativity play. The accompanying story described one child as a Muslim, one as a Hindu, and one as a Christian. The supposedly sweet and touching point of the story was that they were all taking part in this Nativity play.
What is not sweet and touching is that these children were all four years old. How can you possibly describe a child of four as a Muslim or a Christian or a Hindu or a Jew? Would you talk about a four-year-old economic monetarist? Would you talk about a four-year-old neo-isolationist or a four-year-old liberal Republican? There are opinions about the cosmos and the world that children, once grown, will presumably be in a position to evaluate for themselves. Religion is the one field in our culture about which it is absolutely accepted, without question -- without even noticing how bizarre it is -- that parents have a total and absolute say in what their children are going to be, how their children are going to be raised, what opinions their children are going to have about the cosmos, about life, about existence. Do you see what I mean about mental child abuse?
It is fashionable to wax apocalyptic about the threat to humanity posed by the AIDS virus, "mad cow" disease, and many others, but I think a case can be made that faith is one of the world's great evils, comparable to the smallpox virus but harder to eradicate.
First of all I don't think Dawkins expects to eradicate religion, I don't even think that is his goal.
My comments were not directed toward Dawkins. Yet, the idea that we ask parents to stop indoctrinating their children with religious beliefs, or societies to steer more away from religion really doesn't address the human phenomenon that there are people that like to go to football games, paint their faces, put on a lucky shirt, twirl 3 times, then beat up on the opposing team during a riot. We group together into clans and become a mass of group think, often times -- that is where I see the problem that our world faces -- religion is not the source of this -- it just arises from this human tendency.
He clearly in The God Delusion states his goal is to raise the consciousness in particular of people who never thought they could question their religious beliefs or never thought to question. Throughout the book he brings up "consciousness raising" numerous times.
I have no problem with him stating whatever he chooses to and yet, he doesn't particularly impress me. I enjoy his works on evolution, yet, the rest of his works on religion just is not compelling, to me. He's an intelligent man, and has his opinions and yet, I just don't necessarily agree with them. I don't think people that have their children perform in a nativity scene are mentally abusing their children -- that strikes me as shrill rhetoric which turns me off of him. I don't care if others are compelled by him. Those that have their kids in nativity scenes will most likely be put off by what he states and those that already agree with him will continue to nod their heads. He may reach the open minded people or those not so invested in beliefs and yet, more often than not radicals in any direction turn off the majority of those that are in the middle and are likely to sway. This is why I appreciate Dennett and think he can be more compelling to those that already are believers or might sway.
He writes p6 "But I believe there are plenty of open-minded people out there: people whose childhood indoctrination was not too insidious, or for other reasons didn't 'take', or whose native intelligence is strong enough to overcome it. Such free spirits should need only a little encouragement to break free oif the vice of religion altogether. At the very least I hope that nobody who reads this book will be able to say, 'I didn't know I could'."
I agree with him. Although I don't necessarily think of religion as a vice, and see wording such as that precisely why many people would be turned off from him. I don't care he uses the terms he does, just again, I think that he's losing audience when he does so.
His target audience is not all religious people but rather those who are capable of some introspection on why they hold the religious beliefs they do and people who haven't given religion in general much consideration and/or critical evaluation. If we lived in a world in which all ideas were of equal value, no discussion would be beneficial or neccesary to evalute, but we don't live in such a world.
I get that.