by Madeleine Kando
There must be an enormous amount of people who, like me, don’t really believe in the existence of a person with a long beard sitting on a cloud, passing judgment on everyone. They just don’t go about telling everyone how they feel. The ones that do are the activist atheists, the ones that speak for the rest of us.
Authors like Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins are explicitly FOR atheism, just like I am for animal rights. But their rational, often passionate arguments pale compared to Michel Onfray’s total destruction of religion in his book: ‘Atheist Manifesto: The Case Against Christianity, Judaism, and Islam’. Onfray sets out to dissect the Koran, the Bible and the Torah with the precision of a surgical procedure, leaving behind little piles of brittle bones, proving that the bulk of these texts were fabricated, not too different from the fraudulent texts of scoundrels like Joseph Smith. They were written by ‘too many people over too long a period of time’ to be historically correct.
This is not the first book I read about atheism, but it definitely made me stop and think hard about my own views. My thoughts go something like this:
Why is the question whether one believes in God so important? If I define myself as an atheist, does that define me in the same sense as being a Democrat?’ That’s where I get confused: is belief in God part of someone’s public or private identity?
Right now, as I am sitting here writing and thinking, I have no need of a God. I am perfectly happy without him/her. I might be accused of lacking ‘spirituality’, of being simplistic and not taking the BIG questions to heart: why are we here, what is the meaning of life, what happens to me after I die, etc. I wish I could believe in an afterlife, because I am terrified of death. I would love to believe that dying is not the end of everything, but there is really no proof of that, is there?
The idea that all the hard work that went into creating me will be for naught when I die is hard to accept. I will disintegrate, as if I never existed. The magnificent architecture of the being that I am, my fingers obeying the commands in my brain to type these words, there MUST be something more to it. Does one life justify all this labor intensive, well-thought out, inexplicably complex process? Shouldn't the rules of living at least be more demanding? If there is nothing more to it than this short-lived one-time affair: shouldn’t it require some kind of daily entrance exam to prove that you are worthy of being alive?
But just because life is finite is not a reason to deny its value. I agree with Onfray, that religion is greedy. It looks for satisfaction in the afterlife by saying that life is just a stepping-stone. ‘Fleeing life in order not to have to die is not a good bargain. You pay death twice.’
That is exactly the point of this book, that religion has poisoned our appreciation of life, that by dismissing life on earth as insignificant, which makes an afterlife essential, which makes life miserable, which makes an afterlife important, which makes life… etc. Get my drift?
The sad part about religion is that we are no more in control of it than the weather. We have created our own monster. Whatever you believe in the privacy of your own life is nobody’s business, but when religion begins to dictate social policy, which affects everyone, then it becomes everyone’s problem. Gay rights, abortion rights, women’s rights, all these affect ME personally, that’s when someone else’s private belief has metastasized into becoming an ever-growing tumor in the public sphere.
The only part of Onfray’s philosophy that I question is his rejection of ALL Judeo/Christian values, At least atheists like Dawkins and Hitchens do not reject the values of compassion, human dignity and equality. They say we can be moral without God. But Onfray, like Nietzsche, insists that this is an illusion. He talks about replacing Judeo/Christian values with a new ‘Atheology’ based on Utilitarianism and Hedonism, but he doesn’t explain exactly what these values would be.
Besides, morality might not have anything to do with religion at all. We might be born with a moral sense; our genes having made us evolve with a sense of right from wrong. If it is genetic, what need do we have of religion? Of atheism for that matter?
In an episode on 60 minutes, babies watch as a puppet struggles to open up a box. Another puppet appears and lends a hand. Then the scene repeats but this time a third puppet appears and slams the box shut. When offered a choice between the bad puppet and the helpful puppet, most babies preferred to hold the helpful puppet.
One might wonder why the burden of proof is on the person who does NOT believe in God, but sadly, that’s just the way it is. At least we are no longer required to prove that unicorns don't exist.
What I like about atheist activists is that they are trying to balance out theism’s disproportionate influence in our culture. Onfray’s book, even though it doesn’t offer a concrete alternative to theism or atheism, is a worthwhile read. With humor and a generous amount of venom it contributes to the atheist arsenal and brings us closer to a time when religion will be subject to the same scrutiny and objectivity that is applied to other fields of 'knowledge'.
leave comment here
14 comments:
It's true, it cannot be proven that there is no life after death, but neither is it proven that there isn't. Darwin never said that God does not exist, he said 'I don't know'. One thing is clear, religion has done more harm than good. IT does spoil the positive image of life on earth.
A very interesting piece and I feel totally connected with your ideas. On morality: isn't it the eternal question of the survival of the species through the genes? What's moral for one is not for the other...
May I suggest also Onfray's "La Puissance d'Exister, manifeste hédoniste" and "The Begining of INfinity" by D. Deutsch.
ps. on another register: Onfray's "Le Canari du Nazi"
Ata's comment is superbly written!
To Csaba: Deutsch's "The Beginning of Infinity" has been sort of a bible to me, since I read it (and reviewed it on this blog) a year or so ago. You are right to bring it up, as it is optimistic about the future, recognizes that there is something special about human beings, and at the same time doesn't lapse into religious nonsense.
For an interesting debate on theism-atheism check out the youtube video: David Wolpe and Christopher Hitchens debate religion, faith,God at John Hancock Hall, Boston, MA. Moderator: Tom Ashbrook
URL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2kZRAOXEFPI
Thanks Moshe and Csaba for the links and suggestions. Ata, you are still as lucid and sharp at 99 as always!
Things in the universe are in awfully convenient order. The wrong mix of things one way or another moments after the big bang and poof! No more universe. "In the beginning God created the created the heavens & earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said let their be light and there was light" Einstein thought the big bang so much like Genesis he rejected it. I don't plan to crash my car, but I buy insurance anyway. A little spirituality wont kill you.
I liked this blog, and the excellent responses it has received. I have been an agnostic ever since I realized at an early age that all proofs of the existence of God must fail because of the lack of a universally acceptable definition of God, the lack of a reliable standard for evidence, and the apparent inability of human reason to reach a final conclusion on the question. I don't happen to need a God or a religion, but I believe that some other people have found that a spiritual practice helps them to treat other beings in more considerate ways, so I would not condemn them for having it. There are both benefits and dangers in almost every human activity, which each person must sort out for themselves.
There is no doubt that religious scriptures are collections of writings considered sacred by premodern peoples, and when modern people cling to them as literal and prooftext them for purposes of power and control they can be used to promote great harm. Personally, I believe that the 10 Commandments are basicly necessary for societies to function well, regardless of of how they are written down or understood, and that scriptures contain a mixture of lessons learned by social adaptations, and as memories of societies that prospered. We could say some of the same things about the ancient Greek and Roman philosophy that is not recorded in the Bible or the Koran. For this reason, rejection of anything that science hasn't proved is like throwing out the baby with the bathwater.
But it is rather difficult for a postmodern to believe in a God who is in the form of a person on a throne with a long beard. And it is hard to believe a suicide bombing will make one's afterlife better.
None of this discussion, however, addresses the Buddhist conception of cosmic consciousness, and if one views "God" as some form of cosmic consciousness, the Hitchens/religious fundamentalist debate seems to make out the "faith" of both the atheist and the scriptural literalist as believers in opposite views of a straw man.
I agree with you, Gene. The problem is that organized religion is not satisfied with the statement 'each person must sort it out for themselves'. The Church wants to sort it out FOR us. That's where I start to protest.
Unfortunately, the straw man has been given the breath of life in the West. I don't believe the Atheist Movement has a beef with Buddhism per se.
Excellent exchanges like this are what makes this blog worthwhile.
My two bits’ worth of comments(and humor):
I just finished reading Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of Time. Like Einstein, he occasionally mentions God. And he does so in a very appealing way, namely by asking: IF such and such a theory were found to be supported by the evidence (e.g. the Big Bang), how would that affect the probability of God’s existence?
Another point (mentioned by David Deutsch in The Beginning of Infinity, among others) is the "infinite regress" problem: If God created the universe, who created God? and who created God’s creator? etc.
Reminds me of the old parable: What supports the world? A giant turtle. And what supports the giant turtle? Another giant turtle below it. And what about that turtle? Well, it’s giant turtles all the way down.
And here is one more funny: We can determine whether God exists democratically. We can vote on it: In the movie Contact, Matthew McConaughey tells Jodie Foster: 98% of the people of the world believe in God. So how can you and your 2% who don’t believe in God be right?
Great review of an interesting topic. I've always wondered why people want others to believe what they do.
Dear Madeleine,
Concerning the existence of God, in the light of modern science an educated person
finds it difficult to acknowledge the traditional image. However, I believe one need not
adopt a closed atheist position. An examination of history should allow one to wonder.
A few examples that make me think are: an obscure town in the middle of Italy grows to
rule the Mediterranean world. from a tiny village in a remote part of the Roman Empire
emerges a religious leader of millions, from an even more remote and desolate area
comes another religious figure whose beliefs are followed from the Atlantic to the
Pacific Oceans (Morocco to Indonesia), a sixteen year old girl defeats the English invader,
the Miracle of the Marne 1914, the great Pacific War lost by the Japanese in five minutes
at Midway. Some examples that make me think and wonder.
It's true that all these significant historical facts beg for an explanation. Was God responsible for them or was it Providence? Was it Military superiority?
We will never know and there is certainly room for doubt from an atheist's point of view. But wouldn't the need for explanations be the reason that we want to believe in a God?
Post a Comment
Please limit your comment to 300 words at the most!