Posted on 05/01/2011 7:24:18 AM PDT by Ethan Clive Osgoode
The squabble between Darwin lobbyists who openly hate religion and those who only quietly disdain it grows ever more personal, bitter and pathetic. On one side, evangelizing New or "Gnu" (ha ha) Atheists like Jerry Coyne and his acolytes at Why Evolution Is True. Dr. Coyne is a biologist who teaches and ostensibly researches at the University of Chicago but has a heck of a lot of free time on his hands for blogging and posting pictures of cute cats.
On the other side, so-called accommodationists like the crowd at the National Center for Science Education, who attack the New Atheists for the political offense of being rude to religious believers and supposedly messing up the alliance between religious and irreligious Darwinists.
I say "supposedly" because there's no evidence any substantial body of opinion is actually being changed on religion or evolution by anything the open haters or the quiet disdainers say. Everyone seems to seriously think they're either going to defeat religion, or merely "creationism," or both by blogging for an audience of fellow Darwinists.
Want to see what I mean? This is all pretty strictly a battle of stinkbugs in a bottle. Try to follow it without getting a headache.
Coyne recently drew excited applause from fellow biologist-atheist-blogger PZ Myers for Coyne's "open letter" (published on his blog) to the NCSE and its British equivalent, the British Centre for Science Education. In the letter, Coyne took umbrage at criticism of the New Atheists, mostly on blogs, emanating from the two accommodationist organizations. He vowed that,
We will continue to answer the misguided attacks [on the New Atheists] by people like Josh Rosenau, Roger Stanyard, and Nick Matzke so long as they keep mounting those attacks.Like the NCSE, the BCSE seeks to pump up Darwin in the public mind without scaring religious people. This guy called Stanyard at the BCSE complains of losing a night's sleep over the nastiness of the rhetoric on Coyne's blog. Coyne in turn complained that Stanyard complained that a blog commenter complained that Nick Matzke, formerly of the NCSE, is like "vermin." Coyne also hit out at blogger Jason Rosenhouse for an "epic"-length blog post complaining of New Atheist "incivility." In the blog, Rosenhouse, who teaches math at James Madison University, wrote an update about how he had revised an insulting comment about the NCSE's Josh Rosenau that he, Rosenhouse, made in a previous version of the post.
That last bit briefly confused me. In occasionally skimming the writings of Jason Rosenhouse and Josh Rosenau in the past, I realized now I had been assuming they were the same person. They are not!
It goes on and on. In the course of his own blog post, Professor Coyne disavowed name-calling and berated Stanyard (remember him? The British guy) for "glomming onto" the Matzke-vermin insult like "white on rice, or Kwok on a Leica." What's a Kwok? Not a what but a who -- John Kwok, presumably a pseudonym, one of the most tirelessly obsessive commenters on Darwinist blog sites. Besides lashing at intelligent design, he often writes of his interest in photographic gear such as a camera by Leica. I have the impression that Kwok irritates even fellow Darwinists.
There's no need to keep all the names straight in your head. I certainly can't. I'm only taking your time, recounting just a small part of one confused exchange, to illustrate the culture of these Darwinists who write so impassionedly about religion, whether for abolishing it or befriending it. Writes Coyne in reply to Stanyard,
I'd suggest, then, that you lay off telling us what to do until you've read about our goals. The fact is that we'll always be fighting creationism until religion goes away, and when it does the fight will be over, as it is in Scandinavia.A skeptic might suggest that turning America into Scandinavia, as far as religion goes, is an outsized goal, more like a delusion, for this group as they sit hunched over their computers shooting intemperate comments back and forth at each other all day. Or in poor Stanyard's case, all night.
There's a feverish, terrarium-like and oxygen-starved quality to this world of online Darwinists and atheists. It could only be sustained by the isolation of the Internet. They don't seem to realize that the public accepts Darwinism to the extent it does -- which is not much -- primarily because of what William James would call the sheer, simple "prestige" that the opinion grants. Arguments and evidence have little to do with it.
The prestige of Darwinism is not going to be affected by how the battle between Jerry Coyne and the NCSE turns out. New Atheist arguments are hobbled by the same isolation from what people think and feel. I have not yet read anything by any of these gentlemen or ladies, whether the open haters or the quiet disdainers, that conveys anything like a real comprehension of religious feeling or thought.
Even as they fight over the most effective way to relate to "religion," the open atheists and the accomodationists speak of an abstraction, a cartoon, that no actual religious person would recognize. No one is going to be persuaded if he doesn't already wish to be persuaded for other personal reasons. No faith is under threat from the likes of Jerry Coyne.
More meaningless quotes when no answers are available for what was asked.
The superstitious preaching to their own choir is quite the bore.
What can I say?
What is man, that thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him?
The Bhagavad-Gita.
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Chapter VII
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I referred to them when I mentioned flawed premises. That area has been accessed by missionaries for a long time. But as I stated, in general, not knowing is sufficient. But they know, at least, right from wrong whatever that may be. They are not excused from those, which are probably prohibitions of theft, prevarication, and murder.
What amazes me are haughty sweeping generalizations, laced with subjective "factual" certainty and opinionated judgments of those who don't share their beliefs, unfailing invoked to avoid answering direct questions.
It's nothing personal. When you leave them to their own devices, they turn on each other with equal vigor and vile, "blessing" other religions and believers with equal "compliments". Just as they know your beliefs are absolutely wrong, they know all other beliefs are equally wrong too, except theirs.
They have this knowledge that they are the lucky ones who have been pulled by a divine tractor beam into the world of revealed truth and communicate with their deity directly via their private 1-800-call-God line for all the answers to the secrets of the world. Gnosticism is alive and well.
So, they are guaranteed saved outside of faith in particular dogma, correct? Provided they do not murder, lie or steal. If a majority of such tribals do not steal, lie or murder, they are automatically saved by the reason of ignorance. Correct?
So, what does this “prove” Elsie?
Sounds to me as if you're projecting your own anxieties about your future onto "primitive tribes who never heard the gospel."
Who might "feel guilt or anxiety"; the primitive tribes who "never heard the gospel", or those who deliberately reject what they heard?
Superstitious primitive groups ("regressives" who call themselves "progressives"), who have rejected what they heard, preach a primitive, un-civilized "evil-eye" gospel of envy. They aren't envious because they are primitive, but primitive because they are envious. Authority ranking is how tribes function ... Know your place, obey orders, and hail to the chief.
In America we have a particular political party that perfectly represents this primitive mind-set.
The most dangerous stage in the growth of civilization may well be that in which man has come to regard all these beliefs as superstitions and refuses to accept or submit to anything which he does not rationally understand. The rationalist whose reason is not sufficient to teach him those limitations of the power of conscious reason, and who despises all the institutions and customs which have not been consciously designed, would thus become the destroyer of the civilization built upon them. --F.A.Hayek
HERE: Dr. Robert Godwin, Ph.D <>
Christianity is obviously fundamentally complete and needs no other revelation to complete it. It is missing nothing.
It is simply a truism that no one is more blind to his Christian assumptions than the anti-Christian atheist who is the beneficiary of 2000 years of Christian conditioning.
Thus, he values all of the precious things that uniquely developed in the Judeo-Christian West and nowhere else: democracy, individuality, liberty, science, freedom of conscience, etc, but then attacks the metaphysical roots of these things -- as if any of them were developed by atheists living in purely secular cultures.
In reality, the most atheistic cultures are tied (or is it hanged?) neck and neck with Islam for producing the most cruel and barbaric cultures (with the possible exception of primitive tribes)...."
(In the past, I have recommended Gil Baile's brilliant Violence Unveiled, which traces the profound anthropological consequences of the Christian revelation, which, in a certain very real sense, was the "cure" for religion -- including bad forms of Christianity). ...
Hard to say; but, if one believes what is written in Romans...
Oh, well, if he says it is, then it must be so! Obviosuly..../s
nothing; other than GOD does things in a BIG way!
(Relative to ME, anyway.)
Verbose ramblings notwithstanding, the point in citing the example of the stranded tribals is to prove an exception to the rule established by religious dogma. If the said dogma cannot accommodate or account for this exception, then the dogma is rendered false and therefore, flawed.
You don’t have to go on carrying out an insult tirade. Simply answering the specific questions asked will suffice. Why is this so hard to do?
... that they are saved without faith?
This "proves" that God does things in a big way? Yet he made us in his image smaller than the speck of dust?
(Relative to ME, anyway.)
Well, that fair, Elsie. I think you should have mentioned that in the first place.
Some people are offended by difficult questions, JCB, especially if such questions bring into question sweeping generalizaitons. They are not used to it.
No, I haven’t.
Faith though threat, that’s what they all seek, or have been chained by. Hence the meaningless, insult-laden verbosity.
It is not an automatic thing they are still judged.
Now I get to ask you a question or two. What is "Ignorantia juris non excusat"? What are your feelings on illegal immigration?
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