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When Atheists Attack (Each Other)
Evolution News and Views ^ | April 28 2011 | Davld Klinghoffer

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.




TOPICS: Education; Religion; Science
KEYWORDS: atheism; atheists; darwin; evolution; gagdadbob; onecosmosblog
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To: James C. Bennett; betty boop; xzins; Matchett-PI; 1000 silverlings; Alex Murphy; bkaycee; ...

Planning on sinning expecting that you can just go in for forgiveness later is what you were addressing.

I responded adequately to that.

Don’t move the goalposts and claim the answer isn’t adequate because it didn’t address something else you were wondering. If you have a different question, by all means pose it, but don’t be so intellectually dishonest and lazy as to claim the first one wasn’t answered because you didn’t like the answer.


2,341 posted on 06/09/2011 2:18:55 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: James C. Bennett; caww
Yes. I am not stupid. My skepticism is my way of searching for the truth. I am content. If you are able to address satisfactorily the exceptions and anomalies raised by me throughout this thread and beyond regarding the nature of your deity, then yes, I will, by way of reason, have to accept the truth.

FWIW, God addresses those in the Bible, which you reject. Hence, nobody will ever be able to satisfy your demands and give you what you would consider an *adequate* answer, and you will die, unsaved, reveling (or maybe more accurately wallowing) contentedly in your skepticism.

What exactly is the purpose of your grilling people about the salvation of *tribals*? How is that relevant to you? Do you not trust God to judge them justly? How is His dealing with them going to affect you anyway?

You are not a *tribal* who has never heard the gospel. You have heard it plainly and clearly many times over the years here on FR. What you are responsible for is what you do with the knowledge which has been granted you and with the amount of knowledge you have available, you have the greater accountability.

Distraction techniques with questions about the tribals is not going to fool God, nor change your outcome when you face Him. Every man gives account for HIMSELF, not others.

2,342 posted on 06/09/2011 2:27:31 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: metmom
I responded adequately to that.

Ummm, no. You didn't. You did supply a lot of obfuscation to what was a clear question. Are the tribals saved due to ignorance or not? Yes or no?

2,343 posted on 06/09/2011 2:28:52 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: presently no screen name
More than likely everything that was in their mind and heart all along - whether it be man made doctrine - which nullify His Word or expressed lies about God/His Word - will be what comes to them. God judges the heart - I doubt in one's last moments one would suddenly have a SINCERE desire to know Him but more of a cya desire. Fooling oneself through life does not mean one can fool The Almighty - only pride/deception would make that believable.

Which then makes being saved just fire insurance.

And God will not be used that way.

2,344 posted on 06/09/2011 2:29:27 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: kosta50; CommerceComet
Last time I checked, Calvinists are Christians.

You show an abysmal ignorance of what it means to be a Christian.

Since you are starting from a flawed premise, it's no wonder you can't make any sense of the mess you post on FR about religion.

2,345 posted on 06/09/2011 2:32:17 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: metmom; kosta50
I take your second reply as an implicit admission of the fact that you inadequately answered the question, earlier. However, you're still obfuscating instead of providing a clear answer:

"What exactly is the purpose of your grilling people about the salvation of *tribals*? How is that relevant to you? Do you not trust God to judge them justly? How is His dealing with them going to affect you anyway?

You are not a *tribal* who has never heard the gospel. You have heard it plainly and clearly many times over the years here on FR. What you are responsible for is what you do with the knowledge which has been granted you and with the amount of knowledge you have available, you have the greater accountability."

See, I have clarified this earlier, repeatedly. All I need to do to prove your entire dogma as false is to provide a counter-example. This is how assumed theories are proven wrong. I am not speaking about myself here, but about an exception that fails the salvation test of your adopted dogma whilst being innocent.

Had you answered with a "yes" to the question whether the tribals are saved due to ignorance, then your entire scriptures, its dogma and its contents are not a pre-condition to salvation. Had you answered with a "no" then it makes your dogma inadequate to address the salvation modes necessary to make it applicable for all modes of human existence.

You are aware of this serious, serious problem, and hence, the obfuscation.

Saved or not?

2,346 posted on 06/09/2011 2:36:32 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: xzins; kosta50
Hardly. It is valid only because it is an idea affirmed by God, and it has its source in the awareness of the Creator extant within us all.

The oldest forms of the Golden Rule appear in places like China and India, independent of the Middle East.

The Golden Rule works in the animal kingdom, too. Are you admitting that animals are able to think like humans?

Your CHOSEN deity... "Supreme, non-negotiable, and True."

You want this to be true, but there is no good reason provided for it to be true. Your CHOSEN deity is not everyone else's deity.

2,347 posted on 06/09/2011 2:44:01 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: James C. Bennett

There have been Scripture passages which have been posted to deal with that already. If you choose to ignore them, there is no point in posting them further.

You are not ignorant. What are YOU going to do about Jesus?

If the tribals salvation is of such concern to you, go tell them about Jesus yourself, so they are no longer ignorant. Or support some missionary agency which works with them. There are several which are worthy of support as they are working to translate Scripture into languages which have none yet.

Wycliffe Bible Translators comes to mind.
http://www.wycliffe.org/


2,348 posted on 06/09/2011 2:47:21 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: xzins; kosta50
"I would assert..."

A pretend solution is always a pretend solution - an ASSUMPTION, devoid of factual evidence. If human rights really did get sourced from such an entity, there wouldn't have been any necessity for human rights to evolve so drastically in the past couple of millennia. Only a few years ago it was morally okay to own slaves. Is this how an absolute moral compass works? You surely must be joking.

2,349 posted on 06/09/2011 2:48:01 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: editor-surveyor

INDEED.

I think with Scripture . . . also . . .

there is a need to WANT to understand.


2,350 posted on 06/09/2011 2:49:39 PM PDT by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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To: metmom; kosta50

You have a fear in providing a clear YES/NO answer and hence, the continued, sustained obfuscation.

This is not about me, this is about a supposed universal standard failing the universality test. Understand that clearly, and don’t move the goalposts by ignoring this.


2,351 posted on 06/09/2011 2:50:31 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: metmom; kosta50

Thanks for the link, but the universality test should not be a victim of time, either. So, I would ask, what about the tribals who have passed on, without hearing your adopted dogma. Are they saved? Yes or no?


2,352 posted on 06/09/2011 2:53:05 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: James C. Bennett

Your misunderstanding of salvation is your problem.

Salvation is not by dogma, nor adherence to a set of beliefs. What you are describing is religion, not Christianity.

Christianity is about forgiveness through the person of Jesus Christ as the propitiation for our sins. God’s divine justice, death for sin, was satisfied with the death of Christ on the cross. Since Jesus was sinless, death could not hold Him.

God has decreed that anyone who puts their faith in the finished work of Christ on the cross, will be saved, by grace through faith.

Each man is accountable to God for responding to the amount of knowledge that has been given him. God’s justice in the matter will be just as He alone knows the heart.

You can carry on all you want about those who have never heard and whether they are saved of not, but it makes not one bit of difference when YOU are standing before God and He is asking you to account for yourself. Pointing to the tribals and demanding that God answer adequately about them before you answer to Him is not going to cut it.

It is merely a distraction technique that God is not going to be side tracked by. There will be no negotiating with God that if He give you an adequate answer, then you’ll tell Him what he wants to know.


2,353 posted on 06/09/2011 2:56:22 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: metmom; kosta50

Are the tribals saved? Yes or no? Simple question, here.


2,354 posted on 06/09/2011 2:57:54 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: metmom
Here is another thing that used to puzzle me. Is it not frightfully unfair that this new life should be confined to people who have heard of Christ and been able to believe in Him? But the truth is God has not told us what His arrangements about the other people are. We do know that no man can be saved except through Christ; we do not know that only those who know Him can be saved through Him. But in the meantime, if you are worried about the people outside, the most unreasonable thing you can do is to remain outside yourself. Christians are Christ's body, the organism through which He works. Every addition to that body enables Him to do more. If you want to help those outside you must add your own little cell to the body of Christ who alone can help them. Cutting off a man's fingers would be an odd way of getting him to do more work.

C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

2,355 posted on 06/09/2011 3:00:48 PM PDT by Wallop the Cat
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To: James C. Bennett

Forms of the Golden Rule are of no consequence. They probably also had rules for eating roaches in polite company....those were not affirmed by God. This rule, also spoken by Jesus, was affirmed by God. Therefore, it is valid.

It matters not about other gods, James, don’t you know that by now. My point is that a life of faith in the Triune God of historic Christianity is the only path to truth. Therefore, if HE directly or indirectly states various human rights, then those are valid and unchangeable.

Any rights you might assume as yours because of some social convention can be taken away by changing societies or rulers.


2,356 posted on 06/09/2011 3:02:34 PM PDT by xzins
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To: Wallop the Cat; metmom; kosta50
But in the meantime, if you are worried about the people outside, the most unreasonable thing you can do is to remain outside yourself.

Again, I repeat, we are testing the alleged universality of what is supposed to be a 'universal truth'. To that end, discussing me is immaterial. Why is this so hard to grasp?

I guess the predictable self-pats will follow.

2,357 posted on 06/09/2011 3:03:24 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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To: metmom
"That is a keeper."

Yes it is. Thanks for the ping.

2,358 posted on 06/09/2011 3:05:24 PM PDT by YHAOS (you betcha!)
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To: James C. Bennett

The truth has always been the truth no matter how obstinate or misdirected were human beings who retained existence only by the grace of God.

In the beginning God made humans free, not master and slave. Paul recognizes this by encouraging any slave who can to get his freedom. The spiritual freedom that is ours in Christ has an impact on secular life in that the ideas of freedom point to the ideal plan of God.


2,359 posted on 06/09/2011 3:07:02 PM PDT by xzins
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To: xzins; kosta50

You didn’t address the evolution of moral standards over the millennia, and therefore didn’t really address what I asked earlier. Absolute morality implies that moral codes do not change.

Your ASSUMPTIONS are inconsequential to these arguments. You believe because you CHOSE to do so. Others can do so with equal conviction, about their chosen deities, as you did so, and be equally convinced. You won’t be able to budge them from their position, for the same reasons.


2,360 posted on 06/09/2011 3:07:34 PM PDT by James C. Bennett (An Australian.)
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