Posted on 09/29/2003 7:09:06 AM PDT by DittoJed2
Not Such a Bright Idea: Atheists Try a New Name Albert Mohler Daniel Dennett claims that atheism is getting a bad press. The world is filled with religious believers, he acknowledges, but a growing number of atheists lack the respect they deserve. It's time for a new public relations strategy for the godless, Dennett argues, and he has just the plan.
The central point of Dennett's strategy is to get rid of the word "atheist." It's too, well, negative. After all, it identifies an individual by what he or she does not believe--in this case the individual does not believe in God. A more positive approach would be helpful to advance the atheist anti-supernatural agenda.
Dennett, joined by Richard Dawkins, thinks he has found the perfect plan. Two atheists in California have suggested that the anti-supernatural crowd should take a page from the homosexual rights movement's handbook. Homosexuals renamed themselves "gays" and changed the terms of the debate, they argue.
As Richard Dawkins explains, "A triumph of consciousness-raising has been the homosexual hijacking of the word 'gay'.... Gay is succinct, uplifting, positive: an 'up' word, where homosexual is a down word and queer [and] faggot . . . are insults. Those of us who subscribe to no religion; those of us who rejoice in the real and scorn the false comfort of the unreal, we need a word of our own, a word like 'gay'."
The word chosen to be the atheists' version of 'gay' is bright. That's right, they want unbelievers to call themselves brights. Give them an "A" for arrogance.
Of course, Daniel Dennett and Richard Dawkins are already specialists in the highest form of intellectual snobbery. Dennett, a professor of philosophy at Tufts University, and Dawkins, a scientist at Oxford University, are well known for their condescending dismissal of all belief in the supernatural. Both address their scorn to anyone who believes in God or dares to question naturalistic evolution.
Their plan, if successful, would put believers in God in the unenviable position of being opposed to "brights" who deny belief in God. This is, no pun avoidable, a diabolically brilliant public relations strategy. The real question is: Will it work?
In "The Bright Stuff," an op-ed column published in The New York Times, Dennett simply declared, "It's time for us brights to come out of the closet." Now, that's an invitation sure to get attention.
He continued, "What is a bright? A bright is a person with a naturalist as opposed to a supernaturalist world view. We brights don't believe in ghosts or elves or the Easter Bunny--or God. We disagree about many things, and hold a variety of views about morality, politics and the meaning of life, but we share a disbelief in black magic--and life after death."
Brights are all around us, Dennett claims. Brights are "doctors, nurses, police officers, schoolteachers, crossing guards and men and women serving in the military. We are your sons and daughters, your brothers and sisters. Our colleges and universities teem with brights. Among scientists, we are a commanding majority." Had enough?
Dennett wants to be the Moses of the atheist cause, leading his people out of bondage to theists and into the promised land of atheistic cultural influence--a land flowing with skepticism and unbelief.
The most absurd argument offered by Dennett is that brights "just want to be treated with the same respect accorded to Baptists and Hindus and Catholics, no more and no less." Those familiar with the work of Dennett and Dawkins will be waiting for the laughter after that claim. The same respect? These two militant secularists show no respect for religious belief.
Philosopher Michael Rea of the University of Notre Dame couldn't let Dennett and Dawkins get away with such hogwash. 'The fact is," he asserts, "the likes of Dennett and Dawkins aren't the least bit interested in mutual respect." Dennett has suggested that serious religious believers should be isolated from society in a "cultural zoo." Dawkins has argued that persons who reject naturalistic evolution are "ignorant, stupid or insane." Well, now--is that their vision of "mutual respect?"
As for the anti-supernaturalists calling themselves "brights," Rea argues, "The genuinely tolerant atheist will refuse the label; for the the very respect and humility that characterize her tolerance will also help her to see that in fact their are bright people on both sides of the theist/atheist divide." [See Rea's exchange with Dennett]
Timothy K. Beal, professor of religion at Case Western Reserve University, notes that the brights demonstrate "an evangelical tone" in their writings. Beal perceptively notes that, in their determination to be irreligious, these atheists have just established a new anti-religious religion. But what they really want is not only respect, but cultural influence.
Dennett's New York Times column decried "the role of religious organizations in daily life," contrasted with no such public role for secularists. Of course, this claim is sheer nonsense. Dennett and Dawkins boast that most scientists and intellectuals are atheists. They are without influence?
G. K. Chesterton once identified atheism as "the most daring of all dogmas," since it is the "assertion of a universal negative." As he explained; "for a man to say that there is no God in the universe is like saying that there are no insects in any of the stars."
The Psalmist agreed, and spoke in even more dramatic terms: "The fool says in his heart, 'There is no God'." [Psalm 14:1] The atheists are caught in a difficult position. They reject belief in God, but draw attention to God even as they shout their unbelief. In the end, they look more foolish than dangerous.
This call for a new public relations strategy will likely backfire. Hijacking the term bright shows insecurity more than anything else. A movement of secure egos would not resort to calling itself "brights."
Atheism may try to change its name, but it cannot succeed in changing its nature. This bright idea doesn't look so bright after all.
|
You have a habit of wasting everybody's time. You also begin with personal insults. Typical of you.
They come from reality.
What does not follow from this is that everyone would choose to do evil-malakhi
Or that if there is a God, that it is not equally so that everything is still permitted (restrained only by the actions of man.... whether he believes in God, or not). Unless of course Dostoyevsky's argument is against free will-OWK
[different context]What a sophisticated intellectual refutation of Dostoyevsky's statement, and of the widely accepted version of the causes of the 20th century horrors.-Revolting cat!
Dostoevsky had Communists (they were called social reformists when he wrote) pegged. A system that attempts to define morality and forcefully denies that role from religion is totalitarian. That was indeed a cause of the tremendous suffering and 20 million dead in Soviet Russia. I agree with Revolting cat!.
Do you honestly not see your entry into this thread?
Hypocrite.
There you go again. Your one word argument is not copyright OWK. I did not call you names. I characterized, in sarcasm, a "specious" rebuttal. It evidently hit home. I expect for you to continue to show everybody your repertoire of personal attacks.
I believe the disagreement was over whether it was a disbelief or a denial. The definition you cited has both. Therefore, it was incorrect for you to call DrC's definition wrong.
Of course anyone reading this thread has long since been studiously ignoring the dictionary battle.
Moral absolutes just are....Since you just keep repeating this, you obviously believe they are real, however, you don't know their source (otherwise you would have named it). How odd... Evidently, you are taking it "on blind faith" that moral absolutes are real - but you don't know where they are from, you just KNOW they aren't from God! You are so bent on denying that God is the source, you are satisfied to say they just are... It seems you have your moral feet planted in mid-air. I think you have some serious thinkin to do...
A discreption. An inconsistency
Our founders wisely refrained from defining morality, leaving that to conscience. They did define law based on specific Judeo-Christian codes of morality, however.
The forced march of secularism championed by the ACLU must be resisted. My choice of words is not to brand them all atheists but to say the SCOTUS justices and subsequent judges have failed to understand the role of religion which the founders counted on.
Part of our law guarantees religious freedom - freedom of conscience naturally including the right not to believe. That and the establishment clause prevent a majoritarian Christian sect from oppressing others. It is ridiculous, as we now do, to legislate that those with state power must refrain from speaking and acting in concert with their belief that the state is subservient to God.
Then who designed the designer?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.