The source of my atheism is primarily derived from the problem of evil argument. Actually, I am not really an atheist, but the problem of evil argument, in my mind, sunders the prospect of the Christian God. But for all practical purposes call me an “atheist” although I do have to acknowledge that one cannot rule out the existence of a deistic entity.
My own name I picked on this forum is a homage to Gerald Joyce. Such a name was chosen because it had a hidden meaning. Joyce’s research mainly involved “evolving” catalytic RNA molecules in an
in vitro setting. Under Joyce’s tutelage, a large population of RNA molecules, can be influenced by various selection pressures to perform catalytic tasks (mainly cleaving phosphodiester bonds and ligating RNA) using the relatively simple to understand techniques. Long story short (since I could not recall the details of the aforementioned research vividly anymore), I have gained an appreciation of the stochastic processes of nature and appreciated its power to generate “order” from chaos from this research. In my mind, Joyce’s research dispelled the veracity teleological argument in biology. I do not buy the theistic conclusion of the “fine-tuning” argument, as I think our observations are simply the result of anthropic bias. (See the
Ikeda-Jefferys Bayesian argument)
Define “eugenics.” I view “eugenics” with some ambivalence now. But I am a liberal and I do not advocate “eugenics” in the sense of what the Nazis did (e.g. mass murder and sterilizations.) Did the Nazis quote
On Liberty or
Utilitarianism to justify their actions? (Mill probably wasn’t significantly influenced by Darwin, but my main point is that secular morality does not promote what the Nazis did and even rejects it.) I do not see how adopting a naturalistic view on the origin of the flora and fauna on Earth will naturally lead to such actions. It might lead one to abandon a religiously influenced morality and replace it with a secular one such as utilitarianism, Rawlsian morality, or Objectivism. (Or one can simply be a nihilist or an existentialist) I know the former two do not even advocate Nazi eugenics. (I do not know enough about Objectivism to say anything significant although it might be congruent with Nietzscheism as it rejects “slave morality”. Ayn Rand explicitly rejected self-abnegation as a virtue.)