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I think Sam Harris and some others have spoken about how atheists can be spiritual, but does this make sense from a naturalistic viewpoint?
It could be your use of the word and someone like Sam Harris’s is different.This from Harris:I think Sam Harris and some others have spoken about how atheists can be spiritual, but does this make sense from a naturalistic viewpoint?
I find people’s use of words very interesting. Thanks for posting this.It could be your use of the word and someone like Sam Harris’s is different.This from Harris:
In writing my next book, I will have to confront the animosity that many people feel for the term “spiritual.” Whenever I use the word—as in referring to meditation as a “spiritual practice”—I inevitably hear from fellow skeptics and atheists who think that I have committed a grievous error.
The word “spirit” comes from the Latin spiritus, which in turn is a translation of the Greek pneuma, meaning “breath.” Around the 13th century, the term became bound up with notions of immaterial souls, supernatural beings, ghosts, etc. It acquired other connotations as well—we speak of the spirit of a thing as its most essential principle, or of certain volatile substances and liquors as spirits. Nevertheless, many atheists now consider “spiritual” thoroughly poisoned by its association with medieval superstition.
I strive for precision in my use of language, but I do not share these semantic concerns. And I would point out that my late friend Christopher Hitchens—no enemy of the lexicographer—didn’t share them either. Hitch believed that “spiritual” was a term we could not do without, and he repeatedly plucked it from the mire of supernaturalism in which it has languished for nearly a thousand years.
It is true that Hitch didn’t think about spirituality in precisely the way I do. He spoke instead of the spiritual pleasures afforded by certain works of poetry, music, and art. The symmetry and beauty of the Parthenon embodied this happy extreme for him—without any requirement that we admit the existence of the goddess Athena, much less devote ourselves to her worship. Hitch also used the terms “numinous” and “transcendent” to mark occasions of great beauty or significance—and for him the Hubble Deep Field was an example of both. I’m sure he was aware that pedantic excursions into the OED would produce etymological embarrassments regarding these words as well. Carl Sagan also freely used the term spiritual in the same way. (See C. Sagan. 1995. The Demon-Haunted World. New York: Random House. p. 29.)
We must reclaim good words and put them to good use—and this is what I intend to do with “spiritual.” I have no quarrel with Hitch and Sagan’s general use of the word to mean something like “beauty or significance that provokes awe,” but I believe that we can also use it in a narrower and, indeed, more personally transformative sense.
Of course, “spiritual” and its cognates have some unfortunate associations unrelated to their etymology—and I will do my best to cut those ties as well. But there seems to be no other term (apart from the even more problematic “mystical” or the more restrictive “contemplative”) with which to discuss the deliberate efforts some people make to overcome their feeling of separateness—through meditation, psychedelics, or other means of inducing non-ordinary states of consciousness. And I find neologisms pretentious and annoying. Hence, I appear to have no choice: “Spiritual” it is. samharris.org/blog/item/a-plea-for-spirituality
Personally, I have no problem with people using the word “spiritual” if they have no religious beliefs. I have many friends and colleagues who consider themselves agnostic or atheist. And I’m delighted that they are still spiritual, in the sense of spending time reflecting on things other than the material or physical. Some will use the word spiritual, some will simply allude to what Harris is talking about here.Spiritual:
relating to or affecting the human spirit or soul as opposed to material or physical things
What the…?…instead of stealing one of ours…
“stealing one of ours”? Is that like ranchers stealing the farmers’ womenfolk or something? Unless you say spiritual™ or spiritual[sup]©[/sup] or spiritual[sup]®[/sup], and have the relevant paperwork, you don’t have any exclusive rights.I must disagree with using the word in this way. We had need of a word to fill a meaning, and spiritual is the word chosen, over the course of generations.
I have no problem with atheists having spiritual feelings… altho it seems to contradict what they are about. If they want to meditate or do something like that, it’s fine. But if they want a word, let them come up with their own word instead of stealing one of ours, esp on the specious excuse of its ancient etymology!
We have the word psyche, let them use that. They can feel psychEc, something can soothe their psyche.
Oprah isn’t a big fan of organized religion. She has a show out now that is partially inspired by her church experiences. I think it is called “Greenleaf.” It doesn’t paint a rosy picture of church.A more disturbing “spirituality” is that propounded
by Oprah Winfrey, claiming to be “Christian” but
espouses the spirituality within you, the “god”
that is you, often using Christian terms in her
“teaching”:
Who owns the word?instead of stealing one of ours, esp on the specious excuse of its ancient etymology!
This doesn’t make much sense. Spirit indeed means breath, referring to the breath of God, who breathed life into this world. Also the Holy Spirit descends upon people who are receptive to the breath or the word of God.It could be your use of the word and someone like Sam Harris’s is different.This from Harris:
The word “spirit” comes from the Latin spiritus, which in turn is a translation of the Greek pneuma, meaning “breath.” Around the 13th century, the term became bound up with notions of immaterial souls, supernatural beings, ghosts, etc. It acquired other connotations as well—we speak of the spirit of a thing as its most essential principle, or of certain volatile substances and liquors as spirits. Nevertheless, many atheists now consider “spiritual” thoroughly poisoned by its association with medieval superstition.
It does.I think Sam Harris and some others have spoken about how atheists can be spiritual, but does this make sense from a naturalistic viewpoint?
It’s vulnerable to the same determinist and materialist lance that allegedly slew god.I think Sam Harris and some others have spoken about how atheists can be spiritual, but does this make sense from a naturalistic viewpoint?
… law inscribed in -]out/-] our heart.