To Touchstone -
If you wish to believe you are simply the end product of a chemically derived mechanism, that is up to you.
Do you think it is a matter of wishing? I think that’s a problematic way to put it. Reality isn’t a matter of “wishing”, right? It is what it is no matter our wishes. If human (and all life) is an emergent property of an impersonal natural universe, then that’s what it is. Wishing one way or the other won’t change that.
That said, what we choose to
make of such a realization, if that is indeed what the evidence indicates is wide open. Religious types take refuge in the idea that a clear-eyed view of a godless universe entails nihilism or some other self-defeating attitude. It doesn’t, and the maturity it takes to face things as they are is often the very thing that grounds a positive, generative disposition toward life and the world around us. Atheism=despair is just another one of the conceits that religious folk often help themselves to for its anodyne qualities.
The Christian understanding of man is rooted in the revelation of God. The hubris of man comes in when all holy books are reduced to simply books of stories invented by man. Then the old words return: “Man is the measure of all things.” and “Man invents himself.”
This sounds very much like a determination to launch a
tu quoque at your opponents, no matter what. If your opponents suggests hubris on your part, well by golly you’re going to find a way to use that word right back, some way, somehow.
Look, there’s nothing arrogant about recognizing the fallibility and fantastic nature of various holy books and superstitions. It’s the product of just a sober review of the world and the evidence it affords. It doesn’t make man a god, or give him super-powers. All it does it reveal hard, often painful truths, burdens. We are alone in this universe as far as we know, and there is no God or gods to paint pretty pictures over everything in the end. Justice left undone in this life
stays undone, which is a very heavy situation to understand. It doesn’t make us gods. It just impresses on us the importance of seeing justice done through our own actions and attitudes. God isn’t there to bliss out the Midianite baby or the black slave or the political prisoner in eternal paradise, so it falls to us to prevent those kinds of horrors in the first place, or to undo them as we can in the here and now.
A godless universe is a very humbling prospect. We are animals – rational animals, but animals, still, and we
don’t have superpowers or magic or faeries or Gods to intervene. Just the basic tools of our reasoning and our experience, and our courage.
In the Bible, we are told the following: If Christ’s ressurection did not actually occur, your faith is in vain. You’ve got nothing.
This is itself a conceit, this idea that if
your belief is mistaken, life is meaningless, hopeless or doomed to despair and futility. I know that to be a comforting thought, but I suggest it’s as illusory as your God. It’s a very small mind that cannot find wonder and awe and hope and exhiliration and joy in the world we live in, right alongside all the bad stuff. It may be that the religious impulse obtains from a distinct failure of the imagination, here (which would be quite ironic, given the imaginative nature of what they
do embrace), but if you look around, it’s not hard to find godless people who are motivated by hope, industry, expectation, love and joy, all ground in the wonders and potentialities of this godless universe. To suppose one needs eternal convalescence with God to give one’s life meaning and value, or any relationship with God at all signals a distinct failure to really take a long around at the world as it is.
In the early 80’s an “underground” newspaper had the following cover story: Easter Cancelled. Christ’s body found. A recent attempt to revive this idea was presented on TV as the discovery of an osuary containing Christ’s bones. Catholics know why this is going on and why it must continue. The truth is difficult to find on the internet and in everyday life.
Hmmm. I think that even if such bones were to be found and somehow authenticated as the bones of Jesus (don’t ask me
how that would be done), the Christian faith would carry on as before. Only now, the empty tomb was a mistaken embellishment, and Christ rose again in a “heavenly” body, an interpretation of Paul and other NT writers that is a point of contention even now. For many, those bones would cause faith to be lost, but the Church would carry on, regardless.
I am watching attempts to establish a Dictatorship of Science, but like all human enterprises, it is in danger of being manipulated and is, in fact, being manipulated. Just ask Dawkins, Harris, Hitchens and Myers. It is all out in the open. There is nothing vague about their pronouncements.
I don’t see the dictatorship happening that you are seeing. Who wants to eliminate religious freedom, or any freedoms, there? My take on all of those guys is that they are advocated for human and civil rights in the most robust sense. Maybe I missed the part where they want to deny, say, homosexuals equality under the law?
-TS