Posts Tagged ‘contradiction’

Hardcore Atheist List

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

I first saw this list on Tangled up in Blue Guy’s blog, but it was originally posted at Friendly Atheist’s blog. I’ve been procrastinating, partially because I had some bones to pick about some of the specific items, but apparently Friendly Atheist has made some edits. Now I’ll try again, with my sometimes extended commentary. If you have a blog, copy the list (the clean list is on FA’s site) and post an answer of your own, bolding the ones you’ve done (or cheating, like I do), and comment below with a link! If you don’t have a blog, or you just don’t want to put this on your blog, do a list in the comments!

How much of an atheist am I? Let’s find out. The challenge is to boldface the ones I’ve done, and elaborate, if I choose.

1. Participated in the Blasphemy Challenge.
-I’m giving myself half a point on this one. I’ve said the words (over and over), but I haven’t made a video and posted it on the YouTube version of the Blasphemy Challenge. I’ll say it again: fuck the holy spirit.

2. Met at least one of the “Four Horsemen” (Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris) in person.
-Yeah, right.

3. Created an atheist blog.
-You’re lookin at it.

4. Used the Flying Spaghetti Monster in a religious debate with someone.
-And the invisible pink unicorn, and the flying teapot, and whatever else gets the message across. Lately, it’s ingesting sand.

5. Gotten offended when someone called you an agnostic.
-I don’t like the way this one is phrased. I don’t get offended. I will correct someone, but I won’t get offended. I don’t think a real atheist would.

6. Been unable to watch Growing Pains reruns because of Kirk Cameron.
-Well, that would be included in unable to watch anything with that idiot in it.

7. Own more Bibles than most Christians you know.
-To be fair, I don’t know that many Christians. Most are family. I’ll give myself half.

8. Have at least one Bible with your personal annotations regarding contradictions, disturbing parts, etc.
-That, and my atheist hint book. But why bother with paper when you can have the skeptic’s annotated bible?

9. Have come out as an atheist to your family.
-The ones that matter.

10. Attended a campus or off-campus atheist gathering.

11. Are a member of an organized atheist/Humanist/etc. organization.

12. Had a Humanist wedding ceremony.
-This one I’m particularly proud of.

13. Donated money to an atheist organization.

14. Have a bookshelf dedicated solely to Richard Dawkins.
-I will if you send me the $$ to facilitate that. But I’d never limit it to one author. Dawkins is great, but he’s not god. ;)

15. Lost the friendship of someone you know because of your non-theism.
-Best friend in high school went all Mormon, and I also lost the friendship of about half of my family.

16. Tried to argue or have a discussion with someone who stopped you on the street to proselytize.

17. Had to hide your atheist beliefs on a first date because you didn’t want to scare him/her away.

18. Own a stockpile of atheist paraphernalia (bumper stickers, buttons, shirts, etc).
-Kinda, but I don’t actually display anything.

19. Attended a protest that involved religion.

20. Attended an atheist conference.

21. Subscribe to Pat Condell’s YouTube channel.

22. Started an atheist group in your area or school.

23. Successfully “de-converted” someone to atheism.

24. Have already made plans to donate your body to science after you die.

25. Told someone you’re an atheist only because you wanted to see the person’s reaction.
-I’m having trouble with this one. It sounds extremely shallow and pointless, but perhaps I’m missing something. Why would doing that make me “Hardcore”?

26. Had to think twice before screaming “Oh God!” during sex. Or you said something else in its place.
-Actually, I think about this kinda stuff all the time. I am very careful not to scream anything during sex, lest I offend or distract. I’ll give myself half.

27. Lost a job because of your atheism.
-I’d be working for the ACLU right now if that were the case.

28. Formed a bond with someone specifically because of your mutual atheism (meeting this person at a local gathering or conference doesn’t count).

29. Have crossed “In God We Trust” off of — or put a pro-church-state-separation stamp on — dollar bills.

30. Refused to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

31. Said “Gesundheit!” (or nothing at all) after someone sneezed because you didn’t want to say “Bless you!”
-I usually say nothing. Why bother, when 90% of the people around me are of the inclination already to do it. Hmm, I wonder what would happen if I were in an elevator with just one person, and that person sneezed. God would probably smite the poor bastard.

32. Have ever chosen not to clasp your hands together out of fear someone might think you’re praying.
-Hahah, I like this one. Yes, and no to this one. I’ve refrained from doing so, and I’ve also kept my hands clasped on purpose just to see if people would regard me differently (while I keep my eyes squinty).

33. Have turned on Christian TV because you need something entertaining to watch.
-Heh, yep. And radio, too.

34. Are a 2nd or 3rd (or more) generation atheist.

35. Have “atheism” listed on your Facebook or dating profile — and not a euphemistic variant.
-Yes and no. I’m not really me on anything public. yay. I’ll give me half.

36. Attended an atheist’s funeral (i.e. a non-religious service).

37. Subscribe to an freethought magazine (e.g. Free Inquiry, Skeptic)

38. Have been interviewed by a reporter because of your atheism.

39. Written a letter-to-the-editor about an issue related to your non-belief in God.
-For this one, I’m also going to count writing a letter to a government representative.

40. Gave a friend or acquaintance a New Atheist book as a gift.
-“New Atheist”? Is that the name of the book, or are you saying “Not a book by Bertrand Russell? And I’ve given a lot of my own “book” away, in a sense. The Atheist Hint Book.

41. Wear pro-atheist clothing in public.
-Yeah, everything that doesn’t say “pro-God” is my pro-atheist garb. Yay.

42. Have invited Mormons/Jehovah’s Witnesses into your house specifically because you wanted to argue with them.
-Heh, yep. Also, I stood on the stoop outside the other day, during the amazingly freezing weather, just to talk to a few young Mormons (called, oddly enough, “Elders”) for two hours! I even told them straight to their faces that their chances of converting anyone on my block were none to less than none.

43. Have been physically threatened (or beaten up) because you didn’t believe in God.
-In a sense. I’ll leave it at that, and half it.

44. Receive Google Alerts on “atheism” (or variants).

45. Received fewer Christmas presents than expected because people assumed you didn’t celebrate it.
-How about I tell people not to send me Christmas presents?

46. Visited The Creation Museum or saw Ben Stein’s Expelled just so you could keep tabs on the “enemy.”
-In general.

47. Refuse to tell anyone what your “sign” is… because it doesn’t matter at all.
-Well, that, and I like to be mysterious. ;)

48. Are on a mailing list for a Christian organization just so you can see what they’re up to…
-Close to #46.

49. Have kept your eyes open while you watched others around you pray.
-Almost every time, except when I’m nodding off.

50. Avoid even Unitarian churches because they’re too close to religion for you.
-Yeppers. Can’t stand them quasi-religious non-church churches.

Friendly Atheist’s ranking system:

0-10: Impressive, but not too far from agnosticism.
11-20: You are, literally, a “New Atheist.” But you now have something to strive for! Go for the full 50!
21-30: You are an atheist, but babies aren’t running away from you. Yet.
31-40: You are the 5th Horseman! Congratulations!
41-50: PZ Myers will now be taking lessons from you.

Looks like I scored a 30.5.

yay?

StOP

The Rationalist Playing Field

Monday, December 8th, 2008

One thing that gets me when I am involved in religious discussions is the constant struggle of the religious to “bring it back” to scripture, as if their arguments are somehow validated by the ancient scratchings of ill-informed desert dwellers. Their beloved texts, other than perhaps the fact that they have survived so long, have no more value as factual references than, for instance, Homer’s Iliad, which has survived (in much better shape) even longer than the bible and related scripture.

My semi-rhetorical question is: Why do people who are supporting rationalism (atheists, agnostics, skeptics, etc.) keep being lured in by the trap of having to argue the details of such scripture?

The simplified way to see what’s really happening when we succumb to the temptation to argue about whether scripture is right or wrong goes something like this:

Rationalist (“R”): “We need no spirits or religion to be moral.”

Believer (“B”): “Ah, but the Bible indicates otherwise.”

R: “How is that relevant? The bible is flawed, and therefore cannot be fully trusted.”

B: “How is the Bible flawed? There are no contradictions in the Bible. It is perfect.”

R: “No contradictions? Are you crazy? There are hundreds of…”

B: “Name me one. Just one! You can’t!”

R: “Yeah, I’ll name you one. How about the no smaller seed part, huh? Or the cud-chewing cloven foot part. Or, even better, the fact that Genesis is all screwed up in its timeline.”

B: “Fascinating, but I don’t think you’re really reading the Bible. If you really read it, you will see. Now, show me what you were talking about in Genesis, and I will show you where you are wrong.”

And then what happens? You get into a lengthy discussion about what boils down to be strict versus loose interpretation and the validation of the bible as a work of god via the holy spirit, which we non-believers just don’t get, because we don’t open ourselves up to the truth. How do we do that? By reading the bible. And so on.

What has been accomplished as a result of that conversation? The optimistic among us might think that, at some point, the rationalist may have planted a seed of doubt in the mind of the believer, hopefully eventually steering the believer into becoming more skeptical about scripture and the world view created around that scripture. The cynical among us might think otherwise — that this was a fruitless battle that mimics many of the discussions believers have with non-believers, on the turf of the believers. That, I argue, is a flaw in our approach to the overall issue of infusing society with reason, and pushing aside (back into its niche, if anything) religion.

The question that naturally follows is: Where, exactly, is the rationalist playing field? Or, where should it be?

It doesn’t seem logical to argue in a vacuum. It’s also probably not effective to avoid using arguments targeted specifically against scripture, like the argument that scripture should be trusted as much as, but not more than myth. One might argue that a rationalist’s playing field ought to be from the point of view of science. That makes sense, to some degree, since science is the language we use to interpret the natural world, and rationalists argue that there is nothing but the natural world. However, not all of us are versed in that language. Should all rationalists who hope to argue against religion, for reason, be made to learn science fluently enough to use it as the choice of the field of battle?

Perhaps the field is a melting pot of just about everything conceivable that can be referred to in a rationalist vs believer argument. Just as many believers cling to their bibles as the only source of truth and reference, perhaps the answer to that is for rationalists to cling to absolutely nothing. This isn’t battling in a vacuum, but is, instead, an acknowledgment that no sole thing defines all truth. It’s a recognition of the fact that everything in existence defines everything in existence, and ignoring 99% of everything in existence to try to define existence is akin to madness.

Regardless of whether I’m right about where the rationalist playing field ought to be, I assert that we need to wean ourselves from what should be considered a bad habit — arguing scripture. Doing so seems to be tossing kerosene on a fire you’re trying to put out. Instead, let their little fires burn in their niche of choice, and let’s start our own bonfire, in the field of everything, and give them the burden of trying to douse our blaze.

Download the Podcast!

StOP

Would a Christian Bail You Out?

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

The failure of the US House of Representatives to pass the financial services rescue plan (nee “bailout”) has caused me to consider further how Christians define themselves. Who are Christians and what are their basic principles? How do these principles apply to the rescue plan?

From Luke 6 (NIV), we can find these two verses dealing with the wise and foolish builders:

48He is like a man building a house, who dug down deep and laid the foundation on rock. When a flood came, the torrent struck that house but could not shake it, because it was well built. 49But the one who hears my words and does not put them into practice is like a man who built a house on the ground without a foundation. The moment the torrent struck that house, it collapsed and its destruction was complete.

A verse that deals with the building of a home is rather appropriate for today’s economic circumstances. Shouldn’t there be rewards for those who build houses well, and shouldn’t there be troubles for those who don’t? Do those verses entice the listener to pay heed to the words for building well, or do the verses warn of the consequences of building poorly?

Also, in Luke 6 we find prior verses that deal with loving one’s enemies:

32If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even ’sinners’ love those who love them. 33And if you do good to those who are good to you, what credit is that to you? Even ’sinners’ do that. 34And if you lend to those from whom you expect repayment, what credit is that to you? Even ’sinners’ lend to ’sinners,’ expecting to be repaid in full. 35But love your enemies, do good to them, and lend to them without expecting to get anything back. Then your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High, because he is kind to the ungrateful and wicked. 36Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful.

Are those who committed sins the ones who built houses poorly? Are those who committed sins the ones who must suffer the consequences? Is there only one consequence of a poorly built home, or are there many?

The Christians of American politics are most often represented by Republicans who cling to the identity of a Christian nation, along with a few Blue Dog Democrats who are simply conservatives wearing a different badge. Together, they represent conservative Americans who are “Christian” with “family values” and together they decided to punish the sinners and their fellow man at the same time. These conservative Christians wish to cling to their money rather tightly. They prefer a free market system that rewards winners and punishes losers. They prefer to remain distant when others are having or will soon be in troubles.

It can be a challenge to understand the financial crisis facing the United States (and much of the rest of the world), but it really is a rather simple thing: people who built [financial] houses poorly (through greed) tried to make a buck more than they deserved. Maybe the citizens who spoke most loudly to their representatives, these citizens who frequently self-identify as Christians, wish to impose penance upon the wrongdoers, those who were too greedy for their own good. Maybe these Christians are greedy themselves. Do Christians have rules regarding the profiting from their fellow man? The Jews certainly gave us plenty of financial rules to follow in the Old Testament, but Jesus reportedly wiped away some or all of those rules depending on your viewpoint or self interest. The economic rules of the ancient Jews are in direct contradiction with the economic rules of modern capitalism. Can greed on any level make followers forget the tenets of their religion?

Luke 6 also warns us of holding the proper perspective on our problems, specifically our shared problems that may not be so obvious:

41Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? 42How can you say to your brother, ‘Brother, let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when you yourself fail to see the plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.

When it comes to punishment, pain and penance, Christians are quite good at providing all three. The predominantly Christian citizenry has spoken: those big corporations and banks on Wall Street must be punished for their wrong doings and they should not profit from taxpayer dollars. To follow the wisdom of Luke, Christians cannot see the plank stuck in their own eye because they can only point to the speck of sawdust in their brother’s eye.

The plague of the financial system is the lack of confidence in the value of assets that support the value of credit. Even if we don’t like it and even if we don’t use it, the free flow of credit does run the economy and without that flow the economy slows down like a dreidel losing the momentum to spin. When Christians do not help their fellow man, they do not help themselves. The judgment they make upon others returns as judgments made upon them.

When a home burns down, there are Christians who go help the victims. When there is an auto accident, there are Christians who go help the victims. When there is a need for a organ transplant, the are Christians who go help the victims. There are Christians who will contribute a great deal of money to all of these victims to help relieve them, however slightly and imperfectly, from their despair. However, when the only visible consequence to a victim is the lack of funds in a bank account, the Christians are nowhere to be found.

Could this be a simple misunderstanding? Certainly. Could this be the voices of a few controlling the actions of the many? Certainly. Have these Christians been presented the complete picture of this problem so that they can make an informed decision? Maybe not. One would think that if these Christians had a fuller understanding of the predicament faced by all, their choice of support would be different.

What Would Jesus Do? Would he bail you out? Would he bail himself out? Remember, Jesus was a martyr.

Editor’s note:
In a Time online magazine article on October 3, David Van Biema asks, “Foreclosures: Did God Want You to Get That Mortgage?”

Has the so-called Prosperity Gospel turned its followers into some of the most willing participants — and hence, victims — of the current financial crisis? That’s what a scholar of the fast-growing brand of pentecostal Christianity believes. While researching a book on black televangelism, says Jonathan Walton, a religion professor at the University of California Riverside, he realized that Prosperity’s central promise — that God would “make a way” for poor people to enjoy the better things in life — had developed an additional, toxic expression during sub-prime boom. Walton says that this encouraged congregants who got dicey mortgages to believe “God caused the bank to ignore my credit score and blessed me with my first house.” The results, he says, “were disastrous, because they pretty much turned parishioners into prey for greedy brokers.”

Read the article at Time

The article concludes that “magical thinking can prevail.” In other words, if you pray, and you do it right, God will favor you and let you have a better deal on your mortgage, so you don’t end up like the 90-year-old lady who shot herself in a failed suicide attempt in her foreclosed home. She must have not been doing the beg to the deity thing right.

Also, still no magic for amputees.

Update
Is Fannie Mae a Christian organization? In a revised CNN.com article located at the same link as shown above, Fannie Mae has forgiven Addie Polk’s mortgage. The ole gal is still in the hospital and suffering with her self-inflicted injuries, but Fannie Mae came to the rescue stating “Given the circumstances, we think it’s appropriate.” Is attempted suicide the way to a bailout for your mortgage? For thousands of others who are behind on their mortgages, is Fannie Mae tempting them to attempt suicide? Do Christians award attempted suicide with an erased mortgage?

Perhaps this seems like an organization who has committed some form of questionable business practices repenting for their sins, but Fannie Mae only had indirect responsibility for Addie’s predicament. The story states that in 2004 (when Addie was about 86 years old), Countrywide Home Loans gave Addie a 30-year mortgage on her home for $45,620. I don’t know about you, but I think that Countrywide was a little too optimistic that Addie would survive to her 116th birthday to pay off that mortgage. How does a woman her age have an income to justify payment of the mortgage? If she needed money at Age 86, did they really think she would miraculously gain sufficient income to serve herself and pay her mortgage? Also, according to the real estate website Zillow, Addie’s home has a current market value of $58,000, which happens to be about the same market value as back in 2004 when she got the mortgage. So, where was the collateral for a woman who, statistically, only had about 4 more years to live (attempted suicide notwithstanding)? Did Countrywide take advantage of an 86-year-old woman who should have been counseled against such a mortgage? Had they never heard of a reverse mortgage? Where were the ethical standards in this transaction? I would like to see a counselors statement showing that Addie was of sound mind and body and had a complete understanding of her circumstances and options when she executed the mortgage documents. This situation makes me sick and those involved should be prosecuted for what they have done.

This is a case where Wall Street bailed out Main Street in a game of cover-your-ass. Is attempted suicide the path the only path redemption and is debt erasure an act of atonement?

How Much Is Too Much?

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Haven’t you heard it? If you’ve ever visited an atheist or skeptic forum, it’s quite likely that you have. It’s the “why won’t you leave us alone?” retort from believers. “Why do you hate us?” “Why do you hate God?” The more profound and underlying question we’ve been asked, and the question we should be asking ourselves, is, “How far should my activism reach, and why?”

You can scale the relative level of activism in most atheists similarly. Starting off as a believer, or at least a follower, we are quite often sure of ourselves. Perhaps we haven’t encountered any opposing points of view. Perhaps we’re stubborn. Perhaps we’re overwhelmed by the religious beliefs and practices of our families. Whatever the case, many of us start off on the theist end of the spectrum, and are quite often advocates of that way of life and belief.

Then we’re hit with some sort of doubt. Bart Erhman, for instance, was awestruck by the fact that the icon of his belief system, the Holy Bible, was severely flawed with contradictions, rewrites, and surreptitiously inserted new passages. How could the bible be inerrant, how could a real god endorse such a mishmash of not only contradictory but also violent and cruel edicts? Doubting is the catalyst that causes us to self-reflect, and to analyze all that we know about what we’ve been told. It’s required for the next stage of development – agnosticism.

Perhaps I’ve intentionally skipped a few minor middle steps, but the phase between doubt and disbelief encompasses a variety of positions, depending on the individual, from confusion to agnosticism to denial to relapse. I like to call this phase the “I don’t know” phase, which is why I associate it with agnosticism.

Eventually, hopefully, we reach a point at which we question why we’re even bothering with the question of “is there a god?” We realize that, since there’s no empirical evidence of the existence of, at minimum, the divine beings alluded to in every god myth, we narrow our scope of world view to two main areas:

First, the area of spirituality. This isn’t to say that spirituality exists or it doesn’t. It’s a concept, and there comes a time where most of us in some way address whether it has meaning to us. When a loved one dies, do you think he or she “goes to a better place?” How do you fit that into your world view? Do you think there is something invisible that is greater than you? Do you think there is destiny, fate, karma? These are things that even agnostics question, even after having rejected their former god of choice, and it’s something that, until all our questions are satisfactorily answered by science, we will be inclined to address.

What matters about that area of interest is that it may help determine your level of acceptance of certain types of activism, because even without a god or doctrine to guide you morally, you may reach for a more metaphysical state of moral choice based on your concepts of spirituality. Hardline skeptics and atheists tend to eschew this point of view, but they cannot deny that people are habitually, if not naturally, sentimental toward the supernatural and spiritual potential in the world.

Second, the area of society. This is not what you think, but how you deal with what others think, and how they deal with what you think, and the acts based upon such thought. This is your relationship with, essentially, the rest of the world. More specifically, it’s what’s mutually tangible. What kinds of laws, regulations, taboos, etc., affect you, and what kind of effect you can have. On our scale of development, this is often a stopping point (or sometimes a starting point for those who were never theists to begin with). It’s a plateau representing a static world view, with no inclination to have that world view affect society.

Beyond that plateau, there is a minority of skeptics, rationals, atheists who attempt to influence society in a variety of ways. The extent to which one is active is often based on the extent to which one has rejected religion. So, there are varying degrees of activism (degrees of intensity) and varying methods of activism. And there’s at least one person or group of people out there in the world opposed to every single type. Surprisingly, many are from the set of non-believers.

The degrees of intensity can be described in another abridged scale: start with the “closet” atheists, who, although in their own minds are atheists, either deny that fact to others, or try to hide it, lest they be reprimanded, punished, or shunned by family, work, friends, or others. Sometimes these closet atheists end up creating alternate identities for use on the Internet, a place in which they can freely express opinions without coming under personal attack. The next level is the avowed atheist — someone who isn’t afraid to tell others, but who doesn’t necessarily seek out others in order to tell them. Next is the conversational atheist — someone who actively tells others, perhaps seeking them out, in order to tell them about non-belief. That category can be split between those who seek just to converse and share ideas, and those who are on the fringes of being active deconverters.

Proactive deconversion is the next level, and it shares its spot with proactive lobbying — efforts either to convert believers into non-believers, or efforts to create a society where law, the government, and public places are secular. My opinion is that this is where most non-believers choose to draw the line. Beyond that line lies anti-religious activism. This is an activist state that actively attempts to purge society of all (or most) things religious. This category can be split between targeting only religious activities that cause specific harm, and targeting all religious activities, regardless of perceived harm (with the idea that all aspects of religion are harmful, because they’re religious).

An example of the latter point of view is where, recently, the Swedish government is making it illegal for any school, public or private, to teach religion as if it were true.1

There are two more primary levels of activism. Next is targeting everyone, treating religion as a disease, in a sense, and trying to disinfect everyone, even parents who want to teach their children about religion. In 2001, Richard Dawkins wrote a letter to the British secretary of state, asking that the faith status of existing schools be removed, allowing children to choose for themselves what to believe, in a non-religious school environment.2 Essentially, wipe away religious schooling institutions, and eliminate faith-based labeling for children, despite parental wishes. This is a step further in the direction of activism because, unlike Sweden’s attempt to eliminate teaching of religion “as if it were true,” Dawkins (at least then) advocates eliminating religion as a label of any sort — no religious institutions at all, no parental force-feeding of religion, and especially no state-based advocacy of religious belief.

Christopher Hitchens is even a more ardent supporter of this “no religion” point of view. Even from the title of his best selling book “God is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything,” one can infer that Hitchens decries all things religious, and would probably, if in a position to do so, wipe the world clean of religious practice (but for the sake of scholarship, not religious history, I’m sure). Some would call this “militant atheism.” My view is that that term is misused, and should apply only to the final niche in the spectrum of activism.

Real militant atheism is literally taking up a weapon and fighting those who support religion, and in some cases those who merely don’t support real militant atheism. Consider the Crusades. Real militant atheism is similar. It’s a purge of religion, similar to what Hitchens seems to desire, but instead of doing so through legal means, it’s doing so with violence. Have we seen much of this? Hardly. Perhaps none at all, at least in what’s commonly displayed on the news. There are countries, though, that will torture and kill some believers.3 There are also, assuredly, individuals and factions worldwide who, like their religious counterparts, would take up arms in order to fight for what they consider to be freedom from religion (especially if they think that a purported secular government has overly mingled its affairs with religion, effectively creating a theocracy).

Inevitably, those who fall somewhere on the active side of the scale will be directly or indirectly criticized for such activism by those who believe they are the targets. Here’s a fine, succinct, example of what I mean, thanks to Atheist Eve:

atheve

To be an activist at any level, one must expect some criticism. My analysis here isn’t about criticism, however, it’s more about ethics. Obviously, the more advanced on the activism scale, the more criticism, but is there a point on the scale that clearly goes too far?

One potential way to analyze what’s an appropriate level of activism is to consider what “the other side” is doing or has done to promote religion. Religious groups have been spending centuries sending missionaries all over the world, establishing churches, shrines, meeting places. They’ve been creating supposed charitable organizations and activities, hospitals, (and in Mother Theresa’s case, places to go suffer and die), youth organizations, private schools, camps, heavily funded lobbying groups, and more. They’ve started and perpetuated military campaigns, sometimes backed by governments, sometimes by radical militants outside of the government. Entire nations currently sway with the religious breezes blown by zealots on both sides. What hasn’t been done in the name of religion? If we are to take the religious as examples of anything, it’s that they have overwhelmingly dotted the landscape of history and the world with religious activism spanning the entire scale. Therefore, citing what the religious are doing or have done is not a good way to measure the ethicalness of our own activist behavior.

Another way to think about where we should fall on the scale is from the consequentialist point of view. Let’s not think too much about what we’re doing on the small scale (whether it be handing out atheist pamphlets or assassinating religious zealot leaders), but what we’re trying to accomplish for the sake of humanity. This point of view may require the activist not only to believe that religion is wrong, but also that religion is so harmful that it must be eliminated by any means necessary. However, that is not the only side one can take as a consequentialist. It could be believed that a well-balanced world is, in the long run, more beneficial for humanity, and that the actions that must be taken should be limited to those which would ultimately treat religion and non-religion as essentially equal. There are those who already think this is the case, and there are those who think that we have a long way to go to accomplish something even close to a balance. Consequentialism, is, then, too ambiguous and subjective to use as a guideline. The same could probably be said of any utilitarian theory — they’re all quite subjective, and goal-oriented.

Let’s just say that I carried on with an analysis of every ethical theory that I could come up with. I don’t think I would find a satisfactory answer to my query. The reason? I don’t know all there is to know. I don’t know and I cannot know what’s in store for humanity. I only know what I’ve seen, what’s occurring right now, and what has apparently occurred in the past, with regard to the rife between secularism and religion, and the firm grasp that religious groups have on so many aspects of the world today. I’m not advocating violence or war on behalf of non-religion. What I’m saying is that I’m not quite sure that it’s unethical, depending on the situation, and from whose point of view it is making the decision.

Most assuredly, though, if the religious zealots of my nation stood up in arms and attempted to create a theocracy by force, I would retaliate in kind. I think that’s essentially happening in some parts of the world today. What’s happening here is that the religious have infused themselves into the government and essential positions in society in order to perpetuate that hold on power and control, and we, as rationals, as skeptics, as atheists, need to do at least the minimum of what it takes to reverse that trend and keep it reversed, regardless of any criticism from any source. I just can’t tell you exactly how that’s to be done, and how far we need to go in order to get it done.

  1. God’s Honest Truth, Andrew Brown, Guardian.co.uk. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2007/oct/18/godshonesttruth [<]
  2. Children must choose their own beliefs, Richard Dawkins, Guardian.co.uk. http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2001/dec/30/schools.religion [<]
  3. China, among others, has had a blemished history of military-backed opposition to religion. [<]

Mormonism Unearthed: Part 2 of 3

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

Mormons view the Old and New Testaments as divinely inspired and also have additional books in their scriptural canon, i.e., the Book of Mormon (where the term Mormon is derived), the Doctrine and Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price. The vast majority of the content found in these additional books was dictated by Joseph Smith, Jr., and nearly all his teachings had some root in the King James Version of the Bible, or his interpretation of it.1

The historicity of the Book of Mormon has been widely disputed. The consensus among geneticists is that the Native American people descended primarily from north-east Asian stock. However, the Book of Mormon says that the Native American people descended from groups of Semitic people, including Israelites, who emigrated from the Old World by ship. The book also refers to things such as steel, horses, and elephants that are not known to have existed in the New World at the relevant time.

Another point of contention is Smith’s method of translation. Among other artifacts found with the plates, Smith wrote of interpreting devices called the Urim and Thummim. He described them as a pair of stones, fastened to a breastplate joined in a form similar to that of a large pair of spectacles. The Urim and Thummim, or “seer stones,” are what Joseph claims to have used to interpret the writings on the plates.2 Joseph’s first wife, Emma, was the first person to act as his scribe. She later recounted the following to her son Joseph Smith III: “In writing for your father I frequently wrote day after day, often sitting at the table close by him, he sitting with his face buried in his hat, with the stone in it, and dictating hour after hour with nothing between us.”3 David Whitmer, one of the Three Witnesses of the Book of Mormon, gave an address in 1887 in which he stated, “I will now give you a description of the manner in which the Book of Mormon was translated. Joseph Smith would put the seer stone into a hat, and put his face in the hat, drawing it closely around his face to exclude the light; and in the darkness the spiritual light would shine. A piece of something resembling parchment would appear, and on that appeared the writing. One character at a time would appear, and under it was the interpretation in English. Brother Joseph would read off the English to Oliver Cowdery, who was his principal scribe, and when it was written down and repeated to Brother Joseph to see if it was correct, then it would disappear, and another character with the interpretation would appear. Thus the Book of Mormon was translated by the gift and power of God, and not by any power of man.”4

Given these and other descriptions, it is easy to draw a correlation with Joseph’s early career as a “Glass Looker” who would be hired to locate buried treasure in exchange for fees in various areas of Western New York during the 1820s. To do this, he would place his “peep stone” into a hat and look into it to have the location of the treasure revealed to him. In 1826, he was arrested for this, under the charges of being “a disorderly person and an imposter.”5

In 1835, Smith purchased some Egyptian papyri containing hieroglyphics and four mummies from a traveling exhibition.6 He later translated the papyri in the same method he used with the Book of Mormon. He called it the Book of Abraham and in it recounted the story of Abraham’s early life and of a vision in which God revealed to Abraham much about astronomy, the creation of the world, and the creation of man. It was originally published in 1842 and is now an official book of the Pearl of Great Price.

Although the Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799, it had not yet been completely deciphered. Translations of the Egyptian language were not widely available until the 1850s, and by this time the original papyri were considered lost. However, in 1966, twenty-two fragments of it were discovered in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Both Mormon and non-Mormon Egyptologists confirmed their authenticity and that these documents were in Smith’s possession. This discovery raised some major issues. First, the papyri can reliably be dated to around A.D. 60, which is much too late for Abraham to have written it. Of course, it could be a copy, or a copy of a copy, but that brings us to the second issue. When the text of the book of Abraham is compared with the translations of the original papyri, they are clearly not the same. In fact, they were discovered to be funerary texts containing passages from the Egyptian Book of the Dead, which were commonly buried with mummies.7

The LDS Church has given two possible explanations for these contradictions, neither of which are very satisfactory. One explanation given is that Smith might have been translating a different portion of the papyrus rolls, a portion that remains lost. The other explanation given is that we must take into consideration what Joseph meant by the word translation. Receiving revelation through the Urim and Thummin is a much different process than translating a text using the tools of scholarly research.8 I can only concur.

-Laura

  1. Joseph Smith’s Wentworth Letter, 1842 [<]
  2. Joseph Smith-History, Pearl of Great Price [<]
  3. History of the RLDS Church, 8 vols., Independence, Missouri, 1951, “Last Testimony of Sister Emma” [<]
  4. David Whitmer, An Address to All Believers in Christ, Richmond, Missouri, 1887 [<]
  5. D. Michael Quinn, Early Mormonism and the Magic World View (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1987) [<]
  6. History of the Church, Vol. 2, Ch. 17, p. 236 [<]
  7. Jay M. Todd, “Egyptian Papyri Rediscovered,” Improvement Era, January 1968: 12–13 [<]
  8. Michael D. Rhodes, “I Have a Question,” Ensign, July 1988, 51 [<]