Monday, October 15th, 2007 | Author: Mark Mitchell

I have struck this article off as I think it is not factually correct and was a bit of a rant, however, there are points relevant to my overriding uncomfortableness with RD’s current PR approach.

Richard DawkinsLike Richard Dawkins, I am myself an atheist, that is, I do not believe that divine beings exist, let alone influence our lives. I have been fascinated to see the rise of Richard Dawkins over the years and have been a fan of his approach and work until the last couple of years. There is no doubt that this known but hardly celebrity level academic has suddenly exploded into the public eye through a number of TV programmes and of course through the controversial book ‘The God Delusion’. With the establishment of the Richard Dawkins Foundation of Reason and Science (RDF), he is now the figurehead of a movement to rid the world of the superstitious and ignorant views of religious zealots and lazy thinkers.

Richard has questioned representatives of most faiths and has exposed clairvoyants and spiritualist charlatans for what they are, and although his arguments are solid and completely rational, I wonder what his objectives really are? Let us not forget Richards background. He is from a privileged landed gentry background and certainly represents the intellectual elite in our country. From the lofty heights of academic supremacy there is no doubt he can look down upon the teeming masses, scrutinize their illogical actions and dissect them into a palatable example of how ignorant many people truly are. Ignorance is often the result of poor education/cultural influences and is also the result of choosing to be ignorant as a coping mechanism to deal with emotional trauma. An erudite and accomplished academic will find it incredibly easy to overturn most orthodox religious assumptions as well as dissect the fickle modern interpretations that seem to constantly evolve to cope with modern changes. Yet, within the madness are reasons however banal or poignant. The reasons why people choose irrationality over reason is often due to a survival or coping mechanism. Dealing with the death of close relative or adapting to a harsh theocratic dictatorship. This is obvious, but what may not be so obvious is that poverty plays a massive role in the establishment of the uneducated, traumatised and terrible life experiences that people have to deal with. The disparity between rich and poor is extreme and I will not venture to explain what most people know to be the truth.

This is where my admiration of Richard Dawkins starts to curdle as I watch him simply argue in a rather self-satisfied way that rationalism and scientific methodology can give wonder and hope to everyone in the same way that is does to him and no doubt as it does to myself. The truth is that atheism is a luxury, something to treasure and respect. It is predominately found in rich liberal western societies and has no doubt freed many people from the constrains of dogma and superstition. I argue as much as Dawkins against supposition and assumptions believing in a Socratic method to weed out untruths and delusion. Yet, like Socrates, I believe that personal development should over-ride financial aspirations, something I’m not convinced Richard Dawkins completely agrees with, especially with BUY NOW buttons plastered all over his website. As much as Dawkins seems to understand rationality he seems to be incapable of understanding the importance of self-delusion. There is no doubt that lying is fundamentally important to every-one’s sanity and forms a fundamental part of our creative and imaginative tapestry as a species. Embellishments, exaggerations, and lies are creative processes and no doubt form a hugely important part of every day lives. From fiction books to films, urban myths to legends their prevalence and importance cannot be understated. We all allow ourselves these escapes, yet it is most evident in areas where poverty stricken people live life in a way most westerners would find intolerable. It is here Dawkins fails to deliver a fair case for an idealised secular world through evangelised atheism. To truly enlighten the ignorant he needs to tackle its main cause, poverty. It is this irony that strikes at the heart of Dawkins argument. How can a man of so much privilege and obvious intelligence fail to recognise that the very wealth and liberality that allows him his freedom to study, scrutinize and communicate his ideas is formed directly from the capital which drives these people into poverty and ignorance. Dawkins is a perfect example of a bourgeois, intellectual bully boy.

To sustain my interest I would like to see him become a braver man and address the socio-political reasons why people turn to religion or fundamentalism. I know empirical data to Dawkins may just seem like filler in an already won argument but I think that Dawkins needs to challenge his own cultural inheritance and its contribution to keeping the plebians ignorant. Understanding and facing the reality of poverty and the inevitable poor educational standards this creates should be his priority now and would certainly give him far more credibility than slamming average Joes who never had the chances he had. Dawkins should be addressing why people turn to religion and supernatural beliefs rather than proceeding to duck shoot the ignorant.

Category: Blog, Philosophy, Science
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3 Responses

  1. Very interesting point. I think he has in some way addressed these issues but agree that he certainly should examine his own direction carefully.

  2. 2
    Szymanowski 
    Wednesday, 17. October 2007

    A discussion will ensue here:

    http://richarddawkins.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=26818&start=0&st=0&sk=t&sd=a

  3. Here’s a word for you: megalothymia, the need to be seen as being superior to other people.

    I’m a huge science nerd, and I’m well aware of our common affliction: we’re usually bullied in school, unpopular with girls, and need to puff ourselves up to fight a self-image of inferiority. Infected with megalothymia! If only a trace. I’m certainly like this myself, and I think I recognize quite a bit of it in RD’s attitude.

    For high-accomplishment straight-A student types it takes much practice to avoid the dishonest twistedness of grade-competition, to recognize and defeat our own arrogance, and to eventually become a humble scientist. Einstein pulled it off, for the most part. Einstein gave the impression of being constantly aware of his own flaws, and constantly strove to be “only a student” and to avoid self-praise. RD to me seems somewhat the opposite, seems convinced of his own superiority and expertise. *NOT* that this has much effect on his argument of course… but it leaves a huge weak spot in his persuasive ability. With even a trace of hostile superior attitude, his audience of religious Believers will perceive him as hopelessly biased and untrustworthy, and will erect barriers to avoid listening to his reasoning. And so he’ll end up preaching only to the converted, while the converted sadly shake their heads as the Believers simply ignore all his obvious points.

    RD can’t sway Believers as long as he considers them inferior; behaving as their opponent in some sort of debate. A good teacher first lives in his students’ world, then leads them to a better one. A good teacher is humble, and is well aware that he was once ignorant himself. I suspect RD considers this “students’ world” of religious belief to be disgusting, would never lower himself to seeing through students eyes, and instead treats it as an enemy to be attacked.

    So there’s an analogy. To effectively reach students, should a teacher try to make them ashamed of their own ignorance, and attempt to humiliate them in public by analyzing all their errors? Such an stance is more akin to that of an insecure bully with a sneering attitude towards younger students. This doesn’t have to be overt, since it doesn’t take much of this to convince an audience to plug their ears and turn away.

    “You can get into a habit of thought in which you enjoy making fun of
    all those other people who don’t see things as clearly as you do. We
    have to guard carefully against it.” - Carl Sagan, 1987
    CSICOP meeting

    “There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which
    cannot fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance– that
    principle is contempt prior to investigation.” - Herbert Spencer,
    British philosopher

    …The chief deficiency I see in the skeptical movement is its polarization: Us vs. Them — the sense that we have a monopoly on the truth; that those other people who believe in all these stupid doctrines are morons; that if you’re sensible, you’ll listen to us; and if not, to hell with you. This is nonconstructive. It does not get our message across. It condemns us to permanent minority status. - Carl Sagan

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