Angry Atheists
A happy atheist- by which I mean an atheist confident in their unbelief- wouldn't continually be banging on about God the way Dawkins and Hitchens and Pullman do, they'd just let the matter rest and get on with their cheerfully Godless life, wouldn't they?
I read a piece by Dawkins the other day. (Thanks to
chiller for the link. ) It's very ecrasez l'infame- very shrill. Dawkins thinks he's got the Pope on the run and is giving chase with loud cries.
Philip Pullman is just about to publish a book about Jesus with a provocative title. I doubt that it'll be any good. Fictions about Jesus- for or against- never are. I enjoyed the Dark Materials trilogy, but the anti-God stuff was clumsy. As Eliot said of Matthew Arnold, Pullman is dealing with a subject "in (which) reasoning power matters, and it fails him."
I've been an atheist. I've dreamed that dream. The one where the bastille is tottering and you put just a little more weight on the crowbar and something gives and the masses come staggering out into the light of pure Reason. It's not going to happen.
I read a piece by Dawkins the other day. (Thanks to
Philip Pullman is just about to publish a book about Jesus with a provocative title. I doubt that it'll be any good. Fictions about Jesus- for or against- never are. I enjoyed the Dark Materials trilogy, but the anti-God stuff was clumsy. As Eliot said of Matthew Arnold, Pullman is dealing with a subject "in (which) reasoning power matters, and it fails him."
I've been an atheist. I've dreamed that dream. The one where the bastille is tottering and you put just a little more weight on the crowbar and something gives and the masses come staggering out into the light of pure Reason. It's not going to happen.
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There's a link, I think, between personal insecurity and the need to win converts.
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Depends on temperament and experience, I suspect. I'm pretty contented in my unbelief, but that doesn't save me from being irked from time to time by the towering dumbness, hubris, and outright evil that believers manage to get up to. Sometimes I act on the feeling of ire, sometimes I don't. But I can certainly empathize with it in others.
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Ever notice how miserable both sides tend to look?
I'll have to check out the Pullman book. I did like his Dark Materials trilogy, but you're right about his handling of the anti-God element.
Personally, I'll stick with my cloud of myriad Small Gods, and Short-Duration Personal Savior Catch-and-Release program. :-)
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I don't like shoutiness. If you're going to attack religion do it with sly wit. My hero is the wicked, surrealist film maker Luis Bunuel.
I like small gods too- and especially when they're smaller than I am.
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That's an interesting thought. I wish I had the time and mental capacity today to speak more to that thought, but I don't. Or, at least, not now.
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Firstly, humans are inherently story telling creatures, and he's approaching the atheism argument by telling stories which subsume and replace belief.
Secondly, because behind everything that Dawkins, Hitchens and their ilk have to say, you can hear the not so sub-text "If only you were as clever as me, I wouldn't have to explain this to you."
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I'm not 100% down on Dawkins. I do believe he is sincere and passionate - but fails to understand how he comes across sometimes.
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But I too can become an evangelical atheist at times, especially where I see religion as limiting horizons, loading people with guilt, being used as an excuse for bigotry and abuse, driving divisions between people, and causing general misery.
Atheism is, in the end, a kinder belief.
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But I think his strategy is wrong. He uses the cudgel when the stilletto would be so much more effective.
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Dawkins is polarising. He's preaching to the choir and the only effect he's having on his enemies is to make them even angrier.
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Sometimes I am highly frustrated by the fact of that last paragraph, but usually I live with it okay.
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(Yes, I know these are generalisations. They're meant to be.)
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Why would you be angry if you'd really grasped the truth?
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he'd still out me to death for what I believe..!
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Bigotry is sad whatever form it takes.
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My favourite atheist is the film maker Luis Bunuel- who knew Catholicism from the inside, understood its glamour, and exposed its absurdities with sly wit.
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Watch this space. :)
I consider God to be like Sherlock Holmes:
Re: I consider God to be like Sherlock Holmes:
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I don't think that's fair.
I spent a lot of time arguing religion a few years ago, but it wasn't because I was unsure in my unbelief. It was because I enjoyed arguing about the subject. That eventually got boring, but I hadn't made a career out of it; I was just being opinionated online.
This reminds me too much of the old argument that the loudest homophobes are secretly homosexual. While it's an attractive idea, it's probably not true of many of them.
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One gets into arguments, I think, partly in order to convince oneself.
And why would one debate an idea or a stance if one didn't find it attractive in some way? Speaking for myself, I'm not going to waste time arguing against a position I find boring, irrelevant or just plain silly.
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