The
"know-nothings", the "know-alls", and
the "no-contests"
(has no official title)
A lecture by Richard Dawkins extracted from The
Nullifidian (Dec 94)
Richard Dawkins, well-known for his books on
evolution, took part in a debate with the Archbishop
of York, Dr John Habgood, on the existence of God at
the Edinburgh science festival last Easter. [Easter
'92 ed.] The science correspondent of The
Observer reported that the "withering"
Richard Dawkins clearly believed the "God should
be spoken of in the same way as Father Christmas or
the Tooth Fairy". He [the correspondent]
overheard a gloomy cleric comment on the debate:
"That was easy to sum up. Lions 10, Christians
nil".
Religious people split into three main groups when
faced with science. I shall label them the
"know-nothings", the "know-alls", and
the "no-contests". I suspect that Dr John
Habgood, the Archbishop of York, probably belongs to the
third of these groups, so I shall begin with them.
The "no-contests" are rightly reconciled to
the fact that religion cannot compete with science on its
own ground. They think there is no contest between
science and religion, because they are simply about
different things. the biblical account of the origin of
the universe (the origin of life, the diversity of
species, the origin of man) -- all those things are now
known to be untrue.
The "no-contests" have no trouble with this:
they regard it as naive in the extreme, almost bad taste
to ask of a biblical story, is it true? True, they say,
true? Of course it isn't true in any crude literal sense.
Science and religion are not competing for the same
territory. They are about different things. They are
equally true, but in their different ways.
A favourite and thoroughly meaningless phrase is
"religious dimension". You meet this in
statements such as "science is all very well as far
as it goes, but it leaves out the religious
dimension".
The "know-nothings", or fundamentalists, are
in one way more honest. They are true to history. They
recognize that until recently one of religion's main
functions was scientific: the explanation of existence,
of the universe, of life. Historically, most religions
have had or even been a cosmology and a biology. I
suspect that today if you asked people to justify their
belief in God, the dominant reason would be scientific.
Most people, I believe, think that you need a God to
explain the existence of the world, and especially the
existence of life. They are wrong, but our education
system is such that many people don't know it.
They are also true to history because you can't escape
the scientific implications of religion. A universe with
a God would like quite different from a universe without
one. A physics, a biology where there is a God is bound
to look different. So the most basic claims of religion are
scientific. Religion is a scientific theory.
I am sometimes accused of arrogant intolerance in my
treatment of creationists. Of course arrogance is an
unpleasant characteristic, and I should hate to be
thought arrogant in a general way. But there are limits!
To get some idea of what it is like being a professional
student of evolution, asked to have a serious debate with
creationists, the following comparison is a fair one.
Imagine yourself a classical scholar who has spent a
lifetime studying Roman history in all its rich detail.
Now somebody comes along, with a degree in marine
engineering or mediaeval musicology, and tries to argue
that the Romans never existed. Wouldn't you find it hard
to suppress your impatience? And mightn't it look a bit
like arrogance?
My third group, the "know-alls" (I unkindly
name them that because I find their position
patronising), think religion is good for people, perhaps
good for society. Perhaps good because it consoles them
in death or bereavement, perhaps because it provides a
moral code.
Whether or not the actual beliefs of the religion are
true doesn't matter. Maybe there isn't a God; we educated
people know there is precious little evidence for one,
let alone for ideas such as the Virgin birth or the
Resurrection. but the uneducated masses need a God to
keep them out of mischief or to comfort them in
bereavement. The little matter of God's probably
non-existence can be brushed to one side in the interest
of greater social good. I need say not more about the
"know-alls" because they wouldn't claim to have
anything to contribute to scientific truth.
Is God a Superstring?
I shall now return to the "no-contests". The
argument they mount is certainly worth serious
examination, but I think that we shall find it has little
more merit than those of the other groups.
God is not an old man with a white beard in the sky.
Right then, what is God? And now come the weasel words.
these are very variable. "God is not out there, he
is in all of us." God is the ground of all
being." "God is the essence of life."
"God is the universe." "Don't you believe
in the universe?" "Of course I believe in the
universe." "Then you believe in God."
"God is love, don't you believe in love?"
"Right, then you believe in God?"
Modern physicists sometimes wax a bit mystical when
they contemplate questions such as why the big bang
happened when it did, why the laws of physics are these
laws and not those laws, why the universe exists at all,
and so on. Sometimes physicists may resort to saying that
there is an inner core of mystery that we don't
understand, and perhaps never can; and they may then say
that perhaps this inner core of mystery is another name
for God. Or in Stephen Hawkings's words, if we understand
these things, we shall perhaps "know the mind of
God."
The trouble is that God in this sophisticated,
physicist's sense bears no resemblance to the God of the
Bible or any other religion. If a physicist says God is
another name for Planck's constant, or God is a
superstring, we should take it as a picturesque
metaphorical way of saying that the nature of
superstrings or the value of Planck's constant is a
profound mystery. It has obviously not the smallest
connection with a being capable of forgiving sins, a
being who might listen to prayers, who cares about
whether or not the Sabbath begins at 5pm or 6pm, whether
you wear a veil or have a bit of arm showing; and no
connection whatever with a being capable of imposing a
death penalty on His son to expiate the sins of the world
before and after he was born.
The Fabulous Bible
The same is true of attempts to identify the big bang
of modern cosmology with the myth of Genesis. There is
only an utterly trivial resemblance between the
sophisticated conceptions of modern physics, and the
creation myths of the Babylonians and the Jews that we
have inherited.
What do the "no-contests" say about those
parts of scripture and religious teaching that
once-upon-a-time would have been unquestioned religious
and scientific truths; the creation of the world the
creation of life, the various miracles of the Old and New
Testaments,, survival after death, the Virgin Birth?
These stories have become, in the hands of the
"no-contests", little more than moral fables,
the equivalent of Aesop of Hans Anderson. There is
nothing wrong with that, but it is irritating that they
almost never admit this is what they are doing.
For instance, I recently heard the previous Chief
Rabbi, Sir Immanuel Jacobovits, talking about the evils
of racism. Racism is evil, and it deserves a better
argument against it that the one he gave. Adam and Eve,
he argued, were the ancestors of all human kind.
Therefore, all human kind belongs to one race, the human
race.
What are we going to make of an argument like that?
The Chief Rabbi is an educated man, he obviously doesn't
believe in Adam and Eve, so what exactly did he think he
was saying?
He must have been using Adam and Eve as a fable, just
as one might use the story of Jack the Giantkiller or
Cinderella to illustrate some laudable moral homily.
I have the impression that clergymen are so used to
treating the biblical stories as fables that they have
forgotten the difference between fact and fiction. It's
like the people who, when somebody dies on The
Archers, write letters of condolence to the others.
Inheriting Religion
As a Darwinian, something strikes me when I look at
religion. Religion shows a pattern of heredity which I
think is similar to genetic heredity. The vast majority
of people have an allegiance to one particular religion.
there are hundreds of different religious sects, and
every religious person is loyal to just one of those.
Out of all of the sects in the world, we notice an
uncanny coincidence: the overwhelming majority just
happen to choose the one that their parents belong to.
Not the sect that has the best evidence in its favour,
the best miracles, the best moral code, the best
cathedral, the best stained glass, the best music: when
it comes to choosing from the smorgasbord of available
religions, their potential virtues seem to count for
nothing, compared to the matter of heredity.
This is an unmistakable fact; nobody could seriously
deny it. Yet people with full knowledge of the arbitrary
nature of this heredity, somehow manage to go on
believing in their religion, often with such
fanaticism that they are prepared to murder people who
follow a different one.
Truths about the cosmos are true all around the
universe. They don't differ in Pakistan, Afghanistan,
Poland, or Norway. Yet, we are apparently prepared to
accept that the religion we adopt is a matter of an
accident of geography.
If you ask people why they are convinced of the truth
of their religion, they don't appeal to heredity. Put
like that it sounds too obviously stupid. Nor do they
appeal to evidence. There isn't any, and nowadays the
better educated admit it. No, they appeal to faith. Faith
is the great cop-out, the great excuse to evade the need
to think and evaluate evidence. Faith is belief in spite
of, even perhaps because of, the lack of evidence. The
worst thing is that the rest of us are supposed to
respect it: to treat it with kid gloves.
If a slaughterman doesn't comply with the law in
respect of cruelty to animals, he is rightly prosecuted
and punished. but if he complains that his cruel
practices are necessitated by religious faith, we back
off apologetically and allow him to get on with it. Any
other position that someone takes up can expect to be
defended with reasoned argument. Faith is allowed not to
justify itself by argument. Faith must be respected; and
if you don't respect it, you are accused of violating
human rights.
Even those with no faith have been brainwashed into
respecting the faith of others. When so-called Muslim
community leaders go on the radio and advocate the
killing of Salman Rushdie, they are clearly committing
incitement to murder--a crime for which they would
ordinarily be prosecuted and possibly imprisoned. But are
they arrested? They are not, because our secular society
"respects" their faith, and sympathises with
the deep "hurt" and "insult" to it.
Well I don't. I will respect your views if you can
justify them. but if you justify your views only by
saying you have faith in them, I shall not respect them.
Improbabilities
I want to end by returning to science. It is often
said, mainly by the "no-contests", that
although there is no positive evidence for the existence
of God, nor is there evidence against his existence. So
it is best to keep an open mind and be agnostic.
At first sight that seems an unassailable position, at
least in the weak sense of Pascal's wager. But on second
thoughts it seems a cop-out, because the same could be
said of Father Christmas and tooth fairies. There may be
fairies at the bottom of the garden. There is no evidence
for it, but you can't prove that there aren't
any, so shouldn't we be agnostic with respect to fairies?
The trouble with the agnostic argument is that it can
be applied to anything. There is an infinite number of
hypothetical beliefs we could hold which we can't
positively disprove. On the whole, people don't believe
in most of them, such as fairies, unicorns, dragons,
Father Christmas, and so on. But on the whole they do
believe in a creator God, together with whatever
particular baggage goes with the religion of their
parents.
I suspect the reason is that most people, though not
belonging to the "know-nothing" party,
nevertheless have a residue of feeling that Darwinian
evolution isn't quite big enough to explain everything
about life. All I can say as a biologist is that the
feeling disappears progressively the more you read about
and study what is known about life and evolution.
I want to add one thing more. The more you understand
the significance of evolution, the more you are pushed
away from the agnostic position and towards atheism.
Complex, statistically improbable things are by their
nature more difficult to explain than simple,
statistically probable things.
The great beauty of Darwin's theory of evolution is
that it explains how complex, difficult to understand
things could have arisen step by plausible step, from
simple, easy to understand beginnings. We start our
explanation from almost infinitely simple beginnings:
pure hydrogen and a huge amount of energy. Our
scientific, Darwinian explanations carry us through a
series of well-understood gradual steps to all the
spectacular beauty and complexity of life.
The alternative hypothesis, that it was all started by
a supernatural creator, is not only superfluous, it is
also highly improbable. It falls foul of the very
argument that was originally put forward in its favour.
This is because any God worthy of the name must have been
a being of colossal intelligence, a supermind, an entity
of extremely low probability--a very improbable being
indeed.
Even if the postulation of such an entity explained
anything (and we don't need it to), it still wouldn't
help because it raises a bigger mystery than it solves.
Science offers us an explanation of how complexity
(the difficult) arose out of simplicity (the easy). The
hypothesis of God offers no worthwhile explanation for
anything, for it simply postulates what we are trying to
explain. It postulates the difficult to explain, and
leaves it at that. We cannot prove that there is no God,
but we can safely conclude the He is very, very
improbable indeed.
This was a lecture by Richard Dawkins extracted
from The Nullifidian (Dec 94)
John Catalano
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