Archive for the ‘Atheism’ Category

Impressed

I’m impressed:

[David Wilkinson:] ‘One [unanswered question] would be where the laws of physics come from. Science subsumes the laws but we are still left with the question of where the laws come from….

[Richard Dawkins:] Even if we are left with that question, it is not going to be answered by a God, who raises more questions than he answers.

Precisely true: There are no answers to the question of where the universe (incl. the laws of physics) came from, or the purpose (if any) of the universe/life.

That’s the reality we’re stuck with, and it’s also the point at-or-beyond which any honest, thinking, informed person can only be truly agnostic. Atheists who do need to have (non-existent) answers beyond that point are as desperate for certainty as are any religious believers.

But then, just when you think RD has gotten himself steady on the beam, he follows it up with this behemoth of a swing-and-miss:

[Ruth Gledhill:] Jerry [Coyne], in some liberal theological circles, it is not regarded as impossible that there is truth in both Islam and Christianity.

[Dawkins:] The Islamic penalty for converting to Christianity is what, Ruth, perhaps you know?

She never said (or implied) that they were both completely true, Dick-head. It’s ham-handed stuff like that which gives militant atheists a bad name.

God did not create the universe, says Hawking

Behold, what drivel passes for spiritual insight among scientists and atheists:

“Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing. Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist,” Hawking writes.

And where did that law of gravity come from?

“Oh, erm, we hadn’t thought of that….” The energy comes from random quantum fluctuations (or whatever), but where did the laws governing those fluctuations come from?

With such feeble thoughts at Hawking’s on the subject, you can see why any thinking person with a heart would find it very easy to believe in higher levels of reality, and Spirit as the Ground of all Being. After all, if the hand-waving, under-rug-swept notions of Hawking and his ilk are the alternative, Eastern philosophy starts to look pretty solid and insightful by comparison … at least until you start to understand a little bit about neurology.

White Fright

You know, the more I read of Christopher Hitchens, the less respect I have for him. These are his dribblings about the Glenn Beck rally over the weekend:

One crucial element of the American subconscious is about to become salient and explicit and highly volatile. It is the realization that white America is within thinkable distance of a moment when it will no longer be the majority….

Until recently, the tendency has been to think of this rather than to speak of it—or to speak of it very delicately, lest the hard-won ideal of diversity be imperiled.

Actually, it’s “lest one be called a racist.” It has piss-all to do with imperiling the “hard-won ideal of diversity,” which is in no danger at all of being imperiled.

Thus, it is really quite rare to hear slurs against President Barack Obama that are based purely on the color of his skin. Even Beck himself has tried to back away from the smears of that kind that he has spread in the past.

Beck called Obama a “racist”—that’s the “smear” he’s been backing away from recently. I still think he was right the first time, and that just as literally 70% of blacks are actively homophobic (in California, at least, and probably with a just as high or higher percentage in more conservative states), well over 80% of them are incurable and unapologetic racists. (By that I mean, they are people for whom their race is the most important aspect of their self-identification, which automatically makes them racists, just as feminists’ overweening identification as women can lead nowhere else but to them being unapologetic sexists, who favor and see only the good in their preferred in-group, and only the bad in the mistrusted out-group.) Including the half-black, racist Obama.

[I]t is increasingly common to hear allegations that Obama is either foreign-born or a Muslim.

The foreign-born thing is something that Barack could clear up in an instant, if he wanted to. That he hasn’t cleared up the “birther” issues shows either that he can’t (i.e., that the birthers are right), or that he doesn’t want to, i.e., he’s using it as a way of letting the “wingnuts” embarrass themselves. Either way, it’s completely his own fault, and his own responsibility; so there’s no point in trying to pin that on the people who are asking reasonable questions (even if their imaginations are getting away from them, beyond that).

And no, Obama’s not a Muslim. But he did sit in the pews of Jeremiah Wright’s church for several decades. And Wright is actively sympathetic with Louis Farrakhan’s truly vile and unapologetically racist Black Muslim movement in America:

Wright … called Louis Farrakhan “one of the most important voices in the 20th and 21st century,” and repeated his endorsement of an AIDS conspiracy theory [i.e., that AIDS is a biological weapon manufactured by whites to wipe out the black race]. (Wikipedia, since removed)

Obama’s spiritual mentor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, is a good friend of Louis Farrakhan and even accompanied him to Libya to meet with General Muammar Gaddaffi in 1984. And in 1995, Barack Obama himself flew from Chicago to Washington, D.C. to attend Farrakhan’s [sexist] Million Man March….

No one could sit in a church like that for twenty years without being a racist: Anyone who wasn’t a racist would have been so disgusted by Wright’s (and Farrakhan’s) racism and sexism, that he would have simply walked out and not gone back.

This is how I summarized that craziness it in Hip Like Me:

[Jesse] Jackson is also a “friend and ally” of Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam. That Nation teaches that black people were the original humans, and that whites are only “potential humans.” Plus some even more out-of-this-world ideas, from a Meet the Press interview with Farrakhan in 1997:

[Tim Russert:] Henry Louis Gates … asked you whether you still subscribe to the teachings of Elijah Muhammad on Yakub, a black scientist who 6,600 years ago created the white man, and that by the end of the twentieth century, a spaceship will come and rain down upon white people and people who don’t embrace Islam. Do you subscribe to the teachings of Yakub, that Yakub, the black scientist, created the white man?

[Farrakhan:] I subscribe to every word that the Honorable Elijah Muhammad taught us.

Until Malcolm X left the Nation of Islam in 1964, knowing his life was in danger for doing that—he was assassinated in 1965—he promoted the same science-fiction teachings. And more:

White people are born devils by nature….

Thoughtful white people know they are inferior to black people…. Anyone who has studied the genetic phase of biology knows that white is considered recessive and black is considered dominant. When you want strong coffee, you ask for black coffee….

Elsewhere, Farrakhan labeled the Jews, Palestinian Arabs, Koreans and Vietnamese as “bloodsuckers,” for allegedly taking from the black community but giving nothing back in return.

Farrakhan later confirmed that he is neither a racist nor anti-Semitic.

Enlarging on that same theme in a speech in 1994, the Supreme Minister of the Nation of Islam claimed: “Murder and lying comes easy for white people.”

Enlarging even further on that theme, in 1992 filmmaker Spike Lee stated:

A lot of people will have to do a lot of explaining on AIDS one day. All of a sudden, a disease appears out of nowhere that nobody has a cure for, and it’s specifically targeted at gays and minorities (i.e., Hispanics and blacks). The mystery disease, yeah, about as mysterious as genocide.

I’m convinced AIDS is a government-engineered disease. They got one thing wrong, they never realized it couldn’t just be contained to the groups it was intended to wipe out.

A year earlier, comedian Bill Cosby had reportedly claimed that the same illness was “started by human beings to get after certain people they don’t like”…. And, in the July 1999 issue of Vanity Fair, Will Smith floated the idea that “possibly AIDS was created as a result of biological-warfare testing.”

Do you honestly think that that crazy-paranoid-racist ideology won’t have come up regularly in Wright’s “Christian” church? Of course it did. And Obama sat through it all, when any thinking person with a conscience would have walked out in disgust.

Hitchens:

And these insinuations are perfectly emblematic of the two main fears of the old majority: that it will be submerged by an influx from beyond the borders and that it will be challenged in its traditional ways and faiths by an alien and largely Third World religion.

Wasn’t that a big part of the motivation behind multiculturalism in the first place? You know, to break the monopoly of white (male) Christian power in the West by importing a bunch of non-white, non-Christian Others, with the idea that “You scratch my back [in agitating for civil/women's rights], and I’ll scratch yours,” against the common (white, Christian male) enemy. (And as we all know, “the enemy of my white, male enemy is my friend.” Isn’t he? Ask the gays in California.) Plus, blank-slate ideology (where equality of opportunities would automatically produce equality of results, so an inequality in the latter is taken as proof of discrimination in the former) and a genuine wish to make up for the wrongs of colonialism (which wish can be driven just as well by the greater liberal desire for fairness, as by the one-dimensional accusation of “white liberal guilt”).

At the last “Tea Party” rally I attended, earlier this year at the Washington Monument, some in the crowd made at least an attempt to look fierce and minatory. I stood behind signs that read: “We left our guns at home—this time” and “We invoke the First Amendment today—the Second Amendment tomorrow.” But Beck’s event was tepid by comparison: a call to sink to the knees rather than rise from them.

The alternative was to get dismissed by the liberal media (yourself included, Hitch) as a bunch of resentful, gun-totin’ rednecks.

[T]he U.S. population is simply not going to be replenished by Puritan pilgrims from England, and the original Pledge of Allegiance was fine with most people as a statement of national unity, until its “original intent” was compromised by a late insertion of the words “under God” in the McCarthyite 1950s.

Only atheists are bothered by that insertion, and they comprise less than 15% of the population. When illegal immigrants from Mexico, and legal immigrants (including Muslims) from the rest of the Third World, gag on that same pledge of allegiance, it ain’t the “under God” part that they’re being bothered by. Hitchens’ treatment of that issue is either pathetically ignorant or outright disingenuous/dishonest.

In a rather curious and confused way, some white people are starting almost to think like a minority, even like a persecuted one. What does it take to believe that Christianity is an endangered religion in America or that the name of Jesus is insufficiently spoken or appreciated?

Oh, I dunno, maybe the “War on Christmas,” for one—e.g., the fact that you’re not even allowed to cheerfully say “Merry Christmas” without risking offending the recipient?

A controversy regarding these issues arose in 2002, when the New York City public school system banned the display of nativity scenes, but allowed the display of supposedly less overtly religious symbols such as Christmas trees, Hanukkah menorahs, and the Muslim star and crescent….

In December 2007, a public controversy arose when a public school in Ottawa, Canada planned to have the children in its primary choir sing a version of the song “Silver Bells” with the word “Christmas” removed….

Another controversy occurred in 2005 with the US hardware retailer Lowe’s. Signage for their Christmas trees read “holiday trees” in English, but read árboles de Navidad (Christmas trees) in Spanish rather than árboles de feriados. In 2007, Lowe’s started using the term “family tree,” sparking protest from the American Family Association, but they have since claimed that this term was only a printing mistake….

In 2009 in Jerusalem, Israel the Lobby for Jewish Values with support of the Jerusalem Rabbinate has handed out fliers condemning Christmas and have called for a boycott of restaurants and hotels that sell or put up Christmas trees and what the organization called “foolish” Christian symbols.

Christians have been successful in getting major retailers to go back to saying “Christmas,” but that’s only because they still have the numbers to enforce meaningful boycotts. That won’t be the case forever.

And no one, I’m sure, has ever claimed that “Christianity is an endangered religion”—that’s a pure straw man on Hitchens’ addled (or dishonest) part, equating potential minority (< 50%) status with being “endangered,” i.e., at risk of not existing at all.

Further, any Christian, regardless of how moderate he is, would surely say that “the name of Jesus is insufficiently spoken or appreciated”—that’s just part of wanting the whole world to hear and believe the Good News you’ve accepted into your heart! So yeah, I’m sure they’re regularly guilty of thinking that Jesus is underappreciated! How could they not be??

What an idiot. What a fucking dishonest atheist idiot. I’d like to be charitable and say that it’s just the chemotherapy that’s affecting his ability to think clearly, but I really doubt that that’s the problem.

Who wakes up believing that there is no appreciation for our veterans and our armed forces and that without a noisy speech from Sarah Palin, their sacrifice would be scorned?

What does “waking up” first thing in the morning have to do with it? Probably even less than McCarthyism had to do with the addition of the words “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance. That is, it’s just an easy way for Hitchens to smear things by association, in this case painting the Tea Partiers and their ilk as being sleepy-eyed dopes.

And who has ever said “no appreciation”? What the relevant people (including Palin) are obviously saying (going back to the way in which veterans returning from Vietnam were “welcomed” back home in the ’60s) is “insufficient appreciation.” So again, either stupid or dishonest on Hitchens’ part, take your pick.

It’s not unfair to say that such grievances are purely and simply imaginary, which in turn leads one to ask what the real ones can be. The clue, surely, is furnished by the remainder of the speeches, which deny racial feeling so monotonously and vehemently as to draw attention.

What a polite and circuitous way of calling the people involved, racists—whose perception of being treated unfairly by (and in favor of) affirmative-action benefiting minorities is purely imagined, and whose racism is shown by the very “clue” of them denying it (in the naïve hope that doing so will make a difference to dishonest and/or incompetent journalists like Hitchens himself).

Damned if ya do, and damned if ya don’t, eh?

Incidentally, of all the things to cite in opposition of the Ground Zero mosque, the relevant imam’s statement (which Hitchens makes much of) that “the United States policies were an accessory to the crime that happened” is not one of them. As the Canadian military tells its own soldiers (I have this from one of them, who was deployed to the Persian Gulf), Osama bin Laden was originally financed by the American government, as a (Cold War) terrorist against Russia. So in a most direct way, Bin Laden was indeed created by American foreign policy. And even if it wasn’t for that, there’s still plenty of political (i.e., American foreign-policy) motivation behind Islamic terrorism.

These are Bin Laden’s own words, unmodulated by Hitchens’ wonky/dishonest view of the world:

Allah knows it did not cross our minds to attack the towers but after the situation became unbearable and we witnessed the injustice and tyranny of the American-Israeli alliance against our people in Palestine and Lebanon, I thought about it. And the events that affected me directly were that of 1982 and the events that followed—when America allowed the Israelis to invade Lebanon, helped by the U.S. Sixth Fleet. As I watched the destroyed towers in Lebanon, it occurred to me punish the unjust the same way (and) to destroy towers in America so it could taste some of what we are tasting and to stop killing our children and women.

So in no way is it a 100% cultural (or virgin-Paradise driven) war, as Hitchens and Sam Harris disingenuously try their best to reduce it to.

Late professors Arthur Schlesinger and Samuel Huntington both published books expressing misgivings about, respectively, multiculturalism and rapid demographic change. But these were phrased so carefully as almost to avoid starting the argument they flirted with.

Yes, because they didn’t want to have their careers ruined by being called “racists” by the liberal media. See under “Tea Party, clue.” How friggin’ difficult is that to understand?

More recently, almost every European country has seen the emergence of populist parties that call upon nativism and give vent to the idea that the majority population now feels itself unwelcome in its own country.

I know I do. Seriously. And that’s an attitude that I’ve only come to reluctantly over the past three years, as economic circumstances forced me to live alongside these imported (and homegrown) dregs, who would regularly (i.e., every couple of weeks, on average) hassle me as I was walking down the street, minding my own business, for no reason other than the color of my skin, and their own homophobia (even though I’m not gay, but I do look like I very well might be, and regardless, what little low-IQ runt wouldn’t be thrilled to find someone that even he can finally push around?).

The ugliness of Islamic fundamentalism in particular has given energy and direction to such movements. It will be astonishing if the United States is not faced, in the very near future, with a similar phenomenon.

Let’s hope so. Let’s fucking hope so.

Another controversy occurred in 2005 with the US hardware retailer Lowe’s. Signage for their Christmas trees read “holiday trees” in English, but read árboles de Navidad (Christmas trees) in Spanish rather than árboles de feriados. In 2007, Lowe’s started using the term “family tree”, sparking protest from the American Family Association, but they have since claimed that this term was only a printing mistake.[34]

After claims that it was avoiding the term, US retailer Lowe’s began using “Christmas tree” prominently in advertising.

In 2009 in Jerusalem, Israel the Lobby for Jewish Values with support of the Jerusalem Rabbinate has handed out fliers condemning Christmas and have called for a boycott of restaurants and hotels that sell or put up Christmas trees and what the organization called “foolish” Christian symbols.

One other thing, about Hitchens’ idea that the “don’t walk your dogs near a mosque” vs. “don’t build the mosque near Ground Zero” debate can be a lesson in mutual tolerance: We have no leverage at all in those negotiations because (i) we’re dealing with a bullying culture in which attempts at negotiation are seen as a sign of weakness, (ii) they already know that when they threaten us we won’t threaten them back (which is another sign of weakness to them, as bullies, right?), (iii) they’ve got God/Allah on their side, so letting dogs walk too close to their mosques or moving the Ground Zero mosque would both be effectively “giving in to Satan,” and (iv) if all else fails, they can scream “racism” or “Islamophobia,” to get us to cave.

So if they threaten us for walking our dogs too close to their “holy” places, we’ll just find some other, safer place to walk … until there are no such places left.

Given all of those constraints, the only way to “fight back” against the Islamic menace is to make them feel unwelcome in our countries, via opinion poles and private election votes, passive-aggressive though that may be. And because that fight is so unfair, and we are so culturally self-restricted in how we can respond even to savages who threaten our basic human rights from within our own countries, things like banning minarets in Switzerland, banning burquas in France, and protesting against any mosque in NYC (regardless of where it’s built), are not only encouraging signs that the populace is waking up to that menace, but are the right thing to do … especially if they make Muslims feel unwelcome in the West.

Smear ‘em all with lard, is what I say.

Bad Skepticism

I unsubscribed from Discovery magazine’s RSS feed a while back, simply because far too much of it is cluttered with postings from Chris Mooney and the cute-but-dumb “kissing-book” cherry-tree chic … and by Razib Khan, whose “meander-thal” (sic) writing style makes me want to vomit all over Audacious Epigone, and kill two birds-who-can’t-write-worth-birdshit with one stone.

So I’ve also been doing without Phil Plait’s consistently middling “Bad Astronomy” postings … along with his recent Amazing Meeting speech, which one commenter on Jerry Coyne’s site has summarized as:

The worst part of all this was watching Phil resort to several tactics that skeptics actually decry: anecdotal evidence, straw men, and failing to support his standpoint when asked. I even noted the relaxation of a skeptical approach when dealing with “friends,” which is a bit hypocritical (and seems to apply to his friendship with Mooney.)

Richard Dawkins also posted a nice response:

I could quote plenty of skeptics who employ ridicule, who skewer pretentiousness, stupidity and ignorance using wit. Listening to such ridicule, and reading it, is one of the great joys life has to offer. And I suspect that it is very effective.

But then, check out this uninformed comment:

It occurs to me that the difference between Phil and someone like P.Z. is that when P.Z. thinks someone’s actions/arguments are harmful or silly, he isn’t afraid to actually call out that person (like he’s doing now with Kurzweil). That doesn’t make P.Z. a jerk. Rather, it demonstrates that he’s actually interested in having an honest exchange.

Man, the loud-mouthed idiot Myers totally misrepresents Kurzweil’s position, insults him by calling him “Deepak Chopra for the computer science cognoscenti,” a “kook,” “completely wrong,” and a “pseudoscientific dingbat” … and that’s proof of Myers being “interested in having an honest exchange”???

Makes you wonder how PZ would treat people with whom he wasn’t interested in having an “honest exchange,” eh?

And yet the drooling liberal-atheists lap it all up, never stopping to think about how they’re behaving exactly like any good cult-followers would.

Or what exactly would PZ have to do to get called out for being a “jerk” by these lemmings? Because clearly, baldly insulting and completely mischaracterizing the positions of people he disagrees with isn’t enough.

Ray Kurzweil Responds to “Ray Kurzweil does not understand the brain”

I’ve been slowly—or is it rapidly?—coming to the conclusion that PZ Myers is every bit as much of an idiot as is Sam Harris. Observe:

While most of PZ Myers’ comments (in his blog post entitled “Ray Kurzweil does not understand the brain” posted on Pharyngula on August 17, 2010) do not deserve a response, I do want to set the record straight, as he completely mischaracterizes my thesis….

Myers, who apparently based his second-hand comments on erroneous press reports (he wasn’t at my talk), goes on to claim that my thesis is that we will reverse-engineer the brain from the genome. This is not at all what I said in my presentation to the Singularity Summit. I explicitly said that our quest to understand the principles of operation of the brain is based on many types of studies—from detailed molecular studies of individual neurons, to scans of neural connection patterns, to studies of the function of neural clusters, and many other approaches. I did not present studying the genome as even part of the strategy for reverse-engineering the brain.

I mentioned the genome in a completely different context. I presented a number of arguments as to why the design of the brain is not as complex as some theorists have advocated. This is to respond to the notion that it would require trillions of lines of code to create a comparable system. The argument from the amount of information in the genome is one of several such arguments. It is not a proposed strategy for accomplishing reverse-engineering. It is an argument from information theory, which Myers obviously does not understand….

[S]ome of my critics claim that I underestimate the complexity of the problem. I have studied these issues for over four decades, so I believe I have a good appreciation for the level of challenge. What I would say is that my critics underestimate the power of the exponential growth of information technology.

Halfway through the genome project, the project’s original critics were still going strong, pointing out that we were halfway through the 15 year project and only 1 percent of the genome had been identified. The project was declared a failure by many skeptics at this point. But the project had been doubling in price-performance and capacity every year, and at one percent it was only seven doublings (at one year per doubling) away from completion. It was indeed completed seven years later.

As I’ve noted in the past, it’s typical for Kurzweil’s critics (like mine) to have to put so pathetically little thought into the subject that they think he’s the one who’s overlooking the obvious. This is Myers—who, having done research in neuroscience, has even less excuse—proving himself to be a complete fool in exactly that way:

[Ray Kurzweil is] actually just another Deepak Chopra for the computer science cognoscenti….

[Kurzweil thinks] that we’ll be able to write software that simulates all the functions of the human brain. He’s not just speculating optimistically, though: he’s building his case on such awfully bad logic that I’m surprised anyone still pays attention to that kook….

Kurzweil knows nothing about how the brain works….

We haven’t even solved the sequence-to-protein-folding problem, which is an essential first step to executing Kurzweil’s clueless algorithm….

It’s an insanely complicated situation, and Kurzweil thinks he can reduce it to a triviality.

To simplify it so a computer science guy can get it, Kurzweil has everything completely wrong….

I’ll make one more prediction. The media will not end their infatuation with this pseudo-scientific dingbat, Kurzweil, no matter how uninformed and ridiculous his claims get.

And, of course, all the drooling liberal-atheist PZ fanboys can’t wait to lap it all up … with, grrr, the obligatory “software engineering isn’t real engineering” idiocy/pissing-contest. As one notes:

Oh yes. Another opportunity to post the Mitch Kapor quote that I love so much about Kurzweil and the Singularity kooks:

“It’s intelligent design for the IQ 140 people. This proposition that we’re heading to this point at which everything is going to be just unimaginably different—it’s fundamentally, in my view, driven by a religious impulse. And all of the frantic arm-waving can’t obscure that fact for me, no matter what numbers he marshals in favor of it. He’s very good at having a lot of curves that point up to the right.”

That would be the same Mitch Kapor who said, of Ken Wilber’s magnum-quack-opus Sex, Ecology, Spirituality, “This book changes everything.” Heh.

So I guess Kurzweil’s curves would point to the Upper Right Quadrant then, in Kapor’s view, eh?

And Wilber himself has, of course, endorsed Michael Behe’s writings on … yep, Intelligent Design. Heh.

Not to mention that Kapor is listed in the acknowledgments section for people who “offered support or feedback” for “all the books that kw has written since Grace and Grit,” along with … yes, Deepak Chopra!

After reading Wilber, it’s impossible to imagine looking at the world the same way again.”—Mitchell Kapor, founder of Lotus, Inc.

And what is Wilber’s view of the future? Basically an endorsement of Kurzweil’s Singularity, with the evolution of consciousness on top of that—a future that will be even more “unimaginably different” from how it is today:

These are some of Wilber’s other (explicitly fictional) musings on related subjects:

Code Project AQAL began as the join [sic] effort of literally hundreds of social scientists and researchers from around the world. They also called it “The Human Consciousness Project” (HCP). Much like the Human Genome Project, which had mapped all the genes of human DNA, the HCP was a complete mapping of human consciousness—any and all of its levels, lines, states, and types, as reported over the last several millennia. This involved hundreds of cultural experts, spiritual teachers, psychologists, psychiatrists, and sociologists—and a dozen Cray supercomputers parallel processing this information from all over the world, with enough meta-analyses to attempt to spot any recurring patterns. The result is said to be the entire spectrum of consciousness fully mapped for the first time in history….

“The Code appears to be the Code to the entire Kosmos,” as a senior researcher, who asked to be anonymous, said. “It makes sense if you think about it,” the source continued. “If humans are part of the universe, then when the Code to the former was discovered, it would be the Code to the latter as well—the Code for one is the Code for the other. What the AQAL Code gives us seems to be the basic structure or pattern of the known universe, as [sic] least as we understand it so far.”

The novel suggests that the Singularity event that we’ve heard so much about will take place on two fronts—on the technological front (in the manifest world), and on the cultural front (in the inner worlds).

Finally, Wilber’s novel suggests that while there are ample reasons to be concerned with the frightening events currently unfolding in our world, in the end, after 10 percent of the world has transitioned to the next level of development, a Singularity event will happen and when it does, it will be good, wonderful, rapturous, and “off the wall” (beyond anything we can currently envision).

“Religious impulse,” indeed. (Didn’t Wilber also once do an “Integral 1-2-3″ sort of thing? If so, I just got the connection between that and Lotus 1-2-3!)

Anyway, as a brighter commenter notes, on Myers’ thread:

Change some terms and PZ’s post right here would read like a papal condemnation of a heterodoxy.

Precisely. As I’ve noted previously, PZ would make a fine cult-follower … and makes a pretty good cult leader, too. Though, of course, that point is lost, utterly lost, on the lock-step fanboys.

P.S. Christopher Hitchens, on It’s Not Just About Israel: Six more reasons why we can’t let Iran get nukes.

Also stumbled on this:

I came across Ken Wilber, the brilliant psychologist-philosopher. In this blog I want to scream in dismay at the atrocity of such incredibly delusional genius….

Ken Wilber’s influence on humanity is an atrocity worse than the Holocaust.

Wow, that’s even more over-the-top than I’ve ever been!

“Ken Wilber: Worse Than the Holocaust.” I like how it sounds (this best said in a Mel Brooks or Harvey Korman voice).

What Obama Got Wrong About the Mosque

Sam Harris, on What Obama Got Wrong About the Mosque:

The New York Times has declared that the proposed mosque will be nothing less than “a monument to tolerance.” It goes without saying that tolerance is a value to which we should all be deeply committed. Nor can we ignore the fact that many who oppose the construction of this mosque embody all that is terrifyingly askew in conservative America—“birthers,” those sincerely awaiting the Rapture, opportunistic Republican politicians, and utter lunatics who yearn to see Sarah Palin become the next president of the United States (note that Palin herself probably falls into several of these categories).

That, from an idiot—who could aspire to being a mere “lunatic”—who not only speaks complimentarily of the ideas of the New Age quack Ken Wilber, but has even guested on Wilber’s Integral Naked bully pulpit; and who further touts the “exquisite ravings” of the psychedelic drug-addled, “not even wrong” world-class fool Terence McKenna. For those, you see, are the embarrassing categories into which Harris himself trips and falls.

In all seriousness, as I’ve noted before, Palin would have a better chance of keeping her religious foolishness out of her political-office decisions, than Harris would:

Harris’s tolerance for Terence McKenna’s psychedelic-induced “exquisite ravings” is just as crazy, and nearly as potentially dangerous, as are any Christian Rapture expectations. For, if the many-worlds cosmos really was peopled with “self-transforming machine elves” who can communicate with us in altered states of consciousness … how might those communications from higher beings affect Harris’s own decision-making, should he (god forbid) ever be placed in a position of responsibility?

People like Sarah Palin understand the separation of Church and State well enough to not try and force their own religious beliefs onto others in that context. By contrast, to truly embrace integral spirituality is, by its very nature, to attempt to apply it to every aspect of life. Would you want someone with that kind of belief system to be holding an elected office, where he would necessarily have to try to bring his spiritual/religious beliefs into government? I sure wouldn’t.

Dawkins denounces religious education as ‘wicked practice’

Dawkins denounces religious education as ‘wicked practice’:

[Dawkins said:] “Many people want to send their children to faith schools because they get good exam results but they’re not foolish enough to believe that it’s because of faith that they get good exam results.” [Which, of course, is mostly a product of selection, in the schools not accepting proles and blacks, etc.] Anecdotes of parents suddenly discovering God shortly before school admissions season are certainly common, and Professor Dawkins is sympathetic.

“I don’t want to cast any blame on them. It’s hypocrisy that is imposed on them by a ridiculous and unjust system. It’s something that taxpayers shouldn’t be tolerating.” In fact, if he were in the same situation, he might be tempted to do the same thing.

“Since I have absolutely no belief at all, I wouldn’t be betraying anything,” he said.

Ouch. No, Sir, you would be betraying your integrity, and showing—for all the religious people who have ever worried about the effects of atheists not having a “god-given” moral code on which to base their decisions—that you will lie at the drop of a hat, if it suits you. After all, you have “nothing to betray” in doing so.

Nice “own goal,” there.

Shallow, smug, arrogant

I just wasted ten minutes of my life reading Russell Blackford’s dull critique of an even-worse Op Ed piece by Suzanne Fields in Sun Myung Moon’s Washington Times, in which he notes:

As for the essays in 50 Voices of Disbelief, since she mentions it, some are light and humorous, but I can’t think of any that can fairly be described as containing nothing but “smug, shallow and arrogant assertions.”

Ophelia Benson’s contribution comes very close indeed to exactly that—smug, yes; shallow, absolutely; arrogant, certainly—on top of unapologetically twisting the facts to suit her persecuted-feminist view of the world. So it’s actually worse than Blackford is giving it credit for.

Of course those Western atheists who think religion should be criticized are likely to concentrate on the religion that exerts the most social influence around them and which they understand best, i.e. Christianity. There is nothing surprising or sinister about this. It doesn’t show hypocrisy and or a double standard, merely a sense of local priorities and a rational division of labor. For exactly the same reason, it is perfectly understandable, and there’s nothing sinister about it, when Turkish atheists concentrate more on Islam. In any event, as Islam gains in influence in the West more actually is being written about it by Western atheists. The violent fanaticism associated with various strains of political Islam constantly comes under attack from Western atheists (among others). There are numerous examples of this every day, e.g. over at Butterflies and Wheels, and again that is a natural step.

True enough, and Benson plays that “one note” very well—though one truly wonders how much interest she’d have in the subject if it wasn’t her in-group that is, above, all, being oppressed by dem goat-fuckers.

But then, a commenter has the temerity to step up and say:

Too long and too gentle Russell. The bitch [i.e., Fields] deserves a very hard slap.

Ah, but you see, that’s exactly the sort of “cliquish locker room atmosphere of anonymous boyz cheering each other on” that Benson keeps, er, “bitching” about.

I trust a heartfelt apology (to Benson) will be forthcoming, from Blackford and his commenters….

Why Science Cannot Address the Existence of God

Steven Dutch, on Why Science Cannot Address the Existence of God:

The only question about a god that is meaningful or interesting is whether or not there is a god who interacts with the universe. Pantheism, the idea that the sum total of everything that exists is a god, is trivial.

Well, first, pantheism would typically include the ability to appeal to that immanent god(s), e.g., by sacrificing virgins to a volcano to prevent it from erupting. Wiccans do stuff like that all the time—the appealing, I mean, not the sacrificing; anyway…. (Wicca + pantheism: 315,000 hits, the first of which states, “many Wiccans also adhere to pantheism.”)

Plus, pantheism is really just a subset of the idea that Consciousness has become all things, and that we can expand our individualized consciousness into union with that immanent (e.g., pantheistic) and transcendent One. (“Monist idealist Pantheism holds that there is only one type of substance, and that substance is mental or spiritual. Ultimate reality consists of a single consciousness. This version is common in Hindu philosophies and Consciousness-Only schools of Buddhism, as well as in some New Age writers such as Deepak Chopra…. Dualist Pantheism holds that there are two major types of substance, physical and mental/spiritual. Dualistic pantheism is very diverse, and may include beliefs in reincarnation, cosmic consciousness, and paranormal connections across Nature. It is represented most widely today in literal versions of Paganism.”)

Not trivial, that, if you think about it.

Deism, the idea that a god created the universe but does not interact with it, is of no imaginable interest or relevance.

Unless that same god has created a heaven/hell outside of our finite physical universe, where we’ll spend all eternity after His judgment of us, in which case its existence could indeed be of relevant interest, even if the deity did not otherwise interact with our physical universe.

To see how rationalization and wishful thinking can distort any attempt to investigate the God question scientifically, consider Francis Galton’s 1872 paper Statistical Inquiries Into The Efficacy Of Prayer, in which he argued that, since royalty tended to die at a younger age than other affluent classes of society, despite all the prayers offered for their health, that prayer was ineffective. As Galton noted:

The prayer has therefore no efficacy, unless the very questionable hypothesis be raised, that the conditions of royal life may naturally be yet more fatal, and that their influence is partly, though incompletely, neutralised by the effects of public prayers.

In other words, if we attempt to explain the difference by some other factor (say inbreeding or hemophilia, both of which plagued the royal houses of Europe), that’s an ad hoc explanation. One wonders what Galton would have said if the results had turned out the other way. Well, actually, we don’t need to wonder, because Galton also wrote:

We are justified in considering the clergy to be a far more prayerful class than [lawyers or doctors]. …We do not, however, find that the clergy are in any way more long lived in consequence. It is true that the clergy, as a whole show a life-value of 69.49, as against 68.11 for the lawyers, and 67.31 for the medical men; but the easy country life and family repose of so many of the clergy are obvious sanatory conditions in their favour.

So when royalty turn out to have shorter longevities than everyone else, it’s not permissible invoke some additional ad hoc factor to explain it, but when clergy turn out to have longer lifespans, it is.

That’s the same Francis Galton whom Steve Sailer has repeatedly touted as being “Charles Darwin’s smarter cousin” (for his ideas on eugenics), with that evaluation being mindlessly parroted by the Steveosphere (e.g., by the total moron Dennis Mangan) … whose members are even more disinterested in the other side of their wide-ranging, one-dimensional beliefs, than Galton could ever have been.

Good one.

Transubstantiation (Pat-a-Cake)

Transubstantiation:

When I was in second grade, a few months before we had our First Communion, my class took a field trip to the bakery where our parish’s Communion wafers were made. This field trip was just one part of the First Communion preparation process, and I suppose that our teachers hoped that it would illustrate the power of the act of Transubstantiation. In other words, if we saw that the wafers were made in the same way as any other cracker, we would more clearly understand and respect the mystery and significance of the fact that these normal, everyday crackers, via Transubstantiation, were transformed into the actual body of Christ.

Oh, I can’t let that go:

Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker’s man.
Bake me a Savior as fast as you can;
Pat it and prick it and mark it J.C.,
Put him on the cross for my sins and me.

Patty cake, patty cake, Mary’s womb.
Bake me a Jesus and make him my groom;
Roll him up, roll him up;
And throw him in a tomb!
Patty cake, patty cake, Mary’s womb.

Tee-hee-hee, I’m gonna burn in hell for sure now!

Of course, if God or Allah were real, and were to be truly disturbed by how the guru-debunking and religion-making-fun-of work which atheists (including myself) do is leading people away from Him, He could solve that problem in a second, just by permanently stopping my heart from beating; that would be fully justified for the greater good, even if it infringed on my (ex-) free will. The fact that so many believers get their panties in a bunch about “blasphemy” and the like, while feeling the need to “do God’s will” for Him, says something….