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ere is an unvarnished truth with which the committed atheist Richard Dawkins needs to come to grip: If you do not want to believe in God, then there is probably nothing that anyone can say or do that would make you believe. Likewise, if you want to believe in God, then there is probably nothing anyone can say or do that would make you disbelieve. Truth be told, nobody believes or disbelieves in God simply because of some string of sentences or series of acts. To be sure, people change sides all the time. But the explanation for this is not that, alas, they stumbled upon this or that argument or series of facts.
As I shall try to show, the belief in God is very much akin to the belief that our parents loved us or our commitment to friendship or romantic love. And that, alas, tells us something important about our humanity.
Richard Dawkins is a committed atheist, and a very talented evolutionary scientist, author of the influential book The Selfish Gene.
In his 2006 book, The God Delusion, Dawkins examines and finds entirely unacceptable a multitude of considerations that purport to show or provide reasons to believe that God exists. But is that why he does not believe in God? Was it the epiphany of seeing that Thomas Aquinas’s proofs for the existence of God flounder that turned Dawkins into an atheist? I don’t think so.
Or, was there a string of empirical truths that did it for Dawkins? For instance, was it his commitment to the truth of evolutionary theory? I doubt it. Why? Because there is no string of empirical truths about the world that yield the conclusion that God does not exist. Empirical truths can yield all sorts of interesting conclusions about emperically verifiable things. If you know, for instance, that Jane is at this very moment in Brazil, then you also know that this very same Jane cannot be in Spain two minutes later. We do not at this point in time have the means to traverse thousands of miles in a mere 2 minutes.
But there is no set of empirical facts that will yield in a like manner the conclusion that God does not exist. True, many religious folks seem to think that there is some incompatibility between the truth of evolution and the existence of God. The incompatibility, rather, is in the truth of evolution and certain actions attributed to God. If the claim is that God brought the human race into existence by combining water, sand, and leaves from a tree: well that action attributed to God is clearly incompatible with evolution’s claim that the human race evolved from apes.
However, the belief that the human race evolved from apes which, in turn, evolved from creatures in the sea (or whatever) hardly requires me, on the pain of otherwise being irrational, to assert that God does not exist.
The underlying premise of Dawkins’ argument is that human beings should be guided by the facts and none other than the facts. I myself wonder whether, from an evolutionary perspective, this is how human beings are actually constituted.
Consider the following very simple conviction that many a person has: My parents love me. Now, what facts actually establish this? It is true, of course, that in the typical case a person can say that her parents did this and that and the other for her. A person will invariably point to many sacrifices that were made by her parents on her behalf. But how is all of this supposed to establish the conclusion that she was loved by her parents, especially since the very same action can flow from entirely different and incompatible motives? Was it a photo opportunity, given my bid for president, or my affection for you as my friend that motivated me to jump into the pool and save your life?
Now, imagine two families, one rich and one poor. John is a child of the poor family and Jane is a child of the rich family. As it turns out John and Jane are playmates. Now, Jane gets all the toys and amenities and privileges that a child could want; whereas John does not. Jane, then, can point to one thing and then another as evidence, supposedly, that her parents love her. But now I ask you: Is John at a disadvantage when it comes to thinking that his parents love him? After all, he can surely see that his parents are not giving him all the things that Jane’s parents are giving her. His parents may tell him that they are poor. But what exactly does that utterance do for a child? Surely it is not the case that John has doubts as to whether his parents loved him and the utterance “We are a poor family” wipes away the doubts.
My general point here is that the belief that one was loved by one’s parents is not so much tied this fact and then that one. Rather, this belief is simply tied to the phenomenology of the experience with one’s parents, which is about a host of quite ineffable things from a touch to a look. The fact that parental love can be secured in this way makes it possible for children to feel loved by their parents across an exceedingly wide-variety of differences. In particular, rich children are not at an advantage when it comes to having the conviction that they are loved by their parents.
By the way, a similar line of reasoning applies to friendship or romantic love. There is no one thing that establishes that people have romantic love for one another? Not even sex.
In an odd way, then the real problem with Dawkins book, The God Delusion, is that he does not see the forest for the trees; and this is quite striking given that he is an evolutionary theorist.
In The God Delusion, Dawkins is committed to the tedious exercise of exposing one fallacy after another on the part of those who believe in God or who ague for God’s existence. Or, Dawkins draws attention to one morally unacceptable piece of behavior after another that has been committed in the name of God. For example, he tells us about the abominable behavior of the religious pro-life folks who kill doctors who perform abortions because these religious folks regard the fetus as a person. See the section in The God Delusion entitled “Faith and the Sanctity of Life” (pp. 291-298). I have discussed some of his other claims in a previous blog-entry.
What does Dawkins imagine? Does he think that a theist who completes The God Delusion will go: “What on earth am I doing believing in God? This is utterly silly of me.” Does he expect the reader to conclude that all religious people are morally bad or more so than all non-religious people?
No honest and reasonably informed person could possibly think either that all religious people are morally bad or that all non-religious people are morally good. Certainly, this much is clear. There is no way for Richard Dawkins to establish the truth of the counterfactual that if there had been no religion in the world, then the world would be a better place.
I claimed that Richard Dawkins does not see the forest for the trees. What did I mean by that? The question that he might ask is this: Is there is something about human nature that makes it the case that belief in God remains such a rich feature of the human tapestry?
To see my point, consider the case of romantic love. People continue to believe in and to be moved by the idea of romantic love although if one just looked at the facts alone, one might deem the pursuit of romantic love rationally indefensible. Look at all the betrayal, deceit, and pained caused by the pursuit of romantic love gone awry. True, there are some marvelous successes. Just so, there are lots and lots and lots of horrendous failures. So it is notwithstanding the fact that case after case of romantic love often starts with the greatest of hopes.
What distinguishes human beings from mere animals is that we are and can be animated by the transcendent. Whether it be parental love or romantic love or love between friends, the truth of the matter is that love is necessarily a transcendent good. Facts are relevant, but are rarely decisive—in just the way that (as Kurt Baier observed) candlelight is relevant to having a romantic atmosphere but not decisive with regard to whether the atmosphere is romantic or not. Out of love, we make sacrifices and take risks that we would in the typical instance never ever make for another and for which there can be no rationally compelling argument to make on behalf of another.
At yet a more rarified level, religion speaks to the impulse that I have just described in the preceding paragraph. Can this impulse be put to evil use? Absolutely. But this merely tells us what we already know, namely that anything can be abused—even the transcendent traits of love and loyalty can be abused in the most horrific ways.
Accordingly, living well consists not in destroying any trait that can be abused, but so successfully harnessing the trait in question for that which is good that the trait’s abuse is kept to a minimum if not eliminated entirely. Whether it is religion or love, this is the challenge that we human beings have and no mere animal has. This challenge is the mark of our humanity.
What Richard Dawkins has unwittingly shown in his book The God Delusion is not that belief in God, as such, is the problem, but rather that the fear of having that belief is.
