Atheists argue over fervor
I missed the recent Associated Press story “Atheists Split on How Not to Believe” (good headline) that spawned much analysis, but I caught this analysis, and it’s…insightful.
The gist of the story as I read it is that there are soft atheists and fundamentalist atheists, and the softies are concerned that the fundies are becoming too outspoken, too uppity, indeed that they are giving unbelievers a bad name–a good trick that, like trying to give a bad name to an oil slick.
A group of atheists giving unbelievers a bad name is something I hadn’t thought of, in the crush of daily news.Â
As usual, the impetus for this new development was 9/11, and the death and destruction caused by religious fanatics, after which some atheist intellectuals decided there was complicity in silence, thus they would be silent no more.
That was also the impetus for the more widespread use of the term ‘religious fanatics’, tossed carelessly at believers by secular progressives who don’t like what they believe.
So, it’s all getting even more muddled now.
The spokesman for the soft atheists has been Greg Epstein, a “humanist chaplain” at Harvard University. The Rev. Mr. Epstein is encouraging the fundamentalists or “New Atheists” to pipe down, and warns that their outspokenness is keeping fence-sitters from coming over to the side of the humanists, a dubious allegation, at best. Though I can’t prove it, it seems to me that passionate advocacy attracts converts as often as it drives them away.
This is a strange but interesting spat.
The soft atheists have it in for three bestselling authors in particular: Richard Dawkins (author of “The God Delusion”), Sam Harris (“Letter to a Christian Nation”) and Christopher Hitchens (“God Is Not Great”). Though they differ on many points of scripture, all three are passionately antireligious…Mr. Epstein finds these authors rigid and intolerant, which ultimately makes them no different from the religious fundamentalists they condemn.
There’s an example of flinging the term “religious fundamentalists” recklessly, and trying to wrap the terrorists of 9/11 in the same vocabulary and mantle as, basically, Christian believers, in a dangerously distorted moral equivalence.
So now, Mr. Epstein equates these “passionately antireligious” authors to the religious fundamentalists they condemn.
Nor is he alone. As one English dean told the Guardian, Mr. Dawkins is “just as fundamentalist as the people setting off bombs on the tube.”
Harvard’s E.O. Wilson, another secularist, has also criticized the New Atheists, and suggests their tone is alienating important faith groups whose help is needed to solve the world’s problems…
Messrs. Epstein and Wilson have a point. Mr. Dawkins, et al., are intolerant.
Now there’s a heavy accusation. It’s one of the big ones in the current culture.
Mr. Hitchens, in particular, is intolerant of a great many things: Hypocrisy. Vacuity. Bad books. Henry Kissinger. He is especially intolerant of the multiculti Europeans, whom he considers too tolerant of intolerant Islamic fundamentalists…
Are passionate atheists being unfairly demonized? Absolutely, if by labeling them “militant” and “fundamentalist” they are likened to terrorists who fly jets into buildings and wrapped in TNT saunter into crowded wedding receptions.
In truth, one should make that same distinction between terrorists and, say, Christian fundamentalists.Â
Still it is important to ask whether atheists–as alleged–are out to eradicate faith. And if so, in what manner? Mr. Epstein, sounding very much like a New Age shaman, insists that “Humanism is not about erasing religion. It’s an embracing philosophy.” That’s a warm and fuzzy sentiment, but the fact is many atheists do long to see religion go the way of the coach-and-four–much like early Christians had no desire to embrace pagan religions–though most favor bringing future generations around not by the sword, but rather by reason, logic and scientific evidence.
But wouldn’t the triumph of secularism mean the eradication of the basic tenets of Judeo-Christian society?
Yes.Â
Wouldn’t it mean that the U.S. would evolve into a sort of United States of Sweden (Sweden being the world’s most secular society)?
That case can be made…Â
America already allows abortion on demand and bans Christmas trees in airports–how much further down the secular slope could it go? Same-sex marriage could conceivably replace same-sex unions, but there seems little danger of a Soviet-style ban on religion, or the conversion of churches into horse stables. Secularism, after all, has not completely devastated Scandinavian societies. In fact, the greatest crisis these countries face is from their fundamentalist Muslim populations.
And therein lies a very real threat. Tolerance does have its limits.