Good Reason

It's okay to be wrong. It's not okay to stay wrong.

Category: religion (page 27 of 36)

Those wacky Muslims

Someone’s been watching TV, and the scantily clad women are making him feel all hot and bothered.

The most senior judge in Saudi Arabia has said it is permissible to kill the owners of satellite TV channels which broadcast immoral programmes.

Sheikh Salih Ibn al-Luhaydan said some “evil” entertainment programmes aired by the channels promoted debauchery.

Dozens of satellite television channels broadcast across the Middle East, where they are watched by millions of Arabs every day.

The judge made the comments on a state radio programme.

He was speaking in response to a listener who asked his opinion on the airing of programmes featuring scantily-dressed women during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

“There is no doubt that these programmes are a great evil, and the owners of these channels are as guilty as those who watch them,” said the sheikh.

“It is legitimate to kill those who call for corruption if their evil can not be stopped by other penalties.”

This isn’t some local imam. This is the highest ranking judge in Saudi Arabia.

This is the problem when you try and apply a bronze-age moral system to modern times. It leads to certain obvious moral contradictions. Apparently, killing people is permissible, but nudity on TV? Are you nuts? That’s just way out there!

Run, children! Run!

This ad is airing on Perth television stations on Saturday mornings, presumably in an effort to proselyte children. It features Barry Hickey, Catholic Archbishop of Perth.

There’s something deeply inappropriate about Mr Hickey taking his mythology directly to kids on their Saturday morning TV. In fact, I think this goes beyond inappropriate and leans toward sinister. By pushing the notion of god to young viewers, he’s actually promoting a toxic ideology that renders some people incapable of reason, and enriches the coffers of people like himself.

Maybe this isn’t the worst message you’ve ever seen on TV. Maybe you even think that it’s nice for Mr Hickey to spread a message about happiness. (On the other hand, you might think, as I do, that it’s creepy as hell. You might even have nightmares about someone who is dressed a lot like Mr Hickey.) But consider that if you want to poison an animal, you have to conceal the poison in some kind of food that the animal will like. First, you get the soft, fluffy talk about happiness and being truthful. Who could argue with that? Then, they deliver the ‘god payload’. Now the link between ‘kindness’ and ‘god’ is made. No wonder some people think you can’t be moral without religion.

I guess this is just another reason that parents need to be aware of their children’s viewing habits and be able to discuss what they see on TV. Perth stations need to explain why they think it’s all right for the Catholic Church to market their services to children.

Muslim school unwelcome, Catholics are fine

You may remember the story of Camden NSW, and how the residents opposed an Islamic school.

I think religious schools are a horrible idea because schools should be promoting education, not promoting the myths of a religious community. And I’d hate to see the public educational system undermined because religions are funding a separate system that pulls students away. (Not that I’m one to talk — my kids go to a Steiner school that I pay for.)

Of course, this situation’s a little complicated. Mainstream Christian religions do a lot with education in Australia, the schools tend to be of high quality, and in most cases the religion is toned down. And it always seemed to me that the Camden protests were based on racism and xenophobia rather than on secular principles. Call me crazy.

The heads of two pigs have been found on stakes at the site of a proposed Islamic school in Sydney’s south-west.

About 6am today, police were called to the site, on Cawdor Road, Camden, where they found the animal remains and a number of other items, a police spokesman said.

The pig heads had been “elevated off the ground” using stakes, he said.

An Australian flag was also strung up between the stakes, according to AAP.

Maybe they were suggesting that the school should study Lord of the Flies.

Well, last week those same Camden folks actually approved a Catholic school.

The Camden residents’ group that fought a Muslim society’s proposal for a school in rural Camden has welcomed a Catholic organisation’s plans to build a school nearby because “Catholics are part of our community”.

The president of the Camden/Macarthur Residents’ Group, Emil Sremchevich, said the Catholic school plan “ticked all the right boxes”, even though he is yet to see its development application.

“Catholics are part of our community so we should be supporting it on this basis alone. We have to welcome them,” Mr Sremchevich told the Herald. “To become part of a community, you need to live in the community. You can’t just turn up.”

Hmmm. ‘Sremchevich’. That’s a funny name. Y’ain’t from around here, are ya?

The Quranic Society said Mr Sremchevich’s comments were racist but he rejected that tag. “Why is that racist? Why is it discriminatory? It’s very simple: people like some things but don’t like other things. Some of us like blondes, some of us like brunettes. Some of us like Fords, some of us like Holdens. Why is it xenophobic just because I want to make a choice? If I want to like some people and not like other people, that’s the nature of the beast.”

He answered his own question. When people make choices that discriminate against people because of race, we call them racists.

It’s reasonable to oppose religious education, especially where this involves the indoctrination of children. But there’s no basis for these people embracing one religious school over another, except their own revolting bias.

It’s not easy being crucified…

From the world of art:

An Italian museum on Thursday defied Pope Benedict and refused to remove a modern art sculpture portraying a crucified green frog holding a beer mug and an egg that the Vatican had condemned as blasphemous.

The board of the Museion museum in the northern city of Bolzano decided by a majority vote that the frog was a work of art and would stay in place for the remainder of an exhibition.

Great news. Now can we please use these skills the next time there’s a work of art that offends Muslims?

The Vatican wrote a letter of support in the pope’s name to Franz Pahl, president of the regional government who opposed the sculpture. Pahl released parts of the letter, which said the work “wounds the religious sentiments of so many people who see in the cross the symbol of God’s love“.

In other words, he thinks his ideas are so important that everyone else should tiptoe around them to save his feelings.

Then he holds his breath and turns blue.

Pahl, whose province is heavily Catholic, was so outraged by the sculpture of the pop-eyed amphibian that he went on a hunger strike to demand its removal and had to be taken to hospital during the summer.

I hope he’s okay now. At least he only tried to harm himself rather than others, so props for that. But he (and everyone) needs to realise that it’s not okay for his ideas (or mine, or anyone’s) to be exempted from satire, scrutiny, or even criticism and mockery.

“Art must always be free and the artist should not have any restrictions on freedom of expression,” Claudio Strinati, a superintendent for Rome’s state museums, told an Italian newspaper on Thursday.

Most encouraging.

Zing!

Still laughing over this snippet from a Dawkins talkback radio session yesterday.

Dawkins and the radio host talk about what it would have been like to meet Darwin, and the host asks:

Dawkins doesn’t miss a beat.

Shermer lecture: How do we influence others?

Michael Shermer gave an engaging lecture Wednesday night at UWA’s Octagon Theatre. Since it was Science Week, he spoke on the scientific method, and the need for skepticism in evaluating ideas.

And I got to ask him a question. I mentioned in this post that I think he’s backed the wrong horse on the science v. religion question. In ‘Why Darwin Matters’, he seemed to lean toward the ‘Non-Overlapping Magesteria Argument’ — that science is science and spirituality is spirituality, and science can’t examine spirituality. Besides the gaping holes in the argument, it’s just an unscientific view. How can you falsify it?

But I didn’t want to fight over that — I’m sure he knows the terrain. No, I was more curious about the strategy of it all. Here was my question:

Me: I’ve enjoyed reading “Why Darwin Matters.” You give three possibilities for the relationship between science and religion. One is the Conflicting Worlds model, the Same Worlds model, and the Shared Worlds. You seem to reject the idea that science is right and religion is wrong, as an extremist position. Instead you seem to say that God is somehow outside of science.

I was wondering if that’s really your view, (audience laughter) or is this some kind of tactic that we use to lull the religious to sleep so that the grown-ups can do their work?

Shermer: A sop (unintelligible), yes. No, I do think it’s important to strategise how to interact with other people. And if you tell somebody that their most cherished beliefs are bullshit, (bright tone) and now let’s go to the ball game and have fun together! (audience laughter) You know, that isn’t probably the best way to win friends and influence people. It’s always good to try to be polite and respectful and whatever — you’re more likely to change their minds. That’s isn’t necessarily why I do it; that’s the way I am.

But the argument I make is that — that’s why I went through that whole business of aliens and Shermer’s Last Law and all that stuff. You can’t possibly find a god. Most people think of god as this supernatural being, that isn’t just some garage tinkerer, that isn’t just a genetic engineer who’s really good at it. That somehow that isn’t going to fulfill what people think when they think about god. So I really don’t… I can’t possibly imagine any experiment that any scientist could ever run and go, “Oh, look! There is a god! Wow!” Or “Nope! There isn’t, ’cause look. Failed the experiment.” Something like that. I just don’t think you could do that.

Now Dawkins makes an interesting argument in ‘The God Delusion’ about probabilities, that, you know, on a range… a scale of one to seven, what’s the likelihood? No, we can’t say for sure that there isn’t a god, but there probably isn’t. That’s a reasonable argument. But there you’re not using science directly to test the godly probabilities. It’s something slightly different than that.

Did he answer my question?

In a way, kind of. I was left with the feeling like he’s just being nice and giving religious folk on the edges a way to accept Darwin and science. Off the point, he argues that you can’t falsify the supernatural, to which I readily agree.

But this touches on what should be a major issue among atheists: How do you change people’s minds? Shermer’s right: confronting people directly about their beliefs won’t change their minds. You know what else doesn’t change people’s minds? Not confronting them directly about their beliefs. Thinking back to my days as a believer, if you’d said that I could keep my beliefs, that they were perfectly good, but that science is good too, I’ll guarantee you I’d have left the discussion thinking exactly what I was thinking before.

So what does change people’s minds? Well, in many cases, nothing. If people really want to believe in ghosts or UFO’s or Reiki, no evidence will shift ’em. But there are a certain number of smart people who are in a belief system, and eventually they’ll notice the contradictions and feel enough cognitive dissonance to reach escape velocity. For these people, we need to foster a climate where science and evidence are regarded as authoritative and where disbelief is supported (intellectually and socially), until they’re ready to make the jump. Shermer’s certainly doing his part in this by giving lectures about science and scepticism, with intelligence and good humour. I’m doing my part in this by pointing out firmly (and repeatedly) that no evidence exists for the supernatural, and inviting people to show me some. I don’t sugar-coat my point of view, but I don’t think that’ll turn anyone off; the deeply committed won’t listen anyway. And I think it’s important to be direct with people.

Education is one way of promoting good views. Ridicule is one way of discouraging bad views. I do both. If you can’t manage it, you’re only using half the tools at your disposal. But do what you’re comfortable with. I’ll be over here holding the Overton Window on my end. Go ahead and slag me off and call me a militant atheist and an extremist, so you can look moderate by comparison. That’s absolutely part of the strategy. I don’t mind; I’ll take it for the team.

Just please remember that the forces of anti-science are not content to just believe what they believe. They want to influence what everyone believes. Religions constantly expend a great deal of energy in proselyting. They send missionaries around the world, they build publishing factories, and they go about promoting their memes in an organised way. So let’s not kid ourselves that they just want to play softball.

The MWF works through market forces.

You may have heard of Rocky Twyman, the guy who’s behind “Pray at the Pump”. Since April, they’ve been asking a supernatural being to lower gas prices. And holy Regression Fallacy! it seems to be working.

A prayer group in Washington DC is claiming the credit for the recent sharp drop in the US price of petrol.

Rocky Twyman, 59, a veteran community campaigner, started Pray At The Pump meetings at petrol stations in April.

Since then, the average price of what the US calls gasoline has fallen from more than $4 a gallon to $3.80.

“We don’t have anybody else to turn to but God,” Mr Twyman told the BBC. “We have to turn these problems over to God and not to man.”

God, schmod. Isn’t it obvious who’s behind the recent drop in petrol prices? Not supernatural beings or market forces. It’s… the Magical Wishing Ferret!

Meep!

Now it’s true that no one’s been asking the Magical Wishing Ferret for his help. But that’s what makes him so great. He knows what you need, and gives it to you before you ask.

That other ‘god’ makes you go through all kinds of contortions before he’ll do anything. Sometimes you literally have to starve yourself just to get his attention, the sadist.

None of that crap for the MWF. He’s good about getting you what you want, although he needs you do the work for the sake of your character. He doesn’t require any faith (just occasional chocolate), and he’s much more deserving of admiration than other gods I could mention. And you certainly don’t have to hang out at petrol stations shouting at the sky to curry his favour.

I’m also a Eucharist abuse sympathiser.

Man! Some bloggers have all the luck. Towleroad, who I’ve never heard of, has been targeted by closet case Bill Donahue of the so-called Catholic League. He wants the Democrats to drop Towleroad and Bitch Ph.D from the list of media bloggers for the DNC convention, or else he’ll hold his breath and turn blue. How cool would that be to nettle Donahue to that extent? And how can I get on Bill’s big bad list?

You know, I think I’ve got the Catholic League figured out. It’s just Bill Donahue. There’s no one else there. And the Catholic League website is just his blog. But instead of making blog posts and leaving it at that, he sends his blog posts to the media, and calls it a press release!

I’m going to start calling myself the “Good Reason League”. My first press release:

“I advocate contraception.”

There. That ought to get Bill’s attention.

Random House, society, wimps out

This is wrong.

Prophet Muhammad novel scrapped

Plans to release a novel about Prophet Muhammad’s child bride A’isha have been scrapped by US publishers Random House over fears it could spark violence.

Violence? From Islam? But they told me it’s a religion of peace!

Random House is wrong to pull the project just because they assume a small number of violent Muslims will be offended. Yes, they may, but you have to give them the right of reply. They made an awful fuss over the Muhammad cartoons, but maybe —just maybe — they’ll react differently this time. And anyway, people need to realise that we live in a marketplace of ideas, and even their wonderful precious beliefs aren’t immune to some tough scrutiny now and again.

I guess it’s pretty rich coming from me, since I wouldn’t be the one targeted for violence. But I could be. Having my face on this blog and criticising religion like I do could make me a target some day. Any of us could be, just for living in a secular society. That’s why it’s vital to confront violent religious extremism head on, instead of tiptoeing around it hoping it will go away.

Let the adherents of Islam step up and show that they’re a peaceful religion, as they claim. Or let us see the reverse.

UWA Atheist/Christian debate

The debate went pretty well, actually. In the Christian corner was Tim Thorburn, and the Atheist was Michael Tan.

Atheist Michael did a great job, hitting all the main points. Humans have a need to explain things, and sometimes they make explanations that involve magical beings. But we need to use evidence and reason to sort out what’s happening, and the evidence for Christianity is not particularly strong. The most electric moment: Tim said that the Bible contained predictions that have been fulfilled, and Michael responded that many others haven’t yet, especially the return of Jesus. “How long is it going to take before we realise he’s not coming back?” he said, to gasps and applause from the audience.

Christian Tim argued that Christianity was true because the Bible said so. Okay, he didn’t put it as weakly as that. He mentioned that the Bible contained eyewitness accounts of Jesus’ resurrection, and that Paul alluded to the eyewitness accounts so casually that they must have been well-accepted by the Christians of his day. So that’s the evidence.

“Except it isn’t evidence,” I said to Tim as we chatted afterwards. “It’s another claim.”

“How do you mean?” he asked.

“Well, Paul is claiming that Jesus was resurrected and that there were eyewitnesses to it. But that’s not evidence. That’s another claim, and we need to examine it.

“I mean, it’s part of the same story. You can’t use a part of the story as evidence for the story!”

“Yes, I can!” he said, looking rather surprised.

I also asked him about the Book of Mormon. At the front of every copy of the Book of Mormon, there appears the testimony of three men who claimed that an angel showed them the gold plates. There’s also the testimony of eight other men who claimed that they got to see the gold plates without any angel. I believe these testimonies to be false, to which Tim the Christian readily agreed. But if you’re going to accept the testimony of so-called eyewitnesses in the Bible, why wouldn’t you accept the testimonies of eye-witnesses in the Book of Mormon?

Tim responded that the Bible was a very reliable source of testimony because it had many different witnesses whose testimony dovetailed together so well that it couldn’t all be fiction. I’m not doing his response justice because he said it much better than I can remember, and I hope I’m getting the gist of it right — memory is unreliable. But that was basically the idea; the Bible was so much better a source for eyewitness testimony than other books because it was so complex and dense and interlocking that no one could have faked it and it must be true.

But anyone who’s heard the story of the Nottingham Lion or heard conflicting reports from eyewitnesses at accident scenes knows that eyewitness accounts are not reliable sources for what really happened. Especially when the story has had hundreds of years to get itself straightened out.

Anyway, it was a fine outing. Michael and Tim were good gentlemen to talk to. And the UWA Atheist and Agnostic Society has a Facebook group, if you’re a person of the ‘Book.

Older posts Newer posts

© 2024 Good Reason

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑