I’m sure the guy has made his contributions and whatnot, but he really comes across as not arguing much better that your typical GDer. In fact, a lot of what he says is embarrassingly childish.
For those with Salon Premium here is the link (if you’re without, you can watch an ad and read it):
http://www.salon.com/books/int/2006/03/21/wilson/
First, there’s the typical Darwin worship. Yes, he was a great thinker and scientist. But evolution was in the air at the time, he had many predecessors, he had Wallace as a contemporary, and we regularly impute to him completed, modern views that he reached himself but gradually or not at all (i.e., he never used the term “evolution” in Origin except in one instance, etc. etc.).
BTW, I’m sick of the false religion-vs.-evolution dichotomy. If you were raised Catholic, as I was, you were taught evolution as fact from day one and there was never any contorversy in the matter.
OK, here’s our first not-so-bright point:
No, you don’t. Aristotle saw the soul as the “form of the body.” I have a similar view: the soul is the pattern of a human, the “theory” of a person that exists outside of the strict time of what we perceive as the material universe. The soul is produced by natural means and is a natural entity. (In a similar fashion, The Great Gatsby can be written in sand, ink, or pixels but is always the same pattern of words and/or meanings. It was created by natural means–Fitzgerald wrote it–but can nevertheless continue to exist without him.)
False dichotomy.
Bad history. Pagan religions generally recognized each other’s gods. The interesting question is how hard-core evangelical monotheistic religion arose when it had never existed previously.
EOW is correct that our species has a sad tendency to play insider-outsider games, but religion in the modern era seems to be a leveler of the tribe more than a supporter (Christianity and Islam, at least in theory and often in practice, seek to create one tribe of believers, that is, all of humanity).
Actually, there’s a perfect word for it: “Awe.”
Actually, I think he’s missing the big picture: the problem isn’t a “religious” instinct but a serious flaw of the species’ mental makeup: the desire to create a falsely complete story of the world and stick to it. Religions do it, political parties do it, factions and tribes and nations do it. In Maoist China, atheism was correct, Marx and Lenin were the greatest heros of the past, and everything Mao said was true. It was a simplified, mythical, and superficially secular worldview.
EOW goes on to call himself a “provisional deist.” His brain wattage on this point as well is pretty meagre.
Oh, where to start. First, he is not confident that there is no deity, but he’s confident that this deity doesn’t intervene.That is like saying that I don’t know if Pegasus exists, but I am confident that, if it does, and even if it has wings, it can’t fly. As you will see from the context, EOW admits there might be an “intelligence”; if it’s intelligent and intervened once, then presumably it could intervene again.
Second, the type of research that an astrophysicist does is incapable of elucidating why there is something and not nothing, inasmuch as everything such a scientist studies is (insofar as we may perceive) contingent, whereas an attempt to understand the origin of the universe must comprise an attempt to understand the nature of contingency.
He really ought to be embarrassed by now, but he goes on to say other things that are just plain stupid. To wit,
And maybe Jesus Christ is Lord–can you discount that? Oh, but of course what he can’t discount would definitely not be anything like, you know, what Jews and Christians believe. Just because scientists like him, you know, know.
And the conclusion that progress is “basically a human concept” or “just a human concept” is… just a human concept! I like how these guys think they can step outside of our poor human minds just for a second to perceive in perfect objectivity how subjective, and therefore invalid, some particular meme or whatnot is.
Yeah, human beings and Bach and malt whisky are “progress” over the paramecium, and WWI and George W. Bush are negative progress, as it were. Subjectively objectively speaking.
EOW goes on to say why heaven would be hell in a pretty dense fashion. The whole article makes him look pretty boneheaded. He says nothing really original or clever, he fails to anticipate what clever opponents could say and is presumably ignorant of what they are in fact saying, and in general he just doesn’t demonstrate those little epicycles of mind (“Wait a second, I can take my own point and criticize it and take it to the next level”) that I associate with true genius.
Disappointing.