from the site : The Rational Response Squad
 
Atheists for Jesus - A Richard Dawkins Essay

Submitted by Tomcat on December 11,  2006  
 
An essay by Richard Dawkins: 
The argument, like a good recipe, needs to be built up gradually, with the  
ingredients mustered in advance. First, the apparently oxymoronic title. In 
a  society where the majority of theists are at least nominally Christian, 
the two  words are treated as near synonyms. Bertrand Russell's famous 
advocacy of  atheism was called Why I am not a Christian rather than, as it 
probably should  have been, Why I am not a theist. All Christians are theists, 
it 
seems to go  without saying. 
Of course Jesus was a theist, but that is the least interesting thing about 
 him. He was a theist because, in his time, everybody was. Atheism was not 
an  option, even for so radical a thinker as Jesus. What was interesting and 
 remarkable about Jesus was not the obvious fact that he believed in the 
God of  his Jewish religion, but that he rebelled against many aspects of 
Yahweh's  vengeful nastiness. At least in the teachings that are attributed to 
him, he  publicly advocated niceness and was one of the first to do so. To 
those steeped  in the Sharia-like cruelties of Leviticus and Deuteronomy; to 
those brought up  to fear the vindictive, Ayatollah-like God of Abraham and 
Isaac, a charismatic  young preacher who advocated generous forgiveness must 
have seemed radical to  the point of subversion. No wonder they nailed him. 
"Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a 
 tooth: But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall 
smite  thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man 
will sue  thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloke also. 
And  whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain. Give to 
him that  asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee turn not thou 
away. Ye have  heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, 
and hate thine  enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that 
curse you, do good  to them that hate you, and pray for them which 
despitefully use you, and  persecute you."
My second ingredient is another paradox, which begins in my  own field of 
Darwinism. Natural selection is a deeply nasty process. Darwin  himself 
remarked, 
"What a book a devil's chaplain might write on the clumsy, wasteful,  
blundering low and horridly cruel works of nature." 
It was not just the facts of nature, among which he singled out the larvae 
of  Ichneumon wasps and their habit of feeding within the bodies of live  
caterpillars. The theory of natural selection itself seems calculated to 
foster  selfishness at the expense of public good, violence, callous 
indifference 
to  suffering, short term greed at the expense of long term foresight. If 
scientific  theories could vote, evolution would surely vote Republican. My 
paradox comes  from the un-Darwinian fact, which any of us can observe in our 
own circle of  acquaintances, that so many individual people are kind, 
generous, helpful,  compassionate, nice: the sort of people of whom we say, 
"She's a real saint."  Or, "He's a true Good Samaritan." 
We all know people (is it significant that the ones I can think of are 
mostly  women?) to whom we can sincerely say: "If only everybody were like you, 
the  world's troubles would melt away." The milk of human kindness is only a 
metaphor  but, naive as it sounds, I contemplate some of my friends and I 
feel like trying  to bottle whatever it is that makes them so kind, so 
selfless, so apparently  un-Darwinian. 
Darwinians can come up with explanations for human niceness: 
generalisations  of the well-established models of kin selection and reciprocal 
altruism, 
the  stocks-in-trade of the 'selfish gene' theory, which sets out to explain 
how  altruism and cooperation among individual animals can stem from 
self-interest at  the genetic level. But the sort of super niceness I am 
talking 
about in humans  goes too far. It is a misfiring, even a perversion of the 
Darwinian take on  niceness. Well, if that's a perversion, it's the kind of 
perversion we need to  encourage and spread. 
Human super niceness is a perversion of Darwinism because, in a wild  
population, it would be removed by natural selection. It is also, although I  
haven't the space to go into detail about this third ingredient of my recipe, 
an  apparent perversion of the sort of rational choice theory by which 
economists  explain human behaviour as calculated to maximize self-interest. 
Let's put it even more bluntly. From a rational choice point of view, or 
from  a Darwinian point of view, human super niceness is just plain dumb. And 
yes, it  is the kind of dumb that should be encouraged - which is the 
purpose of my  article. How can we do it? How shall we take the minority of 
super 
nice humans  that we all know, and increase their number, perhaps until they 
even become a  majority in the population? Could super niceness be induced 
to spread like an  epidemic? Could super niceness be packaged in such a form 
that it passes down  the generations in swelling traditions of longitudinal 
propagation? 
Well, do we know of any comparable examples, where stupid ideas have been  
known to spread like an epidemic? Yes, by God! Religion. Religious beliefs 
are  irrational. Religious beliefs are dumb and dumber: super dumb. Religion 
drives  otherwise sensible people into celibate monasteries, or crashing 
into New York  skyscrapers. Religion motivates people to whip their own backs, 
to set fire to  themselves or their daughters, to denounce their own 
grandmothers as witches,  or, in less extreme cases, simply to stand or kneel, 
week 
after week, through  ceremonies of stupefying boredom. If people can be 
infected with such  self-harming stupidity, infecting them with niceness should 
be childsplay. 
Religious beliefs most certainly spread in epidemics and, even more  
obviously, they pass down the generations to form longitudinal traditions and  
promote enclaves of locally peculiar irrationality. We may not understand why  
humans behave in the weird ways we label religious, but it is a manifest 
fact  that they do. The existence of religion is evidence that humans eagerly 
adopt  irrational beliefs and spread them, both longitudinally in traditions 
and  horizontally in epidemics of evangelism. Could this susceptibility, 
this  palpable vulnerability to infections of irrationality be put to genuinely 
good  use? 
Humans undoubtedly have a strong tendency to learn from and copy admired 
role  models. Under propitious circumstances, the epidemiological consequences 
can be  dramatic. The hairstyle of a footballer, the dress sense of a 
singer, the speech  mannerisms of a game show host, such trivial idiosyncrasies 
can spread through a  susceptible age cohort like a virus. The advertising 
industry is professionally  dedicated to the science - or it may be an art - 
of launching memetic epidemics  and nurturing their spread. Christianity 
itself was spread by the equivalents of  such techniques, originally by St Paul 
and later by priests and missionaries who  systematically set out to 
increase the numbers of converts in what turned out to  be exponential growth. 
Could we achieve exponential amplification of the numbers  of super nice 
people? 
This week I had a public conversation in Edinburgh with Richard Holloway,  
former Bishop of that beautiful city. Bishop Holloway has evidently outgrown 
the  supernaturalism which most Christians still identify with their 
religion (he  describes himself as post-Christian and as a 'recovering 
Christian'). He retains  a reverence for the poetry of religious myth, which is 
enough 
to keep him going  to church. And in the course of our Edinburgh discussion 
he made a suggestion  which went straight to my core. Borrowing a poetic 
myth from the worlds of  mathematics and cosmology, he described humanity as a 
'singularity' in  evolution. He meant exactly what I have been talking about 
in this essay,  although he expressed it differently. The advent of human 
super niceness is  something unprecedented in four billion years of 
evolutionary history. It seems  likely that, after the Homo sapiens 
singularity, 
evolution may never be the same  again. 
Be under no illusions, for Bishop Holloway was not. The singularity is a  
product of blind evolution itself, not the creation of any unevolved  
intelligence. It resulted from the natural evolution of the human brain which,  
under the blind forces of natural selection, expanded to the point where, all  
unforeseen, it over-reached itself and started to behave insanely from the  
selfish gene's point of view. The most transparently un-Darwinian misfiring 
is  contraception, which divorces sexual pleasure from its natural function 
of  gene-propagation. More subtle over-reachings include intellectual and 
artistic  pursuits which squander, by the selfish genes' lights, time and 
energy that  should be devoted to surviving and reproducing. The big brain 
achieved the  evolutionarily unprecedented feat of genuine foresight: became 
capable of  calculating long-term consequences beyond short-term selfish gain. 
And, at least  in some individuals, the brain over-reached itself to the 
extent of indulging in  that super niceness whose singular existence is the 
central paradox of my  thesis. Big brains can take the driving, goal-seeking 
mechanisms that were  originally favoured for selfish gene reasons, and divert 
(subvert? pervert?)  them away from their Darwinian goals and into other 
paths. 
I am no memetic engineer, and I have very little idea how to increase the  
numbers of the super nice and spread their memes through the meme pool. The 
best  I can offer is what I hope may be a catchy slogan. 'Atheists for 
Jesus' would  grace a T-shirt. There is no strong reason to choose Jesus as 
icon, 
rather than  some other role model from the ranks of the super nice such as 
Mahatma Gandhi  (not the odiously self-righteous Mother Teresa, heavens 
no). I think we owe  Jesus the honour of separating his genuinely original and 
radical ethics from  the supernatural nonsense which he inevitably espoused 
as a man of his time. And  perhaps the oxymoronic impact of 'Atheists for 
Jesus' might be just what is  needed to kick start the meme of super niceness 
in a post-Christian society. If  we play our cards right - could we lead 
society away from the nether regions of  its Darwinian origins into kinder and 
more compassionate uplands of  post-singularity enlightenment? 
I think a reborn Jesus would wear the T-shirt. It has become a commonplace  
that, were he to return today, he would be appalled at what is being done 
in his  name, by Christians ranging from the Catholic Church to the 
fundamentalist  Religious Right. Less obviously but still plausibly, in the 
light of 
modern  scientific knowledge I think he would see through supernaturalist 
obscurantism.  But of course, modesty would compel him to turn his T-shirt 
around: Jesus for  Atheists. 

 
The Enlightenment wounded the beast, but the killing blow has  yet to 
land... 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to