There is a fundamental fallacy in the following article,  namely, that 
Theism
supports a common morality.  This is false on the  face of it. The morality
of Islam is drastically different than is the case for  not only  
Christianity and
Judaism, but also very non-theistic Buddhism and most  forms of Hinduism.  
Otherwise the gist of the article is very much on   target.
 
BR
 
-----------------------------

Christian Post

Do Libertarians Need God? Apologist Says  Theism Necessary for Freedom, 
Human Rights

 
 
_Tyler O'Neil_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/tyler-oneil/)   , CP 
Reporter  
November 8, 2013

 
 
WASHINGTON – The ideas behind individual freedom, personal responsibility,  
and basic human rights require something more than materialism, a Christian 
 scholar argued. 
"The easiest way to avoid sawing off the branch you sit on as a libertarian 
 is to be a theist," Jay Richards, _distinguished fellow at  the Institute 
for Faith, Work, and Economics_ 
(http://tifwe.org/about-us/people/jay-w-richards/)  and author of the book  
_Money,  Greed, and God: Why Capitalism is 
the Solution and Not the  Problem_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Money-Greed-God-Capitalism-Solution/dp/0061900575) , 
told an audience of about 80 people at 
Ebenezer's  Coffeehouse near Capitol Hill on Thursday.
 
Richards argued that the basic truths behind the Declaration of 
Independence  and the political theory of libertarianism require a theistic 
worldview.  
Materialism, by contrast, fails to provide the necessary foundation for 
freedom,  responsibility, reason, and moral truth, he contends. These four 
bedrock beliefs  – that human beings have free will and are responsible for 
their actions, that  they can reason and come to a knowledge of truth, and that 
there is objective  morality in the world – are fundamental to a libertarian 
understanding, he  claimed. 
"Theism doesn't mean you believe God has a white beard," Richards quipped.  
Rather, it designates belief in "a self-existent, transcendent, good,  
purposeful, and free agent created the universe and everything other than God." 
 
Christians are theists, but Richards did not argue that you have to be 
Christian  to believe in individual rights. 
The scholar defined materialism as the belief that there is no God and  
everything is matter in motion with no purpose. He quoted Karl Sagan, who 
argued  that "the cosmos is all there is, or ever was, or ever will be." On 
these 
 grounds, individual rights and limited government do not make sense, 
Richards  claimed. 
To prove this, the scholar quoted actual materialists who doubted the  
fundamental tenets of freedom. 
He started with the atheist B. F. Skinner, who wrote that "autonomous man 
has  been constructed from our ignorance…and as our understanding increases, 
the very  stuff of which he is composed vanishes." Skinner claimed that 
there is no free  will or morality, but all human actions are determined by 
natural causes. 
Richards also quoted the outspoken atheist Bertrand Russell. "When a man 
acts  in ways that annoy us we wish to think him wicked, and we refuse to face 
the  fact that his annoying behavior is the result of antecedent causes 
which, if you  follow them long enough, will take you beyond the moment of his 
birth and  therefore to events for which he cannot be held responsible by 
any stretch of  the imagination," Russell wrote, claiming that man has no 
responsibility for his  actions. 
To stress his point further, Richards even quoted Charles Darwin, who 
doubted  man's ability to reason since he thought humans descended from the 
lower 
 animals. "With me the horrid doubt always arises whether the convictions 
of  man's mind, which has been developed from the mind of the lower animals, 
are of  any value or at all trustworthy," Darwin wrote. "Would any one trust 
in the  convictions of a monkey's mind?" 
Logically, Richards explained, if humans evolved through natural selection, 
 our minds adapted not to know the truth, but to keep us alive. [WTH?   
Knowledge of truth, certainly in most cases, contributes to survival in  
important ways  BR ]  He quoted Patricia Churchland, explaining that  when it 
comes to natural selection choosing the reasons for adaptations, "truth,  
whatever that is, definitely takes the hindmost," compared to survival and  
reproduction. 
Richards also quoted self-proclaimed atheist Alex Rosenberg, who declared  
that "the notion that thoughts are about stuff is illusory." The scholar  
explained that Rosenberg would "say with a straight face that he wrote a book  
that isn't about anything, just a result of chemical reactions." 
Richards suggested that a theistic worldview provides better ground for the 
 principles of libertarianism, the Declaration of Independence, and basic 
sanity.  "Not everyone has perfect access to natural law, but it still lets 
people  understand that murder is wrong," he explained. This view of Natural 
Law, rooted  in Christian thinkers like Thomas Aquinas, forms a better 
defense for the  individual rights we take for granted in America, the scholar 
argued. 
_According  to the Public Religion Research Institute's 2013 American 
Values Survey_ 
(http://publicreligion.org/2013/10/the-relationship-between-libertarians-the-tea-party-and-the-christian-right/)
 , 78  percent of 
self-identified "Libertarians" do not identify with the Christian  Right. 
"But there is a difference between Christian and Christian Right," a  
Christian conflicted with the libertarian label who asked not to be identified  
told The Christian Post on Friday. "Many people, especially young people, are 
 embracing libertarian principles such as economic freedom and personal  
responsibility, but are hesitant to label themselves libertarians because of  
some of the negative stigmas attached."

-- 
-- 
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

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to