July 8, 2014
 
 
 (http://www.slate.com/topics/s/slate_book_review.html) 
Know Nothing
 
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The true history of atheism.
By _Michael  Robbins_ (http://www.slate.com/authors.michael_robbins.html)  

 
 
Nick Spencer begins his spirited history of atheism with a fairy tale. Once 
 upon a time, people lived in ignorant superstition, offering sacrifices to 
 monsters in the sky. Then some clever folks used special weapons called  “
science” and “reason” to show that the monsters had never really existed in 
the  first place. Some of these clever folks were killed for daring to say 
this, but  they persevered, and now only really stupid people believe in the 
 monsters.
 
Spencer’s point, of course, is that this received wisdom is naive nonsense—
it  gets the history of science and the nature of religious belief wrong, 
setting up  an opposition between reason and faith that the church fathers 
would have found  rather puzzling. (Spencer focuses on Europe, whence modern 
atheism arose, and  hence on Judeo-Christianity.) Few historians take this 
myth seriously, but it  retains its hold on the vulgar atheist imagination. To 
believe it requires the  misconception that religion exists primarily to 
provide explanations of natural  phenomena. (“You seriously believe in God?” “
Well, how do you explain  thunder?”)
 
A formal definition of religion is notoriously difficult to formulate, but 
it  must surely involve reference to a particular way of life, practices 
oriented  toward a conception of how one should live. “_You must change  your 
life_ (http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/archaic-torso-apollo) ,” as the 
broken statue of the god Apollo seems to say in Rilke’s  poem. Science does not—
it isn’t designed to—recommend approaches to what Emerson  calls “the 
conduct of life.” Nevertheless, Richard Dawkins claims that religion  “is a 
scientific theory,” “a competing explanation for facts about the universe  and 
life.” This is—if you’ll forgive my theological  jargon—bullshit.

 
 
 
To be sure, several scriptures offer, for instance, their own accounts of  
creation. But Christians have recognized the allegorical nature of these  
accounts since the very beginnings of Christianity. _Basil_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_of_Caesarea) , John  Chrysostom, Gregory of 
Nyssa, 
Augustine—they all assumed that God’s creation was  eternal, not something that 
unfolded in six days or any other temporal frame. In  the third century Origen 
of Alexandria wrote:
 
To what person of intelligence, I ask, will the account seem  logically 
consistent that says there was a “first day” and a “second” and  “third,” in 
which also “evening” and “morning” are named, without a sun,  without a 
moon, and without stars, and even in the case of the first day  without a 
heaven (Gen. 1:5-13)? …. Surely, I think no one doubts that these  statements 
are made by Scripture in the form of a type by which they point  toward 
certain mysteries.

 
Well, no one but Richard Dawkins. _As  Marilynne Robinson writes_ 
(http://chronicle.com/article/Reclaiming-a-Sense-of-the/130705/) :
 
The notion that religion is intrinsically a crude explanatory  strategy 
that should be dispelled and supplanted by science is based on a  highly 
selective or tendentious reading of the literatures of religion. In  some cases 
it 
is certainly fair to conclude that it is based on no reading of  them at 
all.

 
Science and religion ask different questions about different things. Where  
religion addresses ontology, science is concerned with _ontic_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontic)  description. Indeed, it is  what Orthodox 
theologian David Bentley Hart calls their “austere abdication of  metaphysical 
pretensions” that enables the sciences to do their work. So when,  for 
instance, 
evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne and pop-cosmologist Lawrence  Krauss 
dismiss the (metaphysical) problem of how something could emerge from  nothing 
by pointing to the Big Bang or quantum fluctuation, it is difficult to  be 
kind: Quantum fluctuations, the uncertainty principle, the laws of quantum  
physics themselves—these are something. Nothing is not quantum  anything. It 
is nothing. Nonbeing. This, not empty space, is what “nothing”  signifies 
for Plato and Aquinas and Heidegger, no matter what Krauss believes.  No 
particles, no fluctuation, no laws, no principles, no potentialities, no  
states, 
no space, no time. No thing at all.
 
_Atheists:  The Origin of the Species_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/1472902963/?tag=slatmaga-20)  seems to have been born 
out of frustration  with these 
and other confusions perpetuated by the so-called “New Atheists” and  their 
allies, who can’t be bothered to familiarize themselves with the  traditions 
they traduce. _Several _ 
(http://www.firstthings.com/article/2010/05/believe-it-or-not) thoughtful 
_writers_ 
(http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300151794)   have already 
_laid bare_ 
(http://press.princeton.edu/titles/8978.html)   the slapdash _know-nothingism_ 
(http://harpers.org/archive/2006/11/hysterical-scientism/)   of today’s mod-ish 
atheism, but Spencer
’s not beating a dead horse—he’s beating  a live one, in the hope that 
_Nietzsche might rush  to embrace it_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007P4SQB4/?tag=slatmaga-20) . Several critics have 
noted that if evangelical atheists (as  
the philosopher John Gray _calls them_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/mar/15/society) ) are  ignorant of 
religion, as they usually are, then 
they aren’t truly atheists. “The  knowledge of contraries is one and the same,
” as Aristotle said. If your idea of  God is not one that most theistic 
traditions would recognize, you’re not talking  about God (at most, the New 
Atheists’ arguments are relevant to the low-hanging  god of fundamentalism and 
deism). But even more damning is that such atheists  appear ignorant of 
atheism as well.
 
For atheists weren’t always as intellectually lazy as Dawkins and his ilk.  
(Nor, to be sure, are many atheists today—Coyne _accused  me of “
atheist-bashing”_ 
(http://whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com/2014/01/08/more-atheist-bashing-in-slate/)
  the last time _I  wrote about religion for Slate_ 
(http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/2014/01/molly_worthen_s_apostles_of_reason_
history_of_evangelical_christianity_reviewed.html) , but I really only  
bashed evangelical atheists like him. My father and sister, most of my friends, 
 and many of the writers I most admire are nonbelievers. They’re also 
unlikely to  mistake the creation myth recounted above for anything more than 
the 
dreariest  parascientific thinking.) What Spencer recounts is the true 
history of atheism,  which
 
had only a limited amount to do with reason and even less with  science. 
The creation myth in which a few brave souls forged weapons made of a  
previously unknown material, to which the religious were relentlessly opposed,  
is 
an invention of the later nineteenth century, albeit one with ongoing  
popular appeal. In reality … modern atheism was primarily a political and  
social 
cause, its development in Europe having rather more to do with the  (ab)use 
of theologically legitimized political authority than it does with  
developments in science or philosophy.


 
To demonstrate this, Spencer ranges from the early Christians (accused of  
atheism by the Romans) to early modern Europe (where “the word was thrown 
about  with as much abandonment as Communist during the McCarthy years, and to 
a  similar effect”) through the forerunners and “pioneers” of atheism in 
our  sense—Machiavelli, Hobbes, Spinoza, Rochester, Mandeville, D’Holbach, 
the  philosophes, Hume, Nietzsche, several others. Obviously many of these  
precursors, like the early Christians, were, from our perspective, theists. 
But  Spinoza’s naturalistic theism, for instance, was a far enough cry from  
Judeo-Christian orthodoxy in an age that discerned little light between  
skepticism and atheism.
 
Spencer’s account too often trades depth for breadth, but one of his most  
trenchant themes is that it is more proper to speak of atheisms and of  
various species of atheist. (One wonders, therefore, why his subtitle adds a  
definite article to Darwin’s title.) Atheism in the sense of unbelief is  
probably as old as the gods—although you often had to keep your unbelief under  
your heretical hat if you wanted your head to remain under it as well. But 
there  is a monster-crammed abyss between finding the notion of a creator 
implausible  and the full-blast anti-Christianity of Nietzsche, who, as Terry 
Eagleton writes  in Culture and the Death of God, “has a strong claim to 
being the first  real atheist.” “The only really effective antidote to the 
dreariness of reading  the New Atheists,” _Hart has  written_ 
(http://www.firstthings.com/article/2010/05/believe-it-or-not) , “is rereading 
Nietzsche.”
 
This is wise counsel for believers and atheists alike. In Nietzsche we find 
 the full power and terror that atheism is capable of, for Nietzsche 
scorned mere  unbelievers, who, Hart writes,
 
do not dread the death of God because they do not grasp that  humanity’s 
heroic and insane act of repudiation has sponged away the horizon,  torn down 
the heavens, left us with only the uncertain resources of our will  with 
which to combat the infinity of meaninglessness that the universe now  
threatens to become.

 
Nietzsche’s atheism is far from exultant—he is not crowing about the death 
of  God, much as he despises Christianity. He understands how much has been 
lost,  how much there is to lose. As he writes in _The Gay  Science_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/0486452468/?tag=slatmaga-20) :
 
The event itself is far too great, too distant, too remote from  the 
multitude’s capacity for comprehension even for the tidings of it to be  
thought 
of as having arrived as yet. Much less may one  suppose that many people know 
as yet what this event really  means—and how much must collapse now that 
this faith has been undermined  because it was built upon this faith, propped 
up by it, grown into it; for  example, the whole of our European morality.

 
Nietzsche realized that the Enlightenment project to reconstruct morality  
from rational principles simply retained the character of Christian ethics  
without providing the foundational authority of the latter. Dispensing with 
his  fantasy of the Übermensch, we are left with his dark diagnosis. To  
paraphrase the Scottish philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre, our moral vocabulary 
has  lost the contexts from which its significance derived, and no amount of  
Dawkins-style hand-waving about altruistic genes will make the problem go 
away.  (Indeed, the ridiculous belief that our genes determine everything 
about human  behavior and culture is a symptom of this very problem.)

 
 
 
The point is not that a coherent morality requires theism, but that the 
moral  language taken for granted by liberal modernity is a fragmented ruin: It 
rejects  metaphysics but exists only because of prior metaphysical 
commitments. A  coherent atheism would understand this, because it would be 
aware of 
its own  history. Instead, trendy atheism of the Dawkins variety has 
learned as little  from its forebears as from Thomas Aquinas, preferring to 
advance a bland version  of secular humanism. Spencer quotes John Gray, a 
not-New 
atheist: “Humanism is  not an alternative to religious belief, but rather a 
degenerate and unwitting  version of it.” How refreshing would be a popular 
atheism that did not shy from  this insight and its consequences.
 
I’m not holding my breath. What’s most galling about evangelical atheists 
is  their epistemic arrogance—and their triumphalist tone: If religious 
belief is  like belief in the Easter Bunny, as they like to say, shouldn’t they 
be less  proud of themselves for seeing through it? Gray _put_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/dp/0374270937/?tag=slatmaga-20)  the matter  starkly:
 
Driven to the margins of a culture in which science claims  authority over 
all of human knowledge, [religious believers] have had to  cultivate a 
capacity for doubt. In contrast, secular believers—held fast by  the 
conventional 
wisdom of the time—are in the grip of unexamined  dogmas.


 
 
This will already have occurred to anyone who has spent five minutes  
browsing, say, the comments sections of Dawkins’ website. Though, as it 
happens,  
the most affecting response to this sort of arrogance I’ve encountered is 
also  there, courtesy of an Orthodox believer _calling herself Saint  
Cecilia_ (http://old.richarddawkins.net/articles/5481#page9) . (I don’t know 
her 
real name, but she certainly has the patience of  a saint.) On a comment 
thread devoted to misunderstanding Hart’s arguments, she  gently corrects a few 
of the usual fallacies. The “pitch” of Christianity, she  points out, has “
nothing to do with the Big Bang or evolution or anything like  that at all.” 
Nor is the existence of God a scientific proposition: “Christians  aren’t 
talking about a math problem, they’re talking about a Person. And in the  
vast experience of people who claim to have had a genuine encounter with the  
Personality called Christ, there are certain things that are involved, such 
as  willingness [and] humility.”
 
The modest atheists respond with their customary persiflage: “Can you spell 
 g-u-l-l-i-b-l-e?” Cecilia isn’t ruffled: “I spell gullible exactly as you 
did.  Well done.” She continues:
 
If someone is really interested in whether or not God  exists, I’d say the 
best way is to have a little humility and experiment, with  an open mind and 
heart, with the paths that Christians have claimed take you  directly to 
him, in the ways that have worked. If someone isn’t willing to do  such a 
thing, and insists that a discussion about painting be one about  mathematics, 
then the conversation isn’t going to go  anywhere.

 
This spirit of invitation and inquiry is far from gullible, a calumny 
better  directed at the evangelical-atheist faithful who thoughtlessly parrot 
what  Emerson called “the tune of the time.” Again, the point is not whether 
God does  or does not exist, but that, as Cecilia writes elsewhere in the 
thread,  “Everyone is talking past each other and no one seems to be elevating 
the  conversation to where it could and should  be.”

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