Real Clear Politics
 
Real Clear Religion

 
 
January 13, 2015  
 
The Decline of Philosophy
By _Robert  Barron_ 
(http://www.realclearreligion.org/authors/robert_barron/) 



Daniel Dennett, one of the "four horsemen" of contemporary atheism, 
proposed  in 2003 that those who espouse a naturalist, atheist worldview should 
call  themselves "the brights," thereby distinguishing themselves rather 
clearly from  the dim benighted masses who hold on to supernaturalist 
convictions. 
In the wake of Dennett's suggestion, many atheists have brought forward 
what  they take to be ample evidence that the smartest people in our society do 
indeed  subscribe to anti-theist views. By "smartest" they usually mean 
practitioners of  the physical sciences, and thus they point to surveys that 
indicate only small  percentages of scientists subscribe to religious belief.
 
In a recent _article_ 
(http://www.salon.com/2014/12/21/religions_smart_people_problem_the_shaky_intellectual_foundations_of_absolute_faith/)
   
published in the online journal Salon, titled "Religion's Smart-People  
Problem," 
University of Seattle philosophy professor John Messerly reiterates  this 
case. However, he references, not simply the lack of belief among the  
scientists, but also the atheism among academic philosophers, or as he puts it, 
 
"professional philosophers." He cites a recent survey that shows only 14% of  
such professors admitting to theistic convictions, and he states that this  
unbelief among the learned elite, though not in itself a clinching argument 
for  atheism, should at the very least give religious people pause. 
Well, I'm sorry Professor Messerly, but please consider me unpaused. 
Since I have developed these arguments many times before in other forums, 
let  me say just a few things in regard to the scientists. I have found that, 
in  practically every instance, the scientists who declare their disbelief 
in God  have no idea what serious religious people mean by the word "God." 
Almost  without exception, they think of God as some supreme worldly nature, 
an item  within the universe for which they have found no "evidence," a gap 
within the  ordinary nexus of causal relations, etc. I would deny such a 
reality as  vigorously as they do. If that's what they mean by "God," then I'm 
as much an  atheist as they -- and so was Thomas Aquinas. What reflective 
religious people  mean when they speak of God is not something within the 
universe, but rather the  condition for the possibility of the universe as 
such, 
the non-contingent ground  of contingency. And about that reality, the 
sciences, strictly speaking, have  nothing to say one way or another, for the 
consideration of such a state of  affairs is beyond the limits of the 
scientific method. And so when statistics  concerning the lack of belief among 
scientists are trotted out, my response,  honestly, is "who cares?" 
But what about the philosophers, 86% of whom apparently don't believe in 
God?  Wouldn't they be conversant with the most serious and sophisticated 
accounts of  God? Well, you might be surprised. Many academic philosophers, 
trained in highly  specialized corners of the field, actually have little 
acquaintance with the  fine points of philosophy of religion and often prove 
ham-handed when dealing  with the issue of God. We hear, time and again, the 
breezy claim that the  traditional arguments for God's existence have been 
"demolished" or "refuted,"  but when these supposed refutations are brought 
forward, they prove, I have  found, remarkably weak, often little more than the 
batting down of a straw-man.  A fine example of this is Bertrand Russell's 
deeply uninformed dismissal of  Thomas Aquinas's demonstration of the 
impossibility of an infinite regress of  conditioned causes. 
But more to it, the percentage of atheists in the professional 
philosophical  caste has at least as much to do with academic politics as it 
does with 
the  formulation of convincing arguments. If one wants to transform a 
department of  philosophy from largely theist to largely atheist, all one has 
to do 
is to make  sure that the chairman of the department and even a small 
coterie of the  professoriat are atheist. In rather short order, that critical 
mass will control  hiring, firing, and the granting of tenure within the 
department. Once atheists  have come to dominate the department, only atheist 
faculty will be hired and  students with theistic interests will be sharply 
discouraged from writing  dissertations defending the religious point of view. 
In time, very few doctorates supporting theism will be produced, and a new  
generation, shaped by thoroughly atheist assumptions, will come of age. To 
see  how quickly this transformation can happen, take a good look at the 
philosophy  department at many of the leading Catholic universities: what were, 
in the  1950's overwhelmingly theistic professoriats are today largely 
atheist. Does  anyone really think that this happened because lots of clever 
new 
arguments were  discovered? 
Another serious problem with trumpeting the current statistics on the 
beliefs  of philosophers is that such a move is based on the assumption that, 
in 
regard  to philosophy, newer is better. One could make that argument in 
regard to the  sciences, which do seem to progress in a steadily upward 
direction: no one  studies the scientific theories of Ptolemy or Descartes 
today, 
except out of  historical interest. But philosophy is a horse of a different 
color, more akin  to poetry. 
Does anyone think that the philosophical views of, say, Michel Foucault are 
 necessarily better than those of Plato, Aristotle, Kant, or Hegel, just 
because  Foucault is more contemporary? It would be like saying the verse of 
Robert Frost  is necessarily superior to that of Dante or Shakespeare, just 
because Frost  wrote in the twentieth century. Philosophy, so marked today by 
nihilism and  postmodern relativism, is passing through a particularly 
corrupt period. Why  should we think, therefore, that the denizens of 
philosophy 
department lounges  today are necessarily more correct than Alfred North 
Whitehead, Edmund Husserl,  Ludwig Wittgenstein, Jacques Maritain, Emmanuel 
Levinas, and Jean-Luc Marion,  all of whom were well-acquainted with modern 
science, rigorously trained in  philosophy and affirmed the existence of God? 
I despise the arrogance of Dennett and his atheist followers who would  
blithely wrap themselves in the mantle of "brightness;" but I also despise the  
use of statistics to prove any point about philosophical or religious 
matters. I  would much prefer that we return to argument.

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