The Guardian
 
What scares the new  atheists 
 
 
 
 The vocal fervour of today’s missionary atheism  conceals a panic that 
religion is not only refusing to decline – but in fact  flourishing 




 
_John Gray_ (http://www.theguardian.com/profile/johngray)  
Tuesday 3  March 2015 
 
 
In 1929, the Thinker’s Library, a series established by the Rationalist 
Press  Association to advance secular thinking and counter the influence of 
religion in  Britain, published an English translation of the German biologist 
Ernst  Haeckel’s 1899 book _The Riddle of the  Universe_ 
(http://www.amazon.co.uk/Riddle-Universe-Great-Minds-Haeckel/dp/0879757469) . 
Celebrated as “
the German Darwin”, Haeckel was one of the most  influential public 
intellectuals of the late nineteenth and early twentieth  century; The Riddle 
of the 
Universe sold half a million copies in Germany alone,  and was translated 
into dozens of other languages. Hostile to Jewish and  Christian traditions, 
_Haeckel_ (http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/251305/Ernst-Haeckel)  
devised  his own “religion of science” called Monism, which incorporated an 
anthropology  that divided the human species into a hierarchy of racial 
groups. Though he died  in 1919, before the Nazi Party had been founded, his 
ideas, and widespread  influence in Germany, unquestionably helped to create an 
intellectual climate in  which policies of racial slavery and genocide were 
able to claim a basis in  science. 
_The Thinker’s  Library_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thinker's_Library)  
also featured works by Julian Huxley, grandson of TH Huxley, the  Victorian 
biologist who was known as _“Darwin’s  bulldog”_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/science/2008/feb/09/darwin.bestseller)  for his 
fierce defence of 
evolutionary theory. A proponent of  “evolutionary humanism”, which he 
described as 
“religion without revelation”,  Julian Huxley shared some of Haeckel’s 
views, including advocacy of _eugenics_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/feb/17/eugenics-skeleton-rattles-loudest-closet-left)
 . In  1931, 
Huxley wrote that there was “a certain amount of evidence that the negro  is 
an earlier product of human evolution than the Mongolian or the European, and 
 as such might be expected to have advanced less, both in body and mind”.  
Statements of this kind were then commonplace: there were many in the 
secular  intelligentsia – including HG Wells, also a contributor to the 
Thinker’s 
Library  – who looked forward to a time when “backward” peoples would be 
remade in a  western mould or else vanish from the world. 
But by the late 1930s, these views were becoming suspect: already in 1935,  
Huxley admitted that the concept of race was “hardly definable in 
scientific  terms”. While he never renounced eugenics, little was heard from 
him on 
the  subject after the second world war. The science that pronounced western 
people  superior was bogus – but what shifted Huxley’s views wasn’t any 
scientific  revelation: it was the rise of Nazism, which revealed what had been 
done under  the aegis of Haeckel-style racism.


It has often been observed that _Christianity_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/christianity)  follows changing moral  
fashions, all the while 
believing that it stands apart from the world. The same  might be said, with 
more 
justice, of the prevalent version of atheism. If an  earlier generation of 
unbelievers shared the racial prejudices of their time and  elevated them to 
the status of scientific truths, evangelical atheists do the  same with the 
liberal values to which western societies subscribe today – while  looking 
with contempt upon “backward” cultures that have not abandoned religion.  The 
racial theories promoted by atheists in the past have been consigned to the 
 memory hole – and today’s most influential atheists would no more endorse 
racist  biology than they would be seen following the guidance of an 
astrologer. But  they have not renounced the conviction that human values must 
be 
based in  science; now it is liberal values which receive that accolade. 
There are  disputes, sometimes bitter, over how to define and interpret those 
values, but  their supremacy is hardly ever questioned. For 21st century 
atheist  missionaries, being liberal and scientific in outlook are one and the 
same. 
It’s a reassuringly simple equation. In fact there are no reliable  
connections – whether in logic or history – between atheism, science and 
liberal  
values. When organised as a movement and backed by the power of the state,  
atheist ideologies have been an integral part of despotic regimes that also  
claimed to be based in science, such as the former Soviet Union. Many rival 
 moralities and political systems – most of them, to date, illiberal – 
have  attempted to assert a basis in science. All have been fraudulent and 
ephemeral.  Yet the attempt continues in atheist movements today, which claim 
that liberal  values can be scientifically validated and are therefore humanly 
universal. 
Fortunately, this type of atheism isn’t the only one that has ever existed. 
 There have been many modern atheisms, some of them more cogent and more  
intellectually liberating than the type that makes so much noise today.  
Campaigning atheism is a missionary enterprise, aiming to convert humankind to 
a 
 particular version of unbelief; but not all atheists have been interested 
in  propagating a new gospel, and some have been friendly to traditional 
faiths. 
Evangelical atheists today view liberal values as part of an emerging 
global  civilisation; but not all atheists, even when they have been committed 
liberals,  have shared this comforting conviction. _Atheism_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/atheism)  comes in many irreducibly different 
 forms, among 
which the variety being promoted at the present time looks  strikingly 
banal and parochial. 
* * *
In itself, atheism is an entirely negative position. In pagan Rome, “atheist
”  (from the Greek atheos) meant anyone who refused to worship the  
established pantheon of deities. The term was applied to Christians, who not  
only 
refused to worship the gods of the pantheon but demanded exclusive worship  
of their own god. Many non-western religions contain no conception of a  
creator-god – Buddhism and Taoism, in some of their forms, are atheist 
religions  of this kind – and many religions have had no interest in 
proselytising. 
In  modern western contexts, however, atheism and rejection of monotheism 
are  practically interchangeable. Roughly speaking, an atheist is anyone who 
has no  use for the concept of God – the idea of a divine mind, which has 
created  humankind and embodies in a perfect form the values that human beings 
cherish  and strive to realise. Many who are atheists in this sense 
(including myself)  regard the evangelical atheism that has emerged over the 
past 
few decades with  bemusement. Why make a fuss over an idea that has no sense 
for you? There are  untold multitudes who have no interest in waging war on 
beliefs that mean  nothing to them. Throughout history, many have been happy 
to live their lives  without bothering about ultimate questions. This sort 
of atheism is one of the  perennial responses to the experience of being 
human. 
As an organised movement, atheism is never non-committal in this way. It  
always goes with an alternative belief-system – typically, a set of ideas 
that  serves to show the modern west is the high point of human development. In 
Europe  from the late 19th century until the second world war, this was a 
version of  evolutionary theory that marked out western peoples as being the 
most highly  evolved. Around the time Haeckel was promoting his racial 
theories, a different  theory of western superiority was developed by Marx. 
While 
condemning liberal  societies and prophesying their doom, Marx viewed them 
as the high point of  human development to date. (This is why he praised 
British colonialism in India  as an essentially progressive development.) If 
Marx had serious reservations  about Darwinism – and he did – it was because 
Darwin’s theory did not frame  evolution as a progressive process. 
The predominant varieties of atheist thinking, in the 19th and early 20th  
centuries, aimed to show that the secular west is the model for a universal  
civilisation. The missionary atheism of the present time is a replay of 
this  theme; but the west is in retreat today, and beneath the fervour with 
which this  atheism assaults religion there is an unmistakable mood of fear and 
anxiety. To  a significant extent, the new atheism is the expression of a 
liberal moral  panic.
 
 
_Sam Harris_ (http://www.samharris.org/) , the  American neuroscientist and 
author of The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the  Future of Reason 
(2004) and The Moral Landscape: How Science Can Determine Moral  Values (2010), 
who was arguably the first of the “new atheists”, illustrates  this point. 
Following many earlier atheist ideologues, he wants a “scientific  morality”
; but whereas earlier exponents of this sort of atheism used science to  
prop up values everyone would now agree were illiberal, Harris takes for 
granted  that what he calls a “science of good and evil” cannot be other than 
liberal in  content. (Not everyone will agree with Harris’s account of liberal 
values, which  appears to sanction the practice of torture: “Given what 
many believe are the  exigencies of our war on terrorism,” he wrote in 2004, “
the practice of torture,  in certain circumstances, would seem to be not 
only permissible but  necessary.”) 
Harris’s militancy in asserting these values seems to be largely a reaction 
 to Islamist terrorism. For secular liberals of his generation, the shock 
of the  11 September attacks went beyond the atrocious loss of life they 
entailed. The  effect of the attacks was to place a question mark over the 
belief that their  values were spreading – slowly, and at times fitfully, but 
in 
the long run  irresistibly – throughout the world. As society became ever 
more reliant on  science, they had assumed, religion would inexorably decline. 
No doubt the  process would be bumpy, and pockets of irrationality would 
linger on the margins  of modern life; but religion would dwindle away as a 
factor in human conflict.  The road would be long and winding. But the grand 
march of secular reason would  continue, with more and more societies joining 
the modern west in marginalising  religion. Someday, religious belief would 
be no more important than personal  hobbies or ethnic cuisines. 
Today, it’s clear that no grand march is under way. The rise of violent  
jihadism is only the most obvious example of a rejection of secular life.  
Jihadist thinking comes in numerous varieties, mixing strands from 20th century 
 ideologies, such as Nazism and Leninism, with elements deriving from the 
18th  century Wahhabist Islamic fundamentalist movement. What all Islamist 
movements  have in common is a categorical rejection of any secular realm. But 
the ongoing  reversal in secularisation is not a peculiarly Islamic 
phenomenon.
 
The resurgence of religion is a worldwide development. Russian Orthodoxy is 
 stronger than it has been for over a century, while China is the scene of 
a  reawakening of its indigenous faiths and of underground movements that 
could  make it the largest Christian country in the world by the end of this 
century.  Despite tentative shifts in opinion that have been hailed as 
evidence it is  becoming less pious, the US remains massively and pervasively 
religious – it’s  inconceivable that a professed unbeliever could become 
president, for  example.
 

For secular thinkers, the continuing vitality of religion calls into 
question  the belief that history underpins their values. To be sure, there is  
disagreement as to the nature of these values. But pretty well all secular  
thinkers now take for granted that modern societies must in the end converge 
on  some version of liberalism. Never well founded, this assumption is today 
clearly  unreasonable. So, not for the first time, secular thinkers look to 
science for a  foundation for their values. 
It’s probably just as well that the current generation of atheists seems to 
 know so little of the longer history of atheist movements. When they 
assert that  science can bridge fact and value, they overlook the many 
incompatible  value-systems that have been defended in this way. There is no 
more 
reason to  think science can determine human values today than there was at the 
time of  Haeckel or Huxley. None of the divergent values that atheists have 
from time to  time promoted has any essential connection with atheism, or 
with science. How  could any increase in scientific knowledge validate values 
such as human  equality and personal autonomy? The source of these values is 
not science. In  fact, as the most widely-read atheist thinker of all time 
argued, these  quintessential liberal values have their origins in 
monotheism. 

* * *
The new atheists rarely mention Friedrich Nietzsche, and when they do it is 
 usually to dismiss him. This can’t be because Nietzsche’s ideas are said 
to have  inspired the Nazi cult of racial inequality – an unlikely tale, 
given that the  Nazis claimed their racism was based in science. The reason 
Nietzsche has been  excluded from the mainstream of contemporary atheist 
thinking is that he exposed  the problem atheism has with morality. It’s not 
that 
atheists can’t be moral –  the subject of so many mawkish debates. The 
question is which morality an  atheist should serve. 
It’s a familiar question in continental Europe, where a number of thinkers  
have explored the prospects of a “difficult atheism” that doesn’t take 
liberal  values for granted. It can’t be said that anything much has come from 
this  effort. _Georges  Bataille_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2006/apr/23/art) ’s postmodern project 
of “atheology” didn’t produce the 
godless  religion he originally intended, or any coherent type of moral 
thinking. But at  least Bataille, and other thinkers like him, understood that 
when monotheism has  been left behind morality can’t go on as before. Among 
other things, the  universal claims of liberal morality become highly 
questionable.
 
 
It’s impossible to read much contemporary polemic against religion without  
the impression that for the “new atheists” the world would be a better 
place if  Jewish and Christian monotheism had never existed. If only the world 
wasn’t  plagued by these troublesome God-botherers, they are always 
lamenting, liberal  values would be so much more secure. Awkwardly for these 
atheists, Nietzsche  understood that modern liberalism was a secular 
incarnation of 
these religious  traditions. As a classical scholar, he recognised that a 
mystical Greek faith in  reason had shaped the cultural matrix from which 
modern liberalism emerged. Some  ancient Stoics defended the ideal of a 
cosmopolitan society; but this was based  in the belief that humans share in 
the 
Logos, an immortal principle of  rationality that was later absorbed into the 
conception of God with which we are  familiar. Nietzsche was clear that the 
chief sources of liberalism were in  Jewish and Christian theism: that is 
why he was so bitterly hostile to these  religions. He was an atheist in large 
part because he rejected liberal  values. 
To be sure, evangelical unbelievers adamantly deny that liberalism needs 
any  support from theism. If they are philosophers, they will wheel out their 
rusty  intellectual equipment and assert that those who think liberalism 
relies on  ideas and beliefs inherited from religion are guilty of a genetic 
fallacy.  Canonical liberal thinkers such as John Locke and Immanuel Kant may 
have been  steeped in theism; but ideas are not falsified because they 
originate in errors.  The far-reaching claims these thinkers have made for 
liberal values can be  detached from their theistic beginnings; a liberal 
morality 
that applies to all  human beings can be formulated without any mention of 
religion. Or so we are  continually being told. The trouble is that it’s 
hard to make any sense of the  idea of a universal morality without invoking an 
understanding of what it is to  be human that has been borrowed from 
theism. The belief that the human species  is a moral agent struggling to 
realise 
its inherent possibilities – the  narrative of redemption that sustains 
secular humanists everywhere – is a  hollowed-out version of a theistic myth. 
The idea that the human species is  striving to achieve any purpose or goal – 
a universal state of freedom or  justice, say – presupposes a pre-Darwinian, 
teleological way of thinking that  has no place in science. Empirically 
speaking, there is no such collective human  agent, only different human beings 
with conflicting goals and values. If you  think of morality in scientific 
terms, as part of the behaviour of the human  animal, you find that humans 
don’t live according to iterations of a single  universal code. Instead, they 
have fashioned many ways of life. A plurality of  moralities is as natural 
for the human animal as the variety of  languages.
 
At this point, the dread spectre of relativism tends to be raised. Doesn’t  
talk of plural moralities mean there can be no truth in ethics? Well, 
anyone who  wants their values secured by something beyond the capricious human 
world had  better join an old-fashioned religion. If you set aside any view 
of humankind  that is borrowed from monotheism, you have to deal with human 
beings as you find  them, with their perpetually warring values. 
This isn’t the relativism celebrated by postmodernists, which holds that  
human values are merely cultural constructions. Humans are like other animals 
in  having a definite nature, which shapes their experiences whether they 
like it or  not. No one benefits from being tortured or persecuted on account 
of their  religion or sexuality. Being chronically poor is rarely, if ever, 
a positive  experience. Being at risk of violent death is bad for human 
beings whatever  their culture. Such truisms could be multiplied. Universal 
human values can be  understood as something like moral facts, marking out 
goods and evils that are  generically human. Using these universal values, it 
may be possible to define a  minimum standard of civilised life that every 
society should meet; but this  minimum won’t be the liberal values of the 
present time turned into universal  principles. 
Universal values don’t add up to a universal morality. Such values are very 
 often conflicting, and different societies resolve these conflicts in 
divergent  ways. The Ottoman empire, during some of its history, was a haven of 
toleration  for religious communities who were persecuted in Europe; but 
this pluralism did  not extend to enabling individuals to move from one 
community to another, or to  form new communities of choice, as would be 
required 
by a liberal ideal of  personal autonomy. The Hapsburg empire was based on 
rejecting the liberal  principle of national self-determination; but – 
possibly for that very reason –  it was more protective of minorities than most 
of 
the states that succeeded it.  Protecting universal values without honouring 
what are now seen as core liberal  ideals, these archaic imperial regimes 
were more civilised than a great many  states that exist today. 
For many, regimes of this kind are imperfect examples of what all human  
beings secretly want – a world in which no one is unfree. The conviction that  
tyranny and persecution are aberrations in human affairs is at the heart of 
the  liberal philosophy that prevails today. But this conviction is 
supported by  faith more than evidence. Throughout history there have been 
large 
numbers who  have been happy to relinquish their freedom as long as those they 
hate – gay  people, Jews, immigrants and other minorities, for example – 
are deprived of  freedom as well. Many have been ready to support tyranny and 
oppression.  Billions of human beings have been hostile to liberal values, 
and there is no  reason for thinking matters will be any different in 
future. 
An older generation of liberal thinkers accepted this fact. As the late  
Stuart Hampshire put it: 
“It is not only possible, but, on present evidence, probable that most  
conceptions of the good, and most ways of life, which are typical of  
commercial, liberal, industrialised societies will often seem altogether  
hateful to 
substantial minorities within these societies and even more hateful  to most 
of the populations within traditional societies … As a liberal by  
philosophical conviction, I think I ought to expect to be hated, and to be  
found 
superficial and contemptible, by a large part of  mankind.”
Today this a forbidden thought. How could all of humankind not want to be 
as  we imagine ourselves to be? To suggest that large numbers hate and 
despise  values such as toleration and personal autonomy is, for many people 
nowadays, an  intolerable slur on the species. This is, in fact, the 
quintessential illusion  of the ruling liberalism: the belief that all human 
beings are 
born  freedom-loving and peaceful and become anything else only as a result 
of  oppressive conditioning. But there is no hidden liberal struggling to 
escape  from within the killers of the Islamic State and Boko Haram, any more 
than there  was in the torturers who served the Pol Pot regime. To be sure, 
these are  extreme cases. But in the larger sweep of history, faith-based 
violence and  persecution, secular and religious, are hardly uncommon – and 
they have been  widely supported. It is peaceful coexistence and the practice 
of toleration that  are exceptional. 
* * *
Considering the alternatives that are on offer, liberal societies are well  
worth defending. But there is no reason for thinking these societies are 
the  beginning of a species-wide secular civilisation of the kind of which  
evangelical atheists dream. 
In ancient Greece and Rome, religion was not separate from the rest of 
human  activity. Christianity was less tolerant than these pagan societies, but 
without  it the secular societies of modern times would hardly have been 
possible. By  adopting the distinction between what is owed to Caesar and what 
to God, Paul  and Augustine – who turned the teaching of Jesus into a 
universal creed – opened  the way for societies in which religion was no longer 
coextensive with life.  Secular regimes come in many shapes, some liberal, 
others tyrannical. Some aim  for a separation of church and state as in the US 
and France, while others –  such as the Ataturkist regime that until 
recently ruled in Turkey – assert state  control over religion. Whatever its 
form, 
a secular state is no guarantee of a  secular culture. Britain has an 
established church, but despite that fact – or  more likely because of it – 
religion has a smaller role in politics than in  America and is less publicly 
divisive than it is in France.
 
There is no sign anywhere of religion fading away, but by no means all  
atheists have thought the disappearance of religion possible or desirable. Some 
 of the most prominent – including the early 19th-century poet and 
philosopher _Giacomo  Leopardi_ 
(http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/336597/Giacomo-Leopardi) , the 
philosopher _Arthur  Schopenhauer_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2005/may/08/society1) , the 
Austro-Hungarian 
philosopher and novelist _Fritz Mauthner_ 
(http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/370275/Fritz-Mauthner)   (who 
published a four-volume history of atheism in 
the early 1920s) and Sigmund  Freud, to name a few – were all atheists who 
accepted the human value of  religion. One thing these atheists had in common 
was a refreshing indifference  to questions of belief. Mauthner – who is 
remembered today chiefly because of a  dismissive one-line mention in 
Wittgenstein’s Tractatus – suggested that belief  and unbelief were both 
expressions 
of a superstitious faith in language. For  him, “humanity” was an 
apparition which melts away along with the departing  Deity. Atheism was an 
experiment in living without taking human concepts as  realities. Intriguingly, 
Mauthner saw parallels between this radical atheism and  the tradition of 
negative theology in which nothing can be affirmed of God, and  described the 
heretical medieval Christian mystic _Meister Eckhart_ 
(http://www.eckhartsociety.org/)  as being an atheist in this  sense. 
Above all, these unevangelical atheists accepted that religion is  
definitively human. Though not all human beings may attach great importance to  
them, every society contains practices that are recognisably religious. Why  
should religion be universal in this way? For atheist missionaries this is a  
decidedly awkward question. Invariably they claim to be followers of Darwin. 
Yet  they never ask what evolutionary function this species-wide phenomenon 
serves.  There is an irresolvable contradiction between viewing religion 
naturalistically  – as a human adaptation to living in the world – and 
condemning it as a tissue  of error and illusion. What if the upshot of 
scientific 
inquiry is that a need  for illusion is built into in the human mind? If 
religions are natural for  humans and give value to their lives, why spend your 
life trying to persuade  others to give them up? 
The answer that will be given is that religion is implicated in many human  
evils. Of course this is true. Among other things, Christianity brought 
with it  a type of sexual repression unknown in pagan times. Other religions 
have their  own distinctive flaws. But the fault is not with religion, any 
more than science  is to blame for the proliferation of weapons of mass 
destruction or medicine and  psychology for the refinement of techniques of 
torture. The fault is in the  intractable human animal. Like religion at its 
worst, 
contemporary atheism feeds  the fantasy that human life can be remade by a 
conversion experience – in this  case, conversion to unbelief. 
Evangelical atheists at the present time are missionaries for their own  
values. If an earlier generation promoted the racial prejudices of their time 
as  scientific truths, ours aims to give the illusions of contemporary 
liberalism a  similar basis in science. It’s possible to envision different 
varieties of  atheism developing – atheisms more like those of Freud, which 
didn’
t replace God  with a flattering image of humanity. But atheisms of this 
kind are unlikely to  be popular. More than anything else, our unbelievers 
seek relief from the panic  that grips them when they realise their values are 
rejected by much of  humankind. What today’s freethinkers want is freedom 
from doubt, and the  prevailing version of atheism is well suited to give it 
to  them.

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