>Zeke Yewdall wrote:
>
>ZY> Well, if you take the position that women are not worth anything
>ZY> except as property, sort of like a horse or cow only probably
>ZY> worth a little more, then it does make sense as a parable that you
>ZY> should value the life of men, even strange ones, more than your
>ZY> own property.  In the patriarchal culture they lived in then, the
>ZY> parable might indeed have had the same meaning to them if he
>ZY> offered the mob seven oxen or something
>
>OK, That's a fair point. But I also have an issue with fundamentalists
>who assert that the bible - which they say is not to be understood
>symbolically but word-for-word literally - is a basis for morals in
>present-day society. However, it's encouraging that "The God Delusion"
>- where I encountered the Lot story - topped the bestseller list in the
>US
>
>David

<snip>

http://www.alternet.org/stories/46566/

Atheist Richard Dawkins on 'The God Delusion'

By Terrence McNally, AlterNet. Posted January 18, 2007.

In the last few years, Americans have seen the harm that results when 
political decisions are made in the name of religion. Now, the 
non-believers are fighting back.

In the last few years, Americans have seen the dark side of religion. 
The events of 9/11 brought home the extremes to which some radical 
Muslims would go to defeat infidels and attain virgins. At home, 
we've seen assaults on the separation of Church and State and attacks 
on the teaching of evolution and the distribution of life-saving 
condoms. And now, it appears the godless are fighting back.

During the recent holiday season, there were prominent articles about 
atheism in The New York Times and the UK's Financial Times and 
Telegraph, and a segment on NPR's All Things Considered. Richard 
Dawkins debated the existence of God on the London chat show, The 
Sunday Edition. Dawkins' book, The God Delusion was a top 10 
bestseller on the lists of both the New York Times and LA Times, 
number one at Amazon UK and Amazon Canada, and number two at 
Amazon.com. Letter to a Christian Nation by Sam Harris was recently 
an equally successful bestseller.

A group calling itself "The Rational Response Squad," has launched 
The Blasphemy Challenge, a campaign to entice young people to 
publicly renounce belief in the God of Christianity. Participants who 
videotape their blasphemy and upload it to YouTube will receive a 
free DVD of The God Who Wasn't There, a number one bestselling 
independent documentary at Amazon.com.

Richard Dawkins holds the Charles Simonyi Chair for the Public 
Understanding of Science at Oxford University. His 1976 book, The 
Selfish Gene, popularized the gene-centered view of evolution and 
introduced the term "meme." In January 2006, Dawkins hosted on the 
UK's Channel 4 a two-part documentary on the dangers of religion, 
entitled (against his wishes, I might add) The Root of All Evil. His 
newest book, The God Delusion, is an international bestseller.

Below is a shortened version of Terrence McNally's recent interview 
with Richard Dawkins. You can also listen to the audio of the full 
interview.

Terrence McNally: When and how did you become an atheist?

Richard Dawkins: I suppose it was discovering Darwinism. I was 
confirmed into the Church of England at the age of thirteen. I then 
got pretty skeptical about it, but retained some respect for the 
argument from Design -- the argument that says living things look as 
though they've been designed, so they probably have been. I then 
learned the real scientific explanation for why they look as though 
they've been designed, and that was enough for me. I lost my 
religious faith pretty much then.

TM: What do you think explains the current interest in atheism?

RD: I would love to think that there really is something moving -- a 
shifting in the tectonic plates, and, at last, in America, atheism is 
becoming respectable; that one can now come out of the closet and 
proclaim one's self.

I got certain indications of that on my recent tour of the United 
States. I got packed houses everywhere I went. Of course, I was 
preaching to the choir, but I was impressed by how large the choir is 
and how enthusiastic. Over and over again people came up to me 
afterwards and said how grateful they were that I and Sam Harris and 
others were finally speaking out and saying the things that they 
wanted to say, but perhaps didn't feel able to.

TM: You compare the experience of atheists to that of gays in the 
fairly recent past. Do you think that's an apt comparison?

RD: I think the parallel is a valid one. Until recently nobody dared 
admit that they were gay. Now, they're rather proud to do so. 
Nowadays it's impossible to get elected to public office if you're an 
atheist, and I think that's got to change. The Gay Rights Movement 
raised consciousness. It initiated the idea of Gay Pride. I think 
we've got to have Atheist Pride, Atheist Consciousness. I think it's 
pretty clear that a fair number of members of Congress must be lying 
because not a single one of them admits to being an atheist. The 
probability that in a sample of over 500 well-educated members of 
American society, not a single one of them is an atheist, 
statistically, that is highly unlikely. So, some of them, at least, 
have got to be lying, and I think it's a tragedy that they have to.

TM: Could you address a couple of reactions that I see in the media, 
either to atheism, in general, or to you and your book? One, people 
ask why are atheists so angry?

RD: That's a very curious misperception. We get accused of being 
angry or of being intolerant, but, if you were to look at critiques 
of one political party by the other... when Democrats criticize 
Republicans, or Republicans criticize Democrats, nobody ever says, 
"You're being intolerant of Republicans, or angry." It's just normal, 
robust argument.

People have gotten so used to the idea that religion must be immune 
to criticism that even a very mild and gentle criticism of religion 
comes across as angry and intolerant. That's yet another piece of 
consciousness raising that we've got to undertake.

TM: You and others are accused of being arrogant, condescending. What 
would you say to that?

RD: Exactly the same thing. Nobody says that a Democrat who dismisses 
Republican ideas is arrogant. They just assume that's what 
politicians do. They attack each other's ideas with good, robust give 
and take. That's exactly what people like me and Sam Harris are doing 
with respect to religion. Once again, the accusation of arrogance 
comes about because religion has acquired this weird protection that 
you're not allowed to criticize.

TM: You give the Americans too much credit. In the last couple of 
years, perhaps since 9/11, when people criticize the Bush 
Administration, they are accused of Bush-hating. I think they're 
attempting to clothe this President and this Administration in the 
same kind of protective halo that religion has had.

RD: Now that you mention it, I have noticed that very thing. There 
has been a tendency to say, if you criticize the President, Bush, you 
are criticizing America, which is ludicrous because he was elected by 
a --

TM: --a minority.

RD: -- if indeed he was elected at all. I take your point completely. 
Thank you.

TM: People finally say, "What's it to you? Why not be an atheist if 
that's what works for you, and leave the rest of us to be as 
religious as we wish?" This, I believe, is offered as a challenge to 
your open-mindedness or your respect for others. You're being called 
"an atheist fundamentalist."

RD: "Fundamentalist" usually means, "goes by the book." And so, a 
religious fundamentalist goes back to the fundamentals of The Bible 
or The Koran and says, "nothing can change." Of course, that's not 
the case with any scientist, and certainly not with me. So, I'm not a 
fundamentalist in that sense.

Why not live and let live? Why not just say, "Oh, well, if people 
want to believe that, that's fine." Of course, nobody's stopping 
people believing whatever they like. The problem is that there's not 
that much tolerance coming the other way. Things like the opposition 
to stem-cell research, to abortion, to contraception -- these are all 
religiously inspired prohibitions on what would otherwise be freedom 
of action, whether of scientists or individual human beings.

There are religious people who are not content to say, "Oh, well, my 
religion doesn't allow me to use contraceptives, but I'm quite happy 
for anybody else to." Instead, we have religiously-inspired 
prohibitions on aid programs abroad, including in areas where HIV 
AIDS is rife, prohibiting aid going in any form that might be used to 
help contraception. That is religion over-stepping the bounds and 
interfering in other people's freedom. So, religion does not observe 
this "live and let live" philosophy.

TM: In other words, if it were just a philosophical belief that had 
no impact on the world, fine.

RD: Exactly. I don't think you'll find many people criticizing any 
gentle religion, like Jainism.

The other thing is that, as a scientist and an educator, it is 
impossible to overlook the fact that, especially in America, there is 
a vigorous and virulent campaign to suppress the teaching of 
scientific biology. In state after state, there are court battles 
being fought. Scientists have to go out of the laboratory and waste 
their time responding to these know-nothings who are trying to stop 
the teaching of evolution or give equal time to creationism or 
intelligent design, or whatever they like to call it. They actually 
are trying to interfere with the freedom of children to learn science 
and the freedom of science teachers to teach their science properly.

TM: Why did you write The God Delusion?

RD: I care passionately about the truth. I believe that the truth 
about whether there is a God in the Universe is possibly the most 
important truth there is. I happen to think it's false, but I think 
it's a really important question.

Also, because I felt that the world actually is drifting, parts of it 
anyway, towards theocracy in very dangerous ways. Education in my own 
field of Evolutionary Biology was under threat. There are all sorts 
of reasons why one might worry about the looming rise of religious 
influence, especially in the United States of America and in the 
Islamic world.

TM: Can you explain the distinction you offer between Einstein's God, 
as you put it, and Supernatural God? You clarify this at the top of 
the book to make clear which definition of God you believe is a 
delusion.

RD: Sometimes when people hear that one is an atheist, they say 
something like, "Oh, well, surely you believe in something." Or "You 
believe that the Universe is a wonderful place." And I say, "Yes, of 
course, the Universe is a wonderful place." And they say, "Oh, well, 
then you believe in God." And they are using "God" in the Einsteinian 
sense of a kind of metaphor for that which is mysterious and 
wonderful in the universe. And the more the physicists look into the 
origins of the universe, the more wonderful it does seem to become. 
Without a doubt there is cause for something approaching worship or 
reverence that moves scientists such as Einstein, and Carl Sagan, 
and, in my humble way, myself. Einstein was very fond of using the 
word "God" to refer to that feeling of non-personal reverence.

TM: Beyond that feeling, didn't he also use it to refer to the 
awesome existence that we confront?

RD: Yes, he did. When Einstein wanted to say something like, "Could 
the universe have happened in any other way? Is there only one kind 
of universe?" The way he expressed it was, "Did God have a choice in 
creating the universe?" Now, to any ordinary churchgoer in the pew, 
that sounds as though Einstein believed that a personal God designed 
the universe. In fact, all Einstein was doing was wondering whether 
there could be more than one kind of universe, which is a perfectly 
respectable scientific question.

I think it's extremely unfortunate that Einstein chose to use the 
word "God" for that. Einstein himself was most indignant when he was 
taken literally and people thought that he meant a personal God, such 
as the Christian God or the Jewish God. But I think he was asking for 
trouble by using the word "God." He did it again over Heisenberg's 
indeterminacy principle, which he hated. He expressed his hatred for 
it by saying, "God does not play dice."

TM: So you're making the distinction between that use of the word 
"God" and the God that you believe is a delusion?

RD: A personal God. A God who is a deliberate, conscious 
intelligence, the sort of God who listens to your prayers, forgives 
your sins. A God who sits down like a master engineer or physicist 
and designs the Universe, works out what ought to happen, worries 
about sins, all that kind of thing.

TM: Could you briefly respond, as you do in the book, to some of the 
arguments for this supernatural, directive, personal God. The 
argument from beauty...?

RD: People say things like, "If you don't believe in God, how do you 
account for Beethoven? How do you account for a lovely sunset? How do 
you account for Michelangelo?" It's such a dopey thing to say. 
Beethoven wrote beautiful music. Michelangelo painted wonderful 
paintings and did wonderful sculptures. Whether or not there is a God 
doesn't add to the argument one bit. So that's not an argument, 
although an amazingly large number of people seem to think it is.

TM: The argument from scripture...?

RD: There are lots of scriptures all around the world and they 
contradict each other. There's really no reason to suppose that just 
because something's written down, it's true. You have to ask who 
wrote it and when and why.

If you ask somebody, "Why do you believe that your Scripture is the 
Word of God?" the answer that comes back is, "Oh, because it says 
so." And you say, "Well, where does it say so?" And they say, "In my 
Scripture." So, the Holy Scripture, whichever it is, The Koran, or 
The Bible, or The Book of Mormon, says within itself that it is the 
Word of God. This is a circular argument and not to be taken 
seriously.

TM: The argument from personal experience...? In late-night 
conversations during my high school days, my questions regarding 
God's existence would be answered by the challenge-defying, "You have 
to experience it."

RD: I think that is a difficult one, but, on the other hand, anybody 
who knows anything about psychology, knows what an immensely powerful 
simulation engine the brain is. I'm impressed by the fact that every 
single night of my life, my brain conjures up images and sounds of 
things that have never existed and never will exist. They are 
completely non-sensical. It's as though I go temporarily insane every 
night of my life and you do, too. Everybody does. We get a very 
life-like, full color simulation of a fantasy world inside our heads. 
Now, when we get that in our sleep, we call it a dream. When we get 
it in our waking lives -- in much less vivid form -- we might call it 
a vision of God or a vision of an angel, or we might say "God just 
talks to me."

Even when you actually see an angel or you actually hear a voice 
inside your head, that is an easy feat of simulation for the brain to 
achieve. When it's just a sort of vague feeling that God is 
whispering to you, it's really rather pathetic to be fooled by that, 
I think.

TM: My president claims God talks to him.

RD: Yes. Your president is told by God to invade Iraq. It's a pity, 
by the way, that God didn't tell him there were no weapons of mass 
destruction.

TM: I, too, wish God had been more specific. What do you make of the 
recent scientific conversations about certain phenomena such as a 
"God nodule" in the brain?

RD: There is a certain amount of evidence that specific parts of the 
brain do have something to do with so-called religious experience. 
I've had experience of the work of the Canadian neurophysiologist, 
Michael Persinger. He tries to mimic the effects of temporal lobe 
epilepsy by passing magnetic fields through the brain. In about 
eighty percent of subjects, when he passes magnetic fields through 
certain parts of the brain, he can induce religious or mystical 
experiences. The details of the religious experience depend upon how 
the person was brought up. So, if the person was Catholic, they tend 
to see Virgin Marys or whatever it might be. I turned out to be one 
of the twenty percent for whom it didn't work. If it had worked for 
me, I probably wouldn't have seen any gods, but I probably would have 
experienced some sort of mystical experience of Oneness with the 
Universe.

TM: How universal is the belief in a supernatural God?

RD: It's universal in the sense that all human cultures that 
anthropologists have looked at seem to have something corresponding 
to a belief in some sort of God.

Sometimes it's many gods. Sometimes it's one. Sometimes it's an 
animistic set of gods -- the God of the Waterfall, the God of the 
River, the God of the Mountain, the Sun God. The details vary, but it 
does seem to be a human universal, in the same sort of way as 
heterosexual lust is a human universal, even though not all 
individual humans have it. Like sexual lust, I suspect there's a kind 
of lust for God.

TM: How do you explain its prevalence?

RD: When you ask a Darwinian like me, how we explain something, we 
usually take that to mean, "What is the Darwinian survival value of 
it?"

Quite often, when you ask what is the survival value of "X", it turns 
out that you shouldn't be asking the question about "X" at all, but 
that "X" is a by-product of something else that does have survival 
value. In this case, the suggestion I put forward as only one of many 
possible suggestions, is that religious faith is a by-product of the 
childhood tendency to believe what your parents tell you.

It's a very good idea for children to believe what parents tell them. 
A child who dis-believes what his parents tell him would probably 
die, by not heeding the parent's advice not to get into the fire, for 
example. So child brains, on this theory, are born with a rule of 
thumb, "believe what your parents tell you." Now, the problem with 
that -- where the by-product idea comes in -- is that it's not 
possible to design a brain that believes what its parents tell it, 
without believing bad things along with good things. Ideally we might 
like the child brain to filter good advice like, "Don't jump in the 
fire," from bad advice like, "Worship the tribal gods." But the 
child-brain has no way of discriminating those two kinds of advice. 
So, inevitably, a child-brain that is pre-programmed to believe and 
obey what his parents tell it, is automatically vulnerable to bad 
advice like, "Worship the tribal juju."

I think that's one part of the answer, but then, you need another 
part of the answer: Why do some kinds of bad advice, like, "Worship 
the tribal juju," survive and others not?

Beliefs like "life-after-death" spread because they are appealing. A 
lot of people don't like the idea of dying and rather do like the 
idea that they'll survive their own death. So the meme, if you like, 
spreads like a virus because people want to believe it.

TM: Though children may tend to believe what their parents tell them, 
you state strongly that a child should not be called a Catholic 
child, a Muslim child, or a Jewish child.

RD: Yes. I'm very, very keen on the idea that children should be not 
labeled like that. We're back to consciousness raising. The feminists 
raised our consciousness about use of language in all sorts of ways 
-- things like saying, "his or hers," instead of just "his". In the 
same way, I think we need to raise consciousness about such labeling 
of children.

I'm not saying that parents shouldn't influence their children. That 
would be hopelessly unrealistic. Parents influence their children in 
all sorts of ways, but I think religion is more or less unique in 
being licensed to confer a label on a child. You never talk about a 
"Republican child" or a "Democratic child." You never make the 
assumption that because a professor of post-modernist literature has 
a child, that therefore it will be a post-modernist child. It would 
be ridiculous to do that, and yet if a Christian or a Jew or a Muslim 
has a child, then the whole of society goes along with the idea that 
you can label this child "a Jewish child," "a Christian child," "A 
Muslim child." I think that is a form of child abuse. I think it's a 
civil rights issue.

TM: Many suggest that you and other atheists, perhaps especially 
scientists who are atheists, neglect phenomena that you cannot 
explain. For example, the subjective experience of meaning or comfort 
of inspiration many claim to receive from their belief or their 
relationship with God... If millions experience such things, is this 
not evidence for the source to which they attribute them? If not, can 
you clarify why it isn't?

RD: There's no question that people do get comfort and consolation 
from religion. If a loved one has died, of course, it's comforting to 
feel that they're still somewhere out there caring for you, and 
you're going to see them again one day. But, what is comforting isn't 
necessarily true, and it is sort of intellectual cowardice to say, 
"We should let people wallow in their illusions, because it comforts 
them." I think it's rather patronizing.

TM: Do you think this is similar to when families or even doctors 
debate whether to tell someone their cancer is terminal? Because, 
after all, life is terminal...

RD: That's a really good parallel. There are people who would rather 
not be told the truth by a doctor and I respect that, but that 
doesn't make it true. That you want your doctor to tell you that you 
haven't got terminal cancer, and your doctor obliges by lying to you, 
that's fine; but the fact is he has lied to you. Similarly, you may 
be comforted by the thought that there's a God looking after you, but 
if there isn't a God looking after you, then I'm afraid there isn't 
one, and that's all there is to it.

I don't want to impose my beliefs on anybody else, but I do care 
about what's true. If you want to know what I think is true, read my 
book. If you'd rather not know what I think is true, don't read my 
book.

TM: Many criticize you on the grounds that science can't answer some 
of the biggest questions or that science is unwilling or unable to 
offer those meaningful things that we just talked about. Is it fair 
to respond to your book or your arguments by pointing out 
insufficiencies of science?

RD: There are some questions that science not only can't answer, but 
doesn't want to answer, things like, "What is right? And What is 
wrong?" or "How shall we be comforted?" Science has nothing to say 
about "right" or "wrong." Moral philosophy does. There's another 
whole category of questions that science may not be able to answer -- 
the really deep questions of existence, like, "Why is there 
something, rather than nothing?" or "Where did the laws of physics 
come from in the first place?" It's an open question at the moment 
whether science will ever be able to answer questions like that.

Physicists, in particular, are working on questions like, "Where do 
the laws of physics come from?" But it's a fallacy to say that 
because science can't answer such a question, therefore religion can. 
Much more realistic to say, "Well, if science can't answer that deep 
question, nothing can."

TM: In America, we hear that we're more provincial and religious than 
so many other people; that much of Europe, even the Roman Catholic 
countries of Spain and Italy, for instance, are far more secular...

RD: I suspect that the grip that religion is alleged to have over 
America has been exaggerated. If people who are not religious would 
only recognize that they're not a beleaguered minority, but actually 
are exceedingly numerous and potentially very powerful... If they 
would stand up and recognize each other and organize, I suspect that 
they would soon give the lie to this idea that America is a supremely 
religious country.

I think there's been a kind of hijacking of American political life 
by religious interests, and I think it's rather sad the way so many 
have gone along with that. You'll see even intelligent Democrats 
desperately currying favor with the religious vote because they think 
it's so powerful. No member of Congress will admit to being an 
atheist, although obviously some of them are.

TM: In polls, people are least likely to vote for an atheist for 
significant political office. They claim to be much more willing to 
vote, for instance, for a homosexual or a Muslim...

RD: It's no wonder that politicians are scared.

TM: I don't think we can expect too many politicians to move first.

RD: People have to come out of the closet and write to their 
Congressmen and Congresswomen and say, "Look, stop sucking up to the 
religious vote. Suck up to us, for a change. Better still, don't suck 
up to anybody, but speak your own convictions."

TM: I once asked a member of the Achuar -- an Amazon rainforest tribe 
who had its first contact with the modern world in the 1970s -- "How 
do you feel about the missionaries?" I assumed he would say, "Oh, bad 
folks," but he said, "They were the ones who stopped us from killing 
each other all the time."

Although several of our Founding Fathers were more likely Deists than 
conventional Christians, they believed that once you took away the 
monarchy or the Papacy, that the people did need religion in order to 
behave as a moral society.

Do you agree that religion is a civilizing or moralizing force? RD: 
There's something awfully patronizing and condescending about saying, 
"Well, of course, we don't need religion, but the common people do." 
I hope it's not as bad as that.

With regard to the missionaries being a civilizing influence on 
tribes whose habit was to kill each other -- presumably, if their 
first contact with Westerners had been with policemen, they would 
have said, "Until the policemen came, we killed each other."

Through centuries of change, we have now reduced our natural tendency 
to kill each other, but there have long been tribes where killing is 
the norm and the way to achieve worldly success. In our society we 
talk about making a killing on Wall Street. The equivalent in some 
tribes in the Amazon jungle might be to literally go and kill sexual 
rivals, for example.

That changes when such tribes are brought into contact with Western 
civilization. The fact that the people who go out of their way to 
bring Western civilization to such tribes usually are missionaries 
doesn't mean that religion fosters the "Thou salt not kill," point of 
view. "Thou shalt not kill" is a general moral principle, which we 
all have now, whether or not we're religious.

TM: Some people will claim that without religion we would not act 
morally; we would lack ethics...

RD: That's an appalling thing to say, isn't it? It suggests that the 
only reason we have morality -- the only reason we don't kill and 
rape and steal -- is that we're afraid of being found out by God. 
We're afraid that God is watching us, afraid of the great 
surveillance camera in the sky. Now, that's not a very noble reason 
for being good.

As a matter of fact, there's not the slightest evidence that 
religious people in a given society are any more moral than 
non-religious people. We are, all of us in the modern world, far more 
reluctant to kill, reluctant to discriminate against other people on 
grounds of sex. We no longer regard slavery as a good thing. All 
these things are universally approved of among educated people of 
goodwill in modern society, whether or not they are religious. You 
can point to abolitionists who happened to be religious, and you can 
point to other religious individuals who were in favor of slavery.

Modern morality is very different from the truly horrifying version 
of morality in the Old Testament. If we went by the Bible, we'd still 
be taking slaves. If we went by the Bible, we'd still be stoning 
people to death for the crime of picking up sticks on the Sabbath. 
There are all sorts of ways in which we've moved on, and nobody who 
claims to get their morality from religion, could seriously maintain 
that they get it from Scripture.

TM: You have a problem with moderate Christians, Jews, and Muslims, don't you?

RD: I take this largely from Sam Harris. In his two excellent books, 
Letter to a Christian Nation and The End of Faith, he points out -- 
and I agree with him -- that the majority of religious people are 
perfectly nice people who don't do horrible things. Yet moderate 
religion makes the world safe for extremist religion by teaching that 
religious faith is a virtue, and by the immunity to criticism that 
religion enjoys. That immunity extends to extremists like Osama Bin 
Laden and that dreadful man who goes around saying, "God hates fags." 
I've forgotten his name...

TM: Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, the list goes on.

RD: The world is made safe for people like them and Osama Bin Laden 
because we've all been brainwashed to respect religious faith and not 
to criticize it with the same vigor we criticize political and other 
sorts of opinions that we disagree with.

If you can say, "such and such a view is part of my religion," 
everybody tiptoes away with great respect. "Oh, it's part of your 
religion," then of course, you must go ahead. In a way, we've been 
asking for trouble by moderate people persuading us to give to all 
religion a respect, which it has never done anything to deserve.

TM: You quote physicist Steven Weinberg: "Religion is an insult to 
human dignity. Without it, you'd have good people doing good things 
and evil people doing evil things. For good people to do evil things, 
it takes religion."

You open the book marveling at the wonders of existence. You end it 
writing about your personal experience of awe and transcendence. You 
also write eloquently about this in a previous book, Unweaving the 
Rainbow.

RD: Unweaving the Rainbow, which I wrote in the late '90s, was my 
answer to those people who say that science and, in particular, my 
world view in The Selfish Gene was cold and bleak and loveless. Maybe 
I could read a few words from the opening of Unweaving the Rainbow, 
which I've set aside and asked to be read at my funeral.

"We are going to die and that makes us the lucky ones. Most people 
are never going to die because they're never going to be born. The 
potential people who could have been here in my place, but who will, 
in fact, never see the light of day, outnumber the sand grains of 
Sahara. ...In the face of these stupefying odds, it is you and I, in 
our ordinariness, that are here. Here's another respect in which we 
are lucky. The universe is older than a hundred million centuries. 
Within a comparable time, the sun will swell to a red giant and 
engulf the earth. Every century of hundreds of millions has been in 
its time, or will be when its time comes, the present century. The 
present moves from the past to the future like a tiny spotlight 
inching its way along a gigantic ruler of time. Everything behind the 
spotlight is in darkness, the darkness of the dead past. Everything 
ahead of the spotlight is in the darkness of the unknown future. The 
odds of your century being the one in the spotlight are the same as 
the odds that a penny, tossed down at random, will land on a 
particular ant crawling somewhere on the road from New York to San 
Francisco. You are lucky to be alive and so am I."

We are lucky to be alive and therefore we should value life. Life is 
precious. We're never going to get another one. This is it. Don't 
waste it. Open your eyes. Open your ears. Treasure the experiences 
that you have and don't waste your time fussing about a non-existent 
future life after you're dead. Try to do as much good as you can now 
to others. Try to live life as richly as possible during the time 
that you have left available to you.

Interviewer Terrence McNally hosts Free Forum on KPFK 90.7FM, Los 
Angeles (streaming at kpfk.org).


_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
http://sustainablelists.org/mailman/listinfo/biofuel_sustainablelists.org

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Search the combined Biofuel and Biofuels-biz list archives (50,000 messages):
http://www.mail-archive.com/biofuel@sustainablelists.org/

Reply via email to