Tuesday, July 3, 2007

A New Secularism?

If you've spend anytime in bookstores -- real or virtual -- recently, you can't help but notice the recent spate of books on atheism. Richard Dawkins' "The God Delusion," Sam Harris's "Letter to a Christian Nation," and Christopher Hitchens' "God is Not Great" have heralded a comeback for the unbelievers. We have always had doubters, of course -- from Epicurus and Lucretius in ancient times to Nietzsche and Bertrand Russell in modern times -- but atheism has never gained public respectability in the United States. It is one of history's great ironies that the United States, with its religious freedoms and "godless" Constitution, has always been one of the most Christian, church-going countries on earth. One can scarcely imagine a professed atheist running for any notable office in the reasonably foreseeable future, for example.


As these books demonstrate, however, atheism, or at least skepticism, might be finding more fertile ground in early 21st century America. Not that the United States is experiencing the early throes of the secular shift that is already taking place in Western Europe (and that is so vexing to Benedict XVI), but the country is ripe for a more critical look at the role of religion in public life. There are many reasons for this. For one thing, in the last 30 years evangelical Christians have become an integral component of a Republican Party that has won five Presidential elections and captured Congress for the first time in 50 years (only to lose control again after 12 years). Their mounting influence in the party has alienated the libertarian wing of the party, as well as independent voters, who were content to go along for the ride until differences with the Bush Administration over Iraq, government spending, immigration, domestic security, and simple competence finally rent the party. Although these particular ills were not caused by the "values" wing of the party, their stance on "moral" issues such as gay marriage and abortion seem increasingly counterproductive to old guard Republicans and independents who simply want the government to do what it is supposed to do in a competent manner and otherwise get out of the way.


At the same time, the Catholic Church has lost a great deal of credibility with the country at large, including many Catholics, for its longstanding inability -- or refusal -- to expose and punish pedophiles in its ranks. In the world at large, Islamic extremists have assailed the very idea of not only free speech, but of rational thought itself. And as Christopher Hitchens rightly points out, the teachings of the Enlightenment and the still-young science of evolutionary biology are now available, through the Internet, to everyone -- not just the academic elite. The wider dissemination of scientific knowledge can only lead to increased skepticism towards policy prescriptions explicitly based on religious faith, such as the teaching of Creationism in public schools.


Hitchens' thesis is that "all major confrontations over the right to free thought, free speech, and free inquiry have taken the same form -- of a religious attempt to assert the literal and limited mind over the ironic and inquiring one." As Hitchens seems to recognize, however, this theory broke down in the 20th century, which saw the advent of murderous, avowedly atheistic regimes in the Soviet Union, China, and Germany, among others. Hitchens responds by emphasizing the quasi-religious cult of personality and mythology that infected these regimes; even "Stalinist" North Korea is a weird hybrid of Communism, Confucianism, and ancestor worship. But a better answer is that modern atheism does not demand that religion be stamped out and replaced with fresh dogma, but instead exhorts humankind to transcend what Hitchens calls the "infancy" of the species and adhere to the rationalism of the Enlightenment. Sam Harris puts it less pointedly than Hitchens, advocating a humble, moral atheism that seeks to maximize happiness and alleviate suffering.


What does all of this mean? It surely does not mean that organized religion faces imminent and inevitable collapse in the United States. Christianity is too integral a part of the national fabric to fade away anytime soon, and very few Americans would want it to. But increased religious skepticism could shape the national debate over issues such as abortion, stem cell research, and gay marriage by emboldening secular-minded Republicans and Independents to challenge religiously-based assumptions emanating from the other side of the culture war. And it could make religious skepticism more respectable with the public at large. (It is, of course, already quite respectable in many quarters, especially college campuses, which unfortunately have their own brand of intolerance and group-think.) If nothing else, any trend that results in a more engaged, more enlightened, and more skeptical public can only augur well for the civic health of the nation.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

What worries me about the so-called 'New Atheism' -- particularly the militant atheism that Dawkins, Harris, and Dennett are currently popularizing -- is that it is as narrow-minded an orthodoxy as any church. It seeks no compromise, and no middle ground. It claims to know The Truth, and is self-satisfied that it has The Answer. They condemn belief in God and also a respect for God believers -- that religion is evil.

Dawkins said that "highly intelligent people are mostly atheists." This is the spirit of the times, I'm afraid. No compromise. No center. The same incurious, unabashed bellicosity that orthodoxy engenders, God or no god.

The spirit of the Constitution was for government to steer clear of religion, and leave it wide birth. I don't think it was intended to mean freedom from religion -- it was for freedom of religion. Freedom from religion is wrought with intolerance. Freedom of religion is a groundwork for moderation and tolerance.

I resent that our modern culture has compressed theology into the Dawkins camp and the Falwell camp -- as if those two extreme, unaccommodating views are the only two choices between believing or not believing in God. From my viewpoint, their debate is easily put this way:

Dawkins: "It must have a natural cause."
Falwell: "It must have a supernatural cause."
Dawkins: "Yeah but, it must have a natural cause."
Falwell: "I know but it must have a supernatural cause."
Dawkins: "Natural cause!"
Falwell: "Supernatural cause!"

Ad nauseam. We live in a time of arrogance. God or no god, arrogance is the enemy of freedom.

barrister63 said...

Cicero,

Thank you for your probing comments. I share your abhorrence of intellectual arrogance of any stripe, and freedom of religion (not freedom from religion) and the tolerance that implies is a pillar of our Constitutional order. That being said, I don't think we face the threat of "militant atheism" gaining much traction with the public. (I can't imagine more than a handful of peple buying Hitchens' arguments about circumcision and religion being a form of child abuse, for example). I think that works such as these are more of a backlash against overtly religious notions informing public policy, just as the rise of evangelical Christianity was a backlash against the cultural upheaval of the 1960s. As such, I don't think their long term effect will be the rise of a large camp of militant atheists, but rather the rise of a more engaged and skeptical public who will challenge policies and assumptions that lack scientific and rational support.

Along the same lines, The Extreme Center would acknowledge that as a matter of public policy, there should be a "center" between belief and atheism -- people are free to believe what they wish. The argument you posit between Dawkins and Falwell will never be resolved; no one can "prove" that God does or doesn't exist. But we can resolve the argument over whether evolution occurred, or whether there is a scientific (as opposed to philosophical or theological) basis for creationism (or if you like, intelligent design). It did, and there isn't. That doesn't mean that God doesn't exist. I wouldn't want Dawkins, Harris, et al., to run the country (God forbid!), but if they force us to think more critically about our otherwise unexamined assumptions, they will have done us a great service.

Smilin' Paul Villa said...

TEC,

From a purely political view, the Republican Party would have achieved nothing without the evangelicals. The Libertarian Wing as you call it, I prefer Country Club wing, was quite content to play the role of minority party forever. Goldwater forced Conservatives to re-examine the content of the Republican Party ideology and most importantly, galvanized evangelicals and grassroots operatives, something the country clubbers and libertarians had never done before. The resultant Reagan landslide elections were the result.

In short, you may not like the alliance but as Churchill noted, politics makes for strange bedfellows. Without the energy, organization, money and grassroots efforts provided by the Religous Right, no Conservative Republican will be elected to national office.

I would also note that I have yet to see creationism being taught in any public school. Since I am not convinced that macroevolution of the nature outlined by Darwin actually occurred, I don't see any problem with instructing students in additional theories. Not that the government is going to do that. Which brings me back to States Rights, if Kansas wants to include Intelligent Design in their curriculum, they should be permitted to do so, rather than bow to the wishes of some political hack appointee in the Education Department, who grew up in Ithaca and is a leftover bureaucrat from the Carter Administration.

Smilin' Paul

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