The antireligion wars
started by Daniel Dennett and Sam Harris will heat up even more with this salvo
from celebrated Oxford biologist Dawkins. For a scientist who criticizes
religion for its intolerance, Dawkins has written a surprisingly intolerant
book, full of scorn for religion and those who believe. But Dawkins, who gave
us the selfish gene, anticipates this criticism. He says it's the scientist and
humanist in him that makes him hostile to religions—fundamentalist Christianity
and Islam come in for the most opprobrium—that close people's minds to
scientific truth, oppress women and abuse children
psychologically with the notion of eternal damnation. While Dawkins can be
witty, even confirmed atheists who agree with his advocacy of science and
vigorous rationalism may have trouble stomaching some of the rhetoric: the
biblical Yahweh is "psychotic," Aquinas's proofs of God's existence
are "fatuous" and religion generally is "nonsense." The
most effective chapters are those in which Dawkins calms down, for instance,
drawing on evolution to disprove the ideas behind intelligent design. In other
chapters, he attempts to construct a scientific
scaffolding for atheism, such as using evolution again to rebut the notion that
without God there can be no morality. He insists that religion is a divisive
and oppressive force, but he is less convincing in arguing that the world would
be better and more peaceful without it. (Oct. 18)
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