Month: January 2011

  • Is Luke Muehlhauser right that Sam Harris is unclear about morality?

    Intro:

    Luke Muehlhauser, over at Common Sense Atheism, influences a lot of atheists in the popular blogosophere.  Most of the time that's a good thing, imo.  However, on the question of moral discussion, even though his choice theory (desirism) is one I accept as probably correct, I think many of his observations on Sam Harris' latest book, "The Moral Landscape: How Science Can Determine Human Values" are unhelpful and counterproductive.


    Where is Sam Harris' positive argument anyway?

    Luke says:

    But here, it’s again difficult to locate a positive argument that morality is concerned well-being.  And, perhaps “well-being” is a question-begging term. Is well-being defined in terms of moral goodness? Then Harris’ claim is empty and circular.

    To which Harris has already replied:

    Many people believe that the problem with talking about moral truth, or with asserting that there is a necessary connection between morality and well-being, is that concepts like "morality" and "well-being" must be defined with reference to specific goals and other criteria -- and nothing prevents people from disagreeing about these definitions. I might claim that morality is really about maximizing well-being and that well-being entails a wide range of cognitive/emotional virtues and wholesome pleasures [...]

    Of course, goals and conceptual definitions matter. But this holds for all phenomena and for every method we use to study them. My father, for instance, has been dead for 25 years. What do I mean by "dead"? Do I mean "dead" with reference to specific goals? Well, if you must, yes -- goals like respiration, energy metabolism, responsiveness to stimuli, etc. The definition of "life" remains, to this day, difficult to pin down. Does this mean we can't study life scientifically? No. The science of biology thrives despite such ambiguities. The concept of "health" is looser still: it, too, must be defined with reference to specific goals -- not suffering chronic pain, not always vomiting, etc. -- and these goals are continually changing. Our notion of "health" may one day be defined by goals that we cannot currently entertain with a straight face (like the goal of spontaneously regenerating a lost limb). Does this mean we can't study health scientifically?

    I wonder if there is anyone on earth who would be tempted to attack the philosophical underpinnings of medicine with questions like: "What about all the people who don't share your goal of avoiding disease and early death? Who is to say that living a long life free of pain and debilitating illness is 'healthy'? What makes you think that you could convince a person suffering from fatal gangrene that he is not as healthy you are?" And yet, these are precisely the kinds of objections I face when I speak about morality in terms of human and animal well-being. Is it possible to voice such doubts in human speech? Yes. But that doesn't mean we should take them seriously.

    Apparently Luke expects to be taken seriously for some reason.  Luke had already grabbed a quote from that very Sam Harris article as though his objection had not been addressed.  Hence the conversation is going backwards.  To go forward (or rather to simply catch up to where Harris already is) it entails making the "huge" leap from ordinary general notions of well-being to something a bit more specific (or as Harris said: "a wide range of cognitive/emotional virtues and wholesome pleasures") like:

    joy, love, self respect, good friendships, security/trust, contentment, peace/tranquility, self-improving behavior, sense of purpose/self worth, positive social climate

    And not:

    misery, loneliness, self-loathing, bad friendships, fear/paranoia, discontentment, anxiety/stress, neurosis, depression, self-destructive behavior, purposeless/worthlessness, negative social climate.

    You are human, right Luke?  I know you know what these things are given our mutual pattern recognition abilities as well as general mental disposition for seeking out the former states over the later.  And I know you are smart enough to formulate a simple mental picture of "well being" vs. "misery" (aka, the moral landscape).  I didn't need Harris to spell it out for me, because I share a great deal of psychological dispositions with members of our species like Harris.  I allow his words to refer to my background knowledge without unnecessarily disrupting the conversation.

    So...what is another Luke excuse?  Luke says:

    Or perhaps well-being just means happiness? Then his claim is not circular, but is probably false. We humans value other things than happiness, which is why many modern utilitarians speak of maximizing “preference satisfaction” or “desire satisfaction” rather than happiness.

    Somehow happiness doesn't roughly equal preference and desire satisfaction in Luke's world?  Very strange. 

    The intellectual implausibility of Luke's position is obvious.  How could he have ever even known what he was looking for in a moral theory in gist unless he was already operating under the basic assumptions Harris lays out?  Luke, on his blog, has related that he was grossly concerned with finding the right moral theory because otherwise he wouldn't know if he were doing a great deal more harm than good.  But such a sentiment is only explicable with Harris' presentation.  If desirism had somehow pointed to the "bad" category and not the "good" category, would Luke have embraced it?  Um...probably not.  Let's be honest.  Or we'd rightly think he was crazy for doing so.  How could we know what "dead" means unless we already kinda-sorta-know before we get to the point of spelling out that a "dead" body is one that fails to live up to (as Harris says):

    ...goals like respiration, energy metabolism, responsiveness to stimuli, etc.

    Right? 

    Will someone somewhere in the world challenge our categories to some degree as we get more and more specific?  I'm sure.  And the debate will progress rather than regress through territory already covered.  Desirism may well be on the horizon of moral science as the next level of articulation, but offering up these kinds of nonsense objections in the meantime when establishing ground zero is entirely inappropriate for someone as knowledgeable and skilled as Luke Muehlhauser, imo.

    Americans don't know a great deal about "honor," for example, even though the sentiment "It is better to die than to live without honor" is a moral truism of many cultures.  I certainly don't live my life guided especially by the metric of honor, though I could characterize much of what I do as honorable.  I would like to think that an honest, systematic, and comprehensive cross-cultural evaluation could be brought to my doorstep giving me the full list of pros and cons about what it means to live in a collectivistic honor/shame society (especially as compared to other types of societies).  And since I'm not so close-minded, I might well find myself at some moral disadvantage for having grown up in a society that emphasizes other things.  I'm human.  They are human.  Obviously everything has something going for it.  It's obvious any one person or culture isn't going to be born with a perfect set of cultural moral expectations.  None of them are going to be completely wrong either.

    When person x dogmatically asserts that their preferred overblown singular mental state is the only way to go even though obviously that's not true or representative of most of the population, we don't have to listen.  People can be wrong and solipsistic.  Obviously.  Am I alone in these kinds of sentiments?  I sure hope not. 


    Outro:

    Will we be dogmatic and close-minded when others offer reasonable challenges to our moral goals or will we be the kind of person who is on that journey and exploration of the possibilities to sort through?  Will we empathize with honest alternatives or will we give up, because thinking things through is just so darn hard?  Those questions are a great deal more relevant to the conversation and our moral growth, imo, than the cliche' (conversation stifling) philosophical hairsplitting that Muehlhauser appears to have presented. 

    Ben

  • What is the next step for Sam Harris' moral science?

    A commenter on my Amazon review of Sam Harris' latest book, "The Moral Landscape: How Science Can Determine Human Values" asked me this:

    Ben,

    You're obviously very excited about this book. What changes do you envision for our government, exactly? Do you want to direct scientists to study things they don't already study? (If so, I can't imagine what those things might be.) Do you want to replace voters and voter representatives with a board of scientists? Do you want to abolish religion? Or what?


    I'm not sure exactly where this person was coming from (since there are some absurd suggestions and incredulity packed in there), but it's a fair question in essence.  So I responded:

    S. Prewitt,

    Thanks for commenting. I'd definitely like to know Harris' thoughts on the matter of what the first step is after the scientific community accepts his basic premise and acknowledges that there can be a branch of science for morality.

    I'm not in the best position to say what that might be. Though to speculate (since this wouldn't be a fun comment if I didn't), since there is already quite a bit of research on human behavior and psychology from the sciences that does exist, it would seem (given the second step of the scientific method) that would be the "gather information" phase to see exactly where we are at. There's probably tons of info and it would need to be restructured in terms of Harris' basic framework.

    How do we formulate what we already know in terms of moral prescriptions for improving our standing on the moral landscape? What issues arise from attempting to do this? I'm assuming that would entail evaluating specific metrics to see which if any are feasible and scientifically operational. Surely there'd be a debate over all the most plausible candidates for choice mental states (like the ones I referenced in my review near the end). Although I've seen studies on that already where people from all over the world were asked what they thought the best qualities of a person are. Something like that might be a heuristical starting place. We'd have to see what objections arise from beginning to create our recipe for "the good mental life" that is genuinely cross-cultural.

    Ultimately, I'd like to see research that can be condensed into a textbook on the topic of morality. I'd like to see there be moral education in schools. I'd like to see rigorous study on effective government structures and ways of nation building that have been shown to work around the world in bits and pieces. I'd like to see politicians who can brag about their higher education in morality. I'd like to see science advisors to leaders of the country to keep tabs on evidence-based policies and perhaps create a give and take environment where advice is given and studies are commissioned based on current needs. Perhaps questions like, "How should we structure our business world so that people get the best balance out of a satisfying career and also leisure time?" would be good to pursue. It would also be interesting to create some kind of automated online "moral advice" service designed to walk people through normative life decisions or something like that. We have that kind of thing for physical health issues (though there is possibly already something like it for mental health issues, but possibly not in a positive constructive sense?). Perhaps "what moral science says" can be included on voter ballots on particular issues and people can feel free to disregard the facts just like they do with all the current science on issues like vaccines, global warming, and whatever else.

    I don't think we should abolish religion or do anything like a scientific takeover of government. It should all be open-ended and complementary to most of what we already have going for us. The information should be made as available and easily accessible as possible in all the venues where it could help the most. But no one should be forced to use it. When moral science says, "initiative x would be the best we can do for our community" any group will have the opportunity to step up and pitch in towards that end. There shouldn't be some thought-police clause concerning everything you happen to believe.

    Anyway, that's my general conception of what may lie ahead in the next 10-20 years. If artificial intelligence is around the corner a few decades after that, then we'll start wanting to talk about how to use what we know to program moral mind machines. We'll want to talk about transhumanistic issues on how to augment the brain to correct for whatever issues evolution never quite got around to perfecting. We'll want to have all of the basic issues worked out well in advance, because the next challenges ahead are going to be even more difficult than getting the ball rolling here.

    Ben


    Outro:

    And then we kill 7 million Jews.  I may have left that part out.

    Ben

  • Is bryangoodrich right that Sam Harris doesn't know morality?

    Intro:

    I recently posted my general review of Sam Harris' latest book, "The Moral Landscape: How Science Can Determine Human Values."  A fellow xangan, bryangoodrich, let me know that he'd previously posted his thoughts on a Sam Harris Tedtalk on the same topic.  There's enough one to one correlation with the talk and the contents of the book to make this relevant to my review of the book.


    Bryan says:

    ...well-being and associated morality is "agent relative." Harris wants to talk about there being an objective notion of well-being, but he talks of objectivity in morality like objectivity in science. Talking about values can be like talking about facts in that we can form cognitive (semantic) theories about how they are associated, but values are not facts. Their very nature imposes relativistic or perspectival constraints not found in "billiard ball objectivity."

    Rather than use the terms "objective" and "subjective" it may be better to use "common ground" to refer to common psychological capacity for mental states as members of the same species and "arbitrary" to refer to benign divergence from that.  People who don't know about higher moral peaks and are relatively content in their ignorance still have the psychological capacity to have a different and better life.  That's "billard ball objectivity" to me as things just aren't "agent relative" enough in any relevant sense to undermine Harris' proposal.

    Bryan makes a perplexing claim:

    I have seen no evidence to support the idea that the tyranny of custom preventing us from having available certain choices causes any sort of conscious defect. Without that, Harris' fundamental thesis is not supported.

    Bryan's objection might make sense if Harris was only talking about active suffering, but he is also talking about the positive side of the moral landscape as well.  Surely there's no overwhelming reason to discuss monastic techniques for achieving amazing levels of contentment, yet Harris brings that up a lot more than all of the other new atheists out there, doesn't he?  So there's not really a conflict here as Bryan imagines. 

    Bryan says:

    ...notice a recurring theme in Harris' example: Middle Eastern women are often forced, either by cultural stigma or by physical abuse, to cover themselves completely when in public. He is quick to note that if someone in a free country like America chooses to wear a burqa, this is alright. To maintain a tradition by our own free choice is fundamentally different than not having the choice at all. There is a difference between someone fasting and someone starving, for instance.

    All humans self-justify their choices as a means of preserving the norms of their self-esteem.  That doesn't mean their every perceived beneficial justification actually represents what they think it does.  I don't think we should necessarily assume that liberty makes everything okay.  It just often makes things better since people are free to navigate away from imposed suffering and towards mental states that they at least believe work better for them.  Individuals tend to be the best judges of that to a point, but ignorance is a factor as well.  Even the women who have the liberty to choose the burqa can be wrong about that choice as a lifestyle just as someone who chooses to fast can be wrong about the benefits of fasting.  They might make different choices if introduced to certain facts or methodologies which accomplished the same goal better.  It is not an uncommon post-hoc sentiment to look back on the choices made in the past and exclaim, "What was I thinking!?" as though there is a problem with their memory. 

    Bryan says:

    If we are to say that being forced to wear a burqa with no other choice is wrong, even though it induces no mental stress on the person accepting that lifestyle, then we are saying which conventions of morality are better. We may have good reasons for that, but they do not rely upon the information Harris wants us to believe is important. 

    The active suffering of Muslim women of this kind is just a factual question Harris may be wrong about.  If there aren't any problems, and burqa wearing turns out to be as awesome as it gets, then Harris is going to have to agree by his own logic.  Even if the example of the burqa can be found not to work for some reason and that active "oppression" is entirely contrived from our narrow-minded Western perspective, surely Bryan is aware of repressive cultural norms in general?  Virtually everything feminists and gay rights activists argue for fall into that category.  Religious people push back when their cultural options are cut off in a secular society, etc.  Pick a different one and we can simply use that as our example, but I don't think we have to.

    Aside from the idea of just pleasing the arbitrary whims of Allah*, what exactly is a Muslim woman trying to accomplish in her day to day experience by wearing a burqa?  What are the psychological expectations of a woman in the West who chooses to show a great deal of skin on a daily basis (since that dichotomy is Harris' common example)?  Taking into consideration whatever each woman might report in addition to a full cross-cultural analysis of women from around the world on the same kind of issue, what are all of the possible "psychological goals" that human females are attempting to actualize with their clothing choices?  We already have some idea of what that palette of experiences will be to do a preliminary assessment (which of course can be checked for bias and other mistakes with further analysis).  Who is hitting the best balance of modesty, self-respect, personal liberty, net solicitation of flattering social approval as well as comfortable indifference (which would also entail different encultured assumptions for men as well in a full picture), and whatever else we may find that tends to be important to women.  Who can boast the most?  Surely someone can.  It's not like every moral/relational mental framework is static and perfectly attuned to every representative individual. 

    Harris suggests something in between the extremes.  Someone may claim that they have the maximum possible level of self-respect for example, but perhaps we can do brain scans to show just how active that part of their mind is when feeling that way in comparison to another person's alternative claim.  Perhaps further research might also be able to cut through the self-reporting artifacts by determining the frequency and longevity of such experiences in every day life as well.  In all likelihood, when all the facts are in and when the logic is corrected there will probably be a meaningful answer (whether Harris' moderate answer is correct or not) that the vast majority of women who care about their experience of themselves should want to know about in a morally prescriptive sense on the issue.

    As I said in my review:

    Even our own values change over time, from moment to moment, and we are constantly navigating the perils of self-contradiction, personal ignorance, and our own immaturity when engaging the world of value differences.  There's not even such a thing as a genuine cultural baseline inside of one culture for relativism to latch onto.  If you are doing any effective moralizing for yourself or your own not-so-static culture or any trouble-shooting whatsoever, you do in fact have all the tools you need to sort the entire world out whether you recognize that or not.

    If my own convention is to mean anything at all, and if I have anything in common with other humans, we can in principle sort this stuff out even if it turns out the practical science can't be used to tease out results.  I really don't understand how anyone can hope to argue for an arbitrary dividing line where those tools cease to apply to sorting out the human condition.  Otherwise we're just making a whole bunch of arbitrary stuff up that doesn't actually correlate with improving one's life or avoiding the many flavors of misery. 

    Bryan says:

    ...people in these sort of "problem case" scenarios are often not in some sort of conscious detriment. Consider an abused and overworked housewife or an impoverished black male. In both cases, they may be consciously well-off, even though they lack substantial freedoms to enjoy things other people readily obtain. The black male may not get a great job, drive a BMW or get an advanced education. Nevertheless, he may go through his entirely life satisfied. Why? Because he has no aspirations to get a great job, drive a BMW or obtain an advanced degree. His life expectations were low to begin with, and so he was satisfied with his lowly life.

    I don't get the impression that Harris' conception of the moral landscape entails that everyone drives a Ferrari.  Bryan feels free to use the value-laden terms "abused" and "overworked" in reference to the housewife.  That's a little confusing since there's no reason to call someone abused if there are no symptoms of abuse to appeal to.  I'm assuming Bryan is not using the example of "stable" dysfunctional relationships that are clearly problematic from the outside and yet viciously defended from the inside despite the cycles of abuse.  We must be talking about something more low key than that.   

    It's definitely an interesting point and contributes additional complexities to the discussion.  People don't know what they don't know and may report "wellness" from their current level of expectations given their knowledge base of possible mental states.  However, to speak for Harris (if I may, or at least to speak for myself), I don't consider this a meaningful stumbling block to proceeding with moral science.  It can just become an axiom of moral science that humans can achieve the maximal states of happiness with a variety of life expectations.  Is that really a problem?  Cinderella might be able to be just as happy slaving under her step-mother if she never has another option as she is living the life of a fully appreciated princess.  Even taking the pictures that Bryan presents for granted as static demographics (which probably isn't ever entirely true, since I don't know of anyone who doesn't ever consider other options for their life), that's only a slice of the spectrum of humanity and doesn't refute the relevancy of the rest of the spectrum.  There can be many stunted "I don't know any better" hills on the moral landscape where perhaps not a lot of suffering is happening (and hence, less worthy of our time as far as solving the world's problems go). 

    However that doesn't mean that someone who happens to know better can't evaluate them and make educated guesses as to what might be better.  We do that all the time with friends and family going through the complexities and dramas of their lives.  We make constant judgments about when others are failing to meet their "full potential" in their ignorance and this isn't crazy talk (or crazy thoughts) in principle even though often enough we can be hasty and make poor judgments based on the wrong things.  It is logically possible for someone to be more aware than someone else when it comes to positive and even negative mental states.  I don't think that should be a controversial claim.  In our own person experience and life history it is typical to be informed of higher elevations on the moral landscape whether by stumbling into them or through advertisement from others.  Presumably, a comprehensive appraisal of what is possible for human beings could inform us where the highest peaks are.  If I can hope to find higher elevations on the moral landscape in my personal experience (which is obviously true), I see no reason why a concerted effort on the part of our most rigorous methods couldn't do even better. 

    There probably is some limited detriment to informing people of what they don't have in terms of mental states.  They become "have nots" whereas they otherwise would have been "didn't know any betters."  One could construe situations where "ignorance is relative bliss" but in an information age and in public discourse, this isn't as important as building the best picture of human capacities that we can.  It may be an issue with dealing with primitive cultures around the world which are not on the main street of the world community, but I don't think the "right to be ignorant" applies to anyone else in a responsible conversation that attempts to get all of our moral facts straight. 

    Bryan says:

    ...Harris has argued for something entirely opposite of what he says is fundamental to morality. It is true that taking consequences and suffering into account is important. These manifest at aggregate levels by heuristics we identify as being important to accept, at least to those that accept that convention. But to recognize the significance of our heuristics over those of others cannot be defended by a thesis of mental suffering. As Harris has done, it must be defended by a theory of liberty, rights and justice.

    Liberty, rights and justice either have consequences for the well-being of conscious creatures or there is no reason to defend them and that's what Harris has been seamlessly arguing for all along.  The error that Harris constantly harps on is to allow the discussion to separate those realms. 

    *I'm assuming there are conceptions of Allah where he and Harris could be on the same page in principle in terms of stipulating behaviors that maximize well-being.  Many theists have this kind of view where guidelines for proper human behavior can simply be "reverse engineered" from experience.


    Outro:

    So there appears to be just a few minor conceptual errors and misunderstandings.  Most of what Bryan says in his post, I think Harris would agree with.

    Ben

  • Should anti-bullying legislation include enumerated categories for victim groups?

    Intro:

    I started and run a forum called Responsible Public Debate at the local Ethical Society in St. Louis, MO.  I invite various speakers to present their position in contrast to another.  They give their   presentation, respond to each other's points, and then we take audience questions.  Two weeks later after some fact checking, video uploading, and some argument mapping we meet again to build off of the cases laid out in the debate, evaluate the outcomes of the fact checking, and catch all those loose ends that typically tend to get lost when debates come and go.  All in all, it can be a very enriched experience tackling an issue for those who participate.  This is an exercise in civility and responsible epistemology and a learning experience on just how to make this kind of thing happen.  Ideally, I'd like to see RPD groups (or something like them) pop up all over the country at a grass roots level and become an expected staple of a healthy democratic society.  I'm also sure to promote any other forums in the area and abroad that embody similar values and give shout outs to instances of healthy cross-ideological conversations that happen in our media. 


    RPD4:  Should anti-bullying legislation include enumerated categories for victim groups?

    The argument map (click to rebiggen):

    The issue is about including a clause in anti-bullying legislation that goes out of its way to define specific categories of victim groups.  The clause reads:

    Bullying that is reasonably perceived as being motivated by actual or perceived race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, gender, sexual orientation as defined in section 557.035, intellectual ability, physical appearance, or a mental, physical or sensory disability or disorder; or on the basis of association with others identified by these categories; is prohibited.

    Does this help or hinder?

    My answer:  It probably helps

    Eleven states that have enumeration in their laws have fewer reported cases of bullying.  As even the research points out, correlation is not causation, but the logic behind why enumeration helps seems more solid than the logic against it.  Enumeration empowers teachers to be able to speak up and say that something like "being gay" is okay in some authoritative sense where otherwise they might fear losing their job for being some gay activist.  It is legal in Missouri to fire someone for being gay or to kick them out of their apartment and so have a specific legal clause that ensures this category is protected means that teachers can freely do their job.  It also enables students who have a minority status to feel more secure when perhaps the local prejudices of the school they attend might otherwise seem set against them by default.  Even if more tolerant and understanding school districts happen to be the ones most likely to adopt enumerated policies (in other words, the enumeration didn't exactly cause the benefit), this doesn't seem like an argument against the positive case for enumeration.  Its seems more like an argument for a change in attitude on behalf of the states and school boards to get in step with the idea behind the legislation which would further contribute to that end. 

    I await to see the evidence that shows that enumeration somehow lop-sides the focus on protecting certain kinds of victims over others that have not been spelled out.  It is not like we are introducing teachers to the concepts of ethnicity, religion, or sexual orientation.  They were there all along and I don't think calling attention to them is somehow mental sabotage or blinders towards other more vague kinds of bullying as much as it is legal structure to protect all parties involved, enabling them to do what should be done.  Most of us have probably been bullied at some point in the past as one of our debaters pointed out (I think I can count the number of times on one hand for me), but some of us were bullied much more frequently than others and for basically the same set of obvious reasons.  Some of the broadest sides of the barn need to be spelled out and the Safe Schools Act can simply add an open-ended clause in addition.  The punishments for bullying, as I understand it, are no more harsh for any other kind, so this doesn't appear to be a "thought crimes" issue.  Certainly more study could be done on the issue to tease out every angle which could be addressed to further inhibit bullying in schools. 


    Outro:

    I'd like to again thank Kerry Messer from the Missouri Family Network and Morgan Keenan from PROMO for participating in our forum.  The video of their debate can be found here.

    Ben

  • (book review) Sam Harris' "The Moral Landscape"

    Intro:

    Mostly what I want to say is that I highly recommend this book and completely support Harris' initiative to get the ball rolling on developing morality as a legitimate branch of science.  I also wish everyone who read the book would say the same.  On that note, I appreciate the pains he must be going through, putting up with the incredulity from many sides.  I do not envy him, though I am glad there is someone out there talented enough and willing enough to take on the burden and the challenge.  People, even smart people (sometimes, especially smart people), seem to very easily go off track when it comes to sorting out values even though they probably aren't having representative difficulties in practice sorting out their own moral lives. 


    Can we figure out what the general goal of human flourishing ought to be?  Sure, why not?  If not, I feel sorry for the reader, since you apparently have no idea how not to live a horrible life.  Does it entirely depend on the facts of the world?  Um...yeah.  Last time I checked.  Things that don't have to do with the facts of the world aren't a part of the world...  Are there better ways than not of achieving that end?  Uh, duh.  I can't suddenly choose my way into happiness via the infinite grab bag of methodologies.  Is there more than one way to be well off in the world?  Yeah, I think we already know that or we wouldn't be asking the question.  Do we have to worry about the amoral opinions of sociopaths in order to have sufficient motivation to get this general human initiative off the ground?  I think not.  I shed endless "crocodile tears" over their broken non-existent hearts.  Can science help us push the envelope of moral discernment deeper and wider than ever before?  Obviously.  Is there a better game in town?  [**supernatural crickets are *not* heard chirping**] It seems to me though that Harris' book (which is a delightful 6 hour long lecture in audio form) only seems particularly brilliant in light of the competition.  In reality, this is (or should be considered) 101 material.  Yes, we are that far behind, but a collaborative effort like this has to start on the ground floor.

    I don't share the fear of a totalitarian science that dictates evil Darwinian moral truth to the masses, but I do at least somewhat fear the stereotypical scientists who lack the personal growth and  the self-awareness necessary to tackle the many complexities required to square their understanding with the facts of the world and also keep it meaningful and potent for average folk.  Many scientists who may be great at their job are simply horrible philosophers.  Some people can have high IQ's but rather low EQ's (emotional intelligence).  And of course, not every version of intelligence in either category is born equal.  It is very easy for smart people to have amazing blindsides when it comes to articulating a conceptual ideology about values, since most ordinary people are far more busy living their values rather than specializing in how to describe what they are doing and why.  I'm sure there's some way to work through it and surely our brightest scientific moral philosophers will rise to the challenge in a self-selecting kind of way (in addition to those who mistakenly believe that's who they are), but I await that well-researched and soundly established moral textbook to land on my desk with a pleasantly satisfying thud.

    Otherwise, I'm not worried about science coming back with some moral conclusion that I do not approve of though I'm sure it will.  Perhaps wearing the male burqa will turn out to be the best way to go!  D'oh!  If it has done its job, it will have correct conclusions and I will be the one who needs to change his mind.  If there is something I don't like, well then I'd better have reasons that map onto the real world and presumably those would already have been taken into account.  And if I don't have those reasons what is my basis for disapproval beyond some arbitrary preference or prejudice?  Isn't that my problem?  Besides, people have a long history of not listening to moral authorities as it is.  What's one more, no matter how qualified? 

    Harris makes frequent use of physical health analogies to bypass most of the objections people throw his way and rightly so.  He has to avoid the perils of loaded terminology and erroneous existential expectations.  Further complicating things is that we are being asked to discern objective relational principles from the realm of human desires when we would like to hastily toss out that domain of content as arbitrary as a rule.  Humans are also most likely to get defensive and therefore irrational when fundamental values are challenged intellectually and yet that's exactly what any serious conversation about getting morality correct has to be about.  Unfortunately morality is just abstract enough to get people confused and lost in a mental space they can't see.  Yet at the same time it is indispensable enough not to vanish entirely from our interests (I consider morality the security software necessary for maintaining our most important interests).  It's why we can have a really good sense of what good is, but be almost entirely unable to spell out all of the stipulations of what that is (One would have to write many volumes on how to fully supplement the loopholes in the golden rule to the extent a robot could be programmed to follow it without messing up horribly).  This tension (or lack thereof) allows the appearance of vast differences in moral lifestyles to seem irresolvable to the core, it allows many philosophers to get endlessly lost in trivial obstructions, and it enables many religious people to be baffled just enough to never connect morality to the real world.  This is frustrating, because there are many times where I run across complex moral questions that simply can't be resolved without the rigor of a scientific investigation I can't possibly sponsor myself.  Only collective and focused efforts could hope to evaluate the facts and without enough support, we'll just be stuck in the dark ages on some questions. 

    Even our own values change over time, from moment to moment, and we are constantly navigating the perils of self-contradiction, personal ignorance, and our own immaturity when engaging the world of value differences.  There's not even such a thing as a genuine cultural baseline inside of one culture for relativism to latch onto.  If you are doing any effective moralizing for yourself or your own not-so-static culture or any trouble-shooting whatsoever, you do in fact have all the tools you need to sort the entire world out whether you recognize that or not.  And if you are unable to do so, that's probably just a practical problem for yo brains and not representative of a genuine ideological impasse.  Humans just aren't that different than each other and I've never met a set of cultural values where I could not discern the basic spectrum of appeal.  Finding common denominators is the basis for solving the cultural relativism equation and this is a skill that can be learned.  If one isn't a stick in the mud and are willing to engage the differences with the attitude that you could be wrong about how best to pimp out the human condition despite your upbringing and other influences, then differences in cultures are just mutual mountains to scale.  Not inaccessible parallel universes.  Difficult perhaps on occasion, but certainly not impossible.

    So yeah, science should go about the project of exploring all of the non-destructive maximum capacities of human psychology and how to go about making that happen (such as:  joy, love, self respect, good friendships, security/trust, contentment, peace/tranquility, self-improving behavior, sense of purpose/self worth, positive social climate and not: misery, loneliness, self-loathing, bad friendships, fear/paranoia, discontentment, anxiety/stress, neurosis, depression, self-destructive behavior, purposeless/worthlessness, negative social climate for general orientation in case you were really that clueless).  In a hundred years perhaps it can approach us with such a salient and complete account of all that entails.  All the basics?  Go for it (It's not like we aren't already well on our way with common sense as well as the field of clinical psychology).  A complete account of naturalistic mysticism in the way Harris seems to describe?  Awesome.  Let's make all of the mystical traditions that are tied down to one bogus ideology or another deeply envious of our cumulative, inclusive, and impartial progress on that front (assuming someone out there hasn't already started championing that goal).  I want to know all about what the human brain can do and who is doing it better.  Who wouldn't?  The folly of the argument in rejection of this will amount to:  I am an ordinary human who does not want what science has proven that ordinary humans would in fact most want if they knew any better.  Good luck with that. 


    Outro:

    I'm hopeful that enough people aren't philosophical snobs, that enough aren't so relativistic as to fail to recognize that we have plenty of common ground to work with across the spectrum of humanity, and that enough religious people are saturated enough with reality that Harris will be persuasive.  I have just seen way too many ridiculous and unnecessary hurdles thrown in the way that I'm a bit cynical.  They just keep coming, even from the smart people, like a large troll is going to come bash us all on the head if we dare get something slightly wrong.  *sigh*

    There were a few tidbits in Harris' book I think I could quibble about, but this books gets a greater than 95% approval rating from me...and that's rather hard to come by (for what that's worth).  On a side note, if Harris is successful in moving the ball forward on this note in the scientific community, this would be such a fitting legacy for the "new atheist" movement.  It would forgive many of their sins and help lead the world of skeptics, nonbelievers, and staunch anti-religion contrarians into a positive project with potentially genuinely lasting results.     

    I went ahead and posted this as my review on Amazon.

    Ben

  • (book review) "The Christian Delusion" - Ch. 6: The Bible and Modern Scholarship (part 2)

    Intro: 

    This series is an atheist's review of an important anthology critical of Christian beliefs called, "The Christian Delusion: Why Faith Fails" (TCD), that has been popularly discussed across the web.  I'll be reviewing the book in light of just about every other response to TCD on the web (pros and cons) and responding to new Christian objections as I find them.  I think this will be educational and perhaps the best that I personally can contribute to improving the online dialogue between Christians and non-believers on popular battleground issues.


    Who cares if the Bible gets some things wrong?

    But before we get into the issue of scholarly authority and bias and the details of atheist, Paul Tobin's chapter, a surprising number of Christian reviewers seem relatively okay with an errant word of the Christian god.  Let's take a look.

    Looney said this:

    My bet is still on Luke getting it right - especially since he writes much closer to the events - but if he gets one event a bit confused, it certainly won't shake my faith.  [emphasis mine]

    I assumed Looney was an inerrantist, but perhaps not.  It seems he is of the opinion at least that inerrancy is optional.

    Diglotting said this:

    ...as with a lot of this essay, I am left thinking, “so what?” If the Genesis flood narrative never actually took place, what does that prove? That Jesus was never resurrected and is not Lord over all creation? Hardly. It only proves that perhaps the genre and literary purpose of Genesis needs to be rethought.  [...]  if  Luke was just plain wrong, what does it prove? That the rest of what Luke wrote is historically false and should not be believed? If Luke was historically inaccurate on the census issue, I guess it could be a problem for those who hold to a scientific/historical view of inerrancy.  [emphasis mine]

    Jayman777 said this:

    Like the previous chapter, an individual Christian’s response to this chapter will depend largely on his views of inspiration and inerrancy.  There are numerous Christians who are modern scholars and have felt no need to leave Christianity because of their findings.  [...]  The bulk of the section is spent attacking the historicity of the infancy narratives in Matthew and Luke.  Raymond Brown’s The Birth of the Messiah is a scholarly treatment of the infancy narratives.  He does not attempt to defend every historical detail of the narratives.  I must also note that if a passage in the Bible is of a genre of literature that is not concerned with history then it is pointless to criticize that passage for not being history.  [...]  I agree with Tobin that the prophecies he mentions from Ezekiel were not fulfilled.  [emphasis mine]

    I'm not clear on what Diglotting and jayman777's views on inspiration are (and I recall that jayman777 doesn't have his views 100% crystallized yet).  Presumably they are fine with their god's word being as generally true and reliable as other human works.  One wonders why a most excellent god aimed so low in terms of quality control, but okay.  The expectations of fundamentalists seem more philosophically justified at face value.

    Randal Rauser said this:

    Tobin talks about "forgeries" in the Bible, what New Testament scholars call pseudopigraphy. To call them forgeries is about as blunt as calling a polygamist living in sub-Saharan Africa an "adulterer".  [...]  So let's say that 2 Peter is pseudopigraphic – it was not written by Peter but rather by someone emulating his style (rather unsuccessfully it must be said) and claiming his authority. Tobin's argument presumably would be that God cannot appropriate a pseudopigraphic text, that is, he cannot include it within a canon of literature that through the providential course of history will come to be recognized as authoritative in matters of faith and action by a specific community of faith.  Why not Mr. Tobin? What's the problem? [emphasis mine]

    Rauser's view of inspiration is the most unsettling since the Christian god can appropriate literally anything that he wants to.  Perhaps mythicism is true and Christianity started out as a mystery cult with a cosmic Jesus who never even existed.  Why couldn't this god just use the urban legend style gospels as "authoritative" and divinely insist the church take historicity seriously?  Maybe Rauser wouldn't have a problem with that, or with my proof that the character of god in the Old Testament lies to Abraham.  I don't know.  But we have to admit here that modern Christians have some extremely lax standards of "inspiration" as far as truth goes and then still manage to be confounded when outsiders looking in have an eyebrow raised.  The only thing left to grant errant documents divine authority is Rauser's flimsy "god perception evidence" and perhaps the "unfair cultural mystique" of the Bible that was discussed in Jason Long's chapter 3.



    Outro:

    Each of these Christian folk are willing to defend Biblical contradictions when they think skeptics have gone too far, but ultimately inerrancy (or at least Tobin's standard of inerrancy) isn't an issue for them.  That's a slight majority of Christian reviewers.  The three Triabloggers in The Infidel Delusion will presumably not be giving ground. 

    This situation might be inspiring if I thought that the more liberal Christian reviewers were necessarily going to compromise on some of the more important errors in the Bible (as in, something that might help the Christian population get along with the modern world) rather than just covering the Christian god's behind and maintaining the general status quo of mere self-satisfying belief.  I'm not familiar enough with any of their stances on various modern issues to know for sure.

    Ben

  • Is Richard Carrier wrong about Bayes' theorem?

    Intro:

    Atheist Luke Muehlhauser interviewed Christian theist Lydia McGrew on the topic (partially, at least) of the application of Bayes' theorem to historical inquiry.  Later, Muehlhauser interviewed atheist Richard Carrier which included the same subject.  In that podcast interview Carrier dismissed McGrew's paper on the topic which set her husband, Tim McGrew, off on fellow Christian Victor Reppert's blog to show that Carrier doesn't know what he's talking about.

    However, nitpicking what is meant to be an intro to a difficult math subject (as though even textbooks don't have basic errors) simply doesn't prove the point that Carrier's forthcoming book on the topic is doomed to failure, even if there are some legitimate examples.  There are only three supposed errors here and only one that shows any promise.  If Tim McGrew or someone else comes up with something valid, Carrier will just correct the text.  They aren't going to refute Bayes' theorem or its application to history as I'm sure they'd agree.

    Note, I sent the original incarnation of this post (that was meant to be a concise summary of the "errors") to Carrier and I've been given permission to reproduce his comments (which will only show up here on the web, to my knowledge).


    Problem one:

    Carrier says:

    There are numerous statistical fallacies and statistical illusions (where the correct result violates common sense intuitions). The more of these you are aware of, the better your reasoning will be.  An example of a pertinent statistical fallacy arises from the Talpiot tomb discovery (the so-called “Jesus Tomb”), where it was claimed that a particular conjunction of five names was highly improbable, but the fact that there were ten burials in that same tomb was ignored, a serious error. The probability of getting five specific names in a sample of five is indeed low, but the probability of getting those same five names in a sample of ten is much greater. For example, if 1 in 4 people were named Mark, and you picked three people at random, the odds that they would all be named Mark would be 0.253 = 0.016 = 1.6%, in other words very unlikely, but if you picked ten people at random, the odds that any three of them would be named Mark would be 1 – 0.757 = 1 – 0.133 = 0.867 = 87%, in other words very likely. This is the kind of statistical fallacy you need to be aware of if you decide to employ statistical logic in your historical method.

    However, a Christian (I'm assuming these are all Christians, I haven't double checked) named Tim over on Victor Reppert's blog says:

    There's a cookie for the first person who can explain why this calculation, winding up with "87%," is completely bogus; bonus cookie for the first person to give the proper calculation. (Hint: remember nCr from basic statistics?)

    And the Duke of Earl answers his request:

    Okay, in the binomial coefficient equations.

    10!/(3!x7!) = 120.

    Thinking
    Thinking

    120(0.25^3)(0.75^7)=0.25

    So the probability that 3 people in a group of ten are named Mark where 25% of the population is named Mark is 0.25

    I won't call it 25% because probabilities are not presented in percentages.

    Tim calls that answer good:

    A cookie for Duke! Two cookies, in fact! (Is your browser cookie-enabled, Duke?)

    Richard Carrier responds:

    The information he is leaving out of his math is that the Talpiot tomb has missing names, i.e. we *don't know* what the other names are (as my example states). Thus Duke is calculating for finding exactly three Marks (no more), not for there being *at least* three (i.e there might be 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or even 10 Marks). But he is right that the correct math is more complex than I use (I gave only the equation for at least 1 Mark in a group of 7, not at least 3 in a group of 10) and the correct result is thus slightly different than I gave, and I'm glad to be reminded of this so I can revise the tutorial. It now has the correct equation: if you picked ten people at random, the odds that at least three of those ten were named Mark would be the converse of the probability of there being less than three Marks in those ten (i.e. the probability of finding only 0 Marks, plus the probability of finding only 1 Mark, plus the probability of finding only 2 Marks), or 1-[(10!/2!8!)(0.25^2)(0.75^8)+
    (10!/1!9!)(0.25^1)(0.75^9)+(10!/0!10!)(0.25^0)(0.75^10)] = 1-[(45)(0.0625)(0.1001)+(10)(0.25)(0.0751)+(1)(1)(0.0563)] = 1-[0.2816+0.1877+0.0563] = 1 - 0.5256 = 0.4744. In other words almost 50/50, which is very likely. If there is almost a 50/50 chance of at least three Marks in a tomb of ten, finding three named Mark there is not improbable at all. (Like mission control in *Apollo 13* if I have erred anywhere in my arithmetic, please check it and let me know and I'll correct it, but otherwise the equation is correct). Note that the probability of three names chosen at random from those ten then being these Marks will still be less than this (and differently so for observing three Marks if five names are selected). But in the Talpiot case, the accident of which names remain unmarked is irrelevant to the hypothesis being tested.


    Problem 1, part 2:

    Tim continues:

    Extra credit -- and Duke, perhaps you should just eat your cookies and let someone else have a crack at it -- to what question would Carrier's calculation yield the right answer?

    To which the omnipresent internet commenting deity known as Anon answers:

    Working backwards.

    Carrier's calculation 1-(.75^7)=.86 takes the form of the basic probability formula, 1-P(A)=P(not-A). So in Carrier's example, P(A)= .75^7

    .75^7 is the probability that the first 7 people you meet successively are not named Mark (in much the same way as how P(first seven coin flips being heads)=.5^7) .

    Hence, P(not-A)= the probability that it is not the case that the first 7 people you meet successively are not named Mark.

    So Dr. Carrier should have asked something along the lines of, "What is the probability that it is not the case that the first 7 people you meet successively are not named Mark?"

    Tim says:

    Yes indeed! Please note that this has absolutely nothing to do with ten guys or with three guys: it's all about seven, namely (to rephrase Anon's version) that if you meet seven guys, at least one of them will be named Mark.

    Problem 2:

    Tim moves on to the second problem:

    ...let's start with a conceptual question. Carrier offers this definition:

    ~h = all other hypotheses that could explain the same evidence (if h is false)

    Question: what role does the phrase "could explain the same evidence" play in the definition of ~h? [Warning: this is a trick question.]

    Mr. Veale adds:

    ~h includes hypotheses that lower the probability of the evidence.

    And then Mr. Veale says:

    ~h is just all the hypotheses that aren't h. That's it. You consider them before you consider the evidence.

    That information is concealed in that subtle little word prior

    Mattghg suggests:

    Um, is the answer: no role at all? The definition of ~h should just be 'h is false', right?

    Tim says that Mr. Veale and Mattghg are correct.  This one seems to be a matter of nitpicking. 

    Richard Carrier responds:

    I'm still not sure what they are saying is supposed to be an error here. The statement "The definition of ~h should just be 'h is false', right?" is a statement entailed by my statement. So they aren't contradicting anything I said. So what's mistaken? If any hypothesis exclusive of h is true, then h is false (by obvious deductive logic); therefore if ~h includes all hypotheses exclusive of h, then if any one of them is true, h is false (and conversely if h is true, all of them are false).

    The reason ~h must include all hypotheses that explain e (but that entail h is false) is mathematical: the sample space must be complete (you can't get a correct ratio if your divisor does not equal the total of all possibles). For example, if h is "Joe got rich by winning the lottery" and e is "Joe got rich" then ~h must include all the other ways Joe can get rich (each one of which can be re-framed as h, and then "Joe got rich by winning the lottery" must become one of the hypotheses included in ~h; as all hypotheses must be commutable this way, all hypotheses must be included in ~h). For example, if data showed that there are only 100 rich people, 10 got rich by winning the lottery, 80 got rich by business, and 1 got rich by space aliens, that leaves 9 unaccounted for. If you calculated the prior odds that Joe got rich by winning the lottery without those unaccounted possibles you'll get the wrong result: 10/91 when there are 100 rich people; if there are 100 rich people then the prior odds Joe got rich by winning the lottery must be 10/100, not 10/91; therefore those other 9 unaccounted for causes of getting rich must be included in ~h, even if you don't know what they are (this gets even more complicated when you address the fact that you can never have a complete sample, e.g. those 100 rich people aren't the only rich people there are, were, or ever will be; this is addressed, of course, with sampling probabilities, etc., but the mathematical fact remains the same that in any sample of 100, the frequency of x must always be x/100, which entails that all ~x must be accounted for, even if by sweeping categories like "unknown causes").

    This can be demonstrated formally by expanding the equation to multiple hypotheses (see my formula for that, it's in the same document: PDF p. 4, and p. 15, for expanding ~h into h1, h2, and h3, which can be continued to any h{n}). It can be shown that a sum of probability formulas for three (or any number of) hypotheses alternative to h necessarily equals a single probability formula for ~h alone; therefore a single ~h by definition includes all three hypotheses. This can be iterated to all possible hypotheses. It's just that most of them have a P(h|b) and P(e|h.b) so small we don't even need to count them, e.g. "Joe got rich by my spitting to the left on Wednesday" has a nonzero prior probability (by virtue of our non-omniscience) and a nonzero consequent probability (ditto), but each so small they can have zero observable effect to any decimal place we'd ever bother caring about (so we ignore them). But this still means ~h includes even that hypothesis, as a matter of necessary logic: e.g. we could give it a formula box in the denominator as h4, say, which entails that any single denominator for only ~h alone would have to include the numbers for this h4 (and therefore it always does, it just doesn't matter because those numbers are so small).

    But exactly what part of all that that they want to object to is unclear to me.


    Problem 3:

    Tim says:

    On p. 4, Carrier gives the following definition:

    P(~h|b) = 1 – P(h|b) = the prior probability that h is false = the sum of the prior probabilities of all alternative explanations of the same evidence (e.g. if there is only one viable alternative, this means the prior probability of all other theories is vanishingly small, i.e. substantially less than 1%, so that P(~h|b) is the prior probability of the one viable competing hypothesis.

    [...] what is wrong with the explanation being offered here?

    No one has answered this yet, but Tim gives a hint:

    [Hint: does viability have anything to do with P(~h|b)? If sub-hypotheses under ~h have non-zero probability given b, even though that probability is low, do they still contribute to P(~h|b)?]

    Mike responds:

    P(~h|b) = 1 – P(h|b) simply means there is a 100% chance one of the two is correct. Assigning "viability" to one or the other simply exposes your priors.

    To which Tim responds:

    You're in the zone -- have a peppermint -- but there's something more direct to be said. Every sub-hypothesis under ~h that has a non-zero prior given b contributes to P(~h|b). So to say that if

    the prior probability of all other theories is vanishingly small, i.e. substantially less than 1%,

    then

    P(~h|b) is the prior probability of the one viable competing hypothesis

    is just mathematically wrong.

    Richard Carrier responds:

    The statement is that *if* there is one and only one viable *alternative* hypothesis (PDF p. 4) then "the prior probability of all *other* theories" i.e. all theories that are neither h nor this one viable alternative "is vanishingly small, i.e. substantially less than 1%." Which is actually just a tautology (I'm simply defining "viability," and wholly uncontroversially I might add), so they can have no objection to it. They are mistakenly assuming "all other theories" means "other than h" when I am clearly saying "other than h *and* the one proposed viable alternative." Once that is explained to them they should concede the point. (I italicized the word "other" in both instances in the hopes of making this clearer, although it should have been clear enough already).

    Outro:

    Muehlhauser wants to save his intellectual reputation too prematurely it seems:

    When asked to guess at the competence in probability theory between two people who have been publishing peer-reviewed philosophy literature on probability theory for at least a decade [that would be the McGrews] vs. someone who discovered Bayes’ Theorem in the last few years [that would be Carrier], I’m going to bet on the former in a heartbeat.

    Unfortunately that's a false dichotomy from even a non-expert perspective since I pointed out that Carrier says he's had his stuff vetted by qualified people who generally approved of it with minimal changes.  The retaliatory Christians out and about on the internet on this issue are conveniently ignoring that (and continue to do so). Further, the disagreement between the McGrews and Carrier turned on miscommunication and not math competency, as Carrier and Lydia McGrew eventually agreed. 

    Ben

  • Does science show that atheists are angry at God?

    There's some survey information floating around the popular atheists blogs. 

    The Friendly Atheist, Hemant Mehta complains:

    I don’t know what questions Exline asked, but if the conclusion people are reporting is that “atheists are angry at god,” there’s either a problem with the questions, the interpretation of the results, or communication of what was actually found.

    This plays into a common Christian narrative that atheists validate the existence of God because of their emotional states.  Normally atheists respond negatively to the accusation and try to distance themselves from it with some intellectual move.  I recall that atheist Richard Carrier will quip

    Finally, [Christian apologist, David Wood] resorts to the ad hominem tactic of claiming I'm "angry at God" because my "mind has been poisoned by rage, and this rage has led to [my] irrational war against Christianity." I'm angry at someone I don't even think exists? That's like accusing me of being angry at Darth Vader.

    Um...I do get angry at Anakin Skywalker for betraying his wife, murdering children he probably helped to train, and being such a selfish wanker who falls for the Dark-side despite there being virtually a large neon sign saying "EVIL" floating over Emperor Palpatine. That dick move cost the galaxy a huge setback in moral progress. You can be angry at hypothetical people and I'm sure the mirror neurons are firing in pretty much the same way.  My investment in the plight of the characters from the original trilogy, having watched the films countless times in my youth, is predicated on the sins of Darth Vader.  When I think of how horrible Luke Skywalker's life was and how virtually the entire weight of setting the galaxy right again was laid upon his orphan shoulders (at the expense of having a normal life), Anakin's moral failings shine brightly.  So I can be rather moved by this anger at times when watching Revenge of the Sith.  

    Although in terms of "me and the Christian god" I've been more historically bitter that there isn't even a coherent concept of that god to even properly hate. It probably would have been a much more emotionally healthy transition into unbelief had I been able to be straightforwardly angry at that god.  One has to be able to model the mental states of a being plausibly enough to even get a direct emotional "lock." And needless to say there are just so many messed up things in the definition of god that I've been intellectually unable to disregard in favor of some simplistic sky daddy picture.  It's just too psychologically hard to do and so historically I've been unable to get that lock in some subjective sense.  I had similar problems as a Christian with just trying to establish a coherent stable relationship for lots of similar reasons.  Others were willing to make all sorts of unjustified arbitrary assumptions that could be completely different than the next Christian over and I just wasn't willing to do that.  The Christian god had to do his own job of interacting and I wasn't going to interpret him into reality in ways that I knew were so plastic as to be entirely useless.  I always knew it wasn't my job to make the Christian god my imaginary friend.  I lived with that lack of confidence for a long time in a Christian context...and then eventually push came to shove and I bailed. 

    I imagine other people less constrained by the plausibility of the entity in question who reject its existence are perfectly capable of being angry in ordinary senses at a god they don't think exists. I see no reason to fault them for this and I don't think this tells us anything about atheists other than that they are human and have historical emotional entanglements with their native religions.  Allah doesn't exist because of angry apostates from Islam.  The many gods of the Hindus don't exist because of the emotional states of their ex-believers.  The common denominator here isn't hard to discern in a naturalistic context. 

    Ben

  • The New Atheists and their Critics


    Intro:

    I am indebted to Common Sense Atheism's list on the same topic.  Luke has not updated his list from the suggestions in the comment section, it seems, or he has rejected them for some reason.  I've also arranged mine in order of "popularity" according to Amazon which is a little more interesting than publishing date, imo.  I've created my own version since I will be canvassing them for topical content for future projects.  It's going to be interesting getting such a wide survey of Christian reactions to various issues.

    It's also humorous to see all the titles lined up next to each other.  "The End of Reason" seems to take the cake for the most ridiculous on the face of it, imo.  Ray Comfort's title is silly, but not unexpected.  The titles from James S. Spiegel and Fr. John J. Pasquini seem to be the most pejorative (though David Marshall's, Joel McDurmon's, and Eric Reitan's titles aren't far behind). I do like Phillip Johnson's and David Myers' titles. Thirteen of the books play off of Dawkins' "delusion" meme (and note there are actually two versions of "The Dawkins Delusion"). One can only assume that Thomas Crean's book is the objectively worst of the bunch since it has the most reviews vs. worst rating.  Poor guy.  I'm most surprised that Dinesh D'Souza tops out the list on the Christian side of things and most disappointed that there appear to be no other Muslim responses.  There appear to be only two female contributors to the 60 + list of overwhelmingly white males.  It is amazing that Dawkins' book has so many reviews.  The number of reviews and positive ratings on Harris' latest book on scientific moral realism gives me some hope for humanity.

    I'll be adding more later.  Let me know if I missed anything.  Hopefully as I learn more about the authors I can figure out ways to organize them.  Who are the liberals?  Who are the conservatives?  Etc.


    The new atheists (11 books):

    The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins (4 stars, 1,683 reviews)

    The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason by Sam Harris (4 stars, 882 reviews)

    Letter to a Christian Nation by Sam Harris (4 stars, 712 reviews)

    The Moral Landscape: How Science can Determine Moral Values by Sam Harris (4 1/2 stars, 184 reviews)

    God is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens (3 1/2 stars, 975 reviews)

    Is Christianity Good for the World? by Christopher Hitchens and Douglas Wilson (4 stars, 35 reviews)

    Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel Dennett (3 1/2 stars, 189 reviews)

    God: The Failed Hypothesis: How Science Shows That God Does Not Exist by Victor Stenger (3 1/2 stars, 181 reviews)

    The New Atheism: Taking a Stand for Science and Reason by Victor Stenger (4 stars, 40 reviews)

    The God Virus: How religion infects our lives and culture by Darrel Ray (4 1/2 stars, 78 reviews)

    Atheist Manifesto: The Case Against Christianity, Judaism, and Islam by Michael Onfray (3 1/2 stars, 39 reviews)


    Their Christian critics (45 books):

    The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism by Timothy Keller (4 1/2 stars, 300 reviews)

    What’s so Great about Christianity by Dinesh D’Souza (4 stars, 203 reviews)

    The Dawkins Delusion?: Atheist Fundamentalism and the Denial of the Divine by Alister McGrath (3 stars, 95 reviews)

    The Irrational Atheist: Dissecting the Unholy Trinity of Dawkins, Harris, and Hitchens by Theodore Beale (Vox Day) (3 1/2 stars, 65 reviews)

    Answering the New Atheism: Dismantling Dawkins' Case Against God by Scott Hahn (3 1/2 stars, 47 reviews)

    Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies by David Hart (4 stars, 46 reviews)

    The End of Reason: A Response to the New Atheists  by Ravi Zacharias (3 1/2 stars, 40 reviews)

    Patience With God – Faith For People Who Don’t Like Religion (Or Atheism) by Frank Schaffer (4 stars, 39 reviews)

    The Making of an Atheist: How Immorality Leads to Unbelief by James S. Spiegel (3 1/2 stars, 38 reviews)

    The Truth Behind the New Atheism: Responding to the Emerging Challenges to God and Christianity by David Marshall (3 1/2 stars, 36 reviews)

    The Delusion of Disbelief: Why the New Atheism is a Threat to Your Life, Liberty, and Pursuit of Happiness by David Aikman (3 stars, 33 reviews)

    God Doesn’t Believe in Atheists: Proof that the Atheist Doesn’t Exist by Ray Comfort (3 stars, 31 reviews)

    Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate (The Terry Lectures Series) by Terry Eagleton (3 1/2 stars, 30 reviews)

    God is No Delusion: A Refutation of Richard Dawkins by Thomas Crean (2 1/2 stars, 28 reviews)

    God and the New Atheism: A Critical Response to Dawkins, Harris, and Hitchens  by John Haught (3 1/2 stars, 26 reviews)

    The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism by Edward Feser (3 1/2 stars, 25 reviews)

    Letter to a Christian Nation: Counter Point  by RC Metcalf (2 1/2 stars, 25 reviews)

    No One Sees God: The Dark Night of Atheists and Believers by Michael Novak (4 stars, 24 reviews)

    God Is Great, God Is Good: Why Believing in God Is Reasonable and Responsible by William Lane Craig (4 1/2 stars, 15 reviews)

    Against All Gods: What's Right and Wrong About the New Atheism by Phillip Johnson (4 1/2 stars 15 reviews)

    A Case for the Existence of God by Dean L. Overman (4 1/2 stars, 14 reviews)

    Atheism Remix: A Christian Confronts the New Atheists by R. Albert Mohler Jr. (4 stars, 12 reviews)

    A Friendly Letter to Skeptics and Atheists: Musings on Why God Is Good and Faith Isn't Evil  by David Myers (4 stars, 12 reviews)

    Contending with Christianity's Critics: Answering New Atheists and Other Objectors by Paul Copan (and others like Gary Habermas and Ben Witherington) (4 1/2 stars, 11 reviews)

    Letter from a Christian Citizen by Douglas Wilson (4 stars, 11 reviews)

    Atheist Personality Disorder: Addressing A Distorted Mindset by Fr. John J. Pasquini (4 stars, 10 reviews)

    Letter to an Atheist by Michael Leahy (3 stars, 10 reviews)

    The Dawkins Letters: Challenging Atheist Myths by David Robertson (4 stars, 9 reviews)

    The Return of the Village Atheist by Joel McDurmon (3 stars, 9 reviews)

    Is God A Delusion: A Reply to Religion's Cultured Despisers by Eric Reitan (4 stars, 8 reviews)

    Why There Almost Certainly Is a God: Doubting Dawkins by Keith Ward (3 stars, 8 reviews)

    The New Atheists: The Twilight of Reason and the War on Religion by Tina Beattie (3 1/2 stars, 7 reviews)

    Atheism Is False: Richard Dawkins And The Improbability Of God Delusion by David Reuben Stone (2 1/2 stars, 5 reviews)

    The Richard Dawkins Delusion by Daniel Keeran (1 1/2 stars, 5 reviews)

    God Is. How Christianity Explains Everything by Douglas Wilson (4 stars, 4 reviews)

    Errors of Atheism by J. Angelo Corlett (1 1/2 stars, 4 reviews)

    A Reasonable God: Engaging the New Face of Atheism by Gregory E. Ganssle (5 stars, 3 reviews)

    Is Religion Dangerous? by Keith Ward (4 1/2 stars, 3 reviews)

    The 'New' Atheism: 10 Arguments That Don't Hold Water by Michael Poole (4 stars, 3 reviews)

    The Ipod Tutor: The Argument Against Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion by Barry Krusch (3 1/2 stars, 3 reviews)

    The Deluded Atheist: A Response to Richard Dawkins’ The God Delusion by Douglas Wilson (5 stars, 2 reviews)

    The Dawkins Delusion by Scott Reeves (3 stars, 2 reviews)

    Is Richard Dawkins the New Messiah? A Layman's Critique of 'The God Delusion' (revised edition) by R. J. Fallon (4 stars, 1 review)

    A Catholic Replies to Professor Dawkins by Thomas Crean (0 stars, 0 reviews)

    Darwin’s Angel: An Angelic Riposte to The God Delusion by John Cornwell (0 stars, 0 reviews)


    Their secular critics (5 books):

    The Devil's Delusion: Atheism and its Scientific Pretensions by David Berlinski (4 stars, 118 reviews)

    When Atheism Becomes Religion: America’s New Fundamentalists by Chris Hedges (2 1/2 stars, 74 reviews)

    The New Atheist Crusaders and Their Unholy Grail: The Misguided Quest to Destroy Your Faith  by Becky Garrison (3 1/2 stars, 18 reviews)

    An Atheist Defends Religion: Why Humanity is Better Off with Religion Than Without It by Bruce Sheiman (5 stars, 11 reviews)

    I Don’t Believe in Atheists by Chris Hedges (3 stars, 3 reviews)


    Their Jewish critics (1 book):

    Why Faith Matters by David J. Wolpe (4 1/2 stars, 27 reviews)


    Their Muslim critics (1 book):

    Sam Harris And The End Of Faith: A Muslim's Critical Response  by Bill Whitehouse (4 stars, 5 reviews)