Whenever I hear someone talk about God, except in the Einsteinian sense, I am reminded of the stunning vastness and elegance of the universe. The Old Testament God, which Steven Pinker dealt a few posts ago, is simply incompatible with reality as we know it today. Even ignoring the bible's cosmology and all of its problems, the character depicted as the world's author in the OT is far too small and petty to account for all the astounding things we have learned in the intervening centuries.
evolved in Greece and Israel over a period known as the Axial Age, spanning 800-200 BCE. While it is true that many thinkers in those two areas shifted toward a more naturalistic understanding of the world, they were not involved in a cohesive movement. The Hebrews came to question the vengeful, intercessory God of their oral tradition after an extended period of suffering and misfortune; it was not at all apparent that the deity who made a covenant with Abraham was interested in coming down and fighting battles on behalf of His Chosen People. The Greeks moved away from their earlier ontology in which melodramatic, anthropomorphic gods were responsible for what went on in the world at about the same time, but their transition was the result of a relatively comfortable lifestyle that became available to their upper classes, making the "contemplative life" possible. Their worldview changed as a result of rational contemplation rather than empirical experiences. While the Hebrews and the Greeks made this advance roughly simultaneously, it's inaccurate to describe them as part of a single movement.
Those two points really don't have that much to do with the rest of the essay, but obviously they meant a lot to me. In any event, moves on to explain why the discovery of a rational, ordered world "fully vindicate[s]" the theistic worldview. He describes the world as a "teleological hierarchy," meaning that it is arranged in levels and that a group of subordinate levels exists for the benefit of a primary level, on which humans exist. This is a common view among theists. It demonstrates what I like to refer to as the "anthropocentric conceit."
Humans generally believe that the universe exists, in one sense or another, for their benefit. Early Mesopotamian cultures believed that the world did not extend far beyond the Tigris and Euphrates valleys in which they lived (once again, there's that Old Testament cosmology that I won't shut up about). Later thinkers such as Augustine knew more about geography but still assumed that the Southern Hemisphere was uninhabitable and that only the North had been created for human beings to inhabit. The anthropocentric worldview has gradually yielded more ground as it has been contradicted by new facts about the world around us. When Edwin Hubble showed that our galaxy is one of a vast number and that the universe has no discernible physical center, anthropocentrism retreated into the notion that humans are the ontological center of the universe. I see no reason to assume that, as we investigate further into the fundamental nature of the universe, we will not discover new details which make
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Not only is there not a shred of evidence proving the existence of a god, but there are no grounds to go as far as to posit one. Reason allows us to postulate theories we cannot conclusively prove, such as evolution, if we can infer them from extensive empirical data and if there is no viable alternative explanation. So theists are defying reason when they not only theorize but affirm the existence of a god-- a god which may rationalize heretofore unexplained phenomena but will never be the single or most viable explanation, and therefore does not even deserve the title of "theory," let alone fact.
The entire 'teach the debate' line is a red herring. There is no debate. There is accepted scientific fact (evolution) and there are irrational objections to reality (creationism). To a layman, though, a 'teach the debate' policy has a specious appeal. It certainly sounds open-minded: present the case for both sides and let students decide for themselves. But the very idea that a naturalistic explanation and a supernatural have the same weight is dangerous to science.
What baffles me is that the scientific explanation isn't enough for some people. There are those who need a creator to impose their morality on others, and then there are those who just can't accept that the world is beautiful enough as it is and need to set up an elaborate supernatural explanation.
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