Well worth your reading time: ‘The God wars’ by Bryan Appleyard

The God wars

To hardline atheists, it is now unreasonable and “dramatically peculiar” to argue that religion is not altogether evil.  How did such intolerance become acceptable to rational minds, asks Bryan Appleyard.

De Botton is the most recent and, consequently, the most shocked victim.  He has just produced a book, Religion for Atheists: a Non-Believer’s Guide to the Uses of Religion, mildly suggesting that atheists like himself have much to learn from religion and that, in fact, religion is too important to be left to believers.  He has also proposed an atheists’ temple, a place where non-believers can partake of the consolations of silence and meditation.

This has been enough to bring the full force of a neo-atheist fatwa crashing down on his head.  The temple idea in particular made them reach for their best books of curses.

“I am rolling my eyes so hard that it hurts,” wrote the American biologist and neo-atheist blogger P Z Myers.  “You may take a moment to retch.  I hope you have buckets handy.”  Myers has a vivid but limited prose palette.

There have been threats of violence.  De Botton has been told he will be beaten up and his guts taken out of him.  One email simply said, “You have betrayed Atheism.  Go over to the other side and die.”

And:

De Botton finds Dawkins a psychologically troubling figure.

“He has taken a very strange position.  He’s unusual, in that he came from an elite British Anglican family with all its privileges and then he had this extraordinary career, and now he stands at the head of what can really be called a cult . . . I think what happened was that he has been frightened by the militancy of religious people he has met on his travels and it has driven him to the other side.

“It smacks of a sort of psychological collapse in him, a collapse in those resources of maturity that would keep someone on an even keel.  There is what psychoanalysts would call a deep rigidity in him.”

Appleyard concludes:

Religion is not going to go away.  It is a natural and legitimate response to the human condition, to human consciousness and to human ignorance.  One of the most striking things revealed by the progress of science has been the revelation of how little we know and how easily what we do know can be overthrown.  Furthermore, as Hitchens in effect acknowledged and as the neo-atheists demonstrate by their ideological rigidity and savagery, absence of religion does not guarantee that the demonic side of our natures will be eliminated.  People should have learned this from the catastrophic failed atheist project of communism, but too many didn’t.

Happily, the backlash against neo-atheism has begun, inspired by the cult’s own intolerance.  In the Christmas issue of this magazine, Dawkins interviewed Hitchens.  Halfway through, Dawkins asked: “Do you ever worry that if we win and, so to speak, destroy Christianity, that vacuum would be filled by Islam?”  At dinner at the restaurant in Bayswater we all laughed at this, but our laughter was uneasy.  The history of attempts to destroy religion is littered with the corpses of believers and unbelievers alike.  There are many roads to truth, but cultish intolerance is not one of them.

Click on the link above and read the whole, excellent article.

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