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Notes -
John Psmith reviewed "Believe, by Ross Douthat"
The middle section has examples of atheist scholars being wrong... but are examples of atheists scholars being wrong evidence against atheism? We know they were wrong, because atheistic scholarship has deeply-flawed-but-integral self-correction mechanisms. What self-correction have religions done, in the last 100 years? Or is this an isolated demand for rigor, because the pro-belief case is simply that some religion is inerrant, even if we don't know which (if any!) presently-practiced religion is inerrant, therefore, no religion needs to self-correct?
There's also a section on miricles, which includes:
Shouldn't we question which miracles are "diabolical" and which are "divine? And why deny another religion's morals, if you don't deny its signs and wonders of other religions? And doesn't this "prove too much," inasmuch as it's also true of conspiracy theories, cryptids (fun fact: Scotland's national animal isn't the unicorn, because someone thought it'd be funny - the Scots genuinely believed unicorns existed, at the time they chose it), and UFO sightings?
The review ends by making a strange argument promoting Christianity:
The last two paragraphs I quoted use opposing arguments to come to the same conclusion: Similarities to the "monomyth" are evidence of Truth and differences from the "monomyth" are also evidence of Truth.
Has anyone read this book? If so, does this review do a bad job relaying the book's thesis? Am I wrong to think that the thesis, as presented in the review, is unpersuasive? If I am wrong, how am I wrong?
I think the sociological angle specifically (where the New Atheist types said that declining religion would make the world a better place and well that is not what happened) revealed that their religious opponents (who were often chided for the idea that "morality comes from religion") actually had a stronger grasp on reality than the New Atheist types did. In my opinion it does not slam-dunk prove anything about God one way or the other by itself.
But if two groups of people make predictions and one of them is better at the predictions, your priors should be that they understand reality better. I don't know that "religious people" are perfect scorers but against the New Atheists on the general question of whether (our) society would flourish without God...I think they've generally won.
Well yes, that's what Chesterton is suggesting, isn't it? That you sort out the diabolical from the divine?
This is another pet peeve of mine, but UFOs (much like, topically, the historicity of Christ) is another one of those "midwit meme" moments where both people who have studied the topic and people who just absorb what's on Ancient Aliens both take UFOs much more seriously than people who take the superficially informed view that there's nothing there.
I think it's incorrect to view this as trivially wrong. Imagine instead this was a purely scientific argument about a specific aspect of reality instead of a broader argument about the true nature of reality. Any would-be successor theory must explain why it is similar to and yet superior to alternative competing theories. Typically adherents of competing theories agree on the vast majority of the underlying facts, and so all theories will actually be quite similar, but the adherents of all of these theories must explain the distinctions in their theory from other theories, to show how it is the best theory.
If we threw out scientific theories on the basis that they were similar to (and therefore derivative of and thus incorrect) another similar theory we rejected, we would not be in a great place. Ultimately religion, too, is trying to explain reality as we know it, although on different terms.
And the reality is that materialism is unsatisfying, that people do have religious experiences and that those experiences sometimes conflict with each other.
I haven't, but noting the interest here in case I do.
Do atheists commit crime or otherwise contribute to social dysfunction at a greater rate than theists? Who gets credit, if the "evaporative cooling of group beliefs" leads to the moderately religious population falling below the critical mass necessary to socially constrain religious zealots?
Where does Chesterton suggest that we consider the possibility other religions are correct?
Yeah, I was hesitant to include UFOs, because the "U" tautologically includes real phenomena, but I couldn't think of a better "you know what I mean" example, off the top of my head. Perhaps "extra-terrestrials" would have been better.
If Jesus was unique, why would his story have any connection to the monomyth? And if his story is true, why would stories from unaffected cultures resemble his story?
Western countries, including those in which the moderately religious population is boiled off more-or-less completely, do not seem to have problems with religious zealots. How much terrorism do the Dutch Calvinists or Laestadians do? Next to no one else goes to church in those countries.
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