The God Delusion, by
Richard Dawkins
Houghton Mifflin, 406 pp., $27.00
Six Impossible Things
Before Breakfast: The Evolutionary Origins of Belief
by Lewis Wolpert, Norton, 243 pp., $25.95
Evolution and Christian
Faith: Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist
by Joan Roughgarden, Island, 151 pp., $14.95
Scientists' interest in
religion seems to come in waves. One arrived after the
publication of Darwin's Origin of Species in 1859.
Another followed in the 1930s and 1940s, inspired by surprising
revelations from quantum mechanics, which suggested the
insufficiency of conventional physical theories of the universe.
And now scientists are once again writing about religion,
apparently provoked this time by the controversy surrounding
intelligent design.
During the last year, a
number of popular books on religion by scientists or
philosophers of science have appeared. Daniel Dennett kicked
things off with his Breaking the Spell (2006), an
investigation into the possibility of a science of religion.
Reviewing evolutionary, psychological, and economic theories of
the origin and spread of belief, Dennett covered much ground but
reached few conclusions. In the last few months, three prominent
scientists—all biologists—have published their own books on
belief. Richard Dawkins, the Charles Simonyi Professor of the
Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University, has given
us The God Delusion, an extended polemic against faith,
which will be considered at length below.
Lewis Wolpert, an
eminent developmental biologist at University College London,
has just published Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast,
a pleasant, though rambling, look at the biological basis of
belief. While the book focuses on our ability to form causal
beliefs about everyday matters (the wind moved the trees, for
example), it spends considerable time on the origins of
religious and moral beliefs. Wolpert defends the unusual idea
that causal thinking is an adaptation required for tool-making.
Religious beliefs can thus be seen as an odd extension of causal
thinking about technology to more mysterious matters. Only a
species that can reason causally could assert that "this storm
was sent by God because we sinned." While Wolpert's attitude
toward religion is tolerant, he's an atheist who seems to find
religion more puzzling than absorbing.
Joan Roughgarden, on
the other hand, is sold on religion. An evolutionary biologist
at Stanford University and a recent convert to Christianity, she
attempts in Evolution and Christian Faith both to explain
evolutionary biology to fellow believers—laying out what is
known, what is speculative, and what is unknown—and to discuss
what the Bible has to say on matters relevant to evolution.
These are ambitious aims, particularly for so brief a book, and
Roughgarden's own views—that, as she writes, "what evolutionary
biologists are finding through their research and thinking
actually promotes a Christian view of nature"—are not supported
by sufficiently detailed arguments.
1.
Among these books,
Dawkins's The God Delusion stands out for two reasons.
First, it's by far the most ambitious. While Wolpert and
Roughgarden preach to the choir—each has his or her own
audience, rationalist and religious, respectively—Dawkins is on
a mission to convert. He is an enemy of religion, wants to
explain why, and hopes thereby to drive the beast to extinction.
Second, Dawkins has succeeded in grabbing the public's attention
in a way that other writers can only dream of. His book is on
the New York Times best-seller list and he's just been
featured on the cover of Time magazine.
Dawkins's first book,
The Selfish Gene (1976), was a smash hit. An introduction
to evolutionary theory, it explained a number of deeply
counter-intuitive results, including how an apparently
self-centered process like Darwinian natural selection can
account for the evolution of altruism. Best of all, Dawkins laid
out this biology—some of it truly subtle—in stunningly lucid
prose. (It is, in my view, the best work of popular science ever
written.) While Dawkins has published several other popular
books on Darwinism, he has, in recent years, turned to larger
issues. In such works as Unweaving the Rainbow (1998) and
A Devil's Chaplain (2003), he's explored our sense of
wonder before the natural world and, increasingly, the tension
between science and religion.
His new book continues
this last theme. Dawkins clearly believes his background in
science allows him to draw strong conclusions about religion
and, in The God Delusion, he presents those conclusions
in language that's stronger still. Dawkins not only thinks
religion is unalloyed nonsense but that it is an overwhelmingly
pernicious, even "very evil," force in the world. His target is
not so much organized religion as all religion. And within
organized religion, he attacks not only extremist sects but
moderate ones. Indeed, he argues that rearing children in a
religious tradition amounts to child abuse.
Dawkins's book begins
with a description of what he calls the God Hypothesis. This is
the idea that "the universe and everything in it" were designed
by "a superhuman, supernatural intelligence." This intelligence
might be personal (as in Christianity) or impersonal (as in
deism). Dawkins is not concerned with the alleged detailed
characteristics of God but with whether any form of the God
Hypothesis is defensible. His answer is: almost certainly not.
Although his target is broad, Dawkins discusses mostly
Christianity, partly because this faith has wrestled often with
science and partly because it's the tradition Dawkins knows best
(he was reared as an Anglican).
The
first few chapters of The God Delusion are given over to
philosophical matters. Dawkins summarizes the traditional
philosophical arguments for God's existence, from Aquinas
through pre-Darwinian arguments from biological design, along
with the traditional arguments against them. In a later chapter
entitled "Why There Almost Certainly Is No God," Dawkins himself
plays philosopher, presenting the chief argument of his book.
The God Hypothesis, he tells us, is close to "ruled out by the
laws of probability." Dawkins's demonstration involves what he
calls the Ultimate Boeing 747 gambit. This is his variation on a
standard creationist argument. By tweaking that argument in a
clever way, Dawkins claims it now leads to a conclusion that's
the opposite of the traditional creationist one.
The creationist
argument works like this. Living things are enormously complex.
Even the simplest of present-day organisms, like bacteria, are
far more complicated than anything found in the nonliving world.
All organisms carry genes, built from a replicating molecule
like DNA (which is itself very complex). But DNA alone doesn't
make an organism. Organisms also possess many different proteins
(each, in turn, made of amino acids), as well as other molecules
that help make structures like cell membranes. Moreover, all
these parts must be arranged in just the right way: membranes on
the outside of the cell and DNA on the inside, and so on.
Creationists argue that the idea that such organized complexity
could arise by natural means—without the intercession of a
designer mind—is absurd. In particular, they argue that the
probability that life could assemble itself spontaneously is
extremely close to zero. To dramatize this, they suggest that
thinking life could arise by natural means is like thinking a
tornado could tear through a junkyard and assemble a Boeing 747.
Such an event is not, strictly speaking, impossible but it's so
extraordinarily unlikely that it is, according to creationists,
unworthy of serious consideration.[1]
Dawkins's variation on
this argument involves a judo-like move in which he turns its
logic against itself. In particular, Dawkins claims that
rejecting natural means to explain life and instead invoking a
designer God leaves us with a hypothesis that's even more
improbable than the naturalistic one:
A designer God cannot
be used to explain organized complexity because any God
capable of designing anything would have to be complex
enough to demand the same kind of explanation in his own
right.
In short, only
complicated objects can design simpler ones; information cannot
flow in the other direction, with simple objects designing
complicated ones. But that means any designer God would have to
be more complex—and thus even more improbable—than the
universe he was supposed to explain. This argument, Dawkins
concludes, "comes close to proving that God does not
exist": the God Hypothesis has a vanishingly small probability
of being right.
The
latter half of The God Delusion is partly devoted to
Dawkins's discussion of religion as practiced. Not surprisingly,
he finds little good to say about it: religion for him is the
root of much evil and its disappearance from the world would be
an unmitigated good. Religion, he tells us, is certainly not the
source of our morality (indeed the God of the Old Testament is,
he claims, nothing short of monstrous) and believers are no
better morally than nonbelievers; in fact they may be worse.
Dawkins regales us with tales of Christian cops who threaten to
beat up an atheist; presents statistics on the higher rates of
crime in regions that are religious; and argues that, when
considering religiously inspired violence and terrorism, "we
should blame religion itself, not religious extremism—as
though that were some kind of terrible perversion of real,
decent religion." Late in his book, Dawkins defends a faith-free
morality and provides his own, secular, Ten Commandments. (For
example, "Do not indoctrinate your children" and "Enjoy your own
sex life (so long as it damages nobody else).")
As you may have
noticed, Dawkins when discussing religion is, in effect, a blunt
instrument, one that has a hard time distinguishing Unitarians
from abortion clinic bombers. What may be less obvious is that,
on questions of God, Dawkins cannot abide much dissent,
especially from fellow scientists (and especially from fellow
evolutionary biologists). Indeed Dawkins is fond of imputing
ulterior motives to those "Neville Chamberlain School"
scientists not willing to go as far as he in his war on
religion: he suggests that they're guilty of disingenuousness,
playing politics, and lusting after the large prizes awarded by
the Templeton Foundation to scientists sympathetic to religion.[2]
The only motive Dawkins doesn't seem to take seriously is that
some scientists genuinely disagree with him.
Despite my admiration
for much of Dawkins's work, I'm afraid that I'm among those
scientists who must part company with him here. Indeed, The
God Delusion seems to me badly flawed. Though I once labeled
Dawkins a professional atheist, I'm forced, after reading his
new book, to conclude he's actually more an amateur. I don't
pretend to know whether there's more to the world than meets the
eye and, for all I know, Dawkins's general conclusion is right.
But his book makes a far from convincing case.
2.
The most disappointing
feature of The God Delusion is Dawkins's failure to
engage religious thought in any serious way. This is, obviously,
an odd thing to say about a book-length investigation into God.
But the problem reflects Dawkins's cavalier attitude about the
quality of religious thinking. Dawkins tends to dismiss simple
expressions of belief as base superstition. Having no patience
with the faith of fundamentalists, he also tends to dismiss more
sophisticated expressions of belief as sophistry (he cannot, for
instance, tolerate the meticulous reasoning of theologians). But
if simple religion is barbaric (and thus unworthy of serious
thought) and sophisticated religion is logic-chopping (and thus
equally unworthy of serious thought), the ineluctable conclusion
is that all religion is unworthy of serious thought.
The result is The
God Delusion, a book that never squarely faces its
opponents. You will find no serious examination of Christian or
Jewish theology in Dawkins's book (does he know Augustine
rejected biblical literalism in the early fifth century?), no
attempt to follow philosophical debates about the nature of
religious propositions (are they like ordinary claims about
everyday matters?), no effort to appreciate the complex history
of interaction between the Church and science (does he know the
Church had an important part in the rise of non-Aristotelian
science?), and no attempt to understand even the simplest of
religious attitudes (does Dawkins really believe, as he says,
that Christians should be thrilled to learn they're terminally
ill?).
Instead, Dawkins has
written a book that's distinctly, even defiantly, middlebrow.
Dawkins's intellectual universe appears populated by the likes
of Douglas Adams, the author of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy, and Carl Sagan, the science popularizer,[3]
both of whom he cites repeatedly. This is a different group from
thinkers like William James and Ludwig Wittgenstein—both of whom
lived after Darwin, both of whom struggled with the question of
belief, and both of whom had more to say about religion than
Adams and Sagan. Dawkins spends much time on what can only be
described as intellectual banalities: "Did Jesus have a human
father, or was his mother a virgin at the time of his birth?
Whether or not there is enough surviving evidence to decide it,
this is still a strictly scientific question."[4]
The vacuum created by
Dawkins's failure to engage religious thought must be filled by
something, and in The God Delusion, it gets filled by
extraneous quotation, letters from correspondents, and, most of
all, anecdote after anecdote. Dawkins's discussion of religion's
power to console, for example, is interrupted by the story of
the Abbott of Ampleforth's joy at learning of a friend's
impending death; speculation about why countries, such as the
Netherlands, that allow euthanasia are so rare (presumably
because of religious prejudice); a nurse who told Dawkins that
believers fear death more than nonbelievers do; and the number
of days of remission from Purgatory that Pope Pius X allowed
cardinals and bishops (two hundred, and fifty, respectively).
All this and more in four pages. Gone, it seems, is the Dawkins
of The Selfish Gene, a writer who could lead readers
through dauntingly difficult arguments and who used anecdotes to
illustrate those arguments, not to substitute for them.
3.
One reason for the lack
of extended argument in The God Delusion is clear:
Dawkins doesn't seem very good at it. Indeed he suffers from
several problems when attempting to reason philosophically. The
most obvious is that he has a preordained set of conclusions at
which he's determined to arrive. Consequently, Dawkins uses any
argument, however feeble, that seems to get him there and the
merit of various arguments appears judged largely by where they
lead.
The most important
example involves Dawkins's discussion of philosophical arguments
for the existence of God as opposed to his own argument against
God, which he presents as the intellectual heart of his book.
Considering arguments for God, Dawkins is careful to recite the
many standard objections to them and writes that the traditional
proofs are "vacuous," "dubious," "infantile," and "perniciously
misleading." But turning to his own Ultimate Boeing 747 argument
against God, Dawkins is suddenly uninterested in criticism and
writes that his argument is "unanswerable." So why, you might
wonder, is a clever philosophical argument for God subject to
withering criticism while one against God gets a free pass and
is deemed devastating?
The reason seems clear.
The first argument leads to a conclusion Dawkins despises, while
the second leads to one he loves. Dawkins, so far as I can tell,
is unconcerned that the central argument of his book bears more
than a passing resemblance to those clever philosophical proofs
for the existence of God that he dismisses. This is unfortunate.
He could have used a healthy dose of his usual skepticism when
deciding how much to invest in his own Ultimate Boeing 747
argument. Indeed, one needn't be a creationist to note that
Dawkins's argument suffers at least two potential problems.
First, as others have pointed out, if he is right, the design
hypothesis essentially must be wrong and the alternative
naturalistic hypothesis essentially must be right. But since
when is a scientific hypothesis confirmed by philosophical
gymnastics, not data? Second, the fact that we as scientists
find a hypothesis question-begging—as when Dawkins asks "who
designed the designer?"—cannot, in itself, settle its truth
value. It could, after all, be a brute fact of the universe that
it derives from some transcendent mind, however question-begging
this may seem. What explanations we find satisfying might say
more about us than about the explanations. Why, for example, is
Dawkins so untroubled by his own (large) assumption that both
matter and the laws of nature can be viewed as given? Why isn't
that question-begging?
Exercises in double
standards also plague Dawkins's discussion of the idea that
religion encourages good behavior. Dawkins cites a litany of
statistics revealing that red states (with many conservative
Christians) suffer higher rates of crime, including murder,
burglary, and theft, than do blue states. But now consider his
response to the suggestion that the atheist Stalin and his
comrades committed crimes of breathtaking magnitude: "We are not
in the business," he says, "of counting evils heads, compiling
two rival roll calls of iniquity." We're not? We were forty-five
pages ago.
Dawkins's problems with
philosophy might be related to a failure of metaphysical
imagination. When thinking of those vast matters that make up
religion—matters of ultimate meaning that stand at the edge of
intelligibility and that are among the most difficult to
articulate—he sees only black and white. Despite some attempts
at subtlety, Dawkins almost reflexively identifies religion with
right-wing fundamentalism and biblical literalism. Other, more
nuanced possibilities—varieties of deism, mysticism, or
nondenominational spirituality—have a harder time holding his
attention. It may be that Dawkins can't imagine these
possibilities vividly enough to worry over them in a serious
way.
There's an irony here.
Dawkins's main criticism of those who doubt Darwin—and it's a
good one—is that they suffer a similar failure of imagination.
Those, for example, who argue that evolution could never make an
eye because anything less than a fully formed eye can't see
simply can't imagine the surprising routes taken by evolution.
In any case, part of what it means to suffer a failure of
imagination may be that one can't conceive that one's
imagination is impoverished. It's hard to resist the conclusion
that people like James and Wittgenstein struggled personally
with religion, while Dawkins shrugs his shoulders, at least in
part because they conceived possibilities—mistaken ones perhaps,
but certainly more interesting ones—that escape Dawkins.
4.
Putting aside these
philosophical matters, Dawkins's key empirical claim—that
religion is a pernicious force in the world—might still be
right. Is it? Throughout The God Delusion, Dawkins
reminds us of the horrors committed in the name of God, from
outright war, through the persecution of minority sects, acts of
terrorism, the closing of children's minds, and the oppression
of those having unorthodox sexual lives. No decent person can
fail to be repulsed by the sins committed in the name of
religion. So we all agree: religion can be bad.
But the critical
question is: compared to what? And here Dawkins is less
convincing because he fails to examine the question in a
systematic way. Tests of religion's consequences might involve a
number of different comparisons: between religion's good and bad
effects, or between the behavior of believers and nonbelievers,
and so on. While Dawkins touches on each, his modus operandi
generally involves comparing religion as practiced—religion,
that is, as it plays out in the rough-and-tumble world of
compromise, corruption, and incompetence—with atheism as theory.
But fairness requires that we compare both religion and atheism
as practiced or both as theory. The latter is an amorphous and
perhaps impossible task, and I can see why Dawkins sidesteps it.
But comparing both as practiced is more straightforward. And, at
least when considering religious and atheist institutions, the
facts of history do not, I believe, demonstrate beyond doubt
that atheism comes out on the side of the angels. Dawkins has a
difficult time facing up to the dual facts that (1) the
twentieth century was an experiment in secularism; and (2) the
result was secular evil, an evil that, if anything, was more
spectacularly virulent than that which came before.
Part of Dawkins's
difficulty is that his worldview is thoroughly Victorian. He is,
as many have noted, a kind of latter-day T.H. Huxley. The
problem is that these latter days have witnessed blood-curdling
experiments in institutional atheism. Dawkins tends to wave away
the resulting crimes. It is, he insists, unclear if they were
actually inspired by atheism. He emphasizes, for example, that
Stalin's brutality may not have been motivated by his atheism.
While this is surely partly true, it's a tricky issue,
especially as one would need to allow for the same kind of
distinction when considering religious institutions. (Does
anyone really believe that the Church's dreadful dealings with
the Nazis were motivated by its theism?)
In any case, it's hard
to believe that Stalin's wholesale torture and murder of priests
and nuns (including crucifixions) and Mao's persecution of
Catholics and extermination of nearly every remnant of Buddhism
were unconnected to their atheism. Neither the institutions of
Christianity nor those of communism are, of course, innocent.
But Dawkins's inability to see the difference in the severity of
their sins—one of orders of magnitude—suggests an ideological
commitment of the sort that usually reflects devotion to a
creed.
What of the possibility
that present-day churchgoers are worse morally than those who
stay away? They might be. Indeed C.S. Lewis, in perhaps the most
widely read work of popular theology ever written, Mere
Christianity, conceded the possibility. Emphasizing that the
Gospel was preached to the weak and poor, Lewis argued that
troubled souls might well be drawn disproportionately to the
Church. As he also emphasized, the appropriate contrast should
not, therefore, be between the behavior of churchgoers and
nongoers but between the behavior of people before and after
they find religion. Under Dawkins's alternative logic, the fact
that those sitting in a doctor's office are on average sicker
than those not sitting there must stand as an indictment of
medicine. (There's no evidence in The God Delusion that
Dawkins is familiar with Lewis's argument.)[5]
In any case, there are
some grounds for questioning whether Dawkins's project is even
meaningful. As T.S. Eliot famously observed, to ask whether we
would have been better off without religion is to ask a question
whose answer is unknowable. Our entire history has been so
thoroughly shaped by Judeo-Christian tradition that we cannot
imagine the present state of society in its absence. But there's
a deeper point and one that Dawkins also fails to see. Even what
we mean by the world being better off is conditioned by our
religious inheritance. What most of us in the West mean—and what
Dawkins, as revealed by his own Ten Commandments, means—is a
world in which individuals are free to express their thoughts
and passions and to develop their talents so long as these do
not infringe on the ability of others to do so. But this is
assuredly not what a better world would look like to, say, a
traditional Confucian culture. There, a new and improved world
might be one that allows the readier suppression of individual
differences and aspirations. The point is that all judgments,
including ethical ones, begin somewhere and ours, often enough,
begin in Judaism and Christianity. Dawkins should, of course, be
applauded for his attempt to picture a better world. But
intellectual honesty demands acknowledging that his moral vision
derives, to a considerable extent, from the tradition he so
despises.[6]
5.
One of the most
interesting questions about Dawkins's book is why it was
written. Why does Dawkins feel he has anything significant to
say about religion and what gives him the sense of authority
presumably needed to say it at book length? The God Delusion
certainly establishes that Dawkins has little new to offer. Its
arguments are those of any bright student who has thumbed
through Bertrand Russell's more popular books and who has,
horrified, watched videos of holy rollers. Dawkins is obviously
entitled to his views on God, ballet, and currency markets. But
I doubt he feels much need to pen books on the last two topics.
The reason Dawkins
thinks he has something to say about God is, of course, clear:
he is an evolutionary biologist. And as we all know, Darwinism
had an early and noisy run-in with religion. What Dawkins never
seems to consider is that this incident might have been, in an
important way, local and contingent. It might, in other words,
have turned out differently, at least in principle. Believers
could, for instance, have uttered a collective "So what?" to
evolution. Indeed some did. The angry reaction of many religious
leaders to Darwinism had complex causes, involving equal parts
ignorance, fear, politics, and the sheer shock of the new. The
point is that it's far from certain that there is an ineluctable
conflict between the acceptance of evolutionary mechanism and
the belief that, as William James putit, "the visible world is
part of a more spiritual universe." Instead, we and Dawkins
might simply be living through the reverberations of an
interesting, but not especially fundamental, bit of Victorian
history. If so, evolutionary biology would enjoy no particularly
exalted pulpit from which to preach about religion.
None of this is to say
that evolutionary biology cannot inform our view of religion. It
can and does. At the very least it insists that the Lord works
in mysterious ways. More generally, it demands rejection of
anything approaching biblical literalism. There are facts of
nature—including that human beings evolved on the African
savanna several million years ago—and these facts are not
subject to negotiation. But Dawkins's book goes far beyond this.
The reason, of course, is that The God Delusion is not
itself a work of either evolutionary biology in particular or
science in general. None of Dawkins's loud pronouncements on God
follows from any experiment or piece of data. It's just Dawkins
talking.
We should not, though,
conclude that there's no debate whatever to be had between
science and religion. The view championed by Stephen Jay Gould
and others that the two endeavors are utterly distinct and thus
incapable of interfering with each other is overly simplistic.
There have been, and likely will continue to be, real
disagreements between legitimate science and authentic religion.
Some of the issues involved are epistemological (Do scientific
and religious claims simply begin with different premises, the
first materialist and the second not?), and others ethical
(Where do we draw the line between what medicine can accomplish
and what it should be allowed to accomplish?). These questions
are difficult and might well merit extended discussion between
scientific and religious thinkers. But if such discussions are
to be worthwhile, they will have to take place at a far higher
level of sophistication than Richard Dawkins seems either
willing or able to muster.
_______________
Notes
[1] Most
evolutionary biologists would argue that we do not need to
explain anything as complex as present life to explain the
origin of life. We need only explain how a self-replicating
molecule could arise. Given such a molecule, natural selection
can operate and complex life could then evolve. Although the
details are difficult and the case is not proved, there is
reason to believe that the origin of life may have involved a
replicating molecule called RNA. According to this theory, this
RNA was able to replicate by itself—without the
assistance of any proteins or other molecules. See James P.
Ferris, "From Building Blocks to the Polymers of Life," in
Life's Origins: The Beginnings of Biological Evo-lution,
edited by J. William Schopf (University of California Press,
2002), pp. 113–139.
[2] For more on
this, see Dawkins's interview at Salon.com (www.salon.com/
books/int/2006/10/13/dawkins/index .html).
[3] For an
interesting look at Sagan's thought, see Richard C. Lewontin's
"Billions and Billions of Demons," The New York Review,
January 9, 1997.
[4] T.S. Eliot:
"The unbeliever starts... as likely as not with the question: Is
a case of human parthenogenesis credible? and this he would call
going straight to the heart of the matter." (From Eliot's
introduction to Pascal's Pensées, Dutton, 1958.)
[5] Even when
comparing believers and nonbelievers, Dawkins is curiously
silent on one of the best-known differences. Believers give far
more to charities—even nonreligious charities—than do
secularists. See, for instance, the Social Capital Community
Benchmark Survey (www.cfsv.org/communitysurvey/results.html).
[6] Dawkins would
likely respond that his moral vision derives from either
biological or cultural evolution, i.e., from the spread of
"memes," his putative unit of cultural evolution. I suspect that
biological evolution has endowed us with a rough moral sense;
but this can't explain the kind of differences between
Judeo-Christian and Confucian cultures noted above. As for
memes, I see no difference between saying that my morals derive
from, say, Christianity and saying that my brain hosts a
"Christian morality meme." In any case, most scientists do not
accept Dawkins's theory of memes. Lewis Wolpert's reaction in
his new book is typical: "Just what a meme is, and how it is
distinguishable from beliefs, I find difficult.... There is no
distinction made between memes relating to belief and knowledge.
Moreover, no mechanism is proposed for the so-called replication
of memes, or what they are selected for."