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page 2 of Can an atheist be a fundamentalist?
So, in order not to be a
"fundamentalist" atheist, which of the absurdities
connoted in the foregoing should an atheist temporise
over? Should a "moderate atheist" be one who does
not mind how many hundreds of millions of people
have been deeply harmed by religion throughout
history? Should he or she be one who chuckles
indulgently at the antipathy of Sunni for Shia,
Christian for Jew, Muslim for Hindu, and all of
them for anyone who does not think the universe
is controlled by invisible powers? Is an acceptable
(to the faithful) atheist one who thinks it is
reasonable for people to believe that the gods
suspend the laws of nature occasionally in answer
to personal prayers, or that to save someone's
soul from further sin (especially the sin of heresy)
it is in his own interests to be murdered?
As it happens, no atheist
should call himself or herself one. The term already
sells a pass to theists, because it invites debate
on their ground. A more appropriate term is "naturalist",
denoting one who takes it that the universe is
a natural realm, governed by nature's laws. This
properly implies that there is nothing supernatural
in the universe - no fairies or goblins, angels,
demons, gods or goddesses. Such might as well
call themselves "a-fairyists" or "a-goblinists"
as "atheists"; it would be every bit as meaningful
or meaningless to do so. (Most people, though,
forget that belief in fairies was widespread until
the beginning of the 20th century; the church
fought a long hard battle against this competitor
superstition, and won, largely because - you guessed
it - of the infant and primary church schools
founded in the second half of the nineteenth century.)
By the same token, therefore,
people with theistic beliefs should be called
supernaturalists, and it can be left to them to
attempt to refute the findings of physics, chemistry
and the biological sciences in an effort to justify
their alternative claim that the universe was
created, and is run, by supernatural beings. Supernaturalists
are fond of claiming that some irreligious people
turn to prayer when in mortal danger, but naturalists
can reply that supernaturalists typically repose
great faith in science when they find themselves
in (say) a hospital or an aeroplane - and with
far greater frequency. But of course, as votaries
of the view that everything is consistent with
their beliefs - even apparent refutations of them
- supernaturalists can claim that science itself
is a gift of god, and thus justify doing so. But
they should then remember Popper: "A theory that
explains everything explains nothing."
In conclusion, it is worth
pointing out an allied and characteristic bit
of jesuitry employed by folk of faith. This is
their attempt to describe naturalism (atheism)
as itself a "religion". But, by definition, a
religion is something centred upon belief in the
existence of supernatural agencies or entities
in the universe; and not merely in their existence,
but in their interest in human beings on this
planet; and not merely their interest, but their
particularly detailed interest in what humans
wear, what they eat, when they eat it, what they
read or see, what they treat as clean and unclean,
who they have sex with and how and when; and so
for a multitude of other things, like making women
invisible beneath enveloping clothing, or strapping
little boxes to their foreheads, or iterating
formulae by rote five times a day, and so endlessly
forth; with threats of punishment for getting
any of it wrong.
But naturalism (atheism)
by definition does not premise such belief. Any
view of the world that does not premise the existence
of something supernatural is a philosophy, or
a theory, or at worst an ideology. If it is either
of the two first, at its best it proportions what
it accepts to the evidence for accepting it, knows
what would refute it, and stands ready to revise
itself in the light of new evidence. This is the
essence of science. It comes as no surprise that
no wars have been fought, pogroms carried out,
or burnings conducted at the stake, over rival
theories in biology or astrophysics. And one can
grant that the word "fundamental" does after all
apply to this: in the phrase "fundamentally sensible".
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