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Religion See other Religion Articles Title: Richard Dawkins On Why Religious Faith Tends To Create More Evil People Than, Say, Stalinism The atheist as fundamentalist Q&A | Richard Dawkins On Why Religious Faith Tends To Create More Evil People Than, Say, Stalinism Oct. 29, 2006. 01:00 AM OLIVIA WARD TORONTO STAR Richard Dawkins is the enfant terrible of atheism, a scientist whose best-selling first book, The Selfish Gene, argued a genetic basis for Darwin's theory of evolution, and who went on to challenge theories of creationism that have gained traction in the last decade. Currently a professor of Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University, he has just completed a documentary series on the role of religion in modern history. Here he talks about his latest book, The God Delusion (Houghton Mifflin), which makes the case that the existence of a supreme being is supremely improbable, and that religious belief is not only wrong but deadly. Did you use the title of your book to provoke people? It's not the intention of the title. The whole book is meant to change people's minds. It's not intended just to provoke, though. I really want people to think and to come to a different conclusion from the one they had previously. I hope there is a good middle ground of people who vaguely think of themselves as religious but haven't given it much thought. I'm hoping that I can provoke them into thinking. But isn't the problem really with the extremists, not the middle-of-the-roaders? You will never change the mind of a real dyed-in-the-wool faithhead. But there are plenty of people who vaguely think they are religious but just need a bit of stimulation to think for themselves. They are important because we need their numerical strength. In the United States, for instance, it is impossible for an atheist to get elected to public office. If you think about it, there are hundreds of members of Congress, and some are drawn from the intellectual elite. It is almost impossible that such a large sample of those intellectuals are all religious. Most of them are lying to get elected. But if my middle-of-the-roaders come off the fence, it will no longer be true that politicians have to invoke God in all their speeches in order to get the votes. You've been called "Darwin's Rottweiler." Do you like being labelled a militant atheist? Rottweilers are very sweet and charming dogs, you know. It's true I do feel the need to convert people. I care about what's true, and I think it's rather sad if people have to go through life believing in a falsehood. How do you answer critics who say your book ignores the evils of anti-religious ideologies such as Stalinism? It's a misunderstanding. I never simply list evil deeds by evil people. There are evil deeds done by the non-religious as well as the religious. But that's not really the point. The point is whether religious faith is more likely to make people evil and I suspect it is. Of course, not every religious person does bad things. But I think if you are brought up to think there is something called faith that cannot be questioned, and that it is bad manners to question, then that paves the way for a few extremists to feel justified in doing their terrible acts. Very few religious people do those things, but they make the world safe for those who do by extolling the virtues of faith and bringing children up to believe that blind faith is a virtue. Do you see religious extremism on the rise generally, or is it merely confined to a vocal minority? If you take the longer view of history, going back to the Middle Ages or Biblical times, it was even worse. If you take the shorter view, over my lifetime I do see religious extremism on the rise. But I don't think it is a permanent effect. It's a zigzagging curve that goes up and down. It happens to be going up and down in the United States at the moment, for example. That is perhaps because of President George W. Bush coming to power. How can you combat such extremism? I do it to the best of my own powers, using the media, writing books, talking to people, et cetera. And there are faintly encouraging signs. Both my book and Sam Harris's book, Letter to a Christian Nation which is every bit as outspokenly anti-religious as mine are high in the bestseller list at the moment, and that would not have been foreseen six years ago. Maybe there is the beginning of a shift in opinion. Is there a countervailing upswing in interest in science? I'd like to think so. It's the raison d'être of my career, and it's my duty to work as though that were the case. It may be different in other countries, but in Britain, if you actually look at the statistics on young people choosing to read scientific subjects at university, on the contrary, there is a tendency the other way. I'd like to think that's also a blip. You don't give any ground to religion. But what about those people in dreadful situations who simply turn to it for comfort? That's a difficult one, because if you find something comforting that doesn't make it true. But even if it's not true, is that a justification for it? I think it's like saying, "Would you rather have a doctor tell you the truth about what you've got if it's serious, or would you prefer him to hide it from you?" Nobody is forcing anyone to read my book. But I'm writing for the kind of person who would rather the doctor told them the truth.
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#1. To: Mind_Virus (#0)
OTOH, were there any good Stalinists?
Dawkins is the quasi-scientific version of a bag lady screaming in the street. Scientists don't take him seriously, and rightfully so.
"We become what we behold. We shape our tools and thereafter our tools shape us." -- Marshall McLuhan, after Alexander Pope and William Blake.
The man is an idiot. Stalin killed 60,000,000. You cannot count Zionists as religious people. Nor the Nazis. So where does he get his data except from inside his head? I will skip his book.
The Truth of 911 Shall Set You Free From The Lie
It's not the intention of the title. The whole book is meant to change people's minds. How do you answer critics who say your book ignores the evils of anti-religious ideologies such as Stalinism? It's a misunderstanding. I never simply list evil deeds by evil people. There are evil deeds done by the non-religious as well as the religious. But that's not really the point. The point is whether religious faith is more likely to make people evil and I suspect it is. This imbecile is the same as the ones he criticizes. An evangelistic atheist who wants to make others believe his way is the way, rather than STFU and allowing others to believe as they wish. " The point is whether religious faith is more likely to make people evil and I suspect it is." --Is THIS all he's got?? BWAHAHAHAHAHA!!!! Stalin killed more than any person on earth for goodness sakes.
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