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The mission of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science is to support scientific education, critical thinking and evidence-based understanding of the natural world in the quest to overcome religious fundamentalism, superstition, intolerance and suffering.
The Magic of Reality
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Sean Faircloth:
Attack of the Theocrats!
No, definitely not Christian!
Used to be, though, and back in those days, as I tried to explain in my article, I accepted evolution but knew next to nothing about it. I hadn't looked into it at all, hadn't been taught about it at school, had no idea how it worked. I simply assumed (taking things on faith being something you become quite good at as a Christian) that the scientists would have good reason for saying that it was true, and then just ignored it.
'God is mysterious and all-powerful' is an incredibly flexible and convenient belief. What it means is that anything is possible but the believer cannot expect to understand how - which in turn means that what seems like an insurmountable obstacle to faith to those of us outside the bubble can be easily hand-waved away by those on the inside of it. 'Well, I can't explain it, but that doesn't mean that God couldn't do it.'
Religious belief creates an entirely different way of looking at the world. Leaving that behind when I realised that Christianity was literally incredible was an enormous relief: I can remember to this day the almost physical sense of release, the sense of finally coming up for air, the sheer sense of liberation when I began to investigate proper explanations and grapple with facts and evidence and data rather than the woolliness of faith!
Taking things on trust and believing that there are some things we will not be able to understand in this life are central to faith - so we should never be surprised when, like the White Queen in Alice through the Looking Glass, the religious believe six impossible things before breakfast. It doesn't necessarily mean they are not sincere or genuine; and certainly not that they're stupid. It's just what the intellectual prison of religion does to its inmates.
Permalink Wed, 24 Aug 2011 21:11:10 UTC | #863872