alexandraerin: (Bovvered)
It's up on the latest post in [livejournal.com profile] fandomsecrets. Those who know me can probably guess which one, but I'll just say straight up: it's number 164. Catherine Tate Eff Tee Double You.

Here's a copy of the secret for the connection impaired:



Obviously it's not much of a secret if I'm admitting to posting it, and truthfully, I don't need another person's example to teach me that it's okay to eat. The fact is, I don't even know Ms. Tate's eating habits. She could have a glass of water and a cracker (or "lorry", as Ariella tells me they call them over there) every day for all I know. Those of us who live in reality instead of Weight Loss Industry Sponsored Land™ know that you can't tell somebody's dietary habits from looking at their body.

So what's the point? I'm trying to plant a seed. Almost every post on [livejournal.com profile] fandomsecrets includes at least one picture of a stylistically thin stick figure of a cartoon character with the message "She is my thinspiration." So, I post a picture of a real, live woman... a tremendously talented woman who has what is probably among the best, most coveted roles in genre television... to show these folk that having a life need not depend on mutilating oneself in pursuit of an unattainable ideal.

This was my first such secret to get posted. I submitted a deliberately cracky one a while back, but it never went up. Whether this was because it was judged to be trollish or because I didn't do it right, I'm not at all sure. I wasn't sure I'd done this one right, and so it may show up as a duplicate in another post.
alexandraerin: (Jesus Christ)
I really should finish writing the More Tales of MU chapter I'm working on, but I've got a bug in my brain about something, and I'll probably be more productive in the long run if I get it out of my system.

According to the 'kipedia:

[Richard] Dawkins describes his childhood as "a normal Anglican upbringing", but reveals that he began doubting the existence of God when he was about nine years old. He later reconverted because he was persuaded by the argument from design, an argument for the existence of God or a creator based on perceived evidence of order, purpose, design or direction—or some combination of these—in nature. However, he began to feel that the customs of the Church of England were absurd, and had more to do with dictating morals than with God. Later, when he better understood the process of evolution, his religious position again changed, because he felt that natural selection could account for the complexity of life in purely material terms, rendering a supernatural designer unnecessary.


You know what?

Guy's totally right about natural selection being sufficient to account for the complexity of life. He's totally right about the physical world being a sufficient explanation for itself without dragging in an external force.

But the vehemence with which he preaches against religion now?

Overkill. Way overkill.

Atheism is such a straight-forward point of view to begin with that it doesn't actually need elaborate justifications and explanations. It doesn't require a manifesto. Such a document might be useful if it debunked misconceptions about atheisms... the idea that atheists are immoral and see no problem with lying or killing if they can get away with it because they don't believe in right or wrong, for instance... but that's a side point.

What I'm talking about his vitriol, which is the exact mirror image of Ben Stein's nonsense about how science == godlessness == killing people. You know what I hear every time I read a quote from Dawkins about religion and people of faith?


"The dwarves are for the dwarves! We won't be taken in again!"


That's a paraphrase (or attempt at quoting from memory, actually) of a scene in The Last Battle, the final phase of The Chronicles of Narnia. Having been tricked into following a fake god, a group of dwarves decide they won't ever believe in any god... and become downright nasty as a result of the feeling of having been tricked, doing things like shooting volleys of arrows indiscriminately, not caring who they kill in the titular battle because they're on no side but their own.

This would actually be a straw man caricature of atheism as it is often seen by theists... but it's actually a bit on the nose for a certain class of bitter "reformed theist" with wounded pride at having been "taken in."

Richard Dawkins seems to be one such individual. He got "tricked" into believing in God at an early age due to a spurious argument for the material necessity of a creator* and he, being the big giant brain that he is, feels deeply ashamed of this. People don't like feeling ashamed, though. They'd much rather be angry, given the choice. So, it's not enough for him to not believe in God.

He has to convince the world that they, the theists, are the fools, rather than Richard Dawkins, Supergenius.

In the process, he has essentially gone from being an atheist---which is nothing more or less than one who believes in no god---and become an antitheist, which is just about the most useless position one can imagine. It's one who shakes his fist at the sky cursing at somebody he's sure isn't there.

It's everything that ordinary atheists are painted as when given an unsympathetic portrayal by religious media.

I don't agree with every little thing the guy comes out with on other topics. I think he gets a lot of undue credit for merely having given the modern name to meme theory, an idea that many intelligent and world-aware people were conscious of long before and one which was fully articulated by others. But for all that, I think he's very intelligent and I'd love to see what more he could accomplish if he could get over his childish embarrassment at having been "taken in."




* Note that all such arguments are spurious and miss the point. A spiritual power exists (whether memetically or otherwise) to address spiritual needs. I often wonder what sort of spiritual comfort people who are only converted by such "watchmaker" arguments actually derive from having been given a pat solution to a perceived plothole in the universe.

Profile

alexandraerin: (Default)
alexandraerin

August 2017

S M T W T F S
   12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 23rd, 2025 05:48 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios