Posts Tagged ‘religion’

The Biology of Religion

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

This is an absolutely fascinating lecture given by Professor Robert Sapolsky, apparently as part of the Stanford Spring 2002 Human Behavioural Biology course.

It’s over an hour long, so it takes some commitment to make it through the whole thing, but I absolutely recommend it.

Here’s a link to the original video.

Charlotte Allen: No point, just whining.

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

The Guradian’s published a Comment is free article by Christian author Charlotte Allen.  It’s called “Atheists: No God, just whining“, with jovial abstract: “Atheists are a tiresome, self-pitying bunch whose primary motivation isn’t rationalism but anger”.  Oh yes, this is already looking like a good one. Well, I read it. And the only thing that struck me was the bizarre irony of someone complaining about whining taking the place of valid argument, by whining in place of valid argument.  There are fifteen paragraphs in Charlotte’s essay, and I think only one valid point is made throughout.  I’m going to reproduce and deconstruct it briefly because, well, because I can.  And I think it’s interesting that an essay of such meagre calibre has been published in not one but two major newspapers. Let me begin:

I can’t stand atheists – but it’s not because they don’t believe in God. It’s because they’re crashing bores.

Well we’re off to a good start.  Allen opens with a short paragraph which really serves as an excellent preview for the rest of the essay — it’s a sweeping generalisation, offensively bigoted (try rehashing with “jew” in place of “atheist” and submitting this to The Guardian), contains no argument, and displays a startling lack of self-awareness.

Other people, most recently the British cultural critic Terry Eagleton in his new book, Faith, Reason and Revolution, take to task such superstar nonbelievers as Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins (The God Delusion) and political journalist Christopher Hitchens (God Is Not Great) for indulging in a philosophically primitive opposition of faith and reason that assumes that if science can’t prove something, it doesn’t exist.

Allen seems to be attempting to be reasonable here, with what looks like a rational critique of the fundaments of atheism; but unfortunately this is nothing more than a grotesque and painfully overused strawman. If we read this — just the second paragraph in the essay — it tells us perhaps all we need to know about Allen to be able to stop reading and save ourselves some time.  Look at that last phrase: “opposition of faith and reason that assumes that if science can’t prove something, it doesn’t exist”. Well, one thing we can be sure of is that Charlotte Allen has probably never spoken to an atheist in person, or read any of the books that she rails against.  Never have I heard a self-respecting scientist or atheist claim that science can “prove” anything.  As a professional scientist himself, Dawkins talks about this all the time; leading me to believe that either Allen has never read his books, or didn’t understand what she read.  Even allowing for this, I’ve never heard any atheist try to claim that if something isn’t suggested by science, it doesn’t exist — that doesn’t even make sense.  Allen has either displayed up-front that she doesn’t understand what she’s talking about, or she’s deliberately constructing a transparent strawman argument in the hopes of appearing superior to people who actually haven’t read or understood what the popular atheist authors are saying.

My problem with atheists is their tiresome – and way old – insistence that they are being oppressed and their fixation with the fine points of Christianity. What – did their Sunday school teachers flog their behinds with a Bible when they were kids?

Unlike many commenters in The Guardian’s threads, I don’t think this can be construed as a deeply offensive slight against people who have suffered abuse as children at the hands of religious authority figures.  I do, however, think that at the very least this is a completely content-free paragraph — Allen not citing or referencing or even suggesting any instance of such things. Atheists do frequently discuss the minuteae of Christian doctrine, as this is a philosophically sound method to show incoherence and inconsistency.  Allen doesn’t say at any point why such a thing is to be frowned upon. The only “victim-mentality” that I see displayed by atheists is in direct response to some specific and clearly-referenced instance of discrimination.  Or, for example, mindless ranting polemics against “athsists” in general published internationally in mainstream news media.  Yes, for shame, atheists everywhere!  This is somehow your fault.

Ironically, the “way old” claim has frequently been shown valid. A fact somewhat weakening Allen’s facile “argument”, rather than strengthening it.

Read Dawkins, or Hitchens, or the works of fellow atheists Sam Harris (The End of Faith) and Daniel Dennett (Breaking the Spell), or visit an atheist website or blog (there are zillions of them, bearing such titles as God Is for Suckers, God Is Imaginary and God Is Pretend), and your eyes will glaze over as you peruse – again and again – the obsessively tiny range of topics around which atheists circle like water in a drain.

Yep, yet another content-free statement — no examples or references, just groundless name-dropping.  What is “obsessively tiny” supposed to mean? Allen gives no hints. Not only is this essay offensive in content, it’s offensive in style, too.

First off, there’s atheist victimology: Boohoo, everybody hates us ‘cuz we don’t believe in God. Although a recent Pew Forum survey on religion found that 16% of Americans describe themselves as religiously unaffiliated, only 1.6% call themselves atheists, with another 2.4% weighing in as agnostics (a group despised as wishy-washy by atheists). You or I might attribute the low numbers to atheists’ failure to win converts to their unbelief, but atheists say the problem is persecution so relentless that it drives tens of millions of God-deniers into a closet of feigned faith, like gays before Stonewall.

When we read this paragraph, what do we find yet again?  That’s right, Charlotte Allen has nothing to say!  She quickly dismisses “atheists’” alleged claims that “low numbers” are misrepresentative because of stigma. Why does she disagree this? None can tell, as she doesn’t even get as far as claiming that they’re wrong, so much as essentially repeating what they say in a silly voice and hoping that this will convince her audience.

In his online Atheist Manifesto, Harris writes that “no person, whatever his or her qualifications, can seek public office in the United States without pretending to be certain that … God exists.” The evidence? Antique clauses in the constitutions of six – count ‘em – states barring atheists from office.

Or perhaps, as Harris actually says, this is a regrettable truth contingent on the polling data collected on American voters.  But hey, why bother to do your research when you can twist quotes to say whatever you want?

The US supreme court ruled such provisions unenforceable nearly 50 years ago, but that doesn’t stop atheists from bewailing that they have to hide their Godlessness from friends, relatives, employers and potential dates. One representative of the pity-poor-me school of atheism, Kathleen Goodman, writing in January for the Chronicle of Higher Education, went so far as to promote affirmative action for atheists on college campuses: specially designated, college-subsidised “safe spaces” for them to express their views.

Well, Allen has completely missed the point Harris was trying to make.  Even if it’s slightly ambiguous in the quotation’s source, it’s reinforced in almost everything else he’s written. Not only has she essentially misquoted him, she’s now arbitrarily conflating voting trends with social conventions. I especially love that last sentence — she’s moved from one point (“there’s an out-dated and irrelevant law I’ve just been talking about”) to one wholly unconnected (“it seems some people want to encourage freedom of expression on college campuses”) in the same breath, followed by a tacit “can you believe their audacity?!”; as if she’s been piling on the evidence.

Maybe atheists wouldn’t be so unpopular if they stopped beating the drum until the hide splits on their second-favourite topic: How stupid people are who believe in God. This is a favourite Dawkins theme. In a recent interview with Trina Hoaks, the atheist blogger for the Examiner.com website, Dawkins described religious believers as follows: “They feel uneducated, which they are; often rather stupid, which they are; inferior, which they are; and paranoid about pointy-headed intellectuals from the East Coast looking down on them, which, with some justification, they do.” Thanks, Richard!

In reality, Allen has quoted Richard Dawkins out of context. He was replying to a question specifically about why “certain” (a word conveniently omitted in Allen’s introducing of the quote, but present in the original transcript) religious people who specifically criticise evolutionary theory as opposed to paleontology or archeology.  So unless she’s a creationist (which wouldn’t surprise me, given her understanding of anything displayed thus far), that “Thanks, Richard” does nothing but further decontextualise the quote. Thanks, Charlotte!

Dennett likes to call atheists “the brights”, in contrast to everybody else, who obviously aren’t so bright. In a 2006 essay describing his brush with death after a heart operation, Dennett wrote these thoughts about his religious friends who told him they were praying for his recovery: “Thanks, I appreciate it, but did you also sacrifice a goat?” With friends like Daniel Dennett, you don’t need enemies.

Allow me to also quote Dennet: “Don’t confuse the noun with the adjective: ‘I’m a bright’ is not a boast but a proud avowal of an inquisitive world view.”  That’s from the same source she’s quoting from, it’s linked to right form the Guardian article.  So I guess she — yet again — either didn’t understand the words she was reading, or deliberately misrepresented them.

Then there’s PZ Myers, biology professor at the University of Minnesota’s Morris campus, whose blog, Pharyngula, is supposedly about Myers’s field, evolutionary biology, but is actually about his fanatical propensity to label religious believers as “idiots”, “morons”, “loony” or “imbecilic” in nearly every post. The university deactivated its link to Myers’ blog in July after he posted a photo of a consecrated host from a Mass that he had pierced with a rusty nail and thrown into the garbage (“I hope Jesus’s tetanus shots are up to date”) in an effort to prove that Catholicism is bunk – or something.

BAM! Right when we let our guard down, another entirely point-free paragraph wastes seconds of our lives. Seriously, talk about “whining”!

Myers’s blog exemplifies atheists’ frenzied fascination with Christianity and the Bible. Atheist website after atheist website insists that Jesus either didn’t exist or “was a jerk” (in the words of one blogger) because he didn’t eliminate smallpox or world poverty. At the American Atheists website, a writer complains that God “set up” Adam and Eve, knowing in advance that they would eat the forbidden fruit. A blogger on A Is for Atheist has been going through the Bible chapter by chapter and verse by verse in order to prove its “insanity” (he or she had gotten up to the Book of Joshua when I last looked).

I don’t know on what basis Myers’ Pharyngula could be considered as “exemplifying” a “frenzied” (?) fascination with the Bible. But not to worry, that last paragraph is just a list of things that some disparate atheists might have done on the internet at one time or another. Characteristically content-free.

Another topic that atheists beat like the hammer on the anvil in the old Anacin commercials is Darwinism versus creationism. Maybe Darwin-o-mania stems from the fact that this year marks the bicentennial of Charles Darwin’s birth in 1809, but haven’t atheists heard that many religious people (including the late Pope John Paul II) don’t have a problem with evolution but, rather, regard it as God’s way of letting his living creation unfold? Furthermore, even if human nature as we know it is a matter of lucky adaptations, how exactly does that disprove the existence of God?

Yes. Many religious people do accept science, and we atheists (according to Allen one atheist can speak for them all, so why don’t I?) have head about it. Unfortunately, Charlotte Allen apparently isn’t one of those people, though, as her idea that “lucky adaptions” leading to “human nature as we know it” is numbingly inaccurate and superficial. “Lucky”? “Human Nature”? Yes, these are terms of statistical evolutionary biology nomenclature, right out of the literature.

And then there’s the question of why atheists are so intent on trying to prove that God not only doesn’t exist but is evil to boot. Dawkins, writing in The God Delusion, accuses the deity of being a “petty, unjust, unforgiving control freak” as well as a “misogynistic, homophobic, racist … bully.” If there is no God – and you’d be way beyond stupid to think differently – why does it matter whether he’s good or evil?

Again, Allen behaves like either a dullard or a liar.  In context, the point Dawkins makes is about obtaining morals from God, not about whether he exists or not. Strawman combined with misquoting? Is this a new low?

The problem with atheists – and what makes them such excruciating snoozes – is that few of them are interested in making serious metaphysical or epistemological arguments against God’s existence, or in taking on the serious arguments that theologians have made attempting to reconcile, say, God’s omniscience with free will or God’s goodness with human suffering.

I just want to break into this paragraph to say that finally Charlotte Allen has made a good point!  Those are good arguments against God’s existence.  And I rarely hear atheists talk about those!!!

Atheists seem to assume that the whole idea of God is a ridiculous absurdity, the “flying spaghetti monster” of atheists’ typically lame jokes. They think that lobbing a few Gaza-style rockets accusing God of failing to create a world more to their liking (“If there’s a God, why aren’t I rich?” “If there’s a God, why didn’t he give me two heads so I could sleep with one head while I get some work done with the other?”) will suffice to knock down the entire edifice of belief.

Contrary to unpopular belief, the Flying Spaghetti Monster is not a “typically lame joke”, it was originally an agent of protest against the Kansas School Board hearing on the teaching of Intelligent Design in schools.  But it’s OK that Allen got another fact utterly wrong through lack of research or willful ignorance — how could she have been expected to know it? It’s only the #2 result on fucking Google!

What primarily seems to motivate atheists isn’t rationalism but anger – anger that the world isn’t perfect, that someone forced them to go to church as children, that the Bible contains apparent contradictions, that human beings can be hypocrites and commit crimes in the name of faith. The vitriol is extraordinary. Hitchens thinks that “religion spoils everything”. Dawkins contends that raising one’s offspring in one’s religion constitutes child abuse. Harris argues that it “may be ethical to kill people” on the basis of their beliefs. The perennial atheist litigant Michael Newdow sued (unsuccessfully) to bar President Obama from uttering the words “so help me God” when he took his oath of office.

Why yes, Charlotte, those are some things which some atheists have done before. Thanks for bringing them to our attention!  Now, what was your point?

What atheists don’t seem to realise is that even for believers, faith is never easy in this world of injustice, pain and delusion. Even for believers, God exists just beyond the scrim of the senses. So, atheists, how about losing the tired sarcasm and boring self-pity and engaging believers seriously?

Well.  The tired sarcasm I’m afraid I can’t loose, because when I’m confronted with pages of bullshit in my newspaper I need to express myself somehow.  And now, Charlotte, why don’t you loose the vapid rhetoric and laughable hypocrisy, and engage atheists seriously?

Er…

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Ahern defends new blasphemy law

Independant.ie writes:

Mr Ahern yesterday defended a fine of up to €100,000 that will be imposed on blasphemers. … Gardai will now have the power to seize blasphemous material from the home or any other premises used by a person convicted of blasphemy.

Okay, seriously now guys, stop it.

This kind of thing used to be funny. We’d be all “heh, glad I don’t live in Saudi Arabia” or “oh, that crazy pope, what’ll he get up to next?”.  But the joke’s run its course and it’s time to give it up and move along, ok?

Remember, we’re trying to build a better world here, and hilarious though pranks like this are, they’re getting a little tiresome.

Pig

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Israeli official: Swine flu name offensive to Judaism and Islam

Oh no. You’re not serious…

Reason Weekly writes:

The outbreak of swine flu should be renamed “Mexican” influenza in deference to Muslim and Jewish sensitivities over pork, said an Israeli health official Monday.

Deputy Health Minister Yakov Litzman said the reference to pigs is offensive to both religions and “we should call this Mexican flu and not swine flu,” he told a news conference at a hospital in central Israel.

Nice to see the men of god have their priorities right.

Labour hates gays, loves Jesus.

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Faith Schools Free to Preach Against Homosexuality

Oh fucking hell. The Guardian writes:

[Sir Alasdair] Macdonald said: “What we’re trying to do, and I accept it’s difficult, is find a balance between young people having an entitlement to knowledge, facts, information but where schools, particularly schools with a particular faith interest or other disposition, also have a right to put that in context of their particular institution. “

Why?

Think about that — a balance between young people having an entitlement to knowledge, and an institution’s particular faith interests. This is just so irresponsible.

Ethics versus religion in Berlin; ethics win

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Berlin Rejects Religious Lessons

That was fairly close…

BBC News writes:

A referendum in Germany has failed to give children a choice between classes in secular ethics or religion. … Opponents said that any changes to the curriculum would be divisive.

Sanity is preserved.

Ethics versus religion in Berlin

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Referendum Pits Ethics against Religion

What a beautifully irony-laced headline from Spiegel Online International.

From the article:

Since 2006, ethics has been a compulsory subject for all high school students in Germany’s capital city, while religion is an optional course. The “Pro Reli” campaign wants to change those rules so that pupils would have to choose between ethics and a faith-based religion class. Those classes would be strictly divided along religious lines, with Protestants, Catholics and Muslims being taught separately.

I actually can’t believe this.  It’s like a piece of science fiction.

Faith Schools: Why They’re a Really Bad Idea

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

As the title suggests, this short article is about faith schools, and why they’re a really bad idea.

To begin with, I’m going to have to make some assumptions.  I don’t want to have to argue everything through from first principles, so let me first detail my starting point.  I think I’ll need just three ideological presuppositions to argue my case.  First, pluralism is good.  By this I mean that we should have some respect and tolerance for other cultures and opinions.  Notice here that I don’t mean that all cultures and opinions are equally valid.  In fact, this is my second assumption — cultural relativism is bad.  By this I mean that no matter how strongly a person or group of people believe something, that doesn’t make it true.  Some things really are universally and objectively wrong.  I’m sure we can all agree that genital mutilation and smacking children are not only wrong, but that people who disagree with us are actually incorrect, by some objective metric.  If we don’t submit this point, then right from the start anything goes.  Rape, murder, anything.  If rape is wrong, it’s wrong objectively.  This second assumption may seem to be in tension with the first, but I don’t think it has to be.  We can find the point of agreement by saying that everyone’s entitled to their opinion, but that we don’t have to take them all seriously; though we certainly shouldn’t be dogmatic about which ones we do and don’t.  Finally, I’m going to assume that needless human suffering should be avoided.  Hopefully this maxim won’t require me to defend it.  I should also point out that I’m speaking as a British citizen here, so my knowledge and analysis relate to faith schools as governed by UK law.

I’m basically going to address three things in this essay.  I’m going to detail what I think’s wrong with faith schools; outline some criticisms.  I’m going to try to look at arguments put forward in defence of faith schools, and dismantle them.  Then I’ll try and come up with some suggestions about what should happen.

What’s wrong with faith schools?

The first thing that’s wrong is that kids don’t have a religion.  Richard Dawkins goes on about this (ad nauseam), but he’s not the only one, and I think he’s right.  The key to this point is that to say of an eight year old “Alice is a Pentecostal” makes no more sense than to say “Alice is a Marxist-Leninist” or “Alice is a structural realist, epistemologically speaking”.  All three are complex and extremely specific sociopolitical concepts and one cannot be said to adhere to one of them unless one has spent a significant amount of time understanding their premises and inner-workings.  It seems unlikely that almost any children, particularly young children of a primary school age, have the capacity to do this, let alone having actually tried.

Society doesn’t view children as full people (and this is a good thing).  They aren’t expected to think for themselves in many capacities.  They can’t vote or hold political office, (told you it was a good thing).  They can’t live alone, because they’re considered incapable of taking care of themselves physically.  They can’t have sex, because they’ve not considered capable of taking care of themselves emotionally.  They can’t be tried for a crime as an adult, as they’re not considered able to take full responsibility for their own actions.  They’re required by law to attend an educational institution of one form or another, because they’re not considered capable of finding things out by themselves or of turning themselves into knowledgeable and able citizens.

Another manifestations of this personal irresponsibility is that they shouldn’t be expected to criticise doctrine told to them as fact.  In fact, kids below a certain age are biologically programmed to accept uncritically things told to them by their parents.  It’s a survival mechanism — if mummy says “don’t play in fire”, a non-experimental approach to following parental advice is obviously an evolutionarily fit behaviour.  By extension, kids will uncritically believe things told to them by other adults in positions of authority and power, to whom parents direct kids’ respect.

It might be the case that children of Muslim parents (for example) end up being Muslim themselves, and this is indeed what we observe; but rather than hinting at responsible parenting, this shows that the children don’t have a choice in the matter.  If children could decide for themselves which theological propositions to accept, we’d surely expect to see a random distribution of faiths amongst children; which is of course exactly what we don’t see.

The above argument notwithstanding, the labelling of kids with one faith-tag or another is still unfair, because it segregates them.  If you say to a child “you are a Catholic, but that child is a Protestant”, then you’re automatically separating those children.  The message is communicated that these children are different in some apparently important way.  If it ends up being that children see past this indirect segregation based in superficial differences, it is despite the labelling, not because of it.

This is a problem only tangentially-related to faith schools, but it leads to the more broad point that faith schools are socially divisive.

School may well be a child’s first experience of wider society, and because of this they should be taught to assume that everyone is equal in dignity and worth of equal respect.  Because they obviously are.

Although lip-service is paid to this sentiment by religious leaders, it seems that the very nature of monotheistic religions is exclusivist, and this doesn’t fit with this egalitarian ideal.  Kids at faith schools may be taught to “respect and tolerate” other faiths, but this basically means “we’re right, they’re wrong, this offends god almighty, but let’s not bother them about it in this world”.  This kind of idea must really enforce notions of “other-ness” — we are of a particular faith, we’re special, and everyone else is different to us.  This is an extremely divisive way to talk to children.

Similarly, faith schools connect faith and community in an inappropriate way.  Certainly communities may be built out of faith (or lack of it), but this is also certainly not necessary, and it should never be told to a child that you can’t have real community without a binding faith.

Instead of these things, young children should be taught that imposed divisions in society are always bad (this is obvious), and that people who try impose such divisions are people who shouldn’t be listened to.  We should teach that everyone is essentially the same.  And most importantly, that there’s nothing wrong with people who don’t agree with you.  This is not what one would expect to learn in a faith school.

At this point, I want to digress from faith schools as institutions, and consider the laws the currently stand to require “secular” schools to implement sessions of collective worship.  The following may be found on teachernet.gov.uk:

All maintained schools must provide daily collective worship for all registered pupils (apart from those who have been withdrawn from this by their parents). This is may be provided within daily assembly but the distinction should be made clear.

The head teacher is responsible for arranging the daily collective worship after consulting with the governing body. Daily collective worship must be wholly or mainly of a broadly Christian character. The precise nature will depend on the family background, ages and abilities of the pupils. It is acceptable for schools to split the collective worship sessions over the school year to be 51 per cent Christian and 49 per cent other faiths or interests.

Is there any way in which this is not divisive?  A child must be specifically marked-out as non-Christian in order not to attend a Christian worship-session.  This designates such a child as automatically “other”, and different to (in most cases) the majority of the school.

Those who defend the above are (unsurprisingly) usually Christian, and have feeble arguments.  They might claim that collective worship gives a sense of something greater, that it builds a sense of community inside the school (I’ve even heard it rebranded as collective “worth-ship”, as if that had any bearing on reality), or that it helps build moral values.  While these effects are good, they can be produced (and in fact enhanced) using secular teaching methods.  Instead of collective worship, collective reflection of, for example, less-fortunate members of society, or veneration of community members who work to better the lives of others are surely things which would have a real and positive effect.  These are concrete things on which senses of community may be based.  Ethical questions can also be discussed, even with very young children.  For example, even adages such as the golden rule (“do unto others as you would have them do unto you”) are good and helpful methods for young kids to approach moral dilemmas.

Let me now return to the main argument involving faith schools.

Faith schools teach distorted moral values.  I’m going to take it as read that morality don’t (and can’t) come from religion.  This question seems to be one of the central theses for each of the “new atheist” books released in the last few years, and I think the arguments are fairly clear and watertight.  Ideas of divine moral arbitration are simply incoherent.  But one of the conclusions that I want to reiterate is that morals shouldn’t come from religion.  Just take a look at scripture, and you’ll see that this is the case.

Some religiously-derived ethical rules may be good, but many aren’t, and we can only recognise the good ones through other (non-faith-based) means.  Those that aren’t are also often especially harmful to teach to children.  For example, pupils at a faith school may be taught such things (in accordance with the corresponding holy texts) as:

  • Thought-crime exists.
  • There are things which don’t really hurt anybody, but still hurt God.  (Search for “crackergate”.)
  • Friends who don’t believe in [insert deity name] go to hell and burn forever.
  • God doesn’t reward goodness, only true belief.
  • You are a fundamentally damaged person, with no hope of salvation except through [insert deity name].
  • Men are better and more important than women.
  • The world exists for our benefit, and we are incapable of doing harm to it.

Which basically can be included in the realisation that faith schools teach kids to think badly.  Fundamental to religious teachings is the idea that there are places where scepticism and critical enquiry aren’t appropriate, and these places can include matters of fact, and matters of ethics.  This is not the case.

In addition to learning this, they may be told that God is never wrong, so that if you spot a mistake or flaw in his reasoning, it’s your mistake, not his.  They will doubtless be told that things can be irrefutable true, even if they don’t make sense.  They will learn that not only is belief somehow its own justification, but that in many important cases, it’s actually better to have faith in something for no reason than to have actual justification for thinking it.  (Of course, they may be also taught straight-up factual untruths like intelligent design, but this is obviously crazy.)

Not only are these methods of thinking bogus, they’re really hard to break free from.  If you’ve read some memetic theory you’ll understand how a self-reinforcing idea like “it’s evil to think in certain ways, and even the act of reasoning which things aren’t evil to think is itself evil” becomes a nightmare when trying to escape from it, especially if it’s instilled at a young age.

So what’s right with faith schools? Are there any things which only faith schools can give to children?

Funnily enough, there weren’t actually that many good arguments which I could find in favour of faith schools.  Such arguments would not only need to show that something was good about faith schools, but that such things couldn’t be at least reproduced in a secular environment.  I’ll put down here the non-crazy arguments I could find (e.g., not “but it’s Sharia” or “but the queen is the head of the church”).

There’s a long and honourable tradition of faith-based eduacation in England.

This is usually the first defence of faith schools, but it’s pretty stupid.  There’s a “long and honourable tradition” of xenophobia in England, but this doesn’t give it any credence.

Faith schools teach kids about their own culture.

This argument is used especially in association with religions where the religion and culture are quite closely linked, such as Judaism and Islam.  But this point seems disingenuous, as this learning about culture would be better done in secular community schools, where all aspects of culture may be discussed and explored in a free and open environment.  It also conspicuously ignores the fact that they’re called “faith schools” for a reason: they teach doctrine as fact to kids — they literally indoctrinate children into a particular faith.  And faith and doctrine are totally distinct from culture and community, as I noted earlier.  This argument is usually quickly replaced by

Faith schools are better for teaching kids about their own religions.

I nearly consigned this one to the “crazy” bin and didn’t mention it, but it’s basically the main defence put forward by proponents of faith schools, so I feel compelled to address it.  First off, it assumes that pupils at a faith school actually have a religion which, as I discussed earlier, doesn’t really make sense.  Also, it seems obvious that teaching a child that Hinduism is true is not the same thing as teaching that child about Hinduism in a social context.  Similarly, teaching a child that Hinduism is true would seem to reduce the likelihood that the child will learn about other religions in a fair and balanced way.  Again, this is socially divisive.

It’s a parent’s right to bring up a child in whatever religion they want.

This is the first difficult one to counter.  Whilst I have my own reasonably strong personal views on this, I don’t feel that I can put forward a rigourous and non-emotional argument for them.  I would like to point out that under the law, parents don’t have the right to ultimate control of their offspring.  For example, neglect or abuse of kids is highly illegal.  I’m not equating faith-based education with child abuse here, but merely establishing that parents can’t just do “whatever they want” under the law.  On the other hand, parents are perfectly entitled to withdraw children form school and educate them at home.

But should the taxpayer be funding it, and should the government be institutionalising it?  On this point, it’s worth noting that the real question is almost “should the government be institutionalising Christian education with taxpayers’ money?”, since roughly 99% of faith schools in England are of a Christian denomination.  Whilst interesting, however, this is not relevant to the core issue.

To attack this argument of parental preference, allow me to quote the Humanist Philosophers’ Group’s 2001 BHA publication “Religious Schools: the case against”:

… it is one thing for parents in private to bring up their children to believe what they, the parents, think true and important. It is quite another for parents to expect that the state should undertake the role of transmitting such a belief.  The state has its own interest in ensuring that children grow up to be responsible and capable citizens.  It must design a system of education that serves that end, as well as promoting the interests of children.

It is the State’s role to aid the raising of responsible citizens, not to subsidise the indoctrination of children.  And it is this indoctrination which is the main difference between faith-based and secular education.

So what’s the answer?

According to OFSTED’s report on religion in schools between 1993 and 1997, only about 20% of secondary schools routinely implemented organised worship, though around 90% of primary schools did (or, at least, did on the day of inspection).  The other 80% and 10% respectively are actually defying the law in their omissions.  Is this wrong?  Would we prefer that they all followed this law?  Definitely not.  It’s a rubbish law.

So first we should remove mandatory (and in fact all) organised worship from schools.  There’s just no good defence for it.  There’s nothing to be gained from organised worship which can’t be gained by other means except for proselytisation.  Secondly, we shouldn’t shy away from criticism of religion itself for the part it plays in the debate.  If religion wasn’t espousing such bad methods of thinking and such twisted moral codes, it wouldn’t be such a problem to have it associate with education (although it would still be a problem).  This all basically means that we shouldn’t let the government spend public money on funding faith schools.

Instead, what we should be doing is teaching all kids about all different faiths — we should have religious education, meaning education about all religions fairly, equally, and impartially.  We should teach philosophy and critical thinking, so that kids can be allowed to make informed decisions about their religious feelings.  Finally, or course, we should disestablish the Church of England, and get a secular constitution.

To summarise my view of the debate, I will ask the following question:  If we were starting again from scratch, would we really decide to require most schools build communities outside of faiths, to educate all children fairly and equally, and to foster functional members of society; but to create a few schools, which everyone would pay for, which would indoctrinate its pupils into just one particular religion, and teach non-universal facts and values?  Or would we just like the first kind?

Poster controversy

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

A (somewhat controversial) poster I made when I was the publicity officer of the Warwick Atheists Society recently got some coverage in The Guardian’s Comment is Free section.

[Edit: Huh, you can also read what the teeming masses have to say.]

Living Without God

Sunday, April 12th, 2009
"Living Without God"

"Living Without God"

A poster I designed for Warwick Atheists to publicise a series of talks exploring atheism and belief from personal perspectives. It’s based on a part of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. It was fun to paint-out god.