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Richard Dawkins in Oz (Read 26824 times)
aikmann4
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Richard Dawkins in Oz
Mar 10th, 2010 at 12:23pm
 
Did anybody catch him on Q&A?
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Paella
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #1 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 5:53pm
 
Missed it, but I will make sure I catch it on the weekend.
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aikmann4
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #2 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 6:31pm
 
It's on Youtube in case you guys missed it.

Dawkins is great, which makes the fact that he has such an enormously mondoqueer fanbase all the more disappointing.
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freediver
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #3 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 7:14pm
 
mondoqueer?
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aikmann4
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #4 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 7:16pm
 
think like "mega gay"
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #5 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 7:30pm
 
I suppose it makes sense. Anything that winds the church up will make gays happy.
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aikmann4
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #6 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 7:35pm
 
They're mostly just gigantic twats.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #7 - Mar 10th, 2010 at 10:26pm
 
aikmann4 wrote on Mar 10th, 2010 at 12:23pm:
Did anybody catch him on Q&A?

Saw him interviewed by Negus, that tired old fart embarrassing Dawkins and himself with his sycophantic Dorothy Dixers.
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Dirty Paki Khunt
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #8 - Mar 11th, 2010 at 2:09pm
 
I liked Dawkins' example of a God who is so brutal that he needed to come down to earth and be tortured by humans in order to redeem them.

Christians, of course, see this as evidence of God's mercy.

Dawkins got a free ride on Q&A. It would have been good to team him up with a smart believer. Stephen Fielding looked totally lost.

I think Dawkins is smart, but he's not wise. His critique of all religion/spirituality is a negative. His solution is a return to classical empiricism. It's interesting that the Enlightenment really began as a critique of religion, so Dawkins is returning to the roots of hard science. Anything that you can't see, hear, smell, taste or touch does not exist.

Dawkins claims that many of the social sciences are false too.

I'm interested in a lot of what Dawkins says. But I take a lot of his stuff with a grain of salt. He hasn't come to terms with relativistic streams of thought like post-structuralism. He's got a very cut and dried mind. Things for Dawkins are either true or false.

I think he comes dangerously close to a new form of fundamentalism: scientific fundamentalism. He's right to ask questions of quack - and often completely accepted - treatments like Homeopathy. Dawkins has made me question practices like acupuncture, for example. It's good to hold these old treatments up to the light of day and test their claims - I now think this is essential.

But there are risks here too. The scientific method is not perfect. This is why philosophers like Kant divided thought up the subjective and objective.

Science - with its look at the surface of things - cannot always come up with reasons. Dawkins is pretty hopeless when it comes to questions of mental health, happiness, etc. Often, his critique of religion is based on the most simplistic understanding - religion is bad because the Christians started so many wars.

Dawkins has waded into the clash of civilizations, which is why his ideas resonate now. I think Dawkins will be seen as a bit of a fad in a few years time.

Which is a blessing and a curse. With the rise of the internet, quack techniques, conspiracy theories and supersticious mumbo jumbo are rising. With the reaction against medicine and psychiatry, people are turning to hackneyed remedies. Mind you, you'll do anything if you're sick. People have always done this.

On the blessing side, we need the freedom to be able to invest our minds into non-materialist objects. We need to be able to experiment with the subjective realm, and Dawkins' black and white stance discourages this.

Things are either true or false with Dawkins. He's almost Aspergers-like in his thinking. He's smart, but he's not flexible. I don't think he's a very good listener either.

Mind you, I'd have him to dinner anytime.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #9 - Mar 11th, 2010 at 2:45pm
 
I think we all have to remember the obvious fact that Christian symbolism today is most likely not what it was taken to be at its inception. The Christian myth of Jesus' death probably resonated far more greatly and its meaning more direct and obvious than it is today.

Crucifixion was the punishment for enemies of the state, but it was also the penalty for crimes committed by slaves. The symbolism that may have been more directly interpreted in the 1st century CE was possibly not so much the remission of all humankind's sins, but that of god's solidarity with the poorest and the lowest caste.
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Dirty Paki Khunt
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #10 - Mar 11th, 2010 at 3:02pm
 
NorthOfNorth wrote on Mar 11th, 2010 at 2:45pm:
I think we all have to remember the obvious fact that Christian symbolism today is most likely not what it was taken to be at its inception. The Christian myth of Jesus' death probably resonated far more greatly and its meaning more direct and obvious than it is today.

Crucifixion was the punishment for enemies of the state, but it was also the penalty for crimes committed by slaves. The symbolism that may have been more directly interpreted in the 1st century CE was possibly not so much the remission of all humankind's sins, but that of god's solidarity with the poorest and the lowest caste.


Good points.

St Paul started the cult around Jesus Christ. Before then, there was no "Christianity." There's certainly no indication in the gospels that Jesus wanted a religion either.

The blood sacrafice, the atoning, etc, is perfect paganism. What St Paul did was create a deity out of Jesus that Romans could worship.

Jesus doesn't say anything in the gospels about wanting to be worshiped, or about being God Himself. This was all added later and crystalised in the Nicean Creed.

The blood sacrifice would have appealed to Romans - it's funny, however, that the story resonates today. I'm not sure if it does. I think modern Christians are attracted to Christianity for other reasons - among them the belief that Christianity is the only form of truth.

In Rome, there were a range of deities to choose from. And why not choose the god of the underclass?
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #11 - Mar 11th, 2010 at 8:18pm
 
Quote:
Dawkins claims that many of the social sciences are false too.


They are not genuine sciences, in that it is almost impossible to apply the scientific method. But to suggest that because of this they are false or lack worth is absurd.

"The Hedgehog, the Fox, and the Magister's Pox" by Stephen Jay Gould puts it into better perspective.

Quote:
I think he comes dangerously close to a new form of fundamentalism: scientific fundamentalism.


I like where you are going with this. But it is pretty harmless as it creates no barriers to self correction.

Quote:
Which is a blessing and a curse. With the rise of the internet, quack techniques, conspiracy theories and supersticious mumbo jumbo are rising.


I would put most of Dawkins internet supporters into this category.
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aikmann4
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #12 - Mar 11th, 2010 at 11:19pm
 
I've been banned from Richard Dawkins' webpage about four times now (I quit trying to go back there). His followers really are a terrible bunch of people. There was a massive controversy there once regarding a Japanese individual who used to argue about the validity of race and its purported links to psychological attributes in an enormous thread which he did not even create. It was eventually decided by the moderators on Dawkins site to "shut him up" (he had basically deflected most of the contentions made against his case and had the entire forum on sort of an argumentative retreat where they were still grappling onto tired old platitudes, "zombie arguments" and so on) and he was banned permanently from the site shortly after. I could understand if Dawkins himself didn't want this discussion going on his board -- Dawkins is a shrewd operator, and it would be bad both for his career and his wallet to have people running about on his board posting things like that. But as far as I know, Dawkins wasn't even involved at all in this fellow's termination -- it was entirely decided by his politically correct devotees who make a habit of masquerading as foremostly dedicated to scientific and rational principles.

I'm not even saying that the chance is indisputable that this guy was 100% correct -- I'm just amazed at the effrontery of these people that they can style themselves as paragons of rationality but get rid of a guy with obviously a lot of intelligent things to say (that had the lot of them in sort of a slow, steady rout) and condemn his views as so absolutely abhorrent and so absolutely wrong, without actually being able to explain why. It's very easy to characterise their group as TWGLO -- Theists With God Left Out. They subscribe to a litany of non-theistic religious causes, compartmentalize just as those who are religious do, and behave with incredible, hurtful animosity to anybody who deviates from their secular-humanist, progressive (and sometimes even claptrap Marxist) world views. People are a lot more respectful on this forum, and just posting here makes me feel a great deal of gratitude and respect to Freediver for allowing such a diversity of opinion, even regarding some particularly touchy or taboo subjects.

It's sad these twats glommed onto Dawkins like this, who does actually seem like a fair-minded scientist. I have a lot of respect for his greatly successful efforts to popularize contemporary biological research, whether it be through his writings or his interesting documentaries. I don't care at all about his Atheism, but that's another matter.
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« Last Edit: Mar 11th, 2010 at 11:27pm by aikmann4 »  
 
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Dirty Paki Khunt
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #13 - Mar 12th, 2010 at 9:10am
 
aikmann4 wrote on Mar 11th, 2010 at 11:19pm:
It's very easy to characterise their group as TWGLO -- Theists With God Left Out. They subscribe to a litany of non-theistic religious causes, compartmentalize just as those who are religious do, and behave with incredible, hurtful animosity to anybody who deviates from their secular-humanist, progressive (and sometimes even claptrap Marxist) world views.


I agree with you about the TWGLO. They can get just as dogmatic as the most fundamentalist believer.

And I believe you should have the right to respectfully post your views. But having also been on the Dawkins website, I don't think it's full of Marxists or progressives - no more than any other website, anyway.

If the guys views on race were villifying, the site could be liable. If they were eugenic, biologically race-based, and "unscientific", I can see where they might have been coming from. Just banning people, however, is infantile.

I think a lot of your ideas on race, Imperium, are as "scientific" as creationism. I believe you deserve a forum to flesh your views out - and have them challenged or seen in the light of day. Censorship, however, just puts these views underground and creates more resentment.

I believe Dawkins has the same Voltairian ideal.
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NorthOfNorth
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Re: Richard Dawkins in Oz
Reply #14 - Mar 12th, 2010 at 9:43am
 
Dirty Paki Khunt wrote on Mar 11th, 2010 at 3:02pm:
St Paul started the cult around Jesus Christ. Before then, there was no "Christianity." There's certainly no indication in the gospels that Jesus wanted a religion either.

The blood sacrafice, the atoning, etc, is perfect paganism. What St Paul did was create a deity out of Jesus that Romans could worship.

True. This has been discussed here before. There's no doubt that Paul was competing with the various deity myths and belief systems of his potential converts throughout the Roman Empire, not least of them would have been those among the Jewish Diaspora who had taken to non-Jewish beliefs. He also was convinced the world was coming to an end, so he likely believed there was no time to convert non-Jews to Judaism-proper before the end. Tough call for him I guess, but then he was charismatic visionary, a gifted orator and well-educated for his time so he had all the right stuff to get the job done (somewhat similar to Muhammad at least in charisma and vision). Being associated with the Imperial Roman families would have helped as well, at least for a while, until he fell foul of Nero... but then again so did Seneca. There's just no pleasing some people.  Grin

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