Ritröð Guðfræðistofnunar - 01.09.2008, Qupperneq 24

Ritröð Guðfræðistofnunar - 01.09.2008, Qupperneq 24
preferred football team, but often available when other labels are not.”23 In other words, religion is only part of the problem - a judgement that few would find questionable. Yet even here, Dawkins’ core anti-religious beliefs lead him to some problematic judgements. The simplistic belief that the elimination of religion would lead to the ending of violence, social tension, or discrimination is sociologically na'ive. It fails to take account of the way in which human beings create values and norms, and make sense of their identity and their surroundings. If religion were to cease to exist, other social demarcators would emerge as decisive, some of which would become transcendentalized in due course. Dawkins has no interest in sociology, as might be expected. Yet the study of how individuals and societies function casts serious doubt on one of the most fundamental assertions of his analysis. Furthermore, one may legitimately point out that Dawkins and others, such as Daniel Dennett, have given rise to precisely the same “in-groups” and “out-groups” by their unwise endorsement of the notion of “Brights” in 2003. For those who missed this diverting episode in American cultural history, a “Bright” was defined as someone who holds “a naturalistic worldview” which is “free of supernatural and mystical elements”.24 Just as “gays” was seen as a better word to designate homosexuals, “brights” was coined as a term for atheists. Except the choice of the term “bright” turned out to be a public relations disaster, reeking of intellectual and cultural arrogance. If atheists were really so smart, how could two of their leading representatives fail to see that the “brights” label would backfire so spectacularly? And the problem lay not simply in the field of public relations. The use of the label immediately created a mindset leading to precisely the “in-groups” and “out-groups”, mimicking what Dawkins and Dennett had declared to be one of the cardinal sins of religion. When launching the “Bright” movement in the New York Times back in 2003, Dennett insisted that telling people that he was “a bright” was “not a boast but a proud avowal of an inquisitive world view.” Well, that’s not 23 Dawkins, The God Delusion, 259. 24 Daniel C. Dennett, “The Bright Stuff”. New York Times, 12 July, 2003. See also Richard Dawkins, “The Future looks Bright”. The Guardian, 21 June 2003.
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