Reason Versus Faith
By Richard Wolin
The Chronicle of Higher Education
June 15, 2009
Edited by Andy Ross
In 1802, Georg W.F. Hegel wrote an impassioned treatise on faith and reason. The
Enlightenment credo celebrated the sovereignty of reason. From that standpoint,
human intellect was a self-sufficient measure of the true, the just, and the
good. Religion was viewed as the last redoubt of delusion and superstition.
Soon skeptics and naysayers emerged to cast doubt on the Enlightenment conceit.
What if ultimate reality weren't attainable by the methods of secular reason?
What if the Absolute had more to do with the faculties of the imagination or the
unfathomable mysteries of the human unconscious?
We haven't gotten much beyond that landmark dispute between faith and reason.
For with the exception of Western Europe, a global revival of spirituality has
occurred in reaction to the broken promises of enlightened modernity.
Jurgen Habermas now refers to the advent of a "postsecular society" to
characterize religiosity's staying power. He questions whether modern societies
possess the moral resources to persevere without their religious roots.
In his political theology, Carl Schmitt argued that all modern political
concepts are secularized versions of theological concepts. He sought to call
into question the legitimacy of the modern age, which in his view fed
parasitically off of a nobler theological past.
Marxism provided a framework for radical social criticism. But with Communism's
demise, the discourse of critique has seemingly been deprived of an immanent,
secular basis. This is one key reason behind the revival of scholarly interest
in political theology.
A Secular Age is the title of a hefty tome published by Charles Taylor. To judge
by his account, religiosity resembles a lifestyle choice: "In our 'secular'
societies, you can engage fully in politics without ever encountering God, that
is, coming to a point where the crucial importance of the God of Abraham for
this whole enterprise is brought home forcefully and unmistakably."
In Taylor's view, the failings of a secular age are egregious and manifold. He
claims that we live in an era of "exclusive humanism." To him, the ideal of
"fullness" is tied to ends that surmount both the self as well as the profane
ends of creaturely life, and such ends can only be religious or transcendent.
Taylor indicts the multifarious shortcomings of a secular age. In his view,
modernity's "crisis of meaning" has reached grave and epidemic proportions. As
denizens of a fallen world, our social existence has withered to the point where
we have become a mass of atomized selves. We have become incapable of community.
Taylor is incapable of conceiving of meaning in secular terms. Taylor refuses to
acknowledge that dogmatic religious doctrines have stood in the way of
meaningful self-determination. Historically, the fundamentalist credo whose loss
he mourns has inhibited freedom of inquiry, tolerance, human rights, and
political emancipation.
Max Weber: "The fate of our times is characterized by rationalization and
intellectualization and, above all, by the 'disenchantment of the world.'" For
Weber, the rise of rationalization meant that in the modern age all aspects of
life are increasingly subjected to the solvent of instrumental reason.
Scientific skeptics challenge religion's resurgence. They argue that since
religion is an illusion and since illusions are detrimental to progress, the
world would be a better place were the last vestiges of belief entirely
extirpated.
Historically, belief and meaning have been integrally intertwined. To reject
belief in the name of science potentially aggravates the crisis of meaning.
Religion's neo-Darwinian detractors seem unable to fathom the correlation. They
are tone deaf when it comes to comprehending the attractions of belief and
spirituality for a great many denizens of our hyperrationalized, disenchanted
cosmos. Richard Dawkins's portrayal of belief is so dismissive and simplistic
that one wonders why anyone would embrace such demented and malicious ideals.
In Breaking the Spell, Daniel Dennett describes the suicidal behavior of an ant
that repeatedly strives to climb to the top of a blade of grass where it can be
better spied by potential predators. It turns out that the insect is the victim
of a parasite that, to the ant's peril, is angling for the completion of its own
reproductive cycle. Dennett treats this vignette as a cautionary tale about the
perils of religion as an instance of demonic possession.
From a narrowly neo-Darwinian perspective, it is impossible to account for
religion's indispensable role in forming the higher ideals that help to make our
species genuinely civilized.
>> Wolin on veiled intolerance
AR Irritatingly triumphalist
and combative, as bad as Dawkins at his most abrasive. And the claimed
impossibility at the end is unwarranted — my own
Godblogs account in terms of the
autophenomenology of genocentricity is just such an "impossible" account.
Science and Religion
By James Hannam
The Guardian, June 14, 2009
Edited by Andy Ross
As the battle between creationism and evolution heats up, some atheists have
been insisting that it is really a battle between religion and science. For
their position to make sense, they need to show that there is some sort of
existential conflict between religion and science. But the historical record
clearly shows that accommodation and even cooperation have been the default
positions.
The popular perception of a historical conflict remains strong. As Ron Numbers
at Wisconsin-Madison ruefully admits, "Despite a developing consensus among
scholars that science and Christianity have not been at war, the notion of
conflict has refused to die." He has edited a new collection of essays,
published by Harvard University Press, called Galileo Goes to Jail and Other
Myths about Science and Religion.
Much of the evidence for the conflict myth is bogus. Not only are most people
ignorant of the real history, but what they think they know about it is actually
untrue. The conflict between science and creationism is the exception, not the
rule. For most of history, science and religion have rubbed along just fine.
AR I am happy to accept this
verdict on the history. My own view is that science is an "ultimate"
purification of belief just as Christianity was once an "ultimate" purification
of religion.

