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The God Conclusion Part 1

Richard Dawkins revitalises the atheist movement in this seminal treatise on the irrationality of religion and the dire consequences it has caused humanity. Before reading on, I wish to warn. The intention of this piece of writing is to review a book and hopefully spark enough interest for you to go and read it. Religion is a contentious issue which may arouse strong reactions. I am not presenting any personal views here, I merely intend to summarise the points Dawkins makes in his book.


Refusing to accept the commonly held assertion by many scientists that religion is beyond the realm of science and therefore affords no more discussion, Dawkins outlines his God hypothesis. Whether God exists or not, is in fact a statement of fact, one that can be proven or not and as such, the role of science in this question becomes essential.


Through his book, Dawkins examines and sequentially dispels arguments for the existence of God. Thomas Aquinas presented his ‘proofs’ of God in the thirteenth century. Broadly summarising, he argued that as nothing moves by itself but by a prior mover and that as nothing is caused by itself but by a prior causer, then the something which made the first move and the first cause must be something that we shall call God. However, as Dawkins espouses, these points rely upon infinite regress, from one thing to something prior and then something before that until it must stop at God. But why should we decide to stop and why stop at God? And if so, what happened before God? Why is God immune to regress?


The argument of design is the primary argument used today. That the world is so complex, so intricate, so beautiful that only God could have been responsible. I summarise an ironic Australian philosopher who Dawkins quotes:

God is the most formidable and incredible creator

The most marvelous achievement imaginable is the creation of the world

This achievement would be more impressive, if the creator was disabled

The greatest disability is non existence

Therefore an even more formidable and incredible creator than God would be one that had the most disability, that is, one that doesn’t exist.


This idea of improbability is the main argument surrounding design and God. It is so improbable that the world could have come about as we know it today that God must have existed. Dawkins turns this point on its head and argues that improbability proves God’s nonexistence. Dawkins recounts Hoyle’s analogy for the creation of life on Earth. Life is just as probable as if a hurricane were to sweep through a scrap yard, pick up all the pieces, swirl them around and then miraculously assemble a Boeing 747, or the eye of an eagle, or the wing of a bird or any other example of life. However, Dawkins argues, no matter how improbable something is, then for a designer to exist to create it then that is just as improbable. God is a Boeing 747.


A common assertion amongst creationists is that something so beautiful, perfect and complex is too improbable to have come into existence by chance and must have been due to a creator (the 747). However, this assumes that the only alternative to chance is design. For an object to be designed by a higher being then the problem of who designed the designer arises. The scientific alternative is natural selection and Darwin’s evolution. Natural selection is not the same as chance. Natural selection allows complex entities to arise from something that was simpler. Not a designer making something simpler than he, but the opposite where something simple becomes more complex. Things don’t just leap from nothing to jackpot. For an eye to spontaneously self assemble is like leaping up a sheer cliff to the top of a mountain. That’s the probability of chance. Natural selection however, takes us one step at a time, climbing small gentle slopes until over time we reach the pinnacle.


The French mathematician Blaise Pascal once stated that, though God’s existence may be incredibly unlikely, we probably should still believe in Him because of the consequences for being wrong. When believing, if you are right then you’ll get eternal bliss and if you were wrong then it doesn’t really make a difference. However by not believing, if you are wrong then you’re setting yourself up for eternal damnation. Would you risk it? Of course, this wager is fraught with flaws. You can’t just make yourself believe and rock up to Church every week. Surely, if you were pretending, then an omniscient God would see your insincerity. Also, why would God only be pleased with belief? Why would He not reward kindness, generosity, humility or sincerity? Would God appreciate rigorous skepticism, blind faith or cowardly bet hedging most?



I haven’t finished the book yet, yes I am a slow reader. Once I do complete it I will give you more snippets of what I believe to be a well written, critically rigorous, strongly researched and referenced, superbly constructed argument. Interposed with humour, Dawkins writes intellectual stimuli for the fundamental existential topic of our times.

Read More 1 Comment | Posted by Mike edit post

1 Comment

  1. bystander on August 14, 2009 at 5:11 PM

    I have read this, i enjoyed it immensely. Dawkin's very clever, logical and writes with commendable eloquence. He's also appeared on South Park as Mrs. Garrison's lover! Haha!

     


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