Dennett in The Guardian

Moving back across the pond, we find another wise op-ed, this time by Daniel Dennett writing in The Guardian. He writes:

I am confident that those who believe in belief are wrong. That is, we no more need to preserve the myth of God in order to preserve a just and stable society than we needed to cling to the Gold Standard to keep our currency sound. It was a useful crutch, but we've outgrown it. Denmark, according to a recent study, is the sanest, healthiest, happiest, most crime-free nation in the world, and by and large the Danes simply ignore the God issue. We should certainly hope that those who believe in belief are wrong, because belief is waning fast, and the props are beginning to buckle.

A national study by evangelicals in the United States predicted that only 4% of their children would grow up to be “Bible-believing” adults. The Southern Baptists are baptising about as many today as they were in 1950, when the population was half what it is today. At what point should those who just believe in belief throw in the towel and stop trying to get their children and neighbours to cling to what they themselves no longer need? How about now?

I find that last paragraph very comforting. I hope it is true.

Tags

More like this

Two things: the first is Sean Carroll's discussion of what kinds of questions science can answer, and what the answers tell us about the universe. And, without fail, the scientific judgment comes down in favor of a strictly non-miraculous, non-supernatural view of the universe. That's what's…
As several other SB'ers have already noted, physicist Brian Greene offers this defense of string theory in today's New York Times. He concludes: I have worked on string theory for more than 20 years because I believe it provides the most powerful framework for constructing the long-sought unified…
Michael Ruse has a very bad op-ed in The Guardian. Jerry Coyne and P. Z. Myers have already laid into him (here and here respectively), but why should they have all the fun? Ruse writes: If you mean someone who agrees that logically there could be a god, but who doesn't think that the logical…
That last post makes a nice lead-in to this post, from my fellow Science Blogger Rob Knop. This post is a follow-up to this previous post, in which Knop professed his own Christian faith, and protested what he perceives as a bias towards atheism here at SB. The present post is entitled, “What is…

My favourite bit has to be the update:

This article was amended on Thursday 16 July 2009. Moon-landing sceptics were referred to as "loonies", contrary to the Guardian style guide. This has been corrected.

Zuckerman's Society without God talks specifically and at length about secular Danish culture.

Of course I would've read Jason's book first, but I'm still waiting for it to come out on Kindle [/grumble]

eric -

My editor at Oxford assures me that a Kindle edition is on its way, and that Oxford now makes all of its books available on Kindle. Sadly, she did not know when the Kindle edition would be available.

A wise op-ed? Perhaps in the parallel universe where algebraic topology is not boring, Gore won Florida, Begala's comment to McCain was a zinger, and Daniel Dennett is not an oxygen-depleting parasite.

Denmark, according to a recent study, is the sanest, healthiest, happiest, most crime-free nation in the world, and by and large the Danes simply ignore the God issue.

Which study and how was it conducted?

A national study by evangelicals in the United States predicted that only 4% of their children would grow up to be âBible-believingâ adults.

Which study and how was it conducted?

The Southern Baptists are baptising about as many today as they were in 1950, when the population was half what it is today.

Notice how this pretentious moron does not provide citations for his assertions? This is known as proof surrogate.

Incidentally, this myopic, Eurocentric moron apparently is unaware that traditional Christianity is expanding rapidly in Africa and Asia (including China), where most of the world's population is located. Perhaps someday they will be evangelizing us, just like the Irish evangelized the Continental Europe in Late Antiquity/Early Middle Ages.

By Robert O'Brien (not verified) on 16 Jul 2009 #permalink

Robert -

Okay, this time you have gone too far! Algebraic topology is not boring.


Incidentally, this myopic, Eurocentric moron apparently is unaware that traditional Christianity is expanding rapidly in Africa and Asia (including China), where most of the world's population is located.

I thought they were. That is, African missionaries come to Europe to try to Christianize the European heathens is the way it goes now.

But anyhow, is the expansion of Christianity in those places at the expense of nonbelief or at the expense of other religions?

@4 Robert

Let's see. You start your post accusing Daniel Dennett of being "an oxygen-depleting parasite" because he made several assertions without giving citations. You devote most of your post to three examples of this.

Then you finish with the real zinger. He is a "myopic, Eurocentric moron because he is unaware that Christianity is expanding rapidly in Afric and Asia". And the citation for your assertion about the growth of Christianity is...not given!

I call Poe, because no one could possibly be that dumb.

I find that last paragraph very comforting. I hope it is true.

I don't know. The outgrowing of religion that Sci-fi promised me seems to be coming very slowly, if at all.

By valhar2000 (not verified) on 17 Jul 2009 #permalink

@7 SteveL
"... no one could possibly be that dumb."

In this case, you are wrong.

Yes Dennett, O'Brien is incapable of using google. You must hand deliver all references to him personally.

If christianity is expanding in africa and asia then i feel very sorry for such places.

By Richard Eis (not verified) on 17 Jul 2009 #permalink

Christianity emerged from the ruins of the Roman empire and has always benefited from social and political disaster. If, as may very well occur, our civilization is en route to ecological catastrophe, O'Brien may well be right that the Christians of Africa and Asia will bring the faith back to America in the same way that the Irish supplied so many missionaries to continental Europe. Thing is, you have to assume a Dark Ages to make this hypothetical plausible. Perhaps O'Brien is hoping for such an outcome or even actively working to bring it about for the glory of his God.

Well, I am capable of using google. So let's check Dennett's claims, shall we?

He says that "A national study by evangelicals in the United States predicted that only 4% of their children would grow up to be âBible-believingâ adults."

I haven't found the study, but the NYT refers to a "highly suspect claim that if current trends continue, only 4 percent of teenagers will be âBible-believing Christiansâ as adults. That would be a sharp decline compared with 35 percent of the current generation of baby boomers, and before that, 65 percent of the World War II generation."

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/06/us/06evangelical.html?hp&ex=116019360…

That would mean that the study said that 4% of ALL current teen-agers will grow up to be "Bible-believing" adults. That's NOT 4% of the children of evangelicals ("their children") but 4% of ALL children. Not the same thing.

And anyway the claim is "highly suspect" according the NYT.

The study in question apparently uses a highly stringent definition of "Bible-believing" according to which only 6-7% of US adults are Bible-believing Christians. So if only 4% of current teenagers grow up to be Bible-believing, well, that is a significant drop, but not what Dennett's writing might suggest.

http://www.youthministry.com/?q=node/5029

By Michael Kremer (not verified) on 18 Jul 2009 #permalink

On Baptist baptisms: Dennett is right, but from this document you can see that baptisms have fluctuated up and down around an average just about the number in 1950/2009. So the situation is not really as new as Dennett makes out. The SBC has been losing out to other denominations for a long time now.

By Michael Kremer (not verified) on 18 Jul 2009 #permalink

so, christianity is going like the clappers in the vast regions of the poor and uneducated. obviously a great indication of the value and staying power of christianity, as long as you accept the premise that these regions will never undergo much economic or educational development

By snaxalotl (not verified) on 20 Jul 2009 #permalink

Jason - thanks for the Kindle update.

R. O'B - even if Dennett is wrong on some particulars, the statement that Christianity or religion is expanding is irrelevant to his main point that 'we don't need religion to have a stable culture.' Dennett only needs one example of a non-religious culture to make his claim stick, and if you want to refute it, you have to do so by demonstrating his example is actually religious or actually unstable. Merely pointing to more examples of religious cultures does nothing to refute his claim.

Let's see. You start your post accusing Daniel Dennett of being "an oxygen-depleting parasite" because he made several assertions without giving citations. You devote most of your post to three examples of this.

You need to work on your reading comprehension. I did not claim Dennett is an oxygen-depleting parasite because of this op-ed; I had already formed my opinion of him based on his work, which is worthless. The only thing he is qualified for is a job as a mall santa.

Then you finish with the real zinger. He is a "myopic, Eurocentric moron because he is unaware that Christianity is expanding rapidly in Afric and Asia". And the citation for your assertion about the growth of Christianity is...not given!

Yes. You need to learn the difference between an op-ed published in a newspaper that provides no citations for specific studies the author cites for his claims and a critical response posted to a blog. Also, just as the decline of Christianity in parts of Europe is common knowledge, the growth of Christianity in Africa and China is something people who claim to be educated about the world should know.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-jesus-1-1-webjun22,0,24582…

I call Poe, because no one could possibly be that dumb.

In your case, I call socially inept and pretentiously moronic.

Yes Dennett, O'Brien is incapable of using google. You must hand deliver all references to him personally.

The onus is not on me.

If christianity is expanding in africa and asia then i feel very sorry for such places.

And I am sure they join me in feeling sorry for your washed-up country (England, yes?), which continues its slide into irrelevancy.

so, christianity is going like the clappers in the vast regions of the poor and uneducated.

Your thinly veiled racism and unfounded feelings of superiority are noted.

By Robert O'Brien (not verified) on 27 Jul 2009 #permalink