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the Hunt for Truth

Tag Archives: Richard Dawkins

what is your heartfelt belief?

31 Tuesday Dec 2013

Posted by Hunt 4 Truth in Consciousness, Culture, Faith, Happiness, Lessons, Music, Philosophy, Self-assessments, Spirituality

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

atheism, beliefs, Bible, Divine LOVE, happiness, homeless, life lesson, love, Richard Dawkins

It’s best to take in this article, commentary and video together.

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Atheism is an intellectual luxury for the wealthy
By Chris Arnade, The Guardian

This is a reblog+

They prayed whenever they could find 15 minutes. “Preacher Man”, as we called him, would read from the Bible with his tiny round glasses. It was the only book he had ever read. A dozen or so others would listen, silently praying while stroking rosaries, sitting on bare mattresses, crammed into a half-painted dorm room.

I was the outsider, a 16-year-old working on a summer custodial crew for a local college, saving money to pay for my escape from my hometown. The other employees, close to three dozen, were working to feed themselves, to feed their kids, to pay child support, to pay for the basics of life. I was the only white, everyone else was African-American.

Preacher Man tried to get me to join the prayer meetings, asking me almost daily. I declined, preferring to spend those small work breaks with some of the other guys on the crew. We would use the time to snatch a quick drink or maybe smoke a joint.

Preacher Man would question me, “What do you believe in?” I would decline to engage, out of politeness. He pressed me. Finally I broke, “I am an atheist. I don’t believe in a God. I don’t think the world is only 5,000 years old, I don’t think Cain and Abel married their sisters!”

Preacher Man’s eyes narrowed. He pointed at me, “You are an APE-IEST. An APE-IEST. You going to lead a life of sin and end in hell.”

Three years later I did escape my town, eventually receiving a PhD in physics, and then working on Wall Street for 20 years. A life devoted to rational thought, a life devoted to numbers and clever arguments.Richard Dawkins

During that time I counted myself an atheist and nodded in agreement as a wave of atheistic fervor swept out of the scientific community and into the media, led by Richard Dawkins.

I saw some of myself in him: quick with arguments, uneasy with emotions, comfortable with logic, able to look at any ideology or any thought process and expose the inconsistencies. We all picked on the Bible, a tome cobbled together over hundreds of years that provides so many inconsistencies. It is the skinny 85lb (35.6kg) weakling for anyone looking to flex their scientific muscles.

I eventually left my Wall Street job and started working with and photographing homeless addicts in the South Bronx. When I first walked into the Bronx I assumed I would find the same cynicism I had towards faith. If anyone seemed the perfect candidate for atheism it was the addicts who see daily how unfair, unjust, and evil the world can be.

None of them are. Rather they are some of the strongest believers I have met, steeped in a combination of Bible, superstition, and folklore.

The first addict I met was Takeesha. She was standing near the high wall of the Corpus Christi Monastery. We talked for close to an hour before I took her picture. When we finished, I asked her how she wanted to be described. She said without any pause, “As who I am. A prostitute, a mother of six, and a child of God.”

Takeesha was raped by a relative when she was 11. Her mother, herself a prostitute, put Takeesha out on the streets at 13, where she has been for the last 30 years. She told me “It’s sad when it’s your mother, who you trust, and she was out there with me, but you know what kept me through all that? God. Whenever I got into the car, God got into the car with me.”

Sonya and Eric, heroin addicts who are homeless, have a picture of the Last Supper that moves with them. It has hung in an abandoned building, it has hung in a sewage-filled basement, and now it leans against the pole in the small space under the interstate where they live.

Sarah, 15 years on the streets, wears a cross around her neck. Always.

Michael, 30 years on the streets, carries a rosary in his pocket. Always.

In any crack house, in the darkest buildings empty of all other furnishings, a worn Bible can be found laying flat amongst needles, caps, lighters, and crack pipes.

Takeesha and the other homeless addicts are brutalized by a system driven by a predatory economic rationalism (a term used recently by J. M. Coetzee in his essay: On Nelson Mandela). They are viewed by the public and seen by almost everyone else as losers.

Just “junkie prostitutes” who live in abandoned buildings. They have their faith because what they believe in doesn’t judge them.

Who am I to tell them that what they believe is irrational? Who am I to tell them the one thing that gives them hope and allows them to find some beauty in an awful world is inconsistent? I cannot tell them that there is nothing beyond this physical life. It would be cruel and pointless.

In these last three years, out from behind my computers, I have been reminded that life is not rational and that everyone makes mistakes. Or, in Biblical terms, we are all sinners.

We are all sinners. On the streets the addicts, with their daily battles and proximity to death, have come to understand this viscerally. Many successful people don’t. Their sense of entitlement and emotional distance has numbed their understanding of our fallibility.

Soon I saw my atheism for what it is: an intellectual belief most accessible to those who have done well.

I look back at my 16-year-old self and see Preacher Man and his listeners differently.

I look at the fragile women praying and see a mother working a minimum wage custodial job, trying to raise three children alone. Her children’s father off drunk somewhere.

I look at the teenager fingering a small cross and see a young woman, abused by a father addicted to whatever, trying to find some moments of peace.

I see Preacher Man himself, living in a beat up shack without electricity, desperate to stay clean, desperate to make sense of a world that has given him little.

They found hope where they could.

I want to go back to that 16-year-old self and tell him to shut up with the “see how clever I am attitude.” I want to tell him to appreciate how easy he had it, with a path out. A path to riches.

I also see Richard Dawkins differently. I see him as a grown up version of that 16-year-old kid, proud of being smart, unable to understand why anyone would believe or think differently from himself. I see a person so removed from humanity and so removed from the ambiguity of life that he finds himself judging those who think differently.

I see someone doing what he claims to hate in others. Preaching from a selfish vantage point.

guardian.co.uk
© Guardian News and Media 2013

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So, there is a lesson here in this. Chris Arnade notes: “I see someone doing what he claims to hate in others. Preaching from a selfish vantage point.” Really — contrasting views is a good thing. Intolerance is wrong (or sinful – sin: missing the point). 

Let’s not forget that suffering is real. Let’s not forget that what people believe is real to them and they have reasons for holding their beliefs.

As for Richard Dawkins, I see him as making a living debating science verses religion. Its odd to me that he’d do this. However, he seems to be enjoying  himself and not at anyone’s great expense really. He’s actually been instrumental for many Christians to take up learning about biology, evolution and so on. It seems basically healthy, I think. Dawkins is the Satan of science in some minds. He’s just a bit militant it seems to others. I just marvel at how he tempers his superior brashness lately. That was a fault I held onto for a long while. 

Maybe Chris Arnade is a bit resentful. Still, he’s moved me with his story. There’s Chris the Wall Street guy turned photographer of the homeless. He’s seeing things differently. He’s working on seeing himself through the world of the lost people.

I eat a slice of humble pie still sometimes. I think we’re best off practicing humility, honesty, working on being open to learn, and being willing to change.

Life’s too complex to have it all right. Yet, loving myself, no matter what, is essential. 

I think we all need to see the world through the lens of our loving selves. When I love myself and see myself in others, I’m growing.

One of my most profound life lessons was to practice seeing that we are mirrors for each other.

 

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Thanks for visiting. I hope this post will help us all be loving of ourselves and others.

New post Eric

Bloggers For Peace.

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Advertisement

Religion for Atheists?

28 Saturday Dec 2013

Posted by Hunt 4 Truth in Culture, Philosophy, Religion

≈ 34 Comments

Tags

Alain de Botton, atheism, Lawrence M. Krauss, Religion and Spirituality, Richard Dawkins, Steve Paikin

Gingho - a rescue dog by my son has a nice home and family now.Well, first off – this post is inspired from a blog that I visited where it was suggested that narrative and symbolism of religious making may have lasting value. See: Gods & heroes by Steve Morris

Second, I am Christian and this post is not intended to inspire nor put down anything. Its just an aside post here, I think. What it may mean to you is what I don’t know.

Please make comment if you’d care to do so. I probably don’t want to debate. I do wonder what others think though.

Religion is not just for
believers anymore

Philosopher and author Alain de Botton says non-believers can learn a lot from religion – without believing in God. He sits down with Steve Paikin.

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If you are still with me, I wonder what you may think about an insider view of what strategies atheists talk about on views of how to convince people to consider un-belief. Actually, I hope to see the film being discussed. I did discover that it probably is not a decisive blast against religion but I haven’t seen it yet. So, I have this:

Regarding the documentary “The Unbelievers”
Here are two of the men featured in the film: professor Richard Dawkins and physicist Lawrence Krauss sitting down with Steve Paikin to tell us that they don’t believe.

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Need help or want to collaborate with me? Just e-mail me at thehunt4truth@yahoo.com

Check back frequently. I love learning with you.

New post Eric

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Dangerous Ideas… what danger?

06 Friday Dec 2013

Posted by Hunt 4 Truth in Consciousness, Culture, Religion, Science, Spirituality

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Chopra, consciousness, Dangerous Ideas, Dawkins, debate, Deepak Chopra, Richard Dawkins

Dangerous Ideas
Deepak Chopra and Richard Dawkins
2013, November 9

The first 14 minutes don’t contain debate content — if you are short on time; forward to about 14 minutes.

This debate was to be about religion — I think. However, the debate confronts consciousness — two scientist are unable to agree. In fact they are just about completely opposed with each other.

Chopra maintains that consciousness is the basis for anything and everything. Chopra opens with that all beliefs are “a cover up for insecurity.” He admits that biological organisms are purpose driven — his view indicates that purpose directs even in the smallest of particles. His source is described as consciousness.

Dawkins maintains that consciousness evolves from complex organization and organic mechanisms — as described by Darwin. He denies that the universe is directed by purpose. Dawkins seems to believe that life and the universe just came to be — all on its own and then consciousness came to be — all on its own too. As for people, Dawkins essentially believes that organic substance evolved and then directive components emerged (DNA, brains, mimeme) and then the substance evolved into beings.

Let me know what you think.

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Need help or want to collaborate with me? Just e-mail me at thehunt4truth@yahoo.com

Thanks for visiting.

New post Eric

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Inner Peace

Inner Peace Award - I would have a no-awards blog but this award changed me. Thanks Suz. I'm glad I changed.

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Hunt 4 Truth

For the entire law is fulfilled in keeping this one command: "Love your neighbor as yourself." https://hunt4truth.wordpress.com/ Absolute Truth is whole, complete and perfect. Absolute Truth is just beyond words, mental concepts, and form; Non-being, yet in everything and yet beyond thought forms. Prayer and meditation fashion in our hearts further honesty, openness, and willingness and thus, we may glimpse guidance and truth to rightly think and act. Any glimpse of truth is not Absolute Truth. It may be sufficient until we renew our commitment to serve God. Life is thus best navigated during mindfulness of prayer and meditation by an inner peace. "For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities — his eternal power and divine nature — have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse." Romans 1:20

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