Personal blog that will cover my personal interests. I write about Christian Theology and Apologetics, politics, culture, science, and literature.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Criticizing the New Surgeon General
I've heard recently that President Obama's choice to be the United States Surgeon is a Black woman, Dr. Regina M. Benjamin, who by almost all accounts is perfect for the job. She is an expert in medicine. She has been awarded the MacArthur Genius award. She works with the underprivileged and by most accounts she is perfect. However, some people are questioning her fitness on one thing...they think she's overweight! Their logic is that the doctor who is representing the United States should fit and healthy not obese. I'm highly offended. Who say's she isn't healthy? Not all women are meant to be a size 6 and weigh 120 pounds. Some women are meant to be full-figured and not be proportioned like a Barbie doll. There is nothing wrong with the way Dr. Benjamin looks and she could possibly be completely healthy. I hope so for her own sake. You can't judge a person's health by how much they weigh or what they look like. I do agree that the surgeon general should be healthy but had she been a man, this would not have come up in discussion. I'm not sure if the problem is that critics are looking to call Obama's decisions into question or if they personally don't think Benjamin is a good choice due to her gender and race. It may be combination. In either case I don't like it.
The More Things Change....
Being at the top of field, and being a reknowned scholar world wide does not make a difference if you are Black, even in post-racial America! Henry Louis Gates, yes the professor at Harvard, was arrested last Thurday night for being in his own house and being angry that the police harrassed him even after he proved who he was and that he owned the house. Apparently, he had problems getting into his house, probably struggling with his keys (as we all have done), and someone had called the police about a prowler. The police came and Dr. Gates are undertandably upset at being harrassed and put into the back of a police car for no reason. When he mad his setniments abundantly clear, accusing the officers of racism, they arrested him for "disorderly conduct". My mouth is hanging open! Grant it the charges were dropped today, but that is besides the point. If this could happen to someone like him, it could happen to anyone of us, especially if you are Black.
Terminology Tuesday: Ontology - Apologetics 315
It's "Terminology Tuesday" from Apologetics 315. This week its"Ontology". Look at the definition and visit Apologetics 315.
Terminology Tuesday: Ontology - Apologetics 315: "Ontology: The study of being. Ontology is often considered to be equivalent to metaphysics, but some thinkers, such as Martin Heideggar, have viewed ontology as a quest to understand the meaning of being, in contract with metaphysics as inquiry about specific types of entities.1
1. C.Stephen Evans, Pocket Dictionary of Apologetics & Philosophy of Religion (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), p. 85."
Response to "Is A Bigot"
I came across the following the following article from twitter. The author attempted to answer questions posed to atheist by a Christian. I have to say that I think atheist does a better job than most but that is because the questions are not good. They show some knee-jerk thoughts that show that the questioner perhaps has not thought too deeply about either position. My comments are in red.
Nestafan made a comment on this article that I felt deserved a post by way of response, as it involved a number of interesting questions meriting detailed responses, and I didn’t want them buried in the comments. I’ll address them on a per-question basis: Nestafan’s text is in bold and my own is in default type.
A few questions for aetheists[sic]:
1. Aren’t you saying people who believe in a higher power are idiots because science can explain why we’re here? Hypocritic[sic].
No? I’d be the first to admit that any number of men of extraordinary genius have believed in a “higher power”. I’d add that science (in terms of “systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation”) doesn’t concern itself with the metaphysical moral sense of ‘why’–this is the proper province of Ethical philosophy, in both its secular and religious flavors.
I don't like this question because most atheists don't seem to think that science can explain ethics and morality or the purpose of life. However, many do think theists (Christians and otherwise) was stupid. At least this author is willing to admit that there have been brilliant men and women who also believed in God.
2. How do you know what’s right and what’s wrong? If there is a moral law, why is there not a moral law giver? Who determined morality, scientists?
The first question is a good one, and deserves lengthier treatment than it’s reasonable for me to give it here. If I were to elaborate upon it, though, I would at least not have to do all the heavy lifting myself, as thousands (perhaps millions?) of man years worth of thinking and writing have gone into the study of normative ethics (moral theory), the branch of Philosophy which attempts to address this question. A large number of workable non-theistic ethical systems have been proposed; you may wish to look into them.
About these non-theistic systems, how many of them have actually been put into practice? The only ones I can think of off the top of my head are Nazism and Communism. We see how well they have turned out.
Parenthetically, the fact that an enormous corpus of fairly robust non-theistic moral philosophy exists partially informs the irritation experienced by many atheists when they are accused of not being “ethical”, or having no “moral barometer.”
God tells us that He has put his rules and laws in the minds of every human being. We all know it is wrong to steal and adultery is wrong. We all know murder is wrong. Of course atheists have ethics and morals. They get them from God like everyone else.
The second part of this question will have different answers for different non-theistic ethical systems and interpretations of the word “law”. Suffice to say, no non-theistic ethical system requires a “moral law giver” in any traditionally anthropomorphic sense, and the word “law” may refer to anything from “government legislation” to “accepted custom”.
The problem is that without a law giver where does the law come from?
For the third part of this question, see my response to question 1.
3. Aren’t these scientists and evolutionary theorists dead?
If this question is meant to continue on from “Who determined morality, scientists?”, then I’ve already addressed it.
4. How do you explain death?
In terms of what it is, “the total and permanent cessation of all the vital functions of an organism” works for me. In terms of why I think death’s a good idea, well. A constantly changing environment would have been a real evolutionary stumbling block without it (and its logical complement, reproduction.)
Would you still think death is a good idea if it's your life hanging in the balance? Also if it's only the cessation of vital functions and natural then why do we fight death? Why is it wrong to murder?
5. There is archaeological proof that Jesus did indeed walk this earth some two thousand years ago. Is there any proof that we evolved from some intergalactic comet?
I don’t recall denying the existence of Jesus as a historical entity. Based on the available evidence, I think it far more likely than not that Jesus did exist. Whether or not I think he was a divine being with magic powers who rose from the dead is a separate debate.
Only those ignorant of History deny Jesus' historical existence. Christians however don't think He was magical. His life and mission are separate Debates.
The idea that comets might have been responsible for bringing simple organic compounds to Earth’s surface in the distant past is only a relatively minor component of one of many current abiogenetical theories. Check out some of the others. Most don’t require comets.
The idea stems from the problem of figuring out how organic life began on earth without believing God did it. There is no evidence what so ever that any of the abiogentical theories is how life started on earth.
6. Wasn’t the constitution (which protects your rights) based on biblical principles?
There is no unequivocal statement in the Constitution specifying the importance of Christian principles or morality; Christianity is never singled out as the basis of anything claimed by the text. (For an extended discussion of this often-heard claim, read this.)
I agree that the constitution is not based on Christianity. Most of the founding fathers were deists and free masons - not Christian. I think it's proof of God existence that America is as Christian as it is given it's origins.
7. Do atheists marry? If so, why?
The answer to the first part of the question is obviously “yes”. I can’t speak for all atheist couples, but I’d imagine they get married for many of the same reasons that theists do. Legal, social, emotional, and economic stability; the formation of a family unit; procreation and the education and nurturing of children; to be perceived as “legitimizing” their sexual relations; as a public declaration of love.
I have no idea why a Christian would ask this question. I mean God commanding and blessing marriage has nothing to do with being a Christian. It's ingrained into all of us just like our consciousness of right and wrong.
8. If believers only “pick out” the good points in the bible, don’t atheists only “pick out” the bad? Who’s right?
I’ll answer these questions with a question: to what authority or standard are you appealing when you use the terms “good”, “bad”, and “right” here?
I'll come right out and say it: poor question. There are no good or bad parts. There are parts that make us feel uncomfortable and confused. They are supposed to be.
9. Isn’t it easy to oversimplify or discount something when you already have a preconceived notion about it? Okay Steve Harvey called atheists “idiots,” that’s a bit heavy-handed; but Bill Maher said the same thing about believers. Who’s right? If you say atheists are, how do you know this?
To the first part of this question I would respond: “Sure, I guess?”, to the second: I’m not familiar with the specific context of Bill Maher’s statement (a reference would be appreciated), but were I to take his reported utterance at face value I ‘d say that I thought both Harvey and Maher guilty of making bigoted statements. I don’t think people who believe in God are necessarily idiots, but I do think atheism represents a superior conceptual system, of course. Otherwise I wouldn’t be one.
As politically a correct answer as I could have imagined. We all sinners and deserving of Hell. The difference between a believer and an atheist is that the believer has received grace and mercy. The hope is that atheist will become believers.
10. We are not born understanding right from wrong. Inherently, like animals, we are more prone to do wrong (ex. breaking your mom’s favorite vase at aged-three, then denying it when she confronts you). How, then, do we learn that violating someone and lying about it is wrong? How did we become separated from animals? Who’s to say it isn’t right to get yourself out of a fix? We know murder, rape, theft, etc. are wrong, right? Well, who says?
I don’t know about “wrong”, but if we don’t figure it out independently (or are genetically defective enough to not have developed empathy) we soon learn that raping/murdering people or stealing their property is a bad idea when doing it gets us killed/beaten/put in jail for a decade.
Do you really think that this was a trial or error thing? Do you think that humanity nearly wiped itself out before we "figured" it out? I don't think so.
And I don’t believe we are separate from animals in the sense of “not being animals”. Why do you believe that we are?
We have moral concerns and consciousness. We have self-awareness. We think. We do art. We do science. We keep track of events from generation to generation - history. What other living things do these things?
Without morality, there would not be six billion people on this planet, because we’d all destroy each other. And, someone had to be the moral law giver as I said earlier. Oh, yeah, it was those evolutionist dudes, right? But wait, aren’t they dead? n Mensa members can’t even figure out how to stop death.
Your statement is a confused one. It presupposes there’s no good reason outside “getting laws from a moral law giver and abiding by them” for humanity not to want to completely destroy itself. Self-preservation is the most important instinct for any life form to develop. Not developing this instinct would make a life form autodeleterious.
The problem with this argument is that self-preservation does not always mean being moral. At times murder can be rationalized as self-preservation. Or even stealing. Self-preservation is a piss-poor explanation for morality.
I fail to see the relevance to your argument of the observation that “those evolutionist dudes” are dead and that “Mensa members can’t even figure out how to stop death”.
I'm sure it was a "brain fart".
“God is like the sun; you can’t look directly at it, but without it you can’t look at anything else.”
Cute. Here’s one I like: “I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.”
I don't think it is all that cute. As for the tired remark "I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.” I think it's really horrible. It assumes that a theist (Christian, Muslim, or Jew) rejects all other Gods for the same reasons an atheist rejects the God we call on. Paul explains why you reject the God of the Bible.
Nestafan made a comment on this article that I felt deserved a post by way of response, as it involved a number of interesting questions meriting detailed responses, and I didn’t want them buried in the comments. I’ll address them on a per-question basis: Nestafan’s text is in bold and my own is in default type.
A few questions for aetheists[sic]:
1. Aren’t you saying people who believe in a higher power are idiots because science can explain why we’re here? Hypocritic[sic].
No? I’d be the first to admit that any number of men of extraordinary genius have believed in a “higher power”. I’d add that science (in terms of “systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation”) doesn’t concern itself with the metaphysical moral sense of ‘why’–this is the proper province of Ethical philosophy, in both its secular and religious flavors.
I don't like this question because most atheists don't seem to think that science can explain ethics and morality or the purpose of life. However, many do think theists (Christians and otherwise) was stupid. At least this author is willing to admit that there have been brilliant men and women who also believed in God.
2. How do you know what’s right and what’s wrong? If there is a moral law, why is there not a moral law giver? Who determined morality, scientists?
The first question is a good one, and deserves lengthier treatment than it’s reasonable for me to give it here. If I were to elaborate upon it, though, I would at least not have to do all the heavy lifting myself, as thousands (perhaps millions?) of man years worth of thinking and writing have gone into the study of normative ethics (moral theory), the branch of Philosophy which attempts to address this question. A large number of workable non-theistic ethical systems have been proposed; you may wish to look into them.
About these non-theistic systems, how many of them have actually been put into practice? The only ones I can think of off the top of my head are Nazism and Communism. We see how well they have turned out.
Parenthetically, the fact that an enormous corpus of fairly robust non-theistic moral philosophy exists partially informs the irritation experienced by many atheists when they are accused of not being “ethical”, or having no “moral barometer.”
God tells us that He has put his rules and laws in the minds of every human being. We all know it is wrong to steal and adultery is wrong. We all know murder is wrong. Of course atheists have ethics and morals. They get them from God like everyone else.
The second part of this question will have different answers for different non-theistic ethical systems and interpretations of the word “law”. Suffice to say, no non-theistic ethical system requires a “moral law giver” in any traditionally anthropomorphic sense, and the word “law” may refer to anything from “government legislation” to “accepted custom”.
The problem is that without a law giver where does the law come from?
For the third part of this question, see my response to question 1.
3. Aren’t these scientists and evolutionary theorists dead?
If this question is meant to continue on from “Who determined morality, scientists?”, then I’ve already addressed it.
4. How do you explain death?
In terms of what it is, “the total and permanent cessation of all the vital functions of an organism” works for me. In terms of why I think death’s a good idea, well. A constantly changing environment would have been a real evolutionary stumbling block without it (and its logical complement, reproduction.)
Would you still think death is a good idea if it's your life hanging in the balance? Also if it's only the cessation of vital functions and natural then why do we fight death? Why is it wrong to murder?
5. There is archaeological proof that Jesus did indeed walk this earth some two thousand years ago. Is there any proof that we evolved from some intergalactic comet?
I don’t recall denying the existence of Jesus as a historical entity. Based on the available evidence, I think it far more likely than not that Jesus did exist. Whether or not I think he was a divine being with magic powers who rose from the dead is a separate debate.
Only those ignorant of History deny Jesus' historical existence. Christians however don't think He was magical. His life and mission are separate Debates.
The idea that comets might have been responsible for bringing simple organic compounds to Earth’s surface in the distant past is only a relatively minor component of one of many current abiogenetical theories. Check out some of the others. Most don’t require comets.
The idea stems from the problem of figuring out how organic life began on earth without believing God did it. There is no evidence what so ever that any of the abiogentical theories is how life started on earth.
6. Wasn’t the constitution (which protects your rights) based on biblical principles?
There is no unequivocal statement in the Constitution specifying the importance of Christian principles or morality; Christianity is never singled out as the basis of anything claimed by the text. (For an extended discussion of this often-heard claim, read this.)
I agree that the constitution is not based on Christianity. Most of the founding fathers were deists and free masons - not Christian. I think it's proof of God existence that America is as Christian as it is given it's origins.
7. Do atheists marry? If so, why?
The answer to the first part of the question is obviously “yes”. I can’t speak for all atheist couples, but I’d imagine they get married for many of the same reasons that theists do. Legal, social, emotional, and economic stability; the formation of a family unit; procreation and the education and nurturing of children; to be perceived as “legitimizing” their sexual relations; as a public declaration of love.
I have no idea why a Christian would ask this question. I mean God commanding and blessing marriage has nothing to do with being a Christian. It's ingrained into all of us just like our consciousness of right and wrong.
8. If believers only “pick out” the good points in the bible, don’t atheists only “pick out” the bad? Who’s right?
I’ll answer these questions with a question: to what authority or standard are you appealing when you use the terms “good”, “bad”, and “right” here?
I'll come right out and say it: poor question. There are no good or bad parts. There are parts that make us feel uncomfortable and confused. They are supposed to be.
9. Isn’t it easy to oversimplify or discount something when you already have a preconceived notion about it? Okay Steve Harvey called atheists “idiots,” that’s a bit heavy-handed; but Bill Maher said the same thing about believers. Who’s right? If you say atheists are, how do you know this?
To the first part of this question I would respond: “Sure, I guess?”, to the second: I’m not familiar with the specific context of Bill Maher’s statement (a reference would be appreciated), but were I to take his reported utterance at face value I ‘d say that I thought both Harvey and Maher guilty of making bigoted statements. I don’t think people who believe in God are necessarily idiots, but I do think atheism represents a superior conceptual system, of course. Otherwise I wouldn’t be one.
As politically a correct answer as I could have imagined. We all sinners and deserving of Hell. The difference between a believer and an atheist is that the believer has received grace and mercy. The hope is that atheist will become believers.
10. We are not born understanding right from wrong. Inherently, like animals, we are more prone to do wrong (ex. breaking your mom’s favorite vase at aged-three, then denying it when she confronts you). How, then, do we learn that violating someone and lying about it is wrong? How did we become separated from animals? Who’s to say it isn’t right to get yourself out of a fix? We know murder, rape, theft, etc. are wrong, right? Well, who says?
I don’t know about “wrong”, but if we don’t figure it out independently (or are genetically defective enough to not have developed empathy) we soon learn that raping/murdering people or stealing their property is a bad idea when doing it gets us killed/beaten/put in jail for a decade.
Do you really think that this was a trial or error thing? Do you think that humanity nearly wiped itself out before we "figured" it out? I don't think so.
And I don’t believe we are separate from animals in the sense of “not being animals”. Why do you believe that we are?
We have moral concerns and consciousness. We have self-awareness. We think. We do art. We do science. We keep track of events from generation to generation - history. What other living things do these things?
Without morality, there would not be six billion people on this planet, because we’d all destroy each other. And, someone had to be the moral law giver as I said earlier. Oh, yeah, it was those evolutionist dudes, right? But wait, aren’t they dead? n Mensa members can’t even figure out how to stop death.
Your statement is a confused one. It presupposes there’s no good reason outside “getting laws from a moral law giver and abiding by them” for humanity not to want to completely destroy itself. Self-preservation is the most important instinct for any life form to develop. Not developing this instinct would make a life form autodeleterious.
The problem with this argument is that self-preservation does not always mean being moral. At times murder can be rationalized as self-preservation. Or even stealing. Self-preservation is a piss-poor explanation for morality.
I fail to see the relevance to your argument of the observation that “those evolutionist dudes” are dead and that “Mensa members can’t even figure out how to stop death”.
I'm sure it was a "brain fart".
“God is like the sun; you can’t look directly at it, but without it you can’t look at anything else.”
Cute. Here’s one I like: “I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.”
I don't think it is all that cute. As for the tired remark "I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.” I think it's really horrible. It assumes that a theist (Christian, Muslim, or Jew) rejects all other Gods for the same reasons an atheist rejects the God we call on. Paul explains why you reject the God of the Bible.
18The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the godlessness and wickedness of men who suppress the truth by their wickedness, 19since what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them. 20For 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 men are without excuse. - Romans 1:18-20
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