8.9.2010 kl. 03:45

Af Leiter Reports, trúarbragðaheimspekingurinn Keith Parsons skrifar:

Over the past ten years I have published, in one venue or another, about twenty things on the philosophy of religion. I have a book on the subject, God and Burden of Proof, and another criticizing Christian apologetics, Why I am not a Christian. During my academic career I have debated William Lane Craig twice and creationists twice. I have written one master’s thesis and one doctoral dissertation in the philosophy of religion, and I have taught courses on the subject numerous times. But no more. I’ve had it. I’m going back to my real interests in the history and philosophy of science and, after finishing a few current commitments, I’m writing nothing more on the subject. I could give lots of reasons. For one thing, I think a number of philosophers have made the case for atheism and naturalism about as well as it can be made.....

Chiefly, though, I am motivated by a sense of ennui on the one hand and urgency on the other. A couple of years ago I was teaching a course in the philosophy of religion. We were using, among other works, C. Stephen Layman’s Letters to a Doubting Thomas: A Case for the Existence of God. In teaching class I try to present material that I find antithetical to my own views as fairly and in as unbiased a manner as possible. With the Layman book I was having a real struggle to do so. I found myself literally dreading having to go over this material in class—NOT, let me emphasize, because I was intimidated by the cogency of the arguments. On the contrary, I found the arguments so execrably awful and pointless that they bored and disgusted me (Layman is not a kook or an ignoramus; he is the author of a very useful logic textbook). I have to confess that I now regard “the case for theism” as a fraud and I can no longer take it seriously enough to present it to a class as a respectable philosophical position—no more than I could present intelligent design as a legitimate biological theory. BTW, in saying that I now consider the case for theism to be a fraud, I do not mean to charge that the people making that case are frauds who aim to fool us with claims they know to be empty. No, theistic philosophers and apologists are almost painfully earnest and honest; I don’t think there is a Bernie Madoff in the bunch. I just cannot take their arguments seriously any more, and if you cannot take something seriously, you should not try to devote serious academic attention to it. I’ve turned the philosophy of religion courses over to a colleague.


3 comments have been posted
Add Comment | RSS Feed

Eiki | 8.9.2010 kl. 22:24
Eiki

Það er samt erfitt að sjá hvort þessi afstaða er góð eða vond fyrir "málstaðinn".

Eitthvað segir mér til dæmis að svipað viðhorf meðal líffræðinga valdi því að talað sé um "álitamál" (teach the controversy, segja creationistar). Þegar svipað margir virðast vera í hvoru liði fyrir sig, gæti fólk haldið að rökin séu svipað sterk báðum megin.

Tryggvi | 14.9.2010 kl. 17:58
Unknown User

Er þetta nokkuð spurning um "málstaðinn" í þessu tilviki? Ég les þetta sem "intellectually honest" afstöðu.

Eiki | 17.9.2010 kl. 00:26
Eiki

Þetta er vissulega "intellectually honest". Hann hefur væntanlega lagt sitt af mörkum til að standa uppi í hárinu á alls konar fólki og á skilið hvíld.

Það er bara að sumir taka þögn sem samþykki í svona málum...

Til samanburðar: er það gott eða slæmt fyrir íslenska tónlistarmenningu að plötur Leoncie séu ekki gagnrýndar í blöðum? Hún fær allavega ekki marga slæma dóma. (Umfjöllun um hana er líkast til aðallega í hennar eigin höndum.)