(Religious) Myth-Busting Ib
Myth #1: Religion is Primitive Science (see here for Part Ia).
Consider the queerness of handshaking. Why do businessmen shake hands? Why do athletes on the pitch shake hands? Why do friends and acquaintances shake hands? Is it a formality? If so, why is it a formality? When two men “shake on it” or “seal the deal” why is it taken seriously? In other words, why is the grasping of hands and the subsequent shaking of those entwined hands taken to mean anything? Consider that a handshake, accepted or refused, can have serious consequences.
It will do no good to say, “well, I don’t shake hands. I’m an ‘A-hand-shaker’. I don’t believe in handshaking!” You may not find handshaking important or significant, but most men do, and that is puzzling to some of us.
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One explanation for handshaking, lets call it the “A-hand-shaker” position, might be that handshaking is a primitive act, and the result of primitive thinking. Perhaps people who shake hands believe that an invisible substance resides in the palm of the hand. They believe that at the joining of palms the aforementioned substance creates a seal that binds the two shakers together. Such a view might explain why a handshake is sometimes called “sealing the deal” – some people believe shaking seals things.
The A-hand-shaker position certainly describes a primitive practice. A simple anatomical study of the hand will show that there is no ghostly substance inside the hand. The hand can be explained by muscles, bones, blood, veins, and nerve endings. When you “shake-hands” no deals are being sealed. The only thing that happens when you “shake on it” is a physical movement, nothing more, nothing less.
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But is not the A-hand-shaker position itself primitive?* The A-hand-shaker misses the point of handshaking. When two people “shake on it” they do not fail to understand the science of the hand. The anatomy and physiology of the hand is irrelevant to understanding handshakes. The meaning and purpose of a handshake can’t be captured by “science”.
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What the A-Hand-Shaker does with handshakes, Htichens (et al.) do with religion. By trying to understand religion, “scientifically”, they distort religion, because religion doesn’t attempt to do what science does. Religious belief is not a scientific account of anything – and, most importantly, its believers never claimed that it was. It is a lack of philosophical charity (or maybe sophistication, and perhaps imagination) that leads to the Hitchens (et al.) conclusion.
To call religious belief primitive because the Roman or Seminole places a kinsman over a dying relative, or because some tribes performed a rain dance (these were the examples used in part 1a), is as nonsensical as calling a businessman primitive because he shakes hands with a business partner.
Consider the rain-dance. Wittgestein, in his Remarks on Frazer’s :”Golden Bough”, noted how odd it was that some tribes only danced when they saw the rains coming. Why, if they believed the dance caused the rain, didn’t they dance during the dry season? Why didn’t they dance when they needed the rain most? Because they knew, like us, that dancing doesn’t cause rain. They didn’t do a rain-dance to cause rain – as if it were a primitive science – rather, they did the rain dance, perhaps, in celebration of the rain.
What is primitive is not religious belief. What is primitive is thinking religious belief is primitive science.
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A few more things: The attempt to undermine a practice by showing how it arose has a name, the genetic fallacy. If everything I wrote above is wrong, Hitchens’ claim would remain fallacious.
Also, the Hitchens claim assumes a great deal of ignorance on the part of ancient people; people whose lives depended on knowing how to read the seasons, till the ground, and hunt. They were certainly not ignorant of the relationship between cause and effect in the natural world.
What this also shows is that perhaps not all things can be understood in terms of materialism and causation. Perhaps there is more to the world than the reality of material and mechanistic movement.
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*The handshaking analogy was first discussed by M.O’ C. Drury in The Danger of Words, and again by D.Z. Phillips in The Hermeneutics of Contemplation.
Those with Eyes to See (Revised)
Young people are more open than old people to atheism, but we don’t find atheism growing. As people mature, they come to understand the importance of things that seemed trivial or puzzling. They see connections that were obscure to them. They acquire depth, perspective, and balance. They become less idealistic and more realistic. They come to value such things as orderliness, stability, security, and tradition – Keith Burgess-Jackson
Why do some see God while others do not? Can you do justice to this question while remaining charitable (i.e. without insulting the intelligence and character of the theist or atheist)?
Some who see:
Nina Hagen (German singer/songwriter)
(Religious) Myth-Busting I
In this series, I use the term “myth” as a synonym for confusion or falsehood. The point is not to convince you to bow the knee (i.e. believe). Rather, the point is to make religious belief clear. Believe it, reject it, fight it, rage against it, but get it right. The student cannot make a [...]
The Religion of Excitement
Excitement is the enemy of happiness. The conclusion: If you want your children to be happy adults and even happy children — and what parent does not? — minimize the excitement in their lives. The more excitement, the less happy they are likely to be. The premises: In both adults and children, one can either [...]
D. Z. Phillips & What It Means To Believe in God
For many years, up ’til his death a few years ago, I studied under D. Z. Phillips. I am not alone in thinking Phillips, along with Alvin Plantinga, the greatest philosopher of religion of the twentieth century. But he was more than a philosopher of religion. I cannot think of an area of philosophy about [...]
God And The Philosopher
When I was an undergrad at UCLA I took a philosophy of religion course (and a course on Leibniz) from a visiting professor. He was a fascinating man. A man of many Idiosyncrasies. He was impeccably dressed and well groomed. He wore only two or three suits, and all of them a mixture of green [...]
What It Means To Believe In God
Clear thinking should result in consistency; certainly among propositions, hopefully in one’s beliefs, and ideally, in one’s life. If, for example, you can’t see why it is inconsistent to assert, “believe those who are seeking the truth. doubt those who find it”, then you are not thinking clearly. The statement is contradictory. Presumably the author [...]
Classic Phillips: Life After Death or Eternity?
Recall, Phillips was arguing that even if the idea of an empirically based after-life made sense, it would make no difference. Would Nietzsche, for example, change his mind if he woke from death to find the risen Christ standing before him? No, of course not, argues Phillips. Therefore, even if it made sense (which it [...]
Classic Phillips: Verification and Religious Belief
For an explanation of this post, go here. The following takes place soon after professor Davis’ remarks in last weeks post. I’ve omitted a restatement of Davis’ remarks by Phillips and by the student who asked the initial question. The issue now is, does the eschaton function as verification of religious belief, thereby making [...]
Classic Phillips: epistemic practices
During the Spring of 2001, in the small town of Claremont, two of the world’s most renowned philosophers of religion debated and discussed the problem of evil for an entire semester. The two philosophers were D. Z. Phillips, my academic advisor, and Stephen Davis, a member of my dissertation committee. I maintain that Phillips, was [...]
