Perhaps the
most vivid manifestation of the cluelessness of New Atheists is their strange
compulsion to comment at length on books they admit they have not read. Naturally, you see this frequently from
anonymous doofuses in comboxes, Amazon reviews, and the like. But what is really remarkable is how often
even otherwise intelligent and educated people make fools of themselves by
doing exactly what they accuse religious believers of doing – forming an
opinion based on preconceptions rather than the actual evidence. We saw biologist Jerry Coyne do this
a few years ago when
he devoted over 5000 words across two blog posts to harshly criticizing a David
Bentley Hart book he admitted he had not read.
The latest example comes from
theoretical physicist Mano Singham at Freethought
Blogs.
Showing posts sorted by date for query jerry coyne. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query jerry coyne. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Friday, September 22, 2017
Monday, May 1, 2017
Caught in the web
The Dictionary of Christianity and Science has just been published by
Zondervan. I contributed an essay to the
volume.
Philosopher and AI critic Hubert Dreyfus has died. John
Schwenkler on Dreyfus at
First Things.
A new
article from David Oderberg: “Co-operation in the Age of Hobby Lobby: When Sincerity is Not Enough,” in the
current issue of Expositions. (Follow the link and click on the PDF.)
Philosopher
Daniel Bonevac on
being a conservative in academia, at Times
Higher Education.
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Addison’s disease (Updated)
Addison Hodges
Hart is a Christian author, former Catholic priest, and the brother of
theologian David Bentley Hart. (From
here on out I’ll refer to David and Addison by their first names, simply for
ease of reference rather than by way of presuming any familiarity.) A reader calls my attention to the Fans of David Bentley Hart
page at Facebook, wherein Addison takes issue with my recent
article criticizing his brother’s universalism. His loyalty to his brother is admirable. The substance of his response, not so
much. Non-existent, in fact. For Addison has nothing whatsoever to say in
reply to the content of my
criticisms. Evidently, it is their very existence that irks him.
Friday, December 30, 2016
Auld links syne
Get your
geek on. Blade Runner 2049 will
be out in 2017. So will Iron
Fist, Guardians
of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Alien:
Covenant, Spider-Man:
Homecoming, The
Defenders, and Thor:
Ragnarok. Season 2 of The Man in the High Castle is
already here.
Bioteaching lists the top books
in philosophy of science of 2016.
The
2017 Dominican Colloquium in Berkeley will take place July 12-15. The theme is Person, Soul and Consciousness.
Speakers include Lawrence Feingold, Thomas Hünefeldt, Steven Long,
Nancey Murphy, David Oderberg, Ted Peters, Anselm Ramelow, Markus Rothhaar,
Richard Schenk, D. C. Schindler, Michael Sherwin, Eleonore Stump, and Thomas
Weinandy.
Thursday, July 7, 2016
I am overworked, therefore I link
Physicist
Lee Smolin and philosopher Roberto Unger think that physics has gotten something really important really wrong. NPR
reports.
The relationship between Aristotelian hylemorphism and quantum mechanics
is the subject of two among a number of recent papers by philosopher Robert
Koons.
Hey, he said he would return. At Real
Clear Defense, Francis Sempa detects a
revival of interest in General Douglas MacArthur. The New
Criterion reviews
Arthur Herman’s new book on MacArthur, while the Wall
Street Journal and Weekly
Standard discuss Walter Borneman’s new book.
At The Catholic Thing, Matthew
Hanley discusses Dario Fernandez-Morera’s
book The
Myth of the Andalusian Paradise: Muslims, Christians, and Jews under Islamic
Rule in Medieval Spain.
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Lofter is the best medicine
New Atheist
pamphleteer John Loftus is like a train wreck orchestrated by Zeno of Elea: As
Loftus rams headlong into the devastating objections of his critics, the chassis,
wheels, gears, and passenger body parts that are the contents of his mind proceed
through ever more thorough stages of pulverization. And yet somehow, the grisly disaster just
never stops. Loftus continues on at full
speed, tiny bits of metal and flesh reduced to even smaller bits, and those to
yet smaller ones, ad infinitum. You feel you ought to turn away in horror, but nevertheless find yourself settling
back, metaphysically transfixed and reaching for the Jiffy Pop.
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
The smell of the sheep (Updated)
Being
insulted by the pop atheist writer John Loftus is, to borrow Denis Healey’s
famous line, like being savaged by a dead sheep. It is hard to imagine that a human being
could be more devoid of argumentative or polemical skill. Commenting on my recent First Things exchange with atheist philosopher
Keith Parsons, Loftus
expresses bafflement at Parsons’ preference for the Old Atheism over the
New Atheism. Unable to see any good
reason for it, Loftus slyly concludes: “Keith
Parsons is just old. That explains why
he favors the Old Atheism.” He also
suggests that Parsons simply likes the attention Christians give him.
Well, as longtime
readers of this blog will recall from his sometimes
bizarre combox antics, Loftus certainly knows well the reek of attention-seeking
desperation. Sadly, being John Loftus,
he tends to misidentify its source.
Saturday, March 12, 2016
Parsons on Coyne
Readers of my
recent First Things review of
Jerry Coyne’s Faith versus Fact might
find of interest atheist philosopher Keith Parsons’ comments on the review in the Letters pages of
the latest issue of First Things. My reply to Keith can also be found there.
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Debased Coynage
I had a lot
to say about Jerry Coyne’s Faith versus
Fact in my First Things review of the book, but
much more could be said. The reason is
not that there is so much of interest in Coyne’s book, but rather because there
is so little. I was not being rhetorical
when I said in my review that it might be the worst book yet published in the
New Atheist genre. It really is that
awful, and goes wrong so thoroughly and so frequently that it would take a much
longer review than I had space for fully to catalog its foibles. An especially egregious example is Coyne’s
treatment of Alvin Plantinga’s “evolutionary
argument against naturalism” (or EAAN).
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Review of Coyne
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Yuletide links
End-of-semester
grading, Christmas shopping, and the like leave little time for substantive
blogging. So for the moment I’ll leave
the writing to others:
Times Higher Education on the
lunatic asylum that is Jerry Coyne’s combox.
Crisis on campus? The president of Oklahoma Wesleyan University speaks
truth to pampered privilege: “This is not a day care. This is a university.”
At Public Discourse: Samuel Gregg on David Bentley Hart and
capitalism; and Jeremy Neill argues that the sexual revolution
will not last forever.
Traditional
logic versus modern logic: What’s the difference? Martin
Cothran explains. (Also, an
older post by Cothran on the same subject.)
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Red herrings don’t go to heaven either
They say
that pride goeth before a fall. And if
you’re Jerry Coyne, every fall goeth before an even bigger fall. The poor guy just never learns. Show him that he’s shot himself in one foot,
and in response he’ll shout “Lock and load!” and commence blasting away at the
other one. It seems the author of Why Evolution is True has got it into
his head that a Darwin
Award is something it would be good
to win. And this week he’s made another
try for the prize.
Friday, October 16, 2015
Repressed knowledge of God?
Christian
apologist Greg Koukl, appealing to Romans 1:18-20, says
that the atheist is “denying the obvious, aggressively pushing down the
evidence, to turn his head the other way, in order to deny the existence of
God.” For the “evidence of God is so
obvious” from the existence and nature of the world that “you’ve got to work at
keeping it down,” in a way comparable to “trying to hold a beach ball
underwater.” Koukl’s fellow Christian
apologist Randal Rauser begs
to differ. He suggests that if a
child whose family had just been massacred doubted God, then to be consistent,
Koukl would -- absurdly -- have to regard this as a rebellious denial of the
obvious. Meanwhile, atheist Jeffery Jay
Lowder agrees
with Rauser and holds that Koukl’s position amounts to a mere “prejudice”
against atheists. What should we think
of all this?
Friday, October 9, 2015
Walter Mitty atheism
While
writing up my
recent post on Jerry Coyne’s defense of his fellow New Atheist Lawrence
Krauss, I thought: “Why can’t these guys be more like Keith
Parsons and Jeff
Lowder?” (Many readers will recall the
very pleasant and fruitful exchange which, at Jeff’s kind invitation, Keith
and I had not too long ago at The Secular Outpost.) As it happens, Jeff
has now commented on my exchange with Coyne. Urging his fellow atheists not to follow
Coyne’s example, Jeff writes:
If I were to sum up Feser’s reply in
one word, it would be, “Ouch!” I think Feser’s reply is simply devastating to
Coyne and I found myself in agreement with most of his points.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Why can’t these guys stay on topic? Or read?
Jerry
Coyne comments on my recent Public Discourse article about Lawrence Krauss. Well, sort of. Readers of that article will recall that it
focused very specifically on Krauss’s argument to the effect that science is
inherently atheistic, insofar as scientists need make no reference to God in
explaining this or that phenomenon. I
pointed out several things that are wrong with this argument. I did not argue for God’s existence. To be sure, I did point out that Krauss misunderstands
how First Cause arguments for God’s existence are supposed to work, but the
point of the article was not to develop or defend such an argument. I have done that many times elsewhere. Much less was my article concerned to defend
any specifically Catholic theological doctrine, or opposition to abortion, or
any conservative political position.
Again, the point of the essay was merely to show what is wrong with a
specific argument of Krauss’s. An
intelligent response to what I wrote would focus on that.
Monday, July 6, 2015
Caught in the net
Some of the
regular readers and commenters at this blog have started up a Classical Theism,
Philosophy, and Religion discussion forum.
Check it out.
Philosopher
Stephen Mumford brings his Arts Matters blog to an end with a post on why he
is pro-science and anti-scientism.
Then he inaugurates his new blog at Philosophers Magazine with a post on
a
new and improved Cogito argument for the reality of causation.
Speaking of
which: At Aeon, Mathias Frisch discusses
the
debate over causation and physics.
The Guardian asks: Is
Richard Dawkins destroying his reputation?
And at Scientific American,
John Horgan says that biologist
Jerry Coyne’s new book “goes too far” in denouncing religion.
Friday, December 12, 2014
Causality and radioactive decay
At the
Catholic blog Vox Nova, mathematics
professor David Cruz-Uribe writes:
I… am currently working through the
metaphysics of St. Thomas Aquinas as part of his proofs of the existence of
God… [S]ome possibly naive counter-examples from quantum mechanics come to
mind. For instance, discussing the principle that nothing can change
without being affected externally, I immediately thought of the spontaneous
decay of atoms and even of particles (e.g., so-called proton decay).
This might be a very naive question:
my knowledge of quantum mechanics is rusty and probably out of date, and I know
much, much less about scholastic metaphysics. So can any of our readers
point me to some useful references on this specific topic?
Friday, May 16, 2014
Pre-Christian apologetics
Christianity
did not arise in a vacuum. The very
first Christians debated with their opponents in a cultural context within
which everyone knew that there is a God and that he had revealed himself
through Moses and the prophets. The
question, given that background, was what to think of Jesus of Nazareth. Hence the earliest apologists were, in
effect, apologists for Christianity as
opposed to Judaism, specifically.
That didn’t last long. As
Christianity spread beyond Judea into the larger Mediterranean world, the
question became whether to accept Christianity as opposed to paganism. Much
less could be taken for granted.
Still, significant
common ground for debate was provided by Greek philosophy. In Book VIII of The City of God, Augustine noted that thinkers in the Neoplatonic
tradition had seen that God is the cause of the existence of the world; had
seen also that only what is beyond the world of material and changeable things
could be God; had understood the distinction between the senses and their
objects on the one hand, and the intellect and its objects on the other, and affirmed
the superiority of the latter; and had affirmed that the highest good is not
the good of the body or even the good of the mind, but to know and imitate God. In short, these pagan thinkers knew some of
the key truths about God, the soul, and the natural law that are available to
unaided human reason. This purely
philosophical knowledge facilitated Augustine’s own conversion to Christianity,
and would provide an intellectual skeleton for the developing tradition of
Christian apologetics and theology.
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Corrupting the Calvinist youth [UPDATED]
Some guy
named “Steve” who contributes to the group apologetics blog Triablogue informs us
that “Feser seems to have a following among some young, philosophically-minded
Calvinists.” (Who knew?) “Steve” is awfully perturbed by this, as he
has “considerable reservations” about me, warning that I am not “a very
promising role model for aspiring Reformed philosophers.” And why is that? Not, evidently, because of the quality of my
philosophical arguments, as he does not address a single argument I have ever
put forward. Indeed, he admits that he
has made only an “admittedly cursory sampling” of my work -- and, it seems, has
read only some blog posts of mine, at that -- and acknowledges that “this may
mean I'm not qualified to offer an informed opinion of Feser.” So he offers an uninformed opinion instead,
making some amazingly sweeping remarks on the basis of his “admittedly cursory”
reading. (Why that is the sort of example “aspiring Reformed philosophers” should
emulate, I have no idea.)
Normally I
ignore this sort of drive-by blogging, but since Triablogue seems to have a
significant readership among people interested in apologetics, I suppose I
should say something lest “Steve” corrupt the Calvinist youth by his rash
example.
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Jerry-built atheism
David
Bentley Hart’s recent book The
Experience of God has been getting some attention. The highly esteemed William Carroll has an article on it over
at Public Discourse. As I noted in a
recent post, the highly self-esteemed Jerry Coyne has
been commenting on Hart’s book too, and in the classic Coyne style: First
trash the book, then promise someday actually to read it. But it turns out that was the second post Coyne had written ridiculing
Hart’s book; the first is here.
So, by my count that’s at least 5100
words so far criticizing a book Coyne
admits he has not read. Since it’s
Jerry Coyne, you know another shoe is sure to drop. And so it does, three paragraphs into the
more recent post:
[I]t’s also fun (and marginally
profitable) to read and refute the arguments of theologians, for it’s only there that one can truly see
intelligence so blatantly coopted and corrupted to prove what one has decided
is true beforehand. [Emphasis added]
Well, no,
Jerry, not only there.
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