Reflections on life at “De Witte Wand”…

Year: 2007

  • Twisted

    I suppose it should come as no surprise that I’m twisted…
     
  • Us Fanatical Atheists

    Dan Gardner has penned a good article that pretty much sums up my approach. Meanwhile, Our Maddy Of The Sorrows continues to take the Goldilocks view. Sorry, Madeleine, I’m with Dan on this one.
     
    Update: one of the things that irritates me about Ms. Bunting is her blasé way of misrepresenting the authors with whom she disagrees. Take this current piece for example. Here she is on Sam Harris:
    In another passage Harris goes even further, and reaches a disturbing conclusion that "some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them". This sounds like exactly the kind of argument put forward by those who ran the Inquisition.  
    This quote is not from Harris’ latest book, but in fact from an earlier one, The End of Faith. The full quote is rather more illuminating than Ms. Bunting would have us believe:
    The link between belief and behavior raise the stakes considerably. Some propositions are so dangerous that it may even be ethical to kill people for believing them. This may seem an extraordinary claim, but it merely enunciates an ordinary fact about the world in which we live. Certain beliefs place their adherents beyond the reach of every peaceful means of persuasion, while inspiring them to commit acts of extraordinary violence against others. There is, in fact, no talking to some people. If they cannot be captured, and they often cannot, otherwise tolerant people may be justified in killing them in self-defense. This is what the United States attempted in Afghanistan, and it is what we and other Western powers are bound to attempt, at an even greater cost to ourselves and to innocents abroad, elsewhere in the Muslim world. We will continue to spill blood in what is, at bottom, a war of ideas. 
    I read Harris as making an observation, rather than a commitment to a course of action. I also note his use of the word "may". I rather suspect that those who ran the Inquisiton had no such doubts and freely used the words "should" and "must".
     
    Bunting then brings up some of the questions that are now being asked of religion:
    Scientists have argued that faith was a byproduct of our development of the imagination or a way of increasing the social bonding mechanisms. Does that make religion an important evolutionary step but now no longer needed – the equivalent of the appendix? Or a crucial part of the explanation for successful human evolution to date? Does religion still have an important role in human wellbeing? In recent years, research has thrown up some remarkable benefits – the faithful live longer, recover from surgery quicker, are happier, less prone to mental illness and so the list goes on. If religion declines, what gaps does it leave in the functioning of individuals and social groups?
    Excellent points, but then she goes and claims:
    This isn’t the kind of debate that the New Atheists are interested in (with the possible exception of Dennett, who in an interview last year was far more open to discussion than his book would indicate); theirs is a political battle, not an attempt to advance human understanding.
    Er, excuse me? This is a blatant misrepresentation. Both Dawkins and Dennett expressly address these points in their latest books. Dawkins devotes two chapters of The God Delusion to them; chapter 5: The Roots of Religion and chapter 6: The Roots of Morality. Damnit, even the subheadings of chapter 5 are points like: direct advantages of religion; religion as a by-product of something else; psychologically primed for religion.  And as for poor old Daniel Dannett – the whole of his last book, Breaking The Spell, went in depth into all these points and more. And what she is wittering on about when she claims that "Dennett … was far more open to discussion than his book would indicate" I simply cannot imagine. Really, I wonder whether we have in fact been reading the same books at all.
     
    Not having yet read Christopher Hitchens’ book, I can’t comment on the accuracy of her representation of his words, but I did see this comment by Wilk1978 on her article:
    I’m sorry if other commentors have already pointed this out, as I don’t have time to read through all of the comments, but Ms. Bunting blatantly misrepresents what Mr. Hitchens says about these historical figures. He points that various Christian critics (he calls them heartless) have argued that Muhammad had epilepsy, and calls such debates pointless and irrelevant. His critique of Gandhi is not that he was an obscurantist, but that he was an anti-modern traditionalist who wanted to retard the process of economic and technological development in India. He idealized the Indian village, poverty-stricken thought it may have been (and still is). He was also, according to Hitchens, opposed to conciliation with Muslims, and his intransigence in turn gave the upper hand to Muslim hardliners and facilitated partition. Finally, Ms. Bunting’s distortion of what Hitchens says about Martin Luther King is probably the most grotesque. Hitchens writes a glowing, respectful section on King. His main point is to contrast the humanistic, compassionate spirituality of King with the parochial, dogmatic, hateful Christianity of many of those who opposed the Civil Rights Movement (often based on biblical convictions). Hitchens states that, to the extent that Christians must necessarily believe in a hell for non-believers (something that Jesus spoke of on several occasions), King, who never spoke of such punishment even for his political opponents, cannot be considered a true Christian. That is the gist of Hitchens’s argument. One might disagree with it, but Ms. Bunting completely distorts it, willingly or not I can’t tell. Finally, she writes that Hitchens suggests that King plagiarized his doctoral dissertation. This is an accusation that many who seek to demonize King and his legacy has made. Hitchens’s point is that this very well might be true, but that it doesn’t really matter, because it doesn’t detract from King’s moral character and accomplishments. His point was that King, like the rest of us, was a human with his own foibles, and that King’s critics (mostly ignorant, outright racist southerners nostalgic for the old days) are wrong to use these foibles as evidence of King’s corruption.
     
    Bunting may or may not have a point regarding whether these atheists will have much success in converting others to their unbelief, rather than merely preaching to the choir. But the fact that she manages to so completely misread one of the books that she attacks makes me far less likely to give her much attention.  
    Misreading of the books that she attacks seems to be a common failing of hers.
     
  • Going To A Town

    Rufus Wainwright has a new song out: Going To A Town. I can’t say I’m particularly won over by the music video, it strikes me as being trite, but the song itself has some interesting musical ideas going on in it. I don’t know enough about musical theory to be able to analyse it, but I know someone who does: Robert Zimmerman, over at his Re:Harmonized blog. From him I learn, amongst other things, that the song contains a Neapolitan Sixth. Who’da thunk it?
     
     
  • Quirkology

    Thanks to The Bad Astronomer, I’ve just discovered Professor Richard Wiseman’s Quirkology web site. Some interesting things here; it makes me think about acquiring the eponymous book. Of course, perhaps that was the Professor’s intention all along. Oh, and I liked the gorilla reference as well. 
  • The Pink List

    The Independent On Sunday has published this year’s version of its Pink List – their annual celebration of the great and the gay in British life. I was somewhat surprised to see Derek Jacobi marked as a "new" entry onto the list. I would have thought that Jacobi deserved a place on the list from the very first time the IoS produced it.
  • The Golden Compass

    I see that the film of the first book of Philip Pullman’s trilogy His Dark Materials is to open at the end of the year. The marketing has begun with the opening of a web site: The Golden Compass.
     
    The film looks good, but I do wonder whether the resulting trilogy of films can do justice to the books. Having said that, Peter Jackson did a good job with The Lord of the Rings, so it can be done.
      
    Visitors to the site can see what their own personal Dæmon would be after answering 20 questions. Mine is apparently a vixen called Amantha.
     
    Update: hello, the vixen seems to have transmogrified into a tigress – someone must be manipulating the results…
     
  • Geoffroy St. Hilaire Was Right

    Back in the 19th century, Geoffroy St. Hilaire proposed that vertebrates and most invertebrates were inverted copies of each other. Vertebrates have a dorsal nerve cord and ventral heart, while an insect has a ventral nerve cord and dorsal heart. It was an idea that was dismissed at the time, but the latest advances in molecular biology seem to prove that he was actually right. PZ Myers has the full fascinating story over at Pharyngula.
  • A Rat Made of Diamonds

    The human mind is capable of making many things appear real. For example, this elderly lady who:
    …sought medical help because she believed that an abdominal operative procedure would be necessary to remove a "rat and a teddy bear made of diamonds" that she believed had grown within her.
    I continue to be grateful that the majority of my perceptions continue to be shared by those around me, such as, for example, the fact that there is a nest of rats in our compost heap and that I, and our farmer neighbour, can at least attest to the fact that (a) they aren’t made of diamonds and (b) so far we have trapped nine of the buggers.  
  • R.I.P. Jan

    I mentioned a few weeks back that one of our neighbours had been told that he did not have long to live. Alas, the doctors’ prognosis was accurate, for yesterday we attended his funeral. He was a popular man, and 200 friends and neighbours were there yesterday to say farewell. As is traditional in this part of the Netherlands, his coffin was brought in by members of his family and his nearest neighbours. The service was simple, but moving, with his three daughters speaking about his life, and music (chosen by Jan) by Bach and Schumann.
     
    He will be missed.
  • A Cruel Punishment

    As Ophelia says, over at ButterfliesAndWheels, I don’t understand the morality behind this. The Irish Health Service (i.e. the persons in it who have taken this decision) seems to want to inflict a cruel and unusual punishment on this young woman.
  • The Science of Hypnosis

    Here’s a terrific site exploring the science that is known about hypnosis and suggestion.
     
    (hat tip to Mind Hacks for the link)
  • Ouch!

    This is almost certainly an urban legend, but it brought tears to my eyes (of pain and laughter) just the same.
     
    And then there’s this little ditty
  • In Good Company

    I find myself in good company…
     
     
  • Frog Chorus

    The frogs in our ponds have tuned up for their annual performance of the Frog Chorus, and are currently giving night and day renditions.
     
    20070501-1419-33 
  • Postcards Of The Future

    Here’s a nice little collection of postcards produced by a German cacoa manufacturer in the 1900s, showing what life might have been like in the year 2000. Predictions are so difficult to get right…
     
    (Chris, this one’s for you) 
  • Anatidae Anomalies

    This is an extraordinary story about the genitalia of ducks.
     
    Apparently, while male researchers have lovingly described the bizarre penises of the males of many species of ducks, none of them have ever thought to check out the corresponding receptacles of the females. They simply assumed that the oviducts were simple and straightforward tubes, and then theorised extravagantly over why the males of some duck species have unusual penises. It has taken a female researcher to discover the truth – the female oviduct ain’t simple either.
     
    Let’s hear it for Dr. Patricia Brennan, a behavioural ecologist, who has gone where no male researcher has ever dared venture before. Carl Zimmer, over at The Loom, has the story.
  • Topsy-Turvy

    That women continue to be oppressed in all sorts of subtle, and often not-so-subtle, ways does not surprise me. So the latest news that the Iranian government are enforcing "correct" Islamic dress codes on women (tell me, do the men ever get the same treatment?) raised simply a sigh of resignation with me. But what really caught my eye was the quote from Sae’ed Mortazavi, Tehran’s public prosecutor:
    "These women who appear in public like decadent models, endanger the security and dignity of young men".
    Er, hello? I’m sure he absolutely believes that nonsense. In any rational world he’d be laughed out of office; the horrifying thing is that he probably reflects majority opinion in Iran. Terrifying.
     
    Oh, by the way, don’t assume that this is just a nasty little result of Islam; Christian men can be equally stupid. It seems to me that men, and stupidity, are the common denominators here…
  • Homophobia in Jamaica

    Terrance, over at The Republic of T, points out the hypocrisy of Jamaica’s Public Defender when responding to the homophobia that seems to be endemic in Jamaican society. Terrance also includes evidence of the homophobia – a rather disturbing video of a mob attacking someone waiting for a bus. It’s worth reading Terrance’s blog entry, and I strongly advise that you do.
  • The Pink Plateau

    The news that Lord Browne of BP has resigned over lying to a court about his relationship with a man strikes me as rather an honourable thing to do. Certainly it is in direct contrast to the attempts of Paul Wolfowitz to hang on to his position at the World Bank despite all the evidence against him.
     
    I agree with Matthew Parris’ analysis in The Times today:
    "What this story is really about is the awkardness of gay sex in the business world and our general fascination with the lives of the rich and (in Lord Browne’s case) slightly famous"
    It is entirely understandable that Lord Browne would have started out in the closet – after all, he joined BP in 1966, when homosexuality was punishable under British law. And as Parris, I think rightly, says:
    "When he was a young man, just starting, there is no way he would have made it to the top as an openly gay junior executive. The choice was between celibacy and a discretion bordering on deception. As the years rolled on and attitudes began to shift, it was too late for him to shift with them, disavowing impressions he had allowed to arise at the start".  
    Choosing to be openly gay in the business world runs risk to be subject to the effect that has been dubbed "the Pink Plateau" – the Guardian has a background story about its effect and its prevalence, still, in the oil industry. The mask that Lord Browne has worn over the years has cost him dearly – literally over 15 million pounds. And, perhaps it’s just me, but in Mr. Justice Eady’s judgement, I caught something of a lip-smacking revulsion of homosexuality in the words he chose. Also not entirely unexpected, I suppose. Some parts of society move more slowly than others. But now that the mask is off, once again I think Parris is right when he says:
    For all the misery Lord Browne will be enduring over the next few weeks, there will come a morning before the year is out when he awakes with a sudden sense that a Damoclean sword that has hung over him for so long, has vanished. His torment this morning will not be entirely unmixed with relief.  
    Update: Having now read Mr. Justice Eady’s judgement in full, I can accept that I would be off the mark from characterising it as purely "lip-smacking revulsion of homosexuality". It is altogether much more subtle than that. Nonetheless, I would argue that Lord Browne has been made an example of, and perhaps in harsher terms than might apply to other mortals. The mask has a cost.
     
    Update 2: This Guardian leader is a good summary of what I believe to be a fair stance on the matter. As for the Mail newspaper, words almost cannot express my loathing of its twisted values. As Wilde said, we may be all in the gutter, but some of us are looking up at the stars. I might add that clearly the Mail is not, and has its snout shoved firmly down into an open sewer, but that would be an insult to pigs everywhere.