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COMMENTARYPost Date: June 15, 2005A Review of the Book Dawkin’s God: Genes, Memes, and the Meaning of Lifeby Dónal P. O’Mathúna |
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In Reproductive BioMedicine Online, Richard Holloway
declared that he felt some sympathy for “the lumberingly awkward religious
communities” because their “commanders . . . have to maneuver their ancient
barnacle-encrusted galleons through these modern torrents” of bioethical
debates (2005;10(suppl):137-9). The role of religious belief in bioethics is
increasingly under attack. Leading that assault in Britain and Ireland is
Richard Dawkins, Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford
University. The view of science that he so persuasively offers society,
however, is that evolutionary biology and logical reasoning make religion
not only unbelievable, but unethical—a parasitic “virus of the mind.” A
review of his recent collection of essays, A Devil’s Chaplain (Weidenfeld &
Nicolson, 2003), noted that Dawkins “has swung from writing about science
for a popular audience to waging an all-out attack on Christianity” (Michael
Ruse, American Scientist 2003;91:554-6).
McGrath demonstrates how Dawkins’ rejection of faith is a
classic straw man argument. Dawkins’ definition that faith “means blind
trust, in the absence of evidence” is not a Christian position, nor would
many thoughtful people of any religion hold to it. In contrast, accepting
Dawkins’ definition would require blind trust since he offers no evidence to
support it! Rather, it is based upon, what McGrath calls, “an unstated and
largely unexamined cluster of hidden non-scientific values and beliefs” (p.
92). McGrath then demonstrates how Dawkins frequently violates the very
tenets of evidence-based reasoning that Dawkins himself claims to uphold and
use to dismiss all religious belief. Dónal P. O’Mathúna, Ph.D., Lecturer in Health Care Ethics in the School of Nursing at Dublin City University in Dublin, Ireland and a Fellow of The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity. Copyright 2005 by The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity The contents of this article do not necessarily reflect the opinions of CBHD, its staff, board or supporters. Permission to reprint granted as long as The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity and the web address for this article is referenced. |