Andrew Newberg is a neuroscientist at Thomas Jefferson University whose field of study is neurotheology, the study of the relationship between the brain and religious and spiritual beliefs and experiences. Newberg and his late partner Eugene D'Aquili mapped various parts of the brain showing activation in specific areas when people were undergoing certain religious rituals or experiences, such as a shaman being in a trance or a Buddhist entering a mystical state. Regardless of the religion, the brain function was the same. Something was happening when these people experienced their version of religious phenomena, and the scans lit up like Robert Redford's suit in The Electric Horseman.
This does not prove God exists, but it does show humans are wired or biologically predisposed to believe in something. When I interviewed him for this article, Newberg said his research demonstrates that "we are wired to have these beliefs about the world, to get at the fundamental stuff the universe is about. For many people, it includes God and for some it doesn't. Your brain is doing its best to understand the world and construct beliefs to understand it, and from an epistemological perspective there is no fundamental difference."
So, whether you make sense of the world as an atheist and don't require the God postulate to complete your understanding, or you are a theist and your feelings and experiences tell you something greater is there, biologically speaking, that big blob of gray Jell-O in our skulls is like a giant arrow pointing us in the same direction. I believe that is delicious. And religious.
This entire section does bring up interesting topics. None of it relates to your opinions on atheism being a religion. It is merely tacked on the end, as an opinion.
(Kennedy)
Childs makes the case:
Atheism is a religion.
Atheism IS a religion. I know that some have made that statement without much evidence. And I know that atheists themselves heatedly deny it. Ive heard their rejoinders: If atheism is a religion, then not playing baseball is a sport. Or, atheism is to religion what bald is to hair color. Clever. I guess I dont blame them for denying it, but denying something doesnt prove it is not there. (I would advise any atheist readers to re-read the previous sentence until BOTH meanings sink in.)
I agree that denying something doesn't prove it is not there. Also, stating something, doesn't prove that it is there either. Facts prove those things.
A religion doesnt have to posit a god who must be identified or worshiped. Some religions are polytheistic (Hinduism, Mormonism), some monotheistic (Judaism, Christianity, Islam), some non-theistic (Buddhism). Id say the new atheists and their religion are anti-theistic. But their atheism is religious nonetheless.
In the above statements, except for atheism, are all religions and religious organizations. They all believe in supernatural forces. I would agree that Buddhism is the least theistic of them all, and I could argue that it could be not a religion, but a philosophy. The speaker makes claims without backing anything up at this point. Let's continue.
Consider this:
They have their own worldview. Materialism (the view that the material world is all there is) is the lens through which atheists view the world. Far from being the open-minded, follow-the-evidence-wherever thinkers they claim to be, they interpret all data ONLY within the very narrow worldview of materialism. They are like a guy wearing dark sunglasses who chides all others for thinking the sun is out.
This is an incorrect analogy. We (humans) can test and verify things we cannot see. Also, how can we tell if anything is true or not, unless we have real world data? The speaker recognizes that we analyze data, but what data do we have from sources that are NOT from sources in our view? Also, atheism simply means that someone doesnt believe in the supernatural. This definition doesnt state or care WHY one does not believe. It is not tied to variables such as world view. Atheism is not a world view.
Scientists collect and analyze scientific data. Scientist and atheism are very different things. I do recognize that there are scientists who are atheist. All scientists are not atheist, and not all atheist are scientists.
They have their own orthodoxy. Orthodoxy is a set of beliefs acceptable to a faith community. Just as there are orthodox Christian beliefs, there is an atheist orthodoxy as well. In brief, it is that EVERYTHING can be explained as the product of unintentional, undirected, purposeless evolution. No truth claim is acceptable if it cannot be subjected to scientific scrutiny.
Incorrect analogy, again. Atheism is not an organization. We do tend to believe in what scientist can test and verify, but this is a result of free thinking. This is not an atheistic belief. Again, I think the speaker is mixing science in general, with atheism. These are not the same things. The very definition of atheism doesnt care why you are an atheist. Atheist also includes people who have not been introduced to the concept of supernatural beings.
Also the very definition of orthodoxy stated above states that is a set of beliefs acceptable to a faith based community. We atheist are not a faith based community. We are people with a LACK of faith in the supernatural.
I also have a problem with
EVERYTHING can be explained as a the product of
evolution. This is not true. Evolution, as most people refer to it, myself included, is biological evolution. The theory associated with evolution is related only to evolution of living things. I fail to see how a theory based on the change of a living organism can explain how stars form, or how tectonic plates shift the continents.
They have their own brand of apostasy. Apostasy is to abandon ones former religious faith. Antony Flew was for many years one of the worlds most prominent atheists. And then he did the unthinkable: he changed his mind. You can imagine the response of the open-minded, tolerant New Atheist movement. Flew was vilified. Richard Dawkins accused Flew of tergiversation. Its a fancy word for apostasy. By their own admission, then, Flew abandoned their faith.
Tergiversation also means desertion of a cause, position, or party. It doesnt only mean desertion of faith. Businesses fire people all the time for not following company rules (said rules including a moral code, or giving information to a competitor, or applying for a job with a competitor), and they are not considered religious.
PETA can have a member eat meat, then denounce them for it. This also doesn't make them a religion.
Also, your example, if true (because I found no reference in my immediate search, but I would love a link if you have one), one known atheist saying something doesnt make the opinion an atheistic view. It would be the same thing as saying since one Catholic priest thinks that touching little boys sexually is acceptable, that all Catholics think that touching little boys sexually is acceptable.
They have their own prophets: Nietzsche, Russell, Feuerbach, Lenin, Marx.
Non-faith based definitions of prophets do include: an effective or leading spokesman for a cause, doctrine, or group. So what you are saying is essentially true. Only that this can include a used car salesman, a sports player, or the Old Spice Guy. These qualities do not make atheism a religion any more than it makes a used car lot a church.
They have their own messiah: He is, of course, Charles Darwin. Darwin in their view drove the definitive stake through the heart of theism by providing a comprehensive explanation of life that never needs God as a cause or explanation. Daniel Dennett has even written a book seeking to define religious faith itself as merely an evolutionary development.
The part of this point is a bit off. We do not think that Darwin was a leader by any means. We think he did some fantastic research in a subject that has since grown into the evolutionary theory. Also, by the definition of messiah, the first leader of the Ku Klux Klan, Nathan Bedford Forrest, is also one. This point doesnt make the KKK a religion itself, or Greenpeace, the Republican party, Wikipedia, or atheism a religion either.
Lastly on this point, stating that religion is a product of evolution, even if true doesnt associate evolution with atheism. Evolutionary theory and atheism are two totally different things. To clarify, evolution and atheism are not the same thing.
They have their own preachers and evangelists. And boy, are they evangelistic. Dawkins, Dennett, Harris, and Hitchens (Speaking of which, our prayers goes out to Christopher Hitchens in hopes of a speedy recovery for his cancer, we need more time with him Lord) are NOT out to ask that atheism be given respect. They are seeking converts. They are preaching a gospel calling for the end of theism.
The quoted words: evangelistic and gospel, are used as metaphors. Using a metaphor doesnt prove points, however it can provide connections for those who cannot relate or are having trouble relating. Saying that a trumpet has a voice doesnt mean it can communicate with another trumpet but it does lend to a point that trumpet notes can communicate something. This point, though interesting, doesnt actually lend itself to its own argument. Metaphors and facts are very different.
They have faith. Thats right, faith. They would have you believe the opposite. Their writings ridicule faith, condemn faith. Harriss book is called The End of Faith. But theirs is a faith-based enterprise. The existence of God cannot be proven or disproven. To deny it takes faith. Evolution has no explanation for why our universe is orderly, predictable, measurable. In fact (atheistic) evolutionary theory has no rational explanation for why there is such a thing as rational explanation. There is no accounting for the things they hope you wont ask: Why do we have self-awareness? What makes us conscious? From what source is there a universal sense of right and wrong? They just take such unexplained things by
faith.
Incorrect assertion again. Faith is belief in something without evidence. We believe in what we can test. We have faith in a vehicle, only because we can verify that it works.
Evolution, again, doesnt try to explain order on a universal scale. That is like saying trying to use an explanation on why you car wont work, with why tornadoes form funnels. These are unrelated things.
Why do we hope you will not ask these things? We want everyone to try and find the truth in all things. I cant explain why everything, including the human mind, works, but that is the beauty in it! The more we dont know, the more we have yet to learn. We dont have faith in why things work, we better say that we cant explain the why yet, but we are working on it. Also, the universal sense of right and wrong, self-awareness, these are things we can test. We dont have faith that they exist, we can prove they do. We, at least I, cant explain how they work, yet.
Also, saying that evolution is an atheist theory is incorrect. The Catholic church states that it believes in evolution. Does that make the Catholic church atheist? No, it does not. evolution and atheism are two different things.
There are days when evil and suffering are hard to explain, even for the most ardent follower of God. There are questions we cannot answer. There are days when every honest Christian will admit doubt. But we dont become atheists. It is because our soul JUST KNOWS that God is there. And maybe because atheism is a religion that requires too much untenable faith.
Not only is Atheism a religion, the entire premise is a negative proof fallacy.
This last part makes quite a bold assertion without any backing. Negative proof fallacy? How did you come to that conclusion exactly? The whole argument presented here was about the parallels of atheism and religion.
bit.ly/AtheistReligion
The framework set forth by Ninian Smart, commonly known as the Seven Dimensions of Religion, is widely accepted by anthropologists and researchers of religion as broadly covering the various aspects of religion, without focusing on things unique to specific religions
The seven dimensions proposed by Smart are narrative, experiential, social, ethical, doctrinal, ritual and material. Not every religion has every dimension, nor are they all equally important within an individual religion. Smart even argues that the secularisation of western society is actually a shift of focus from the doctrinal and ritual to the experiential.
Atheism: A religion
Using this framework, I can state that most sports teams, used car dealerships, the KKK, and Greenpeace are all religions as well.
My final point I would like to make is a simple analogy. There are many parallels that you can draw between dogs and cats. Both have tails, both have four legs, both have paws, a head, a tail, and reproductive organs. However similar they seem to be when observed, they are not the same thing. They are completely separate species. Dogs and cats are vastly different animals. Though religion (dogs) and atheism (cats) look somewhat alike sometimes, they are not the same thing.
-Atheist Alan