Dawkins Tweets, Controversy Ensues

Dawkins sent out a tweet saying:

Shitstorm in a teacup ensued, he sent out responses to the various accusations of bigotry and racism.

You’re a racist (actually usually written as Your a racist)
If you think Islam is a race, you are a racist yourself. The concept of race is controversial in biology, for complicated reasons. I could go into that, but I don’t need to here. It’s enough to say that if you can convert to something (or convert or apostatize out of it) it is not a race. If you are going to accuse me of racism, you’ll have to do a lot better than that. Islam is a religion and you can choose to leave it or join it.

But aren’t Jews a race? And you can convert to Judaism
Yes you can convert to Judaism and no, the Jews are not a race. You can argue about whether Judaism is a religion or a cultural tradition, but whatever else it is it is not a race. That was one of many things Hitler got wrong. But if you want to bring up the Jews, I’m happy to drop Trinity, Cambridge and give you the truly astonishing Nobel Prize figures for Jews. You’ll find it won’t bolster your apologetics.

Race is not a biological concept at all but a socially constructed one. In the sociological sense you can convert to a race because race is a social construction.
There may be sociologists who choose to redefine words to their own purpose, in which case we have a simple semantic disagreement. I have a right to choose to interpret ‘race’ (and hence ‘racism’??) according to the dictionary definition: ‘A limited group of people descended from a common ancestor’. Sociologists are entitled to redefine words in technical senses that they find useful, but they are not entitled to impose their new definitions on those of us who prefer common or dictionary usage. You can define naked mole rats as termites if you wish (they have similar social systems) but don’t blame the rest of us if we prefer to call them mammals because they are close genetic cousins to non-social mole rats and other rodents.

OK, maybe you aren’t strictly a racist, but most Muslims have brown skins so you are in effect a racist
Incidentally, the reverse is not true: huge numbers of brown skinned people are Hindus or Sikhs or Buddhists. But in any case, I’m a lot less interested in skin colour than you seem to be. I don’t think skin colour has the slightest bearing on ability to win Nobel Prizes, whereas it is highly probable that childhood education in a particular religion does. Educational systems that teach boys only memorisation of one particular book, and teach girls nothing at all, are not calculated to breed success in science.

OK, you aren’t a racist at all, but you are a bigot, giving needless hurt and offence
How can the assertion of an undeniable fact be bigotry? Do you deny the fact that Trinity College has produced more Nobel prize-winners than all the billions of Muslims? Actually this raises the interesting question of whether, and under what circumstances, we should refrain from stating uncomfortable facts for fear of giving hurt and offence. I raised this question in a later tweet, out of genuine curiosity. The answers I got were all of the ‘white lie’ form. You don’t go out of your way to tell people they are fat. You may even lie to cheer them up. Fair enough.

Well, quoting an undeniable fact may not be bigotry in itself but you left an offensive, though unstated, implication dangling on the end of the fact
You may be reading in an implication that I didn’t intend. Since (unlike many tweeters, apparently) I am firm about Islam being a religion and not a race, I certainly didn’t, and don’t, imply any innate inferiority of intellect in those people who happen to follow the Muslim religion. But I did intend to raise in people’s minds the question of whether the religion itself is inimical to scientific education. I don’t have the answer, but I think it is well worth asking the question. Has something gone wrong with education in the Islamic world, and is it a problem that Muslims themselves might wish to consider? Just to throw in a separate piece of information, colleagues lecturing to aspiring doctors in British universities inform me that Muslim students boycott lectures on evolution. And I have myself interviewed, for television, pupils and teachers at one of Britain’s leading Islamic secondary schools, one with impeccable Ofsted ratings, where I was informed by a teacher that literally all the pupils reject evolution.

Cambridge University, like other First World Institutions, has economic advantages denied to those countries where most Muslims live.
No doubt there is something in that. But… oil wealth? Might it be more equitably deployed amongst the populace of those countries that happen to sit on the accidental geological boon of oil. Is this an example of something that Muslims might consider to improve the education of their children?

Why pick on Muslims? You could arbitrarily pick on plenty of categories of people that have achieved far less than Trinity College, Cambridge
Again, fair point. Somebody mentioned redheads (neither he nor I have figures on redheaded scientific achievement but we get the point). I myself tweeted that Trinity Cambridge has more Nobel Prizes than any single country in the world except the USA, Britain (tautologically), Germany and France. You could well think there was something gratuitous in my picking on Muslims, were it not for the ubiquity of the two positive boasts with which I began. Redheads (and the other hypothetical categories we might mention) don’t boast of their large populations and don’t boast of their prowess in science.

Trinity College is a Christian foundation. Its full name is ‘the College of the Most Holy and Undivided Trinity’.
Er, yes, that could be kind of the point. Christendom has moved on since 1546 when the college was founded. If Islam has not moved on during the same period, perhaps Muslims might consider asking why, and whether something could be done about it. That was sort of why I added the final sentence of my original tweet: ‘They did great things in the Middle Ages, though.’

Muslim scholars gave you algebra and alchemy
Thank you, I’ll take algebra. But alchemy? Are you sure you want to own alchemy? In any case, once again, a substantial half of my point was that Muslim scholars did indeed grace a golden age, so it is all the more poignant to ask what went wrong and what should be done about it.

How many Nobel Prizes has Richard Dawkins won?
This is getting silly, it really has the scent of desperation but it was tweeted remarkably often. I am one person, Muslims are 1.6 billion.

How many Nobel Prizes have been won by atheists?
Now that’s a really interesting question, one that I would sincerely love to see answered. I suspect that the truculence with which the question was posed might turn out to be misplaced, and that’s an understatement. Polls of the US National Academy of Sciences and of the Royal Society of London give almost identical results and suggest that an overwhelming majority of elite scientists (and a lesser majority of scientists as a whole) have no religious faith, although many might nominally be recorded as, say, baptised Christians or Bar-Mitzvahed Jews. I would love to see a well-conducted study of the beliefs of Nobel prizewinning scientists. My guess is that a large majority would self-describe as atheist or agnostic. And a further substantial number would say something like ‘I might characterise my awe at the universe as “spiritual” but, like Einstein, I have no belief in a personal god and follow no religion.’ I’d be very surprised if a single prize-winner were to say ‘I believe Jesus was born of a virgin and rose from the dead’ or ‘I believe Mohammed rode through the sky on a winged horse’. But those are all conjectures and I would love to see the research done.

Henry Kissinger won a Nobel Prize. That just shows how worthless they are.
That was a Peace prize, and the Peace prize does have a rather more controversial reputation. Mother Teresa won it, after all, and said in her acceptance speech that abortion was the ‘greatest destroyer of peace in the world’. I’d be happy to subtract the Peace prizes. Trinity would lose only one of its 32 and Muslims would lose fully half their tally. Because of the second of the two boasts that I mentioned at the outset, I was in any case primarily interested in scientific achievement. If we count only science prizes, discounting Economics, Literature and Peace, Trinity’s count drops to 27 and the Muslim count drops to two (and even that includes the great theoretical physicist Abdus Salam, who left Pakistan in 1974 in protest at his particular version of Islam being declared ‘non-Islamic’ by its parliament). Bizarrely, some counts of Muslim scientific Nobelists are boosted by inclusion of that quintessential Englishman Sir Peter Medawar (born in Brazil, his father was Lebanese, a Maronite Christian).

Discuss.

He said a fact. What’s wrong with that?

Let’s just blow the lot of them off the map. Problem solved.

What’s the problem/controversy?

That looks like a fascinating book, Chris.

Perhaps every great religion has to do through a “Dark Age” before its period of renaissance and enlightenment. It’s the middle of the fifteenth century on the Muslim calendar. Perhaps Islam is due for a renaissance, and much in the same way that the Crusades allowed the Christian West to rediscover Classical Greek and Roman philosophy and science, which had been safely kept by the Muslim world, perhaps this current period of antagonistic confrontation with modern Christendom will be the spark that ignites a Muslim Renaissance and return to reason. Either that, or it will turn into a conflagration that envelops all of us once again in darkness.

[quote]Varqanir wrote:
That looks like a fascinating book, Chris.

Perhaps every great religion has to do through a “Dark Age” before its period of renaissance and enlightenment. It’s the middle of the fifteenth century on the Muslim calendar. Perhaps Islam is due for a renaissance, and much in the same way that the Crusades allowed the Christian West to rediscover Classical Greek and Roman philosophy and science, which had been safely kept by the Muslim world, perhaps this current period of antagonistic confrontation with modern Christendom will be the spark that ignites a Muslim Renaissance and return to reason. Either that, or it will turn into a conflagration that envelops all of us once again in darkness. [/quote]

I doubt it. The “dark ages” was one Christendom’s brightest intellectual eras, well at least Europe’s then we got the Renaissance and it was down hill from there with Alchemy.

So, I really hope that Islam doesn’t hit a Renaissance.

[quote]pushharder wrote:

Pretty good post for the most part. Seriously.

(Ha, that’s not what you wanted?)
[/quote]

No, he obviously wanted you to disagree with Dawkins on the grounds that he’s one o’ them thar godless eviloooshonists.

Does bring up an interesting question, though, which Dawkins touched on: to what extent is Muslim achievement in the natural sciences being retarded by a literal interpretation of their holy scriptures? How many Nobel Prizes have been awarded in the West in astrophysics and biology to avowed young-earth creationists? Because a preponderance of Muslims are just that.

I like Dawkins because of his seemingly congruent stance on Patriotism, red-meat, Islam, and the benefits of Christianity (even if he doesn’t believe himself).

Most logical New Atheist there is…yessir.

I don’t see anything controversial about what he said.

I enjoy reading his answers as well, makes me want to work on my own reasoning and communication skills.

[quote]Brother Chris wrote:
I like Dawkins because of his seemingly congruent stance on Patriotism, red-meat, Islam, and the benefits of Christianity (even if he doesn’t believe himself).

Most logical New Atheist there is…yessir.[/quote]

I find this stance much more conducive to reasonable dialogue than that of another of your Catholic brethren on this site, who dismisses Dawkins as an “intellectual half-wit”.

[quote]Varqanir wrote:

[quote]Brother Chris wrote:
I like Dawkins because of his seemingly congruent stance on Patriotism, red-meat, Islam, and the benefits of Christianity (even if he doesn’t believe himself).

Most logical New Atheist there is…yessir.[/quote]

I find this stance much more conducive to reasonable dialogue than that of another of your Catholic brethren on this site, who dismisses Dawkins as an “intellectual half-wit”.[/quote]

He’d describe himself as a half-wit before he had his conversion to “right-wing” politics.

I do applaud his pan-atheism.

I can’t stand people that say they’re rational, logical, scientific and athiest but then only make fun of Christianity.

[quote]RyuuKyuzo wrote:
Let’s just blow the lot of them off the map. Problem solved. [/quote]

I very rarely go onto PWI, I just came today to see if there was a discussion of Elysium, but I can see that you may indeed be shit disturbing.

[quote]Brother Chris wrote:

[quote]Varqanir wrote:

[quote]Brother Chris wrote:
I like Dawkins because of his seemingly congruent stance on Patriotism, red-meat, Islam, and the benefits of Christianity (even if he doesn’t believe himself).

Most logical New Atheist there is…yessir.[/quote]

I find this stance much more conducive to reasonable dialogue than that of another of your Catholic brethren on this site, who dismisses Dawkins as an “intellectual half-wit”.[/quote]

He’d describe himself as a half-wit before he had his conversion to “right-wing” politics.[/quote]

Are you referring to Richard Dawkins, or Pat?

[quote]pushharder wrote:
But to foster the idea that because young earth creationists aren’t awarded Nobel prizes therefore “young earth creationism is soooo tootally stupid, doooood,” is rather…how shall we say it???..unconducive to reasonable dialogue. Yeah, unconducive to reasonable dialogue! I like that! Mark me down as the guy who said, “unconducive to reasonable dialogue.”[/quote]

I’ll mark you down as the guy who said it three times in two lines of the same post.

How can the assertion of an undeniable fact be non-conducive to reasonable dialogue? Do you deny the fact that Young Earth Creationism has produced no Nobel prize-winners? Actually this raises the interesting question of whether, and under what circumstances, we should refrain from stating uncomfortable facts for fear of giving hurt and offence.

You may be reading in an implication that I didn’t intend. Since I am firm about Young Earth Creationism being a religious doctrine and not a scientific theory, I certainly didn’t, and don’t, imply any innate inferiority of intellect in those people who happen to follow the Young Earth Creationist doctrine. But I did intend to raise in people’s minds the question of whether the doctrine itself is inimical to scientific education. I don’t have the answer, but I think it is well worth asking the question. Has something gone wrong with education in the Creationist world, and is it a problem that Creationists themselves might wish to consider?

:wink:

[quote]Makavali wrote:

Dawkins sent out a tweet saying:

Shitstorm in a teacup ensued, he sent out responses to the various accusations of bigotry and racism.

You’re a racist (actually usually written as Your a racist)
If you think Islam is a race, you are a racist yourself. The concept of race is controversial in biology, for complicated reasons. I could go into that, but I don’t need to here. It’s enough to say that if you can convert to something (or convert or apostatize out of it) it is not a race. If you are going to accuse me of racism, you’ll have to do a lot better than that. Islam is a religion and you can choose to leave it or join it.

But aren’t Jews a race? And you can convert to Judaism
Yes you can convert to Judaism and no, the Jews are not a race. You can argue about whether Judaism is a religion or a cultural tradition, but whatever else it is it is not a race. That was one of many things Hitler got wrong. But if you want to bring up the Jews, I’m happy to drop Trinity, Cambridge and give you the truly astonishing Nobel Prize figures for Jews. You’ll find it won’t bolster your apologetics.

Race is not a biological concept at all but a socially constructed one. In the sociological sense you can convert to a race because race is a social construction.
There may be sociologists who choose to redefine words to their own purpose, in which case we have a simple semantic disagreement. I have a right to choose to interpret ‘race’ (and hence ‘racism’??) according to the dictionary definition: ‘A limited group of people descended from a common ancestor’. Sociologists are entitled to redefine words in technical senses that they find useful, but they are not entitled to impose their new definitions on those of us who prefer common or dictionary usage. You can define naked mole rats as termites if you wish (they have similar social systems) but don’t blame the rest of us if we prefer to call them mammals because they are close genetic cousins to non-social mole rats and other rodents.

OK, maybe you aren’t strictly a racist, but most Muslims have brown skins so you are in effect a racist
Incidentally, the reverse is not true: huge numbers of brown skinned people are Hindus or Sikhs or Buddhists. But in any case, I’m a lot less interested in skin colour than you seem to be. I don’t think skin colour has the slightest bearing on ability to win Nobel Prizes, whereas it is highly probable that childhood education in a particular religion does. Educational systems that teach boys only memorisation of one particular book, and teach girls nothing at all, are not calculated to breed success in science.

OK, you aren’t a racist at all, but you are a bigot, giving needless hurt and offence
How can the assertion of an undeniable fact be bigotry? Do you deny the fact that Trinity College has produced more Nobel prize-winners than all the billions of Muslims? Actually this raises the interesting question of whether, and under what circumstances, we should refrain from stating uncomfortable facts for fear of giving hurt and offence. I raised this question in a later tweet, out of genuine curiosity. The answers I got were all of the ‘white lie’ form. You don’t go out of your way to tell people they are fat. You may even lie to cheer them up. Fair enough.

Well, quoting an undeniable fact may not be bigotry in itself but you left an offensive, though unstated, implication dangling on the end of the fact
You may be reading in an implication that I didn’t intend. Since (unlike many tweeters, apparently) I am firm about Islam being a religion and not a race, I certainly didn’t, and don’t, imply any innate inferiority of intellect in those people who happen to follow the Muslim religion. But I did intend to raise in people’s minds the question of whether the religion itself is inimical to scientific education. I don’t have the answer, but I think it is well worth asking the question. Has something gone wrong with education in the Islamic world, and is it a problem that Muslims themselves might wish to consider? Just to throw in a separate piece of information, colleagues lecturing to aspiring doctors in British universities inform me that Muslim students boycott lectures on evolution. And I have myself interviewed, for television, pupils and teachers at one of Britain’s leading Islamic secondary schools, one with impeccable Ofsted ratings, where I was informed by a teacher that literally all the pupils reject evolution.

Cambridge University, like other First World Institutions, has economic advantages denied to those countries where most Muslims live.
No doubt there is something in that. But… oil wealth? Might it be more equitably deployed amongst the populace of those countries that happen to sit on the accidental geological boon of oil. Is this an example of something that Muslims might consider to improve the education of their children?

Why pick on Muslims? You could arbitrarily pick on plenty of categories of people that have achieved far less than Trinity College, Cambridge
Again, fair point. Somebody mentioned redheads (neither he nor I have figures on redheaded scientific achievement but we get the point). I myself tweeted that Trinity Cambridge has more Nobel Prizes than any single country in the world except the USA, Britain (tautologically), Germany and France. You could well think there was something gratuitous in my picking on Muslims, were it not for the ubiquity of the two positive boasts with which I began. Redheads (and the other hypothetical categories we might mention) don’t boast of their large populations and don’t boast of their prowess in science.

Trinity College is a Christian foundation. Its full name is ‘the College of the Most Holy and Undivided Trinity’.
Er, yes, that could be kind of the point. Christendom has moved on since 1546 when the college was founded. If Islam has not moved on during the same period, perhaps Muslims might consider asking why, and whether something could be done about it. That was sort of why I added the final sentence of my original tweet: ‘They did great things in the Middle Ages, though.’

Muslim scholars gave you algebra and alchemy
Thank you, I’ll take algebra. But alchemy? Are you sure you want to own alchemy? In any case, once again, a substantial half of my point was that Muslim scholars did indeed grace a golden age, so it is all the more poignant to ask what went wrong and what should be done about it.

How many Nobel Prizes has Richard Dawkins won?
This is getting silly, it really has the scent of desperation but it was tweeted remarkably often. I am one person, Muslims are 1.6 billion.

How many Nobel Prizes have been won by atheists?
Now that’s a really interesting question, one that I would sincerely love to see answered. I suspect that the truculence with which the question was posed might turn out to be misplaced, and that’s an understatement. Polls of the US National Academy of Sciences and of the Royal Society of London give almost identical results and suggest that an overwhelming majority of elite scientists (and a lesser majority of scientists as a whole) have no religious faith, although many might nominally be recorded as, say, baptised Christians or Bar-Mitzvahed Jews. I would love to see a well-conducted study of the beliefs of Nobel prizewinning scientists. My guess is that a large majority would self-describe as atheist or agnostic. And a further substantial number would say something like ‘I might characterise my awe at the universe as “spiritual” but, like Einstein, I have no belief in a personal god and follow no religion.’ I’d be very surprised if a single prize-winner were to say ‘I believe Jesus was born of a virgin and rose from the dead’ or ‘I believe Mohammed rode through the sky on a winged horse’. But those are all conjectures and I would love to see the research done.

Henry Kissinger won a Nobel Prize. That just shows how worthless they are.
That was a Peace prize, and the Peace prize does have a rather more controversial reputation. Mother Teresa won it, after all, and said in her acceptance speech that abortion was the ‘greatest destroyer of peace in the world’. I’d be happy to subtract the Peace prizes. Trinity would lose only one of its 32 and Muslims would lose fully half their tally. Because of the second of the two boasts that I mentioned at the outset, I was in any case primarily interested in scientific achievement. If we count only science prizes, discounting Economics, Literature and Peace, Trinity’s count drops to 27 and the Muslim count drops to two (and even that includes the great theoretical physicist Abdus Salam, who left Pakistan in 1974 in protest at his particular version of Islam being declared ‘non-Islamic’ by its parliament). Bizarrely, some counts of Muslim scientific Nobelists are boosted by inclusion of that quintessential Englishman Sir Peter Medawar (born in Brazil, his father was Lebanese, a Maronite Christian).

Discuss.[/quote]

Well, for arguments sake lets remember that Nobel Prizes have been given to people for virtually nothing. Al Gore, Kofi Annan etc… One could even argue that the Nobel Prize is a cultural masturbatory prize for being popular, or making promises in many cases.

Not saying I’d turn one down, lots of money and fun with women come along with those bragging rights.

I’m sure if we bothered to look, we could find some folks to celebrate in the Muslim world.

To the Christians, how do you feel about Dawkins restructuring the language hegemony in many colleges when it comes to how your faith is described? Do you consider yourselves Agnostic? Well most of you are categorized as Agnostic Theists by Dawkins’ new hegomony.

I’m not so impressed by him. :slight_smile: More of an attention grabbing blow hard who uses his platform to rile up folks, just like this! Nice job taking the bait.