It seems you're using an old browser. In order to view this site correctly, we advise you to upgrade your browser, or try the free Mozilla Firefox.
Bookmark and Share   Email this Story Print-ready version leave a comment
[49]

Spirituality

Aronson's guide for the godless
A WSU prof contemplates America as a not-so-religious nation
MT Photo: Kim Heron
SEE ALSO
More Spirituality Stories

City mission (7/30/2008)
Young Mormons on the move

Alms & Tithe (5/28/2008)
At Zakat, Big Brother's the enemy and there's an escape from despair

Wright and the truth (4/30/2008)
Controversial pastor is warm, smart as hell and deeply intellectual.

 

Editor's note: Readers can discuss this interview and the questions it raises in the comment section at the end of this article. Author Ron Aronson will be checking our comment board for a dialogue with readers in the coming days.

It began seriously with publication of The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason, which became a best-seller for a previously obscure neuroscience grad student named Sam Harris. And it's grown into what Wayne State University professor Ron Aronson calls "a remarkable intellectual wave." What "it" is doesn't have a simple name, but involves questioning and sometimes attacking religion; it especially involves a questioning of the increasing role that religion has taken in American public life in recent decades. The wave includes philosopher Daniel C. Dennett calling for the scientific investigation of religion in Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon. It includes the acerbic journo Christopher Hitchens (God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything) and the Oxford biologist Richard Dawkins (The God Delusion). Bill Maher recently added his two cents with the film Religulous.

Living Without God (Counterpoint), Aronson's contribution to the wave, was published late last year. It brooks no argument with religion as religion, but it challenges how the religious right has warped our politics in recent times. Mostly it considers how folks on the liberal left who aren't religious can nonetheless root their politics and passions in something larger themselves. It's a book that's won blurb-praise from both the activist-theologian Cornel West and the aforementioned Hitchens, as well as from author Barbara Ehrenreich.

Aronson is a distinguished professor of the history of ideas at Wayne State University and the author of books on Marxism, Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre. When he recently dropped by the MT offices in downtown Detroit to talk about his book, he reminded us that, along with being an author, academic and activist, he'd been Metro Times' original restaurant critic, leading, he recalled, to an article — when his first book came out — headlined "From Sauces to Sartre."

MT: At Borders the other day we saw this little section of about a dozen books for atheism, agnosticism, etc., at the end of all the religious books. As best we could figure, it was less than 2 percent of the books about religion, but these were all books from the last 10 years or so. It seems like there's a movement — even if it doesn't have any name — and that your book is part of it. What exactly is it and why now?

RON ARONSON: It's not clear it's a movement yet, and it's interesting to watch it. You've got a few writers who are fed up with the religiosity of the last, really the last generation, going back to Reagan, going back to the religious right. We've had this generation of in-your-face religiosity and one of the things that I'm interested in and write about is the fact that secularists have become so timid.

You compare that with going back 125 years, with what Susan Jacoby calls the golden age of American free thought, where we had people like Robert Ingersoll traveling from city to city on trains, with thousands of people turning out to hear him. This is in the 1880s. Ingersoll would have become president had he not been an atheist. Well, he was actually an agnostic, but he had his reputation for attacking religion and promoting free thought. Those were the days of a real optimistic, self-confident view that religion was declining and the future was going to be a happy future because we were getting smarter. People were leaving religion behind. People were becoming more educated. Society was more democratic, more scientific and, for many of them, more socialist — that was an important part of the current. And all of that optimism gave nonbelievers a sense that the future was ours, believing, like Ingersoll himself said, that there is the angel of progress and we are riding on the wings of progress.

I grew up with that sense of progress, the sense that the world was getting better sort of by itself. All sorts of people, whether on the left or the right, believed the world was getting better, and part of the reason it was getting better was because we were becoming more secularist. In April 1966 you had a very stark Time magazine cover with the headline "Is God Dead?" and, a few years later, you had John Lennon singing "Imagine" — imagine a world without religion. The world was getting better, and part of what was propelling it was the idea that there was going to be no more religion.


MT: And now?

ARONSON: So now here we are after the turn of the next century and the world doesn't seem to have gotten better. In many respects it has gotten worse, and people's optimism about the future seems to have gone away. Part of the reason for that optimism for many sophisticated, educated, politically hip people was that religion was ending. But religion didn't end, the world didn't get better. And people like me, I think we became timid. Plus the religious right, starting with Reagan, spawned this sense of feverish certainty on the part of religious people. I just happened to be listening to a right-wing talk radio station yesterday, and they were talking about lesbian parents and their sinfulness, and there was this amazing sense of we are right. I don't know anybody from the center on over to the left who believes with that kind of certainty anymore.

I believe in science. I believe in history. I believe in logic. I believe in human beings, through discourse, getting to what's true. But I can't thunder down and pound my fists and say, "You guys are wrong." I just don't do that.


MT: One of the things you point out early in your book is that most people have a skewed perception of how religious America really is, and how many people really fall under the broad umbrella of secularism.

ARONSON: If you look at surveys done by the Gallup Organization, for example, you get that 92 percent of the people believe in God, 5 percent say they don't and 3 percent aren't sure. But I recently wrote an opinion piece for USA Today where I contended that nonbelievers are really a much larger share of the population.

In reality, and other polls show this, one-quarter to one-third of Americans are not religious. I'll give you a mind-boggling statistic that nobody has mentioned but me. In a massive Pew Poll, when people were asked, "Where do you primarily get your morality from" — and they are given a list of areas that includes religion, daily life experience, reasoning, philosophy, science to chose from — only 29 percent of Americans overall say they get their morality from religion. Only 29 percent! That's astounding. What it means is that more than two-thirds of Americans have a secular morality.

Now, if you are talking with friends and you say, "I don't believe in God," what's the first issue that comes up constantly? They ask, "How can you be sure you are moral without God?" It's a constant theme. I get that from my students all the time. Well, it turns out that most Americans don't get their morality from religion, and to me what that's saying is that most Americans are really secular despite the fact that some among us go to church, believe in God. I find that absolutely fascinating, because when people talk about the 92 percent who say they believe in God, I want to say, "Come on. What percent really say they are guided by God?"


MT: But our culture is such that, to move in public life, you have to assume that the 92 percent is a reality, and that you need to act like you are part of it.

ARONSON: Yes, you assume the 92 percent is real. So when you have Obama here on Labor Day, in a speech that was cut to nine minutes because of Hurricane Gustav, he mentions God and prayer six times in nine minutes. And he closes by asking everyone to join in silent prayer for the potential victims of the hurricane. There are 100,000 people in the audience. What percentage doesn't believe in God? But let's say 10,000 people — instead of saying, "Hey, why should we pray?" — just sort of quietly bow, because we're in this religiously correct culture.


Guided by God?

MT: You mentioned earlier the certainty of believers compared to what you see as timidity on the part of nonbelievers. On one side there is this authoritarian mind-set — these are our rules and everybody's going to follow them. Whereas liberals, in the broad sense of the word, have this attitude of live and let live.

ARONSON: So, are you going to go to the barricades with that outlook? That's our political issue. Actually, I talk about that in the last chapter of this book, and that stays with me, I think, into my next book. The question for us is, how do we have as much passion and strength of conviction and willingness to struggle? In terms of writing the book, I was convinced that a religious worldview does not give you any more powerful convictions than a secular one. It's just that, if we're secular, we're not supposed to be sure, and we agree with live and let live — but we're not supposed to feel as strongly and we're also supposed to be taken in a little by someone like Camus, who says that we're on our own as individuals, and that the world is absurd and we can't really make sense of it. Part of why I wrote the book was to say that's wrong. We don't have to believe in God to see the world as meaningful and coherent. We can be as committed, and our lives can be as powerfully directed, as anyone who has the most powerful belief in God.


MT: Because we can believe in the rightness of the cause?

ARONSON: Yes, we can believe we're doing right, but it's a different kind of right. It's not authority-based. And, secondly, we can believe that we're part of a historical process that gives the world its meaning, and we are part of that process. I want to write another book about the historical process and say, "Wait a second! Look at how much humans have created over time to make the world a better place. We don't have to figure out where we belong. The place is there waiting for us, and you just have to see it."


MT: Isn't the belief in that akin to religion?

ARONSON: No. But I get the question. It depends on who you're with in this discussion. When we would talk, Cornel West, who made a very positive statement about this book, would say, "Brother Ron has his own way of being religious and I have my way." And I would love it. Because I would say we're both connected somewhere deeply. But I wouldn't call it religion. This is not faith, because I can show you. Come with me. Let's talk about our collective past.

I like to teach genealogy and family history because it roots people in where they came from, and I want people to see that we are always standing on someone else's shoulders and they on someone else's and they on someone else's. People don't talk about that as scientific, but it's part of who we are, and that's not religion, and it's not faith. I can demonstrate it and I can argue it.


MT: And the kind of movement that you are hoping this book might ignite, or contribute to — do you see the potential for a political alliance with religious progressives?

ARONSON: There are believers like Cornel West, people for whom religion is not an irrational and authoritarian escape from this life. They are people who are very grounded in this world and who don't use religion to substitute for other forms of direction and meaning, but complement themselves with it.

Along those same lines, there's also William Sloane Coffin Jr., a minister who wrote the book Credo before he died. Whatever he talks about as Christ, I can easily talk about in other terms, and we can get along very profoundly. I don't go beyond this world, but he doesn't abandon science and he doesn't abandon rationality. And he certainly doesn't abandon political struggle. That is pretty big.


MT: So, in terms of things that are necessary to create an alliance ...

ARONSON: One criterion would be, "Do you accept evolution or do you reject it for the creation story?" We know about 40 to 45 percent of Americans reject evolution, but the rest of the believers accept science. They do not want science and rationality to be compromised by their belief. So their belief takes a certain form and it's not that all-encompassing belief of the 45 percent who accept creation. So, yeah, I have an important connection, but I think there is an important task with those folks, which is to ask: Where do we agree? Where do we disagree? How do we learn to be in the same room together? And with mutual respect. I don't have to dismiss them as long as we can talk rationally about things that matter.


'Larger than ourselves'

MT: You're reaching out to some believers. But under the same tent, in this movement that we don't have a name for, you have someone like Christopher Hitchens who says religion, if not fundamentally evil, is something that we'd be better off without.

ARONSON: I had an interesting response to a talk I gave in Philadelphia. A number of people in the audience were hardcore atheists, and they got really angry at me for saying we need to talk with religious people. And the atheists said: What do we need to talk to them for? Their view of the world is totally incoherent. My answer was very simple: They're not going away any time soon. And do we want to learn how to live together? And if so, how would we do that? There are so many of them, particularly in the liberal religions, who are better organized than nonbelievers because their religious faith is tied in with a sense of community and with a sense of political action. I've had too much experience in the past, since the movement of '60s and '70s died, of working primarily with believers, working primarily with people who are inspired by Christ and God while my secular comrades were sort of losing their steam and losing their energy. I know that religion inspires and nurtures people.

Who would I rather be with on a picket line — Sam Harris or Charlie Rooney? Sam Harris is a right-winger who believes in torture and wants to use nuclear weapons. Charlie Rooney is one of our local heroes, activist, former priest, ran the Michigan Coalition for Human Rights with his wife, Jean, for about 10 years. Ed Rowe, the Central United Methodist pastor, is another perfect example.


MT: There's a beautiful passage in your book where you use the phrase, "Our own belonging to a world larger than ourselves." That may not describe a religious experience necessarily, but it does seem to have a spiritual dimension.

ARONSON: The essence of spiritualism, apparently, is being connected with something larger than you. Where I differ from most spiritualists is that this world that's larger than you is around us. It can be seen. It can be described. It can be mapped. It can be studied historically and socially and politically and biologically. The hunger that spiritualists have, I guess I must have had at some point. But I didn't find satisfaction in vague and semi-transcendent views of the world. I found I was satisfied by reading Marx, by reading Freud, by being politically active and by looking at the history of all the movements I was active in.

It becomes "spiritual" in that vague, murky way because people don't have the goddamn tools to look around themselves and map their world and think of themselves concretely in it. It has to do with how we're educated and how we're socialized in this society. We don't open our eyes and look around and see our links to global society, to other people, to other workers. We don't see that and we don't look in ourselves and see our past, and we don't look at ourselves physically and see our biology. We're not educated to do that. We're not socialized to do that. So those people who have the same hunger and needs to connect don't have the tools and they flip out and they become vague and they become incoherent. We are all part of some greater universe, but it doesn't have to be vague.


MT: But there is the unknown.

ARONSON: I was in Ann Arbor at Shaman Drum bookshop recently giving a talk. It was exciting because I thought there would be four people there, but it was a full house. And this one guy, who was clearly a student, at the back of the room raises his hand and says, "What about all those questions that you can't answer?" And I said, "This is about my chapter called 'Choosing to Know.'" I said, "Well, those are important questions. But I'm here to tell you that if you stick with the questions you can answer, and really dig into them, they are so powerful and so exciting that whatever we can't answer sort of almost pales to insignificance because this world we're part of is so rich and so important and gives us so much life. I could see he was responding, which was an exciting moment.


MT: So you are looking for common ground, and ways to build bridges with the faction of believers who are progressive and rational. Do you think Obama is trying to do what you're talking about?

ARONSON: Shit, no. He's not trying to do that. I think he's so caught up in the political process of appealing to these people — Rick Warren, for example — that he's willing to do things that one should never do, like submit to a religious test for the presidency. I think the Democratic Party's trajectory is: How do we get as many fundamentalists on board as we can? How do we appeal to them as much as possible?

I taught church-state this fall, and the Constitution is pretty clear on the separation. Obama pretends, as a constitutional lawyer, that he knows all that. I don't think he does, and it's worrisome.

In an '06 speech Obama said, I insist that you can bring religion into the public square and I'm not going to hold my religion back. But if you do that, and we're talking policy, you have to put what you're presenting in universal terms that everyone can accept and agree with. That's either a recipe for trying to create a large universal language among believers and nonbelievers — or it's a recipe for believers on how to manipulate. Is Obama saying, "You guys have to learn how to market so you can manipulate nonbelievers"?


MT: You used the phrase "religiously correct" a bit ago.

ARONSON: It's Susan Jacoby's. I give her credit.


MT: Here's a religiously correct problem: The drugstore clerk says, "Have a blessed day," when you get your change. How can you not be rude and yet suggest that's part of a creeping religionism that not everybody agrees with?

ARONSON: If you've got a minute, and you're feeling so disposed, you can say, Thank you for wishing me a blessed day, but I'm not a believer so I'll just have a good day and I'll wish you one too ... or something like that without being hostile or harsh. We have to develop the cheer because believers have a thing about nonbelievers, and I'll tell you what it is: They're mean, they're smart and they're sinful. Somehow we have to get around all of those just by not being mean, not being smart-assed and being nice so we appear to be as good as we are ...


Thank who very much?

MT: You talk about gratitude a lot in your book. But if one is not religious, to avoid being some sort of cosmic ingrate, whom do you give thanks to?

ARONSON: The point is to avoid ignoring who we are and to avoid anesthetizing ourselves and becoming morally numb. I'm trying to make a point about dependence. As Americans, we are especially numbed and dumbed in this respect. We are dependent on so much that is beyond us individually. But it's almost like the condition of being socialized as an American is to cut ourselves off from an awareness of how dependent we are for our very being, and our survival. We are deeply dependent and deeply connected beings, and you don't know yourself unless you know that. If you pretend you are on your own completely and that you are alone in an absurd universe and nothing makes sense, you are ignoring our deeper reality. And it's paying attention to our deeper reality as individuals that I'm talking about.


MT:
It sounds as if you are, again, saying that both people with faith, and people who are secularists, there's a point at which they can meet.

ARONSON: I think if you were to ask, "What do people look for in religion?" I'd say there is a sense of community, and a sense of being connected to forces that are beyond yourself. There is a sense of being rooted, and a sense what you should do with your life. And there is a sense of hope. What I'm saying is that there are ways to do that without religion, and it is not an abstraction. The last chapter of my book is a call to social and political commitment to make the world a better place. A call to join the great political movements that are still with us and that have made the world as good as it is, and to combat the forces that make the world as bad as it is. As one reviewer remarked, what I'm really demanding is a wider sense of social commitment, and it's true.


MT:
One reviewer talked about how the city of Detroit was almost a character in this book. How did growing up here shape your worldview?

ARONSON: I was born just a few blocks from here, and the last chapter of my book begins with a walk along the riverfront, which is another few blocks from here. And there is a rootedness in my experiences here that is at the book's core. I feel very much a part of this community. Somehow it is a strange place with a lot of people with a similar political background.

When I returned here after going away to college, for me, coming back to Detroit in 1968 was a wonderful experience. I came back because of, not in spite of, the riot-slash-insurrection. So many of us in the New Left thought Detroit was going to be the center of the next massive political transformation, and we joined it enthusiastically.

But there's another part of this book that's about being in this dumped-on, beat-up, abandoned community. The question has been, how do you find hope in a city that's lost more than half of its population and is on its way to losing more than two-thirds? How do you continue to find hope? And I became one of those people who sort of became nourished on the grittiness of the Detroit metropolitan area. There is a harshness and grittiness and a kind of energy to keep going on. I've looked for ways to be refreshed by this environment, by the riverfront, and the DIA and Campus Martius, where I take my grandchildren ice-skating.


MT: How does that relate to what you refer to in your book as the "privatization" of hope?

ARONSON: Particularly for people from Detroit, during the movements that took place during the 1930s and 1960s, there was this sense of collective hope. Detroit was one of the centers for that. But when the collective hope wanes, when the great movements wane, people have a rough time. And when that happens, one of the things people do is turn inward. You make your life and your family and your own pursuits your happiness. And to me, that's not a recipe for happiness, it's a recipe for discouragement.

In the past we had people like Ken Cockrel Sr. and Coleman Young, and both of them reached out to the progressive white community and included them, and that included people like me. And that's one of the things that we miss enormously right now, because what we need is a progressive movement involving both city and suburbs that is really dedicated to revisualizing the whole region. And it's so pathetically sad that we don't have it.


MT: Given everything that is going on, both in this city and region, and the world at large, how does a person remain hopeful without religion to rely on?

ARONSON: If you really have hope, you don't just have it and keep it. You're constantly plunging into discouragement and despair, because reality can be so negative. You are constantly digging yourself out again and again and again. To give them credit, many religious people will talk the same way. I can have a constant sense of doubt about where things are going, and why they're so goddamn wrong. But you can also say, "Fuck it; I'm going to fight against it." I'm going to do this to contribute or do that to contribute. You have to constantly dig into yourself, or dig into those around you, or dig into your sense of what people who have done before you.

I went to South Africa at one point, and it felt thrilling to be part of something that was so important, that people were pouring their energy into this fight against apartheid. I think part of the reason I write is to sort of reconnect myself, and to make that alive for other people, to help them realize we are connected in these struggles.

Struggle is intrinsic to life. And if you give up fighting against the bullshit, part of you just dies, and there is an emptiness. There's something about being engaged in the battle.


'You make yourself moral again"

MT: That would seem to explain, at least in part, why you've been so involved with the Huntington Woods Peace, Citizenship & Education Project, a small group of activists that has been opposing the policies of the Bush administration for years.

ARONSON: Just keeping a small group like that alive matters so much. Maybe it only matters to that small group. But maybe you're also an example to others. Maybe you don't know what results you're going to have. But one of the things I talk about a little — and it would be worth somebody writing a book about — is that by fighting against this shit, you make yourself moral again. You don't just do the things you do to meet the deadline and do the job and pay the bills, but instead are saying, "Hey, I'm living. I'm doing what human beings should do to be human beings." And you don't need God for that. You don't need religion for that.


MT:
Which brings us to our last question. The subtitle of the book is "New Directions for Atheists, Agnostics, Secularists, and the Undecided." But we finished still wondering what you call yourself.

ARONSON: Really? I suppose I never do say. (Laughs.) You are right that I never argue against religion, because I don't have an interest in attacking it. We could get into an interesting discussion about the difference between an atheist and an agnostic, and agnostic and a humanist. And a secularist. I'm not undecided. Freethinker, I like that too. I guess at a given moment I'm each of those. And I also reject the notion that there's anything to battle about between those. That's the best way to put it.

In November, I spoke at Harvard, and a friend of mine there said, "Ron, you need a one-page statement of our creed. You've got to really get it out there, and you need a name for it."

But after my experience with Marxism, I hate all names. We need new names like we need boils. But if there's any name I would coin, it is responsiblism. It means taking responsibility for who we are, and for taking responsibility for other people in the world, and then demanding that the society and the world around us take responsibility for us as well. In that sense I'm a responsibilist.


W. Kim Heron and Curt Guyette are the editor and news editor of Metro Times, respectively. Send comments to wkheron@metrotimes.com or cguyette@metrotimes.com. Or go through a simple registration to post and share comments on this article . Ron Aronson will be reading online comments and responding in the coming days.

Comments

Report this comment On 1/7/2009 7:36:55 PM, jazzbutcher said:

As I look at the scientific revolution I am disgusted on how nowhere is science applied to human behavior. We have scientific psychology. It goes against societal presuppositions so it is rejected. Conditioning is the only way to explain this. Rejection validates behaviorism, but evidence is ignored while superstition is reinforced. That is predictable. That is tragic. That is irony. We continue to hold people responsible for their behavior instead of realizing we have to responsibly make changes in the environment to change people. People are not stupid, lazy, perverted, violent, etc... People are people. People develop a repertoire of behavior based on the contingencies of reinforcement. We must change the contingencies to change the people. We have to move beyond judgement and move towards understanding in order to actually improve the world. Unfortunately the science of human behavior isn’t being learned and superstition continues to be reinforced. I therefore hope people will be responsible and read About Behaviorism by B.F. Skinner. Of course they won’t because people only read what reinforces their world view, but anyone that wants personal responsibility will only find ways of perpetuating it by reading this book. Understanding the science of human behavior and other sciences is the only way we will get a better world. Scott Colby

Report this comment On 1/8/2009 8:52:14 AM, Bumpadrum said:

Satan has tools everywhere, and this self important hippie is just another narcissist staring at his reflection in a mud puddle. So what? but he ceases being a harmless fool when he states that the seperation of church/ state is clear in the U.S. Constitution. Where? Just because you don't believe in God doesn't mean you can just make stuff up. I will pray for your enlightment. Bumpadrum

Report this comment On 1/8/2009 1:43:52 PM, shinealight said:

I'm shocked, shocked to find a university professor who is inclined toward atheism/agnoticism/secularism. Really, yet another book on the subject? Methinks Aronson stuck his finger in the air and decided he better jump on this bandwagon and make some money on a book while the political mood was still in his favor. I thought for a histroy professor, his thoughts and comments on this movement had huge gaping holes historically that left a lot to be explained. How do we go from Sam ingersoll in the 1880's to a 1966 Time cover to "Imagine" as if they all sort of have some connectedness? As for the so-called optimism of his youth and the optimism he spoke of in the early 60's do you really think it was because we as a society were becoming MORE secular? Where do you pull this assertion out of? Where's the evidence? Just admit you're trying to cash in on a movement that's already passing you by and soon to flicker out like most academic trends. Why not address the question why so many of the athiest/agnostic/secularist authors/spokespeople/notables are white males? I think the article and author mention Cornel West and Susan Jacoby as a sort of preemptive defelction of that criticism, but the question is there. And as cliche as it sounds why not also address the question as to why so many athiests are people who have had little or bad relationships with their fathers? Granted I'm no academic, but how about a little self-analysis of your own "movement" before you go around criticising and lableing those who do believe in a God. Lastly(I promise), why is it always when athiests talk or write a book or have a discussion, they essentially argue against the Christian concept or belief in God. Funny, I never see these types taking their arguments to a black church, synagogue or mosque, or anyone of those beliefs. I'd love to see you take on someone other than your ususal straw man, especially islam.

Report this comment On 1/8/2009 2:41:37 PM, Mark T said:

If you want to continue this discussion in real life. The Center for Inquiry Michigan is hosting Dr. Aronson at the Redford public library on January 21 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Details can be found at http://www.cfimichigan.org/events/event/living-without-god-se/ Mark Thompson Southeast Michigan Coordinator Center for Inquiry Michigan

Report this comment On 1/8/2009 2:56:08 PM, skarris said:

This is in response to "Aronson's guide for the godless." I think Aronson's argument is full of holes, which makes his "prowess" as a seasoned university professor questionable. I feel that he fails to make the distinction between being religious and belief in God, which any true believer or even any "godless intellectual" will tell you is distinct. This clear distinction is what makes believing, nurturing and fulfilling to 92% percent of the population who may or may not prescribe to any ritualistic worship or political power-mongering. His meager attempt to pinpoint the small percentage that consider their lives dictated by religion, only further refutes his point that believers in God are akin to the authoritative religious right. Somehow, alongside this movement of non-belief that according to Aronson is only in its infancy, believers still enjoy their own belief systems and attempting to answer life's unanswerable without pounding their fists in fury against adversity. On that note, he makes the argument that the way to deal with life's unanswerable questions is to simply stop attempting to answer them by as he puts it "sticking to the questions you can answer." How can he, as a history professor, attempt to explain away humankind's struggle with philosophy? His contribution to the movement is to insist, in such a crude and uneducated way, that those who have difficulty with philosophic truths simply stop attempting to educate themselves. They should be doing so in favor of such intangible and fallible things as scientific discovery and biased historical accounts. I fear if humankind stops trying to answer the difficult questions in favor of the "easier" ones the direction he is supplying for the Atheists, Agnostics, Secularists, the Undecided, etc., will have them continuing to go in circles.

Report this comment On 1/9/2009 11:34:22 AM, kdaubs93 said:

Hello Mr. Aronson- I just read your article, and one main point that I did like about your journey/testimony/beliefs, is that you appear to be very interested in giving money, time, and energy to the poor. You also believe that we are all connected to eachother, and we long for community. You also believe that we are on this Earth to make this a better place, and you also believe that we are to have hope in our lives, no matter what the ups and downs. The 'interesting'thing about all these points is that Jesus Christ was for these exact same things over 2,000 years ago. I agree that this country is far from being a "religious" country, and in a lot of ways we are religiously confused. The awesome thing that I've learned from Jesus is that he "did not come to condemn the world, but that through Him the world would be saved" John 3:17. We both agree that there has been a lot of 'mess' in this world due to religious causes (racism, wars) but that should not cause one to become an atheist. You also had mentioned above about struggles in life. Paul the Apostle, who was once a murderer of Jews, was converted to Christianity. He also saw Jesus Christ face to face after Jesus was resurrected. He ended up living and dying a completely martyred lifestyle and was rejected and imprisoned many times. The only hope he had in life was in the fact that he had seen Jesus Christ resurrected, and because of that he had no other choice but to serve him....... And that's where I get my HOPE

Report this comment On 1/9/2009 11:53:56 AM, Doc d20 said:

To: shinealight. Good post! You'll never see the atheists use Islam as their straw man. More than anything, the atheist fears death: This is because their faith excludes the hope of an afterlife and poo-poos the idea of eternal consequence to present action. Moreover, it is well documented that Muslims kill (or, at least, fervently call for the death of) those who insult Islam. Thus, the Christians, most of whom adhere strongly to tenets of peaceful prosylitizing, will continue to be the punching bag of choice for these miserable jerks.

Report this comment On 1/9/2009 1:45:04 PM, jacklattie said:

For me, some of these comments (so far) are part of what make such issues so hard to get into. How can we have a rational discussion of these issues when the first thing out of everyone's mouth is an attack. Attack the secularists (miserable jerks), attack the writer (self-important hippie), attack those not being attacked enough (Muslims). The ideas presented here aren't "God is Dead" or "Religion will kill us all". Why such a defensive posture? What I take from this is a call for tolerance and understanding; a desire for mediation between these factions so that some progress can be made, some betterment. No wonder the secular/agnostic/atheists are so quiet and disconnected when even the most even-handed thinking is ferociously pounced upon. And as for Christians always being the focus, polls reported by CBS and ABC news say nearly 83% of Americans count themselves as Christian. If we're talking about religion and its affect in the United States, we're talking about Christians. It's as simple as that. At 83% that's white or black, hispanic or asian, male or female.

Report this comment On 1/9/2009 10:08:36 PM, diagoras said:

Granted I'm no academic, but how about a little self-analysis of your own "movement" before you go around criticising and lableing those who do believe in a God. Lastly(I promise), why is it always when athiests talk or write a book or have a discussion, they essentially argue against the Christian concept or belief in God.

Report this comment On 1/9/2009 10:09:28 PM, diagoras said:

the hypocrisy...

Report this comment On 1/9/2009 10:12:27 PM, diagoras said:

The steps to being a hypocrit 1. Tell people they shouldn't criticize or label people who believe in god 2. Label atheists, and criticize them for only writing books on christianity. Try reading Ayan Hirshi Ali's, or Christopher Hitchens book. Atheists aren't soft on islam. They write what they are familiar with - what they have knowledge about. If they grew up in a country that is predominantly christian - then christianity is the religion they know thoroughly enough to critique.

Report this comment On 1/10/2009 11:20:09 AM, Ron.Aronson said:

The most interesting fact about some of these comments is that they resemble what happens in a Rorschach Inkblot Test - they’re not interested at all in the actual interview, not engaging with what I said, but rather seize the opportunity to go off — wherever the writer was predisposed to go by whatever inclination. Still, I’d like to respond to a few points. First, I agree with the main point maid by Jazzbutcher (Scott Colby) about the ways in which environment affects, even shapes behavior, and the need to make real changes in the world. I discuss this at length in my book. But as I say there, there’s another side to this, namely holding people responsible for what they make of what is made of them. In the final analysis, however profoundly conditioned, we are not cabbages or widgets, wholly shaped by the environment, but we make ourselves beyond all of the conditioning. The environment may give us our possibilities and our tools, but it doesn’t make our choices for us and it doesn’t form our responses. So “understanding the science of human behavior and other sciences” is not “the only way we will get a better world.” That will also take politics, and it will take human will and hope. Bumpadrum should read the Constitution. Not only is it completely Godless, beginning with “We the people of the United States . . .” but it also prohibits any “religious test”for public office and declares, in the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” Thomas Jefferson, commenting later, declared that this set up a “wall of separation” between church and state. To some of the other writers I’d simply like to say that they might consider doing a little reading and thinking before commenting. To take one example, I don’t argue against religion in my book, and I didn’t in the interview. I am not interested in disproving the existence of God. My goal, in the interview and in the book, is to answer life’s important questions for myself and other secularists, nonbelievers, atheists, agnostics, humanists, skeptics, and freethinkers. I’m trying to explain the ways in which life has purpose, order, meaning, and hope without God. Believers may disagree, but it’s not a very good advertisement for their religion that they fall back on attacks and insults rather than making the case for their beliefs. To skarris on which questions we might be trying to answer. I’d suggest he/she read my chapter five: “Choosing to Know,” which takes this up in detail. To put it most simply, my choice is to turn towards the questions of this life and this world, which most of philosophy has historically tried to answer, rather than focusing on unanswerable questions about . If others make a different choice, so be it, but I’ll continue to argue for putting our priority on solving the world’s problems. Finally, to kdaubs93: You’ve invited a civil, respectful conversation over what we have in common and where we disagree. As Obama says, in one of his best sentences: “No one is exempt from the call to find common ground.” One of my keenest desires is to explore where we agree and where we diverge, but to do so as you’ve done, without name-calling, insult, and disrespect. Thanks.

Report this comment On 1/10/2009 11:38:42 AM, Barb said:

Checking my user name

Report this comment On 1/10/2009 12:25:25 PM, Barb said:

I have read the comments and find that most of them show the intolerance of the right wing fundamentalist culture. It is something that I find on almost every site that has to do with science and religion. I have spent years reading text books to educate myself even though I could not attend college. I grew up a Southern Baptist, but long ago decided the bible was a book of stories written by ignorant men who wanted to control everyone. Most of my peer group are also, at most high school graduates. Most of them were satisfied with their knowledge and most of them are nominal christians, with a few fundamentalist thrown in. I would never try to take away their belief in this mystical god they need in their lives, but I do have a problem with rabid fundamentals who are for the most part not highly educated and have no way of addressing a philosophical question beyond attacking the writer. It is the intolerance and disrespect for opinions other than the one they adhere to that calls me to question their "christian morals". Some of our younger family members have had the opportunity to attend college and most of them are skeptics, unbelievers, or totally non-religious. By the way, I am 65, so I have had a long time to think about this.

Report this comment On 1/10/2009 4:43:40 PM, seathanaich said:

Paul Buckman wrote a good book for religious people who aren't afraid to ask questions, called "Can We Be Good Without God?" It is not very confrontational, and is a good read for theists who want to respect their non-religious friends and family, but have been scared off Hitchens or Dawkins by reviews from religious sources. I agree with Mr Aronson that most of the critical comments here do not actually address what he has written; but if theists actually addressed logical, reasonable criticism of their faith, they would discard it. Your pessimism about change is an insular Americanism. Outside of your country, then entire advanced world is rapidly reducing its religiosity to less harmful levels, and then discarding it entirely. Atheism is the majority view in Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, the UK, Netherlands, Belgium, France, Cechy, and Japan. 33% are atheist in Australia and New Zealand, 25% in Canada. All of these nations outscore the US on almost all social indicators, not coincidentally. Atheists in the United States discuss Christianity as their example (not their straw man, their example) because - SURPRISE - that's the religion of most people around them. It takes either ignorance or dishonesty to not be able to figure this out. The person who claims that the US Constitution doesn't separate church and state is a prime of example of the religious mind set, which has two components: ignorance and dishonesty. When a religious person offers an opinion, it can only be based on one of these two bases. The claim that it is atheists who fear death is Orwellian double-speak at its classic best by theists. Atheists don't make up afterlife mythologies. That's theists who do that, because they fear death. Quacks like a duck, waddles like a duck - it's a duck. Keep up the good work sir. Young people will chose better ideas when they get the chance to contrast and compare.

Report this comment On 1/10/2009 11:28:19 PM, rodneykingofhearts said:

Can't we all just get along? No? Well, then...off with their heads! Entertaining discussion- I would contribute something more substantial, but I'm dyslexic. The book sounds intriguing because I'm certainly curious about what life would be like without dogs. Great...now somebody from People With Learning Disabilities Of America(?) is going to post a large-worded attack on me because I've contradicted my initial plea for tolerance. Mr. Aronson sounds like a nice man that makes some very good points. Other people on this list make some good points, but they don't all seem as nice. I would make a real attempt to ask people to "lighten up", but I forgot-this is the internet. People can communicate things without witnessing the emotional consequence it has on that human being. If feelings were hurt on the message board, and nobody knew that feelings were hurt, did feelings really get hurt? Heck- I might even buy Mr. Aronson's book and have my extremely literate dog read it to me...so he can tell me what life is like without...him...or attend the meeting in Redford and just to make wild guesses at who might be "diagoras" or "shinealight". Maybe Mr. Aronson is god, and this is just a test.

Report this comment On 1/11/2009 1:08:23 PM, -Spiritually Inclined- said:

I would just like to say R.A. I am totally intune with the whole idea of analyzing ones morality. Who is trully in charge of our religious reasoning,and our daily life experiences. Which one of Noahs sons between Ham, Shem, and Japhet, our known great great great great elders and first forefathers should be examined and analyazed under and american telescope? Since everyone wants to blame the other look closely into the historical events process and values of those who look to convert and economically obstruct our progression. They hide from the eyes of "the america" Looking to convert or annexation us by controlling our economy. The Germans vs THE FRENCH, See Revolutionary WAR! And what evolved from this see Calvinism, The Geneva Covention, Huegunot, who opposed annexation by the duke of savoy, from swiss german eidgenosse the confederates from high german and middle german annexation-to add by force or to make one bind threw war consequences or making one CONVERT! The mixing of people and doctrines not by choice. JAPHET the migratory cimmerians of equestrian nomads that inhabited the region of the caucus mountains Ukraine,Russia, mongolia, eastern europe,SEE also those who domesticated the horse see calvary and chariots."the horse people" See also Germanic Pagan and neomidevalisim culture Romanticism see the Goths and Vikings Vulcae. See also Byronics or the romantic ideals elevated by the French who laid the background from which romanticism emerged. Neo. If you want to blame someone blame Them! for keeping a foul ass MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH! And the Beast she rides The red scarlett and the one who sinfully stops our progress! So if you want to blame some one blame these Two for getting the nations drunk and fornicating with all the inhabitant that she tricked into be with wine and music see the slut and her beast Lilith and samael, The Queen of England, and The catholic church, See Ish of Esfahan, Isfahan Iran, From ENGLISH, Swedish, Flemish, German, Norweigian, Iceland. European, English London finacial inerest groups control the OCC of International affairs of London is called an independent bureau of the United States Department of Treasury which fosters competition or rivalary between individuals or GROUPS nations or people for territory or resources Example of a group who looks to take over american economy SEE CITIGROUP, and its Ivy School leaders. of Columbia Institute for Tele information. Metonyming-WALLSTREET Ivy Schools "Citicorp" wallstreet used in metonymy a figure of speech in which IDEA is evoked or named by means of a term designating some associated notion "substituting naming" or trickery these nomadic wanderes are going down! Any way america belongs to the 12 tribes in which there are 4444 thousand in each x 12 = 4 million of " the America " anyway not some English nit wits! Cant wait to meet you R. A. I totally understand ANALYZE! and you will Find the TRUTH!

Report this comment On 1/12/2009 3:51:33 PM, Barb said:

To Spiritually Inclined WHAT??????? Just a little logic please.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 8:51:15 AM, Ron.Aronson said:

The post by "Spiritually Inclined" is incoherent and I can't find a single thing to say directly in response. But as I said in the interview, I agree with both religious and spiritual people that each of us belongs to much that is beyond our own individual self -- and that it's important to see our links to the cosmos, nature, the past, and global society. But this is in and of this world (including its past) and it can be understood and mapped. "Spirit" is often a vague way at getting at something concrete, a mystifying way of indicating something that can be described and mapped.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 9:02:41 AM, Ron.Aronson said:

Here's a question that came directly to MT: Ron, Regarding the existence of God: the answer I sometimes get regarding the "proof" that God exists is: There is too much order in the universe for God or some supreme being NOT to exist. One cannot deny the order that exists, which I'm willing to agree with, but the "argument" invariably seems to cease at this point with myself being the "loser" in this debate, at least in the eyes of the God yea-sayer. Thus my question: How do you counter the existence of God or a supreme being when confronted with the there-is-too-much-order argument? My response: There's also an enormous amount of disorder. A little reading of Darwin's "Origin of Species" will convince you of how wasteful and chaotic is the struggle survival. Or just look around and observe it. And read Darwin, as well as contemplate evolution for a while, to behold with wonder the slow step by step by step development of the earth and plant and animal worlds. The Field Museum in Chicago is a good place to observe this natural history. No one, no mind, is making it happen - it is the chaotic, often random, but cumulative process in which life evolves. Yes, this is an amazing order, but it develops naturally! I for one find contemplating the scientific/historical explanation of this process more awe-inspiring than any religious explanation that short-circuits the billions of years of evolution.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 10:35:04 AM, stratocat said:

A lot of believers accept science, because, if you do your homework, you will find that the OVERWHELMING scientific evidence shows that evolution did not happen and that it is scientifically impossible. DNA of one species CANNOT change to DNA of another species. Never has. Never will. Evidence shows a universe that was created very quickly. If evolution was true, we should have numerous fossils of these "transition" creatures that supposedly took millions of years to form, yet there are NONE. As far as separation of church and state, I don't know what constitution this guy is reading. It isn't the US constitution. Separation of church and state simply meant that the government would not impose on people which form of CHRISTIANITY they wanted to practice. That's right. CHRISTIANITY. Our founding fathers, in their writings and speeches, constantly spoke of Jesus Christ by name, in public, and there was even government money used to establish a christian community among the Indians in an effort to convert them to Christianity. Godless people like Aronson conveniently "forget" these facts or simply try to hide them. It's no wonder our colleges are so screwed up when you have people like this guy and Lessenberry teaching there. How do you know God exists? Simple. Science proves it. Either the universe came into existence on it's own (impossible because it violates the first law of thermodynamics), or it always existed (impossible because that would violate the second law of thermodynamics), OR, you have an almighty being who can violate the laws of science and create the universe from nothing. Simple logic and common sense, not to mention the scientific evidence, tells you that there is a God. No wonder God Himself says "it is the fool who says there is no God, because you can KNOW he exists by the works of His hands". DUH!!! By the way Mr. Aronson, are you a little concerned about where YOU will spend eternity? We ALL spend it in one of two places.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 1:40:35 PM, Barb said:

stratocat: Why are you so angry? Just because a person writes an article on reason and religion, you come unglued. I guess it is ok to do so since you are anonoymous to all here, but you are really yelling from a point of view, not necessarily from fact. As with most fundamentalist, you use circular reasoning to prove something that is just your opinion. As I say it is fine, but it can't be good for your blood pressure.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 5:56:08 PM, Bumpadrum said:

Ron wrote... "Bumpadrum should read the Constitution. Not only is it completely Godless, beginning with “We the people of the United States . . .” but it also prohibits any “religious test”for public office and declares, in the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” ~ Yes Ron, and after the comma the sentence continues... "or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..." Which acknowledges those that are not "Godless", and means you can't tell me how to exercise, practice, or express my religious beliefs, publically or privately, even if I vote for an openly Evangelical Christian who advocates prayer in school. ~ "Thomas Jefferson, commenting later, declared that this set up a “wall of separation” between church and state." That was Jefferson expressing his personel opinion, at a different time and a different place, in his own context and perspective. I stand by my statement, the words "seperation of church and state" do not appear anywhere in the constitution, nor does the concept or the illussion, the impression, or even a hint that that's what the Founding Fathers wanted.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 9:24:12 PM, screaminscott said:

Religious people can bluster all they want. Religion is on the wane. People are leaving the main denominations in droves. Religious doctrine is changing to be more marketable to people, and therefore becoming less 'religious' and more 'practical'. The last gasp for churches in the USA will be the baby boomers. As they age, they will become more religious. But the youngsters growing up these days aren't buying into the nonsense that churches are putting out. And when the baby boomers die off, there will be a mass closing of churches, if they are even still called churches at that time. And us secularists will eventually win. It's just a matter of time.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 10:40:34 PM, stratocat said:

I'm not angry at all Barb. I don't know why you took it that way. The fact is, I AM speaking from fact, not point of view. How so many people can't see the obvious is beyond me. OBVIOUSLY God, the Lord Jesus Christ, exists. OBVIOUSLY, evolution is impossible and nonsense. OBVIOUSLY, our founding fathers spoke of Christ openly many times over. So many people are brainwashed because they are constantly fed the kind of liberal nonsense that Aronson spews. You will never see the other side of the story in science books with compelling evidence that evolution is impossible and that this earth and the universe are no more than a little over 6000 years old, with our own laws of thermodynamics backing that up, and if you don't know that God exists, I TRULY feel sorry for you. You only get one chance to get that right, and if you don't, just as Christ Himself said, you will pay for it eternally in a place that Christ Himself described as a place of everlasting torment where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth, and it's SO easy to avoid that if you simply receive the free gift being offered to you. Now those of you who ridicule Christ can go ahead and call me, let's see, a fanatic, an extremist, a lunatic, or whatever other description ungodly people like to use.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 10:56:38 PM, rodneykingofhearts said:

That's it, stratocat! You've convinced me! Your textbook extremist stance that turns faith into fact has shown me the light! I especially appreciate the pseudo-logical strategy of saying "it's not this or this or this, so it must be this!" when faced with an undefined, infinite amount of "thisses". We must have taken science as far as it can possibly go, right? And in typical fashion, the fear card is played to ensure that I will feel the burning embers tickling my feet...or is that his pitchfork? Next, you'll be playing the "free-will" card to explain the world's mischief, when god supposedly created heaven (a perfect place of peace and love) over which to reign. Wow- we got the shaft, didn't we. Then you'll try to spin all of the ridiculously obsolete and outrageous ideas in the old testament to fit a more modern, x-games-indie-rock version of church. I'll just take your steadfast confidence and join you on this wild circular ride to the rapture, and I won't ask anymore questions...but I'll tell you one thing, no loving god that I know is going to punish me just for continuing to ask. Sorry for the sarcasm, but anyone that ends their comment with an absolute, eternal ultimatum like that deserves a little playful retort. Keep dreaming, everyone.

Report this comment On 1/13/2009 11:16:58 PM, rodneykingofhearts said:

Wow- even more from "the cat". We must've been typing simultaneously- did you feel the holy-spirit-love right through keyboard? You beat me to the submit button with my last comment, so I felt it necessary to respond again briefly. There are many valid points being made here...and many, many more left to be made. How about treating others as intellectual equals instead of denouncing everyone with your incredible hubris and expressing your condescending pity? Maybe we can be friends, on myspace...or christspace or something. Then we can hang out in the afterlife and stuff. Is your name a reference to a guitar? I'm into music as well. Maybe you can join my death-metal band called "Lucifer's Lingerie"- just kidding. Seriously, man- lighten up and listen to people without judgement. Remember-WWJD?

Report this comment On 1/14/2009 11:23:34 AM, shinealight said:

Ok Ron, you ducked two of the questions I hoped you would answer: Why not address the question why so many of the athiest/agnostic/secularist authors/spokespeople/notables are white males? I think the article and author mention Cornel West and Susan Jacoby as a sort of preemptive defelction of that criticism, but the question is there. And as cliche as it sounds why not also address the question as to why so many athiests are people who have had little or bad relationships with their fathers? That's not out of criticism of your beliefes, but out of a question to understand where the non-theists are coming from? I'd be interested to hear you attempt answering that.

Report this comment On 1/14/2009 12:46:36 PM, Ron.Aronson said:

To shinealight: "Why so many of the atheist/agnostic/secularits authors/spokespeople/notables are white males" seems to trouble you. To me it doesn't seem much different than asking why so many religious authors/spokespeople/notables are white males. Or corporate CEO's, or university professors, or politicians, or doctors or any other "leadership" category in traditionally patriarchal societies. But, still, check out my fellow secularists Lori Lipman Brown, Barbara Ehrenreich, Katha Pollitt, Jennifer Hecht, Alice Walker, Joyce Carol Oates, and Margaret Atwood. Second, what do you know about any of these people's relationship with their fathers?

Report this comment On 1/14/2009 5:19:42 PM, Barb said:

cat: you didn't read my first post. I was reared Southern Baptist. My cousin was the minister of my church. But just to clarify, I am a white, 65 years who had a wonderful father who was kind, compassionate, incredibly talented,and smart. He was also stubborn just like you. We (his children) had a plack made for one of his birthdays, it read "My mind is made up, don't confuse me with the facts". He died while I was still in the closet about my atheism, although, I think he knew that I no longer believed the Bible was the word of a god, but only a book written by ignorant, supersticious old men and sometimes women. No one actually knows who wrote it, but a little research will tell you that many of the books in the bible were written hundreds of years after the event they were reporting. Remember, no cameras, no printing press, no libraries to keep current information; just someone hundreds of years later writing words in hopes of dictating how all should live. Not unlike what most churches do today. Believe me, I had the opportunity to "get it right" during my years as a southern baptist, but I was just too logical to allow myself to be brainwashed with what they were selling. If you read the bible, and just attempt to live your life the way the god of the bible instructed his people to do, I assure you, your friends will visit you in jail. Why?? Because poligimy is against the law (Solomon, 500 wives), you will be arrested for stoning to death a homosexual, you may not kill a man so that you can have his wife (David and Bathsheba)you would be arrested for war crimes if you took all of the young girls from a battle and turned them into sex slaves, and I could go on and on. This is the god of the bible. I not only read the feel good parts, I read it all. I decided that I could never love a god like that. My own father was a much better person than your god. I will not call you names, however, I will tell you that just because you believe something, does not make it true. That also goes for me, but I have no evidence at all that what you believe about a god is true, and through many conversations with theist, none of them can give me proof. So I will believe that the life I currently live is the most important time for me, not so magical afterlife. And, I will live this life fully and completely, because you are right about this, you only get one chance to live your life.

Report this comment On 1/14/2009 5:19:48 PM, Barb said:

cat: you didn't read my first post. I was reared Southern Baptist. My cousin was the minister of my church. But just to clarify, I am a white, 65 years who had a wonderful father who was kind, compassionate, incredibly talented,and smart. He was also stubborn just like you. We (his children) had a plack made for one of his birthdays, it read "My mind is made up, don't confuse me with the facts". He died while I was still in the closet about my atheism, although, I think he knew that I no longer believed the Bible was the word of a god, but only a book written by ignorant, supersticious old men and sometimes women. No one actually knows who wrote it, but a little research will tell you that many of the books in the bible were written hundreds of years after the event they were reporting. Remember, no cameras, no printing press, no libraries to keep current information; just someone hundreds of years later writing words in hopes of dictating how all should live. Not unlike what most churches do today. Believe me, I had the opportunity to "get it right" during my years as a southern baptist, but I was just too logical to allow myself to be brainwashed with what they were selling. If you read the bible, and just attempt to live your life the way the god of the bible instructed his people to do, I assure you, your friends will visit you in jail. Why?? Because poligimy is against the law (Solomon, 500 wives), you will be arrested for stoning to death a homosexual, you may not kill a man so that you can have his wife (David and Bathsheba)you would be arrested for war crimes if you took all of the young girls from a battle and turned them into sex slaves, and I could go on and on. This is the god of the bible. I not only read the feel good parts, I read it all. I decided that I could never love a god like that. My own father was a much better person than your god. I will not call you names, however, I will tell you that just because you believe something, does not make it true. That also goes for me, but I have no evidence at all that what you believe about a god is true, and through many conversations with theist, none of them can give me proof. So I will believe that the life I currently live is the most important time for me, not so magical afterlife. And, I will live this life fully and completely, because you are right about this, you only get one chance to live your life.

Report this comment On 1/15/2009 11:35:07 AM, shinealight said:

Ron: I'm not a psychologist, but its telling when a person asnwers a question with a question. To me anyway, it says I'm hedging, can't come up w/an answer or have never considered the question. Its also intellectual laziness. I can't believe I'm asking a history professor if he believes in facts and truth. Do you? The fact that the near-unanimity of athiest/secularist/agnostic notables are white males is to me telling, not troubling. To respond as you did in saying religious notables would have the same proportion shows a shallowness and lack of familiarity with any range of religious people. I mean, goodness how many different religions/denominations have as leaders, clergy and spokespeople, those that are not white or male? Cetainly way more than the secularist crowd-look around you Ron-you work and live in Detroit of all places. Why not check the turnout at your upcoming event on the 21st. I'll bet dollars to donuts you lose. You state also that other fields would have similar proportion. I'll bet my paycheck to yours there are more women/minorities as CEOS, doctors, professors, politicians and "leaders" than there are in the athiest/agnostic/secularist world. How can you make such a statement otherwise? As for your list of diverse noatbles (all white upper class women except Alice Walker), none of those people are really known for their athiesm/agnosticism/secularism, nor are they spokepeople for them or the neoathiest movement. They may inject it into their writing, but they don't represent the movement. As for athiest reltionships w/fathers. I don't know the answer. It was an actual question. I have heard some things about how certain athiests in history were shown to have had bad/horrible relations w/their fathers and wondered if you know of any academic work or study in that area, being an academic interested in the subject and and all. I know one could say that everyone has a bad relationship/ their fathers, so I'll spare you the opportunity. Ball's in your court.

Report this comment On 1/15/2009 11:35:11 AM, shinealight said:

Ron: I'm not a psychologist, but its telling when a person asnwers a question with a question. To me anyway, it says I'm hedging, can't come up w/an answer or have never considered the question. Its also intellectual laziness. I can't believe I'm asking a history professor if he believes in facts and truth. Do you? The fact that the near-unanimity of athiest/secularist/agnostic notables are white males is to me telling, not troubling. To respond as you did in saying religious notables would have the same proportion shows a shallowness and lack of familiarity with any range of religious people. I mean, goodness how many different religions/denominations have as leaders, clergy and spokespeople, those that are not white or male? Cetainly way more than the secularist crowd-look around you Ron-you work and live in Detroit of all places. Why not check the turnout at your upcoming event on the 21st. I'll bet dollars to donuts you lose. You state also that other fields would have similar proportion. I'll bet my paycheck to yours there are more women/minorities as CEOS, doctors, professors, politicians and "leaders" than there are in the athiest/agnostic/secularist world. How can you make such a statement otherwise? As for your list of diverse noatbles (all white upper class women except Alice Walker), none of those people are really known for their athiesm/agnosticism/secularism, nor are they spokepeople for them or the neoathiest movement. They may inject it into their writing, but they don't represent the movement. As for athiest reltionships w/fathers. I don't know the answer. It was an actual question. I have heard some things about how certain athiests in history were shown to have had bad/horrible relations w/their fathers and wondered if you know of any academic work or study in that area, being an academic interested in the subject and and all. I know one could say that everyone has a bad relationship/ their fathers, so I'll spare you the opportunity. Ball's in your court.

Report this comment On 1/17/2009 10:15:37 AM, josh.shelly said:

Interesting discussion(s). I'll give a quick religious background and then some thoughts. I was raised in church, still attend, and consider myself a follower of Christ. I took a course from Professor Aronson last semester and thoroughly enjoyed it. While I profoundly disagree with some of his major conclusions, I think as people professing to know "truth," we should be intellectually honest enough to acknowledge some truth in what Professor Aronson says. Firstly, many of the founding fathers were indisputably under the category of "deists". They did not believe in a personal God, and were directly influenced by movements of their time and movements that predated them, such as the scientific revolution & the enlightenment. If you take a careful study of US historical documents and put them in context, there is significant evidence to call ours' the "godless constitution". I also personally believe that because of some of the incredible religious roots of our nation (read: Massachusetts Bay Colony) that our country had a history of tension between religion and secularism. Such a tension is healthy, especially for those who follow Christ. It reminds them that they live by faith, not by sight. (Hebrews 11) I know this doesn't sit well with those who claim that America is a "Christian nation". Why? Does the legitimacy of one's faith rest in the founding of a country 200 years ago? When I read scripture, Jesus confounded Pharisees and his disciples alike because he wasn't interested in usurping government or saving the Jewish nation from their physical captors (the Roman empire). Indeed, what did he say, 'Render to Caesar what is Caesar's'. He didn't seek to revolutionize people's lives by making Rome a "Christian nation" but rather was interested in the subversive kingdom--like a yeast that works its way through the dough) a kingdom not of this world. (When Jesus talks Pilate, what does he say? "My Kingdom is not of this world") Let's get off of this need to make America a Christian nation. It's not factually true. What's more, if you read scripture, it's not the call of Christ. In fact, I would contend that the very idea of a Christian nation runs counter to the call of Christ. Greg Boyd, a pastor from Minnesota writes about this in his book "Myth of a Christian Nation." He lost a large swath of his congregation in response to writing the book, but gained a spiritual integrity which is invaluable. Two more quick things that are bothering me. Shinealight: why the hostility towards questions? The man you claim to follow, Christ Jesus answered many questions with questions. Why did he do so? Because he knew that questions are often so much more important than the answers, and, what's more, often reveal the intentions behind the questions. He asked the Pharisees in response to their question, "John's baptism, where was it from?" Finally, I think that the thoughtful Christian is dangerously absent from our Western discourse. (I also think the thoughtful atheist is absent from such a discourse as well) To the religious in this forum: the thoughtful Christian doesn't spew propaganda, quote the latest Pat Robertson book, and disperse hurt. The role of the thoughtful Christian is to "be merciful to those with doubts" (Jude), to be intellectually honest, and finally, do all in love. (What greater evidence of our Savior than that?) The thoughtful Christian realizes what is foundational and what is not. Example. Foundational: the atonement of Christ. NOT foundational: If George Washington was a Christian or not. Foundational: God is love. NOT foundational: The earth is flat. (Remember that faux pa? The church misread the first part of Genesis and freaked out with Galelio? Last time I checked, the earth was round. I'm just saying.) Foundational: Our worth is derived from the fact that God says we are valuable. NOT foundational: Our worth is not derived from whether or not evolution is true; from whether or not my great great grandfather was an ape or not. (Another possible misreading of Genesis? I'm just saying, our track record ain't so great.) Just some thoughts.

Report this comment On 1/17/2009 1:00:35 PM, rodneykingofhearts said:

Thank you, Josh. I enjoyed your thoughts and understand where you're coming from.

Report this comment On 1/18/2009 10:21:59 PM, -Spiritually Inclined- said:

To Mr. Ron Aronson you call me incoherent! I am very coherent and you wouldnt know jesus if he came up and smacked you in your bald ass head! LAMetrious La Trees LAWrence is my name and history is my game and from symbolically and metaphorically putting The WORDs in order straight out of the dictionary and encyclopedia will not only explain your history but will define who you are today do the math with my name and you will come to the realization on who i am and what i stand for man who does not beleive in god you are talking to a Goddess and a Great Spirit a "Zeitigist" I am The Spirit of the age and its society The word zeitgist describes the intellectual, cultural, ethical and political climate, ambiance and moral of an era or also trend a genius! R. A. you are speaking not only to a genius but a Mother of Nature and Evolutionist, Philanthropist and spiritualist on the origin of my very being. Where did woman come from see the CADUCE or healthtex sign of the two snakes one good and one which was bad these snakes or LEVIATHAN define us in the stories of Homer and the Muses First woman born from the Leviathan brought to shore on foam The first Hermaphrodite or Aphroditie or woman from the bottom of the oceans floors where we created! not a damn monkey dude. The oldest bones ever found where of a black woman!The Aphrodite and first woman EVE in Genenis and first agricultural queen ISIS is who we should be looking at you know the TRUTH! so dont act like you are just exsisting to be exsisting The LAMB of the LAWS of Jesus Christ is what you should be worried about! Because I am a part of this great movement. Genesis In the beginning The SPIRIT was upon the face of the deep duh the oceans floor! The spirit is the most important truth factor in all of this so when you tell me to mapp it out! I will tell you this that i am so far beyond the bullshit i can see the forest from the trees! And the most superior Super Powere is MOTHER of ALL things see Genesis 3;20 And Adam called out his wifes name EVE because she was the MOTHER of all LIVING LIFE! and dont you pion forget this! Jesus said honor thy mother! because with out her you would not exsist! incoherent sorry im very coherent and so well versed in evils history that i can telll you all the assholes who had a hand in killing there own mothers example King james and his fucked up version of the bible who had his own mother beheaded. And people are running around putting so much faith in this assholish jerk and idiot! come on people wake the fucke up! before its to late! R. A. dont give up the ghost! the Holy Ghost and Spirt of J.C.

Report this comment On 1/19/2009 11:12:39 AM, Bumpadrum said:

Spiritually inclined seems chemically motivated. Say no to meth.

Report this comment On 1/19/2009 11:12:43 AM, Bumpadrum said:

Spiritually inclined seems chemically motivated. Say no to meth.

Report this comment On 1/20/2009 11:00:16 AM, stratocat said:

Well Rodney, WWJD? Let me quote Christ. "If you do not believe I am who I say I am, you will surely die in your sins". Which means eternal death. Death in hell. What did Christ mean when he said if you don't believe I am who I say I am? He mean't that he was God, who took a body of flesh, just to die on the cross and pay for our sins. "There is no remission of sin without the shedding of blood". We are ALL sinners. NO sinner gets into heaven. Only ONE way to be washed clean of sin. The blood of Christ. Only then are you acceptable for eternal life with Christ. And it's a free gift. You only have to accept it. Don't blame God if you end up in hell. If you end up there, you chose it by rejecting the ONLY way to be saved. Christ is such an obvious truth that if you don't see it, it's because you don't want to.

Report this comment On 1/20/2009 2:30:00 PM, Constance_Cumbey said:

To adopt the interviewee's world view, I would have to have unlimited faith in "coincidence" -- which I clearly don't. Personally, I have had far too much happen to me to ever be a non-believer in God Almighty. Interestingly, Mr. Aronson cites Coleman Young. He should go back and review old newspaper articles on Coleman Young, shortly before his 1997 death. Coleman Young went into a coma from which he was not expected to emerge. He did and enjoyed at least another two weeks of coherent and aware life. It was reported in the press that the "formerly cussing Coleman Young" (by the way, a long time personal friend of myself since the late 1960s) WAS NEWLY PRAYERFUL. Coleman Young's fine son, now Coleman Young, Jr., a state representative, was interviewed on television at the time giving thanks that his father had found faith in God. My prayer for Mr. Aronson is that when this time comes in his own life that he will make the same discovery as Mr. Young and not instead die in the existentialist despair to which he now evidently condemns himself

Report this comment On 1/21/2009 7:47:27 AM, shinealight said:

Josh: I don't see the "hostility" in my questions, unless they have somehow provoked you or others to think about them. If, as you say "questions are often so much more important than the answers", then why not consider the question?. The more I think about that line, the more I can see why Athiests/Humanists/Secularists/Agnostics have so few answers to life questions-they are too obsessed with the questions. I thought the goals in life, no matter what one's belief system is is to find answers, truth, solutions. I do appreciate your foundational/non foundational examples. I just want Ron to answer my questions. Maybe you can take a stab. I feel like he's ducking the question, even when he has replied. Why must academics always do that? Just answer the question. I haven't quoted any verse or condemned anyone in my posts, just asked questions, and he can't even try to answer except to give vauge generalities at best. How about the "thoughtful" academic/secularist? I thought you guys were supposed to be smart.

Report this comment On 1/21/2009 8:40:00 PM, rodneykingofhearts said:

Okay, stratocat: you win. I can see that you're blessed with powers beyond my comprehension. That Jesus quote is great...and you even understood exactly what he meant. That interview must have been a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I would have thought that Barbara Walters or somebody would have gotten to Christ first. Your interpretation of the Simon and Schuster Published King James New Era Children's Daily Devotional Unlimited Edition Large Print Bible (on CD narrated by James Earl Jones) is second to none, and that's saying a lot with the infinite interpretations out there. I'll leave you alone to go burn gay witches at abortion clinics while handling snakes and drinking communion goblets of strychnine or whatever you do in your time on this earth (okay-that's a little harsh, you're probably just in church a lot- although, your extreme nature deserves a little hyperbole) because I know there will be no doubt in your mind that you're absolutely right. It must be comforting to be so narrow, then you really don't have to worry about all of those pesky facts and unknowns hanging around outside your path. I'm going to take your advice and accept Jesus, with your permission of course...but I already know when I'm going to die because it was in the Bible Code Special when I watched Discovery Channel. It said that I have another 20 years (my name was intersecting with a specific date, time, and words like "electric car" and "very large puddle"), so I'll sin-sin-sin-away right up until the moment. Then I'll praise Christ a good fifteen minutes before it goes down, denounce my old ways and see you at the pearly gates...and don't get mad if I start laughing. It's been entertaining, but I promise I won't reply anymore.

Report this comment On 1/22/2009 7:44:58 PM, josh.shelly said:

Shinealight: Your questions were not hostile, just your response to Prof. Aronson's question--"Ron: I'm not a psychologist, but its telling when a person asnwers a question with a question. To me anyway, it says I'm hedging, can't come up w/an answer or have never considered the question. Its also intellectual laziness" Asking questions is not necessarily intellectual laziness. Perhaps what is more indicative of laziness is when people find something they want to call "truth" and stick to that point so that they don't have to think. Questions are so often indicative of real thought. My thoughts on your questions--I don't really care about whether or not atheists are majority white male or majority pink with polka dots. As one of faith, you must know that scripture speaks of atheists way before our current cultures and groups of people. It's nothing new. Besides, Aronson did give you plenty of non-white non-male atheists, but that's not really the point is it? He could list non-Western non-male atheists till he is blue in the face, and you still believe you're right. Don't ask questions you already have made up your mind to and then tell people they didn't answer them because you just don't like their answer. I guess I would challenge you with this--why are you participating in this comment/discussion board? Is it because you want to show people your faith? Or is it because you want to speak poorly of people who don't believe the same things you do? I just sense a lot of pride in comments like, "I thought you guys were supposed to be smart". It's an arrogance that says, "What I believe is superior to what you believe, therefore, I am better than you are" (Which is a misnomer, by the way) The gospel of Jesus inspires humility, not pride. The true response of a Christian is "What I believe is truth and that truth shows me just how low I am in God's eyes, and I have no reason for pride." Here is the irony-I read the article. And 99% of this discussion has nothing to do with the article. Or anything else that Professor Aronson was talking about. I wonder how many people actually read the article and how many just saw the word atheist and got all riled up. Respond to what you read, not to what your prejudices already confirm about a word that is a lightening rod.

Report this comment On 1/22/2009 10:26:39 PM, shinealight said:

Josh: I'll agree that 99% of this discussion had nothing to do w/ the article. Why did I ask the questions I asked? Because I always want to ask secularists/athiests these questions because its truly something I would like them to address/answer. I have never gotten a straight answer in all the times I have asked it, which to me is telling. Contrary to what you asked I have not brought my personal faith into this discussion, and I certainly don't think of myself as better than others, but I do sense a certain smugness, bravado and brazeness in the neo-athiest/secularist crowd which borders on arrogance. I guess they're allowed because they don't believe in a god?

Report this comment On 1/23/2009 8:25:48 AM, Heywood said:

I find it funny how all these religious and moral people , throw their morality and Religious "education" out the window to attack the author for merely questioning their ideas. They have no interest in a debate, they have lost many times over. They offer no valid input to questions brought before them, and the only thing they will accept is blind obedience of their ideology or praise to people who support their beliefs , now matter how ridiculous or incoherent the post may be. Instead of viewing this as the chance to legitimize their beliefs with real input , and not regurgitated scripture taken in the most literal sense. I know from experience that many people claim to believe in God as a "just in case it's real" , and do not truly believe ,and are more agnostic than religious, I think this is a perfect example of how Christianity uses guilt and fear as a brainwashing technique. It appears to me that the Christian movement is not so concerned about people really believing and understanding through facts and philosophy, as long as they can be counted as a Christian, when really they are agnostic "just in case" believers.

Report this comment On 1/23/2009 8:46:45 AM, Heywood said:

Why is the Christian community so outraged by people with beliefs outside their own narrow view? Atheists do not go door to door and wake people up on Saturday morning wishing to convert anyone. We do not leave pamphlets in public restroms threatning an etertnity of suffering for believeing.In fact we do not wish to convert or change you in any way at all , but only strive for their place and constitutional rights given them. We do not put Atheist symbols in public places or force our ideas down anyone throat , it's simply out there for people to read if they so choose. In fact most Athiest fighting for their struggle for freedom from Religion, also protect your freedom to it. Yet stil the game of attack and defense continues , the attackers claim to believe in Jesus, but throw his words of "turn the other cheek" away.

Report this comment On 1/23/2009 10:55:56 AM, shinji307 said:

I just saw that Aronson is going to be at the Royal Oak Barnes and Noble on Februrary 19th. Maybe this could be a good forum to answer some of your questions.

Report this comment On 1/23/2009 1:17:33 PM, Heywood said:

Ok so let me get this straight, You relgious ones are saying that there is a God who is all merciful and loving ,and you believe in him , and try to live according to gospel. If that is true and 93 % of the population in Christian ? Why is there so much crime and horredous acts being commited. If I truly in my heart cannot believe in God or Christ,What good does it do to fake it? If god does exist would he really condemn someone to hell for all etrinity for simply not believing in his existance when there is no tangible proof, Would the God you describe actually be as much as a hypocrite as his followers? That sounds like an arrogant and self centered God to me, and is nothing like the God you describe else where. If he's Omnipotent would he not have known I'd be an Atheist before he created me, and if so then why? So he would have someone to burn in hell? That sounds awful cruel, the kind of cruelty only man would engage in, further proving God is a man made scare tactic to keep you in line and away from thinking for yourself. Stratocat ? Can I ask where your fact come from because I can not find anything to suggest that the founders of our country intended this to be a christian nation , except on Religious web pages, all public ones do not support your claims. I also found no evidence to support your claims on Thermodynamics. Got a link?

Report this comment On 1/24/2009 1:22:00 AM, CliffWalkinFool said:

The interviewer mentioned seeing 12 books from the past 10 years. This is a drop in the bucket. As a small-time publisher I have received, just as review copies, just on the topic of atheism or books of interest to atheists, more books than any of the general religion sections of any of the Borders stores in the State of Oregon. My point is that we are here and have been for a long time. The difference, I predict, since Dubya and now Obama have begun to openly acknowledge atheism as a dignified position, is that we are beginning to feel free to openly identify ourselves as atheists the same way that a Roman Catholic might openly identify himself or herself as religious. This interview is further proof that atheists' centuries-long "tough part" is rapidly coming to an end.

COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE

Leave a comment on this article.

User:
Password:

By posting a message, you agree to our Posting Policies No account? New users sign up here.
Forgot your password?

  • Events
  • Eats
  • Drinks

Keyword search

Detailed search

Preferences

Critic's picks

Non-recurring

All ages

Keyword search

Browse restaurants

Search by:

Cuisines (1769)

City (1768)

Neighborhood (82)

Reviewed (476)

Critic's pick (165)

Open 24 hours (25)

Late dinner (390)

Brunch (152)

Takeout (649)

Delivery (140)

Outdoor dining (227)

Kid friendly (411)

Serving

Food (1175)

Microbrew (231)

No alcohol (91)

Featuring

Dance floor (844)

Darts (628)

Billiards (700)

Games (764)

TV (1081)

Outdoor seating (404)

Wheelchair access (852)

Keyword search

Detailed Search

> PLACE CLASSIFIED AD

Untitled Document
MECHANIC: Full time, Part time
APPLY TODAY: Start Tomorrow
COLLEGE GRADS!: Full time, Part time
TRUCK DRIVER: Full time, Part time
MEDICAL TECH: Full time, Part time
View all TOP JOBS ads
ROOMS FOR RENT: Homes & Apartments Available
View all TOP HOMES/RENTALS ads
RASOR LAW FIRM PLLC.: Sharp. Agressive. Responsive.
BANKRUPTCY: Criminal Defense, Family Law, Firearms
View all TOP ATTORNEY ads