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- From: mangoe@cs.umd.edu (Charley Wingate)
- Newsgroups: talk.philosophy.misc
- Subject: The Good Book -- Rand's or God's
- Message-ID: <62052@mimsy.umd.edu>
- Date: 15 Nov 92 23:13:39 GMT
- References: <3BT8TB1w165w@momad.UUCP>
- Sender: news@mimsy.umd.edu
- Lines: 200
-
- Mr. Katz:
-
- >My debate with Charley began when he made dismissive comments about
- >Ayn Rand, a philosopher whom I admire. He made these responses based,
- >apparently, on reading one work of fiction by her and little of her
- >non-fiction philosophical texts. His dismissal seemed to be based
- >primarily on the fact that the text was dated.
-
- I am uninterested in debating whether or not these statements are true,
- although I think this line of discussion speaks to the presence of a larger
- critique than is admitted here. However, I do intend to justify some of
- these criticisms.
-
- Except for a few brief asides to _Intro._, this argument has revolved around
- _Atlas Shrugged_, which happens to be a novel. A modern theologian might
- refer to it as a myth, which is to say, a story whose purpose is to convey
- something fundamental about human existence. (Mr. Katz should take note
- that the word "myth" here is not pejorative.) And the book is very commonly
- referred to by objectivists in some of the same ways that, say, christians
- refer to the parables of Jesus. As far as I know, Ayn Rand never disowned
- any of her fiction and always regarded it as part of her output as a
- philosopher.
-
- _Atlas_ is also one of the ways that people are introduced to objectivist
- thought; as such, it is subject to literary criticism as an argument. It is
- subject particularly to the criticism that it is unrealistic, since an
- unrealistic book of this sort translates into a philosophy based on wishful
- thinking. The criticism I have made against the book is that its principal
- characters are unrealistic. As far as being dated applies, this is a
- criticism of a different order. _Atlas_ is also a very peculiar sort of
- science fiction novel, seemingly written for the future of a 1940's America,
- the future of the American Industrial Might. Galt's Gulch in particular has
- almost a comic book feel to it. In an era where computers are becoming
- ubiquitous, its vision of an attack upon inventions as property has no real
- correspondence to what has happened instead.
-
- As far as my participation in this is concerned, several people from the
- sideline indicated gestures of support for my criticisms. One thing that is
- rather remarkable about this line of discussion is the repeated appeal to
- debates won in the past as testimony to the soundness of objectivist thought.
- This is precisely parallel to the figure of St. Catherine, martyred for
- defeating a number of pagans in theological argument. It is also exactly
- parallel to the inevitable reappearance of _Evidence That Demands A Verdict_
- as a source of authoritative arguments for christian faith.
-
- I am by no means as certain of my positions as Mr. Katz and Mr. Wales seem
- to be of theirs. I don't consider this to be a weakness; the evidence of
- arguments on the net is that those most dead certain of their positions
- present the weakest arguments.
-
- Somewhere in the course of this, things turned to Rand's critique of
- religion (and to some degree, an argument over whether she ever made one).
- This is more important than perhaps may be realized; the point at which I
- see Rand as being most vulnerable, her understanding of human nature, is
- precisely the point at which christianity's understanding of human nature is
- strongest.
-
- Inevitably, arguments about religion in this group turn into arguments about
- evidence. They are, in essence, epistemological disputes. I don't want to
- continue this too far in this line, but Mr. Katz's arguments about unicorns
- merit a specific response. Several times I have pointed to the existence of
- religions as evidence about the supernatural, saying that it requires
- refutation. Mr. Katz's reply this time:
-
- >And I suppose the existence of the concept of unicorns is sufficient to
- >allow someone to believe in their existence (if there is no contrary
- >evidence). What would evidence of the non-existence of unicorns consist of?
-
- Evidence of the non-existence of unicorns lies in the fact that people, for
- the most part, understand them as fabulous beasts; furthermore, it is
- apparent that in earlier times the knowledge of the world and the
- then-current understanding of "science" made it reasonable to accept that
- unicorns *might* exist even if one knew nobody who had seen one, in the same
- manner that belief in the existence of passenger pigeons as an extinct
- species is reasonable now to those of us who have never seen one. Talk
- about evidence has to actually be about the evidence, the real evidence, not
- evidence in the hypothetical.
-
- Mr. Katz then pomposizes:
-
- >Observant readers will immediately spot this as an example of 'social
- >metaphysics', that is the belief that the nature of the universe is whatever
- >the most people think it is.
-
- ... and of course, this is so unobjective. My criticism is in fact in quite
- a different direction: in this case, it is a criticism of the view that the
- nature of the universe is what the most perceptive people say it is.
- Objectivism as a position is hopeless in a world where people's "concepts"
- are often found at variance with experience-- and our world is such a world.
-
- The argument then brushed by the Mormons at the door as evidence for
- religion:
-
- >A bunch of people coming to my door and arguing does not constitute evidence
- >of the supernatural! The organization members claim that _they_ have had
- >supernatural experiences. Why should I believe them, they have a strong
- >incentive to mislead me, they are probably not competent to judge what
- >is supernatural, etc....
-
- But from their point of view, you suffer the same problems! As a
- non-believer (i.e., non-Mormon), you are committed to an erroneous viewpoint
- and are therefore liable to self-delusion; furthermore, as a non-Mormon your
- competency to judge it is questionable. This is baldly a prejudice toward
- yourself as a right-thinking person as opposed to all those muddle-headed
- christians/Mormons.
-
- Also, this standard rather obviously fails to distinguish between a
- christianity with a real ressurection in it, and one which does not. A real
- christianity or a "fake" one would both be driven to proselytizing.
-
- Christianity as an organized religion is objectively real. It is up to you
- to confront it and refute it. To simply assume that it is wrong because it
- arises, most fundamentally, from the authority of the witnesses to the
- ressurection is to make a most fantastic epistemological claim about
- knowledge from authority.
-
- Conveniently, the discussion turns in this direction, and Mr. Katz
- characteristically either completely misunderstands or completely
- misrepresents my position. I wrote:
-
- >>In the second place, your personal experience isn't necessarily as good as
- >>anyone else's. Indeed, with respect to conversion, someone else's
- >>experience typically starts out having priority, in much the same way that
- >>any other information passed on authority-- like the morning paper--
- >>initially has priority.
-
- >Another appeal to authority, even balder. Wingate's message, don't reason
- >for yourself let others do it for you.
-
- I am not arguing here that christianity's REAL authority is necessarily any
- better than yours. My point here is that your implicit appeal to your own
- reasoning is an appeal to the authority of your own experience. In a test
- between that and christianity's authority, christianity's authority starts
- out with an advantage. Your argument basically amounts to the assertion
- that you are under no obligation to check to see whether the house is on
- fire simply because someone tells you it is. This just plain wrong. If you
- want to escape death or injury, you at least have to go and check for
- yourself, if not just take the person at their word and get out.
-
- At this point, we have the morning paper as a metaphor for Rand...
-
- >If the morning paper ever made the preposterous metaphysical, epistemological,
- >ethical, or political claims that religion makes, it would cease to be an
- >authority (in my book) instantly.
-
- Rand makes (or in this case, you are making on her behalf) such absurd
- claims. Therefore, she is not worthy as an authority and I wonder why you
- bother with her. Christianity, by contrast, has a much better grasp of
- human nature, which I contend should make a reasonable person prefer it over
- objectivism as an authority.
-
- I'm simply going to let the issue of definition slide right by, even though
- this is Rand's other great weak point. I've treated this in a separate
- article, and it would make an overly long article too long by half.
-
- However, there's always time for the ad hominem section-- which,
- interestingly, seems to be the only argumentative fallacy which objectivists
- don't acknowledge:
-
- >You remind me of the most primitive of door-to-door religion salesmen. They
- >are ecstatic when they find some passage in the bible that might possibly
- >refer to something that is said to them. They parrot it and think they have
- >found a brilliant response, after all, it was in the bible. We don't want to
- >hear your appeals to authority anymore. We want *you* to defend *your* ideas.
-
- Sorry. I don't have to defend *my* participation in christianity *from*
- you, particularly as you are obviously predisposed to rationalize it away
- rather than confront it honestly. I am willing to expose my depths to those
- who will take it seriously and who are willing to judge themselves as well
- as me. Your article shows that you are interested only in attacking the
- integrity of my experiences.
-
- >If you hack this up, leaving only the ad hominem, and a few weak sentence
- >fragments, and include a brief and dismissive reply, you will be revealed to
- >all for what you are, a transparent psuedo-intellectual who dodges the tough
- >stuff and parades himself as an authority figure.
-
- The only authority to which I have appealed is simple experience, and at that,
- not even my own.
-
- And consider what you are saying. If I am a "pseudo-intellectual", I would
- hold myself to be a *sincere* p-i, at least to the extent of being "deluded"
- by my own arguments. That alone should speak to the insufficiency of human
- reasoning as a *final* test. Anyone who reads the net for more that two
- weeks, particularly those foolish enough to venture into, say,
- talk.religion.misc, will find people arguing with utter conviction on both
- sides of almost any given argument. One side has to be defective, at
- least-- usually both sides are repeating arguments they've gotten from
- elsewhere, and arguments which a lot of other people think are garbage. You
- are potentially in the same position, repeating as you do objectivist
- arguments.
-
- As far as trimming articles is concerned, this I do without apology.
- Discourse on the net simply cannot survive if it must carry the burden of
- every word ever written there.
- --
- C. Wingate + "The peace of God, it is no peace,
- + but strife closed in the sod.
- mangoe@cs.umd.edu + Yet, brothers, pray for but one thing:
- tove!mangoe + the marv'lous peace of God."
-