The God Delusion
****/***** God/Religion
The God Delusion
Richard Dawkins
Religion was never a major
influence in my growing years. To a great extent this was due to the liberal
religious views of my parents but also because religion I was born in was not
rigid or dogmatic. But this liberalism of my parents did not countenance
Atheism. Belief in God was an immutable fact. Though religion was not
conspicuous in daily life, God was never too far away. It had to be propitiated
on all occasions big or small: by small observances on birthdays, before
stepping out of home on the day of school examinations, and through major
ceremonies during house warming, marriage and death. I accepted religious views
of my parents unquestioningly: belief in rebirth, concept of reward or
punishment for our present deeds in subsequent lives, and other such doctrines.
These direct offspring of religion were like axioms of mathematics, misgivings about
whose veracity never troubled one’s mind. It was only when I was confronted
with seemingly insurmountable personal crisis and read about the immense
miseries that have afflicted world regularly and continue to do so, that doubts
about the omnipotence and omniscience of God first arose. When I read the
physics of cosmos, I was wonderstruck by the boundless vistas of understanding
which science had unraveled. Wonders of nature were truly awe inspiring but
were not inexplicable. One did not have to believe in a creator to explain the
immense intricacy and beauty of life or the unfathomable vastness of the cosmos
and the dazzling brilliance of the laws of physics which governed it. On the
contrary, I felt it will belittle the wonder that this universe is, if we were
to resort to explaining all these phenomena by invoking the hand of an
omnipotent being. This discovery was like a gush of fresh air which flushed my
mind of the debris that had accumulated over the years.
In subsequent
years I formulated my own views on Atheism from what I gleaned from various
books or could think over. But these were half-baked ideas utterly lacking any
bulwark and the fabric of my belief in Atheism looked severely moth-eaten even
at its best. I discovered that Richard Dawkins’ ‘The God Delusion’ is just the
right book to bolster my staggering belief. This is a monumental piece of work
and should be read by believers, non-believers and agnostics alike. To the
first the book will provide a sounding board to test their beliefs, to the
second it will offer a solid foundation for their philosophy and will defog the
mind of the third.
Richard Dawkins
builds his philosophy of Atheism, coherently and cogently. He begins with
asserting that he is ‘a deeply religious non-believer’. He states why he is a
religious atheist. He then discusses the various meanings of God as propounded by thinkers and theologians. He discusses the godly attributes of God as told
in the Bible. Clearly, devastatingly, and perhaps with a tinge of humorous
irony, he lays bare the inhuman God of Bible. He writes about Christian God, as
he knows this the best. Same can be said about God of every religion. In a
chapter he deliberates upon diverse arguments which have been offered for God’s
existence. In the next chapter he explains his opinion, ‘why there almost
certainly is no God’. In a section he speculates how this ubiquitous cultural
phenomenon could have originated in our species and does our biology makes it
an ineluctable component of our mind. At length, he talks about morality and do
we need to believe in a God to be moral? He reserves his most scathing arguments
when he elucidates ‘what’s wrong with religion’? And why he is so hostile to it.
He devotes a full chapter to the abuse of children, physically and
psychologically, by religion. If not any other argument, this barbaric and
inhuman treatment of young, credulous, minds and bodies, should be sufficient
to convince us of the gross lies propounded by religious doctrines. In a
chapter he discusses, tongue-in-cheek, whether religion fills up ‘a much-needed
gap’ in our lives. Religion was once credited to have provided humanity answers
to its two profound quests: Our existence and the nature of the physical world
we find ourselves in. Science has surely and comprehensively answered many of
these queries. Religious discourse on these profound questions is ridiculously
infantile at its best and flagrantly insincere at its worst.
In the book
Dawkins unflinchingly confronts the most sacrosanct tenets of Theism. He
elucidates and professes clearly and unambiguously only one fact i.e., ‘there
is no evidence of God in our universe’. He is absolutely unwilling to
compromise in his belief and gives reasons for this intransigence. Book is very
well researched and littered with references on every page. Bibliography is
exhaustive and will provide much reference for an inquisitive mind. His
language, as always, is succinct, lucid, and a delight. This is a marvelous
book: informing, stimulating, entertaining, consoling and liberating.
Comments
Post a Comment