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Sep 05 2009

“Eden is an Illusion” - Video by G. Stolyarov II - The Rational Argumentator

The Rational Argumentator

A Journal for Western Man

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Eden is an Illusion - Video

G. Stolyarov II

Issue CCVI - September 5, 2009

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Beyond being destructive, the Eden myth is simply false. There never was a “better” state from which human beings have “descended.” Mr. Stolyarov explores in this video why the Fall is an illusion that ought to be abandoned.

The essay on which the video is based can be found here .
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G. Stolyarov II is an actuary, science fiction novelist, independent philosophical essayist, poet, amateur mathematician, composer, contributor to Enter Stage Right, Le Quebecois Libre, Rebirth of Reason, and the Ludwig von Mises Institute, Senior Writer for The Liberal Institute, former weekly columnist for GrasstopsUSA.com, and Editor-in-Chief of The Rational Argumentator, a magazine championing the principles of reason, rights, and progress. Mr. Stolyarov’s new blog, The Progress of Liberty, offers a combination of commentary, multimedia presentations, educational materials, and suggestions for effective activism in favor of individual freedom. Mr. Stolyarov also publishes his articles on Helium.com and Associated Content to assist the spread of rational ideas. He holds the highest Clout Level (10) possible on Associated Content. Mr. Stolyarov has also written a science fiction novel, Eden against the Colossus, a non-fiction treatise, A Rational Cosmology, and a play, Implied Consent. You can watch his YouTube Videos. Mr. Stolyarov can be contacted at gennadystolyarovii@yahoo.com.

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May 02 2009

“Against a Theology Requirement at Hillsdale College: Responses and Elaborations” by G. Stolyarov II - The Rational Argumentator

The Rational Argumentator

A Journal for Western Man

Principal Index *** Contributors *** Yahoo! Group

Against a Theology Requirement at Hillsdale College:

Responses and Elaborations

G. Stolyarov II

Issue CXCIV - May 2, 2009

Recommend this page.

On April 16, 2009, the Hillsdale Collegian published an editorial of mine opposing the plan to institute a compulsory theology course requirement in the Hillsdale core curriculum. Since then, several individuals – most notably, Dr. John Reist, David Stehlik, and Derek Muller – published responses in opposition to my arguments. Here, I intend to address these responses in as much detail as I can in order to prevent a policy decision which, I believe, will significantly impair the educational quality and cultural atmosphere at Hillsdale – to the point that the college would no longer be worthy of my support or the support of advocates of genuine individual liberty. 

Responses to Dr. John Reist

Dr. John Reist of Hillsdale’s religious department is one of the primary advocates of adding a theology requirement to the Hillsdale core curriculum. I have known Dr. Reist for the past four years, and I have had discussions with him on numerous occasions. He is indeed not a person who would wish to stifle questions and discussion, and I commend him for being open to examining the issues on any matter where they may be disagreement between us. I also hope that he will be able to teach many more courses in theology at Hillsdale – just not any compulsory courses on this subject. I see Dr. Reist and myself as two individuals who sincerely believe in their respective stances on this issue and who are each trying to implement their own view of what the proper direction for Hillsdale College is. I, however, think that the direction Dr. Reist proposes will lead to totalitarian control over the human mind – an outcome Dr. Reist does not desire but which will nonetheless follow inexorably from this theology requirement. Dr. Reist’s editorial in the Collegian in response to mine contains the first set of objections that I would like to address.

Dr. Reist writes, “We require a core curriculum - is that too much for Mr. Stolyarov? Is it not unfair to require a foreign language, or HST 104-05, or ENG 101-02 or two courses in physical education?”

I have other issues with a core curriculum – namely, the limitations it imposes on a student’s ability to specialize in multiple disciplines at Hillsdale if he or she sees fit to do so while still only remaining at Hillsdale for four years. Already, we are witnessing the unfortunate phenomenon of some students needing to stay for five or six years in order to complete their major requirements in addition to the core. I was able to complete three majors during my four years at Hillsdale, but this was possible only due to my 66 Advanced Placement credits coming in. Many students find themselves needing to rush to complete even one major. I also think that introducing students into classrooms who do not specifically wish to be there devalues the quality of the discussion and leads the professors to teach to a lower common denominator than would otherwise be the case.

But this is not the central issue of contention at present. While, in theory, I would propose replacing the Hillsdale core curriculum with a voluntary incentive system for taking the same courses, this is not the dilemma before us. The issue is whether we retain an imperfect but tolerable status quo or descend into overt religious indoctrination. I find the current core curriculum to be much more mildly objectionable than it would be with a theology requirement in place. This is because the subjects of English, history, physical education, and foreign languages are not inherently ideological and, at Hillsdale, are taught from a wide variety of perspectives depending on the professors who are teaching the core courses. Others of these subjects do not, in their structure, permit controversy. There are only certain possible ways of solving a math problem, running a mile, or conjugating verbs in various languages. Some professors are more overtly ideologically biased in how they approach the “softer” subjects (and bias, of course, is always a matter of degree), but students at Hillsdale have a choice of which professor biases they will be subject to, and to what extent. This is because there is no single “conservative” or “Christian” take on history or literature; different conservative Christians can have radically divergent views on these subjects. Thus, no intellectual homogeneity is imposed onto the Hillsdale campus through these core requirements.

The issue of the U. S. Constitution course requirement in the core curriculum is, I admit, a bit of a special case. Dr. Reist writes that “[w]e require a course in the U.S. Constitution, and I support that. However, suppose a Marxist or Tory or Whig or Socialist or Monarchist were required to take the course - would that be unfair?” I think it certainly is true that there is a pro-Constitution and pro-constitutionalist bias in Hillsdale’s political science department. Some opponents of my argument might accuse me of being more accepting of such a bias simply because I myself am a constitutionalist – while I rebel against the prospect of a theology requirement because I am not a Christian. While it is true that I am more viscerally comfortable with a Constitution requirement, I recognize that this personal inclination is not a valid ground for argument – so I would like to present a case for why I believe a Constitution requirement is different from a theology requirement qualitatively and in a manner that holds for all persons.

The Constitution is the supreme law of the land in the United States, according to Article VI. As such, everyone living in this country is bound to respect it as they are bound to respect any law that is consistent with it. I note that whether a person is bound to respect a law does not depend on that person’s ideology, worldview, understanding, values, and motives.  Any American citizen (at the very least!) is subject to the protections of the Constitution and to the operation of a government that was founded explicitly and incontrovertibly on its basis and is, at least in theory, supposed to retain it as its basis. A good case can be made that, if one of the purposes of education  is to confer upon students skills essential to their competent functioning in our society, then it is proper for students to be educated in the founding principles behind the laws they will be required to respect. Even Tories, Whigs, Monarchists, and Socialists are protected against a plethora of government actions by the Constitution, while they are obligated to support a government structure described therein. Their beliefs do not exempt them from the indisputably real laws of the land.

But no comparable situation exists with regard to theology. No individual, under the laws of the United States, is obligated to adhere to or even understand the theological views of any party. Moreover, in this world at the very least, people can get along just fine without knowing any theology – in a manner that would not be the case if they were illiterate, innumerate, physically unhealthy, or ignorant of the law and of basic historical facts.  I do not need to know your religious beliefs in order to respect you and uphold your freedom to believe and practice as you wish. All I need is the understanding that, whatever in the world you believe, you will not use force to impose it on others or to punish others who do not believe as you do. Moreover, while some might think that I will suffer eternal post-death damnation for not having religious beliefs, I see not a trace of this predicament in the present world – and it really is too much to base educational policies on any other world that no person has ever seen or returned from.

Dr. Reist writes, “Mr. Stolyarov misunderstands me (probably because I said it shortly, as a sound byte) if he thinks I believe that the Constitution is a ‘Christian’ document.” Fair enough: Dr. Reist does not believe this. What, then, does he actually believe about the relationship of Christianity to the Constitution? He writes that “many of those who produced [the Constitution] were Christians (we know that from examination of their letters, essays, orations, wills and diaries) and it was their Christian faith that motivated them to produce the Constitution.” This is true – although, emphatically, it is not true for all of the Founders, a sizable number of whom actually saw the Constitution as a refuge against some of the abuses of Christianity that have been perpetrated in both the Old and New Worlds. But it is also incontrovertibly true that many Founders were influenced by Enlightenment philosophy in designing the Constitution as they did. I am certain that Dr. Reist would not therefore advocate compelling all Hillsdale students to take a course in Enlightenment philosophy! (Doubtless, such a course would be highly beneficial, but I would also not advocate that requirement.)

Dr. Reist, after making the aforementioned historical point, proceeds with a non sequitur: “This, of course, challenges Mr. Stolyarov’s argument (or at least, his principle without argument) that requiring a course in biblical studies or theology would impose it on students, for these Christian men produced a document that is about fundamental freedoms.” How a requirement is not an imposition in any case, I know not. Even requiring history or math is an imposition; the question is not whether an imposition exists, but what kinds of impositions may be tolerable, and what kinds are absolutely inappropriate? I believe that imposing religious beliefs is absolutely inappropriate, whether or not those beliefs are compatible with fundamental freedoms. If the fundamental freedoms can be justified without reference to Christianity (as they can be – because such justifications have been offered by tens of thinkers throughout history at least), then Christianity is not necessary for those freedoms to exist. It might be interesting to examine some people’s motivations for pursuing these freedoms – and mentions of Christian influences on some of the Founders are already excessively prominent in some of Hillsdale’s Constitution courses – but freedoms qua freedoms can be justified from a variety of perspectives. It might be essential to know what they are (and here a curricular requirement may be justified, at least proceeding from that consideration alone), but a uniform perspective on why they are should never be imposed.

Dr. Reist says that “Hillsdale College is an oasis of freedom, but not without focus. Freedom without focus is not freedom, but anarchy or chaos.” I do not think that Hillsdale has any danger of lapsing into “anarchy” or “chaos” or “freedom without focus.” The consistency of the college architecture, its statuary, its newsletters and special events, and its Great Books reading list cannot be mistaken for anything but tremendous focus. Whether this is good or bad, I will not venture to say. But to suggest that Hillsdale will be in any kind of unfocused stupor if a theology requirement is not imposed is easily empirically falsified by its status quo. I also venture to suggest that too much focus on an institutional level will necessarily destroy all freedom. When an institution has so much focus that everyone in it is required to think the same thoughts, study the same ideas, attend the same events, and embrace the same social mores, then it is no longer a place of focused freedom, but rather one of totalitarianism. Hillsdale is not there yet, but the creep of tyranny is almost always incremental. To see where it may lead, I encourage my readers to examine the rulebook of Clearwater Christian College. First come the theology requirements, then comes mandatory chapel attendance, then come restrictions on student relationships and music-listening opportunities, then come the attempts to control the students’ lives during breaks and vacations. The danger of too much “focus” is enforced homogeneity – the very antithesis of freedom. I draw the line here and now and say that not one step closer to that abyss will be taken with my explicit or tacit support.

Dr. Reist writes, “Further, Hillsdale College would not even exist were it not for Christians (free church men and women - Baptists!) and their faith - read our charter, Mr. Stolyarov.” It is true that Baptists founded Hillsdale College. But then, by Dr. Reist’s logic, it would be necessary to force all Hillsdale students to learn Baptist theology in particular, because that is what the founders of the college happened to believe. Why stop at so broad a category as Christianity? Why not specify the requirement further to Baptism or even Freewill Baptism or Freewill Baptism of the mid-19th century? Why not require everyone to read the writings of Ransom Dunn and his associates? Certainly, these were important figures in the founding of Hillsdale College, but is it not absurd to require every student to devote three hours a week for one semester to examining their particular oeuvre? On the other hand, why stop at so narrow a category as Christianity? Why not simply say that Hillsdale’s founders were religious, or philosophical, or that they spoke and wrote, or that they lived on Earth – in which case everyone should be required to study geology?  I think that instead of imposing requirements on students in the name of Hillsdale’s esteemed founders, we should examine the spirit in which these individuals created the college and what role they intended for it to perform for its students. The History & Mission page on Hillsdale’s website states quite clearly that “Though established by Freewill Baptists, Hillsdale has been officially non-denominational since its inception.  It was the first American college to prohibit in its charter any discrimination based on race, religion or sex, and became an early force for the abolition of slavery. “ [Emphasis mine.] How is it not discrimination based on religion to require non-Christian students to take courses in Christian theology or biblical studies? I like these Freewill Baptists who founded Hillsdale, and I am honestly intrigued with regard to what elements in their theology motivated them to be so much more tolerant and accepting of different viewpoints than many Christians are today. I think they would agree with me if they could witness the present controversy.

Dr. Reist writes, “All thinking, even liberal arts thinking, is about something - and everything. It is not intolerant to expect students to think about Christianity.” How does he get from the fact that thinking is thinking about something to the normative claim that everyone’s thinking should be about Christianity? There are a few steps in the argument he is trying to make that appear to be mysteriously absent. I do not deny that all thinking should be about something, but Dr. Reist has not even shown that thinking about Christianity is superior to thinking about polka-dot-colored marshmallows, much less non-Christian religions and philosophies!

Dr. Reist writes, “We wish to move students to address the basic questions of existence, and, while all thoughtful men and women do so, we believe that if you have not addressed the questions of Christianity (which is true), you have personally, seriously and fatally impaired your understanding of the cosmos.” First, I do not think any person in the United States, in which almost 80 percent of the population are Christians, can fail to “address the questions of Christianity,” as the religion and its influence are culturally unavoidable. Second, the overwhelming majority of Hillsdale students are already far more thoroughly Christian in their upbringing and theological beliefs than many Christians in the United States. There is no risk that they would avoid addressing the questions of Christianity! This leaves only one group of students at whom the theology requirement would be aimed: the non-Christians on this campus, who, apparently, have not examined the questions of Christianity “sufficiently” in the minds of some – or else, it is alleged, they would be Christians. Dr. Reist may not believe this himself, but the practical effect of the theology requirement would be redundancy for those already well-versed in Christian theology (or who would have taken the theology courses anyway!) and indoctrination for those who are not. I can confidently speak for all non-religious Americans, though, that it is impossible to be non-religious in this country without having “addressed the questions of Christianity,” as the questions are asked of them continually whether they want to hear them or not. I probably know more of the history of Christian doctrines and their consequences than do many Christians, and it seems that the more I examine Christian texts and teachings, the less attracted I am to them. I do not wish to argue about why this is so, or whether I am right to think this; I merely present it as a fact. Most non-Christians are not ignorant of Christianity. They encountered it, honestly examined it, and were not persuaded. I can confidently say that there is nothing at present that can convince me to embrace a Christian or any manner of theistic worldview as my own – but I cannot be clearer in my understanding of why I reject such worldviews. My objections are as essential as the rejection of the creation of the universe, original sin, and omnipotence/omniscience – and don’t get me started on the Bible. 

Dr. Reist reassures us that “No one is required to believe anything in the courses I teach. And if we require a course in biblical studies, we would be saying that you must address and consider these issues, not sign a creed.” I am glad that Dr. Reist follows this approach. I never suggested that he would do anything other than act in the fairest manner he saw possible – defining fairness, of course, in accord with his own convictions, as we all do. However, can Dr. Reist guarantee absolutely and without reservation that no one will be graded adversely based on his or her beliefs in the courses Dr. Reist teaches? If so, how could Dr. Reist enforce such a guarantee in practice? The only way I see of making this possible – and I hope that Dr. Reist will suggest alternative approaches – is to give every student in the class an A simply for attending and turning in the required assignments. If the course is graded on a participation/completion basis, rather than on the nature of the content submitted, then we can at least have the consolation that sitting through religious instruction will be the most students will be required to do. If this is not the case, however, then students’ grade point averages, and possibly their future careers, run the risk of being ruined over theological disagreements with the instructor. I understand that this would not be the intention of Dr. Reist and his colleagues, but I ask them to be honest: If a student submitted to them a sincere, intelligent, thorough, and well-researched defense of Arian or Gnostic Christianity, or Deism, or Mormonism, or atheism, would that student get an A on the assignment?

Dr. Reist writes, “Biblical ignorance or illiteracy is a sure way to truncate your understanding of ethics, science, music, psychology, sociology, et al.” While it is certainly useful in some contexts to understand Christian influences on these other disciplines, I do not believe it to be necessary in all cases and for all people. I can listen to a classical composition inspired by Christian beliefs and containing explicitly Christian lyrics – and yet I can appreciate its musical richness and depth without understanding the lyrics, which are written in a language I do not know. I do not think the Christian aspect adds anything to the music in question; the melodies, voices, instruments, and composition styles, on the other hand, do. This is in many ways similar to comic opera of the 18th century; the music is sublime, but the lyrics would probably fit right into a daytime TV show. I do not think that a chorus of beautiful voices singing “Hallelujah!” has any nobler effect than the same voices exclaiming “Hi, how are you?” to the same music. Likewise, to an atheist, materialist, and rationalist such as myself, it is possible for Christianity to be correct about some things – and indeed, about many things – relevant to other disciplines. However, the truth of those things is independent of the truth of Christianity and can be arrived at in other ways. What is there that is true about these disciplines that can only be explained by reference to Christianity? I have not found a single element. If these disciplines are important in their own right (and they are), why not study them in their own right and maybe speculate about parallels to Christianity, but not maintain the unsupportable position that they require Christianity in order for essential components of them to not go missing? 

 Dr. Reist writes, “We will miss you next year, Mr. Stolyarov. And we will miss your children, if they do not come. But think of what they will miss - an open liberal education in the whole tradition which would lead them into the future with a hopeful trajectory determined by that tradition; otherwise, a truncated education will lead to tragedy.” And I will miss Dr. Reist as well. On the other hand, I do think that I will be able to furnish a well-rounded education to my children – including an education that discusses the contents, history, and contemporary significance of Christian beliefs – without having them ever set foot into a theology course except of their own unconstrained volition, and I will not deny them that prerogative.  In a saner world, they might be able to obtain such an education at Hillsdale College, although events occurring day to day continue to reduce my estimation of the probability that this will happen. When my children learn about religions, they will learn about all the major religions of the world at a roughly equal level of depth – and, of course, I could not escape my own biases in exposing them to this subject. A college that seeks to Christianize its student body will not be a place for them, although friendly, civil, and mutually beneficial interactions with many Christians will, I hope, be a prominent feature of their lives – because many Christians are good people, not because they are Christians.  

Responses to David Stehlik

David Stehlik, a 2009 graduate of Hillsdale College, published three additional arguments in favor of a theology requirement on the website of the Hillsdale Collegian. I have spoken with Mr. Stehlik at a considerable level of depth on several occasions previously, and I can say from experience that he is a civil, honest, and well-intentioned person. Nonetheless, I believe all of his arguments on this issue are severely flawed.

Mr. Stehlik writes that “The founders identified themselves and the College they were founding with their specific, denominationally-defined belief in the Christian God.”

While the founders of the college were indeed Freewill Baptists, they did not, contrary to Mr. Stehlik’s assertion, ever identify Hillsdale College with “their specific, denominationally-defined belief in the Christian God.” Again, I quote from the History & Mission page of the college’s own website that “Though established by Freewill Baptists, Hillsdale has been officially non-denominational since its inception.” [Emphasis mine.] I think that the present push for a theology requirement is a severe departure from what the founders of this college wanted it to be. Indeed, how ironic it would be if the first college to abolish religious discrimination in the United States were now to become one of the few colleges in the country to practice it overtly and proudly!

Mr. Stehlik writes that “The preamble continues by citing the College’s founding purpose as essential to the ‘perpetuity’ of God’s ‘inestimable blessings resulting from the prevalence of civil and religious liberty and intelligent piety in the land.’ Hillsdale’s founders recognized that civil and religious liberty and intelligent piety flow from the Christian faith; they are blessings from God. Thus, the founders would probably assert that Mr. Stolyarov can consider himself a proud atheist because of the blessings which come from the Almighty God, an odd freedom indeed.”

This is not quite what the preamble says. It starts as follows: “WHEREAS the denomination of Christians, known as Free-Will-Baptists, with other friends of education, grateful to God for the inestimable blessings resulting from the prevalence of civil and religious liberty and intelligent piety in the land, and believing that the diffusion of sound learning is essential to the perpetuity of these blessings…” The preamble merely states that the Freewill Baptists are grateful to God for these inestimable blessings – not that it is necessary to believe in God or study Christian theology in order to receive, understand, and appreciate said blessings. Moreover, where is the religious liberty in mandating students to attend theology courses? Mr. Stehlik tries to read a certain philosophical position into the preamble – a position that is not explicitly stated there – while ignoring the incontrovertible explicit support in the preamble of religious liberty. And no, it does not work to undermine religious liberty in order to establish the alleged preconditions for religious liberty. That is called a contradiction.

As for “intelligent piety,” compulsion to believe in or even think about certain ideas is not intelligent at all. Where the realm of the intellect is concerned, one can either accept an idea because it makes sense and is appealing in itself – which is the intelligent way – or one can accept it because of adverse institutional consequences that follow from its rejection – which is the way of fear, conformity, and submission to arbitrary power. Intelligent piety is piety that is accepted freely and without mandates; there is no other kind of intelligent piety.

Mr. Stehlik’s second argument is rather disappointing, because I would have expected a person of his intelligence and moral character to take a higher ground. He writes, “Hillsdale College embodies a mission pursuable only through partnership. Students not wishing to partner with the College should not come. The mission is not ‘to be a divided body,’ but rather to stand united for the truth. And, the truth is one thing, not two things or three things.” This is the more circuitously phrased equivalent of the commonly used vitriolic mantra, “If you don’t like it, leave/do not come!” Such a sentiment is insular, immature, and intellectually cowardly; it is a refusal to confront challenges to one’s ideas and a desire to sequester oneself within a cultural and ideological bubble where there is only agreement and mutual back-patting. Surely, Mr. Stehlik does not want to be affiliated with that kind of institution, but that is what his arguments, if applied, will bring about. Only through discussion, disagreement, and interaction among different perspectives can the truth be arrived at; no individual or group has a monopoly on it to start with. The attainment of truth, just like the attainment of accurate information about customer desires and resource availabilities in the economic marketplace, is a dynamic discovery process (read your Hayek, Mr. Stehlik!), which can only be facilitated by vigorous, unceasing competition among different ideas and ways of life. 

Moreover, the various students who come here do not all share a single motivation for doing so. Those who saw Hillsdale as a refuge from the big, bad world that disagrees with them need to realize that they have no right to restrain and redirect the courses of other people’s educations – where those other people see Hillsdale as an excellent school both in terms of academics and extracurriculars but do not look in it for a citadel of people who only nod their heads in agreement to everything one might say. One of the purposes of the liberal arts is to foster intelligent discussion, debate, and a mutual search for truth. One cannot have an intelligent discussion (or an intelligent anything) if one only admits and compels a single monolithic perspective on all matters. There may be only one truth, but nobody can claim to know all of it – or even most of it – and thus nobody can legitimately silence the expression of perspectives contrary to his or her own. There is no refuge from having one’s ideas challenged. Students and faculty who think otherwise need to swallow this hard (but beautiful) truth and cease insisting that the Hillsdale experience must be made uniform for everyone in order to allay the fears of some that maybe, just maybe, a few of their beliefs and ways of life will be called into question.

While I do think there exists a partnership between students and the college, this partnership is bilateral, and it is custom-tailored to each student based on the student’s academic and career ambitions, choice of major(s), choice of extracurricular activities, and desire to utilize other college resources – such as the library, special events, computer labs, and so many more great and eminently useful things. Some students might come to the college because they admire its largely merit-based system of admission and scholarship allocation, its rejection of federal funds, and its generous acceptance of virtually all Advanced Placement credits. The responsibilities of students upon coming here include abiding by official college policies, respecting the rights of others, and maintaining sound academic performance in the courses they choose to take. There is no obligation to agree with anyone at this college as to what the truth is or might be – although one would hope that discussions as to the nature of truth will take place.

It seems to me that Mr. Stehlik is fundamentally uncomfortable with a heterogeneous, pluralistic, and dynamic society which is not completely controlled from the top down. He seems to prefer to reduce the society at Hillsdale to the artificial centrally planned order of taxis, as opposed to the spontaneous, emergent, locally planned order of cosmos – to use Hayekian terminology. But if human beings are diminished to mere pieces on an institutional chessboard, to be placed in their “proper” positions by the master planners in the college faculty and administration, then all liberty, intelligence, and self-government will be lost for the students. I certainly hope that Mr. Stehlik does not want this, but if he does not, he needs to seriously rethink his position on the theology requirement!

Mr. Stehlik’s third argument demonstrates a larger error with regard to the founding of the United States. He writes, “Mr. Stolyarov incorrectly asserts that the United States was not founded on Christian principles. His statement suggests that one must consistently hold to a philosophy in order to take of its fruit. Human nature, however, is fallen, and fallen men are inconsistent. For instance, most Hillsdale students have learned the frustrating fact of Mr. Jefferson: that although he was against slavery, he kept slaves. In the same way, while some of the Founders were not Christians, they were undeterred from desiring the blessings of a Christian-framed regime.”

First, I claim that this position is non-falsifiable. Any explicitly Christian sentiments among the Founders can be used to justify a Christian foundation for the United States, while any non-Christian sentiments can simply be ascribed to inconsistency. I do not think that there is an empirical arrangement whereby Mr. Stehlik would, on his own terms, be able to recognize the absence of a Christian foundation for this country. This statement of Mr. Stehlik’s has a lot in common with the Freudian take on the Oedipus Complex. If one displays signs of an Oedipus Complex, then one obviously has it, but if one does not – it is because one still has it, but it has been repressed. Can any amount of evidence suggest that someone does not have an Oedipus Complex?

Moreover, many of the Founders saw Christian dogmatism as the problem that the United States Constitution and other founding documents were meant to rectify! Thomas Jefferson, to whom a statue has now been erected at Hillsdale College, remarked that “Millions of innocent men, women and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined and imprisoned; yet we have not advanced one inch towards uniformity.” Indeed, Jefferson cautioned that “History… furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil government. This marks the lowest grade of ignorance of which their civil as well as religious leaders will always avail themselves for their own purposes.” James Madison was also strongly opposed to the union of church and state and to government religious imposition. He noted, “During almost fifteen centuries has the legal establishment of Christianity been on trial. What have been its fruits?  More or less, in all places, pride and indolence in the clergy; ignorance and servility in the laity; in both, superstition, bigotry and persecution.” He also stated that “Religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprise.” John Adams, too, was privately extremely skeptical of religion in general and wrote to Jefferson, “I almost shudder at the thought of alluding to the most fatal example of the abuses of grief which the history of mankind has preserved– the Cross. Consider what calamities that engine of grief has produced!” There are numerous other instances of similar criticisms of Christianity from some of America’s most famous Founders.

Moreover, certain documents during the early history of the United States explicitly denied a Christian foundation! The Treaty of Tripoli (1796) contains Article 11, which is rather inconvenient for would-be theocrats: “Art. 11. As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquility, of Mussulmen; and, as the said States never entered into any war, or act of hostility against any Mahometan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from religious opinions, shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries.” [Emphasis mine.] This is not to mention, of course, our wonderful First Amendment!

Responses to Derek Muller

2004 Hillsdale graduate Derek Muller published another response to my editorial in the Collegian. Although he does not necessarily support a theology requirement himself, Mr. Muller does make some points opposing mine which I consider important to address.

Mr. Muller writes, “Mr. Stolyarov concedes, in somewhat obligatory language, that Christian theology is ‘interesting, has numerous elements which are useful and relevant to non-Christians and was developed by thousands of refined, intelligent thinkers who deserve universal respect.’ That, to me, sounds like a rousing defense of a theology course. One may be a non-republican (small r) and be compelled to read Aristotle. One may be a non-Catholic and be compelled to read Dante. One may be a non-utilitarian and be compelled to read Bentham. Yet all are interesting, useful, relevant and developed by refined, intelligent thinkers.”

Ah, but consider the opportunity costs! While Christian theology may in some cases be interesting, useful, and relevant, what else could one be doing with three hours every week during a whole semester? There are numerous subjects that are interesting, useful, and relevant – and that are offered at Hillsdale College – that I am nonetheless not taking, including psychology, sociology, and graphic design. I have nothing against these subjects, and under different circumstances, I might have taken courses in each of them. The same goes for theology. I want to make it clear that I can conceive of instances where I would voluntarily take a theology course, even though I could never be persuaded to personally adopt a theology. However, my specific majors, other core courses, career ambitions, and leisure activities during my time at Hillsdale had higher priority in my mind for a variety of important reasons on which I need not elaborate. My general point is that each person has different priorities which may make complete sense in that person’s case – and imposing a uniform set of priorities on everyone is a highly effective means of setting everyone back in their goals and ambitions.

Mr. Muller writes, “Mr. Stolyarov then counters that a compelled theology course is ‘religious compulsion.’ If, I suppose, one were required to sign a statement of faith agreeing with the articles of theology in the course, then one might discuss ‘religious compulsion.’ But I doubt Mr. Stolyarov has lambasted the republican, Catholic and utilitarian compulsion present in other core curriculum courses.”

But this is just my point: not everyone on the Hillsdale faculty teaching the core curriculum courses is a republican, Catholic, or utilitarian! There are professors on the Hillsdale faculty who are democrats or monarchists, Protestants or non-believers, natural law and/or deontological moral theorists. However, everyone on the Hillsdale faculty teaching the theology courses would be a Christian. If Hillsdale’s faculty were more religiously diverse and if the religion department had in it Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Deists, agnostics, and atheists, then I would not mind a theology core requirement as much – provided that students could choose their professors or the courses would be team-taught by professors having a variety of extremely different religious perspectives.

I think Mr. Muller’s least substantiated and reasonable claims are his statements about alleged religious principles in the Constitution: “Of course, had Mr. Stolyarov spent a nominal period of time contemplating theology and the Constitution, he would see several theological influences upon that document. To name a few: Article III criminalizes the capital offense of treason only if two witnesses testify against the defendant, an acknowledgment of the Western legal adoption of Deuteronomy 19:15, which requires two witnesses to testify against a man. The ‘Sundays excepted’ clause in Article I acknowledges the role that the Sabbath played in the Founders’ days. The religious clauses of the First Amendment were developed from Christian theology concerning conscience and the role of the state.”

Would Mr. Muller also go so far as suggesting that prohibitions on murder and theft exist in the United States criminal justice system solely because of the Ten Commandments? Would he be able to seriously state that these prohibitions would not exist were it not for the Ten Commandments and the Christian religion? Or would he recognize, as historical fact requires, that numerous other non-Judeo-Christian cultures throughout history also had prohibitions on murder and theft because these made sense for the smooth functioning of human interactions in this world, and not because of some specific religious beliefs? Moreover, would Mr. Muller suggest that all of us really found our lives on Christian principles because, well, numerous characters in the Bible clearly and incontrovertibly wear clothing?

Just because the Bible happens to contain aspects that were later found in the American legal system does not mean that these aspects were derived from the Bible or from Christian theology. The “Sundays excepted” clause may simply have been a practical measure which took into account the fact that few people at the time worked on Sundays – and it would be awfully inconvenient to transact important government business on most people’s days off! The requirement of two witnesses for establishment of guilt in cases of treason also makes logical sense apart from any religious text. After all, treason is a matter of grave importance, and if there is only one witness to testify that a person has committed it, there is the risk that such a witness would fabricate information due to malicious intent against the defendant. Two independent witnesses are much less likely to make up the same “facts,” and so any discrepancies between their testimonies can be readily detected. This protection for the rights of the accused makes sense in itself; one does not need to refer to religious texts to justify it.

As for the First Amendment, its motivation was precisely to affirm that the United States government is completely independent of any kind of religious affiliation or religious belief system. The relevant part of the First Amendment reads, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…“ This is the exact opposite of a claim that the United States was founded on religious principles. It is an explicit prohibition for the government from acting on religious principles in its decision-making! It is an explicit protection for the religious practices (or lack thereof) of any individuals living under the U. S. government – freeing these practices (or lack thereof) from the threat of government intervention and repression.  

It is possible (indeed, quite frequent!) that one can be a non-Christian and still believe in freedom of religion and freedom of conscience. Indeed, it was the largely Deistic Enlightenment philosophers that popularized the principle during the 18th century, while 14 prior centuries of Christian church-state affiliation in the West had produced a notoriously blood-stained record of religious persecution.

How Will a Theology Requirement Affect Hillsdale?

Some people might make the spurious claim that a theology requirement is justified because it is within the rights of Hillsdale College as a private institution that does not receive government funding to impose such a requirement. Yes, private institutions can impose many regulations that they see fit as conditions of attendance. But this is also completely besides the point, for ability (even legitimate ability) does not imply desirability. This confusion fatally impairs the moral judgments of many conservatives and libertarians alike – who equate legitimacy with morality, when in fact morality is confined to a much narrower sphere.

The primary issue here is not whether Hillsdale can institute a theology requirement, but rather whether Hillsdale should. We already know that private universities which do not receive government funding can institute a variety of practices on their campuses that would be antithetical to the preferences of some individuals or of the broader society. Bob Jones University, Clearwater Christian College, and Liberty University – all heavily regulated (dare I say, totalitarian?) fundamentalist religious schools – are cases in point. But the real question that needs to be asked is, should Hillsdale’s administration want to make the school more like these rather disreputable organizations, or should it seek to adhere to principles of morality, prudence, and tolerance that will facilitate the school’s flourishing?

If Hillsdale imposes a theology requirement, this will deter ex ante any non-Christian or “softly” Christian students from attending. This includes two demographic groups where intellectuals (meaning people who think systematically, without necessarily being employed in certain literary or academic professions) are most prominently concentrated – Jews and atheists. (However much Hillsdale touts its “Judeo-Christian heritage,” the theology courses will be teaching Christian theology and will probably stop there.) This particular statement of mine is simply a matter of fact; Jewish culture has historically emphasized intellectualism as a result of Jews not being allowed to own most physical capital in most places during their history. Atheists, on the other hand, are virtually always intellectuals because it takes a certain considerable degree of independent and systematic thinking to consciously reject existing religious traditions. It is not atheism that makes an intellectual, but rather a disproportionately large number of intellectuals become attracted to atheism (or agnosticism or Deism or pantheism – for that matter). Observe the distribution of atheists among various educational demographics, and you will find that there is a larger percentage of Ph. D. atheists than of any other educational group (i.e., Masters, Bachelors, high school graduates, etc.). Even Hillsdale, which has maybe 2%  non-religious students, still has an atheist student in the top five of this graduating class. (Yes, I am that student, but again, does it not illustrate something?)  Of course, there are still probably more Christian intellectuals than atheist ones, but this is simply because Christians comprise such an overwhelmingly larger percentage of the population. And it must be mentioned that there are extremely few atheists in prisons relative to their numbers in the general population – so they tend to behave themselves.

Thus, by imposing a theology requirement, Hillsdale will cut off some of the groups of students that are most likely to yield some of its best and brightest. This is a completely suicidal policy from a prudential standpoint – and this is exactly why a theology requirement is much more objectionable than anything else that could be done with the core curriculum. While Hillsdale is not necessarily religion-neutral, it has thus far been free of any kind of religious compulsion – and atheists and members of other religions can live and flourish in that kind of environment. But to attend de facto indoctrination sessions (although no one may intend them to be such) for a semester and to be graded on it is not acceptable treatment in the minds of these students. I predict that if any non-religious students do choose to attend Hillsdale after such a requirement is imposed, their GPAs will be precipitously lower compared to what non-religious students’ GPAs were prior to the requirement’s enactment.

Moreover, there are plenty of explicitly religious schools in this country – and in my judgment all of them are of rather poor quality to some degree or another. What makes Hillsdale unique – and what enables it to stand proudly apart from the rest – is that it is not a religious school; that its core principles are about liberty and the liberal arts – the formation of free, well-rounded, self-governing human beings. There may be inconsistencies in how the administration treats these matters, but this is what Hillsdale stands for, and this is what we should strive to maintain on this campus. I would be happy to give my money to an institution that serves as the vanguard for the promotion of liberty and the educated uses thereof – but no Bible college or mere finishing school will get a cent of it. As for Hillsdale’s stance on religion, it should be a stance in favor of complete religious liberty and toleration for all non-coercive religious activities – no more, no less. Adhering to this principle alone will enable Hillsdale to have a flourishing religious culture simply by the nature of its student demographics and the demographic composition of this country.

It has been suggested to me recently that I may have been fortunate enough to attend Hillsdale during a transient flowering of liberalism in its history (and I use the term liberalism to mean what it was originally intended to mean!). It has been suggested that the degree of open inquiry and free discussion that existed on this campus during my time here (2005-2009) will not long remain, as homogenizing and religiously intolerant influences transform the college into an ideological monolith, where loyalty to a dogma is trumpeted over individual merit, hard work, and intellectual earnestness. This may happen with or without my resistance, but at least I will have the satisfaction of putting up a good defense against what I believe is the corruption of a wonderful institution. I sincerely think that Hillsdale has the potential of becoming one of the top colleges in the country by all standards, if only its administration and some among its faculty could renounce all attempts to homogenize the campus and could begin to encourage real freedom and intellectualism among a wider section of the student body. A lot of work needs to be done in this direction, but stopping the theology requirement is a necessary first step.­­

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Find out about Mr. Stolyarov and The Progress of Liberty.

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This TRA feature has been edited in accordance with TRA’s Statement of Policy.

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Apr 16 2009

The Taiping Rebellion: A Religiously Motivated Slaughter of 25 Million

An alarming number of theists argue that it was atheism that led to the genocides of Josef Stalin, Mao Zedong, and Pol Pot during the 20th century – notwithstanding that atheism is not a positive doctrine and it was rather the dogma of communism that motivated these genocides. However, theists who argue this way often challenge non-believers to give instances where slaughters on such a grand scale were motivated by religious considerations. In fact, there happens to be such an instance, the Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864) in China, where about 25 million people – mostly civilians – were killed in the course of an uprising orchestrated by the Christian convert and religious fanatic Hong Xiuquan. Hong’s regime was not only Christian, it was communistic – abolishing private property and mandating communal living and strict separation of the sexes.

By contrast, estimates of the death toll inflicted by Pol Pot only go as high as 2.3 million. This is still horrific, of course, and inexcusable. However, it is for this reason that I advise theists not to play the death toll card anymore. Rather, it is important to recognize the dangers of all sorts of fanaticism and dogma, irrespective of their underlying metaphysics. Any set of ideas which does not incorporate a considerable degree of tolerance for opposing views is highly dangerous and likely to lead to horrendous destruction of lives and property.

Sincerely,

Gennady Stolyarov II

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Apr 13 2009

Could Religions Come to Adopt a Naturalistic Perspective on Resurrection and Judgment?

Religions and religious doctrines evolve all the time – and this is a fact that warrants hope. I have long speculated that some future strains of Christianity might come to view the promise of resurrection as one of renewed life in this world – not in some ethereal Platonic world of souls that many Christians today seem to consider Heaven to be.

Robert Ettinger, the founder of the cryonics movement, wrote an excellent short story, “The Penultimate Trump,” in 1948. In this story, the suspended animation of humans enables them to be restored to life and youthfulness hundreds of years later. At that time, they are judged on the basis of their past actions and, if they committed sufficient misdeeds are flown to the penal colony on Mars, which has been renamed Hell. (I recommend everyone to read the full short story, so I will say no more on its contents.) Perhaps the promise of resurrection and judgment will be fulfilled through naturalistic means in this world – and cryonically preserved humans will indeed be judged by their more morally advanced future counterparts upon their revival.

An even more distant future possibility might be the revival of non-preserved humans from even a remoter past, if it ever becomes possible to reconstitute entire bodies and minds from the data included in whatever DNA samples from these persons might have remained. In this case, the “judgment” might consist of deciding whom to revive. We would want Leonardo da Vinci and Benjamin Franklin around, but not Hitler or Tamerlane.

I myself am an atheist, but I welcome any adjustments in the theological views of religious people that would render such persons more comfortable with and supporting of technological progress that will ultimately benefit us all.

Sincerely,

Gennady Stolyarov II

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Apr 12 2009

Famous Atheist Composers – Who Says One Needs God to Appreciate Beauty?

Published by G. Stolyarov II under Atheism, Music Edit This

One of the most ludicrous allegations made by some theists is that one needs to believe in God in order to appreciate beauty in the world and in art. Such a claim needs only one counterexample of an atheist artist, musician, or admirer of the arts to refute. Several such counterexamples are extremely well-known.

The French composer Hector Berlioz (1803-1869) repeatedly referred to himself as an atheist in his letters. The virtuoso Italian violinist Niccolo Paganini (1782-1840) was well-known as an atheist during his day. Franz Schubert (1797-1828) was documented to have said of all religious creeds and writings, “Not a word of it is true.”  French composer Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921) was an atheist, as was Richard Wagner (1813-1883) during the time when he wrote his most monumental music.

An excellent article by Madalyn Murray O’Hair documents atheistic and freethinking tendencies among some of the most famous composers of human history. If these men could compose works of universally recognized beauty, then surely a belief in God is not required for esthetic appreciation!

Sincerely,

Gennady Stolyarov II

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Apr 06 2009

Avoid Conceding to Theists That Your Premises are Arbitrary

Published by G. Stolyarov II under Atheism Edit This

One approach that many theists will use to convince you that their religion is at least just as plausible as a rational, naturalistic worldview is stating that every worldview requires one to accept certain arbitrary starting premises or value judgments. In the case of the theists, then, the arbitrary starting premises are that their god or gods created the universe and that it/they is/are the source(s) and arbiter(s) of morality. These theists will then claim that an atheist also starts with some arbitrary premises, such as the sole status of the senses and reason as instruments that can convey knowledge as well as the status of the individual’s life as the highest moral value. It is important to avoid conceding that these premises are just as arbitrary as the theists’ assumption that their god(s) of choice exist(s).

When an atheist, materialist, and rationalist discusses his starting premises or axioms, he must be clear that these axioms are either true because it is impossible to meaningfully deny them without lapsing into contradiction or because they are observed to be true through ubiquitous experience — quite unlike the posited deities of any religion. While it is true that every person’s worldview has starting premises, these premises need not be arbitrary, and any system whose starting premises are not arbitrary is superior to any system whose starting premises are.

Sincerely,

Gennady Stolyarov II

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Apr 04 2009

“Atheism and Liberty: Compatible and Mutually Reinforcing” by G. Stolyarov II - The Rational Argumentator

The Rational Argumentator

A Journal for Western Man

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Atheism and Liberty:

Compatible and Mutually Reinforcing

G. Stolyarov II

Issue CXCI - April 4, 2009

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Atheism, far from threatening the future survival of freedom or being irreconcilable with it, is compatible with individual liberty, free markets, and limited government. Moreover, atheism reinforces liberty by providing for the metaphysical realm what liberty provides for the political: the freedom of the individual from subjugation to the dictates of an arbitrary authority. Here, some of the principal arguments for the mutually reinforcing status of atheism and liberty shall be examined.

What is Atheism?

Atheism is not by itself a positive worldview; it is, rather, the non-belief in any god or gods – i.e., in any entity which has powers beyond those that are feasible within the parameters of the laws of nature or which controls the world, the universe, or its laws. Atheists reject the existence of both the earlier polytheistic gods  who had more limited and finite powers and the Abrahamic god, which is defined as simultaneously omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent. A more thorough explication of what atheism actually is can be found in my essay, “Atheism Facts and Myths.” The purpose of the present essay is more specific: to illustrate the complementarity of atheism and liberty.

What is Liberty?

Liberty is the ability of the individual to act according to his own choices and desires in living his life, provided that he respects a similar prerogative in all other innocent human beings. The philosophy of liberty is grounded in the individual having inalienable natural rights to life, property, health, and the taking of any non-coercive action needed to pursue and sustain happiness. These rights are not conditional upon the wishes of any entity and cannot be legitimately taken away or infringed for any reason; as natural rights, they exist from the moment an individual comes to be. In the political realm, the liberty of each individual only requires the lack of coercive interference with that individual’s life, beliefs, choices, and actions. The purpose of government is therefore solely to prevent harm to any individual under its jurisdiction and to resolve any disputes that arise regarding what constitutes such harm.   

Argument 1. Freedom from Arbitrary Power

Virtually all theistic religions dictate the individual’s subordination to some “higher” entity – a god or gods which, at the very least, set(s) up the laws of nature and the laws of morality and require men to obey them. This is similar in kind to the individual’s political subordination to some “higher” entity – a king, a dictator, a central planning committee, or a popularly elected president and representatives who claim some special warrant for restricting and controlling the individual’s life. That warrant could be the “divine right of kings,” or “the will of the people” – expressed as the vote of 51% of those who happen to cast a ballot or as the governing officials’ interpretation of what “the people” want. Or this warrant could simply be a case of might making right; a strongman with sufficient guns and enforcers can dictate his will upon others without requiring others to accept his legitimacy on an intellectual level.

The manner of obedience theistic religions expect of their followers is identical in kind to the special status arguments that are so often used to justify unconditional obedience to kings, dictators, and democratically elected populists. In Christian – and, more generally, in Abrahamic – circles, an argument is often invoked that an action that is God’s will is by definition good, and that no action can be good unless it is God’s will. This has numerous perverse consequences – including the status of the Old Testament God’s commands to commit genocide against entire populations and to inflict draconian punishments against non-transgressions as moral, while the actions of an atheist who does not harm a single individual and brings about nothing but increased prosperity and peace through his actions are immoral.

Statist regimes and religions are identical in justifying their contents and structures by fiat; the mere pronouncement of some entity or the mere origin of an idea or action from that entity by definition makes the pronouncement, idea, or action “good.” By contrast, the case for liberty is independent of any personal pronouncement. The best possible case for liberty posits that natural rights are inherent in the individual and are not given by any outside entity – be it natural or supernatural. Within the case for liberty, then, the justice or injustice of a political arrangement is determined by whether that political arrangement favorably relates to what the individual already is – i.e., defends that individual’s pre-existing natural rights. Both statism and theism make the error of supposing that rights and goodness respectively must “come from” an external source. The best case for liberty suggests that rights need not “come from” – and indeed, the question of the source of rights – while syntactically correct – may be as nonsensical as the question “What is the meaning of life?” or “What is the chairness of green?”

But even if rights do not “come from” an external source but are inherent in the individual, we must still answer the question of why this is the case. An atheist can answer this question by simply examining the nature of morality. Just as the best case for liberty does not assume rights by fiat from some “higher authority” – be it a god or a government – neither does the atheist assume morality by fiat from some supernatural “higher authority.” Rather, an atheist who does not adhere to any validations by fiat looks for some rational justification for why certain actions are moral and others are immoral. An atheist advocate of liberty therefore believes that a rational justification is required for both morality and liberty; the fiat pronouncement of any entity, real or imagined, natural or supernatural, will not suffice.

To draw the connection between atheism and liberty, we begin with the basic question of morality, the question of “What ought the individual to do?” This is the basic inquiry underlying all of ethics. We note that this question itself does not exist in a vacuum; it is grounded in certain necessary prerequisites. For instance, it requires the existence of the individual and the possibility of continued individual action. Moreover, it requires the individual to have some faculty of effectively and reliably deciding what he ought to do. The very ability to ask the basic question of morality requires 1) a living individual, 2) a physical body by which the individual can engage in actions, and 3) a sensory apparatus, a mind, and a faculty of reason (also physically grounded according to most atheists) which the individual must employ to perceive reality and make choices about what he should do. If any of these prerequisites is undermined, morality is impossible, and the basic question of morality no longer makes sense – and, indeed, can no longer even be asked in any meaningful way. Any logical system is founded on prerequisites – axioms – from which subsequent propositions within that system can be derived. But a system cannot be used to undermine or contradict its own axioms, because this would then invalidate the system. It would enable one to prove any conceivable statement and its negation within the system, and it would produce the logically impossible status of simultaneous A and non-A among any and all existents addressed by the system. 

Therefore, any system of morality must not undermine the prerequisites of morality – the continuation of the individual’s life, physical body, and sensory and rational faculties. Any system of morality which undermines these prerequisites is self-contradictory and therefore untenable. The question, “Why is the preservation of each individual’s life good and moral?” can be answered as follows: “Morality presupposes the value of preserving each individual’s life and the holding of such preservation as the most important value, because without it, morality itself cannot exist.”

Now that we have established that the preservation of each individual’s life is the most significant moral value, we can make the case that each individual has a right to take actions to preserve his own life. After all, it would make no sense for any state to be morally valuable without the individual having a legitimate ability to pursue and preserve that state. A right to life is precisely the legitimate prerogative to pursue one’s life without interference from others. Likewise, any actions and physical prerequisites which are necessary or useful for preserving the life of any individual should be within the sphere of that individual’s legitimate pursuits. From this originate the rights to liberty and property – freedom of action and freedom of owning and using legitimately obtained physical objects.

While the preservation of the life of the individual is the most significant moral value, it need not be the only moral value. For instance, certain values – such as civility, tact, and esthetic beauty – are not indispensable to life, but they do make life more enjoyable and comfortable; as a result, it is also moral to pursue them – but not at the expense of the higher value of life. Values like civility and integrity are universally preferable – in that everyone’s life would be more reliable and comfortable if everyone practiced them. These values can also generate behavior that indirectly prevents certain kinds of persecution and intolerance and thereby makes the life of every individual more secure. Other values – such as one’s choice of occupations or one’s esthetic preferences – are not necessarily universalizable, although they may objectively be the best values for an individual to pursue given his particular circumstances. The pursuit of any of these values – provided that it does not trump life – is within the sphere of every individual’s right to pursue happiness. Again, any moral value ought to be accompanied by a legitimate prerogative to actualize it – and this prerogative arises from within the individual who holds the value, rather than from an external source.

Political liberty, then, is the necessary societal precondition for the actualization of the preservation of the most important underpinning of all morality – the life of every individual who is engaged in moral pursuits. This argument is entirely atheistic and can more readily be recognized by an atheist who does not adhere to fiat theories of existence or morality.

By contrast, an atheist can recognize as claims to arbitrary power both the supposed pronouncements of deities and the pronouncements of men who claim a special right to dispose of the lives and destinies of others.

Argument 2. The Sole Status of This World

Because atheists do not believe in an afterlife or a world beyond the present one, they by definition hold this world and this existence to be the only one there is. If this existence is the only one there is, then anything important must be achieved in this existence – or it cannot be achieved at all. If liberty is important, then one cannot wait until some fictitious next life to have it; one must have it in this life. A theistic proponent of liberty might at least console himself that, if he fails in obtaining freedom here, he will have it in the hereafter. The atheist has no such consolation. Either he will have liberty here, or liberty will be lost to him. This focuses all of the atheist’s efforts on attaining liberty in this world.

This argument, of course, can be extended to every other human value – such as prosperity, beauty, longevity, productivity, integrity, family, friendships, and romantic relationships. If there is only this world, then this world is the place to pursue the optimal quantities of these values (some of which may be indefinite – as, for instance, with longevity!). For instance, now that the technologies that may enable humans to live indefinitely are within the reach of some presently living generations, it may be that religion will do many of today’s humans a great disservice by diverting their energies away from the push to arrive at and support these technologies and toward the pursuit of an afterlife that is highly improbable to say the least. It is also likely that an excessive focus on the hereafter could diminish the amount of time and efficiency of the efforts devoted to the preservation of liberty.

Argument 3. Freedom from Institutional Entanglements

Religions are not mere abstract belief systems about the supernatural. Virtually every religion entails considerable institutional entanglements with human organizations – such as churches, temples, or mosques, social networks, and even at times political movements. Many religions prescribe everything from an individual’s diet to his or her romantic relationships to his or her views on political and social issues. The requirements imposed by religious organizations as preconditions for membership are often much more onerous in restricting the individual’s ability to rationally choose his own best course in life than any of the requirements imposed by Western welfare states today.

Freedom from religious belief also gives the atheist the freedom from obeying the prescriptions of self-proclaimed religious authorities. He can be autonomous in his personal life just as he is autonomous in his political and economic life under true liberty. While he can certainly find wisdom and prudence in some of the recommendations of some religious individuals and individuals with claims to religious authority, he is not bound to accept these claims because of their source, but rather because of their merits. Moreover, he does not have to accept every authority’s pronouncements as a package. Rather, he can use his independent judgment to pick the best elements in the ideas of as many people as he wishes – and synthesize them into an unprecedentedly good and effective framework for living life. An atheist is free in his mind to accept or reject every idea individually, just as a politically free individual is able to accept or reject every non-coercive choice individually – without thereby being bound to accept a whole host of other ideas or choices which are not inextricable consequences of the idea or choice in question.

Argument 4. Freedom from Subjugation to Lesser Men

Any atheist of integrity would join any theist of integrity in decrying the abuses of authority perpetrated by both political and religious figures. Exposing and condemning abuses of authority does not require atheism or advocacy of laissez-faire. However, both the atheist and the advocate of laissez-faire stand in a superior position with regard to preventing the damage to them caused by abuses of authority as well as warning others of the possibility of such abuses. Many well-intentioned and honest Catholics, for instance, had for decades seen as the legitimate interpreters of the word of God men who had during the same time engaged in the most horrendous acts of child abuse. These same Catholics were rightly horrified upon finding out that such abuse had taken place, and thereafter most of them repudiated the abusers. However, is it not better to not submit oneself unconditionally to a potential abuser in the first place? It is possible to have a benevolent priest, and indeed, I have met such persons – but it is also possible to have a benevolent dictator or a benevolent central committee with absolute power but with the best intentions. However, the advocate of liberty rejects grants of absolute power to even the most benevolent of persons, because of the lack of certainty in such benevolence, the precedent this would set for the assumption of similar power by less benevolent men, and the impossibility of even the most benevolent rulers to competently plan the lives of others due to the calculation problem and the knowledge problem discussed by Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek.

When lesser men obtain political power, more than mere governmental inefficiency may result – but torture, sadism, and carnage are likely outcomes. Likewise, when lesser men obtain religious authority, we can expect to witness perversions of morality – including hypocrisy, promiscuity, adultery, sexual abuse, intellectual dishonesty, and the condemnation and punishment of innocent persons within the religious institution. However, there is no reliable mechanism for ensuring that only persons of honesty and integrity always rise to positions of either political or religious authority. The proper remedy, then, is to jettison any unconditional reliance on authority and to treat every holder of power as being perpetually on trial – always to be scrutinized in his decisions and actions and never to be acceded to by virtue of his status alone. Reason and not position ought to determine whether a person’s moral and philosophical counsels are followed, just as reason and not position ought to determine the legitimacy of the actions of a governmental officeholder.

The individual rank-and-file believer in a particular religious faith is often morally superior to the highest authorities of that faith. Atheism offers such persons the opportunity to no longer be subject to the often unreliable and perverse wishes of such lesser men and instead to take charge of their own lives and decisions – which they can do much more competently when guided by their own intellect rather than by external pronouncements. 

Argument 5. Freedom to Refine One’s Views

The institutions which make political liberty possible are not static; they must adapt to changing technological and cultural circumstances and interpret these changes in a manner that is consistent with the maximal freedom of every individual. The political theory of liberty will always continue to evolve as new areas of dispute arise and new developments in technology and society raise questions that have not been addressed by the existing theory. Certainly, fixing the theory of liberty in place at any stage of development would render it impotent to deal with new problems and challenges.

But many religions attempt precisely to fix their theoretical understanding of morality – or, even worse, of nature itself – at some point in those religions’ historical development. This endeavor inevitably fails, as no set of ideas can ever be fixed so firmly as to disallow the possibility of new and creative interpretations. However, most of the prominent world religions still adhere to millennia-old texts which, by those religions’ precepts, cannot be revised or improved upon. While the interpretation of those texts has certainly evolved over time, it was not possible for adherents to those religions to jettison parts of the texts that have since been found to be blatantly immoral – such as God’s punishment of Saul for failing to perpetrate sufficient genocide upon Amalek; after ruthlessly exterminating the men, women, and children of Amalek, Saul did not do the same to the best animals and instead offered them as a sacrifice to God. Most Christians and Jews today would agree that genocide is immoral in all cases, but they are not allowed by their religion to reject the idea of God as explicitly commanding such genocide. They are thus barred from fully developing a coherent and relevant theory of morality, just as individuals who would freeze the theory of liberty at a certain historical point are barred from fully developing coherent and relevant understandings of liberty.

An atheist is not unconditionally bound to any person, any text, or any concrete institution. As new developments shed light on previous errors and as new questions arise, the atheist is free to develop intellectual and institutional innovations to address these issues. An atheist can thereby become the best friend of liberty and the best innovator who works in developing liberty’s new applications and enabling it to overcome new challenges.

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Mar 31 2009

“Jesus and Substance” by G. Stolyarov II – The Rational Argumentator

Published by G. Stolyarov II under Art, Atheism Edit This

The Rational Argumentator

A Journal for Western Man

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Jesus and Substance

G. Stolyarov II

Issue CXCI - March 31, 2009

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Jesus and Substance

Note: Left-click on this image to get a full view. 

This satirical work of quasi-art was made by Mr. Stolyarov using MS Paint. The image was deliberately designed to show too much Jesus and too little substance, as a commentary on the rather ridiculous proclivities of some who try to stuff Jesus into every area of their lives and to justify every single action in which they engage by reference to Jesus. It can be seen here that the image of Jesus does not fit within the boundaries of the picture; there is too much Jesus – a play on too many invocations of Jesus in the discourse of some. The blue sphere in the top left-hand corner represents substance – tiny compared to Jesus and occurring in about a similar proportion in conversations where Jesus is inserted into everything.

The basis for the image of Jesus was a painting by Giotto, “Jesus Carries His Cross.”

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Mar 02 2009

“The Transcendent Tofu” by G. Stolyarov II - The Rational Argumentator

Published by G. Stolyarov II under Atheism Edit This

The Rational Argumentator

A Journal for Western Man

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The Transcendent Tofu

G. Stolyarov II

Issue CLXXXVIII - March 2, 2009

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            In the cafeteria, I once met an eater of raw tofu, who told me that what he was eating was not, in fact, raw tofu. “It is sjorg,” he said, his voice filled with conviction, “and you should eat it, too. Everyone should eat it.”

“But it looks like tofu,” I said, honestly baffled. “What is there to distinguish sjorg from tofu?”

“I know that sjorg is different by virtue of my eating it,” the eater replied. 

“But is there any way to tell, from the outside, just by inspecting it, that a given item of food is sjorg and not tofu?” I asked.

“Now, don’t you start injecting your preconceived notions into this!” The eater’s voice was surprisingly passionate for such a discussion. “The moment I accept your premise that external inspection is the criterion for determining the nature of a food, I will be playing your game by your rules, and you can get nothing but bare, meaningless raw tofu from that. Sjorg is beyond human external inspection. No matter how much you claim you can see, hear, smell, and touch – you  really have to taste sjorg to recognize it.”

“But some of my friends who also eat raw tofu tell me that it is not sjorg, but rather mraf, nwata

or zarglesniffle. Some others who more closely share your convictions tell me that sjorg is really pronounced ‘sjarg,’ or is spelled with two g’s. How can I know that you are right and they are wrong?”

“They may have some inkling of the truth, in that they recognize that there is a world of deliciousness beyond mere raw tofu, but in all the rest I am afraid they are simply wrong. All the best arguments are on the side of sjorg.”

“What kinds of arguments?” I inquired.

“Why, all you have to do is examine the Best Cookbook. Everything you need to know about sjorg is there. All of the writers of the Best Cookbook were inspired by the taste of sjorg – and really, their writings suffice to describe everything there is to know about the world of food, provided that you interpret them properly.”

So I got a copy of the Best Cookbook – ordinarily known just as the Cookbook or rather, das Kochbuch, since sjorg eating was mainly popularized in the English-speaking world by German connoisseurs who for centuries preserved the eating customs and ceremonies of a tribe in the remote regions of Madagascar, which was reportedly the first tribe ever to taste sjorg.  The next time I saw the eater, I pointed out a few passages that had been puzzling me. “I see in Chapter 3, Line 40, that sjorg ‘tastes as the sweetest grape,’ but then Chapter 6, Line 23, says that ‘Tyler recoiled from the bitter taste of the sjorg, as he was unworthy of it.’ And then Chapter 20, Line 113, states that ‘Sjorg is made of all ingredients and has all flavors, and yet is fully tasty and delicious to all who shall savor it.’ And yet  das Kochbuch is filled with examples like that of Tyler, who clearly was not pleased with the taste of sjorg. How can one reconcile these contradictions?”

The eater shrugged. “Sjorg works in mysterious ways. It is not for us humans, with our limited faculties, to understand fully the nature of sjorg – except to know that everything in the Best Cookbook is an accurate description. You see, we have our puny human logic, and sjorg has its own logic. The great gift of sjorg is that it offers us the opportunity to appreciate it at all – and das Kochbuch says that eventually, once our taste buds have been burned off from drinking too much vodka, we will receive eternal taste buds which will enable us to always appreciate all the flavors of sjorg in all of their magnificence!”

 “Has anyone you know obtained these eternal taste buds?” I asked.

“Billy, Clarence, and Rachel might have done,” the eater responded. “At least this is what I and all my friends fervently hope for.”

“Perhaps they could be helpful in clarifying the taste of sjorg for us,” I suggested.

The eater stared at me as if I were insane. “Oh, no! No one who has the eternal taste buds is permitted to talk about them. It wouldn’t be much of a genuine test of one’s devotion to sjorg if one knew in advance what pleasures await someone who has obtained the eternal taste buds. After all, the full, marvelously exquisite taste of sjorg is so sublime that anyone who knew fully about it would naturally want it! I think the way things actually work is for the best, because then we know that the people who get the eternal taste buds get them because of their devotion to sjorg, and not because of their selfish interests of magnifying their sensations of taste. You get the deliciousness of sjorg because of your devotion to sjorg; you cannot fake devotion to sjorg in order to get to savor the deliciousness. Sjorg does not work that way.”

“But how can I know that I will actually receive these eternal taste buds? Can you at least get that much of a confirmation from your friends?”

“No, and I don’t even want to,” the eater replied. “The fact is, I have accessible to me all the information I could possibly need to know about sjorg at this stage of my existence. It is all written down in the Best Cookbook, after all. With that much clear and compelling evidence for what awaits a devoted eater of sjorg, it would be supremely ungrateful to ask for more. Sjorg is supposed to tempt me, not the other way around.”

“But all medical evidence says that you don’t get eternal taste buds if you burn off your existing ones. At best you get some of your regular taste buds back. And certainly, drinking vodka over a period of many years will reduce the number of those—” I tried to interject with some common knowledge.

“It is arrogant to suggest that we can know everything through our medical studies—“

“Surely not, but we do know something!”

“I am pretty sure all of that scientific talk about taste buds is meant to distract us from a true understanding of the magnificence of sjorg and its essential role in bringing about the tastiness of all food. After all, it was the scientific study of taste buds that led to the obesity epidemic of the twentieth century!”

            “How does that follow? Obsesity has existed throughout history,” I noted.

            “But never on that scale. You see, various movements arose during the twentieth century which used a purely observation-based approach to food and human biology in order to learn exactly what foods can fatten people the most and make people dependent on the food provider. All of the horrific fast food establishments of the twentieth century – McDonald’s, Burger King, Chipotle – were the result of the assumption that what you can scientifically observe all that there is about food!” 

            “But it is perfectly possible to hold to the best scientific understanding of taste buds and not eat junk food!” I objected. “Millions of people eat healthily and in moderation without believing in sjorg or any kind of transcendent tofu.”
            “This is only because the residual influence of sjorg is still with them,” the eater replied authoritatively. “For instance, they might have had good, sjorg-eating parents and might have absorbed their dietary habits from them. Or they might be beneficiaries of a community where sjorg eating has a strong presence, and as a result many healthy foods are produced and marketed. But were it not for the widespread legacy of sjorg in our society as well as throughout the history of our civilization, there would be virtually no healthy eaters at all. Perhaps everyone would be on a subsistence diet – as in the days before our sjorg-inspired ancestors developed high-yield agriculture – or perhaps we would all be eating from lead dishes and suffering from mass dementia, like the sjorgless Romans. The fact is, a healthy lifestyle is impossible without sjorg.”

            “But I try to eat healthily, and I exercise quite a bit every day. I do not eat sjorg or even believe that sjorg exists. Tofu is tofu, as far as I am concerned. Nor are my parents or even their parents sjorg eaters. There are millions of people like me. Are those not sufficient counterexamples to your rather sweeping assertion?”

            “If there is no sjorg, then what is the point of healthy eating?” the eater asked, seriously baffled by the possibility of a sjorgless sound diet. “After all, without some transcendent food to impart meaning onto all the other foods and to direct the eater’s ambitions toward a transcendent goal, why not just eat anything one wants? What is there to dissuade one from eating garbage, metal, or fried onions?”

            “Well, it could be that none of these items tastes particularly good, or – in the case of garbage and metal – that they are profoundly damaging to one’s physical well-being – “ I attempted a rather commonsense reply.

            “But why value one’s physical well-being if one does not have any transcendent deliciousness to strive for? What’s the point of taking good care of one’s body of there is no sjorg whose gustatory sublimity requires it and offers a world of omni-flavorfulness far beyond the pathetic limitations of our human assortment of foods?”

            “How about just wanting to live, work, and be in good spirits? Besides, when it comes to savoring sublime flavors, there are plenty of delicious foods that humans produce,” I objected. “All the cakes, fruits, meat dishes, breads, diet sodas, sugar-free gelatin snacks… One needs to be healthy in order to enjoy these without suffering for it in the future.”

            “All vain distractions of human cooking!” the eater scoffed. “They ensnare us, enslave our appetites, distract us from the true eternal magnificence of sjorg! They lead to anorexia, bulimia, binge eating, foie gras, rare steaks, and eating expired food! When people become greedy for the food of man, they lose their sense of moderation, their discrimination in taste, their self-respect and self-restraint! They become superficial and avaricious – lusting after the appearance of good eating and a good lifestyle, without the substance. Only accepting and anticipating the sublime taste of sjorg can lead them back onto the right path!”

            “But you sjorg eaters have about the same prevalence of these vices as the food skeptics, or the nwata eaters, or the zarglesniffle eaters. And with some vices, such as mass self-inflicted food poisonings,  cannibalism of eaters of other foods, and writing bad tofu-based recipes, the food skeptics have virtually no incidence, while many eaters of transcendent foods get exposed perpetrating them every day. And all that vodka you drink on Wednesdays surely cannot be good for your long-term health!”

            The sjorg-eater’s patience had been exhausted. “Enough of this!” he shouted. “I can see that you and I can have no common ground whatsoever, because you reject the sublime taste of sjorg, which is such a vital part of my life!”

            “Now wait a minute,” I attempted to salvage the situation. “You said that we can have no common ground. But do you believe that when you take one banana and you add to it another banana, you will get two bananas?”

            “Yes. And your point is?”

            “I believe this, too. As you can see, we do have some common ground.”

            “But so much about my life is based on sjorg, and you are being quite intolerant and offensive when you insult my devotion to it!”

            “I am not insulting you; I am merely asking questions and arguing against what I perceive to be logical fallacies. Besides, I have shown that there is something you believe which is not necessarily tied to sjorg. Why do we not start with the areas where we do have some common understandings and work from there?”  

            The sjorg eater recognized my attempt at conciliation and began to confine his assertions to a more reasonable scope. The next day, however, when he delivered a speech before the weekly meeting of his Club of Sjorg Connoisseurs, he reiterated the same fallacies that I had identified during our conversation. He said to his audience – devoted sjorg-eaters, all – that our conversation had caused him to develop some genuine doubts regarding his dietary habits, but that these doubts were a way of testing his devotion to sjorg – to see if he could have confidence that he would get those eternal taste buds despite apparent evidence to the contrary. “Sjorg requires a leap of gustatory faculties to an entirely new level,” he explained. “We can argue and observe all we want, but past a certain point, a much stronger commitment is required. You have to make that commitment first in order to truly appreciate sjorg.”  

            Five years later, the sjorg eater became a food skeptic. His brother had become involved with a culinary society which held that drinking vodka out of beer tankards with every meal would accelerate the conferring of eternal taste buds upon all the devoted sjorg eaters of the world. One day, the brother had one sip of vodka too many and tragically perished – revered by his associates as a heroic martyr. But my acquaintance had had enough by that time. One tangible event of sufficient magnitude persuaded him to change his mind far more decisively than any amount of abstract argumentation on my part. I just hope that his new culinary paradigm retained the prohibitions on eating garbage, metal, and fried onions.

            I still eat tofu once or twice a year. It is tofu.

           

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Find out about Mr. Stolyarov and The Progress of Liberty.

Recommend this page.

This TRA feature has been edited in accordance with TRA’s Statement of Policy.

Click here to return to TRA’s Issue CLXXXVIII Index.

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Feb 02 2009

Sir David Attenborough Harassed by Religious Fanatics

Published by G. Stolyarov II under Atheism Edit This

Some people do not know when to stop inserting God and Jesus into every aspect of their lives and conversations. I have to shake my head at those people and hope that they will grow out of such futile and ridiculous nonsense. But a much stronger form of my censure and condemnation is directed at people who spew hate at others who fail to insert God and Jesus into every aspect of their lives, conversations, and work.

 

My full sympathies and support go to Sir David Attenborough – host of numerous quality nature documentaries – who has been receiving hate mail simply for failing to mention God in his films! This kind of intolerance is barbaric and inexcusable. Moreover, it verges on harassment, as Mr. Attenborough is sometimes told to “burn in Hell” simply for not mentioning God.

 

As a proud atheist and enemy of all forms of bigotry, fanaticism, and intolerance, I hope that Sir David will persist with his excellent films and that his detractors are seen as the vicious haters that they are.

 

Sincerely,

Gennady Stolyarov II

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