Delight Springs

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Believing-muscles

We're wrapping up Julian Baggini's Atheism: A Very Short Introduction today in A&P. 

It emerged last class that I'm using the 2d edition, just out, while others have the 1st. Not a big deal, but since it dates all the way back to 2003 they're missing a few emendations. There's a fresh discussion of the New Atheists, for instance, who of course are not so novel anymore. 

And I'm missing the old autobiographical start to chapter 1, in which the author charitably described his own childhood exposure to Roman Catholicism in "a gentle, benign religious environment" by non-"Bible-thumper" parents and teachers who were not "anything other than kind." He says he later "moved over to Methodism" before eventually landing in atheism. He believes there is no God. But he bears no grudge against those who believe otherwise. It's a nice beginning. I wonder why they removed it.  

Maybe this line from Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, aka Lewis Carroll (who would be 190 today) is pertinent to that editorial decision. It's definitely pertinent to our impending CoPhi discussion of ancient skepticism. 

“If you set to work to believe everything, you will tire out the believing-muscles of your mind, and then you’ll be so weak you won’t be able to believe the simplest true things.”

But you've got to believe something, and even the most skeptical atheists do. They believe, affirmatively, that there are no gods. That's something, right Pyrrho? Well, he's not saying. He's like Douglas Adams's hyper-skeptic in the Hitchhiker's Guide (Restaurant at the End of the Universe), the Ruler of the Universe, whose cat he calls the Lord...

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