The Literature of the Heretics, pt.
4
One
thing I have never understood—that I freely admit to never having understood—is
the vehemence with which the heretics denounce beliefs about nature that do not
conform to their own. When I say this I am not referring to their opposition to
their contemporaries, like myself, who disagree (they have every right to
disagree vehemently with me). Rather, I mean their strange reverence for the
shifting of historical paradigms and the consistent change of perspective
brought about by nothing more complex than the passage of time.
The
heretics—at least, some
heretics—simply cannot bring themselves to believe that anyone could have been
ignorant enough to ever have believed
that the Earth was the center of the solar system (or the universe), or that
matter was made up of anything but atoms. They stand on their high-horses and
ridicule anyone who came before them, not merely as the products of a
less-enlightened age—but as malicious contributors to the stunting of
knowledge.
I
am referring, of course, to the concept commonly called “chronological
snobbery,” as made famous by C.S. Lewis, who rightly considered it one of the
hallmarks of the heretic. There is a decided inability to empathize with our
predecessors in thought or deed; a decided lack of understanding of the
movement of history and how things have really played out.
I
made special note before to say that this particular trap only ensnared some heretics. I am focusing here specifically
on Christopher Hitchens, who is an offender to the point that some of his more
clear-minded acolytes really ought to have pointed out how petty he had begun
to sound. On the other hand, at least in this area, I can give some credit to Richard
Dawkins, who at various points actually acknowledges his separation from the
past. For example, when mentioning Lord Kelvin’s theory that the earth could
not be billions of years old or else the sun would have spent all of its fuel,
Dawkins notes, “Kelvin obviously could not be expected to know about nuclear
energy.” Of course he couldn’t.
Likewise,
when discussing the “changing moral Zeitgeist,” Dawkins makes an astute
observation: “The American invasion of Iraq is widely condemned for its civilian
casualties, yet those casualty figures are orders of magnitude lower than
comparable numbers for the Second World War. There seems to be a steadily
shifting standard of what is morally acceptable. Donald Rumsfeld, who sounds so
callous and odious today, would have sounded like a bleeding-heart liberal if
he had said the same things during the Second World War.” While I am certain
that I disagree with the argument Dawkins is ultimately making, he raises an
interesting point: we cannot ultimately comment on history through the lens of
the twenty-first century.
Now,
consider those relatively magnanimous comments compared with just a few of the cringe-worthy
denunciations of Hitchens:
“The early fathers of faith (they made very sure
that there would be no mothers) were living in a time of abysmal ignorance and
fear.”
“Aquinas...was convinced that the fully formed
nucleus (not that he would have known the word as we do) of a human being was
contained inside each individual sperm.”
“Augustine was a self-centered fantasist and an
earth-centered ignoramus: he was guiltily convinced that god cared about his
trivial theft from some unimportant pear trees, and quite persuaded—by an
analogous solipsism—that the sun revolved around the earth.”
The
last seems to me to be the most egregious. Disagreeing (even vehemently
disagreeing) with Augustine’s theology is one thing—a thing that wouldn’t
bother me in the least—but what sort of snob does it take to criticize a man
for saying that sun revolved around the earth in a time when everyone said that the sun revolved
around the earth? And what possible reason could Hitchens have for being so
upset that Augustine felt guilty for stealing fruit? Hitchens, like many of his
scientific colleagues, also frequently derides ancient scientists for refusing
to believe in atomism, even though it was proposed by Democritus in the fifth
century, B.C., ignoring the fact that no one believed it because there was no evidence for it.
There
is the assumption (and Hitchens was not alone in believing it) that to believe
such things as geocentrism (the idea that the sun revolves around the earth
rather than the other way around) or to fail to believe in atomism could only
have been a product of ignorance brought about by dogma—but the truth is
exactly the opposite: I would be far more inclined to ridicule any foolish
pre-Galilean astronomer deluded enough to believe in anything but geocentrism, or any pre-Newtonian
naive enough to put any amount of faith into atomism. The humanist makes a
great deal out of common sense, and from the perspective of man before the
invention of the telescope there was no reason, apart from pure love of dissent,
to believe in anything but that the Earth was at the center. The early
astronomers were not being willfully ignorant in their beliefs; they were being
observant, which, I understand, is
something generally applauded in science.
Would
any of us be foolish enough to ridicule the darkness of Dickensian London
because they had not yet mastered the incandescent light? Do we think, as we
read Great Expectations, that someone
really ought to have just flipped a switch and so do away with that dreaded gloom?
Should we mock them for thinking that they had achieved anything at all with
their primitive gas lamps when there are such greater sources of light to be
discovered? There is a pitiful perception that time has made humanity wiser,
more intelligent, and less prone to being duped, when the truth is that we
simply know more. We have no greater capacity for knowledge—we simply have a
greater (and often contradictory) body of knowledge through which to sift.
It
did not take two thousand years for science to reach its present state because
it was stifled by dogma or because it was persecuted by the church. In fact,
apart from isolated incidents that are given more than their due weight, science
really has not been persecuted by the
church. So few are the actual occurrences, in fact, that Hitchens had to stoop
to making one up: “Atomism was viciously persecuted throughout Christian Europe
for many centuries, on the not unreasonable ground that it offered a far better
explanation of the natural world than did religion.” Suffice it to say, this
didn’t happen at all. Atomism was never persecuted. No, science was not held
back by religion, it was held back by the fact that it took people a while to
figure things out.
Though
it may be common among the heretics, Hitchens’ snobbery seems especially
egregious, as he seems to imply that, in a similar situation, he would surely
have easily seen through the “ruse” of superstition. Had he been born centuries
earlier he would have been the exception; the revolutionary able to see the
world as it truly was. But he would not have. If he really believes at all in
reason he would have looked into the sky and come to the conclusion that the
earth was at the center of things. He would have looked at the material world
and decided that it could not possibly have been made of atoms. He would be the
same ignorant fool that he derides.
Suffice
it to say, I can’t help but think that this chronological snobbery plays a
large role in preventing people from believing in God. There is a strange
sense, and I have written about it several times before, that we, as human
beings, have become something unique; that we are somehow different from all
who came before us. There is a sense that we have the right to mock our
primitive ancestors and their primitive beliefs because we have come to know
and understand so much. Suffice it to say that there is no real evidence to
support these conclusions. The truth, if one cares to really look at it, is
humbling. We may know a few more facts about the world, we may have unlocked a
few more of the universe’s gears and pulleys, but in fact we have gotten
nowhere. We think that we have understood enough to supplant God in the minds
of the people, relegating Him to a “God in the gaps” but in truth we have only
just begun to realize how big those gaps truly are, and just how big a God
would be needed to fill them. We believe that we are inching our way closer and
closer to the eternal, but the fact is that our advancements might come in
leaps and bounds and yet the eternal will remain the eternal.
If
the situation demands anything it is precisely the reverse of chronological
snobbery. We ought to be humbled by a history that shows humanity leaping every
hurdle to obtain knowledge and understanding; to shine the light of
understanding into the darkness. It must be disheartening to the humanist that
the majority of his fellow humans have not yet accepted the glory of
self-worship. It must seem strange to the devoted secularist that the world
remains religious despite the tremendous achievements of science. The fact is
that reason is not all it’s made out to be. Faith is on the rise, and no
appeals to science or reason have stemmed the tide; and almost certainly the
petty arguments of a few heretics don’t seem to be doing much either.
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