Bodhi Leaves - Offerings and Reflections from the Buddhist West

Monday, May 4, 2009

God Talk

NY Times columnist Stanley Fish presents a fascinating discussion of Terry Eagleton's new book, 'Reason, Faith, and Revolution'. The work discusses the recent clashes between science and religion and is quite critical of 'school-yard atheists' like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. The piece delves into some very thought provoking ideas:
...And, conversely, the fact that religion and theology cannot provide a technology for explaining how the material world works should not be held against them, either, for that is not what they do. When Christopher Hitchens declares that given the emergence of “the telescope and the microscope” religion “no longer offers an explanation of anything important,” Eagleton replies, “But Christianity was never meant to be an explanation of anything in the first place. It’s rather like saying that thanks to the electric toaster we can forget about Chekhov.”

Eagleton likes this turn of speech, and he has recourse to it often when making the same point: “[B]elieving that religion is a botched attempt to explain the world . . . is like seeing ballet as a botched attempt to run for a bus.” Running for a bus is a focused empirical act and the steps you take are instrumental to its end. The positions one assumes in ballet have no such end; they are after something else, and that something doesn’t yield to the usual forms of measurement. Religion, Eagleton is saying, is like ballet (and Chekhov); it’s after something else...

No comments: