http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/mar2006/denn-m21.shtml

The 19 February 2006 issue of the New York Times Book Review carries a
tendentious attack on Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural
Phenomenon, the latest work by American philosopher Daniel Dennett.

Dennett is best known as a philosopher of evolutionary biology and for
his earlier books, Consciousness Explained and Darwin’s Dangerous
Idea—works that make significant contributions to the defense of
Darwinism and philosophical materialism. In his earlier books, Dennett
showed himself to be a skilled and thoughtful popularizer of the most
important philosophical ramifications of the modern conception of
evolution, and a shrewd exposer of many of the superficial attempts to
discredit it or sow confusion about it. He is also acutely sensitive to
the politically reactionary role played by those who are now attempting
to reintroduce creationism under the guise of “intelligent design.”
Dennett is himself an ardent atheist. In the intellectual climate that
prevails in academia, these positions require a laudable degree of
courage.

Breaking the Spell proposes a radical venture: to make a scientific study
of religion. Dennett rejects the idea of the late Stephen Jay Gould that
religion and science occupy two separate “magesteria” that ought to and
can co-exist peacefully as long as neither intrudes on the other’s
dominion. Dennett refuses to abide by the injunction that scientists
should refrain from looking too closely at religion.

Dennett’s proposal to study religion does not mean only subjecting
religion’s claims to logical scrutiny. It is not for him only a matter of
counterposing religion to science. Instead, he seeks to use the methods
of science to inquire into the natural reasons for the continued
prevalence of religion. Why is it, he asks, that religion has not only
survived, but expanded in influence even after its claims about the world
have been shown to be false?

Dennett’s book does not attempt the exhaustive investigation that it
proposes, but it does provide an introduction to a significant body of
existing literature on the subject and proposes a number of potential
avenues of development and inquiry. Dennett is undeniably correct to
claim that a taboo exists that creates real barriers to the study he
proposes. To look at religion under the scrutinizing microscope of
science is regarded, within the prevailing intellectual climate, as
entirely unacceptable.

Dennett is also right to insist that such a study is all the more
necessary in light of the immense political influence still wielded by
religion in modern life. For this reason, he expects hostility not only
from the official representatives of the major religious denominations,
but especially from those academics and intellectuals eager to defend
religion for essentially political reasons.

A particularly banal and duplicitous example of such a “defense” of
religion was provided in Leon Wieseltier’s assessment of the book, which
appeared in the February, 19 issue of the New York Times Book Review.
Wieseltier is the literary editor of the New Republic, a journal in which
the right-wing trajectory of the Democratic Party intersects with that of
the Republican neo-conservative right. Wieseltier embodies the magazine’s
orientation. He is crass defender of American imperialism and a member of
the Project for a New American Century, which argued for an invasion of
Iraq from the time of the group’s inception in the mid-1990s. Prior to
this review, Wieseltier’s most recent polemical exercise was a
denunciation of Steven Spielberg’s film Munich for being “anti-Israel.”

The first question that ought to be asked about Wieseltier’s review is
why he was asked to submit it in the first place. One presumes that the
Times Book Review could have easily called upon an expert in philosophy,
biology, anthropology or comparative religion, to suggest only the most
obvious disciplines. Instead it decided to commission a right-wing
ideologue to perform a hatchet job on Dennett’s book. Given Wieseltier’s
religious and political commitments, his selection is highly significant
because of what it says about the agenda of the New York Times Book
Review editors. They chose him in order to give a platform to a defender
of religion to attack science.

Wieseltier knows enough to realize that religion cannot be defended by
attempting to refute what science has to say about it. There is between
religion and science a giant intellectual mismatch, so Wieseltier must
take another tack. The basic thrust of his review is that Dennett has
vastly exaggerated the competency of science and, in doing so, has
corrupted it. His central claim is that Dennett has lapsed into
“scientism,” which he defines as “the view that science can explain all
human conditions and expressions, mental as well as physical.”
“Scientism,” according to Wieseltier, is “a superstition” and Breaking
the Spell is “a merry anthology of contemporary superstitions.”

This statement is as absurd as it is reactionary. Science is the
antithesis of superstition, resting on testable claims and evidence and
rejecting all supernatural explanations of phenomena. Individual
scientists may be superstitious, but they do so only to the extent that
they temporarily set aside the scientific method.

Wieseltier’s claim that Dennett’s views amount to “superstition” is the
type of cheap rhetorical sleight-of-hand that is often employed by
proponents of religion to tar skeptics and atheists. “Ah,” they say as
though they had made a real discovery, “atheism is simply your religion.”
They wish to obscure the fact that religion and science have
fundamentally different criteria for truth and make them seem, instead,
to be merely different outlooks. They argue that the outlook of
“scientism” (an epithet they employ to refer to confidence in conclusions
drawn by scientific methods), avoids consideration of the emotional and
aesthetic sides of human life.

Dennett, Wieseltier would like us to believe, is nothing more than the
most simpleminded biological reductionist who claims that all of life,
including human life, can be directly and immediately reduced to its
biology and evolution. Wieseltier presumes that religion may fill the
place occupied by this straw man, once it is knocked down. The crudeness
of Wieseltier’s attack is indicated in sweeping statements like, “Dennett
is unable to imagine a fact about us that is not a biological fact.” Or,
“For Dennett, thinking historically absolves one of thinking
philosophically.”

Of course, nowhere in the book does Dennett claim that to biology alone
belongs the capability to explain all human phenomena. But Wieseltier is
not writing as a serious advocate of science concerned that a co-thinker
has made a factual error. He does not set out to correct Dennett’s
alleged lapses and set science back on its feet. Rather, “scientism” is a
bogeyman that Wieseltier has trotted out in order to absolve religion
from scientific inquiry. What upsets Wieseltier is that Dennett is not
willing to give religion a free ride and allow it and its claims to go
unscrutinized.

“Scientism” is, according to Wieseltier, “one of the dominant
superstitions of our day.” The reader can only be amazed at the
statement. The US, not to mention the rest of the world, is hardly
suffering from too much science. If the broad public were so convinced of
the scientific outlook, Mr. Dennett would have had no need to write his
book. In fact, the official intellectual climate is characterized by a
continuing retreat from the conclusions that science has drawn in the
face of a renewed offensive by those promoting religious, antiscientific
explanations.

That matter aside, what are these “supersitions” of which Mr. Dennett
stands accused? Of the supposed “anthology”, Wieseltier elaborates only
on one, and that one only in a trite manner. Near the end of his review
he tells us that Breaking the Spell “is riddled with translations of
emotions and ideas into evo[lutionary] psychobabble.” He is referring to
Dennett’s comments about the biological foundations of human social
customs of courtship, marriage, and mourning. With this verbal slapshot,
Wieseltier attempts to brush off an entirely new field of scientific
inquiry. Evolutionary psychology actually attempts to make use of the
modern Darwinian conception of evolution to explain the natural bases
that underlie complex forms of social behavior and thinking among
animals, including humans. It does not attempt to erase the insights of
psychology and reduce, in a crude manner, all thought processes to simple
biological signals. But for Wieseltier, this field can be cast aside as
mere “babble.”

In other parts of the review Wieseltier makes a caricature of Dennett’s
positions in order to lampoon them rather than have to argue against
them. A few examples will give the flavor of his approach. First, there
are the artificial dichotomies that Wieseltier puts into Dennett’s mouth,
like: “Dennett lives in a world where you must believe in the grossest
biologism or in the grossest theism, in a purely naturalistic
understanding of religion or in intelligent design, in the omniscience of
a white man with a long beard in 19th-century England or in the
omniscience of a white man with a long beard in the sky.”

Because Dennett refers in one place to non-religious values of importance
to atheists like democracy, life, love, justice, etc., Wieseltier feels
it reasonable to conclude that “If you refuse his ‘impeccably hardheaded
and rational ontology,’ then your sacred values must be tyranny,
injustice, death, hatred and falsehood.” This sort of juvenile verbal
tricksterism is one of the favored methods of right-wing editorialists in
the US.

In a gratuitous and disingenuous afterthought, Wieseltier adds that
“Dennett is the sort of rationalist who gives reason a bad name, and in a
new era of American obscurantism, this is not helpful.” In a piece that
is essentially dedicated to the defense of religion from science,
Wieseltier wants to present himself as a defender of “reason” against
“obscurantism”! This is rather like the exponents of “intelligent design”
campaigning against the supposedly close-minded evolutionists who refuse
to go along with “teaching the controversy.”

Wieseltier’s defense of religion becomes more explicit as his argument
unfolds. “It will be plain that Dennett’s approach to religion is
contrived to evade religion’s substance. He thinks that an inquiry into
belief is made superfluous by an inquiry into the belief in belief. This
is a very revealing mistake. You cannot disprove a belief unless you
disprove its content.”

When Dennett speaks of “belief in belief,” however, he refers to the
widespread acceptance of religion by those who may not believe in the
divine, but rather believe that they should believe in it. Dennett is
also suggesting an inquiry into this phenomenon. Why do so many people
feel that they must pay homage to religious belief even when they are
actually rather skeptical at heart?

More fundamentally, Dennett’s essential point about “belief in belief” is
evaded by Wieseltier. For Dennett, it is not so much a matter of proving
religious notions incorrect; that has already been done. The type of
inquiry that Dennett proposes is necessary, above all, because religious
belief has long outlived the rational disproving of all of the claims
that it has made about the universe. Is further scientific proof needed
to show that miracles do not take place, that human beings do not rise
from the dead, that evil spirits do not cause illness, or that man
evolved from less complex animals? Dennett is arguing that instead of
focusing on these questions, it is high time for science to uncover the
reasons for the persistence of belief after rational disproval. Does it
survive only in a parasitic capability as a sort of mind-virus? Does it
confer as-yet unknown benefits to human beings? Dennett says that these
(and other related questions) have not been fully investigated.

Wieseltier repeatedly attempts to make Dennett’s argument crude and
simplistic. For example, Wieseltier elaborates on his objection to
evolutionary psychology by saying: “[I]t is very hard to envision the
biological utilities of such gratuitous outlays as ‘The Embarkation for
Cythera’ and Fermat’s theorem and the ‘Missa Solemnis.’” He says this as
though biology only explained physiological functions, like the utility
of respiration or eyesight. In fact, quite elaborate explanations for the
biological utility of artistic (and scientific) capabilities have been
offered by contemporary biologists and philosophers of science. These
theories draw not only upon the mechanisms of natural selection, but also
of sexual selection.

Moreover, the claim that science cannot comprehend the complexities of
the intellectual or the emotional sides of human life is belied by the
development of neuroscience in particular during the most recent decades.
Though much of the published research is highly specialized, a number of
new works are aimed at the general public. Of these, a particularly
noteworthy book, which directly refutes much of Wieseltier’s argument, is
Antonio Damasio’s Looking for Spinoza: Joy, Sorrow, and the Feeling
Brain. Though Damasio concentrates on the emotional side of the human
brain, much of his argument can also be adapted to mental processes that
we take to be largely intellectual.

Damasio is the head of the neurology department at the University of Iowa
Medical Center. In his book, he draws attention to the complex manner in
which changes in the neural architecture of different regions of the
brain give rise to emotion and particular senses of pain or pleasure
associated with them. Though we cannot fully do justice to his book in
this space, it will suffice to quote from one of his conclusions to see
how far from crude reductionism is a genuinely materialist conception.
“The gist of my current view,” Damasio writes, “is that feelings are the
expression of human flourishing or human distress, as they occur in mind
and body. Feelings are not a mere decoration added to the emotions,
something that one might keep or discard. Feelings can be and often are
revelations of the state of life within the entire organism—a lifting of
the veil in the literal sense of the term [p.6, emphasis in original].”
Damasio traces the evolutionary origins of feelings to the very simple,
unconscious reflexes of basic organisms. Over eons, collections of simple
reflexes became behaviors, collections of behaviors were transformed into
drives, and assemblies of drives became emotions. Feelings are placed by
Damasio at the apex of this evolutionary pyramid.

This development happened not in a single organism but in the evolution
of animal life as a whole. Feelings are found in only the most complex of
animals. By delving into the neural details of the brain, Damasio is able
to show how an elaborate system of more basic decision-making structures
is able to yield the emotional richness of human experience.

Wieseltier does no better in considering the philosophical heritage drawn
upon by Dennett than he does the biological. Wieseltier is highly
disingenuous in the portion of his review dealing with the philosophical
legacy of David Hume. (Dennett acknowledges his intellectual debt to
Hume, whose 1757 pamphlet “The Natural History of Religion” served as one
of the inspirations for Breaking the Spell). According to Wieseltier,
Dennett is simply being duplicitous in claiming some sort of Humean
legacy. Wieseltier chooses to ignore the more philosophically radical
elements in Hume’s pamphlet and other writings on religion. He takes
instead one sentence from the preface of the Hume’s pamphlet which avows
theism in the form of an “intelligent author” of nature. Even if Hume
rejected religious ministrations and, while dying “deplored religion as a
source of illusions and crimes,” “his God was still a god and so his
theism is as true or false as any other theism,” says Wieseltier.

This claim is both crude and sloppy. Different theisms differ radically,
agreeing only that one or more gods exist. Wieseltier’s argument makes an
amalgam of Hume’s philosophy of religion and that of very different
traditions. In reality, Hume staked out a very radical position; it is
simply impossible to read The Natural History of Religion and think of it
as merely another form of theism. Hume posits a God that embodies the
remarkable beauty of the natural laws that had been discovered during the
Enlightenment, particularly Newton’s mechanics.

Of course, Hume was writing a century before Darwin and two centuries
before the neo-Darwinian synthesis in biology. After Hume’s death,
science was able to provide a compelling natural explanation for the
development of the material world and of life on Earth. Hume’s conception
could not transcend the historical limitations that were imposed upon
him.

Dennett is more interested in the manner in which Hume pointed to the
value of a comparative study of religion rather than the specific
conclusions that he drew from his preliminary inquiry into the matter.
Dennett points to Hume the investigator, hostile to the official creeds
of his time and eager to make a fresh examination of the historical
development of religion.

Wieseltier argues that Dennett is simply appealing to Hume’s authority in
order to avoid taking on religion directly. “The truth of a religion,” he
says, “cannot be proved by showing that a skeptic was in his way a
believer, or by any other appeal to authority. There is no intellectually
honorable surrogate for rational argument.” By this he attempts to impute
to Dennett intellectual dishonesty for allegedly dodging an issue of
major controversy, as though religion relied on “rational argument” for
its present standing.

Particularly startling are Wieseltier’s conclusions about Dennett’s
citations of Hume. Dennett’s “misrepresentation” of Hume (and, allegedly,
of William James and Thomas Nagel) “illustrates his complacent refusal to
acknowledge the dense and vital relations between religion and reason,
not only historically but also philosophically.” Here is real
obscurantism! The actual relation between religion and reason is, of
course, a generally hostile one. As human society and philosophy
developed, reason came into ever-greater conflict with religion. During
and after the Enlightenment, a secure place for religion within
philosophy was sought, but only by isolating it increasingly from the
scrutiny of reason. To believe Wieseltier, however, one would have to
conclude that reason depended for its very existence on religion!

For Wieseltier, the methods of science have no place in studying
religion; an investigative project such as Dennett proposes is inherently
invalid. This objection is largely unstated in the review, but it can be
inferred not only from the citations above but also from the fact that
Wieseltier never explains that the central purpose of Dennett’s book, in
the words of the author, is to propose a serious and systematic study of
religion using the methods of modern social and natural science. Here is
what Dennett actually says:

“It is high time that we subject religion as a global phenomenon to the
most intensive interdisciplinary research we can muster, calling on the
best minds on the planet. Why? Because religion is too important for us
to remain ignorant about. It affects not just our social, political and
economical conflicts, but the very meanings we find in our lives. For
many people, probably a majority of people on Earth, nothing matters more
than religion. For this very reason, it is imperative that we learn as
much about it as we can. That, in a nutshell, is the argument of this
book.”

Whatever the limitations of the methodology used by Dennett in the
book—and the chief one is an insufficient appreciation of social
stratification in the development and maintenance of religious belief—the
project he proposes is entirely legitimate and timely. His naturalistic
theory of religion’s propagation, inspired by Hume and James but drawing
heavily on analogies suggested by modern biology may have its defects,
but Dennett is not arguing that his ought to be the final theory of
religion, but instead merely that it serve as a starting point for more
systematic theoretical work by “the best minds on the planet.” Whatever
its flaws, Dennett’s present theory is certainly not, as Wieseltier
suggests, “just an extravagant speculation based on his hope for what is
the case, a pious account of his own atheistic longing.”

And what of Wieseltier’s “longings”? They are revealed in statements
like, “There are concepts in many of the fables of faith, philosophical
propositions about the nature of the universe. They may be right or they
may be wrong, but they are there.” Humanity is, therefore, indebted to
religion for these “philosophical prepositions,” which Wieseltier does
not care to enumerate and which, by his own admission, may not even be
true. Dennett, of course, does not deny that concepts about the nature of
the universe are to be found in religion. Unlike Wieseltier, however, he
believes that the veracity of these concepts is determined by their
correspondence to reality. He asks whether they stand up to scientific
scrutiny. And the central idea of Dennett’s book is that the methods of
science should be used to evaluate the veracity of these concepts and,
most importantly, to uncover the reasons that they have found such wide
reception in the course of human history.

Wieseltier claims that science cannot understand the products of human
culture. But he carefully avoids asking the related question: what does
religion understand about their production? Nor does he ask: What facts
has religion uncovered about emotional life? And how do its conclusions
compare with those drawn scientifically?

Wieseltier’s review, as well as the decision of the New York Times Book
Review to publish it, mark another milestone in the backsliding of what
once constituted the liberal intelligentsia in the United States. These
once-liberal elites are increasingly at pains to try to find an
accommodation with the religious right and avoid positions that might
antagonize it. By proposing a detailed study of religion by science,
Dennett has committed an unpardonable sin in the eyes of these select
few: he threatens to expose the nature of the hold that religion
maintains over political life. For this reason the New York Times Book
Review elected to prejudice public opinion against Breaking the Spell in
hopes that the book will fail to find a broad readership. This simply
reflects the fact that for definite social reasons, the entire political
establishment in the US is committed to ensuring that the “spell,” to
which Dennett draws attention in his book, remains unbroken.


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