An Atheist Manifesto
by Sam Harris
www.truthdig.com, 12/7/05
Editor's Note: At a time when fundamentalist
religion has an unparalleled influence in the highest government
levels in the United States, and religion-based terror dominates
the world stage, Sam Harris argues that progressive tolerance
of faith-based unreason is as great a menace as religion itself.
Harris, a philosophy graduate of Stanford who has studied eastern
and western religions, won the 2004 PEN Award for nonfiction for
The End of Faith, which powerfully examines and explodes the absurdities
of organized religion. Truthdig asked Harris to write a charter
document for his thesis that belief in God, and appeasement of
religious extremists of all faiths by moderates, has been and
continues to be the greatest threat to world peace and a sustained
assault on reason.
Somewhere in the world a man has abducted
a little girl. Soon he will rape, torture and kill her. If an
atrocity of this kind is not occurring at precisely this moment,
it will happen in a few hours, or days at most. Such is the confidence
we can draw from the statistical laws that govern the lives of
6 billion human beings. The same statistics also suggest that
this girl s parents believe at this very moment that an all-powerful
and all-loving God is watching over them and their family. Are
they right to believe this? Is it good that they believe this?
No.
The entirety of atheism is contained
in this response. Atheism is not a philosophy; it is not even
a view of the world; it is simply a refusal to deny the obvious.
Unfortunately, we live in a world in which the obvious is overlooked
as a matter of principle. The obvious must be observed and re-observed
and argued for. This is a thankless job. It carries with it an
aura of petulance and insensitivity. It is, moreover, a job that
the atheist does not want.
It is worth noting that no one ever needs
to identify himself as a non-astrologer or a non-alchemist. Consequently,
we do not have words for people who deny the validity of these
pseudo-disciplines. Likewise, atheism is a term that should not
even exist. Atheism is nothing more than the noises reasonable
people make when in the presence of religious dogma. The atheist
is merely a person who believes that the 260 million Americans
(87% of the population) who claim to never doubt the existence
of God should be obliged to present evidence for his existence
and, indeed, for his benevolence, given the relentless destruction
of innocent human beings we witness in the world each day. Only
the atheist appreciates just how uncanny our situation is: Most
of us believe in a God that is every bit as specious as the gods
of Mount Olympus; no person, whatever his or her qualifications,
can seek public office in the United States without pretending
to be certain that such a God exists; and much of what passes
for public policy in our country conforms to religious taboos
and superstitions appropriate to a medieval theocracy. Our circumstance
is abject, indefensible and terrifying. It would be hilarious
if the stakes were not so high.
We live in a world where all things, good
and bad, are finally destroyed by change. Parents lose their children
and children their parents. Husbands and wives are separated in
an instant, never to meet again. Friends part company in haste,
without knowing that it will be for the last time. This life,
when surveyed with a broad glance, presents little more than a
vast spectacle of loss. Most people in this world, however, imagine
that there is a cure for this. If we live rightly-not necessarily
ethically, but within the framework of certain ancient beliefs
and stereotyped behaviors-we will get everything we want after
we die. When our bodies finally fail us, we just shed our corporeal
ballast and travel to a land where we are reunited with everyone
we loved while alive. Of course, overly rational people and other
rabble will be kept out of this happy place, and those who suspended
their disbelief while alive will be free to enjoy themselves for
all eternity.
We live in a world of unimaginable surprises--from
the fusion energy that lights the sun to the genetic and evolutionary
consequences of this lights dancing for eons upon the Earth--and
yet Paradise conforms to our most superficial concerns with all
the fidelity of a Caribbean cruise. This is wondrously strange.
If one didn't know better, one would think that man, in his fear
of losing all that he loves, had created heaven, along with its
gatekeeper God, in his own image.
Consider the destruction that Hurricane
Katrina leveled on New Orleans. More than a thousand people died,
tens of thousands lost all their earthly possessions, and nearly
a million were displaced. It is safe to say that almost every
person living in New Orleans at the moment Katrina struck believed
in an omnipotent, omniscient and compassionate God. But what was
God doing while a hurricane laid waste to their city? Surely he
heard the prayers of those elderly men and women who fled the
rising waters for the safety of their attics, only to be slowly
drowned there. These were people of faith. These were good men
and women who had prayed throughout their lives. Only the atheist
has the courage to admit the obvious: These poor people died talking
to an imaginary friend.
Of course, there had been ample warning
that a storm of biblical proportions would strike New Orleans,
and the human response to the ensuing disaster was tragically
inept. But it was inept only by the light of science. Advance
warning of Katrina's path was wrested from mute Nature by meteorological
calculations and satellite imagery. God told no one of his plans.
Had the residents of New Orleans been content to rely on the beneficence
of the Lord, they wouldn't have known that a killer hurricane
was bearing down upon them until they felt the first gusts of
wind on their faces. Nevertheless, a poll conducted by The Washington
Post found that 80% of Katrina's survivors claim that the event
has only strengthened their faith in God.
As Hurricane Katrina was devouring New
Orleans, nearly a thousand Shiite pilgrims were trampled to death
on a bridge in Iraq. There can be no doubt that these pilgrims
believed mightily in the God of the Koran: Their lives were organized
around the indisputable fact of his existence; their women walked
veiled before him; their men regularly murdered one another over
rival interpretations of his word. It would be remarkable if a
single survivor of this tragedy lost his faith. More likely, the
survivors imagine that they were spared through God's grace.
Only the atheist recognizes the boundless
narcissism and self-deceit of the saved. Only the atheist realizes
how morally objectionable it is for survivors of a catastrophe
to believe themselves spared by a loving God while this same God
drowned infants in their cribs. Because he refuses to cloak the
reality of the world's suffering in a cloying fantasy of eternal
life, the atheist feels in his bones just how precious life is--and,
indeed, how unfortunate it is that millions of human beings suffer
the most harrowing abridgements of their happiness for no good
reason at all.
One wonders just how vast and gratuitous
a catastrophe would have to be to shake the world's faith. The
Holocaust did not do it. Neither did the genocide in Rwanda, even
with machete-wielding priests among the perpetrators. Five hundred
million people died of smallpox in the 20th Century, many of them
infants. God's ways are, indeed, inscrutable. It seems that any
fact, no matter how infelicitous, can be rendered compatible with
religious faith. In matters of faith, we have kicked ourselves
loose of the Earth.
Of course, people of faith regularly assure
one another that God is not responsible for human suffering. But
how else can we understand the claim that God is both omniscient
and omnipotent? There is no other way, and it is time for sane
human beings to own up to this. This is the age-old problem of
theodicy, of course, and we should consider it solved. If God
exists, either he can do nothing to stop the most egregious calamities
or he does not care to. God, therefore, is either impotent or
evil. Pious readers will now execute the following pirouette:
God cannot be judged by merely human standards of morality. But,
of course, human standards of morality are precisely what the
faithful use to establish God's goodness in the first place. And
any God who could concern himself with something as trivial as
gay marriage, or the name by which he is addressed in prayer,
is not as inscrutable as all that. If he exists, the God of Abraham
is not merely unworthy of the immensity of creation; he is unworthy
even of man.
There is another possibility, of course,
and it is both the most reasonable and least odious: The biblical
God is a fiction. As Richard Dawkins has observed, we are all
atheists with respect to Zeus and Thor. Only the atheist has realized
that the biblical god is no different. Consequently, only the
atheist is compassionate enough to take the profundity of the
world's suffering at face value. It is terrible that we all die
and lose everything we love; it is doubly terrible that so many
human beings suffer needlessly while alive. That so much of this
suffering can be directly attributed to religion--to religious
hatreds, religious wars, religious delusions and religious diversions
of scarce resources--is what makes atheism a moral and intellectual
necessity. It is a necessity, however, that places the atheist
at the margins of society. The atheist, by merely being in touch
with reality, appears shamefully out of touch with the fantasy
life of his neighbors.
The Nature of Belief
According to several recent polls, 22% of Americans are certain
that Jesus will return to Earth sometime in the next 50 years.
Another 22% believe that he will probably do so. This is likely
the same 44% who go to church once a week or more, who believe
that God literally promised the land of Israel to the Jews and
who want to stop teaching our children about the biological fact
of evolution. As President Bush is well aware, believers of this
sort constitute the most cohesive and motivated segment of the
American electorate. Consequently, their views and prejudices
now influence almost every decision of national importance. Political
liberals seem to have drawn the wrong lesson from these developments
and are now thumbing Scripture, wondering how best to ingratiate
themselves to the legions of men and women in our country who
vote largely on the basis of religious dogma. More than 50% of
Americans have a "negative" or "highly negative"
view of people who do not believe in God; 70% think it important
for presidential candidates to be "strongly religious."
Unreason is now ascendant in the United States--in our schools,
in our courts and in each branch of the federal government. Only
28% of Americans believe in evolution; 68% believe in Satan. Ignorance
in this degree, concentrated in both the head and belly of a lumbering
superpower, is now a problem for the entire world.
Although it is easy enough for smart people
to criticize religious fundamentalism, something called "religious
moderation" still enjoys immense prestige in our society,
even in the ivory tower. This is ironic, as fundamentalists tend
to make a more principled use of their brains than "moderates"
do. While fundamentalists justify their religious beliefs with
extraordinarily poor evidence and arguments, they at least they
make an attempt at rational justification. Moderates, on the other
hand, generally do nothing more than cite the good consequences
of religious belief. Rather than say that they believe in God
because certain biblical prophecies have come true, moderates
will say that they believe in God because this belief "gives
their lives meaning." When a tsunami killed a few hundred
thousand people on the day after Christmas, fundamentalists readily
interpreted this cataclysm as evidence of God's wrath. As it turns
out, God was sending humanity another oblique message about the
evils of abortion, idolatry and homosexuality. While morally obscene,
this interpretation of events is actually reasonable, given certain
(ludicrous) assumptions. Moderates, on the other hand, refuse
to draw any conclusions whatsoever about God from his works. God
remains a perfect mystery, a mere source of consolation that is
compatible with the most desolating evil. In the face of disasters
like the Asian tsunami, liberal piety is apt to produce the most
unctuous and stupefying nonsense imaginable. And yet, men and
women of goodwill naturally prefer such vacuities to the odious
moralizing and prophesizing of true believers. Between catastrophes,
it is surely a virtue of liberal theology that it emphasizes mercy
over wrath. It is worth noting, however, that it is human mercy
on display--not God's--when the bloated bodies of the dead are
pulled from the sea. On days when thousands of children are simultaneously
torn from their mothers' arms and casually drowned, liberal theology
must stand revealed for what it is--the sheerest of mortal pretenses.
Even the theology of wrath has more intellectual merit. If God
exists, his will is not inscrutable. The only thing inscrutable
in these terrible events is that so many neurologically healthy
men and women can believe the unbelievable and think this the
height of moral wisdom.
It is perfectly absurd for religious moderates
to suggest that a rational human being can believe in God simply
because this belief makes him happy, relieves his fear of death
or gives his life meaning. The absurdity becomes obvious the moment
we swap the notion of God for some other consoling proposition:
Imagine, for instance, that a man wants to believe that there
is a diamond buried somewhere in his yard that is the size of
a refrigerator. No doubt it would feel uncommonly good to believe
this. Just imagine what would happen if he then followed the example
of religious moderates and maintained this belief along pragmatic
lines: When asked why he thinks that there is a diamond in his
yard that is thousands of times larger than any yet discovered,
he says things like, "This belief gives my life meaning,"
or "My family and I enjoy digging for it on Sundays,"
or "I wouldn't want to live in a universe where there wasn't
a diamond buried in my backyard that is the size of a refrigerator."
Clearly these responses are inadequate. But they are worse than
that. They are the responses of a madman or an idiot.
Here we can see why Pascal's wager, Kierkegaard's
leap of faith and other epistemological Ponzi schemes won't do.
To believe that God exists is to believe that one stands in some
relation to his existence such that his existence is itself the
reason for one's belief. There must be some causal connection,
or an appearance thereof, between the fact in question and a person's
acceptance of it. In this way, we can see that religious beliefs,
to be beliefs about the way the world is, must be as evidentiary
in spirit as any other. For all their sins against reason, religious
fundamentalists understand this; moderates--almost by definition--do
not.
The incompatibility of reason and faith
has been a self-evident feature of human cognition and public
discourse for centuries. Either a person has good reasons for
what he strongly believes or he does not. People of all creeds
naturally recognize the primacy of reasons and resort to reasoning
and evidence wherever they possibly can. When rational inquiry
supports the creed it is always championed; when it poses a threat,
it is derided; sometimes in the same sentence. Only when the evidence
for a religious doctrine is thin or nonexistent, or there is compelling
evidence against it, do its adherents invoke "faith."
Otherwise, they simply cite the reasons for their beliefs (e.g.
"the New Testament confirms Old Testament prophecy,"
"I saw the face of Jesus in a window," "We prayed,
and our daughter's cancer went into remission"). Such reasons
are generally inadequate, but they are better than no reasons
at all. Faith is nothing more than the license religious people
give themselves to keep believing when reasons fail. In a world
that has been shattered by mutually incompatible religious beliefs,
in a nation that is growing increasingly beholden to Iron Age
conceptions of God, the end of history and the immortality of
the soul, this lazy partitioning of our discourse into matters
of reason and matters of faith is now unconscionable.
Faith and the Good Society
People of faith regularly claim that atheism is responsible for
some of the most appalling crimes of the 20th century. Although
it is true that the regimes of Hitler, Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot
were irreligious to varying degrees, they were not especially
rational. In fact, their public pronouncements were little more
than litanies of delusion--delusions about race, economics, national
identity, the march of history or the moral dangers of intellectualism.
In many respects, religion was directly culpable even here. Consider
the Holocaust: The anti-Semitism that built the Nazi crematoria
brick by brick was a direct inheritance from medieval Christianity.
For centuries, religious Germans had viewed the Jews as the worst
species of heretics and attributed every societal ill to their
continued presence among the faithful. While the hatred of Jews
in Germany expressed itself in a predominately secular way, the
religious demonization of the Jews of Europe continued. (The Vatican
itself perpetuated the blood libel in its newspapers as late as
1914.)
Auschwitz, the gulag and the killing fields
are not examples of what happens when people become too critical
of unjustified beliefs; to the contrary, these horrors testify
to the dangers of not thinking critically enough about specific
secular ideologies. Needless to say, a rational argument against
religious faith is not an argument for the blind embrace of atheism
as a dogma. The problem that the atheist exposes is none other
than the problem of dogma itself--of which every religion has
more than its fair share. There is no society in recorded history
that ever suffered because its people became too reasonable.
While most Americans believe that getting
rid of religion is an impossible goal, much of the developed world
has already accomplished it. Any account of a "god gene"
that causes the majority of Americans to helplessly organize their
lives around ancient works of religious fiction must explain why
so many inhabitants of other First World societies apparently
lack such a gene. The level of atheism throughout the rest of
the developed world refutes any argument that religion is somehow
a moral necessity. Countries like Norway, Iceland, Australia,
Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, Belgium, Japan, the Netherlands,
Denmark and the United Kingdom are among the least religious societies
on Earth. According to the United Nations' Human Development Report
(2005) they are also the healthiest, as indicated by measures
of life expectancy, adult literacy, per capita income, educational
attainment, gender equality, homicide rate and infant mortality.
Conversely, the 50 nations now ranked lowest in terms of human
development are unwaveringly religious. Other analyses paint the
same picture: The United States is unique among wealthy democracies
in its level of religious literalism and opposition to evolutionary
theory; it is also uniquely beleaguered by high rates of homicide,
abortion, teen pregnancy, STD infection and infant mortality.
The same comparison holds true within the United States itself:
Southern and Midwestern states, characterized by the highest levels
of religious superstition and hostility to evolutionary theory,
are especially plagued by the above indicators of societal dysfunction,
while the comparatively secular states of the Northeast conform
to European norms. Of course, correlational data of this sort
do not resolve questions of causality--belief in God may lead
to societal dysfunction; societal dysfunction may foster a belief
in God; each factor may enable the other; or both may spring from
some deeper source of mischief. Leaving aside the issue of cause
and effect, these facts prove that atheism is perfectly compatible
with the basic aspirations of a civil society; they also prove,
conclusively, that religious faith does nothing to ensure a society's
health.
Countries with high levels of atheism
also are the most charitable in terms of giving foreign aid to
the developing world. The dubious link between Christian literalism
and Christian values is also belied by other indices of charity.
Consider the ratio in salaries between top-tier CEOs and their
average employee: in Britain it is 24 to 1; France 15 to 1; Sweden
13 to 1; in the United States, where 83% of the population believes
that Jesus literally rose from the dead, it is 475 to 1. Many
a camel, it would seem, expects to squeeze easily through the
eye of a needle.
Religion as a Source of Violence
One of the greatest challenges facing civilization in the 21st
century is for human beings to learn to speak about their deepest
personal concerns--about ethics, spiritual experience and the
inevitability of human suffering--in ways that are not flagrantly
irrational. Nothing stands in the way of this project more than
the respect we accord religious faith. Incompatible religious
doctrines have balkanized our world into separate moral communities--Christians,
Muslims, Jews, Hindus, etc.--and these divisions have become a
continuous source of human conflict. Indeed, religion is as much
a living spring of violence today as it was at any time in the
past. The recent conflicts in Palestine (Jews versus Muslims),
the Balkans (Orthodox Serbians versus Catholic Croatians; Orthodox
Serbians versus Bosnian and Albanian Muslims), Northern Ireland
(Protestants versus Catholics), Kashmir (Muslims versus Hindus),
Sudan (Muslims versus Christians and animists), Nigeria (Muslims
versus Christians), Ethiopia and Eritrea (Muslims versus Christians),
Sri Lanka (Sinhalese Buddhists versus Tamil Hindus), Indonesia
(Muslims versus Timorese Christians), Iran and Iraq (Shiite versus
Sunni Muslims), and the Caucasus (Orthodox Russians versus Chechen
Muslims; Muslim Azerbaijanis versus Catholic and Orthodox Armenians)
are merely a few cases in point. In these places religion has
been the explicit cause of literally millions of deaths in the
last 10 years.
In a world riven by ignorance, only the
atheist refuses to deny the obvious: Religious faith promotes
human violence to an astonishing degree. Religion inspires violence
in at least two senses: (1) People often kill other human beings
because they believe that the creator of the universe wants them
to do it (the inevitable psychopathic corollary being that the
act will ensure them an eternity of happiness after death). Examples
of this sort of behavior are practically innumerable, jihadist
suicide bombing being the most prominent. (2) Larger numbers of
people are inclined toward religious conflict simply because their
religion constitutes the core of their moral identities. One of
the enduring pathologies of human culture is the tendency to raise
children to fear and demonize other human beings on the basis
of religion. Many religious conflicts that seem driven by terrestrial
concerns, therefore, are religious in origin. (Just ask the Irish.)
These facts notwithstanding, religious
moderates tend to imagine that human conflict is always reducible
to a lack of education, to poverty or to political grievances.
This is one of the many delusions of liberal piety. To dispel
it, we need only reflect on the fact that the Sept. 11 hijackers
were college educated and middle class and had no discernable
history of political oppression. They did, however, spend an inordinate
amount of time at their local mosque talking about the depravity
of infidels and about the pleasures that await martyrs in Paradise.
How many more architects and mechanical engineers must hit the
wall at 400 miles an hour before we admit to ourselves that jihadist
violence is not a matter of education, poverty or politics? The
truth, astonishingly enough, is this: A person can be so well
educated that he can build a nuclear bomb while still believing
that he will get 72 virgins in Paradise. Such is the ease with
which the human mind can be partitioned by faith, and such is
the degree to which our intellectual discourse still patiently
accommodates religious delusion. Only the atheist has observed
what should now be obvious to every thinking human being: If we
want to uproot the causes of religious violence we must uproot
the false certainties of religion.
Why is religion such a potent source of
human violence?
o Our religions are intrinsically incompatible with one another.
Either Jesus rose from the dead and will be returning to Earth
like a superhero or not; either the Koran is the infallible word
of God or it isn't. Every religion makes explicit claims about
the way the world is, and the sheer profusion of these incompatible
claims creates an enduring basis for conflict.
o There is no other sphere of discourse in which human beings
so fully articulate their differences from one another, or cast
these differences in terms of everlasting rewards and punishments.
Religion is the one endeavor in which us-them thinking achieves
a transcendent significance. If a person really believes that
calling God by the right name can spell the difference between
eternal happiness and eternal suffering, then it becomes quite
reasonable to treat heretics and unbelievers rather badly. It
may even be reasonable to kill them. If a person thinks there
is something that another person can say to his children that
could put their souls in jeopardy for all eternity, then the heretic
next door is actually far more dangerous than the child molester.
The stakes of our religious differences are immeasurably higher
than those born of mere tribalism, racism or politics.
o Religious faith is a conversation-stopper. Religion is only
area of our discourse in which people are systematically protected
from the demand to give evidence in defense of their strongly
held beliefs. And yet these beliefs often determine what they
live for, what they will die for, and--all too often--what they
will kill for. This is a problem, because when the stakes are
high, human beings have a simple choice between conversation and
violence. Only a fundamental willingness to be reasonable--to
have our beliefs about the world revised by new evidence and new
arguments--can guarantee that we will keep talking to one another.
Certainty without evidence is necessarily divisive and dehumanizing.
While there is no guarantee that rational people will always agree,
the irrational are certain to be divided by their dogmas.
It seems profoundly unlikely that we
will heal the divisions in our world simply by multiplying the
opportunities for interfaith dialogue. The endgame for civilization
cannot be mutual tolerance of patent irrationality. While all
parties to liberal religious discourse have agreed to tread lightly
over those points where their worldviews would otherwise collide,
these very points remain perpetual sources of conflict for their
coreligionists. Political correctness, therefore, does not offer
an enduring basis for human cooperation. If religious war is ever
to become unthinkable for us, in the way that slavery and cannibalism
seem poised to, it will be a matter of our having dispensed with
the dogma of faith.
When we have reasons for what we believe,
we have no need of faith; when we have no reasons, or bad ones,
we have lost our connection to the world and to one another. Atheism
is nothing more than a commitment to the most basic standard of
intellectual honesty: One's convictions should be proportional
to one's evidence. Pretending to be certain when one isn't--indeed,
pretending to be certain about propositions for which no evidence
is even conceivable--is both an intellectual and a moral failing.
Only the atheist has realized this. The atheist is simply a person
who has perceived the lies of religion and refused to make them
his own.
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