The World’s Religions – Hinduism

I’ve heard from many sources that the book to read for an impartial look into the major religions and their teachings is The World’s Religions: Our Great Wisdom Traditions by Huston Smith.

The first section of Smith’s book outlines what we can expect the book to be, and what we can expect it not to be. Before we even get to this chapter, however, we can anticipate much of this book just from its subtitle: Our Great Wisdom Traditions. Smith clearly believes first, that religions are great; second, that they impart wisdom; and third, that they are traditions and, being great traditions, will be highly valued. We can see that one of Smith’s value assumptions is that tradition is important, a view that often diminishes the importance of individuality.

To his credit, Smith acknowledges this in Chapter 1. He states that his aim is to “embrace the world,” “take religion seriously,” and is “an effort to communicate.” He states that religions are an attempt to address the divine, that each does so in its own voice, and the purpose of the book is to listen to each of these voices. Further, “the empowering theology and metaphysical truths of the world’s religions are … inspired.” (p. 5)

He further acknowledges that the book ignores the negative aspects of any religion, that the book is not a balanced account of its subject because it is a book about values. He tries to defend this with an analogy. “Probably as much bad music as good has been composed in the course of human history, but we do not expect courses in music appreciation to give it equal attention.” (p. 4) Very weak analogy, as bad music didn’t start the Inquisition, create the caste system in India, or convince people to become suicide bombers. Besides, many music appreciation courses will at least address bad music, because knowing why something is bad can help you in determining what is good. Smith’s rosy look at the religions he discusses might benefit from a more critical eye.

The other assumption the reader has to consider, one that Smith does not acknowledge, is the author’s obvious Christian leanings. On the first page of Chapter 1, he states that he “attended” a Christian service, yet “observed” a service of a non-Christian religion. This subtle difference speaks volumes. In one he was a participant, while in the other he was clearly an observer. There is more evidence of this bias in the next chapter, Hinduism.

Hinduism

Smith states that if Hinduism could be summed up in one phrase or affirmation, it would be “You can have what you want.” The tricky part is discovering what exactly it is that you want. Hinduism believes there are four basic desires that appear in sequence, usually across many human lives of the same soul, or jiva.

The first desire is pleasure, the hedonistic pursuit of nothing but personal pleasure. Of this, we soon tire, and move on to the second desire, worldly success. In this stage we want wealth, fame, and power. Soon, we realize this too is fleeting, and we move on to duty. Duty to family, duty to community, we can define our lives by our service to those around us.

At this stage, many people stop, thinking that this may be what is important. But, eventually every jiva tires of this and asks, “Is this all there is?” This, according to Smith, is the birth of religion. It also moves us to the fourth desire, liberation. In this, we desire infinite being, infinite knowledge, and infinite bliss. We already have these things within us, but they are buried beneath layers of nearly eternal distraction that were created by the first three desires. Hinduism is peeling away these layers and reaching the infinite within us, called Brahman (also called the God-head, or just plain God, by Smith).

If this is the great wisdom tradition that has come out of a culture that has been contemplating human existence for thousands of years, frankly, I am a little disappointed. These 4 desires could simply be translated as the four stages of a human’s life. The first stage is childhood, where we don’t think beyond our immediate needs and do everything possible to fulfill them. The worldly success stage is young adulthood, where we try to forge our way in the world, make a name and career for ourselves. The third stage is when we have established ourselves and now begin to settle down and make a family, and contribute some of our wealth back to the community. The final stage is when we no longer care so much about the worldly material possessions, and start to contemplate our inevitable death. This is when we start looking for infinite being (freedom from death), infinite knowledge (an answer to all of the philosophical questions that we have been unable to answer during our lives), and infinite bliss (an escape from the pain, frustration, and boredom that is much of life).

Not surprising then, that this is where Smith claims the “Birth of Religion” occurs. Of course this is where it occurs, because religion promises all of these things, if you only think as its proponents think. Religion claims to have the answers to all of the questions that terrify us as we approach our inevitable mortality. This is the time people look for non-rational explanations, because the thought of their life just blinking out is often too overwhelming for them .

One redeeming aspect of Hinduism is the belief that there are “many paths up the mountain.” Further, “those who circle the mountain, trying to bring others around to their paths, are not climbing.” (p. 73) Unfortunately, this kind of tolerance is quickly overshadowed when one takes a look at the caste system.

Smith does not go into great detail about how it works, but basically defines the 4 major castes (Brahmin, managers, artisans, and workers) and offers a sort of defense of it. When told that maybe people might have ambitions greater than what their caste allows, a defender states, “What you would like is not the point. The question is what people actually are.” (p. 56) Meaning, of course, that most people would rather be told what to do than have to think for themselves. The fact that castes are considered to be self-governing would seem to belie that statement. Who acts as the administrator of the Worker caste? If they are all drones and none of them are able to be burdened with management and administration, how could they possibly rule themselves? Wouldn’t it be sheer anarchy? Every time I think about the caste system it makes my blood boil. Smith is far too tolerant of caste, especially after having stated that he would not discuss the bad about religions. This implicitly means that he thinks the caste system is good, or at least of value.

I have real questions about Smith. Throughout the chapter, he makes Christian references to saints and the bible, consistently equates Brahman with capital G God, and states that the many gods present in Hinduism are merely incarnations of the same single God. Whether this is because it is true, or because this is the way Smith interprets it is hard to say. For all I know, he could be thinking that all religions are just various aspects of Christianity, and therefore he relates everything back to his Christian frame of reference.

I have taken a break from the book for a while, as I will need the time to digest each section on each religion. At this point, I don’t think Smith can be considered the last word on any of these religions. I’m not even sure he should be considered the first word.

Book of Job

I have heard that many people find solace in the Book of Job during difficult times. Having just read it for the first time, I find this inconceivable.

The plot, in a nutshell: Satan is in God’s neighborhood and stops by for a chat. God points out the most righteous man on earth, and as a way of showing off, tells Satan he can do anything he wants to Job, short of killing him, and Job will keep his faith. Satan bankrupts Job, kills his family, and covers him in boils. Job is then visited by some friends and he tells them he would like to speak with God to so he can learn what he he has done that displeased God. His friends tell him he must have deserved God’s wrath, and who is he to try to divine the mind of God. Finally, God gets so mad about these men talking about him that he makes his voice appear in the wind to tell Job and his friends that they are impudent for daring to ask any of these questions, and to try to understand God’s will at all. When Job throws himself at God’s mercy and apologizes for his impudence, God restores all that was taken from him.

Perhaps there is comfort in knowing that even the righteous are apt to suffer, and we are not meant to understand God’s will. I might be able to buy that interpretation, if it weren’t for the first scene, where God basically brags about Job, and then uses him to impress Satan. As the reader, we know God’s will and can therefore see how petty he is acting. His tirade at the end almost seems as if he’s embarrassed by his own behavior, and makes up for it by demanding obedience and telling Job he is not worthy to know why he was punished. And Job, like a battered dog, returns to his master with his head hanging low.

Perhaps the solace come from knowing that God is paying attention to our lives at all, and it is a comfort to know that there is a greater purpose for our suffering, albeit one that is hidden from us. But, knowing that it might be just because God wants to show off to his nemesis certainly doesn’t comfort me.

… other?

So then, what’s left? I’m not an atheist (I know of plenty of atheists who still believe in their share of woo), agnostic doesn’t adequately describe my worldview, and the one term that does describe it is not one I will be using anytime soon.

But, if it does adequately describe my worldview, perhaps it is worthwhile to look at it one more time.

A bright is a person who has a naturalistic worldview that is free of supernatural and mystical elements.

In other words, I do not believe in anything that cannot be verified, if not by me, then at least by a process that I know I can trust. In our limited knowledge, this process can only be the scientific process.

Immediately, some people will read that and accuse me of having a bias, tell me that I favor science over other belief systems. Such an interpretation would reveal a comprehensive misunderstanding of science, a view that science is simply another belief system, on a par with religion.

Science is not a belief system. It is a process, through which we learn about the universe. The scientific process is the only reliable way we have of reaching a generally agreed upon consensus in a manner that is transparent and verifiable.

Carl Sagan, in his book The Demon-Haunted World, describes the scientific process:

Science thrives on errors, cutting them away one by one. False conclusions are drawn all the time, but they are drawn tentatively. Hypotheses are framed so they are capable of being disproved. A succession of of alternative hypotheses is confronted by experiment and observation. Science gropes and staggers toward improved understanding. Proprietary feelings are of course offended when a scientific hypothesis is disproved, but such disproofs are recognized as central to the scientific enterprise. (pps 20-21)

In other words, science encourages dissent. That bears repeating. Science encourages dissent. The only way to actively find the best solution to a particular question is to encourage people to disagree with the accepted norms. By presenting a new idea, one opens oneself up to criticism, and more importantly, opens one’s ideas up for debate. Others examine one’s evidence, test it, try to disprove or falsify it, and if they fail, one’s ideas are accepted. All ideas are open to scrutiny, and no one can claim special knowledge of anything.

An example Sagan gives of this is Einstein presenting his General Theory of Relativity. In his paper, Einstein was challenging and extrapolating on Isaac Newton’s ideas. In physics, this was tantamount to challenging the pope. The difference, of course, being that Newton never was the pope, and no one considered his words to be infallible.

This is where science differs fundamentally from religion and other woo. Religion is based purely on revelation, defined by Wordnet as “communication of knowledge to man by a divine or supernatural agency.” Though perhaps it would be more accurate to say “communication of knowledge to a man…,” because that is usually what it is. A single individual has a transforming experience, and relays it to other individuals, who then claim it as truth. Unfortunately, these revelations are almost never verifiable, and are accepted purely on, wait for it, faith.

Being faith-based, information by revelation is unverifiable, and is also therefore unable to be questioned. If one accepts it, one cannot question it. Dissent is forbidden. When dissent is forbidden, doctrine and accepted truth does not change. This does not add to our knowledge, but instead only increases our ignorance by blinding us to the world around us.

If I cannot verify your revelation, and if I do not believe it unquestionably, how can we ever reach a consensus? If you tell me that a 900-foot tall apparition told you no one should ever sleep on queen-sized beds, because it is against god’s law, why should I believe you?

If, on the other hand, I tell you that a queen box-spring mattress will not fit down my stairs, you are welcome to test it for yourself. I am not asking you to accept it as truth solely on my word alone. You are welcome to try to get that mattress into my bedroom, even though I could not. In fact, if you tried, and succeeded, I would be nothing but delighted. (Seriously, if you think you can, call me.)

That is the difference. Revelation is expecting everyone else to believe you, simply because you said it is so. Science is asking everyone to test your ideas, so that we can all agree that something is so. One is dictatorship, the other democracy.

Since people almost always disagree about how a society should function, society can only flourish if it can reach consensus. It can only reach consensus if all facts and propositions are available for examination and verification, not dictated by revelation and deification.

…brights…

As I have said numerous times before in this blog, I do not think that what I say is particularly original. I would be quite surprised to learn that anything I have written here has not been said or written before, more eloquently, by someone else. Therefore, it was no great shock for me to learn that someone else, a lot of someone elses, in fact, felt the same way I did about atheism and many of its image problems.

Enter The Brights. A term originally coined by Mynga Futrell and Paul Geisert of Sacramento, CA, the Brights were an inspirational flash for many of the godless. According to the website,

  • A bright is a person who has a naturalistic worldview
  • A bright’s worldview is free of supernatural and mystical elements
  • The ethics and actions of a bright are based on a naturalistic worldview

Or, said in another way, a bright “doesn’t believe in supernatural entities and… roots one’s understanding of morality in an understanding of nature and not in revelation.”

The idea is to have a positive definition of a person who has a naturalistic, non-religious, view of the world, as opposed to someone who just doesn’t believe in a god. This, in turn can help improve the image of non-believers, while at the same time organizing them into a potent force to speak against the many insults that are handed out to them every day. (Don’t believe me when I say “every day”? Reach in your pocket, pull out some money… you know the rest. Think this is trivial? Change the words. “In Allah We Trust” or better yet, “In Science We Trust.” Or best yet, “We trust in no god, but trust only in ourselves.” A little too long for a coin, though.)

This is an idea I can start to get comfortable with. Until I start thinking about the name. Bright? Why bright? According to the Daniel Dennet, it is not meant to be an adjective, not meant to be arrogant. It is “not a boast but a proud avowal of an inquisitive world view.” Unfortunately, not everyone agrees.

Dinesh D’Souza, who wishes he was the burr under the atheist saddle, but is really more of a thistle that brushes gently against the socks, states “Mr. Dennett, like many atheists, is confident that atheists are simply brighter–more rational–than religious believers.”

Even someone who might otherwise be considered a friend of brights, Chris Mooney at the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, says, “The ‘bright’ kids aren’t always the ones with the most friends, and nobody — nobody — likes a smart ass.”

If you are trying to start a movement that dispels the myth of arrogance, it might not be the best thing to come right out and call yourself a synonym for smart.

As a whole, I agree completely with the idea of the brights. I subscribe to their ideals, and am excited by the idea of movement toward more naturalistic thinking in government and society.

I just hate the name. And like atheist or agnostic, I don’t think I’ll be calling myself a bright anytime soon.

Atheists…

As I stated before, I have never been of a religious mindset. My parents were married in the Unitarian church, and I don’t believe I ever set foot in a church with either one of them unless it was to attend someone else’s wedding. I have never been baptized, confirmed, or bar mitzvahed, and religion has never played a significant role in my life. I have always been fascinated by it, respected what it does for some people, and felt that it has been responsible for some pretty great art. Because of this, I thought there might be some benefit to a belief in something bigger than ourselves, enough so that I decided to put it on my list, #33 – Find god(s).

When I put it on the list, I had no idea what it really meant, hence the “s” inside of parentheses. I knew that it didn’t mean “convert to [established religion]” and was probably meant more as a path to learn about religion. That I don’t exactly know what I was thinking when I added it a few years ago is indicative of my ambivalence.

Some tell me that I should call myself an agnostic, a- meaning “without” and gnosis being the Greek for “knowledge,” and therefore meaning, literally, “without knowledge.” Agnostics prefer the definition given by Wordnet at Princeton,

a person who claims that they cannot have true knowledge about the existence of God (but does not deny that God might exist).

But looking at the other definition given by WordNet, “someone who is doubtful or noncommittal about something,” I see why I’ve never liked this term. Though I may agree with the first definition, overall it is just too wishy-washy for me.

While I may once have felt that I was agnostic, my path towards critical thinking has changed that, as it almost demands that I evaluate my own assumptions and get off the fence. One thing I noticed while visiting many of the skeptic and critical thinking sites was a red A, a scarlet letter of sorts. Clicking on it brought me here, to the Out Campaign.

The idea is that it is time for atheists to come out of hiding and declare themselves as such. As Richard Dawkins, outspoken atheist and founder of the campaign, writes on the site, “a major part of our consciousness-raising effort should be aimed, not at converting the religious but at encouraging the non-religious to admit it – to themselves, to their families, and to the world.”

Most people are probably aware of what is being called the New Atheism or the Atheist Backlash, either a levee against the fundamentalist tide that threatens to flood western society, or an influx of irreverent ideas that threaten the morals and thus the very structure of our society, depending of course on your viewpoint. Regardless of your particular slant, it is most definitely a group of people standing up against what they see as an infringement of their rights. And it is very difficult to disagree with them.

There are verbal assaults being launched against non-believers all across the US. One candidate for President claimed that “freedom requires religion,” while another proposes to change the Constitution so it is more in line with his god’s law. In a much-quoted 1999 Gallup poll, 48% of Americans said they would not vote for an atheist for president, a higher percentage than any of the other choices (Catholic, black , Jewish, woman, Baptist, Mormon, Muslim, and Gay being the others). Further, a March 2007 survey by Newsweek magazine stated that 62% of respondents wouldn’t vote for an atheist, and a 2003 Pew Research poll showed that 54% of respondents had a mostly unfavorable view of atheists. (1) To put it in a little bit of perspective, substitute another word, such as Jewish, for the word atheist, and you can see how discriminatory the prevailing attitude is.

Frankly, those numbers are so shocking to me, I can see why many atheists are fighting back. They are attempting to launch a counter-attack, explaining who they are and what they believe. American Atheists states, “An Atheist has no religious belief. An Atheist does not believe in a god or gods, or other supernatural entities.” Further,

The Atheist position regarding all divinities can be summed up succinctly. The evidence for one equals the evidence for all the others. In other words, the arguments supporting the existence of Jupiter, Zeus, Horus, Jesus, Mithra, Jehovah, or the cosmic muffin are all equally zero. Thus one can conclude that it is hardly feasible to attack something which does not exist. We simply do not buy any of the “god-explanations” that are popular today, or were popular at anytime. They are not reasonable. They do not make any sense. That is not a crime, nor a cause for immorality.

At their core, atheists believe there is no such thing as a god, of any sort, from any cultural tradition, and that all belief should be centered on natural explanation, as opposed to supernatural faith. With this, I can generally get on board. I would only quibble with the wording.

Where I begin to have the problem, is in the way they choose to define themselves. I cannot define myself in opposition to something I find irrelevant. Calling myself an atheist would be like calling myself an Easter Bunny Separatist. Some have tried to refute this, by stating that being an atheist is no different than being an in-dependent (one without a dependence), but this just proves my point. An independent what? Voter? Then you are defining yourself as being independent of the political parties. An independent country? Then you are defining yourself as not being dependent on another country. Independence would have no meaning if there were no such idea as dependence.

Where I continue to have a problem is that most of the atheists I see truly are defining themselves as being in opposition to religionists. Most of the atheist blogs I’ve seen post articles mocking the boobs who are so thick as to believe in a god, typically referring to that god as “sky-daddy” or some other pejorative name implying the infantile mind of the believer, and you won’t believe what they’ve done now, etc etc etc. Sometimes, there is a call to action to fight some fundamentalist or another, trying to seize control of the local school board, but mostly it is mocking.

And this is why non-atheists have the opinion they do of atheists. Atheists are smart-asses, people who think they are smarter than theists because they can see through the superstition and can see reality. (While there does seem to be an inverse relationship between education level and religiosity, I suspect as a percentage of the total, there are just as many idiot atheists as there are idiot theists.) I think though, that this perception is not quite fair. Certainly, there are many outspoken, name-calling atheists who genuinely believe they are smarter than theists. (These are probably also the dumbest atheists.) The perception seems more to come from the theists’ own insecurities, than from any real statements made by atheists.

Atheists use terms such as “critical thinking” and immediately a theist takes that to mean that the atheist has just said that theists do not think critically. According to the basics of critical thinking, and using evidence to support one’s claim, theists, in fact, are not using critical thinking skills. That does not make them stupid; it makes them faithful, or credulous, depending upon your view.

The big problem arises when theists attempt to take on atheists directly, and then actually do become a bit stupid. One way of doing this is to counter-attack using the same critical thinking tools used by atheists (and scientists, and skeptics, and philosophers, and many others). An example of this is Dinesh D’Souza, fellow at the Hoover Institute at Stanford. (I have never been prouder to be a Cal bear.) In his attack on atheists in the Wall Street Journal in October of 2003, D’Souza states,

The atheist foolishly presumes that reason is in principle capable of figuring out all that there is, while the theist at least knows that there is a reality greater than, and beyond, that which our senses and our minds can ever apprehend.

This, he argues, is the atheist fallacy, or the fallacy of the Enlightenment. Unfortunately for D’Souza, his argument is a better known fallacy, called the straw man. An atheist, or anyone with a naturalistic worldview, does not necessarily presume this. Instead, non-religionists believe that nothing that cannot be verified by experiment should be accepted as a universal truth solely because someone in authority says it is so. Plus, a theist “knows”? How? This is exactly the kind of argument from revelation that atheists abhor, and stand against.

Another way theists try to take on atheists is by attempting to “prove” their views. This is probably the worst. Look at former child star Kirk Cameron and his Aussie cohort, Ray Comfort. This, really, is just embarrassing for everyone. Comfort “proved” the existence of his god, basically by saying, “C’mon, I mean, look at the banana!” Cameron has tried to disprove evolution by holding up a badly photo-shopped image of a hybridized animal while saying, “Have you ever seen a croco-duck?”

That anyone of a scientific bent ever tries to engage with these two men is really a shame, but that doesn’t stop everyone. Last May these two had a debate with two atheist members of the Rational Response Squad at the Calvary Baptist Church in Manhattan. While I would expect that the arguments of Comfort and Cameron would be so obviously hollow and meaningless as to not even merit responses, these 2 atheists really tried to engage with them. On Nightline, discussing the event, Brian Sapient, one of the atheists, said, “if I knew that their belief system was flawed and I didn’t say anything, I would find that much more disrespectful [than telling them that they are wrong].” Basically he is being courteous in telling them that they are idiots.

Does anyone actually wonder why atheists are perceived as arrogant know-it-alls?

No, calling myself an atheist is probably not something I will ever do.