Saturday, February 29, 2020
A paradox of grief
41,000 denominations
"There are no unborn children in science"
There are no unborn children in science, Ted. There are fetuses. If you can’t get basic terminology correct, then take a seat in the back of class and shut up because the adults are talking. https://t.co/JOdRdGDeOC
— Jennifer Gunter (@DrJenGunter) February 28, 2020
1. Philosopher Kyle Blanchette responded to Gunter and her ilk months ago.
2. The basic issue is that
And yet, and yet...
Greg Koukl:
I was reading the L.A. Times today in the letters to the editor section and there was a letter written by a gentleman in Newport Beach that was a response to a tragic story that the Times had carried a few days ago. Maybe some of you had seen that story or have read about it in the local papers about not just the rank and file tragedy in Bosnia-Hertzegovena, not about the general tragedy of war. The article was about the problems of the refugees and also a women being victimized by soldiers.
This respondent writes, "Glancing at your April 10 paper my eyes fell upon the tragic story 'Ordeals Put Off Bosnia Rape Victim's Healing.' My heart ached for Amira, the 35 year old Muslim woman, mother of two children, suffering the loss of her husband, wandering about the countryside begging to survive. Placed in a detention camp, raped repeatedly by Serb soldiers acting as animal pigs rather than humans, the woman became another tragic victim of human wickedness. Where is mankind headed? My thoughts turn to God and ask, 'Why, God? Why did you create such monsters? God, are you for real?' If this is God's way of teaching or testing my faith", he continues, " then my beliefs and faith are being shattered with contempt instead. Having just lost my wife to cancer, maybe my feelings are more prone and fragile to be torn apart and my feelings turn more intensely to those who are suffering also." It's signed Victor Jashinski in Newport Beach.
Were humans originally vegetarian?
i) The language is permissive rather than contrastive. It doesn't say they were granted vegetation as opposed to meat. Although the verse allowed for that distinction, it's not a logical implication of the verse. The verse isn't worded in terms of two antithetical sources of food, where one is verboten.
ii) Explicitly stating that vegetation is generally permissible to eat might be theologically relevant insofar as it foreshadows the significance of two particular trees in Gen 2, one of which is forbidden.
iii) Gen 1:24-26 includes a category of livestock. Normally, certain kinds of livestock are consumed. Indeed, that's one reason to domesticate them. It's easier than hunting.
But even if we don't press that issue, some livestock are also used as a food supplement for milk and eggs. But even on that "vegetarian" interpretation, the intended scope of Gen 1:29 can't be confined to an exclusively plant-based diet (fruits, nuts, roots). Rather, it presumptively includes supplementary food provided by farm animals, even if, for the sake of argument, we don't insist that they were butchered for meat. But that means the licit original diet of man was already wider than Gen 1:29.
The only alternative is to suppose the livestock were used as beasts of burden, rather than a food source of any kind. But that's highly artificial, and unlikely that the original audience would draw that dichotomy.
iv) In addition, the tree of life wasn't give for food, but it was permissible to eat. So a food stuff isn't the only function of plants, in the creation account.
v) Humans often prefer herbivores to carnivores for meat. (That depends in part on what's available for consumption.) So there's an indirect link between a meat diet for humans and a vegetarian diet for livestock and game animals. A vegetarian diet is foundational to a meat diet.
vi) Another way of putting this is that Gen 1:29 is permissive rather than prohibitive. Although the wording is consistent with a ban on meat-eating, that's not entailed by the wording.
Moreover, given repeated references to livestock in the same account, it's implausible that a human diet consisting only of vegetation was originally allowed. The narrator couldn't reasonably expect the original audience to have such a restrictive view of what livestock is for.
Even if, for the sake of argument, we think Gen 1:29 excludes the consumption of livestock, how could it also be understood to exclude the consumption of milk and eggs from livestock?
What's the point of livestock? Other than a source of food, the only other function is beasts of burden, but God created Eden with an orchard, It already had fruit trees. So there was no pressing need farm the land with oxen.
Of course, humans domesticated wolves for guarding and hunting, but that's not terribly consonant with the vegetarian interpretation.
Mind you, the reference to livestock might seem anachronistic in a creation account. Did God directly create livestock? Are they not, by definition, domesticated wild animals?
So the reference might be proleptic. But even so, livestock are represented as part of the original goodness of creation, and not a natural evil due to the fall.
Friday, February 28, 2020
When atheism crumbles
My father was the philosopher and political polemicist David Stove. During his undergraduate years, he fell under the spell of the militantly atheistic guru John Anderson of the University of Sydney's philosophy department.
Shortly before Christmas 1993, my mother—who for decades had drunk heavily, smoked compulsively, and eaten hardly at all—suffered a massive stroke. At first she was not expected to live. Gradually, the truth emerged: the stroke, while not powerful enough to have killed her, had robbed her of all speech and nearly all movement.
To watch an adult abruptly transformed before one's eyes into a paralyzed, whimpering vegetable, all too conscious (at least in a general fashion) of what had befallen her, yet as powerless to rectify anything as if she had been six months old, is in a way worse than losing a loved one to Alzheimer's. There, at least, the decay is gradual. This was as abrupt an assault on life as if it had been a homicide. But a homicide can instill in you justified wrath; how can you feel wrath against as impersonal a cutting-down as befell my mother?
From the day of her stroke to the day of her death, almost eight years afterwards, she was in twenty-four-hour-a-day nursing care. By that time my father had long since left the scene. Diagnosed with esophageal cancer, and convinced beyond all reason that his announcement of this diagnosis to Mum had brought about her stroke, Dad simply unraveled. So, to a lesser extent, did those watching him.
All Dad's elaborate atheist religion, with its sacred texts, its martyrs, its church militant; all his ostentatious tough-mindedness; all his intellectual machinery; all these things turned to dust. Convinced for decades of his stoicism, he now unwittingly demonstrated the truth of Clive James's cruel remark: "we would like to think we are stoic...but would prefer a version that didn't hurt."
Already an alcoholic, he now made a regular practice of threatening violence to himself and others. In hospital he wept like a child (I had never before seen him weep). He denounced the nurses for their insufficient knowledge of Socrates and Descartes. From time to time he wandered around the ward naked, in the pit of confused despair. The last time I visited him I found him, to my complete amazement, reading a small bedside Gideon Bible. I voiced surprise at this. He fixed on me the largest, most protuberant, most frightened, and most frightening pair of eyes I have ever seen: "I'll try anything now."
Eventually, through that gift for eloquence which seldom entirely deserted him, Dad convinced a psychiatrist that he should be released from the enforced hospital confinement which he had needed to endure ever since his threats had caused him to be scheduled. The psychiatrist defied the relevant magistrate's orders, and released my father.
Within twenty-four hours Dad had hanged himself in his own garden.
Chic apostates
Earliest evidence for the Resurrection
Why I'm still a Christian
Women, children, and Christianity
Between 31-38 minutes
Dr. Masson discusses how Christianity and the chivalric tradition transformed and upgraded the value of women and children compared to pagan cultures.
12 hard questions
Does God have desires?
Thursday, February 27, 2020
Ash Wednesday
"No country is going to escape [the coronavirus]"
Dr. Amesh Adalja offers his thoughts on the coronavirus in a video here. I've transcribed his remarks in the video below.
So my name is Amesh Adalja. I'm a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. I'm a board certified infectious disease and critical care physician based in Pittsburgh. I work on pandemic preparededness, emerging infectious disease, the intersection of infectious disease and national security, as well as hospital preparededness.I think we are in the beginning stages of a pandemic. I think this pandemic will be mild. Maybe around the scale of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic. It will likely not cause the virus to completely disappear from the world. I think it will become something that may become seasonal until we have a vaccine. And we may deal with this coronavirus in future winter respiratory virus seasons.
The biggest thing the United States needs to do right now is move from a mentality that's tried to contain this virus to one where they're starting to work on mitigating the impact of this virus. That means shifting away from travel bans, quarantines, isolation, and moving towards preparing our healthcare systems to be able to deal with the surge of patients they may have, increasing vaccine development, increasing antiviral clinical trials, scaling up diagnostic tests, improving public health communications. That's really what we need to be doing, and not squandering precious resources on travel bans and quarantining individuals.
We've been dealing with this virus at least since November. It's been spreading in China since November, unbeknownst to anybody. So if you think that a virus that has respiratory spread efficiently through human populations doesn't get around the world very quickly, you really don't know very much about viruses. Overly restrictive testing criteria is going to limit our ability to deal with this virus, and it's also going to panic the public because now the public has been told: "Oh, now there's community spread". But we knew community spread was likely occurring, but the restrictive testing policies that were in place made it very, very hard to test individuals who didn't have a strong link to the epicenter of the outbreak. And that epicenter is going to become less and less important as we see cases spreading all over the globe.
The only way that you can tell that this is a coronavirus caused illness vs. another virus for example, like influenza, is to do the diagnostic testing. The symptoms are clinically indistinguishable. You would not be able to tell the difference between somebody who had the flu and someone who had coronavirus without doing a specific test.
This is a virus that doesn't have a specific antiviral or a vaccine for it. So at an individual level you really have to use a lot of common sense. Some of the same types of principles you use during flu season. Wash your hands a lot. Avoid sick people. If you are sick yourself, stay away from other people - stay home. Cough into your elbow. Those types of measures are the best things you can do.
Specifically now with coronavirus it's important to be tuned into what your local public health department is doing, or your state health department if you don't have a local health department, so that you know what's going on in your community and in your area. You also might want to talk to your employers or maybe the schools that your children go to and ask them what are the policies that are going to be in place so that you know about them ahead of time. For example, maybe there's a telecommuting program. Maybe there is an alternative school childcare that you may need to use. Those types of actions, to do them now, to get some information now, is much better than doing it on the fly when you have community spread of this virus.
But we do know that this is going to be all over the world. And it's going to be really be hard to avoid eventually, this virus, no matter where you go, because it's a virus that spreads efficiently in human populations. Because of that, no country is going to escape it. It's going to be like 2009 H1N1 which infected over a billion people in six months. (People have also fogotten that statistic.)
The big mystery is really the case fatality ratio. How many cases are mild vs. how many are severe or fatal. We have a very skewed sample from China because we're hearing mostly about the severe cases that end up in the hospital or healthcare facilities. We don't know about all the cases that are out in the community that have very mild symptoms - maybe just a runny nose - that aren't qualifying for testing. The biggest question is what's the denominator? How big of a population is affected by this virus? Is it already out there causing lots of mild illnesses? That will really bring down the case fatality ratio because so many people are infected it's only a small number of people that have severe disease or fatal disease.
We also want to know who's at most risk for having severe complications. We know that it's elderly people with immunocompromised conditions, other medical conditions. We want to be able to get very good clarity on that and understand who is at most risk. Especially when we get into the time when we have a vaccine and we want to prioritize who we vaccinate first, who we give antivirals to first, who needs more closer monitoring, who needs less closer monitoring. All of those questions need to be answered. And that will help when we get better diagnostic testing and more time with this virus and the clinical care of patients with this virus.
Revisiting the unforgivable sin
Artificially isolating the problem of evil
In order to have a specific example before us, consider the case of Dominick Calhoun, a four-year-old boy from Michigan who died after days of being beaten and burned by his mother's boyfriend. "I've been doing this a long time, and this is the worst case of child abuse I've ever seen," said the local police chief about Dominick's case: "in all respects, he was tortured." Dominick's body was found covered with bruises and with all of his teeth knocked out. His grandmother reported that "burns covered his body" and that his brain was "bashed out of his skull." A neighbor told police he heard Dominick screaming over and over again, "Mommy, make him stop." The allegation is that God, being perfect, would have prevented Dominick's torture. Stephen Maitzen, "Normative Objections to Theism," G. Oppy, ed. A Companion to Atheism and Philosophy (Wiley-Blackwell 2019), 205.
The Bible, the Koran, and Jesus
Should we worry about the coronavirus?
As people know, the coronavirus (i.e. SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19) is running rampant in China. It's an epidemic in China, but the question is whether it'll become a pandemic that will hit our shores too.
- The coronavirus effectively already is a pandemic (e.g. China, Italy), but it hasn't been officially announced that it is, as far as I'm aware. So what does that mean? At the most basic level the term "pandemic" refers to how widespread a disease is (e.g. sustained transmission). For example, the common cold and the flu are technically pandemics each cold or flu season. However, we don't typically worry about them. So a pandemic alone doesn't necessarily mean it'll be horrible news for humanity, though of course it's not as if a pandemic is a good thing.
- We'd have to consider additional factors in order to figure out how bad it'll be for us. For starters, and as I've mentioned in the past, we'd have to consider a disease's infection (i.e. R0) rate and its fatality rate. If these are high enough, and if the disease is also a pandemic, then that's potentially quite disconcerting. These rates are based on the empirical data; more on the data in a moment.
- Still, there are limitations. I don't think the coronavirus is going to wipe out humanity. Christians in particular should trust God's sovereignty here.
Also, at least based on the data so far, I doubt even in a worst case scenario the coronavirus will be as bad as the Spanish flu in 1918 which on most estimates infected about 500 million people (~25% of the world's population at the time) and killed between 50 million to 100 million people (including ~650,000 Americans), making the Spanish influenza one of the deadliest diseases in history.
For one thing, infectious disease experts have been expecting and warning about an eventual coronavirus to emerge, which it did. Likewise medical care has advanced by leaps and bounds since 1918 (e.g. vastly improved sterilization techniques, hygiene education, antibiotics and antivirals, the very idea of an intensive care unit involving intubation, vents, hemodynamic monitoring, etc.). And we're not coming out of a world war.
- That said, most Western medical experts are highly skeptical of the data coming out of China. We don't know how reliable the numbers are. Sure, China has been more trustworthy than in the past, but that's not saying much, I don't think. To be fair, the data from developed nations is likely more reliable (e.g. Japan, S. Korea).
In addition, though it seems we're prepared, there may be some cracks beneath the surface. A recent concern is what UC Davis reported.
Also, it wouldn't necessarily take much for our medical facilities to be overwhelmed. We may be well-prepared, but even the most well-prepared place could easily become overwhelmed if enough people in an area need their services. Some places are better than others.
And in general I don't trust mainstream media, nor international organizations like the WHO (e.g. see here). At best, there are a lot of people out there who don't know what they don't know.
- In short, on the one hand, I don't think we should panic about the coronavirus. I don't think it's generally helpful to panic even when something might be worth panicking about.
On the other hand, I don't think we should have little or no concern about the coronavirus. It's not implausible that the coronavirus becomes overwhelming even for developed nations.
- Instead I think we should be realistically prepared.
One thing I'd think is a good idea is if people buy basic supplies now rather than later. That's because if the coronavirus situation does worsen considerably, then it's possible there will be a supply shortage (e.g. Senator Josh Hawley's remarks).
I'm referring to items like food and water. If someone has dependents, then make sure their needs are provided for (e.g. diapers for babies, drug prescriptions refilled for the elderly). That sort of thing.
Likewise basic medical supplies (e.g. adult and infant medications like ibuprofen, cough syrups, hand sanitizers, band-aids, gauze, gloves, injection needles, surgical masks).
Anyway, no need to panic, but prepare.
- I think it'd be best to follow physicians and other relevant experts for news about the coronavirus. For example, consider following Roger Seheult who is a pulmonary and critical care physician (as well as a 7th Day Adventist in Loma Linda, California). Another pulmonologist and critical care physician is Michael Hansen. A person I only recently heard about is the virologist Ian Mackay, but he seems reliable so far. Eric Strong is a hospitalist at Stanford University, though he's quite liberal and sometimes unduly critical of Trump, but I just ignore the politics and focus on the medicine. Amesh Adalja is solid.
Wednesday, February 26, 2020
Our errant brains
Of course we well know people believe, and have believed, tons of obviously false supernatural nonsense, and done so because our brains were not intelligently designed and make countless errors in evaluating reality, unless we tame our errant brains with more reliable methods.
Carrier bungles the argument from miracles
Living gods don’t need ancient poorly attested miracles as evidence of their creeds. Living gods can work living miracles. The reliance, therefore, on long dead tales to support the existence of living gods, is a fallacy of the first order. It would only be necessary in a world without gods. Which is why we can know such is the world we live in.
If he performed miracles anciently, he should be doing so presently, indeed all the more, as the population in need of them is now a thousand times in size—so miracles should be thousands of times more frequent.
ii) For that matter, not all biblical miracles are beneficial. Some are quite destructive. They may help some humans by harming others.
You can explain your way out of that with a bunch of made-up “assumptions” about how God would behave differently than any other person in the same circumstances; but such “gerrymandering” your theory would only reduce the probability of that God existing, not rescue it from disproof as you might irrationally have thought.
What remains is scenario one: God performed tons of miracles in antiquity—parted seas, rained fire from heaven, turned people into salt, transformed sticks into snakes, raised the dead, turned water into wine, became incarnate, flew into space, mystically murdered thousands of pigs, erased the sun. On and on. But now he doesn’t.
And that’s why miracles are never believable. If the world were the sort of place miracles really occurred, we’d have tons of solid evidence of that fact by now. Yet we have accumulated no solid evidence of it. None.
Viruses have rights too!
Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-toss'd to me!
Have people forgotten that a virus is a living entity?
— Titania McGrath (@TitaniaMcGrath) February 26, 2020
As a vegan and humanitarian, I welcome all refugees of any species.
And yes, that includes the coronavirus. #BeKind
Quarantine is just infection shaming. Stop the hate
— Shaun (@DubbleH33lix) February 26, 2020
Agreed. We must respect #COVIDー19's right to life. ✊🏽
— 🌈✊🏾🧕🏿Clunge Fairy ☪️♀️🇻🇪 (@ConceptualMinge) February 26, 2020
But if the pathogen in question should become pregnant and wish to abort the living entity growing inside it then that's an entirely different matter.
MY👏VIRUS👏MY👏CHOICE👏
Weeding evil
Here's a thoughtful response to facile charges of OT "genocide" by Iain Provan:
Dear RJS:
I've been following with great interest your posts on Seriously Dangerous Religion for the last several months, and all the comments they have generated. I want to thank you very much for your thorough and accurate reporting on the content of the book – I feel very well represented!
Now that your posts are concluded, I wonder if I could enter the discussion on the point that is the focus of the final one? In this post, you say that "a valid case can be made that The Old Story is intrinsically dangerous if it actively teaches and encourages violence and warfare." I do agree with this sentiment. So the question is: does the Old Testament do such things? It certainly describes violence and warfare in the ancient world – but does it actively teach and encourage us to engage in these activities? After all, there are many actions described in the Old Testament that cannot reasonably be taken by the alert reader of Scripture as intended for our imitation (e.g. David's adulterous actions with respect to Bathsheba). This includes many actions commanded by God – since the alert Scripture reader knows that God commanded ancient Israelites to do many things that are not required of the Church (e.g. to engage in animal sacrifice). So we need to be discriminating in our judgments when it comes to questions of "teaching" and "encouragement." My own judgment with respect to herem warfare very much agrees with your own: "We are not called to purify the land or to establish a holy kingdom by force." That is absolutely correct, in my opinion.
The question of whether ancient Israel was ever called by God to do such a thing is another matter, and I think that it will help with clarity if we consider it separately. My conviction here is that our biblical authors certainly thought that ancient Israel was called to do such a thing at one point in its history. But here it is very important to read carefully and to note what these authors do say about this, and what they do not. In spite of what modern readers quite often claim (and this includes some of your respondents), the biblical authors evidently do not think that Israel was called to conquer and settle Canaan because of the race or ethnicity of the previous inhabitants, or because Israel had some kind of right to the land and the previous inhabitants were simply and inconveniently "there," in the wrong place and at the wrong time. Our authors explicitly tell us, to the contrary, that in the events of the conquest and settlement, the Canaanite peoples were experiencing the justice of God, on account of their longstanding wickedness (Genesis 15:16; Leviticus 18:24-26; Deuteronomy 9:4-5) – just as the Israelites themselves in the period of the later monarchy are also driven out of the land on account of their longstanding wickedness. For the biblical authors, the war in Canaan was God's (and not the Israelites') war. The Israelites are only God's vassals, summoned to help him fight against wickedness (e.g. Amos 2:9; Psalm 78:53-55).
Perhaps we should like to argue with our biblical authors about these claims; but at least we should recognize that this, and not something else, is indeed what they propose. It will not help the conversation if we begin by misunderstanding them. If we then advance to the argument itself, it interests me to know how we shall establish that, in fact, these claims are false – that, in fact, God was not bringing justice on the Canaanites for their long-term wickedness, but that something else was happening instead. What is the argument to be, on this point? That God cannot bring justice on wicked cultures in the here-and-now, but must wait until the eschaton? Or what? We need to be clear on this point. It will not do just to say that "this idea is dangerous because it has, in the past, and might in the future, encourage some people-groups to attack others." The biblical authors do not tell us about these events in order that we can generalize from them about how we can recruit God to our own bloodthirsty schemes. Indeed, Scripture as a whole never does generalize from them, as it does from the Exodus, about the ways of God in the world. They are understood, within Scripture itself, as highly unusual events (which is indeed why I did not spend much time discussing them in my book – they are not considered in Scripture to be "normative"). Yet the question remains: did God (unusually) once bring these people-groups to justice in this way or not? The biblical authors claim that God did. What are the grounds for dismissing this claim?
And then, thirdly, there is the question of what, exactly, ancient Israel was called by God to do with respect to the Canaanites – not the "whether" question, but the "what" question. This is an important question that has not received as much consideration as it deserves and needs. Modern readerly attention tends to be drawn quickly to the herem language in answering this question, and to passages like Joshua 10:40-42 that give the impression that the conquest of the land of Canaan was complete, and that all the original inhabitants were wiped out. Yet the predominant way of referring to the conquest of Canaan in the Old Testament is in terms of expulsion, not killing (e.g. Leviticus 18:24-28; Numbers 33:51-56; 2 Kings 16:3)— just as the Israelites, later, are said to have been expelled from the land because they sinned in the same way as the Canaanites (2 Kings 17:7-23). Further, there are clearly many Canaanites still living in the land in the aftermath of Joshua's victories – people who are not ultimately even expelled from the land, much less killed (e.g. Judges 1:1-3:6; 2 Samuel 24:7; 1 Kings 9:15-23). Clearly, then, there is something very strange about the language of Joshua 10 (and associated passages). Indeed, as Lawson Younger has helped us to see (Ancient Conquest Accounts: A Study in Ancient Near Eastern and Biblical History Writing, 1990), we are likely dealing here with the kind of hyperbolic language that is fairly typical of ancient Near Eastern conquest accounts in general – with ancient literary conventions governing descriptions of conquest and battle that should not be pressed in a literalistic manner. To press them in such a manner is immediately, in fact, to create enormous tension between what they apparently say, and what other Old Testament passages say about such important matters as distinguishing combatants from non-combatants in warfare (e.g., Exodus 22:24; Numbers 14:3), and not holding children, in particular, morally accountable for wrongdoing, or allowing them to be caught up in the consequences of their parents' wrongdoing (Deuteronomy 1:39; 24:16—in the very book of Deuteronomy that speaks about the Canaanite wars). A particular absurdity that arises from such a literalistic approach is that Deuteronomy 7:1-3 must then be read as speaking of God "driving out" the current inhabitants of the land, then urging the Israelites to "destroy them totally" (herem), and then prohibiting intermarriage with them!
We are dealing with very important matters here. I hope that this short response has at least clarified what I think about them, and what it is that I read the biblical authors as thinking about them. I am very grateful to have had the chance to write. I shall also be grateful, however, if readers of both the Old Testament and my own humble attempt to explicate it in Seriously Dangerous Religion do not so dwell on these things that they neglect the many matters that our biblical authors consider to be much more centrally important. People like Richard Dawkins display a purpose in such a focused neglect. Perhaps the only thing worse than this is neglect with no purpose at all. There are many other aspects of the OT tradition that deserve our attention, and which RJS herself has done an admirable job of articulating over the last few months.
https://www.patheos.com/blogs/jesuscreed/2015/04/16/more-on-seriously-dangerous-religion-rjs
HT: Hawk
In general a good response. A potential weakness of this explanation is that because humans are social creatures, the innocent are sometime caught in the dragnet of collective punishment, so a separation between innocent and guilty isn 't always feasible in this life.