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April 10, 2026
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"Why, exactly, are scientists supposed to accord ârespectâ to a bunch of ancient fables that are not only ludicrous on their face, but motivate so much opposition to science?"
"Theodicy is the Achilles Heel of faith. There is no reasonable answer to the problem of gratuitous evil (i.e., the slaughter of children or mass killings by natural phenomena like tsunamis), and the will to continue believing in the face of such things truly shows the folly of faith. For those evils prove absolutely either that God is not benevolent and omnipotent, or that there is no god. (Special pleading like âwe donât know Godâs mindâ doesnât wash, for the same people who say such things also claim to know that God is benevolent and omnipotent). Both nonbelief or belief in a malicious or uncaring God are unacceptable to the goddy. Ergo, any rational person who contemplates gratuitous evil must become an agnostic, an atheist, or someone who rejects the Abrahamic God. It is a touchstone of rationality."
"Faith is a padlock of the mind, and few keys can open it."
"In the end theologians are jealous of science, for they are aware that it has greater authority than do their own ways of finding âtruthâ: dogma, authority, and revelation. Science does find truth, faith does not."
"No, we donât have faith in reason and science in the same way as âCruâ members have faith in God. I see âfaithâ according to Walter Kaufmannâs definition: strong belief in propositions for which there is insufficient evidence to command the assent of every reasonable person. We have confidence in science because it has led us to provisional truthsâit works. Cru doesnât even know if thereâs any God, or, if there is a divine presence, that itâs the Abrahamic god rather than the Hindu god, Yahweh, or Wotan. And we use reason in the same way: it leads us to truth. Revelation, dogma, and authority do not, for if they did there would be only one religion rather than thousands with their disparate and often conflicting doctrines."
"Can a geology teacher blithely tell his students that the earth is flat, or a European history professor that the Holocaust didnât happen? Thatâs not academic freedom, but dereliction of duty."
"Some believers are fundamentalists about everything, but every believer is a fundamentalist about something."
"Science has only two things to contribute to religion: an analysis of the evolutionary, cultural, and psychological basis for believing things that arenât true, and a scientific disproof of some of faithâs claims (e.g., Adam and Eve, the Great Flood). Religion has nothing to contribute to science, and science is best off staying as far away from faith as possible. The âconstructive dialogueâ between science and faith is, in reality, a destructive monlogue, with science making all the good points, tearing down religion in the process."
"âHOW DO YOU KNOW THAT?â Thatâs the question you should always ask believers when they make unsupported assertions, ranging from âGod is lovingâ to âOur souls live on after death.â The answer will always be one of two things: âThe Bible says so,â or âI just know it to be true.â Neither of those are rational answers, but they satisfy the religious. It is in fact the âhow-do-you-know-thatâ query that really distinguishes New Atheism from Old. While atheists have always decried the lack of evidence for theism, it is the infusion of scientists and science-friendly people into atheism, starting with Carl Sagan and continuing on to Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris, Pinker, and Dennett, that has made us realize that religious dogmas are in fact hypotheses, and you need reasons and evidence for accepting them. If you have none, then you have no reason to believe in God. Nevertheless, religious dogma does change, but not because theology has found better reasons. Itâs because a.) science has shown the dogma to be false (Genesis, Adam and Eve, creation, the Exodus, etc.) or b.) secular morality has shown that the tenets of religious belief are no longer supportable (hell as a place of fire, limbo, discrimination against gays, the Mormonsâ refusal to let blacks be priests, etc.)"
"He is a dissimulator, a back-pedaler, a coward, and a self-serving ignoramus. In other words, heâs a politician."
"Yes, secularism does propose a physical and purposeless universe, and many (but not all) of us accept the notion that our sense of self is a neuronal illusion. But although the universe is purposeless, our lives arenât. This conflation of a purposeless universe (i.e., one not created for a specific reason) with purposeless human lives is a trick that the faithful use to make atheism seem nihilistic and dark. But we make our own purposes, and theyâre real. Right now my purpose is to write this piece, and then Iâll work on a book, and later Iâll have dinner with a friend. Soon Iâll go to Poland to visit more friends. Maybe later Iâll read a nice book and learn something. Those are real purposes, not illusory purposes to which Douthat wants us to devote our only life."
"An âintellectual tradition,â as anyone with two neurons to rub together knows, is not the same thing as evidence. But theologians seem to lack that second neuron."
"Since neither Robbins, nor Hart, nor any other Sophisticated Theologian⢠or Hipster Poet has produced any evidence for God that would convince someone who wasnât already a believer or an incipient believer, we neednât take their claims seriously. The reason people like Robbins sneer at the New Atheistsâ call for evidence is because believers donât have any."
"Anybody who claims that people donât cherry-pick their morality from the Bible, choosing that which comports with their extra-Biblical notions of whatâs good and bad, is simply blind."
"The justification for naturalism is that it works: we have never understood anything about the universe by assuming the supernatural, while assuming naturalism as a working hypothesis has moved our understanding ever forward."
"Religion claims to help us understand things about the universe, but, unlike science has no way to test or verify its claims. Both science and religion compete to understand reality, but only science has the method to verify its findings, while religion merely buttresses emotional and epistemic commitments made in advance, commitments impervious to evidence."
"Even more than religious belief, acceptance or denial of evolution is a test of character. For if you deny evolution is true, you are either pandering to the public even though you know better (showing that youâre ambitious but lack character), are truly ignorant of the facts (which means you canât be trusted to be informed about crucial issues), or are a flat-out creationist (showing that youâre batshit crazy)."
"Atheismâat least the refusal to accept gods for which thereâs no evidenceâis a logical outgrowth of science, and explains (at least to me) why, compared to Americans as a whole, scientists are so much more atheistic. If your career depends on establishing your confidence in a phenomenon proportional to the degree of evidence supporting it, then God is a no-go. The climate of doubt that is endemicâand essentialâto the scientific enterprise is a true disaster for religion. Religious people know this, and that largely explains the many ways they attack science."
"One child dead because of superstition is one too many."
"Postmodernism poisons everything."
"I have to say that I find Aliâs argument truly revoltingânot just because itâs intellectually weak and actually deceptive, but because it debases the entire realm of university scholarship of which Iâm a member. When I see pieces like hersâlame apologetics that are meant from the outset to reinforce an opinion already heldâI thank Ceiling Cat that I am a scientist: a member of the guild in which using your scholarship to reinforce emotional commitments is considered a sin."
"After all, by what lights can you see atheism as a âleap of faithâ? What is the âfaithâ there? Failure to accept gods is no more a leap of faith than is doubting the existence of the Loch Ness Monster, Bigfoot, or Santa Claus. Itâs not âfaithâ when you refuse to accept a proposition for which thereâs no evidence."
"He is the embodiment of greed, ambition, bigotry, and dislike of the marginalized. Of course, all that means is that he simply instantiates in a clear way the values of the GOP, but they donât like those being so out in the open! Trump is in fact the very product of what Republicans stand for: heâs a monster they created, but now they donât like it. They want those values, but expressed sotto voce, and by a slicker candidate."
"Theology schools are the wisdom teeth of academia: useless and sometimes injurious remnants of earlier times. If you want to teach comparative religion in college, you can do it in sociology departments, and if you want to teach the history of religion or of how scripture was confected, you can do it in history departments. There is no rationale for a modern secular university to teach theology, for it is the study of a nonexistent being and its supposed wants."
"Iâm not sure whoâs in charge of âThe Stone,â the New York Timesâs philosophy column, but that person is not doing their job. Imagine if some of our greatest living philosophers would post there about matters diverse: ethics, animal rights, abortion, drone strikes, and so on. But all too often the column is about God; that is, we have Great Minds lucubrating about nonexistent beings. Among all species of philosophy, the philosophy of religion is the most intellectually depauperate. Itâs a waste of time."
"On the Right we have a bunch of regressive conservatives who demonize minorities and women and have no sympathy for the downtrodden, while on the Left we have regressive Leftists who try to censor peopleâs speech, take the side of extremist Islamists against women and gays, and shut down disagreement by other Leftists who arenât pure enough. What is a person to do? The answer, of course, is to call out both sides for regressive behavior."
"Faith is not a virtue, but a character flaw."
"To Parker Bright, Hannah Black, and other critics of this painting, I say this: I completely reject your criticism. If only artists of the proper ethnicity can depict violence inflicted on their group, then only writers of the proper ethnicity can write about the same issues, and so on with all the arts. And what goes for ethnicity or race goes for gender: men cannot write about suffering inflicted on women, nor women about suffering inflicted on men. Gays cannot write about straight people and vice versa. The fact is that we are all human, and we are all capable of sharing, as well as depicting, the pain and suffering of others. I will not allow you to fracture art and literature the way you have fractured politics. Yes, horrible injustices have been visited on minority groups, on women, on gays, and on other marginalized people, but to allow that injustice to be conveyed only by âproperly ethnic or gendered artistsâ is to deny us our common humanity and deprive us of emotional solidarity. No group, whatever its pigmentation or chromosomal constitution, has the exclusive right to create art or literature about their own subgroup. To deny others that right is to censor them. To those who say this painting has caused them âunnecessary hurtâ because it is by a white artist about black pain, I say, âYour own pain about this artwork is gratuitous; I do not take it seriously. Itâs the cry of a coddled child who simply wants attention.â"
"The editorial, very poorly written for a college full of smart students, shows how far this âhate speechâ cancer has spread. Let me provide for you Coyneâs Glossary for the words at issue:"
"We neednât take things like reasoning on faith. We use reason because it works. And science isnât really based on axioms: itâs not math. Itâs based on a method that, refined over time, leads us to widely accepted facts about the universe: the facts that we can rely on to do things like establish the genealogy of species, cure disease, and land probes on comets. You canât accomplish such things through prayer."
"Danger! Mushbrains and believers at work!"
"The realization that God is not the source of morality is, I think, one of the great contributions of philosophy to clarifying human thought."
"Remember three things about censorship. First, it doesnât work to suppress art or words that you donât like. Second, trying to censor something just arouses interest in it, as well as resentment towards those who try to tell others what they can or cannot see. Third, exhibiting art or recommending that students read a book does not mean an endorsement of the image or contents."
"Guilt is the great weapon of the Authoritarian Left, and we must resist it when it comes to endorsing free expression."
"The truth is the truth, regardless of whether it fits your ideological biases."
"If religion makes a society happier, thereâs no data to show that. All we see is that on average countries that are well off are less religious and are happier; and that goes for U.S. states as well. Checkmate, religionists."
"If Hawkingâs world is âsmall,â well, at least what he found was testable, and might be true. Father de Souzaâs claims are either untestable or have already been shown to be doubtful, and he has no evidence for any of them. In requiring people to believe fairy tales, de Souzaâs world is not just small, but nonexistent."
"This implicit denigration of objectivity, and of the way science is done, irritates me immensely. It privileges anecdotes over data, âlived experienceâ over objective tests, and confirmation bias over uncomfortable truths. But that is the way that many humanities scholars, corrupted by postmodernism, have operated. Denying or denigrating an objective search for truth, theyâre free to say whatever they want, or âdiscoverâ whatever they find ideologically convenient."
"What the comedy club in Montreal is doing is not only ridiculous, but is a prime example of virtue signaling: making a gesture to trumpet your own ideological purity, but a gesture that has no effect on society and no mitigation of injustice."
"In other words, (Helen) Pluckrose et al. got a lot more attention than I did. And thatâs fine. For they did, to my mind, expose a creeping rot in the floorboards of academic humanities, which has becoming increasingly solipsistic, tendentious, propagandistic, and devoid of critical thinking but besotted with intersectionalist ideology."
"There is no compromise possible between catering to woke students and maintaining journalistic standards. We all know that this is true. If you feed the beast, it only gets hungrier, and is never full."
"âSafetyâ and âharmâ have become the new buzzwords to use when somebody does something you donât like."
"Everyone else besides the faithful already knows that religion has nothing useful to say to science."
"As we know, wokeness prizes ideology and narrative over truth."
"Yes, the claim that sex in humans is not a binary is pretty much a lie, and is made on ideological rather than scientific grounds."
"This will not abate: wokeness is a one-way ratchet to pure authoritarianism."
"The Woke are after Pinker again, and if heâs called a racist and misogynist, as he is in this latest attempt to demonize him, then nobody is safe. After all, Pinker is a liberal Democrat whoâs donated a lot of dosh to the Democratic Party, and relentlessly preaches a message of moral, material, and âwell-beingâ progress thatâs been attained through reason and adherence to Enlightenment values. But that sermon alone is enough to render him an Unperson, for the Woke prize narrative and âlived experienceâ over data, denigrate reason, and absolutely despise the Enlightenment."
"The GOP, with 100+ of its Congresspeople joining the crazy Texas lawsuit trying to overturn the election, has become a swarming beehive of truthers, conspiracy theorists, and, of course, gun nuts."
"Christianity, and religion in general, is dying in America. (The exceptions are an increase in Islam, probably due to immigration, and in Buddhism, a basically godless religion.) The decline is due largely to a loss of faith among young people, as weâve seen several times before. Religion wanes one corpse at a time."
"Isnât it time for us to stop taking this nonsense seriously? I regard panpsychists as I regard theologians: they both make stuff up, none of what they say is testable, and they both actually get paid to foist nonsense on the world."