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Friday, May 31, 2019

No Confidence in His Innocence?

I want to believe that Special Counsel Robert Mueller is a good man, but he keeps making it harder and harder to do so.

The Federalist's Sean Davis pretty much sums up why in his column about Mr. Mueller's peculiar press conference Wednesday.

Mueller revealed himself to be animated by motives much less noble than a duty to find the truth. He showed himself to be willing to employ innuendo and unscrupulous tactics in order to destroy a man against whom he could find no evidence of any crime.

Davis opens with this:
If there were any doubts about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s political intentions, his unprecedented press conference on Wednesday should put them all to rest. As he made abundantly clear during his doddering reading of a prepared statement that repeatedly contradicted itself, Mueller had no interest in the equal application of the rule of law.

He gave the game, and his nakedly political intentions, away repeatedly throughout his statement.
The weirdest statement in his presser, which was itself very strange given that Mueller claimed that he has nothing to add to his 400+ page report, was his assertion that if his team had confidence in President Trump's innocence they would've said so.

Here's Davis on this astonishing declaration:
Referring to indictments against various Russian individuals and institutions for allegedly hacking American servers during the 2016 election, Mueller said that the indictments “contain allegations and we are not commenting on the guilt or innocence of any specific defendant.”

“Every defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.” Had he stopped there, he would have been correct. But then he crafted a brand new standard.

“The order appointing the special counsel authorized us to investigate actions that could obstruct the investigation. We conducted that investigation and kept the office of the acting attorney general apprised of our work,” Mueller said. “After that investigation, if we had confidence that the president clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so.”

According to Mueller and his team, charged Russians are presumed innocent. An American president, however, is presumed guilty unless and until Mueller’s team determines he is innocent.

Such a standard is an obscene abomination against the rule of law, one that would never be committed by independent attorneys who place a fidelity to their oaths and impartial enforcement of the law ahead of their political motivations.
Mueller wasn't tasked with finding evidence of Trump's innocence. How could there be evidence of such a thing? Imagine trying to adduce evidence, for example, that President Obama was not an Iranian secret agent. It's hard to imagine what such evidence might even look like.

The duty of an investigator is not to demonstrate innocence, it's to find evidence of guilt. If that evidence is lacking then the person is presumed innocent and is officially exculpated. Mueller's claim that they had no basis for indictment but that they could not exonerate Trump is not only a legal absurdity, it's morally reprehensible since it deliberately leaves a stain on a man's character and encourages continued harassment of him by his foes.

Davis had a lot more to say about Mr. Mueller's shortcomings and anyone interested in learning more about why Mr. Mueller is in need of ethical remediation is encouraged to read the rest of his column.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

The Middle East's Perpetual War

Ever since its founding in 1948 the Israelis have been fighting a defensive war against their neighbors, particularly the Palestinians. Their neighbors attack and Israel responds until the attack is repulsed and their enemies are too weakened to continue.

Then the world prevails upon Israel to relent, to show restraint, and retreat from the field which, of course, allows their enemy to recover, regroup, resupply, and at some future date restart the whole cycle all over again.

It seems like an exercise in endless futility, but this is the status quo in the Middle East, and it will continue until Israel's foes, who have sworn its destruction, ultimately wear it down and destroy it. It often seems that this would not bother the West overmuch, which perversely views the stronger more civilized side in a dispute to be ipso facto the evil aggressor and oppressor.

Nevertheless, the prospect of their ultimate destruction should at least bother Israel, one would think, unless, like the rest of the West, they've succumbed to the notion, promoted by the left for the last eighty years or so, that the civilized nations of the world just don't deserve to survive.

Roger Simon at PJ Media once made a shocking suggestion as to how perpetual war in the Middle East might be ended. He opined that perhaps it's time for Israel to create a new status quo. Perhaps it's time to eliminate Hamas in Gaza:
A permanent truce, i.e., genuine peace, does not seem part of the vocabulary of jihadists whose sworn goal is to make the world Islamic, sooner or later, like it or not. They just take a time out when it looks as if they could be in trouble, like a hockey player with a twisted ankle.

As an example, Hamas is known for its hudnas, cooling down (or pretending to) and then heating up again as soon as possible to do what the beginning of its charter always promised it would do — destroy Israel.

For years the bien pensant of the West (Europe, the U.S.) have urged, actually put strong pressure on, Israel to play the hudna game with Hamas, Fatah, Islamic Jihad and the rest of the sociopathic Islamofascist crew. The Israelis, from a humanistic tradition and anxious to be thought well of, have acquiesced, even when they have the extreme whip hand.

The results have been as one would predict: another war, another hudna and on and on. This has been going on since the founding of the state of Israel in 1948 - even before that really. In other words, for a long while.

Maybe it’s time for a different approach. How about just...winning?
Whether one agrees with Simon or not it's true enough that what many Israelis realize but many other Westerners seemingly don't is that radical Islam is in a state of permanent war with the world. It's a war that's been raging since the 7th century and will continue until Islam is the only religion in the world (actually it will continue beyond that as Muslims will be killing each other to decide which sect of Islam will be the only sect in the world).

We will never be safe from this threat. To think that it's at an end, or that we have somehow made peace with the Islamists, is to confuse their temporary tactic of hudna with a genuine desire for peace.

The world shouts "peace, peace" but there is no peace. The Islamists don't want peace, they want total victory. That's why it often seems that there's no pacific solution to the conflict in the Middle East and no realistic prospect of compromise.

Tragically, any clear-eyed American foreign policy must take that as its starting point. To do otherwise is to substitute wishful thinking and self-delusion for objective reality.

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

A Unique (?) Galaxy

Astronomer Hugh Ross discusses some fascinating facts about our Milky Way galaxy in an article at Salvo. In the article he points out that the age of our galaxy, it's uncommonly low luminosity for a galaxy its size, and its very unusual proximity to several smaller galaxies, all conspire to make the Milky Way habitable.

It's pretty interesting stuff. Here's why the age of the galaxy is important:
We must first explain how galaxies are categorized by color. Though it may seem counter to the colors we usually associate with hot and cold, young stars, which tend to be hot, are blue-colored, while old stars, which tend to be cooler, are red-colored.

So galaxies in which star formation proceeds aggressively shine with a blue color, while galaxies in which star formation has ceased appear red.... Astronomers have typically categorized galaxies as belonging to either the red population or the blue population.

The Milky Way (MWG), however, fits into neither the red nor the blue category. It has taken on a green hue. This is because, while star formation in the MWG has subsided some, it has not yet ceased. Thus, our galaxy contains a combination of blue stars and stars that aren't yet old enough to be red but have aged enough to be yellow. Blended together, these stars give the galaxy a green appearance.

Diagram of the Milky Way Galaxy showing the location of our sun
Green galaxies are rare, but they are exactly what advanced life requires. A galaxy dominated by blue stars will bathe its planets with many flares—flares too abundant and intense, and with too much ultraviolet and x-ray radiation, to permit life to exist on any of the planets.

A galaxy dominated by red stars will also bathe its planets with many flares—again, flares of deadly intensity. A red galaxy also exposes its planets to more supernova and nova events (stellar explosions) than advanced life can possibly handle.

Another problem for galaxies dominated by red stars is that they lack the necessary level of ongoing star formation to sustain their spiral structure. But galaxies dominated by blue stars, where star formation is advancing aggressively, experience major disturbances (warps, bends, spurs, and feathers) in their spiral structure, so they cannot maintain a stable spiral form, either.

But the green Milky Way, in addition to being of appropriate size and mass to contain the elements that life requires, has another characteristic that allows for the existence of advanced life within it: its spiral arms are stable, well-separated, highly symmetrical, free of any significant warps or bends, and relatively free of spurs and feathers.

In part, these spiral-arm features are possible because the galaxy is dominated by yellow stars which are complemented by a significant population of blue stars.

[O]ur galaxy....is transitioning from a star-forming site to a no-longer-star-forming site. And this midlife period appears to be the "best of times" for the sustainment of living things....[T]he Milky Way has transitioned from its role in building the required ingredients for advanced life (carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, calcium, iron, etc.) to one in which it can now, for a relatively brief time period, sustain advanced life.
There's more on why our galaxy is a suitable habitation for living things at the link. The sorts of things Ross says about the Milky Way can also be said about the solar system and the earth/moon complex. When all the unique factors which have to be pretty much just as they are for higher life forms to be sustained anywhere in the cosmos are tallied up the improbability of it all has led some scientists to conclude that it's very unlikely that there's any other place in the universe where life like ours could exist.

One could perhaps say that the existence of another habitable galaxy somewhere out there, with a solar system and a planet capable of sustaining life, would almost be miraculous.

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Free Speech for Me But Not for Thee

One of the ironies of our ideological evolution over the course of the last fifty or sixty years has been the transformation of the Left as a putative champion of free speech and defender of unpopular ideas in the sixties and seventies into their greatest foe today.

Anyone today who undertakes, particularly on many college campuses, to advocate social, scientific, religious or political ideas at odds with the current leftist orthodoxy can expect to be shouted down, physically assaulted, fired and/or smeared. The left today has become a stalwart proponent of closed-mindedness, group-think and willful ignorance.

It's as if those who wield power in the media and on campus sense that their ideas cannot withstand rational examination and must therefore be insulated from challenge.

Two generations ago, at a time when their ideas were still often unpopular, they championed free speech in order to get their views a hearing, but once their worldview became mainstream they sought to deny the same freedoms to their critics and shut down any and all opposition.

Like the old communist commissars of the 20th century, they know that leftist ideology, if ever the masses understood it, would be widely and soundly rejected so anyone who criticizes it must be forcibly shut up so that its manifold flaws will never be exposed.

This was the strategy of both communist and fascist totalitarians around the globe in the 20th century, and it's the strategy of their ideological heirs in the 21st century.

Katherine Timpf at National Review Online mentions just a few examples of how campus administrators and others suppress the free and open exchange of ideas and speech by exerting enormous pressure on students and faculty to conform to the party line. Her examples merely scratch the surface.

Conservative speakers are being deplatformed on social media and disallowed to speak at many universities. Faculty who promote alternatives to Darwinism or who express skepticism about anthropogenic climate change are often punished professionally. Christianity, especially Catholicism, is often mocked in the classroom by professors, and students who seek to speak up for their faith often see their grade suffer for it.

To be overtly pro-life in some spheres of academia is to risk physical assault, and heaven help the student or faculty member who dares to express support for Donald Trump.

Why has this change occurred? Perhaps because aside from a few notable exceptions like the late Nat Hentoff (author of the book Free Speech for Me But Not for Thee) the left's professed devotion to the First Amendment was insincere from the start.

Appeals to First Amendment freedoms were a handy tool for propagating their ideology and arrogating power, but once that power had been achieved the tool was dispensed with. Free and open democratic elections were and are touted and praised by the left until they're voted into office, often under the banner of socialism, and then they use their newly acquired power to make those freedoms disappear.

Philosopher Herbert Marcuse (1898-1979) set out the blueprint for all this back in the 60s in what he called "repressive tolerance." Here's Ben Shapiro's adumbration of Marcuse's thought in The Right Side of History:
Marcuse suggested that certain forms of speech had to be barred so that they could not emerge victorious, toppling critical (leftist) theory itself. According to Marcuse, "the objective of tolerance would call for intolerance toward prevailing policies, attitudes, opinions, and the extension of tolerance to politics, attitudes, and opinions which are outlawed or suppressed."

Freedom, Marcuse said, was "serving the cause of oppression"; oppression, therefore, could serve the cause of freedom. Speech could be labelled violence....In essence, "Liberating tolerance, then would mean intolerance against movements form the Right and toleration of movements from the Left..."

The marketplace of ideas had to die, since it was "organized and delimited by those who determine the national and individual interest."

Minority groups had to be given special privileges to shut down opposition: "liberation of the Damned of the Earth presupposes suppression not only of their old but also of their new masters."
"The roots," Shapiro adds, "of sexual liberation, victim politics, and political correctness had been laid." And now, some sixty years later they're bearing their fruit.

It's ironic that in the left's political economy tolerance of contrary opinions has to die, but as the famous physician and counsellor Paul Tournier once wrote, "Tolerance is the natural endowment of true convictions."

The corollary would be that intolerance is a pretty good indication of false convictions.

Monday, May 27, 2019

Remembering, Honoring and Thanking

Memorial Day is a day to remember those who paid the ultimate price in combat for our country, but perhaps I can take a little license and also praise the sacrifices and character of men like those described in these accounts from the war in Iraq. Some of them never came home, but all of them deserve our gratitude and admiration:
A massive truck bomb had turned much of the Fort Lewis soldiers’ outpost to rubble. One of their own lay dying and many others wounded. Some 50 al-Qaida fighters were attacking from several directions with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. It was obvious that the insurgents had come to drive the platoon of Stryker brigade troops out of Combat Outpost Tampa, a four-story concrete building overlooking a major highway through western Mosul, Iraq.

“It crossed my mind that that might be what they were going to try to do,” recalled Staff Sgt. Robert Bernsten, one of 40 soldiers at the outpost that day. “But I wasn’t going to let that happen, and looking around I could tell nobody else in 2nd platoon was going to let that happen, either.”

He and 10 other soldiers from the same unit – the 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment – would later be decorated for their valor on this day of reckoning, Dec. 29, 2004. Three were awarded the Silver Star, the Army’s third-highest award for heroism in combat. When you combine those medals with two other Silver Star recipients involved in different engagements, the battalion known as “Deuce Four” stands in elite company. The Army doesn’t track the number of medals per unit, but officials said there could be few, if any, other battalions in the Iraq war to have so many soldiers awarded the Silver Star.

“I think this is a great representation of our organization,” said the 1-24’s top enlisted soldier, Command Sgt. Maj. Robert Prosser, after a battalion award ceremony late last month at Fort Lewis. “There are so many that need to be recognized.... There were so many acts of heroism and valor.”

The fight for COP Tampa came as Deuce Four was just two months into its yearlong mission in west Mosul. The battalion is part of Fort Lewis’ second Stryker brigade. In the preceding weeks, insurgents had grown bolder in their attacks in the city of 2 million. Just eight days earlier, a suicide bomber made his way into a U.S. chow hall and killed 22 people, including two from Deuce Four.

The battalion took over the four-story building overlooking the busy highway and set up COP Tampa after coming under fire from insurgents holed up there. The troops hoped to stem the daily roadside bombings of U.S. forces along the highway, called route Tampa. Looking back, the Dec. 29 battle was a turning point in the weeks leading up to Iraq’s historic first democratic election.

The enemy “threw everything they had into this,” Bernsten said. “And you know in the end, they lost quite a few guys compared to the damage they could do to us. “They didn’t quit after that, but they definitely might have realized they were up against something a little bit tougher than they originally thought.”

The battle for COP Tampa was actually two fights – one at the outpost, and the other on the highway about a half-mile south.

About 3:20 p.m., a large cargo truck packed with 50 South African artillery rounds and propane tanks barreled down the highway toward the outpost, according to battalion accounts.

Pfc. Oscar Sanchez, on guard duty in the building, opened fire on the truck, killing the driver and causing the explosives to detonate about 75 feet short of the building. Sanchez, 19, was fatally wounded in the blast. Commanders last month presented his family with a Bronze Star for valor and said he surely saved lives. The enormous truck bomb might have destroyed the building had the driver been able to reach the ground-floor garages.

As it was, the enormous explosion damaged three Strykers parked at the outpost and wounded 17 of the 40 or so soldiers there, two of them critically.

Bernsten was in a room upstairs. “It threw me. It physically threw me. I opened my eyes and I’m laying on the floor a good 6 feet from where I was standing a split second ago,” he said. “There was nothing but black smoke filling the building.” People were yelling for each other, trying to find out if everyone was OK.

“It seemed like it was about a minute, and then all of a sudden it just opened up from everywhere. Them shooting at us. Us shooting at them,” Bernsten said. The fight would rage for the next two hours. Battalion leaders said videotape and documents recovered later showed it was Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s al-Qaida in Iraq fighters. They were firing from rooftops, from street corners, from cars, Bernsten said.

Eventually, Deuce Four soldiers started to run low on ammunition. Bernsten, a squad leader, led a team of soldiers out into the open, through heavy fire, to retrieve more from the damaged Strykers. “We went to the closest vehicle first and grabbed as much ammo as we could, and got it upstairs and started to distribute it,” he said. “When you hand a guy a magazine and they’re putting the one you just handed them into their weapon, you realize they’re getting pretty low. So we knew we had to go back out there for more.”

He didn’t necessarily notice there were rounds zipping past as he and the others ran the 100 feet or so to the Strykers. “All you could see was the back of the Stryker you were trying to get to.”

Another fight raged down route Tampa, where a convoy of six Strykers, including the battalion commander’s, had rolled right into a field of hastily set roadside bombs. The bombs hadn’t been there just five minutes earlier, when the convoy had passed by going the other way after a visit to the combat outpost. It was an ambush set up to attack whatever units would come to the aid of COP Tampa.

Just as soldiers in the lead vehicle radioed the others that there were bombs in the road, the second Stryker was hit by a suicide car bomber. Staff Sgt. Eddieboy Mesa, who was inside, said the blast tore off the slat armor cage and equipment from the right side of the vehicle, and destroyed its tires and axles and the grenade launcher mounted on top. But no soldiers were seriously injured.

Insurgents opened fire from the west and north of the highway. Stryker crewmen used their .50-caliber machine guns and grenade launchers to destroy a second car bomb and two of the bombs rigged in the roadway. Three of the six Strykers pressed on to COP Tampa to join the fight.

One, led by battalion operations officer Maj. Mark Bieger, loaded up the critically wounded and raced back onto the highway through the patch of still-unstable roadside bombs. It traveled unescorted the four miles or so to a combat support hospital. Bieger and his men are credited with saving the lives of two soldiers.

Then he and his men turned around and rejoined the fight on the highway. Bieger was one of those later awarded the Silver Star. Meantime, it was left to the soldiers still on the road to defend the heavily damaged Stryker and clear the route of the remaining five bombs.

Staff Sgt. Wesley Holt and Sgt. Joseph Martin rigged up some explosives and went, under fire, from bomb to bomb to prepare them for demolition. They had no idea whether an insurgent was watching nearby, waiting to detonate the bombs. Typically, this was the kind of situation where infantry soldiers would call in the ordnance experts. But there was no time, Holt said.

“You could see the IEDs right out in the road. I knew it was going to be up to us to do it,” Holt said. “Other units couldn’t push through. The colonel didn’t want to send any more vehicles through the kill zone until we could clear the route.” And so they prepared their charges under the cover of the Strykers, then ran out to the bombs, maybe 50 yards apart. The two men needed about 30 seconds to rig each one as incoming fire struck around them.

“You could hear it [enemy fire] going, but where they were landing I don’t know,” Holt said. “You concentrate on the main thing that’s in front of you.” He and Martin later received Silver Stars.

The route clear, three other Deuce Four platoons moved out into the neighborhoods and F/A-18 fighter jets made more than a dozen runs to attack enemy positions with missiles and cannon fire. “It was loud, but it was a pretty joyous sound,” Bernsten said. “You know that once that’s happened, you have the upper hand in such a big way. It’s like the cavalry just arrived, like in the movies.”

Other soldiers eventually received Bronze Stars for their actions that day, too.

Sgt. Christopher Manikowski and Sgt. Brandon Huff pulled wounded comrades from their damaged Strykers and carried them over open ground, under fire, to the relative safety of the building.

Sgt. Nicholas Furfari and Spc. Dennis Burke crawled out onto the building’s rubbled balcony under heavy fire to retrieve weapons and ammunition left there after the truck blast.

Also decorated with Bronze Stars for their valor on Dec. 29 were Lt. Jeremy Rockwell and Spc. Steven Sosa. U.S. commanders say they killed at least 25 insurgents. Deuce Four left the outpost unmanned for about three hours that night, long enough for engineers to determine whether it was safe to re-enter. Troops were back on duty by morning, said battalion commander Lt. Col. Erik Kurilla.

In the next 10 months, insurgents would continue to attack Deuce Four troops in west Mosul with snipers, roadside bombs and suicide car bombs. But never again would they mass and attempt such a complex attack.

Heroics on two other days earned Silver Stars for Deuce Four.

It was Aug. 19, and Sgt. Major Robert Prosser’s commander, Lt. Col. Erik Kurilla, had been shot down in front of him. Bullets hit the ground and walls around him. Prosser charged under fire into a shop, not knowing how many enemy fighters were inside. There was one, and Prosser shot him four times in the chest, then threw down his empty rifle and fought hand-to-hand with the man.

The insurgent pulled Prosser’s helmet over his eyes. Prosser got his hands onto the insurgent’s throat, but couldn’t get a firm grip because it was slick with blood.

Unable to reach his sidearm or his knife, and without the support of any other American soldiers, Prosser nonetheless disarmed and subdued the insurgent by delivering a series of powerful blows to the insurgent’s head, rendering the man unconscious.

Another Silver Star recipient, Staff Sgt. Shannon Kay, received the award for his actions on Dec. 11, 2004. He helped save the lives of seven members of his squad after they were attacked by a suicide bomber and insurgents with rockets and mortars at a traffic checkpoint.

He and others used fire extinguishers to save their burning Stryker vehicle and killed at least eight enemy fighters. Throughout the fight, Kay refused medical attention despite being wounded in four places.
For men like these and the millions of others whose courage and sacrifice have for two hundred and fifty years enabled the rest of us to live in relative freedom and security, we should all thank God. And for those who never made it back we should ask God's richest blessing on their souls.

Saturday, May 25, 2019

Conservatism Is Liberalism

There is, I think, a lot of misunderstanding as to what the words conservatism and liberalism mean in the contemporary political landscape. Both terms have evolved over the centuries and mean different things today than they did two hundred years ago.

Doubtless this is part of the reason for the misunderstanding, but there are other reasons as well. For instance, the popular misunderstanding is due in no small measure to the distortions of the media which seems to have the unfortunate ability to get almost everything that involves subtle distinctions wrong.

It's also due, in part, to the fact that conservatism and liberalism are culturally relative. For example, as Jonah Goldberg at National Review Online, observes:
A conservative in America wants to conserve radically different things than a conservative in Saudi Arabia, Russia, or France does. Even British conservatives — our closest ideological cousins — want to preserve the monarchy, an institution we fought a revolution to get rid of. In the Soviet Union, the “conservatives” were the ones who wanted to preserve and defend the Bolshevik Revolution.
In Saudi Arabia the conservatives want to preserve a strict form of Islam. Indeed, ISIS is a conservative movement. In the antebellum South conservatives wanted to preserve slavery, and in modern Russia it's the conservatives who wish to return to the days of the Soviet Union.

In the modern American context, however, conservatism is essentially the desire, as paradoxical as it may sound, to preserve classical liberalism. It's the desire to hold fast to what has been proven through the ages to work - religiously, politically, economically, morally, and socially. It's a reluctance to change just for the sake of change. It recognizes that if something ain't broke it's foolish to try to fix it, and if it is broken the fix is often worse than the original brokenness.

Goldberg elaborates on the relationship between conservatism and classical liberalism:
America’s founding doctrine is properly understood as classical liberalism — or until the progressives stole the label, simply “liberalism.” Until socialism burst on the scene in Europe, liberalism was universally understood as the opposite of conservatism. That’s because European conservatism sought to defend and maintain monarchy, aristocracy, and even feudalism.

The American Founding, warts and all, was the apotheosis of classical liberalism, and conservatism here has always been about preserving it. That’s why Friedrich Hayek, in his fantastic — and fantastically misunderstood — essay “Why I am Not a Conservative” could say that America was the one polity where one could be a conservative and a defender of the liberal tradition.
Classical liberals, unlike their modern progressive counterparts, stood for freedom - freedom of the individual to believe what he wished and to speak his mind without suffering persecution from an intolerant government or social institutions.

They also believed in the ability of free markets to maximize economic well-being, in the deadening effect of taxation, and in the dangers of big government. They believed in the inherent tendency of men toward evil and, for the most part, in the salutary effect of Christian belief on man's most destructive impulses.

So, I join with Goldberg when he declares at the end of his piece that, "It’s also why I have no problem with people who say that American conservatism is simply classical liberalism. As a shorthand, that’s fine by me."

Friday, May 24, 2019

Existential Yearning

Yesterday's post addressed humanity's existential yearning for meaning and cited a number of thinkers who've concluded that nothing in life simply can satisfy that yearning except temporary and imaginary palliatives.

Human life, it turns out, is like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. We're one way and the world is another, and the world is incompatible with our deepest longings, perhaps chief among which is the longing for meaning.

"Man can't live without meaning," wrote Holocaust survivor and psychologist Victor Frankel. This need for meaning explains why so many in the 20th century committed themselves unreservedly to causes like naziism and communism which have inflicted so much suffering on the world. It explains why so many were so willing to perpetrate unimaginable horrors on their fellow man in service to a "Cause." The Cause, whatever it is, gives their lives purpose and fulfillment.

At least they believe it does, and it's the need to find this fulfillment in the promotion of a Cause that animates so many today to behave so zealously and often so brutally toward those who disagree with them.

However, as Ben Shapiro writes in The Right Side of History (which I discussed in a post here):
After WWII the West "got freer, richer, more prosperous than ever. Human wealth expanded exponentially. Life spans increased. But there remained a hole at the center of Western civilization: a meaning-shaped hole. That hole has grown larger and larger in the decades since - a cancer, eating away at our heart. We tried to fill it with action; we tried to fill it with science; we tried to fill it with world-changing political activism. None of it provides the meaning we seek.
Shapiro could've added that we sought also to fill the emptiness with pleasure, fame, power, drugs and alcohol, but none of these kept their promise to satisfy us either.

The fact is that if we're here simply as a result of some cosmic accident, a flukish perturbation in the vast quantum flux, then there can be no meaning to our existence. We can only have purpose if we were somehow intended by a mind, and even then we can only have meaning if our existence is permanent.

If, though, our lives are like the light of a firefly, random and ephemeral, then there's no sense to any of it, the slaughter and suffering of millions is neither right nor wrong, neither good nor bad. As Richard Dawkins suggests, there is in the universe "no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind pitiless indifference."

Thus, our lives, our strivings, our sufferings and our pleasures are all a grand absurdity. In the words of Shakespeare they are "a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

This is the bleak, inescapable consequence of the Enlightenment's rejection of the Judeo-Christian worldview. It leaves us with nothing to hope for, nothing to believe in, nothing to fill the emptiness, nothing to satisfy our existential longings. It leaves us with nothing except inevitable death.

Yet for many, existential emptiness and despair is a burden they seem willing, even happy, to bear if the alternative is to place one's trust in a God. Maybe, as a friend of mine says on his blog, it's "not that atheists have a distorted concept of meaning, but that they have a distorted concept of atheism. They don't understand the implications of their own beliefs."

Perhaps so.

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Follow-Up to Metaxas Post

Toward the end of last month I wrote a post for VP based on a claim by Eric Metaxas when he appeared on Tucker Carlson Tonight that “If you actually believe we evolved out of the primordial soup and through happenstance got here, by accident, then our lives literally have no meaning.”

David Klinghoffer at Evolution News has written a follow-up to Metaxas' statement in which he quotes a number of people who responded to a query at another site soliciting opinions on whether the respondents, mostly atheists, believed their lives had no meaning.

Typical of the responses were these:
  • "My life has no purpose, my life has no meaning, but I do not care!"
  • "There is meaning and purpose within my life, but my life itself has no meaning or purpose."
  • "...meaning and purpose do exist, but only insofar as one’s desires create them."
In other words, these respondents acknowledge that there's no objective meaning to human existence but believe they can contrive subjective meanings that animate them and give them motivation to get up in the morning.

Their life's purpose, on this view, becomes something like alcohol. It may dull the pain of an empty life, it may give a sense of comfort and solace, but it's all illusory.

One can, however, find a multitude of more clear-eyed views on the matter, such as these from atheists (mostly) who have thought deeply about the problem of human meaning and purpose:
  • "What is the purpose of the universe? There is none. What is the meaning of life? Ditto." Philosopher Alex Rosenberg
  • “ If you believe science provides no basis for God, then you are almost obligated to conclude that science provides no basis for meaning and, therefore, life doesn't have any." Neurosurgeon Paul Kalanithi
  • “Unless the point of life is to suffer, there is no point.” Philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer
  • "The meaning of meaning - the meaning of all these particular meanings - is lacking." Philosopher Luc Ferry
  • "There's no me, there's just things happening...You've got to admit, this (all we do) is completely meaningless." Actor Jim Carrey
  • "I don't want to kill myself because I'm sad or depressed," he told them. "It's because I don't like people. I don't see a point in life, like you're just going to die and there's nothing after that, I think, so what's the point?" School shooter Robert Gladden
  • "The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind pitiless indifference." Biologist Richard Dawkins
  • "Life has no meaning the moment you lose the illusion of being eternal." Philosopher Jean Paul Sartre
  • "Ah, mon cher, for anyone who is alone, without God and without a master, the weight of days is dreadful." Novelist Albert Camus
  • "Life is an unpleasant interruption of nothingness." Lawyer Clarence Darrow
  • "Man knows … that he is alone in the universe’s unfeeling immensity out of which he emerged only by chance." Biologist Jacques Monod
  • "Neither the existence of the individual nor that of humanity has any purpose." Biologist/philosopher Bernard Rensch
  • "Life is a poor player who struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is seen no more. It is a tale told by an idiot; full of sound and fury, signifying nothing." William Shakespeare
  • "If death ends all, if I have neither to hope for good nor to fear evil, I must ask myself what am I here for….Now the answer is plain, but so unpalatable that most will not face it. There is no meaning for life, and [thus] life has no meaning.” Novelist Somerset Maugham
Klinghoffer quotes Kirk Durston who was among the theists who responded to the query about whether life has meaning:
No one disputes that atheists can make up a meaning for their lives … we make up stuff all the time …. fairies, unicorns, and so forth. I trust, however, that when we apply reason and rational thinking that we all realize that we just made that stuff up …. including the belief that life has meaning and purpose. Making up a meaning and purpose is quite a bit different from their actually being objective meaning and purpose.
Just so. It may be that there is no God who purposefully created mankind, but if there isn't then neither does anything we do in this life really matter. Only if what we do matters forever does it have any genuine, objective meaning. Only if what we do matters forever does it really matter at all.

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Dissing Pence

It's not unusual for students to protest the invitation of a commencement speaker with whom they have political disagreements, but it is disappointing that students, of all people, have become so averse to hearing opinions and arguments at variance to their own beliefs that they refuse to even listen to them.

It's even more disappointing to read that students at an evangelical Christian university demonstrated not only this sort of political and intellectual close-mindedness, but also an intolerance that ill-becomes students of any university.

According to TheHill.com,
Dozens of students and faculty at Taylor University in Indiana reportedly walked out of a graduation ceremony Saturday minutes before Vice President Pence took the stage to deliver the commencement address.

The protest, which was planned prior to Saturday’s ceremony, comes after the university community debated the appropriateness of Pence’s appearance at the Christian liberal arts institution.
One student said that she “... thought it was a really inappropriate decision [to invite the Vice-President of the United States]. I think his presence makes it difficult for everyone at Taylor to feel welcomed.”

Are the Taylor students so psychologically fragile that they simply can't bear to hear a speech given by someone who holds views they think are wrong? Would they have walked out of a speech given by a prominent Muslim speaker who endorses sharia, a legal/theological system which promotes theocracy, the oppression of women, and the total proscription of homosexuality? Would these students and faculty have walked out on a minority speaker who makes a career of disparaging "whiteness," a discourse which often camouflages base race hatred in sociological jargon?

Another student declared that, “Inviting Vice President Pence to Taylor University and giving him a coveted platform for his political views makes our alumni, faculty, staff and current students complicit in the Trump-Pence Administration's policies, which we believe are not consistent with the Christian ethic of love we hold dear.”

Well, let's set aside the question of what grievance, exactly, these students and faculty have against the Trump administration and consider how best to be consistent with the "Christian ethic of love they hold dear."

It is, after all, simply rude and personally insulting to walk out of a speech about to be given by someone who is an invited guest of the college one attends. It demonstrates contempt and scorn for the guest, it's disrespectful and unkind, and it's deeply dismaying that Christian students would've been encouraged to treat someone this way by ostensibly Christian adults among the faculty.

All young people, but especially Christians, should be taught to listen courteously and humbly to opposing points of view, to honor others as human beings even if they think they're mistaken in some of their judgments, and to treat them with dignity and kindness even though they believe he or she is in error.

Christians are taught that it is this loving attitude toward their fellow Christians (Mike Pence is a Christian) which will identify them as sincere followers of Jesus Christ.

Christians, moreover, are taught to love their enemies. Certainly this includes mere political opponents - people with whom they have policy disagreements -but it's surely not a display of love to give a guest the equivalent of a raised middle finger by turning one's back and tacitly declaring that he's not worth their time nor attention.

The few dozen students and faculty at Taylor University who chose to insult the Vice President rather than extend to him the courtesy of listening seem to have overlooked this crucial part of their Master's teaching and have brought discredit upon themselves, their school and the Way that they profess to follow.

Most of Taylor’s graduating class of 494 students remained for Pence’s speech and gave the former Indiana GOP governor a standing ovation after the walkout.

Perhaps some of these students even disagreed with what the Trump administration is doing at home and abroad and will vote against them next year. Nevertheless, their open-mindedness, politeness, and hospitable welcome brought credit to themselves and their university.

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

The Right Side of History

I've lately been reading Ben Shapiro's On the Right Side of History in which he traces the ideas that have shaped the contemporary Western world. He doesn't go into the kind of elaborate detail that Charles Taylor does in his magisterial Our Secular Age, which addresses the same theme, but Shapiro's book has the advantage of being a much less tedious read.

He begins with the ideas of the ancient Greeks ("Athens" serves as a synecdoche for the Greek rational tradition) and the Judeo-Christian ideas (represented by "Jerusalem"). The fusion of the two produced the Western world and ultimately the United States. Correlatively, it produced unprecedented progress, well-being and human flourishing.

There's nothing new in this analysis, of course, but unfortunately each generation, especially today's millennials, needs to be reminded of this history and the source of the manifold blessings they enjoy as beneficiaries of this tradition.

Shapiro's main thesis is that Western culture went off the rails when the Enlightenment thinkers split Athens off from Jerusalem, clinging to the former and rejecting the latter. This was especially so in the case of the French Enlightenment which subsequently spawned the horrors of the French terror and contributed to the evolution of modern leftism and its postmodern variants, together with its totalitarian predilections.

As Shapiro states, "Lasting happiness can only be achieved through the cultivation of soul and mind. And cultivating our souls and minds requires us to live with moral purpose."

Enlightenment thinkers, in their hubris, believed they could dispense with the moral and epistemological foundations provided by Jerusalem's God and still harvest all the fruits of Athenian reason, but this project has culminated in the postmodern scuttling of both Jerusalem and Athens. Here's Shapiro explaining the postmodern disdain for reason:
Reason, in fact, is insulting. Reason suggests that one person can know better than another, that one person's perspective can be more correct than someone else's. Reason is intolerant. Reason demands standards. Better to destroy reason than to abide by its dictates.
Tragically, the postmodern rejection of both Jerusalem and Athens has left contemporary Westerners metaphysically empty and void of the kinds of resources needed to satisfy their deepest psycho-emotional yearnings and appetites.

The Greeks thought that men had a purpose, a telos, the striving for which gave their lives meaning, but in a world bereft of God there is no "moral purpose." The Enlightenment, and later Darwinism, made God superfluous and consequently made the idea of a telos untenable. There can be no purpose for humanity if man and the cosmos are all simply freak accidents, and if there is no God then everything is nothing more than a meaningless, ephemeral flux of atoms.

The New Left emerged from the social thought of philosopher Herbert Marcuse (1898-1979) who rejected toleration of speech and ideas promoted by those who oppose the New Left's agenda. He held that freedom as it had been traditionally understood simply served the cause of oppression, that speech could be labelled violence, and that minority groups should be given special privileges including the right to shut down their opposition.

These ideas paved the way for the sexual revolution, victim politics, political correctness, and eventually, intersectionality.

Shapiro crams all this into about 250 pages, and, if you like reading about ideas and their real-world consequences, it's all really quite interesting.

Monday, May 20, 2019

The Incompatibility Between Naturalism and Reason

One of the interesting epistemological developments of the 20th century was the increasingly widespread recognition among philosophers and other thinkers that metaphysical naturalism actually saws off the epistemological branch upon which it had been perched comfortably for the previous three centuries.

Ever since the Enlightenment philosophers inclined toward a naturalistic worldview had touted their devotion to reason and derided those whose beliefs seemed to them to be irrational. They were convinced that they were occupying the intellectual high ground, but in the latter part of the 20th century many thinkers, both naturalists and theists, noting that a naturalistic view of the world entailed a Darwinian account of the origin of human reason, recognized that on Darwinism there's no good basis for trusting our reason to lead us to truth.

According to naturalism, evolution, unguided by any intelligent agent, has selected for cognitive faculties in human beings that lead to survival, but survival doesn't necessarily require truth. Indeed, survival could just as easily be enhanced by falsehoods as by truths.

Consider, for instance, a prehistoric society in which a gene mutation causes some people to believe that the more children they produce the greater will be their reward in the afterlife. Those who carry the mutation would tend, on average, to generate more children than those who don't, and since the mutant gene would be passed on to offspring the belief would spread through the population. It would have very high survival value despite its being completely false.

As Barry Arrington at Uncommon Descent notes, this is an awkward state of epistemic affairs for naturalists to find themselves in, but, even so, there are lots of examples of naturalists admitting that natural selection, at least naturalistic natural selection, entails precisely the conclusion that reason has evolved to aid our survival not to discover truth, and especially not metaphysical truth.

Arrington offers a sampling of such quotes:
“[Our] brains were shaped for fitness, not for truth. Sometimes truth is adaptive, but sometimes it is not.” Steven Pinker

“Sometimes you are more likely to survive and propagate if you believe a falsehood than if you believe the truth.” Eric Baum

“According to evolution by natural selection, an organism that sees reality as it is will never be more fit than an organism of equal complexity that sees none of reality but is just tuned to fitness. Never.” Donald Hoffman

"We are anything but a mechanism set up to perceive the truth for its own sake. Rather, we have evolved a nervous system that acts in the interest of our gonads, and one attuned to the demands of reproductive competition. If fools are more prolific than wise men, then to that degree folly will be favored by selection. And if ignorance aids in obtaining a mate, then men and women will tend to be ignorant." Michael Ghiselin

“[N]atural selection does not care about truth; it cares only about reproductive success” Stephen Stich

“Improvements in sensorimotor control confer an evolutionary advantage: a fancier style of representing is advantageous so long as it is geared to the organism’s way of life and enhances the organism’s chances of survival. Truth, whatever that is, definitely takes the hindmost.” Patricia Churchland

“We are jumped-up apes, and our brains were only designed to understand the mundane details of how to survive in the stone-age African savannah.” Richard Dawkins
Of course, a further irony in all this is that if the naturalist cannot trust her reason to lead her to truths about her deepest metaphysical beliefs then she has no good grounds for believing that naturalism itself is true in the first place.

Anyone interested in reading more about the problem of reconciling naturalism with a belief in the trustworthiness of human reason might check out a book by Alvin Plantinga, one of the foremost philosophers of the 20th century. The book is titled Knowledge and Christian Belief, and it's a more accessible version of his earlier, more technical treatment of the same subject titled Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion and Naturalism.

Saturday, May 18, 2019

A "Disproof" of God's Existence

Skeptic magazine features a piece by philosopher Colin McGinn which they title A Disproof of God's Existence. It's an eye-catching title, but it's very misleading. The article which follows is not at all a disproof of God's existence but rather a critique of the layman's definition of the term "omnipotent."

Even at that the column is something of a straw man since no serious theologian or philosopher subscribes to the definition McGinn critiques.

After arguing that God cannot have certain powers, like the power to digest food (because He has no digestive system), McGinn concludes that God is not all-powerful. He lacks powers that other beings (e.g. animals) have, and if He had those powers then He would be an embodied being and thus not God. Therefore, either He's not all-powerful or not really God. The concept of an all-powerful God, he surmises, is incoherent.

McGinn finishes his essay with this:
The difficulty for God is to specify what kind of omnipotence he is supposed to possess. (Actually, McGinn must mean here that this is a difficulty for the theist, not for God. God has no obligation to specify anything of the sort.)

And the dilemma is obvious: either he has powers that do not properly belong to his nature as divine, or he lacks powers that other things possess, thus being less than all-powerful.

The concept of an all-powerful being is actually, when you think about it, incoherent. To be a thing of a certain type is necessarily to have a limited range of powers, because powers and natures go hand in hand.
It's hard to tell what McGinn's point is here. He's a world-class philosopher. Surely he knows that no one, at least no theistic philosopher, believes that God has the power to do just anything at all. By "omnipotence" theists mean that God can do whatever is not inherently absurd, is logically possible to do, and consistent with His nature.

He cannot, for example, make a dog that's a better rhetorician than a cat or make one color sound better than another. Nor can He create a world in which He doesn't exist, nor take pleasure in evil.

Given the foregoing definition, then, what God can do is create any logically possible universe, a feat or capability that requires unimaginable power. This power further entails that He has the power to create capacities that He Himself does not exhibit because they would be inappropriate to, or incompatible with, the kind of being He is.

Nevertheless, even though He doesn't "possess" these "powers" Himself, His power to create them is itself an enormous potency. For instance, He creates green plants which have the "power" to photosynthesize and creates as well the process of photosynthesis itself. That He Himself can't photosynthesize is hardly a limitation on His power.

In fact, it's beyond ridiculous to claim, as the title of McGinn's article does, that God's "lack" of such powers is somehow a proof that God doesn't exist.

Friday, May 17, 2019

Amazing Spectacle

Right now, in mid-May, in North America, we're in the midst of one of nature's most marvelous feats. Every year, twice a year, millions of birds set out on an amazing and arduous journey, but since it happens largely at night most people aren't very much aware of the awesome spectacle that's occurring all around them in the spring and fall each year.

To help give a sense of the movements of many species of birds during migration, the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology has produced a fascinating animated feature that shows the annual migration pattern of 118 different North American species. The migration animation can be viewed here.

There's also a link on the page which takes you to a similar animation which shows the particular species of bird that's being represented. If you love nature you're sure to enjoy this.

Here are a few questions to ponder while you're watching: How did migration ever evolve through random mutation and natural selection? How do these birds know how to navigate their way back and forth, often returning to the exact patch of territory they departed from six months before? How do the young of the year, which have never made the trip before, know how to do it? Maybe it's all a breath-taking accident of natural selection and random genetic mutations. On the other hand, perhaps the whole process is intelligently designed. Assuming no apriori commitment to either view, which would be the best explanation for this phenomenon?

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Darwin Doubter

Yale computer science professor David Gelernter has done some homework and, in an article at The Claremont Review of Books, acknowledges that he has joined the burgeoning number of academics in the sciences who have serious doubts about Darwinian evolution.

He writes:
Like so many others, I grew up with Darwin’s theory, and had always believed it was true. I had heard doubts over the years from well-informed, sometimes brilliant people, but I had my hands full cultivating my garden, and it was easier to let biology take care of itself. But in recent years, reading and discussion have shut that road down for good....

There’s no reason to doubt that Darwin successfully explained the small adjustments by which an organism adapts to local circumstances: changes to fur density or wing style or beak shape. Yet there are many reasons to doubt whether he can answer the hard questions and explain the big picture—not the fine-tuning of existing species but the emergence of new ones.

The origin of species is exactly what Darwin cannot explain.

Stephen Meyer’s thoughtful and meticulous Darwin’s Doubt (2013) convinced me that Darwin has failed. He cannot answer the big question.

Two other books are also essential: The Deniable Darwin and Other Essays (2009), by David Berlinski, and Debating Darwin’s Doubt (2015), an anthology edited by David Klinghoffer, which collects some of the arguments Meyer’s book stirred up.

These three form a fateful battle group that most people would rather ignore. Bringing to bear the work of many dozen scientists over many decades, Meyer, who after a stint as a geophysicist in Dallas earned a Ph.D. in History and Philosophy of Science from Cambridge and now directs the Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, disassembles the theory of evolution piece by piece.

Darwin’s Doubt is one of the most important books in a generation. Few open-minded people will finish it with their faith in Darwin intact.

Meyer doesn’t only demolish Darwin; he defends a replacement theory, intelligent design (I.D.). Although I can’t accept intelligent design as Meyer presents it, he does show that it is a plain case of the emperor’s new clothes: it says aloud what anyone who ponders biology must think, at some point, while sifting possible answers to hard questions.

Intelligent design as Meyer explains it never uses religious arguments, draws religious conclusions, or refers to religion in any way. It does underline an obvious but important truth: Darwin’s mission was exactly to explain the flagrant appearance of design in nature.

The religion is all on the other side. Meyer and other proponents of I.D. are the dispassionate intellectuals making orderly scientific arguments. Some I.D.-haters have shown themselves willing to use any argument—fair or not, true or not, ad hominem or not—to keep this dangerous idea locked in a box forever.

They remind us of the extent to which Darwinism is no longer just a scientific theory but the basis of a worldview, and an emergency replacement religion for the many troubled souls who need one.
Gerlernter then elaborates on precisely how Meyer's arguments have persuaded him that modern iterations of Darwinism are all inadequate to the task of explaining nature's design without invoking an intelligent designer.

Nevertheless, he's not entirely convinced that Meyer has the answer either although I don't think an intelligent design proponent like Meyer would find Gerlernter's reservations to be as formidable as Gerlernter thinks they are.

In any case, though the article is lengthy, it's accessible to anyone who has taken a good high school biology class and very informative as well.

I recommend it to anyone who has an interest in the contemporary debate between naturalistic, materialistic Darwinians and intelligent design advocates.

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Capitalism's (Near) Miraculous Achievement

A number of the candidates for the Democratic nomination for president have expressed their antipathy for capitalism, opting instead for some variation of socialism.

Polls show that socialism is popular, too, among college students and many of their professors, but this growing support for socialistic nostrums among so many Americans is very difficult to understand given the enormous success of capitalism in increasing the well-being of so many people around the globe.

Here are a few statistics adapted from a site called Human Progress via the Glenn Beck radio show of May 13. The recitation of these statistics begins at about the 1:37:15 mark of the podcast:
  • In 1870 the average European life expectancy was 36 years. Globally, the figure was 30 years. Today, the numbers are 81 and 72 years respectively.
  • In 1820 90% of the world's population lived in extreme poverty. Today it's only 10%.
  • In 1800 43% of the world's children died before their fifth birthday. Today it's 4%.
  • In 1816 only 0.87% of the world's people lived in a democratic society. Today it's 56%.
  • In 1800 people living in France, at the time one of the world's richest countries, lived on 1846 calories per day. In Africa, the contemporary world's poorest continent, people now live on an average of 2624 calories per day.
  • In 1800 88% of the world's population was illiterate. Today only 13% are illiterate.
Since the turn of the century the numbers are equally remarkable:
  • GDP per person has risen globally by 52% since 2001, while infant mortality dropped 38% worldwide.
  • Since 2001 life expectancy around the world has risen 6% and people in sub-Saharan Africa are living a full decade longer than they did prior to 2001.
  • At the same time hunger has declined 33% globally since 2001, and undernourishment has decreased 27%.
These are astonishing statistics. Despite the fact that some people today live in horrendous circumstances the number who do is far less than it was a century ago and many of those who do live in penury exist in socialist dystopias like North Korea, Venezuela and Chad.

It's free markets, not centralized economic control, that have wrought this wonderful advance in human well-being, yet many people will vote in 2020 for politicians who want to kill the goose that's laying the golden eggs.

Here's a graph from Human Progress that shows the stunning explosion in GDP growth that the world has made since capitalism became more widespread in the 19th century:



According to the folks at Human Progress humanity has produced more economic output over the last two centuries than in all of the previous centuries combined. And this burst of wealth-creation led to a massive decrease in the rate of poverty.

In 1820, more than 90 per cent of the world population lived on less than $2 a day and more than 80 per cent lived on less than $1 a day (adjusted for inflation and differences in purchasing power).

By 2015, less than 10 percent of people lived on less than $1.90 a day, the World Bank’s current official definition of extreme poverty.

Why would anyone advocate undoing this modern near-miracle for human well-being in favor of policies that have consistently thrust people who live under them into abject misery? Hopefully, someone will ask Bernie Sanders that question in one of the upcoming debates.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

What Is a Person?

Recently on VP I examined some arguments frequently employed in defense of a woman's right to abort a pregnancy and gave some reasons why I felt those arguments were inadequate.

As a young man I myself was pro-choice for a time, but was persuaded that there were no very good arguments for that position, or, more precisely, the arguments adduced on behalf of the right to choose were, when placed on the scales of reason, outweighed by the arguments made by pro-lifers on behalf of the "weakest among us."

In fact, I couldn't understand why liberals, who always took the side of the weak and defenseless, nevertheless abandoned the weakest and most defenseless when it came to this issue. It seemed both odd and hypocritical.

Anyway, I want to examine one more argument today.

It's often conceded that although the unborn fetus is indeed a human being (a claim that was the topic of the previous post) it's nevertheless not a person until it's born, and since it's a person which has rights, including the right to life, an individual's right to life does not outweigh the mother's right to bodily autonomy until the moment of birth when the individual then becomes, somehow, a person.

This may seem at first hearing to be a sensible argument, but it's fraught with pitfalls. The argument hinges, obviously, upon what we mean by a "person." We cannot simply define "person" as a human being who has been born since that begs the question. It assumes as settled the very matter that's under debate.

A better definition sometimes embraced by philosophers goes something like this: A person is a living human being which has the capacity to engage in acts of intellect, emotion and will.

This seems to capture what we normally think of when we think of persons, but there are cases which are troubling. Does a newborn infant possess these capacities? If not, does the infant's lack of personhood provide a basis for legalizing infanticide?

What of human beings who are in a reversible coma? They lack the capacity to engage in acts of intellect, emotion and will. Do they cease to be persons as long as they're disabled? Would someone not still be guilty of murder if they killed a reversibly comatose human being?

Of course they would, so perhaps we need to amend our definition to say something like: A person is a living human being who has the capacity, or potential capacity, to engage in acts of intellect, emotion and will. This definition would confer personhood on both newborns and the reversibly comatose, but it would also confer personhood on the individual at every stage of her development all the way back to when she was a tiny conceptus.

Adopting this definition would therefore pose a perplexing difficulty for the pro-choice advocate who seeks to base his position on reason rather than emotion.

I argued in the last post that the contention that the unborn fetus is not a living human being is biological nonsense, and if the foregoing definition of "person" is reasonable, the claim that the unborn are not persons is simply false. That is, unless one can come up with a more plausible definition of person which doesn't beg the question.

But what of those tragic individuals who are irreversibly comatose? It could be argued, although I don't make the case here, that the definition of person could be amended one more time as follows: A person is a living human being who has the capacity, potential capacity or former capacity to engage in acts of intellect, emotion and will.

If that is a reasonable definition of a person, and I would suggest that it's incumbent upon the one who denies that it's reasonable to explain why they think so, then it follows that a person just is a living human being and has a presumptive right to life from the time of conception.

This is not to say that no circumstances could ever supercede that right, but it is to say that whatever such circumstances might be, they should certainly be more compelling than that the child just isn't wanted.

Monday, May 13, 2019

So, Impeach Him Already

The Democratic opponents of President Trump are unmollified by the Mueller report exonerating the president of colluding with Russia and failing to find sufficient evidence to indict him for obstruction of justice.

Rather than rejoice that our president did not commit treason, the Democrats in both Congress and the media seem more determined than ever to find something, anything they can use to drive him from office.

We're now told that we find ourselves immersed in a "constitutional crisis" a claim made by, inter alia, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler and CNN's Don Lemon. Here's Lemon:
Ever wonder what a constitutional crisis looks like? Well, open your eyes. The president of the United States is just blowing right through our system of checks and balances, the very thing that is supposed to keep our Congress, the judiciary, and the executive branch working, which means our country working.

He is engaging in an ongoing cover-up by defying at every turn the representatives of you, the American people, the very people who are supposed to be investigating fact-finding on our behalf.
As the Federalist's David Harsanyi responds, however, Lemon's claim is a pile of horsepucky:
None of this is remotely true. Our checks and balances are working exactly as they should. Congress is free to make perpetual demands for information and testimony, and threaten the White House with contempt charges and impeachment when it doesn’t get its way. The White House, in turn, is free to assert executive privilege and decline to hand over that information or give testimony.

Both the legislature and the executive branches have the option of asking the judiciary to weigh in on the matter. It’s not as if Donald Trump is blatantly ignoring the courts, as his predecessor often did. If voters disagree, they have the option of punishing elected officials by voting against them. If the legislature disagrees, it has an even more forceful solution available, and that’s impeachment.
Which raises the question, why doesn't the House, which is controlled by Democrats who claim that there's already enough evidence to prove the president guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors, stop playing around with interminable investigations and get on with entering articles of impeachment?

Why don't they get this over with? Why drag it out? Why claim that there's a cover-up when the Mueller report is available for every Democrat congressperson to read (though none have), when the administration submitted reams of requested documents to House investigators, and supplied every witness requested by Congress?

Harsanyi again:
If Trump is a criminal who flirts with treason and threatens the very existence of the Constitution, don’t Democrats have a duty to impeach the president? When Lemon asked Nadler about this, the congressman answered, “[i]t may come to that if the president keeps up with this conduct, but we’ll see.” Why wait?

The intelligence committee’s Rep. Adam Schiff (D-California) has maintained for years that he has incontrovertible evidence of the administration colluding with Russia. Pelosi has claimed on numerous occasions that Trump engaged in criminal behavior. It’s so bad, she recently argued, that the president is “self-impeachable,” whatever that means.

Democrats run the House. They have the votes to get it done. According to their own rhetoric, they have duty to impeach no matter what the Senate does. An impeachment proceeding that compels Democrats to lay out their case would be far preferable to this show trial—what the Wall Street Journal editorial page dubbed “The Pseudo-Impeachment.”
So why not do it whether or not the Senate will vote to convict? If Trump is such a bad guy every day the Democrats delay is bringing more harm to the country. If they have the evidence they claim to have, let's see it, let's get on with it.

As Harsanyi concludes, "Let’s do it already." Otherwise, it seems the Democrats simply hate Trump more than they care about the country.

Of course, if they don't have any evidence, if their claims to the contrary are all bluster and octopus ink, if they hate Trump more than they care about the country, well, then maybe they'll continue their endless, Kafkaesque investigations no matter what the cost.

Saturday, May 11, 2019

The Differences Between Them

The political campaign season is getting underway again (so soon?!) and we're about to be treated to our quadrennial clash between the ideas and convictions held by liberals and those held by conservatives. That being so, it might be useful to talk a little bit about the philosophical differences between these two groups.

One way to understand that difference, at least as the terms apply to American politics, is to focus on their respective anthropologies. That is, to examine their respective views on what it is to be human - what it is, in the metaphysical sense, to be man and woman.

What follows, of course, is not true of all conservatives nor of all liberals, but I think it's fair to say that it's true of a great many, maybe even the majority, of both.

Perhaps the most fundamental distinction found in the anthropology of conservatives and that of liberals is that many conservatives tend to see man as bearing the image of God, possessing immortal souls, and as loved by God. This is significant because so much else follows from it. For example, from this starting point conservatives then:

  • See human rights as divinely ordained and grounded in the will of God, and thus objective and inalienable.
  • See man as fallen from his original estate and prone to sin. Thus follows the conservative skepticism of governmental power and the need for institutional checks and balances.
  • See history as both meaningful, because it is the outworking of a Divine plan, and replete with lessons for the present because human nature doesn't change much.
  • See science as a fruitful means of making sense of the world because the world was created by a rational being and yields its secrets to rational inquiry.
  • See morality as rooted in a personal, transcendent moral authority who promulgates an unchanging moral law to which each of us is held accountable.
On the other hand, many liberals tend to see man as the product of the blind, impersonal, random process of evolution. For many liberals, particularly secular liberals, which perhaps comprise the majority, God plays little or no role in either the creation of the world or in human affairs. From this starting point, then, these liberals often:

  • See human rights as the product of a consensus of enlightened thinkers.
  • See man as basically good and malleable, and evolving toward ever greater capacities and perfections.
  • See history as an indecipherable, meaningless flux of events about which we can know little and learn less, since humanity is constantly evolving and changing.
  • See science as the only trustworthy source of knowledge and the pronouncements of scientists as authoritative, if not infallible.
  • See morality as an arbitrary, relativistic set of conventions which have evolved to help us get along with each other. There are no objective moral absolutes and probably no accountability for how we live in this life.
These disparate worldviews have profound consequences. One's starting point largely determines where one winds up.

If, for instance, human rights are simply a human invention then they're grounded in little more than the will and whims of those in power. They're just words on paper. They have no objective existence and can be discarded or changed whenever someone has the power and desire to do so. Indeed, to accuse a government of violating the human rights of its citizens makes no sense if those rights are simply whatever the government decides they are.

Likewise, if human nature can be altered and molded then the temptation to use government to compel people to conform to the image decided upon by the elites becomes irresistible.

Since there is no objective right to liberty the government can and should do whatever's necessary to create the utopian society. That, of course, leads to Orwellian dystopias.

Ideas have consequences and the bigger the idea the more far-reaching the consequences.

Friday, May 10, 2019

Not Human

There are several deeply flawed arguments frequently adduced whenever the topic of abortion is discussed, and several of them popped up the other day on CNN's Primetime with Chris Cuomo show.

CNN contributor and former New York City politician Christine Quinn argued, for instance, that “When a women is pregnant, that is not a human being inside of her. It is part of her body."

This is a stunning assertion. What, exactly, does Ms Quinn think that it is that resides in the mother's womb if not a human being?

The embryo or fetus is most certainly a "being" of some sort, and it is most certainly human. It's surely not a frog or cow embryo that's growing inside the mother's body, nor is it a cyst or tumor.

It has the genetic composition of a human being even if it's not as big as an adult human nor look exactly like an adult human. After all, size and looks are not what makes a human being human. If they were then neither dwarfs nor toddlers would be human beings.

Nor is it part of her body like, say, an appendix is. The developing human being has its own DNA signature, it's own blood type, sex and race, all of which may be different from that of the mother.

If it were just a part of the mother's body why is it, as Chris Cuomo observes, that mothers who abort often agonize over their decision? Do people agonize over whether to destroy a tumor or excise an appendix?

The argument that the unborn child is not human and can therefore be disposed of however the mother wishes is pretty much the same argument that was used to enslave blacks and to exterminate Jews. Once a particular group is dehumanized it's easy to rationalize killing them.

Another claim that often arises in discussions about abortion (though not in the present one) is the contention that "No one knows when life begins." This statement reflects an utter ignorance of biology. Life is a continuum going back to the first living cell, and there's no stage in the procreation process from that first cell to the most recently born child in which there's any doubt about the organisms and cells involved being alive.

Two living adults produce living gametes which fuse to form a living conceptus, which in turn differentiates into a living child. At no point are any of these entities not biologically alive.

Moreover, to insist, as many often do, that a child becomes human at birth is absurd. It's a delusion to think that something magical happens to the fetus as it's being birthed that somehow transforms it from subhuman one moment into a fully human being the very next moment. What, precisely, occurs during the voyage down the birth canal that effectuates this transformation?

Anyway, here's video of the exchange (Well, "exchange" is a bit euphemistic as a description of what follows) between Cuomo, Quinn and their pro-life antagonist, former senator Rick Santorum:

Thursday, May 9, 2019

Bobolinks

Long time readers of Viewpoint know that one of my enjoyments is admiring the birdlife in whatever part of the country or the world I happen to be in. Birds are beautiful and fascinating creatures, but they're not always easy to see. Good optics are helpful and, to really see them properly, essential.

Today, with the aid of a powerful scope I was able to observe a flock (not counting the females which look much different and more plain) of over forty of these beauties in a field not far from my home.


This bird is called a Bobolink because its song is alleged by some to sound like bob-o-link, although I must say, I don't hear that at all when I listen to them.

Anyway, Bobolinks are a grassland species which nests in the northern U.S. and Canada and are right now passing through my region on their spring trek to their breeding grounds. The Bobolink is one of the world’s most impressive songbird migrants, traveling some 12,500 miles (20,000 kilometers) to and from southern South America every year. Throughout its lifetime, it may travel the equivalent of 4 or 5 times around the circumference of the earth.

A migrating Bobolink can orient itself with the earth’s magnetic field, thanks to iron oxide in bristles in its nasal cavity and in tissues around the olfactory bulb and nerve. Bobolinks also use the stars to help them navigate.

Bobolink males are not only handsome, but their breeding plumage pattern is unique among North American songbirds. No other songbird species has a white back and a black front - a "reverse tuxedo."

Unfortunately, Bobolinks are declining because the hay fields in which they nest are being mowed earlier in the season and more often during the season, an agricultural practice which is fatal to young birds still in the nest.

Here's an interesting four minute video on the bobolink and some of the efforts being made to conserve them in their nesting range.

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Which Came First?

One of the numerous thorny problems with naturalistic explanations of biological origins is what's called the chicken and egg problem: In order to get a chicken there must be an egg, but in order to get an egg there must be a chicken, so which came first, the chicken or the egg?

This may sound at first like a silly question, but biology is rife with similar examples of this circularity, and it's a perplexing problem for those who believe that the development of biological novelty in nature proceeded through purely naturalistic processes.

Brazilian biochemist Marcos Eberlin, a member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences and author of over 800 scientific articles as well as the new book Foresight: How the Chemistry of Life Reveals Planning and Purpose, talks about several examples of this problem in an article at Stream.

Here are some excerpts:
A chick embryo’s development is a wonder to behold. So too is the egg in which it develops. The egg yolk and egg white contain just the right food the chick will need before it hatches. The eggshell also has microscopic pores that let air in so the chick can breathe. The developing bird then generates a network of capillaries to absorb oxygen from the air and release carbon dioxide.

Just before hatching, special membranes in the egg trap enough air so the chick can take its first breath before it leaves the shell.

The eggshell is hard enough to protect the developing chick, yet fragile enough for the full-grown chick to peck its way out. The shell and its contents are masterpieces of engineering that both nourish and protect the baby bird.

But there would be no egg without a chicken to produce it. Without an egg there can be no chicken, but without a chicken there can be no egg. How could the system have evolved one small functional step at a time? It’s an old question, one that Darwinists would like you to think they have answered satisfactorily, and long ago. They haven’t.

The chicken-and-egg problem is the archetypal example of causal circularity. To get A we need B, but to get B we first need A. We can’t have one without the other. To get both together, we need foresight — an engineer capable of planning for the future.
Eberlin argues that there are numerous examples of this kind of circularity in nature. Another example is the cell membrane which requires specialized proteins made only in the cell. Yet before the membranes existed to encase the cell there would have been no cells, but until there were cells there were no specialized proteins out of which to construct the membranes. So how did the cell ever come about?

Another example is the nucleic acid/protein complex. DNA and RNA manufacture proteins but in order for these nucleic acids to function they need a suite of proteins to assist them in their work, but the proteins are made by the nucleic acids. So how did the nucleic acids make proteins before there were proteins?

Eberlin argues that these circularities in nature can only be resolved by foresight and that foresight requires a mind:
First, we see many instances of causal circularity in biology. These pose engineering challenges whose solutions require on-time delivery of multiple, essential, and well-orchestrated parts.

Second, we know from our uniform experience that the ability to anticipate and solve such problems before they happen is a unique characteristic of intelligent minds.

Third, there are no demonstrated examples of unguided, mindless processes anticipating and solving problems that require a sophisticated orchestration of fine-tuned parts, all brought together for an origin event. Hand-waving references to cases that are assumed rather than demonstrated do not count.
He concludes, therefore, that the evidence points to the existence of an intelligent mind:
Our uniform experience provides us with only one type of cause with the demonstrated capacity to anticipate and solve such problems .... The evidence in biology for a designer with foresight is not merely apparent. It is insistently real.
Eberlin gives much more fascinating detail about the cell membrane and the nucleic acid/protein complex in the article, which is neither long nor technical. Check it out.

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Nature's Designs

The BBC has a couple of short one to two minute videos that point, each in a different way, to intelligent design in nature.

The first video explains how the morphology and effectiveness of the beak of a bird called the kingfisher attracted the attention of Japanese engineers trying to solve a problem with their bullet trains. The fact that nature's designs solve human engineering problems is at least suggestive of something more than random chance and blind forces behind those designs.

Kingfisher
The second video illustrates what might be called supererogatory design, i.e. designed systems in nature that certainly give the appearance of being both unnecessarily elaborate and intentional. The video shows the amazing underground communication system employed by trees that allows them to assist as well as wage "war" on each other.

It's fascinating to be sure, but the question that comes to mind is how such a system would arise simply through undirected, mechanistic processes.

This is not to say that it couldn't have, of course. Such a feat is within the realm of the logically possible, but it seems that very nearly every new discovery in the biological and cosmological sciences is more compatible with the hypothesis that the mind of an intelligent engineer is behind the phenomena we see than that these phenomena are all, in their billions and perhaps trillions of examples, just a lucky coincidence.

In fact, the conclusion that there's a mind responsible for it all would seem to be almost psychologically inescapable unless that conclusion were rejected a priori, but what rational grounds are there for ruling out an explanation just because one doesn't like its metaphysical implications?

Thanks to Evolution News for the tip and photo.

Monday, May 6, 2019

A Baker's Dozen Mysteries

If you're into science you might find this article by Michael Brooks at New Scientist interesting. Brooks lists thirteen mysteries that have (mostly) cosmologists and physicists baffled. To give you a sample here's #9:

It's one of the most famous, and most embarrassing, problems in physics. In 1998, astronomers discovered that the universe is expanding at ever faster speeds. It's an effect still searching for a cause - until then, everyone thought the universe's expansion was slowing down after the big bang. "Theorists are still floundering around, looking for a sensible explanation," says cosmologist Katherine Freese of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. "We're all hoping that upcoming observations of supernovae, of clusters of galaxies and so on will give us more clues."

One suggestion is that some property of empty space is responsible - cosmologists call it dark energy. But all attempts to pin it down have fallen woefully short.

It's also possible that Einstein's theory of general relativity may need to be tweaked when applied to the very largest scales of the universe. "The field is still wide open," Freese says.

I suspect that cosmologists are much more confident that dark energy is the culprit behind the accelerating expansion of the universe than what this article suggests. Nevertheless, the most fascinating thing about dark energy, if it exists, is this:

Scientists have determined that the amount of dark energy present in the universe cannot vary from the actual value by more than one part in 10(120). That's a one with 120 zeros after it. If it did deviate from its actual value by more than this amount life would not be able to exist in the universe that would result. That is an incomprehensibly precise setting. It's the equivalent of the mass of a billionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of the mass of a single electron.

What an amazing thing it is that this dark energy is calibrated to just the right value to allow life to survive. What an extraordinary amount of blind faith it takes to think that it's just a lucky coincidence, especially when there are a couple dozen other forces and parameters of the cosmos which must also be set with similar precision in order for the universe to be life-sustaining.

The biggest mystery about dark energy, it seems to me, is not what it is but rather how it came to be so exquisitely calibrated. Or maybe that's only a mystery for materialists.

Saturday, May 4, 2019

The Root of Our Modern Malaise

As a postscript to the series of posts on Judeo-Christian ethics I'd like to quote from a 1948 article in The Atlantic Monthly by philosopher W.T. Stace. Stace gives a concise summary of how we came to be where we are in the modern world, i.e. adrift in a sea of moral subjectivism and anomie. He asserts that:
The real turning point between the medieval age of faith and the modern age of unfaith came when scientists of the seventeenth century turned their backs upon what used to be called "final causes"...[belief in which] was not the invention of Christianity [but] was basic to the whole of Western civilization, whether in the ancient pagan world or in Christendom, from the time of Socrates to the rise of science in the seventeenth century....They did this on the [basis that] inquiry into purposes is useless for what science aims at: namely, the prediction and control of events.

....The conception of purpose in the world was ignored and frowned upon. This, though silent and almost unnoticed, was the greatest revolution in human history, far outweighing in importance any of the political revolutions whose thunder has reverberated around the world....

The world, according to this new picture, is purposeless, senseless, meaningless. Nature is nothing but matter in motion. The motions of matter are governed, not by any purpose, but by blind forces and laws....[But] if the scheme of things is purposeless and meaningless, then the life of man is purposeless and meaningless too. Everything is futile, all effort is in the end worthless. A man may, of course, still pursue disconnected ends - money, fame, art, science - and may gain pleasure from them. But his life is hollow at the center.

Hence, the dissatisfied, disillusioned, restless spirit of modern man....Along with the ruin of the religious vision there went the ruin of moral principles and indeed of all values....If our moral rules do not proceed from something outside us in the nature of the universe - whether we say it is God or simply the universe itself - then they must be our own inventions.

Thus it came to be believed that moral rules must be merely an expression of our own likes and dislikes. But likes and dislikes are notoriously variable. What pleases one man, people, or culture, displeases another. Therefore, morals are wholly relative.
On one point I would wish to quibble with Stace's summary. He writes in the penultimate paragraph above that, "If our moral rules do not proceed from something outside us in the nature of the universe - whether we say it is God or simply the universe itself - then they must be our own inventions."

I think, though, that if our moral rules derive from the universe they're no more binding or authoritative than if they are our own inventions. The only thing that can impose a moral duty is a personal being, one that has both moral authority and the power to hold us accountable for our actions.

A personal being which would possess that kind of authority and power, the power to impose an objective moral duty, would be one which transcends human finitude. Neither the universe nor any entity comprised of other humans qualifies.

In other words, unless God exists there simply are no objective moral duties. Thus, if one believes we all have a duty to be kind rather than cruel, to refrain from, say, rape or child abuse or other forms of violence, then one must either accept that God exists or explain how such obligations can exist in a world where man is simply the product of blind impersonal forces plus chance plus time.

Put simply, in the world of Darwinian naturalism, no grounds exist for saying that hurting people is wrong. Indeed, no grounds exist for saying anything is wrong.

It's not just that modernity and the erosion of theistic belief in the West has led to moral relativism. It's that modernity and the concomitant loss of any genuine moral authority in the world leads ineluctably to moral nihilism.

This is one of the themes I discuss in my novel In the Absence of God which you can read about by clicking on the link at the top right of this page.