Speaking about bad ideas...atheism and race!

Oct 01, 2008 12:01

Note: I am posting links to two posts in anti-racist communities. Keep in mind that the assumption is that readers are familiar and agree with anti-racist ideas so they're not explained or excused, and I'd rather you reply here unless you genuinely mean to join them (in which case, as always, read the userinfo first!) Also, as I say in the first ( Read more... )

race, thoughts, religion

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kadeton October 1 2008, 16:31:56 UTC
Anyway, for those of you who are atheist: do you agree there's a racist subtext to a lot of atheist discussion? Sam Harris (a moderately well known author) is certainly quite annoyingly bigoted against muslims.

Can I ask what the first sentence has to do with the second?

If you mean (using your example as a clue) that a lot of atheist discussion shows intolerance towards religious groups, I would say "Yes" and probably also "Duh", since atheism obviously opposes all religions.

If you mean that atheist discussion tends to show racism, i.e. a belief in the inherent superiority or inferiority of groups of people with certain similar genetic characteristics, then I would say "Not in what I've read; they tend to focus on cultural differences and ignore superficial biological differences."

If you mean that atheist discussion tends to betray a sense of cultural superiority, I would agree, but I don't really have a problem with that. The actions of an individual can be judged according to a code of ethics, and by extension, a society can be judged on the basis of whether it promotes cultural practices that are considered ethically wrong. This only becomes a problem when it is presented as an objective truth rather than a subjective judgement.

However, there are huge mental links between race, culture and religion. "Arabic" is not the same as "Islamic", nor is it the same as "of middle-Eastern descent", but people often use the terms interchangeably. Race as a concept is firmly entrenched in the human psyche, and the tendency to bundle race, culture and religion into a single package (along with a whole bunch of negative traits to create a stereotype) or at least to confuse the three by using limited terminology, is a major problem when discussing these issues. Of course, it's also a very natural tendency, promoted over hundreds of thousands of years of evolution... but overriding instinctual behaviour in situations where it isn't useful is what intelligence is for.

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kadeton October 2 2008, 04:07:41 UTC
Fair enough, but that perception still has to be tied to race (biological differences), otherwise it wouldn't be racism. An Australian Christian of middle-Eastern descent, for example, seems more likely to encounter racial prejudice in Australia than a white Muslim (correct me if I'm wrong!)... while the prejudice is based on cultural differences, those differences don't necessarily exist. They're just part of a package which associates "middle-Eastern" with "Muslim" (and "Arab"). The assumption that everyone of a particular race is of a particular culture is what links a sense of cultural superiority to racism.

Just to clarify, that isn't to say that prejudice against people of other cultures is okay. The assumption that everyone of a given culture has the same views and opinions is prejudice: assuming you know something about a person given no evidence. Once you have evidence that an individual supports ideas or actions that you consider ethically (or, I guess, morally) wrong, it's no longer prejudice; it's just a judgement.

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kadeton October 3 2008, 04:23:23 UTC
Okay, less rambly version:

There are people who are culturally European but are not white. There are also people who are white but not culturally European. The first group is more likely to encounter racial discrimination in European culture than the second.

Clearly the issue of an individual's cultural background is not important. Instead, it is the view that people who are biologically different must be culturally different that makes it racism.

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alias_sqbr October 3 2008, 03:53:50 UTC
Sam Harris isn't just critical of Islam, he's bigoted: Watch this clip of him saying suicide bombers are clearly just made crazy by their religion, rather than having any secular reason to be angry (Reza Aslan, the muslim he's debating, makes some really good points as well if you can bothered watching the whole debate)

But I think greteldragon has made my point better than I could, so I'll let you two duke it out :D

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kadeton October 3 2008, 04:11:19 UTC
At work at the moment, so I'll check it out later. My point was that thinking that Muslims are all crazy isn't racism, it's religious intolerance. The usual atheist perspective is that people who are devoutly religious are either crazy or stupid, regardless of their race or culture... and I don't think that can ever really be separated from atheism, since one of its central tenets is that all religions are false.

I maintain that there is a difference between religious intolerance and racism, because religion and culture are not the same thing (though they have strong ties). If Harris' problem is with Islam as a whole, then that transcends culture. If he only has a problem with middle-Eastern Muslims, then yes, he is racist, but it isn't his opinion on Islam that makes him so.

Nobody but me thinks semantics are important. :(

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i_palimpsest October 3 2008, 12:04:40 UTC
I'm an athiest but I don't think religious people are stupid or crazy.

More mistaken or mislead. . . and really as long as their religion doesn't hurt me or anyone else it's none of my business.

However I think that blowing yourself up in the name of anything at all is both crazy and stupid. (lets face it that's one attack on whatever it is your against, whereas if you blow something else up you can do more than one attack)

In the case of muslim suicide bombers they justify it through and because of religion. . . but I'd think they were just as crazy if they were blowing themselves up for anything else.

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alias_sqbr October 5 2008, 02:29:15 UTC
People have been martyring themselves since the year dot, and while I'm not in favour of it it's not a completely stupid gambit, since people remember martyrs, and whether or not it makes any sense tend to see them more sympathetically(*). Look at the feminists who threw themselves in front of horses, or went on hunger strikes etc.

(*)Suicide bombers may not get much sympathy here, but I get the feeling they do in the middle east, which is where they're trying to make an impression

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alias_sqbr October 5 2008, 02:22:20 UTC
The thing is, people use words as code. He says "muslim" but he means middle eastern. It's like when people here say "immigrants" they don't usually mean the ones from England and new zealand. When americans talk about "hip hop culture" they mean african americans, even though most people who listen to hip-hop are white.

Now that doesn't mean it's ok to assume that's what people mean when they say "muslim", "immigrant" etc, you have to look at how the words are being used and point out the subtext.

Also, while atheists are obviously going to have a lower opinion of religious people than of ourselves, I strongly disagree that we are justified in thinking they're all crazy, since most of the world (and any given country) is religious and no more crazy (on average) than we are. We can think they're wrong/deluded etc about that one thing but that's different from dismissing them and their opinions in general. And since most religious people are, quite obviously, not insanely violent, dismissing an insanely violent persons actions as "just the inevitable result of religion" is nonsensical.

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lauredhel October 5 2008, 02:29:06 UTC
"It's like when people here say "immigrants" they don't usually mean the ones from England and new zealand."

And definitely not those Catholic Youth who have overstayed their visas.

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alias_sqbr October 7 2008, 02:30:27 UTC
Well obviously, that's completely different!

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