From: Brian Holtz [brian@holtz.org]
Sent: Thursday, March
10, 2005 7:56 AM
To: 'asaj@ex-atheist.com'
Subject: RE:
About your Atheist Deconversion page - ASA Jones
Without addressing you line by line,
I'll take your apology below as a retraction
of your baseless charges that I am "arrogant", "vain", and "conceited", that I
"bully" people, and that I have "widened the scope" of our
discussion.
I would like to give you my final response on this matter. If I recall
correctly, you wanted to know which atheist philosophers I had read in order
to make the case that while perhaps I was an atheist, in no way could I have
been an informed and knowledgeable atheist, for had I been, I wouldn't have
converted.
You don't recall correctly. What I
said
was: "I don't doubt you were well-versed in the arguments about God. My question
is whether your exposure to nontheist ethics was limited to lame Continental
thinkers like Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Sartre, or whether you had encountered
modern
humanist thinking on ethics." You didn't
respond. I didn't say you wouldn't have converted, I just said that "The
best arguments of atheism would then tend to inoculate their atheist hearers
against Christianity".
You've
already said you didn't convert because of comparing the arguments, so there
would be little point in showing that you were unfamiliar with the
arguments. My (updated)
conclusion
is that your conversion involved "factors 7 (emotional dissatisfaction with the
logical implications of atheism) and 12 (desire to reform one's morality or
behavior), probably 13 (desire for hope in divine reward), and possibly 9
(though nowhere on her site does she elaborate on the 'adversity' that 'broke'
her)." Meaninglessness and amorality seem to figure prominently in your
dissatisfaction with atheism, so I'm just trying to see how familiar you were
with the best humanist thinking on meaning and morality. If you ever post
some of your atheist writings, I hope they include your best material on this
topic.
I have no desire to take any more time than I've
already spent responding to you on this issue 1) because you irritate me and I
don't want to spend any amount of time conversing with you. While you may see a
conversation with me as being productive and beneficial to your cause, my
interests are found elsewhere.
Actually, the more you tell me of
the things you knew as an atheist, the more it hurts my proximate "cause" of
showing that well-informed atheists tend not to deconvert. But my ultimate
"cause" here is truth, and I don't mind letting the chips fall where they may --
even if it means discovering reasons why a well-informed atheist like me (or the
former you) should deconvert.
I apologize for my negative reaction to you. I'm
not sure why I have it. Frankly, I find you creepy. I honestly can't say that
I've had this adverse reaction to any other net skeptic.
Creepy n.
producing a sensation of uneasiness or fear. If I were as "vain and
conceited" as you claim, I'd assert
that your uneasiness and fear
are the natural reaction of a self-proclaimed undefeated debater
encountering a clear non-victory. (After all, we can't all
justifiably feel undefeated, can we?) But I already told you why I think
it's natural for our discussion to make you uncomfortable: because I try to
focus on an intense and traumatic part of your personal history. You seem
convinced that I'm doing this out of malice, perhaps because malice is why the atheist Amy would have done
it. I hope you grow to someday be open-minded and charitable enough to consider
that one needn't share the personality of atheist Amy to criticize theism as
well as she used to.
Another possible explanation for your reaction is your
stated motivation for Christian apologetics. You say your motive is to
"encourage Christians" (presumably including yourself), and headline the
question "have the internet infidels got you down?". Your front page talks
about "fortifying your Christian faith in a world that seeks to destroy it", and
it only mentions truth in the context of the
odd notion that your omnigod deliberately hid the most important truths in apparent contradictions. Thus you
seem less concerned about
truth and more concerned about
feeling secure from criticism of your
current worldview, just as when you rejected
"indefensible" Christianity because "atheism was safer, but not necessarily more
truthful".
2) because no matter how much I know or how many
atheist philosophers I have read, it would never be enough to satisfy your
definition of 'knowledgeable'.
That's simply not true. To be
a well-informed atheist one just needs to know
- the basic arguments for and against theism;
- the basics of cosmology, physics, evolutionary biology, and cognitive
science;
- the basics of comparative religion, which in our context includes
introductory biblical criticism; and
- the basic principles of epistemology, metaphysics (esp. naturalism), and
axiology (esp. humanism).
Your conversion story 1) talks about science
where it should talk about philosophy, 2) mentions only ancient and Continental
philosophers, and 3) exhibits no acquaintance with modern humanism while
stressing the axiological problems that humanism addresses. So it seems
that you probably were just missing a
little bit of humanist axiology. If from your contemporaneous writing we could
see that you had considered the relevant principles of humanism, that would make
your deconversion even more significant than it already is.
Probably one of the best documented cases of a
'knowledgeable' atheist converting to theism is the case of Anthony Flew. If he
doesn't fit your description of a knowledgeable atheist, woe be it for me to
attempt to attain that status.
Flew converted to a lukewarm deism,
and still rejects Christianity, so he doesn't count as an "atheist having
long-term experience with both sides' arguments who later converted to
Christianity primarily because of comparing those arguments".
Nevertheless, I've queued him up for my survey; thanks for the pointer.
3) I doubt that you are collecting data on
atheist deconversions only for the sake of pure scientific knowledge. I believe
that you will attempt to use it in a display of propaganda that promotes
atheism, explaining away any and all 'deconverts' as having been less informed
about atheism than those who remain loyal to atheism.
The reason
for my survey remains as
stated in its first two paragraphs. I intend for my survey to promote the
truth, on the premise that a true worldview is more likely to inoculate its
better students from deconversion than a false one is. You calling my survey
"propaganda" suggests that you're uncomfortable with what such a survey would
tend to show.
Of course, this does nothing to explain why
intelligent Christians who are knowledgeable in the subject of atheism remain
Christian.
The same13
non-rational factors that can explain a conversion to Christianity can also
explain someone continuing to be a Christian (just as the analogous non-rational
factors can explain conversion to or remaining an atheist). If you know of
any Christians who are relatively free from all these factors, I'd like to hear
about them. I continue to believe that my atheism is not maintained by any of
the analogous factors, though some might be skeptical of my claim that my
atheism has not been influenced by either the death of my
son or some sort of pride.
Many Christian apologists seem to deny that a well-informed person can
remain (or become) an atheist on the basis of rationality as distinct from
non-rational influences like those on my list. I don't deny that a well-informed
person can remain (or become) a Christian on the same basis, but I've not heard
of one who I can be confident is free of influences like desire for fellowship
or hope in divine reward.
Goodbye, Brian.
I used FutureMe.org to send you an email in ten years, making a
prediction about your life (and no, it's not that you'll revert to atheism). In
the meantime, if you feel the Rapture starting, try to foil it with some quick
sinful thoughts, because you won't want to miss the party we're going to
have.... :-)