Massimo Pigliucci has written a book, Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science From Bunk(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll), that actually sounds very interesting — it takes a strong skeptic’s approach to truth claims. What really makes it sound worth reading, though, is a review by Carlin Romano that pans it, Pigliucci, and a whole great legion of scientists irritated with the public endorsement of nonsense: Romano complains that we’re on “ego trips.” Why? Because Pigliucci expresses such strong certainty about the conclusions of science.
Here’s the heart of the review. It’s a lot of aggravating piss-pottery about tone.
Pigliucci offers more hero sandwiches spiced with derision and certainty. Media coverage of science is “characterized by allegedly serious journalists who behave like comedians.” Commenting on the highly publicized Dover, Pa., court case in which U.S. District Judge John E. Jones III ruled that intelligent-design theory is not science, Pigliucci labels the need for that judgment a “bizarre” consequence of the local school board’s “inane” resolution. Noting the complaint of intelligent-design advocate William Buckingham that an approved science textbook didn’t give creationism a fair shake, Pigliucci writes, “This is like complaining that a textbook in astronomy is too focused on the Copernican theory of the structure of the solar system and unfairly neglects the possibility that the Flying Spaghetti Monster is really pulling each planet’s strings, unseen by the deluded scientists.”
Is it really? Or is it possible that the alternate view unfairly neglected could be more like that of Harvard scientist Owen Gingerich, who contends in God’s Universe (Harvard University Press, 2006) that it is partly statistical arguments–the extraordinary unlikelihood eons ago of the physical conditions necessary for self-conscious life–that support his belief in a universe “congenially designed for the existence of intelligent, self-reflective life”? Even if we agree that capital “I” and “D” intelligent-design of the scriptural sort–what Gingerich himself calls “primitive scriptural literalism”–is not scientifically credible, does that make Gingerich’s assertion, “I believe in intelligent design, lowercase i and lowercase d,” equivalent to Flying-Spaghetti-Monsterism?
Tone matters. And sarcasm is not science.
Romano is oblivious to the actual facts of the Dover case. William Buckingham was not some thoughtful theist who wanted a philosophical discussion in the science classroom; he wasn’t even an ID proponent. He was a born-again jesus freak befuddled on hillbilly heroin who was more of a young earth creationist. He wanted to get the Christian Bible into the public school classrooms, was willing to lie on the witness stand to do it, and saw intelligent design only as a tool to smuggle Jesus into the science classes.
Yes, really.
“Inane” is also how Judge Jones described the school board’s actions: to be precise, he called it “breathtaking inanity”. The view they were trying to push on children, that the there is a magic man in the sky who poofed us all into existence, is actually entirely as silly as the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Pigliucci was right. Romano is wrong.
But what if Buckingham had been a genteel, considerate, ruminative Owen-Gingerich-style Pennsylvania populist? Would that make any difference? No. Gingerich is a religious cosmologist who believes that “a common-sense and satisfying interpretation of our world suggests the designing hand of a superintelligence.” There is absolutely no evidence for this, despite his claims that that bogus ‘fine-tuning’ argument supports the notion. It’s a fabulous fantasy of a grand cosmic super-brain hovering about at the beginning of the Big Bang that is just as ludicrously unfounded as the claim that Jesus did it, or that the Flying Spaghetti Monster flapped a few noodly appendages to conjure a home for pirates into existence. Leaving the word “Jesus” out of your explanation does not turn it into science.
The only thing I agreed with in Romano’s cranky review was the second to the last sentence above: “Tone matters.” It certainly does, but not in the way he imagines. Romano has written a kvetching review in which he reserves all of his bile for the fellow promoting an evidence-based view of reality, and provides nothing but gentle strokes for people who favor fantasies over hard truths…and his complaint is that scientists are insufficiently conciliatory to those deceitful purveyors of faith and fables. Tone does matter when you use that brand of argument to beg special treatment for liars, and to justify chastising those who deliver a blunt truth — it means one is pandering to faith-based folly.
Tone matters, because too many have been insufficiently fierce in their criticism of pious excuses for sloppy thinking. Tone matters because we haven’t been rude enough in the face of special claims of privilege for religious inanity. We need to flip that tone argument around 180°—the problem isn’t that our tone is so harsh, it’s that yours is so inappropriately soft towards people who lie to children, who want to gut our educational system, and who want to taint science with a bias for magic.
csreid says
Yes
No. (Teach him to ask rhetorical questions…)
Glen Davidson says
What a prat! Damn right tone matters, and a moron who doesn’t even understand that the Dover ruling wasn’t about cosmological ID, but (almost) only about biological creationism, ought to adopt a less whiny and certain tone in which to kvetch stupidly and ignorantly.
As for “fine-tuning,” it is only an observation. It’s not so “unreasonable” to a mind predisposed to believe in magical explanations (it’s not so stupid as apologetics, it’s apologetics that’s stupid), but “God” provides absolutely no causal explanation for it.
That said, cosmological ID isn’t as pathetically anti-science as biological ID, which was what was banished at Dover. Romano’s pontificating without even understanding that fact shows what a mindless jerk he really is.
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/mxaa3p
Mystyk says
I’ve been listening to Massimo Pigliucci for some time now through his podcast, and I have always been impressed with the thorough, consistent approach he takes to every topic, especially those with which he admits he would be prone to bias. That is utter scientific integrity, and he doesn’t care how uncomfortable it makes others (although he also doesn’t want to deliberately antagonize just to be contrarian). Richard Feynman would be proud.
For those interested, his podcast is “Rationally Speaking: Exploring the Borderlands between Reason and Nonsense.” It is the official podcast of the NYC Skeptics, and is well worth a listen. It is available free on iTunes, or you can head here: http://www.rationallyspeakingpodcast.org/
raven says
The usual. Carlin Romano is a serial killer.
He created a few poorly made strawpeople. And then set them on fire in an act of premediated murder. Won’t someone think of the poor strawpeople?
KOPD says
This is even funnier since Pigliucci just last month ranted at PZ for not being nice enough to people he disagreed with – essentially saying “tone matters.”
kinem says
PZ, I like that last paragraph. Very quotable.
Celtic_Evolution says
Sure, but not to the substance of the claims. And how it matters is a purely subjective thing… something obviously lost on a reviewer deciding to tell everyone how the tone matters to him and that it should matter the same way to everyone.
Go piss your pants in your own private corner along with the rest of the tone-concerned accomodationists, Romano. The rest of us will spend more time concerned with the substance of the material.
Meaningless drivel masquerading as a clever quip.
Politeness isn’t science either.
Science is fucking science. And there’s plenty of it in this book, whether presented sarcastically or otherwise.
Address the substance or continue to sound like a fool. It’s a damn good thing cases like Dover aren’t decided based on who presents their argument in a nicer way.
And sarcasm is not science.
Celtic_Evolution says
damn… that last line in my #7 is a copy-paste remnant I didn’t see till after I hit submit. Disregard.
Ben Goren says
You know what i think? I think that the fact that Carlin Romano is astounded that the bottoms of his shits are the exact same shape as the insides of his diapers means he’s a poopyhead.
How’s that for tone?
Magical thinking is fantastic for fantastic storytelling. Harry Potter would be a dull tale indeed without all the magic wands and incantations and monsters and what-not.
But people who are foolish enough to believe that a particular faery tale is actually true, contrary to all evidence, merely because they find the faery tale pleasing? Well, they’re fools and deserve to be laughed as such.
Except for the ones with genuine mental illnesses, of course. They deserve compassion and the best treatment modern science has to offer.
Basing your decision as to what is true on what you wish were true? You know, “faith”? That’s deserving of scorn, shame, and humiliation. Those people are poopyheads, and they should be publicly and loudly called such.
Cheers,
b&
—
EAC Memographer
BAAWA Knight of Blasphemy
“All but God can prove this sentence true.”
Teh Merkin says
Wait, we live in a universe “congenially designed for the existence of intelligent, self-reflective life”?
Silly me, I thought that the universe was almost entirely a cold, dangerous place for life. I’ll remember that the next time I am standing on the surface of the moon in my undies.
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
yawn
Celtic_Evolution says
Exactly!! I was about to point that out when I saw your post, KOPD.
I wonder if it will occur to Pigliucci now that this is the problem when you decide to attack tone.
Arguments concerning proper tone are entirely subjective, and has no place is rational discourse. Who is the arbiter of proper tone? Pigliucci? He claimed to be in his rant against PZ, but clearly according to Romano he’s not…
Trying to decide who’s striking the proper tone is like trying to decide if the music at a concert is good based on how loud it is… it’s purely subjective and says nothing, ultimately, about the actual music.
My hope is that Pigliucci learns a valuable lesson about making “tone” and issue when it comes to debating matters of science vs. pseudo-science or religion. Substance is all that matters.
Unfortunately, having read his blog, my guess is that he will not.
Orson Zedd says
What? He doesn’t think my pasta based religion is analogous to his?
massimo.pigliucci says
Well, Sir, thanks for the kind words, despite our recent inter-blog sparring.
cheers,
Massimo Pigliucci
Brownian, OM says
As a resident of Canada’s most willfully ignorant province, screeds like Romano’s boils down to a theme that hits too close to home: “There is a simple wisdom in the views and opinions of the simple and uneducated, and we must not only respect it, but it should trump the views of those who’ve dedicated their lives to studying a particular subject.” ‘Round these parts, being described as “folksy” confers more gravitas than completing high school. Spent forty years farming a dirt patch forty clicks from the nearest single-classroom school? Why, that’s practically a PhD in every field from climate science to public health.
If Romano is so concerned over tone—and shouldn’t he really be more concerned with content?—he would do well to read up on the Dover trial and the antics of those honesty-challenged sacks of dogshit Bill Buckingham and Alan Bonsell. Integrity matters too, Dr. Romano, especially among those who would set themselves up as the arbiters of our education and our morality. Scientists, like the religious, are as honest and as dishonest as the rest of us. However science, as a process, is self-correcting. Religion on the other hand, has demonstrated it’s as concerned with image as the most cold-blooded Hollywood PR agent. Would you have us spend our time polishing science’s image at the expense of its integrity so it becomes as shiny a turd?
a_ray_in_dilbert_space says
My question is this:
When people go out of their way to ignore or deny evidence and take ridiculous positions, what tone is appropriate other than ridicule?
To simply pretend that they have not emitted a massive brainfart is not simply disingenuous, it is condescending.
amphiox says
Maybe, just maybe, the universe was designed for something. But whatever that might be, it’s pretty clear that intelligent self-reflective life is just the accidental by-product. The creator was careless, muffed his figures, and here we are.
And here on earth at least, the “self-reflective” part is only just barely passing muster.
Thorne says
It occurs to me that perhaps the reason religious groups are so opposed to Harry Potter and movies like Avatar is because they know the kids will see the parallels between these fantasy worlds and the fantasy worlds of religion. After all, if you can believe in one fairy godfather, why not all of them? And if praying to the shrubbery doesn’t get you what you want, well hey, neither does praying to Jesus!
eshamlin says
PZ, that last paragraph is a great distillation of the situation.
It will be hereby quothed.
Enough with the automatic deference to mythology.
Roestigraben says
He’s put off by words like “bizarre” and “inane”? That’s about the kindest, yet still accurate description one can come up with to describe what happened in Dover. And then he goes on to call science advocates “Ayn Rand protagonists”! If that’s not rude, I don’t know what is.
Brownian, OM says
Ah, there’s that scala naturae again. Those who would make claims for fine-tuning would do well to put down the mirror and instead focus their gaze upon the actual biota of the planet Earth. If the universe is fine-tuned for anything, it’s for single-celled organisms lacking a nucleus and organelles. We exist by their grace, and none other.
AdamK says
I kinda liked it. I read it in a very sarcastic tone of voice, and it sounded like an elegant little fuckyou at the end of an apt rant.
blf says
Is it just me, or has confusing the tone of the message with the content of the message become more common recently?
InfraredEyes says
I think what has become more common is deliberately focusing on tone so that you can ignore the content.
chaseacross says
I think magic ought to be taught in public schools. I’m dead serious: have spells, incantations, invocations of deities, prayers for intercession, and so on be taught right alongside science. Then when it comes time for the test, present several problems for the students to solve (for example, the classic egg drop, or explaining some natural phenomenon, or predicting the outcome of an experiment). The students can then work out for themselves which perspective yields concrete results and which does not.
https://me.yahoo.com/a/DhjBEuJ8pt63x6eBKuPx0Jv9_QE-#7c327 says
You let Buckingham off far to easily.
He was the one who brought up his Oxycontin addiction as an excuse for his behavior.
Worse than being a young-earth creationist, he was a simple-minded bully who perjured himself, as the judge noted.
He is an ex-cop. Most cops are decent people doing a tough job for crummy pay. But the opportunity to wear a badge and a gun obviously appeals to bullies and authority freaks. We’ve all run into them (Skip Gates comes to mind).
Buckingham lied about everything, including the source of the book “Pandas and People.” He should have spent a year in jail. After all, every cop takes an oath to uphold the Constitution.
(Yes, as you may have guessed, I worked briefly as a cop in small South Carolina town. I know Buckingham’s type all too well.)
Hypatia's Daughter says
You don’t need to go to the Moon. How about hat nice warm cozy womb that aborts 1/3 or more of all fertilized ova? How about death rates (before modern science) that had over half of all children dying before their 5th birthday?
Jebesus, Owen G. How nice that you live in a time and placed that that has cared, cosseted and cuddled you all your life. Try being born poor and hopeless in a Calcutta slum, Dickens’ England or an orphan in a Ireland where Mother Church will take over your care! Most of the billions of humans that have ever lived on this world suffered mean, short lives with no time for “self-reflection”.
This weekend, I listened to PZ debate Dr Angus Menuge (from April 19, 2008 at the University of Minnesota: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1982636607986913603#) and I don’t know what stops PZ from taking a pick-axe to the head of these bozos. The debate he had with Simmons was the same – I was shaking with rage while I listened.
The irony is that PZ is very soft-spoken and polite – very much the American Dawkins – when he in public. Even his posts here, while blunt, never stoop to profanity or cheap insults.
It is us, his minions, who indulge in sins lewdness and rudeness of which PZ stands accused….
Antiochus Epiphanes says
True dat, P-Zed. Keep exposing the stupid!
bullofthewoods says
The tone of so-called new atheists is mild compared to the tone of the fundy church of christ pastors that I was forced to endure throughout my youth. The hell fire and brimstone screeds I had to hear every time the doors of that church was open especially during those week long prayer meetings make the criticism put forth by our side absolutely tame by comparison.
blf says
Yeah, that could be it. Or just coincidence, or my noticing/awareness of the confusion (deliberate or not) has improved. Or, since I have no actual data, my impression could be entirely mistaken.
https://me.yahoo.com/a/O.jullMj0I2VvJaxMMVeNKSfOPf73voLSxJAe9PdlOWwi8Y-#258ec says
You know I would be concerned about the tone if the those who do believe were not trying to force me to believe what they tell me to. If they wanted to engage in rational debate or discussion I would gladly join in but they do not want to engage in any such thing. They show every indication of being willing to use “what ever means necessary” to have their views forced on every one else. It is simply amazing that in this day and age we are still having to argue issues that are this old instead of just finding out together what is real and what is not.
Are those who are so worried about tone really just afraid Daddy and Mommy will get mad and come and punish them like maybe washing their mouth out with soap or bring the belt and whip them?
It looks to me like life has fine tuned itself to this little corner of the Cosmos more than the cosmos is fine tuned for life. which sounds like getting the cart before the horse
Abdul Alhazred says
Sure. A superintelligence who faked fossils to test our fate. :)
Sastra says
Exactly. And this is why all the whining and complaining about “tone” is going to go on forever, and be a constantly shifting goalpost. You will never be considered polite enough, as long as you’re going to be judgmental.
I recently got into a coffee shop argument over whether or not therapeutic touch (energy medicine) was supported by science. They hated my tone. I was being too sure of myself. I needed to admit that my view was just an opinion. Science itself was just a bunch of people’s opinions. Nobody was right or wrong.
This, of course, was not the original thrust of the argument. The original thrust of their argument was that I was wrong, and that chi energy was today an accepted part of the scientific mainstream. When they start to lose the argument, that’s when they whine about tone, style — and the rudeness and philosophical foolishness of expressing strong certainty about anything.
You can’t be nice enough, until you admit that your view is no better than theirs, really. It isn’t really about tone. It’s about content.
Tulse says
Given its prevalence, it presumably was designed for a near vacuum at 3K. All the other bits (stars, gases, people and the like) are just trace impurities.
With regards to tone, what’s worse: telling someone they’re stupid, or telling someone they will be tortured for all eternity?
Jadehawk, OM says
mmm… hero sandwiches… kinkiness…
tommorris says
Carlin Romano manages to be wrong about most things. He’s often egregiously wrong about philosophy. Now he’s being egregiously wrong about science. This is something of a theme in his writings…
Josh, Official SpokesGay says
Well, that’s rich, considering Pigliucci has lambasted PZ and others for their tone. One would hope this would cause him to reconsider his views, and realize that:
1. No matter how gently you phrase your criticism, someone will be angry that the content of their claim is being attacked, but they will disingenuously complain about your tone.
2. The complaint is almost never really about tone, it’s about being wrong and called to account for it publicly.
3. One cannot reasonably complain about the tone other people take when one uses words (correctly) like “inane” to describe, well, inanity.
Sastra says
The Fine-Tuning Argument contradicts itself.
Is God supposed to be intelligent?
Yes.
Is God supposed to be self-reflective?
Yes.
Is God supposed to be alive?
Yes.
Are we made in God’s image?
Yes.
Does God need the constants of the universe fine-tuned in order for his intelligent, self-reflective, living self to exist?
No.
Then neither would we. Disembodied minds and spiritual souls can exist under any damn conditions. God didn’t create the universe so that He could have little intelligences to love Him. He wanted a particular version of carbon-based flesh to attach the spirits to, out of all the possible things to attach it to, despite the fact that it obviously doesn’t need to be attached to anything material at all.
On whim, presumably.
yar.natasha says
I fucking hate the ‘tone’ argument. It is constantly used against we queers, we aren’t being polite enough. If only we weren’t so shrill people would listen to us. Bunk.
In a fight for truth or your rights politeness just gets you ignored. We are never going to reach the faith blind but if we are loud enough we may very well reach the ignorant and hopefully educate them.
El Guerrero del Interfaz says
Delightful the bit about tone.
And Sastra’s Fine Tuning “argument” demolition too.
a_ray_in_dilbert_space says
And just because you can never have too many H. L. Mencken quotes, here’s Mencken on “tone”:
amphiox says
The way I see it, current evidence is leaning towards a three-horse race between hard vaccuum, black holes, and dark energy. As for intelligent life? It tripped on the starting gun, broke a foreleg, and was shot.
Of course, in Avatar, praying to the shrubbery actually worked! Them evil invading aliens and their fancy-schmancy technology proved as vulnerable to Gaia-ex-machina as H.G. Wells’ Martians.
dashukta says
“Nonsense on stilts!” is one of my favorite quotes! I remember watching Bill Moyer’s Journal and the one guest (I think it was actually Pigliucci) in response to some statement busts out with “That is nonsense on stilts!”
I loved it! I wrote it down. But for the life of me,I can’t remember what they were discussing…
jack.rawlinson says
Did Pigliucci, or anyone else, suggest that it was?
One of the many signs of the innate lack of intelligence of these apologists is their fondness for logical fallacy and their apparent inability to understand that it doesn’t pass unnoticed.
Paul W., OM says
Massimo Pigliucci @ 14
I hope you’ll take Sastra’s comment #33 seriously.
I was thinking that during the tone sparring, and lo and behold, Romano comes along and illustrates it beautifully.
(Her #38 was very good too.)
Flex says
blf at #23 wrote,
I don’t think so. Maybe we are all simply learning to recognize it more clearly.
Also, as history moves on, most ‘tone’ arguments are expunged from the public consciousness. The contemporaries of Johnathan Swift complained about his tone, but unless you search them out, you’ll never hear them.
Of course, most censorship is a form of ‘tone’ argument, only with a little more teeth. Who remembers the names of the reviewers who thought ‘Tropic of Cancer’ was obscene?
Hear that Carlin? Your review is far more ephemeral than Pigliucci’s book.
Wholly Cymbal says
That’s exactly what bothers me about these tone-trolls. They remind me very much of the “moderate Muslims” who, whenever the monstrous acts of some Muslims are pointed out, stand up and whine “we’ll we’re not like that!” That’s fine, but it also means we’re not talking about them! It doesn’t matter anyway, because certain Muslims are like that! In this case, it’s the toners standing up and saying “well not all Christians are like that! You should respect their beliefs!” They seem to think that if we criticize a Christian who spreads lies about reality, then we must be criticizing all Christians everywhere about everything they believe (which at times I and others like me are, but now is not one of those times).
I agree with them: tone is important. However, if these people are actually suggesting that a tone that shows anything but contemptuous indignation for the lies of deliberately deceitful snakes like Buckingham is the best tone to take, then it is their tone we should be worried about. To adopt a tone that even hints at the possibility that maybe ID isn’t complete bullshit that twists science and disseminates confusion among the public is to be complicit in that deceit, and is completely irresponsible. Romano fails to understand that the tone he advocates is one which strongly implies that everyone’s opinion is equally valid, no matter how baseless and arbitrary those opinions may be. That’s a tone that tells people they don’t have to think and they don’t have to study something to know everything about it. His TONE is LYING.
The tone writers like PZ and Dawkins take isn’t even sarcastic; it’s polemical, sure, but sarcasm is much to simple a term for this sort of rhetoric. Talking about the FSM and the like isn’t simple ridicule, it’s an illustration of the illogic behind any concrete claims as to the nature and existence of a god or gods, or anything else that one cannot detect or measure in any meaningful way. The whole point of all this is that is one doesn’t think critically, one is bound to believe anything.
It’s like they want to make friends more than they want to educate.
…And I wrote this before reading the last three paragraphs… D’oh…
cafeeine says
@Sastra
Excellent unravelling of the fine-tuning argument.
Even if we ignore the ‘made in god’s image’ as too christocentric for the supposed scientific ID proponents, the fine-tuned argument makers presuppose a naturalistic universe in order to make their fine-tuning claim, and then propose a supernatural solution. It is inherently contradictory no matter what the proposed supernatural solution is.
Jordan says
Pharyngula: Proving time and time again that creationists aren’t the only arrogant morons in the world.
Brownian, OM says
Right: there are YouTube proselytizers as well.
MadScientist says
I wouldn’t buy a Pigliucci book though since he’s a shrill, strident, even militant accommodationist. Science and religion are not incompatible he says. We must respect other peoples’ beliefs. I’m sure there are many good books out there dealing with the same subject and whose royalties won’t flow to someone who sometimes doesn’t seem to know whether he’s coming or going.
Travis says
Jordan,
So, do you have any specific reason to call the people here morons? A disagreement with some of the points made? Your comment does not have any more information than calling someone a poopyhead.
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
Yes, there are drive by morons like yourself as well.
MadScientist says
One more point on Gingerich – OOoo! Harvard! Ooo! Well, Harvard Press anyway, but still – Harvard! Don’t you just love pretentious claims to authority by citing well-known names? I think I can sense the ghost of J. Kwok …
Pierce R. Butler says
Hypatia’s Daughter @ # 27: … his posts here, while blunt, never stoop to profanity or cheap insults.
For a rather low value of “never” – sfaict, our esteemed host hasn’t called anyone a demented fuckwit since July of ’08.
I blame the local coffee shop.
https://me.yahoo.com/hairychris444#96384 says
I just mosied over this chap’s YouTube channel. I really really hope that he’s Poe-ing. The “witnessing to the lost” clip had me in stitches. Unfortuantely the more I think about it the more I’m sure that he is serious.
Stop the world I want to get off. :-/
Blake Stacey says
Science has been leaving common sense behind ever since Stevin and Benedetti started dropping balls from towers and found that the heavy ones hit the ground at the same time as the light ones. “Common sense” is just another term for “your first, uneducated guess”.
katharos says
You know that argument for god has -got- to be right. It was founded on -statistics-.
Gah. One of the things I try very very hard to instill in my students is that statistics are only as good as the data you put into them. They don’t speak on their own.
tutone21 says
Oh man!! What a fucking tool!!! HE had a guy on a boat looking for the Loch Ness Monster representing the science community. That’s why I became a Chemist. To find out the truth about “Nessy.”
What kind of asshat does that?
co says
I love the “nonsense on stilts!” phrase, too. Apparently it originated with Bentham (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Bentham).
co says
Not sure about “Jordan”. He could have just been a little drunk when he drove by here — his YouTube subscriptions include ZomGitsCriss and MrDiety, with Thunderfoot thrown in for good measure. And I don’t see any immediate creotard links. Besides which, his taste in music (if I can believe him) is almost unbelievably good. I choose to believe, for the moment anyway, that he’s not a Babble thumper.
Mal Adapted says
What’s most risible about statements like this is that they are so transparently self-aggrandizing. Don’t theists realize how infantile they sound, so proud of how intelligent and self-reflective humans are, we must be the crown of creation, surely it all exists for our benefit!
The supreme irony in such statements by “people of the Book” is that their book plainly says pride is “the original and most serious of the seven deadly sins, and indeed the ultimate source from which the others arise.”
If pride is the deadliest of sins, then humility is the most exalted virtue, and humility lies in acknowledging (with Dawkins) that “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” — no matter how good it might feel to believe otherwise.
Naked Bunny with a Whip says
@Jordan: Yep, we just had a libertarian-heavy thread, and I don’t think a single one of them was a creationist.
'Tis Himself, OM says
Naked Bunny with a Whip #63
They did qualify as arrogant morons.
Kirk says
Obsequious.
I agree with (my interpretation of) your intent, PZ, but I don’t think the issue is that the apologists are wrong in tone.
It’s not tone. It’s obeisance.
What pisses the religious people off is that real atheists aren’t first willing to bend the knee before they state “I humbly beg to differ, acknowledging that your divine will guides me in all things.”
jemand says
I am consistently amazed at the creativity of this group in insults, and yet the first comment which is actually problematic, as “moron” is somewhat of a slur against mentally ill people, (if not completely recognized today it probably will be some time) is by someone who is *criticizing* the people here!
PZ pulls no punches with inanity, bullshit, and willful ignorance, but it is very difficult to find any language attacking a person or group for physical characteristics, or using physical characteristics as shorthand for bad arguments. However, this seems to be somewhat more common among those who tremble before the judicious application of “bullshit” or “fuckwad.”
Anyone have a theory why?
Joshua Zelinsky says
The most fascinating thing about Romano’s review is that this is despite the fact that Pigliucci is a strong accomodationist (indeed, he actually says explicitly in the book t”consider biologist Richard Dawkins, who goes so far as to (mistakenly, as it turns out) claim that science can refute what he calls “the God hypothesis.”” (part of a larger excerpt at http://friendlyatheist.com/2010/05/03/massimo-pigliucci-criticizes-scientism/ ). So even given Pigliucci’s views he’s still too rude for the theists like Romano. Apparently, no matter how accomodationist one is, the theists will still be unhappy.
The only other interpretation of the data I can think of is that Romano didn’t actually read the book. In which case the lesson is that no matter how accomodationist one is, the theists won’t actually read your book.
End result seems the same.
Hypatia's Daughter says
#55 Pierce R. Butler
Ahh, the crackergate incident. I would generously grant PZ the right to call someone who threatens to kill a person for stealing a cracker a “demented fuckwit” – ’tis more a statement of fact than a mere cheap insult……
#33 Sastra
But because every American has the right to their opinion, they think they can recreate reality to match it. How many times have you heard the ultimate argument: Shouldn’t parents be the ones to decide what their children learn in school? And if parents want goddidit, science be damned.
“You have a right to your opinion. That does not make your opinion right.”
Kel, OM says
That’s a little unfair to him, his views aren’t militant at all. To the extent he goes I don’t agree with him (which I have argued on his blog – it leads to a position where individuals are trying to have their metaphysical cake and eat it too), but I really can’t fault his reasoning for his position.
Pluto Animus says
Ah, Myers. The old adage: the pen is mightier than the sword. In your case, the pen is mightier than the cross.
https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id?id=AItOawnb-E55g7vrnvH-3L1M6d7QuDYWoM_IDEM says
Perhaps we have witnessed a ‘miracle’?
A pearl-clutching faitheist in the initial throes of realising that his filosophical-flapdoodle about concentrating on ‘tone’ does not work?
For many, including I, have pointed out that an experiment has been performed to test whether or not being polite & obsequious to the faith-heads is effective.
This experiment has lasted for more than 2300 years.
It revealed the results of this odious policy to be startlingly negative in total.
Another experiment has been performed over the last handful of years: telling the truth. At the helm of this experiment have been PZ, Dawkins, Hitchens, Harris, D’Souza, hang on, (scratch that last one), etc.
It has worked far better in 2 years than Pigliucci’s (previous?) polite accomodationist stand has in 2,000 years.
As I say, perhaps he is coming to this realisation. I can only hope.
SteveV says
Puddles
CaptainBlack says
A fine tuning argument for design of the Universe does not imply that the fine tuner is what anyone would recognise as a deity. In fact it would be just as consistent with the fine tuner being a hyper-being indistinguishable from a psychopathic torturer and voyeur…. Oh.. that is a definition of a deity!
Brownian, OM says
QFT.
Then he should admit he has a problem. This isn’t his first drunk drive-by here.