AC Grayling makes a very sensible suggestion


We should do away with Religious Studies.

Those who have written to you in defence of religious studies, and in opposition to the philosophy GCSE proposals that I and Dr John Taylor have put forward, do it not on intellectual and pedagogical grounds, but because they have a vested interest in keeping RS going.

They only do it for the big money from Big Theology! I am quite happy to see that argument turned around — we get so many accusations that science is propped up by Big Science or Big Pharma or whatever, and that we’re only in it for the cash. I don’t think theologians are actually in it to get rich (like scientists, there isn’t that much money in our philosophies), but religion would die a little faster if there weren’t so much interest in paying people for affirming silly beliefs.

But Grayling’s argument isn’t just that we need to kick out the moneygrubbers: it’s that there are better, more universal disciplines that cover the field more effectively and with less bias, history and philosophy.

They have one or both of two motives: to keep themselves in a job and to keep religion appearing to be the main game in town when it comes to world views. In light of the fact that religion is to philosophy what astrology is to astronomy – and to science what astrology is to astrophysics – the main interest that religion has, to an intelligent mind, is sociological and historical.

This is why I proposed in a TES article last autumn that instead of the parochial and tendentious study of religion, there should be a more inclusive and ambitious history of ideas course. In such a course, mythologies, religions, philosophies and the rise of science would all figure, thus putting the beliefs of our less-knowledgeable forebears into perspective, and showing how humankind has progressed from supernaturalistic to naturalistic understandings of our world and ourselves. This, alongside proper philosophy GCSE and A-level courses providing critical in-depth study of concepts and theories across a wide range (and not just on the supposed topic of deity and narrowly related moral views) would be a real education of mind.

Many RS teachers would love to be able to teach proper philosophy and the history of ideas, and to be freed from having to purvey the highly misleading impression that religion is the main resource for thinking about life. Indeed, if RS focused principally on the mayhem that religions have unleashed on the world throughout history and still today, its defenders would doubtless be even more up in arms than they are about the view that it should be replaced by history of ideas and philosophy, based on the following simple fact: that religions consist of false beliefs about the world and distorted views about ethics.

That is why we must seek to educate our youth more responsibly and truthfully, more critically and appropriately, than can ever be offered by RS.

That’s a reasonable and rational argument. He’s not saying that we shouldn’t study religion (We should! It’s a human phenomenon that has had major effects on culture), but that basing the study of religion on bogus ideas is a bad way to start.

The article ends with links to a couple of rebuttals:

'AC Grayling is wrong: the humanity of Christ speaks to the nature of true humanism': Oh, really? That’s the problem. Are people who don’t believe in Jesus Christ doing religious studies wrong?

‘AC Grayling is wrong. Religious education and philosophy are complementary, not alternatives’: A more interesting reply, but vague. The author agrees that philosophy is important and that asking questions is essential, but insists that religion needs some kind of special approach. What that specialness would involve, he doesn’t say.

But completely independently, I found another source for a defense of religion. Would you believe their argument is AGAINST CRITICAL THINKING? R.R. Reno thinks this whole business of being skeptical and asking questions is a bad idea.

When it comes to the intellectual life in our day, the fear of error—believing things as true when they are in fact false—far outweighs a desire for truth. Whether it’s the big questions of religion and morality or those concerning history and literature, we have developed an intellectual culture of exaggerated circumspection in which large, long-standing truths are questioned and only small, fashionable truths affirmed. “Critical thinking” has become an end in itself for many educators and has taken on a new meaning in recent decades, one more associated with critique than with constructive criticism. We put a great deal of emphasis on learning how to interrogate, challenge, and criticize. But, while these are all useful skills, and in many cases necessary to help us avoid falsehood, first and foremost we need to be trained in assent. To do this in a reliable, responsible way requires a pedagogy of piety, for we can only hold as true those things we believe to be true.

Join First Things editor R. R. Reno in exploring the ideas behind the current cultural fixation with critical thinking as the highest intellectual good, and learn how a pedagogy based on piety provides a more successful roadmap for the pursuit of the good, the true, and the beautiful.

You heard the man. We have to teach our students to be agreeable and pious.

I think I’m feeling nauseous now. First we have to get people to humbly accept our arguments, and then we can argue for them. This is a standard theological approach, to first demand faith and belief in order to accept a string of nonsense.

It doesn’t work on anyone who expects a better explanation. Witness how George Bush tried to convince the French to join in the Iraq war. This wasn’t going to work.

I may regret posting this, but here’s an account of how George Bush tried to talk French president Jacques Chirac into supporting the invasion of Iraq:

Chirac recounts that the American leader appealed to their common faith (Christianity) and told him: Gog and Magog are at work in the Middle East…. The biblical prophecies are being fulfilled…. This confrontation is willed by God, who wants to use this conflict to erase his people’s enemies before a New Age begins.

This bizarre episode occurred while the White House was assembling its “coalition of the willing” to unleash the Iraq invasion. Chirac says he was boggled by Bush’s call and “wondered how someone could be so superficial and fanatical in their beliefs.”

Hey, Jacques, he was just practicing a pedagogy of piety!

Comments

  1. anteprepro says

    Chirac recounts that the American leader appealed to their common faith (Christianity) and told him: Gog and Magog are at work in the Middle East…. The biblical prophecies are being fulfilled…. This confrontation is willed by God, who wants to use this conflict to erase his people’s enemies before a New Age begins.

    And here I thought that Bush and the Bushites sold the Iraq War to the U.S. (“Weapons of mass destruction!!! 9/11!!! Fight them there so we don’t need to fight them here!!! Why don’t you love Amurkka!!!”) was frighteningly irrational and incoherent!

  2. Holms says

    …But, while these are all useful skills, and in many cases necessary to help us avoid falsehood, first and foremost we need to be trained in assent. To do this in a reliable, responsible way requires a pedagogy of piety, for we can only hold as true those things we believe to be true.

    Oh my fucking god, the sheer inanity almost hurts. Agreeing uncritically with something doesn’t need training, it’s one of the few things we’re good at from birth. Parents telling their kids that Santa exists is a prime example of this – a trusted adult said so, therefore it is true.

    But even apart from that rubbish, critical thinking remains not just a tool for tearing down bad ideas, but is also vital for confirming things to be true. Subjecting a claim to critical scrutiny, but then failing to find a fault with the claim, is a major boost to the credibility to that claim: we tried, and failed, to find anything wrong with it. The claim is accepted with much more justification than if it were not subjuected to that examination.

    Of course, the religious probably know this just fine, but shy away from it because reason is quite simply the bane of religion; religious apologetics requires disinginuity. That’s right, disingenuity: ingenuity in the pursuit of being disingenuous. It’s a word, now.

  3. says

    Theology != Religious Studies
    Maybe it is different in the UK… All the RS dept. at the Unis in the US I know of take the approach that is being proposed, not the one they are arguing against.

  4. Morgan says

    But, while these are all useful skills, and in many cases necessary to help us avoid falsehood, first and foremost we need to be trained in assent.

    But that’s exactly backwards. Assent, by and large, comes naturally to people; what requires training and cultivation is the ability to recognize when what people are telling you, or what everyone around you seems to think, or what you yourself find intuitively obvious, is suspect.

    There’s a case to be made, I suppose, that knowing only how to criticize without learning how and when to say “okay, we’ve got a reasonable basis on which to take action now” leaves one with an unbalanced skillset; certainly, spending all your time second-guessing everything without getting anything done isn’t good. The only way that could be the higher priority in general, though, would be if far fewer people were spending their time lying to us for their own benefit and counting on our unexamined assent.

  5. anteprepro says

    D

    Theology != Religious Studies

    I don’t know who are proposing is unaware of this.

    It isn’t Grayling, because in the article he proposes this:

    This is why I proposed in a TES article last autumn that instead of the parochial and tendentious study of religion, there should be a more inclusive and ambitious history of ideas course. In such a course, mythologies, religions, philosophies and the rise of science would all figure, thus putting the beliefs of our less-knowledgeable forebears into perspective, and showing how humankind has progressed from supernaturalistic to naturalistic understandings of our world and ourselves.

    He wants Religious Studies expanded to (or perhaps more accurately, to become a subset of) History of Philosophy, essentially.

    As for PZ’s mention of Big Theology, look closer:

    They only do it for the big money from Big Theology! I am quite happy to see that argument turned around — we get so many accusations that science is propped up by Big Science or Big Pharma or whatever,

    I would say that Theology relates to Religious Studies in a very rough, broad sense in the same way that “Pharma” relates to Science.

  6. says

    @ anteprepro
    Too many people. And I don’t get the impression that PZ or Grayling are really making the distinction (and I’m sure in some places there isn’t one.). As I already said though, the RS I’m familiar with is already the mixed approach of history and philosophies (as well as sociology, psychology, literature, anthro, etc etc.) So criticizing it for not being that doesn’t make sense to me.

  7. anteprepro says

    From the “humanity” response:

    As the French theologian Yves Congar put it: “Instead of starting only from what is given in Revelation and Tradition, as classical theology has generally done, we must start from facts and questions received from the world and from history…We must start from the problems, if not the ideas, of today and take them as a new ‘given’.”

    Apparently Congar is alleging that theology actually takes into account facts about the world we know today. “Take them as a new ‘given'”. I imagine that somewhere the translation from French to English was messed up, because I’m sure the word “mangled” should be in there somewhere.

    We may or may not change our minds but this is the stuff of education, is it not? Humankind’s struggle has sometimes been a terrible tragedy. The Christian gospel directly addresses this: the work of reconciliation, renewal and transformation in society attests to the core message of love and hope and speaks to faith associated with action.

    It is like clockwork. The instant a religious apologist starts saying something reasonable, they immediately to cram some strained bullshit about the Bible in. Apparently the Bible is the best place to learn religious divisions and conflicts, to learn about critical thinking and finding why we believe what we believe, and how to have a dialog and form good relationships. Great work, Sophisticated Theologian. Same song and dance as your bog standard Bible thumper, just more polished and wisely hiding away the fire and brimstone for later use.

    And here are more discrepancies: are we to understand that philosophy and science are objective, free from personal commitment? That religion is about blind superstition, and science and philosophy is somehow about a form of pure truth?

    Philosophy and Science aren’t purely objective pure truth, ergo religion is just fine!

    It’s like saying Fox News is perfectly fine, because even the Associated Press has biases. Or that Conservapedia is credible, because even print encyclopedias have authors with a political leaning.

    Many school and university students have a religious faith. Professor Grayling, please take note: if we start to tell these students that their religion is superstition, their faith a matter of blind assertion, and that science and philosophy are the sum end of wisdom, then those students would have misplaced their trust in us as educators.

    Italics are mine. I thought the author was gonna say that the students would START mistrusting the educators if they made these assertions. But no. He basically just says Grayling is wrong all over again, like he did throughout his piece, without actually arguing the point. He mostly just appeals to the existence of smart religious people as if it is impossible for those people to be superstitious or believe something blindly, or as if it is simply too rude to phrase it that way.

    This is why theologians are mocked.

    The other “Grayling is wrong” post is far, far better.

    A few days after the Charlie Hebdo affair, I had an email from a teacher of secondary religious education. He reported how his work with young people on the multiple meanings of the concept of jihad had prepared them to discuss the acts of violence in Paris with a high level of maturity and competence. These young people had not simply learned “doctrines”, but had analysed religious language as used in a variety of living contexts, and their work demanded and included philosophical skills. They had also explored the values dimension of the topic, considering rights in relation to responsibilities and sensitivities to others. Does the right to freedom of expression remove all responsibility to show some sensitivity towards those who hold their religious beliefs deeply? The students were able to formulate and express their own views on this. All this is part of the subject of religious education.

    That is an excellent example of how religious education can be beneficial and be more than just teaching dogma and apologetics.

  8. anteprepro says

    D:

    As I already said though, the RS I’m familiar with is already the mixed approach of history and philosophies (as well as sociology, psychology, literature, anthro, etc etc.) So criticizing it for not being that doesn’t make sense to me.

    Fucking Christ. The critique is that there is no need for a fields specifically dedicated to religious history and religious philosophy, and those elements should be incorporated into something broader so as to not give added significance to “religious” qualifier. I don’t agree with that critique, but there it is.

  9. twas brillig (stevem) says

    first and foremost we need to be trained in assent. To do this in a reliable, responsible way requires a pedagogy of piety, for we can only hold as true those things we believe to be true.

    SO, if we believe it’s true, then it becomes true? True facts can only be true when we believe them to be true?
    This sounds pure hogwash to me. I believe it so, so therefore it truly is hogwash; eh?
    Does he really not see any problem with this kind of Philosophy? Is he just believing it to be true, and therefore must be true? Sounds very egotistical to me -> and since I believe so, I must be right QED. You must all learn to assent to my confabulations! They are true, cuz I believes dem.
    .
    apologies. This is just too silly to resist playin around with it. I’m just playin, not taking it serious at all. Implications are very serious. I seriously hope few are followers of this presented filosofee.

  10. twas brillig (stevem) says

    re 10
    borked html, 2nd inner blockquote should have been a “pop” not a “push”.

  11. says

    How do you give an exam about the imaginary?

    What was Aphrodite’s favorite color:
    a) Blue
    b) Pink
    c) Aphrodite didn’t exist

    When Thor wasn’t working what did he do:
    a) Thor didn’t actually “work” because he was work
    b) Farmville
    c) Thor was in meetings doing goddy stuff

    Jesus liked:
    a) Simplicity
    b) We don’t know what Jesus liked, but we know what people who claimed to know Jesus claimed he liked
    c) We don’t know what Jesus liked but we know what the winners of many religious wars claimed he liked

    There isn’t a single thing about theology that isn’t open to question without a response based on authority. So you’re not studying anything, you’re studying to conform with doctrine; i.e.: memorization.

  12. anteprepro says

    Sadly, R. R. Reno’s opinion on Critical Thinking is not new. It’s been a topic for the far-right for a while:

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/post/texas-gop-rejects-critical-thinking-skills-really/2012/07/08/gJQAHNpFXW_blog.html

    In the you-can’t-make-up-this-stuff department, here’s what the Republican Party of Texas wrote into its 2012 platform as part of the section on education:

    Knowledge-Based Education – We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student’s fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority.

    Yes, you read that right. The party opposes the teaching of “higher order thinking skills” because it believes the purpose is to challenge a student’s “fixed beliefs” and undermine “parental authority.”

    It opposes, among other things, early childhood education,

    This mentions this case and previous instances: http://www.austinchronicle.com/daily/news/2012-08-18/half-true-what-politifact-got-wrong-about-the-gop-and-critical-thinking/

    Piece from American Conservative in 2013: http://www.theamericanconservative.com/beyond-critical-thinking/
    (I will admit it might have a point in some cases: It alludes to the Fallacy Fallacy without calling it that)

    As for R. R. Reno himself, from his wiki page:

    A theological and political conservative, Reno was baptized into the Episcopal Church as an infant and grew up as a member of the Church of the Redeemer in Baltimore, Maryland. …. In September 18, 2004, he was received into the Roman Catholic Church. He explained his conversion in this way: “as an Episcopalian I needed a theory to stay put, and I came to realize that a theory is a thin thread easily broken. The Catholic Church needs no theories”

    Yeah, pretty much a right-wing asshole.

    Here is an article of his I found on the front page of First Things: http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2007/02/the-closing-of-the-american-mi

    He said out loud what liberal elite culture could only regard as heresy: The supposed idealism of the 1960s was, in fact, a new barbarism. Whatever moral and spiritual seriousness the long tradition of American pragmatism had left intact in university life, the anti-culture of the left destroyed.

    Also on the First Things front page:
    Slimy bullshit about the Terri Schiavo case

    Those who support Michael’s successful effort to remove her feeding tube—including most of those in the bioethics movement—tend to adhere to the “quality of life” ethic that perceives some lives as not worth living. This is usually framed as a question of personal autonomy—for example, as the “right to die.” But behind that rationale lingers a profound loathing or disregard for impaired human life—to the point that some denigrated Terri as not worth the cost of care, while others opined that she should be lethally injected or that her organs should have been available for transplantation.

    Debates over the sexual revolution and the meaning of marriage also became entangled in opinions about Terri’s fate. In the media, Michael is often identified simply as Terri’s “husband” who pursued a difficult course because that is what she would have wanted. But it wasn’t nearly that simple. Prior to petitioning the court to remove Terri’s feeding tube, Michael began cohabiting with another woman with whom he had sired two child

    And slimy bullshit about reclaiming marriage:

    For centuries, Christians have proclaimed these words at weddings, for they express the gift of marriage long recognized by all humanity and acknowledged by men and women of faith: Marriage is the union of a man and a woman. This truth is being obscured, even denied, today. Because of that, the institution of marriage, which is essential to the well-being of society, is being ­undermined…..
    Maleness, femaleness, and their comp­lementarity are among the central organizing principles of creation….
    [On divorce] Though the dissolution of marriages is treated differently in various Christian churches, we together confess that marriage was originally ordained by God to be ­indissoluble…..

    Sophisticated Theology, truly.

  13. says

    Fuck theology anyway. At least the study of modern fiction gives us insight into the psyche of their authors, which can have relevance today. Do we need “academic” departments of pseudo scholastic wankery over Bronze Age fiction? Are the prejudices and supernaturalist beliefs of desert nomads from 3000 years ago even slightly relevant, beyond the millions of deluded people who live their lives by them? What a waste of resources and time. :/

  14. Sastra says

    I had always thought that university-level Religious Studies already stood in philosophical/sociological/anthropological/psychological contrast to Theology and was going to make this point — till I looked at the link in the Grayling link and saw that he’s addressing a rather different issue. The General Certificate of Secondary Education is “a public examination in specified subjects for 16-year-old schoolchildren.”

    This is not about a college major in “Religious Studies” which would presumably include many courses and need carry no implication that the student is or will become a theist. Grayling is complaining that teenagers in the UK are required to take “Religious Studies” when they should be taking a philosophy course that imbeds religion into larger ideas and concepts so that it can be properly understood. Otherwise, it privileges faith.

    Well hell yeah.

  15. anteprepro says

    Sastra:

    The General Certificate of Secondary Education is “a public examination in specified subjects for 16-year-old schoolchildren.”

    Ah. So that’s what GCSE stands for.

    More on the original proposal for those don’t want to link dive: https://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=11006441

    Professor Grayling believes the lack of philosophy at GCSE level is a “screaming silence in the curriculum” and is confident that a dedicated qualification would prove popular with pupils and teachers.

    The founder of the New College of the Humanities, a private university in London, is concerned that changes to the RE curriculum have squeezed out space for wider thought. Professor Grayling wants pupils to take on the works of Plato, Descartes and Hume, and says the GCSE should include the study of metaphysics, ethics and the theory of knowledge.

    Under government plans published last week, at least 50 per cent of the weighting of the new religious studies GCSE will come from the study of one or two faiths. Previously, schools had more freedom to teach philosophy and ethics topics as the majority of the syllabus…..

    Dennis Brown, head of religion and philosophy at Manchester Grammar School, said: “RE as a subject has expanded hugely, but most of the interest isn’t in world religions but in philosophy and ethics. If there were a philosophy GCSE, we’d pick up a lot more students.”

    A DfE spokesman said: “The new GCSE content requires students to have an understanding of the beliefs, teachings and practices of two religions but still allows them to spend up to 50 per cent of the course studying philosophy and ethics.” ….

    on Jones, head of theology and philosophy at Wallington High School for Girls in Surrey, is confident that schools would opt for a philosophy GCSE.

    “The idea that 50 per cent of the RE qualification has to be on world religions is a bit of a backwards step,” he says. “What students like about the way we deliver RE is the engagement with deep ethical and philosophical questions.

    “To give up curriculum time to learning facts about religion feels like sidelining what has made RE really popular, and could deter students.

    “I’ve been in touch with schools in the area, and several would consider moving away from RE and towards philosophy because they don’t want to lose that edge.”

  16. anteprepro says

    Marcus Ranum:

    Has theology ever established a single supported theory of anything?

    What, several unsupported theories of everything aren’t good enough for you?

  17. reddiaperbaby1942 says

    I don’l know if this column refers to a particular case at a particular institution, and I’m writing from a European rather than an American context, so this may be irrelevant: I suggest it’s important to distinguish between the academic disciplines of Religious Studies (aka Study of Religion, formerly Comparative Religion) and Theology. The latter I have no use for, and don’t think it belongs in a university at all; the former is a very respectable field of study and scholarship, incorporating approaches and methodologies from Sociology of Religion, Cultural Anthropology, History and many others, to identify and examine what causes religious beliefs and behaviours, and how they affect present and past societies. At present, approaches based on cognitive science seem to be especially common –certainly here in the Scandinavian countries, where I live.
    In any case, I hope this wasn’t totally off-topic.

  18. says

    I like the idea of a “history of ideas” course for what would be high school students here in the USA.

    Privileging faith over other cultural trends could be included in the history of ideas course as a bad idea. (Not likely, but maybe the conclusion would be obvious to some students.)

    Anyway, I am irritated by the disrespect currently shown to Thor.

  19. nathanieltagg says

    There’s a problem here, though. We DO expect piety and acceptance in our classrooms, and that’s a good thing.

    I teach physics. There’s a few things you can do: (a) tell ’em what the answer is and build up their intuition with lots of examples reinforcing the right way of thinking… or (b) go on the defensive and prove with evidence and argument that your way of thinking is right. The problem is that (b) is terrible pedagogy. Every time I dip my toe into it even a little it confuses students and muddies the waters.

    The fact is that students CANNOT take the time to question everything and follow the logic that led us to our current understanding: it would take too long. Centuries, if we’re careful; we’d have to go through the same problems that the original thinkers did.

    So, we have to teach in good faith. The student has to agree to conditionally believe everything the professor says, monitoring the argument for inconsistencies. When the inconsistency is encountered, the student must accept that it is probably either the student or the instruction that is in error, not the fundamental principle.

    So I’m torn on this. What I’m asking my students for is very much like what a religion teacher is asking their students for; I don’t know how to tell them apart.

    Except that I’m right and they’re wrong.

  20. says

    AC Grayling is, IMO, woefully under-appreciated. We would do well to trade both Richard Dawkins, the shade of Christopher Hitchens, and Sam Harris for Grayling. And keep the Shermer as spare change.

  21. Sastra says

    From the link to a critic:

    There is also a strong and vibrant record of Christian humanism advocating compassion, ethics, humane action and human dignity. To the Christian, the humanity of Christ speaks to the nature of true humanism.

    Okay, this is a pet peeve of mine. While humanism of course includes the values of “compassion, ethics, humane action and human dignity,” so do many other philosophies and religions so this is not a good definition. Humanism =/= humanitarianism. Humanism as understood today is defined as ‘an approach to life which uses reason and science in order to understand a purely natural universe (with no supernatural component)” — and the compassion, etc. are all derived from that approach.

    You can’t take a spiritual world view which rejects the natural world, reason, and science and claim that people have worth because of a top-down supernatural hierarchy — and then call that “humanism” (let alone “true humanism.”) Not consistently, and/or not so that you’re being accurately understood. Doing this, consciously or unconsciously, is a verbal game designed to make it look like the advances which came directly from secular humanism really did come from God.

  22. Sastra says

    nathanialtagg #22 wrote:

    So I’m torn on this. What I’m asking my students for is very much like what a religion teacher is asking their students for; I don’t know how to tell them apart.

    You and your students can tell them apart because when you teach physics you don’t make a big song and dance about faith being a fundamental moral virtue and mathematical proofs being unnecessary if you’re just willing to believe.

    Yes, it may look similar on the surface, but the different epistemic foundations really do matter. We don’t accept the Theory of Relativity because we trust that Einstein was being truthful.

  23. toska says

    I always thought religious studies would make a good specialization in anthropology, rather than being a field all by itself, because religion is very important to understand if you want to understand the majority of people and their cultures, but it is a study of people. No more, no less.

  24. says

    I always thought religious studies would make a good specialization in anthropology

    Or just history. As in “History of Ideas”
    …filed under ‘Imaginary’ along with dragons, geocentrism, and flat earth.

  25. anteprepro says

    nathanieltagg:

    So I’m torn on this. What I’m asking my students for is very much like what a religion teacher is asking their students for; I don’t know how to tell them apart.
    Except that I’m right and they’re wrong.

    Well, being right really is a big factor. Telling well established facts and expecting acceptance of them with only a minimal explanation of the underlying reasoning isn’t indoctrination, or at least it isn’t BAD. You can’t say the same for teaching poorly established facts, teaching opinion as fact, or teaching distorted facts/lying by omission.

  26. moarscienceplz says

    only small, fashionable truths affirmed.

    Yes! For example, gravity is so lame, let’s replace it with something else, like invisible flying monkeys. Much more fun and easier to understand.

  27. amblingon says

    This suggestion is absurd. Religious studies can’t be replaced by a ‘history of ideas class’ any more than South American history can be collapsed into a World History class. For better or worse (well, for worse), religion and religious superstition has had a massive impact across the board, from philosophy and politics, to geography and anthropology; the fact that it’s based on superstition doesn’t mean it’s not worthy of academic study.

    I mean, you work in academia, right? You should understand why ‘history and philosophy cover it’ is absurd, because there are a *ton* of academic specialties that fall under the general rubric of ‘history and philosophy.’ Do you want to get rid of Women’s Studies or the history of science, too?

  28. amblingon says

    “Or just history. As in “History of Ideas” …filed under ‘Imaginary’ along with dragons, geocentrism, and flat earth.”

    But none of those ideas have had nearly as significant an impact on human history as religion. Without religion the borders of the modern world would be unimaginable different, to pick one example out of dozens.

    Look, I get that none of us *like* how important a role religion plays in the lives of most people (believers or otherwise), but closing our eyes and pretending it doesn’t matter isn’t just silly, it’s self-defeating.

  29. anteprepro says

    If one wonders more about R.R. Reno’s arguments against critical thinking, here is an article he has written on the subject:
    http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2009/05/teaching-in-the-twenty-first-c

    We do not, however, live in ancient Athens or medieval Paris. “Critical thinking” has a contemporary meaning that does not clear the way forward to deeper convictions. Instead, the moment of seeing falsehood has become the goal and summit of the intellectual life. One does no so much aspire to critical thinking as critical theory.

    For example, when I was a college student, critical theory meant the Marxist analysis of the Frankfurt School. Very few people believed in Marxist claims about history, economics, and politics. In fact, figures such as Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse were popular precisely because they were “critical Marxists” rather than the dogmatic sort. They offered little in the way of prescription, and they demurred from the grandiose claims about historical progress that makes Marx so comical today. Their contribution was entirely critical. …..

    Some form of critical theory has become the overriding goal of almost all humanistic study these days. We do not so much read Aristotle or Aquinas or Jane Austen as take their ideas and expressions as instances of a patriarchal culture, instantiations of power-relations, rhetorically coded expressions of class-relations, and so forth. Critical thinking really means cultural studies.

    Many have pointed out the gray ideological homogeneity of what passes for critical theory. David Horowitz has amply chronicled the rigidity and intolerance of the contemporary professoriate.

    Oh boy. You know you have a right-wing asshole if they are whining about Marxism and favorably citing David Horowitz.

  30. amblingon says

    I did- I still don’t think the idea of getting rid of the study of religion as an academic specialty has any merit, whatsoever.

  31. Sastra says

    Critical thinking really means cultural studies.

    Reno seems to be confusing rational skepticism with extremes of postmodernism. Has he not read AC Grayling?

    Or maybe he has but he’s willing to distort him to win a point.

  32. says

    amblingon #34:

    I did- I still don’t think the idea of getting rid of the study of religion as an academic specialty has any merit, whatsoever.

    The study of the historical effects of religion would be part of the study of history. The study of the philosophical parts of religion would be part of the study of philosophy.

    You’re quite right that it is possible to study religion as an academic speciality. Such specialisation should take place in college or university though, not as part of a basic school-level education.

  33. anteprepro says

    Getting rid of the study of religion. Right. Okay, way to read the article.

    Here, I quote it again:

    Philosopher A C Grayling is to campaign for the introduction of a philosophy GCSE in the wake of controversial reforms to religious education, TES can reveal.

    Professor Grayling believes the lack of philosophy at GCSE level is a “screaming silence in the curriculum” and is confident that a dedicated qualification would prove popular with pupils and teachers.

    The founder of the New College of the Humanities, a private university in London, is concerned that changes to the RE curriculum have squeezed out space for wider thought. Professor Grayling wants pupils to take on the works of Plato, Descartes and Hume, and says the GCSE should include the study of metaphysics, ethics and the theory of knowledge.

    Under government plans published last week, at least 50 per cent of the weighting of the new religious studies GCSE will come from the study of one or two faiths. Previously, schools had more freedom to teach philosophy and ethics topics as the majority of the syllabus. …..

    “RE has grown enormously in popularity in recent years, mainly because of the element of philosophy and ethics that has been woven in. I think part of what’s driving concern among RE teachers is that, if you look at the revised content, then there’s clearly less space for that.”….

    “The idea that 50 per cent of the RE qualification has to be on world religions is a bit of a backwards step,” he says. “What students like about the way we deliver RE is the engagement with deep ethical and philosophical questions.

    “To give up curriculum time to learning facts about religion feels like sidelining what has made RE really popular, and could deter students.

    It’s about ALSO teaching regular philosophy and putting more weight on that than about just facts about two major religions.

  34. Pierce R. Butler says

    The story of the conversation

    emerged only because the Elysée Palace, baffled by Bush’s words, sought advice from Thomas Römer, a professor of theology at the University of Lausanne. Four years later, Römer gave an account in the September 2007 issue of the university’s review, Allez savoir.

    In the same year he spoke to Chirac, Bush had reportedly said to the Palestinian foreign minister that he was on “a mission from God” in launching the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and was receiving commands from the Lord.

    There is a curious coda to this story. While a senior at Yale University George W. Bush was a member of the exclusive and secretive Skull & Bones society. His father, George H.W. Bush had also been a “Bonesman”, as indeed had his father. Skull & Bones’ initiates are assigned or take on nicknames. And what was George Bush Senior’s nickname? “Magog”.

  35. Kevin Kehres says

    Well, as long as religion is still a “thing” (as in Daylight Savings time still being a “thing”), I think it’s wise to know what those people are saying. If only to be able to build arguments against their faulty logic in advance, rather than have to assemble it on the spot.

    If religion were a minority (20% or so), then Grayling is right … who cares? But it’s the other way around, and they’re infused into every corner of our lives. And most especially the political corner, where their whims seem to take precedence.

  36. karley jojohnston says

    […] provides a more successful roadmap for the pursuit of the good, the true, and the beautiful.

    Which, I grow more convinced, is the wisest and best.

  37. amblingon says

    “The study of the historical effects of religion would be part of the study of history. The study of the philosophical parts of religion would be part of the study of philosophy.”

    You could say that about literally any cultural phenomenon. The idea that studying religion is the same as endorsing religion is absurd. This type of proposal is literally how I expect the Onion to satirize atheism.

    “You’re quite right that it is possible to study religion as an academic speciality. Such specialisation should take place in college or university though, not as part of a basic school-level education.”

    Why? I took classes in high school every bit as specialized and academically focused as the classes I took at university, and I’m better educated for it. Hell, I credit a Gender & Sexuality in Modern Fiction classes I took as a 9th grader for the fact I’m a feminist.

    “It’s about ALSO teaching regular philosophy and putting more weight on that than about just facts about two major religions.”

    Except that’s not what some of the people in this thread are arguing for.

  38. amblingon says

    I’m criticizing the idea that we should do away with Religious Studies, and I guess by extension anyone who subscribes to that idea.

  39. anteprepro says

    Okay well that it would be great if youd acknowledge that that is not Grayling and not his proposal.

  40. mistertwo says

    @nathanieltagg #22

    If you make a mistake in your class and a student finds it, you celebrate. When an error or contradiction is pointed out in a Bible class, the teacher must find a way to explain it away, or else just say “I don’t understand it but that’s the way it is.”

    The Nicene Creed does exactly this. Was Jesus all man or all god? Well, of course he was both! How do we know? Because the scriptures are confusing on this issue and although it seems illogical and no way of thinking can reconcile it, they seem to imply both things! It can’t be different writers with different opinions because we decided beforehand that these writings were inspired by the other god, or another part of the same god, or something, so… well, they must agree, even though they don’t appear to, so both things must be true at the same time!

  41. consciousness razor says

    amblington:

    For better or worse (well, for worse), religion and religious superstition has had a massive impact across the board, from philosophy and politics, to geography and anthropology; the fact that it’s based on superstition doesn’t mean it’s not worthy of academic study.

    Grayling isn’t saying that religions aren’t worthy of academic study — far from it. The question is something like whether these GCSE-compliant courses are meant to study only religion, somehow independently of all of these other related issues (which are a bit hard to define in one sentence). There are non-religious philosophies which need to be understood for a “religious studies” course to avoid being “parochial and tendentious” as he puts it. It does not look like you could properly understand (or accurately represent) the facts to be studied about religions in such a course (at whatever level), if you don’t take a perspective from the outside as it were, which puts religion into a broader context.

    …Anyway, Grayling is totally right, as usual. There is a lot to learn about metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, politics and aesthetics (if you care to divide philosophy up that way), both as a modern subject and as philosophical history. All kids should learn about that. The fact that in many places none of it gets taught, except as an elective in college or in a highly-specialized degree program, is simply awful and mind-boggling to me.

    Of course, I’m not really sure what the scope should be. You don’t teach advanced quantum physics to high schoolers, for example. Instead, you give them “the basics,” ease them into the subject, try to make sure they can understand the limitations with what they are given, allude to open questions and outstanding problems (as well as resolved ones that the course won’t cover), and so forth. So, I don’t think it’s a special problem here, but how exactly you should do that with a general course in philosophy is totally beyond my pay grade.

  42. PaulBC says

    About 30 years ago, I had a comparative lit course in mythology at a large state university, covering for instance Babylonian, classical, Norse myths (notable Western emphasis). My section was taught by a religious studies professor, and I felt that she did an excellent job in explaining the significance of mythology as “sacred history” that served as a vehicle for cultural values. None of this requires accepting any particular religious beliefs as true, and I have no idea what this professor’s religious beliefs (if any) might have been.

    Religious studies in the sense of trying to understand why people attach importance to religious belief is not analogous to philosophy in any way. It’s an entirely independent thing. Maybe it could be folded into sociology or anthropology. Regardless, there is indisputable empirical evidence that societies are organized around beliefs of what has value and what is sacred. There is also indisputable evidence that these beliefs are for the most part not rationally grounded (though they may or may not be valid anyway). It would be convenient to ignore this fact, since many of us would like to think people are rational. But to do so is itself a kind of wishful thinking.

    The false analogy “religion is to philosophy what astrology is to astronomy” suggests a misunderstanding of religious studies more than anything. Religious practices indeed occur. They are observable and have significance to many if not most people.

    Grayling’s suggestion is to “do away” with the study of something real because we’d prefer it didn’t exist. In what way is this “sensible”?

  43. says

    anteprepro

    Fucking Christ. The critique is that there is no need for a fields specifically dedicated to religious history and religious philosophy, and those elements should be incorporated into something broader so as to not give added significance to “religious” qualifier. I don’t agree with that critique, but there it is.

    amblingon

    I’m criticizing the idea that we should do away with Religious Studies, and I guess by extension anyone who subscribes to that idea.

    anteprepro

    Okay well that it would be great if youd acknowledge that that is not Grayling and not his proposal.

    Now I’m really confused.

  44. PaulBC says

    Note: I don’t mean to misrepresent Grayling, though I disagree with PZ’s capsule summary as well as Grayling’s comparison to philosophy, which is not analogous to religion. Philosophy is interesting insofar as it is actually true (or poses questions to the rational mind), whereas religion is interesting mainly because of the importance it holds for human beings, independent of any rigorous basis.

    Grayling:

    This is why I proposed in a TES article last autumn that instead of the parochial and tendentious study of religion, there should be a more inclusive and ambitious history of ideas course. In such a course, mythologies, religions, philosophies and the rise of science would all figure,

    Yes, but based on my admittedly brief brush with a class taught by a religious studies professor, that’s what I thought RS already was, or is at least some of the time. It is not theology, and it’s definitely not philosophy.

    thus putting the beliefs of our less-knowledgeable forebears into perspective, and showing how humankind has progressed from supernaturalistic to naturalistic understandings of our world and ourselves.

    And now we get the rationalist triumphalism. What about the the beliefs of our “less knowledgeable” contemporaries? Aren’t these also worthy of study? If I call myself a humanist (which I do, enthusiastically) don’t I about those things that are important to human beings? Whether or not I think they “should” be important?

  45. PaulBC says

    Oops, typed too fast. What I meant was:

    If I call myself a humanist (which I do, enthusiastically) don’t I care about those things that are important to human beings? Whether or not I think they “should” be important?

  46. anteprepro says

    D: The quick answer is I was wrong and had not dived one link further to see the initial argument in its initial wording. Not sure how that improves your initial argument of people not getting the division between Religious Studies and Theology, but there ya go.

  47. says

    anteprepro:
    My issue stems from PZ’s usage and the confusion I have run into in many other circumstances between RS and theology. In this specific case perhaps there is no distinction. But I read PZ as not just referring to the specific case. I might be wrong in that. Given that he is an USAian academic, I would not have expected his usage. I’ll at least take comfort that some others seem to have had similar concerns.

  48. mond says

    The GCSE curriculum seems to treat Philosophy as a subset of RS when it should be the other way round. Grayling’s proposal seems to be that Philosophy should be its own discreet subject which would obviously have RS content.
    But RS can also still be its own subject if pupils still wanted to take it.
    At the moment it seems that RS is a gatekeeper subject that you must study if you want study any philosophy at this level in secondary school.

    Just for some context for non UK folk.(Scotland has a slightly different system but the basics are the same).
    GCSEs are taken as individual subjects which are studied usually over a 2 year period. (Usually at age 14-16).
    Pupils receive a final grade for each subject based on coursework and exam results.(Exact ratios vary per subject)
    The number of GCSE subjects sat various from pupil to pupil. A range of between 8-10 subjects studied is fairly typical.

    The results of GCSEs will heavily influence what A-Levels a pupil will study. Studying 4 A-Level subjects is fairly typical.
    A-levels being the normally required qualifications to get a university place.

  49. PaulBC says

    Since I’m not in the UK and don’t know anything about GCSE, I am probably missing Grayling’s point. I thought I had some idea of what Religious Studies is at the university level in the US (and still think I do). But I wouldn’t consider it a suitable subject to require of high school students, even as an elective, and that would also hold for whatever it means in the context of GCSE.

  50. Anri says

    Marcus Ranum @ 17:

    Has theology ever established a single supported theory of anything?

    Numerous practical proofs of the axiom “a fool and his money are soon parted.”

  51. jefrir says

    There are aspects of how at least some British schools teach RE that would likely not be covered in a philosophy class, but are useful to people living in a society where many people are religious; stuff about routine religious practices that people have, or common dietary restrictions. Knowing the basics of what constitutes halal or kosher food, and that you don’t need to freak out about the halal sticker on your vegetable soup, seems like a pretty good idea. That wouldn’t come up in a philosophy class, but it could be taught in a sociology class, which I would be in favour of but is not currently common, or in the Personal & Social Skills classes (or whatever they’re called at the moment) that are compulsory but not examined, and cover things like employment, education and sex ed.
    RE in Britain can be really good, covering quite a lot on what people believe and how it affects their behaviour, and on broader moral and philosophical topics. The problems are that 1. Calling it Religious studies and then teaching about general morality gives the impression that they are inextricably linked when they really aren’t and 2. It is massively variable in practice. In my school, it was taught in a secular, factual way by someone who refused to give her own religious views, and learning religious perspectives was along the lines of “most Christian sects believe X, although some believe Y. Muslims generally believe Z”. In other schools, it’s overwhelmingly a defense of that school’s religion, and taught as if religious doctrines are undeniable facts. It’s worth preserving the good things, but I don’t think we can do that consistently while still calling it religious studies, especially with the recent proliferation of religious schools, which get extra freedom in setting the curriculum.

  52. opposablethumbs says

    Agree w jefrir, plus also too –

    I don’t think we can do that consistently while still calling it religious studies,

    even the schools who do a reasonable job tend to encourage the notion that religion is ExtraSpecial!!! and must get ExtraSpecial RESPECT!!!. Removing it from the headline slot and treating it as a subset of sociology, history etc. would help with that.

  53. David Marjanović says

    And here I thought that Bush and the Bushites sold the Iraq War to the U.S. (“Weapons of mass destruction!!! 9/11!!! Fight them there so we don’t need to fight them here!!! Why don’t you love Amurkka!!!”) was frighteningly irrational and incoherent!

    …yeah.

    pseudo scholastic

    Or literally scholastic for that matter.