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- Newsgroups: alt.atheism
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!lynx!nmsu.edu!charon!sdoe
- From: sdoe@nmsu.edu (Stephen Doe)
- Subject: Re: iq<->religion: connection?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec27.001427.4359@nmsu.edu>
- Sender: usenet@nmsu.edu
- Organization: New Mexico State University
- References: <1992Dec25.163547.8805@prime.mdata.fi> <1992Dec26.203934.11931@nmsu.edu> <1992Dec26.223348.28953@prime.mdata.fi>
- Distribution: world,public
- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 1992 00:14:27 GMT
- Lines: 222
-
- In article <1992Dec26.223348.28953@prime.mdata.fi> iikkap@mits.mdata.fi (Iikka Paavolainen) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec26.203934.11931@nmsu.edu> sdoe@nmsu.edu (Stephen Doe) writes:
- >>In article <1992Dec25.163547.8805@prime.mdata.fi> iikkap@mits.mdata.fi (Iikka Paavolainen) writes:
- >>>In article <1992Dec24.222810.20420@nmsu.edu> sdoe@nmsu.edu (Stephen Doe) writes:
- >>
- >>>>I'm not very impressed by all this anecdotal evidence flying around.
- >>>>8 or so people aren't very good statistics. Many of the most
- >>>
- >>>If you find an increasing number of atheists the higher you go in logical
- >>>intelligence, I think that is much more proof than you can show.
- >>
- >>I would just like to see a larger sample (i. e., better statistics)
- >>before making such a hasty generalization. In other words, I would
- >>like to see a study in support of the statement "there are an
- >>increasing number of atheists the higher up you go in logical
- >>intelligence."
- >
- >That is not hard. Observe most scientists and high-rank university staff.
- >Actually, nearly anybody who is a high-class scientist.
- >And don't most of your rational friends belive in evolution?
-
- Well, as long as we are assuming anecdotal evidence actually means
- something, I observe that of the members of the Astronomy Department
- that I happen to be a part of, I see people of many religious
- persuasions--from hard-core atheist (me!) to some who are quite
- religious. I have a friend here who intends to go to a seminary after
- getting his Master's degree, and I would hesitate to call him less
- intelligent than myself.
-
- And yes, most of my friends here do accept evolution. Guess what,
- some are even religious. Can we say "non sequitur" folks?
-
- >>
- >>I find it fascinating that the very same people who make such
- >>statements would be up in arms if someone made the same sort of
- >>arguments in favor of the notion that, say, Jews were more intelligent
- >>than Gentiles on average. "See, I have a few Jewish friends, and they
- >>are all much more intelligent than most of the Gentiles I know. . ."
- >
- >And they would have a hard time reasoning that. In this case, I find it
- >nearly effortless.
-
- Well, like I said before, you may find it easy to reason so, but if
- the *premise* is faulty. . .
-
-
- >>>>influential people in Christian history (Luther, Calvin, Wesley etc.)
- >>>>were *very* intelligent. In fact, I would think that the intelligent
- >>>
- >>>Proof?
- >>>How about aspects of personality such as courage, sacrifice and valour?
- >>
- >>Gee, don't you think that other aspects of personality might skew the
- >>impressions you get based on a sample of 8 or so people?
- >
- >My sample does not consist of 8 people. It was purely an example.
- >Yes, and answer my question also.
-
- My initial objection was to the people whose sample *did* consist of 8
- people.
-
- I assume by your question, you mean that other aspects of one's
- personality can have an effect upon one's religious beliefs, or lack
- of. You say this, and still cling to the notion that intelligence
- necessarily correlates with lack of religious belief???? You make it
- sound as though intelligence is the main factor, but then turn around
- and say that other factors can also have a significant effect, to
- explain away the intelligent believers that cause me to question this
- premise of yours. . .
-
- >>
- >>>>believer, internalizing the psychological ploys that biblical belief
- >>>>boils down to, will suffer *more* than the rank and file believer, and
- >>>>will be more firmly enmeshed in the biblical scheme.
- >>>>
- >>>>I have yet to see a satisfactory definition of intelligence, one that
- >>>>doesn't boil down to how well one does on some arbitrary intelligence
- >>>>test.
- >>>
- >>>Nobody was talking about the whole definition of intelligence, just the
- >>>logical and abstract thinking part, which is easy to measure.
- >>
- >>Then one should say, "There is an apparent correlation between
- >>logical, abstract thinking skills, which we can measure via IQ tests,
- >>and lack of religious belief." And THEN it would be nice to see
- >>something more than anecdotal evidence in support of such a statement.
- >
- >Yes, one should say so, and one did.
- >Splitting hairs is mega-fun, isn't it?
-
- I would scarcely characterize asking one to be as specific as
- possible, when defining something, as "hair-splitting." I would call
- that striving for clarity.
-
- >Don't base everything on what I said, try to find proof for yourself. This is
- >not a bedtime story, and you are not (hopefully) a child.
-
- You're making the assertions pal, it's up to you to provide something
- more convincing than stories about your friends.
-
- >>>>It isn't illogical to presuppose a supernatural realm, unperceived by
- >>>>our senses, any more than it is illogical to suppose that the Many
- >>>>Worlds Hypothesis is a reasonable interpretation of quantum mechanics;
- >>>>it's just that such speculations are far-fetched. They have the
- >>>>virtue (from the believer's perpsective) of being non-disprovable.
- >>>
- >>>Illogical? In absence of evidence it seems more like fantasizing.
- >>>Of course one believes what one has most rational (this is where logical
- >>>intelligence comes in) proof of. In an environment where Christianity
- >>>has a stranglehold, other proof is basically unavailable. Thus, he/she
- >>>will most likely become a Christian (correlation applies).
- >>
- >>Well, that was kind of my point--we have no particular reason to
- >>believe such things, because we have no information on them, other
- >>than that they apparently are part of someone's fantasy. However, we
- >>don't have 100% certainty that they don't exist, because they are
- >>transparent to our modes of inquiry. In other words, they can't be
- >>confirmed or disconformed for certain. Using them as premises isn't
- >>illogical, it's just that we have no particular reason to, unless it
- >>is to participate in the mind-games of some Christian exegetes. . .
- >
- >So we can start believing in anything we want, because we will never have 100%
- >certainity of their non-existance.
-
- No we have no rational reason to conclude that they do exist,
- therefore we presume they don't. That's not the same as saying you
- have a 100% ironclad disproof of such entities. If you think you do,
- I'm sure there are many here who would like to see it. . .
-
- >>>>I become very uneasy when I see people say "Oh the religious are
- >>>>dumber (or smarter) than others on average." It can too easily
- >>>>degenerate into an ad hominem attack, in which one dismisses beliefs
- >>>>one disagrees with because one believes one's opponent lacks
- >>>>intelligence. Being intelligent is no guarantee that one is right.
- >>>
- >>>Then what is? And what is intelligence then?
- >>>When you talk of these kinds of things, try to be indifferent. You seem so
- >>>emotionally attached (see message you replied to) to Christianity.
- >>
- >>There is no guarantee that being able to follow premises to their
- >>logical conclusions will protect you from using the wrong premises.
- >
- >But the chance of failure drops by the rise of the level of intelligence.
-
- Tell that to Ptolemy. Undoubtedly he would have ranked in the top
- tenth percent of his day, and yet his heliocentric theory was
- incorrect.
-
- Chances of failure may *drop* with higher intelligence, but don't
- get *eliminated* by attaining some arbitrarily chosen level of
- intelligence.
-
-
- >>I think it is up to those seeking to establish a correlation between
- >>intelligence and lack of religiousness to provide satisfactory
- >>definitions of said concepts.
- >
- >You do not find it even remotely possible? You think that logical intelligence
- >has no definition? Your denial is a little far-fetched.
-
- If you're going to find a correlation, is it too much to ask to have
- you define what it is that you are correlating?
-
- I'm not denying a damn thing. *You* claim to find such a correlation?
- Fine. Tell us what *you* are correlating, and give us evidence in
- favor of your supposed correlation.
-
-
- >>For your information, I happen to be an atheist. In fact I happen to
- >>think that Christianity, in its conservative, fundamentalist form, has
- >>the potential for great psychological damage, and that in its liberal
- >>form, boils down to using the Bible to ratify whatever passes for the
- >>conventional wisdom of the day. So do not speak to me of my
- >>"emotional attachment" to Christianity--my only emotional attachment
- >>is to decent intellectual standards, which I happen to think was
- >>severely lacking in this discussion. Your "emotional attachment"
- >>argument savors of the very sort of ad hominem attack I was voicing
- >>concern over.
- >
- >Only emotions can make a person defend a point to the death, no matter what it
- >is. You yourself just said that your emotional attachment is to decent
- >intellectual standards instead of Christianity. This already contributes much
- >to my statement of correlation. I'll add this to my notes.
-
- Ah, so commitment to decent intellectual standards correlates with
- lack of intelligence? So asking for something more convincing than
- "me and my 8 mates are smart atheists, therefore *all* atheists are
- smart" contributes much to your statement of correlation? Eh, no
- wonder the social sciences have fallen into such disrepute.
-
- I wonder if you can tell me, with a straight face, that you have no
- emotional commitment to the concept that "atheists are in general more
- intelligent than theists." The stench of ad hominem is getting
- overwhelming.
-
- So only emotion causes one to defend a point to the death? But what
- happens if one happens to be right?
-
- >Just because trying to prove that their is even a remote chance that something
- >is stupider/uglier etc. that something else would narrow mindedly seem like
- >primitive names-calling, it doesn't meen that you have to lock yourself
- >completely out. First, try to exemplify the statement yourself, then say what
- >you think, without locking out possibilities. Think of Communism and how hard
- >it was to remove it from the ex-USSR.
-
- Let me spell it out in simple terms for you. I am an atheist. I
- think I am right. I would like to think that theistic belief is a
- result of lower intelligence. *Because* of this emotional bias, I
- would like to see something more convincing than the "me and my 8
- mates" style of argument. So far, the only attempt at something more
- rigorous is "look around you at all the scientists who are atheists."
- Well, I know many scientists who are religious. Therefore I would
- like something more rigorous than that. Perhaps you could stop being
- condescending for a moment, and cite a study or two in support of your
- position, so that us poor benighted emotional sorts can go confirm
- your position for ourselves.
-
- Of course, if you can't provide a more rigorous argument in support of
- your position, then it goes without saying that you can take your
- attitude and shove it up your nose.
-
- SD
-