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The Root of All Evil? Episode 1: The God Delusion

Posted by Dr Grey in Video, GPC, PSPcatching, BitTorrent (Thursday January 12, 2006 at 10:29 am)

Richard DawkinsThe Root of All Evil?
Episode 1: The God Delusion

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Richard Dawkins is astounded that religious faith is gaining ground in the face of rational, scientific truth based on hard evidence. Julia Bard reports

In this two-part Channel 4 series, Professor Richard Dawkins challenges what he describes as ‘a process of non-thinking called faith’. Dawkins is well known for bringing to a wide audience the complex scientific concepts that underpin evolution. His first book, The Selfish Gene was an international bestseller.

Truth, lies and faith

He describes his astonishment that, at the start of the 21st century, religious faith is gaining ground in the face of rational, scientific truth. Science, based on scepticism, investigation and evidence, must continuously test its own concepts and claims. Faith, by definition, defies evidence: it is untested and unshakeable, and is therefore in direct contradiction with science.

In addition, though religions preach morality, peace and hope, in fact, says Dawkins, they bring intolerance, violence and destruction. The growth of extreme fundamentalism in so many religions across the world not only endangers humanity but, he argues, is in conflict with the trend over thousands of years of history for humanity to progress – to become more enlightened and more tolerant.

At the extremes

He explores the state of the three Abrahamic religions in the world today, from the political influence of rich and powerful Christian fundamentalist institutions in America to the deadly clash of Judaism, Christianity and Islam in the Middle East. He describes the Holy Land as the least enlightened place in the world, a microcosm of the threat to rational values and civilisation posed by religion, whose irrational roots, he says, are nourishing intolerance and murder.

There are plenty of characters to illustrate his thesis. There are fanatics, like the former West Bank settler who has taken the small step of converting from Jewish fundamentalist to Muslim fundamentalist, transferring his hatred from one side of the looking glass to the other. And the frighteningly charismatic leader of America’s National Association of Evangelicals, who believes he has been chosen by God to convert Americans through religious gatherings that resemble rock concerts – though to Dawkins they feel more reminiscent of Nuremberg rallies.

Then there are the desperate, like those carrying burdens of disability or disease, who are among the 80,000 people a year who make the pilgrimage to Lourdes. Dawkins does the maths: out of the millions who, over a century, have placed their faith in a miracle restoring them to good health, there have been only 66 authenticated cures. This is hardly a strong record, he says, arguing that it is better for us to embrace truth than false hope.

A sense of belonging

Drawing on such examples, it is not difficult to demolish the claims of religion as fairytales, and dangerous ones at that. But there is more to religion than ancient stories and articles of faith. Dawkins touches on the sense of belonging promised by religious groups but dismisses this as ’seductive group solidarity’, which he describes as a ’shared delusion’. In doing so, he glances off the more subtle dilemmas of how religions and religious traditions are woven through people’s notions of ‘community’, ‘history’ and ‘identity’.

Having a sense of one’s place in the world is important to everyone but has particular significance for minorities and peoples under political, economic or military pressure. Individuals may even accept Dawkins’ atheistic and scientific deconstruction of the myths they have grown up with but still defend and nurture the matrix of institutions, practices and relationships which make them who they are.

Next week: The Virus of Faith

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8 comments for The Root of All Evil? Episode 1: The God Delusion »

  1. Thanks for this.

    Comment by Shay — put January 15, 2006 @ 2:35 am

  2. Thanks - Hume

    Comment by Hume — put January 17, 2006 @ 12:56 am

  3. Well there are no seeds or anything for episode 1, how am i supposed to get it, cant find it anywhere.

    E-mail me plz

    Comment by Whitty — put January 21, 2006 @ 6:51 pm

  4. I’ve added it to our tracker. Download here.

    Comment by Dr Grey — put January 21, 2006 @ 8:34 pm

  5. it’s no surprise. evangelicals and conservatives in America have been working against the public school system for decades, and it’s starting to show.

    when our cultural heroes are Britney Spears and Shaq instead of Hawking and Darwin it’s a no-brainer why people don’t want to think too hard!

    Comment by dylan — put January 29, 2006 @ 3:44 am

  6. I kindly request you to keep seeding this file cos it really interests me.
    Please…

    Thanks Vas

    Comment by vas — put February 27, 2006 @ 9:39 am

  7. Richard Dawkins is one of the great men of modern times, and modern science, and I would like to see his 2-part video series, The Root of All Evil, aired on prime time on PBS.

    Further, I think it would be marvelous if he could put together a video series on Evolution that would follow the basic format of his wonderful Ancestor’s Tale book, though obviously not in all the book’s detail. I look forward to hearing Mr. Dawkins on the FFRF radio program (if he is able to be interviewed there), and it would be terrific if he could speak to the students and general public at a University of Wisconsin event. (He would no doubt attract a huge crowd, so they need to reserve a huge auditorium to accommodate this.) The UW sponsored a wonderful series of talks to celebrate Darwin Day this year, and Mr. Dawkins would be “right at home” at the UW and in Madison, Wisconsin.

    It would be a pleasure to meet Mr. Dawkins. He is “fighting the good fight” against the dangerous forces of supersitition infecting the United States, and the Bush Administration in particular. Also, I would love to see Mr. Dawkins present a TV series based on The Ancestor’s Tale, perhaps on the scale of the “Cosmos” series by Cark Sagan. It would be very ambitious. “In the meantime,” it would be grand if e a video series of lectures given by Mr. Dawkins were available. (I need to Google to see if one might already exist and be commercially available.)

    I do hope some reasonable security precautions are taken to ensure Mr. Dawkin’s safety in the event he makes well-publicised public appearances, especially in the United States. Obviously, there are a lot of fundamentalist fanatics in the U.S., and it is better to be safe than sorry.

    Comment by Jeff Glover — put August 2, 2006 @ 11:04 pm

  8. […] And I am beginning to wonder if perhaps the famous atheist and author Richard Dawkins is right. Maybe religion is the root of all evil (episode one and episode two). […]

    Pingback by Division in the (un)Holy Land « Somewhere Beyond the Sea — put November 23, 2008 @ 4:23 am

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