Q & A with Sam Harris
http://www.samharris.org
Official Website for "The End of Faith", by Sam Harris
1. In your book you seem to argue for
a kind of religious intolerance. Do you mean to suggest that we
need not respect a person's religious beliefs?
Yes. Our history of religious conflict
had led us to be very cautious about criticizing the religious
beliefs of others. We are right to be wary of religious intolerance,
but it is time we recognized that our religious identities have
themselves become an increasingly potent source of human conflict.
The notion that God wrote one or another book has always been
a source of dangerous and unnecessary divisions in our world.
Given the spread of modern weapons another disruptive technology,
these divisions are fast becoming antithetical to civilization
itself. Notice that no one is ever faulted in our culture for
not "respecting" another person's beliefs about mathematics
or history. When people have reasons for what they believe, we
consider those reasons, and when they are good, we find ourselves
believing likewise. When they have no reasons, or bad ones, we
dismiss their beliefs as a symptom of ignorance, delusion, or
stupidity. Except on matters of religion.
2. Yes, but isn't religion different?
Only in so far as we treat it differently.
We have been lulled into ignoring just how strange and insupportable
many of our religious beliefs are. How comforting would it be
to hear the President of the United States assure us that almighty
Zeus is on our side in our war on terrorism? The mere change of
a single word in his speech-from God to Zeus-would precipitate
a national emergency. If I believe that Christ was born of a virgin,
resurrected bodily after death, and is now literally transformed
into a wafer at the Mass, I can still function as a respected
member of society. I can believe these propositions because millions
of others believe them, and we have all been taught to overlook
how irrational this picture of reality is. If, on the other hand,
I wake up tomorrow morning believing that God is communicating
with me through my hairdryer, I'll be considered a nut, even in
church. The beliefs themselves are more or lesson a par-in so
far as they are in flagrant violation of the most basic principles
of reason. The perversity of religion is that it allows sane people
to believe the unbelievable en masse.
3. And what is the link, as you see it,
between religion and violence?
It's quite simple and direct. And inevitable.
If you truly believe that your neighbor is going to hell for his
unbelief, and you believe that his ideas about the world are putting
the souls of your children in peril, it is quite sensible to drive
him from your community, or kill him. Religion, by promising an
eternity of supernatural rewards and punishments, raises the stakes
enormously. Which is worse, a child molester or a heretic? If
you really believe that the heretic can endanger your child for
all time, there's simply no contest.
4. Doesn't the fact that no one is being
killed for his religious beliefs in our country suggest that religion,
in a democracy, can become a benign and even ennobling social
force?
It only suggests that we have come to
our senses on so many fronts that killing people for heresy-when
you need these people to collaborate with, to sell your goods
to, to employ, etc-is no longer an option. This does not mean,
however, that no one is dying on account of American-style religion.
Consider the fact that we have allocated a third of our budget
for AIDS prevention in the developing world to the teaching of
abstinence. Rather than provide as many condoms as possible, we
have elected to spend millions of dollars on a program of bogus
and ineffectual moral instruction. This is catastrophically stupid.
Given that millions of people could be infected with AIDS unnecessarily,
this is an example of Christian morality literally herding people
into mass graves. Inadvertently, perhaps-but innocent people will
die all the same.
5. Why is it that you think religious
moderates bear some responsibility for the religious conflict
in our world? It would seem that religious moderates are precisely
the people who abhor violence in the name of faith.
Yes, but their indulgence of religious
faith perpetuates an attachment to religious texts and to religious
identities that, in turn, perpetuate human conflict. Religious
moderates may ignore or overlook the more barbaric passages in
their religious books, but by venerating the books in general,
they leave us powerless to really oppose the belief systems of
fundamentalists. And because moderates tend to ignore the most
lunatic parts of scripture, they lose touch with how dangerous
these books are when taken literally. In fact, they have trouble
believing that anyone does still take these books literally, and
so they tend not to recognize the role that faith plays in inspiring
human violence. Religious moderates are blinded by their own moderation.
When college-educated jihadists stare into a video camera and
declare that "we love death more than the infidels love life,"
and then blow themselves up along with dozens of innocent bystanders,
religious moderates rack their brains wondering what motivated
these killers to do what they did. The respect that moderates
accord to religious faith has blinded them to the fact that the
atrocities of September 11th were a religious exercise. Religious
moderates seem incapable of realizing that our problem is not
terrorism, but Islam.
6. But isn't our conflict just with Muslim
fundamentalists?
The distinction between "fundamentalists"
and "moderates" has not really emerged in the Muslim
world. Most Muslims are "fundamentalist" in the sense
that they really appear to believe that the Koran is the literal
and inerrant word of God. In any case, Islamic fundamentalism
is only a problem for us because the fundamentals of Islam are
a problem for us. There is a pervasive piece of wishful thinking
circulating among religious moderates, and it could get a lot
of us killed. The idea is that all religions, at their core, teach
the same thing. This is myth. The principal tenet of Jainism is
non-harming. Observant Jains will literally not harm a fly. Fundamentalist
Jainism and fundamentalist Islam do not have the same consequences,
neither logically nor behaviorally. Read the Koran. Osama bin
Laden is playing it more or less by the book. Anyone who says
that there is no basis for his worldview in the doctrine of Islam
is either dangerously ignorant or just dangerous. We must hope
that the Muslim world is full of moderates who abhor the worldview
of Osama bin Laden. But where are they? We cannot just assume
that they exist. And the horrible truth is that if they do exist,
they will be easily marginalized by their coreligionists.
7. But we've all seen moderate Muslims
in the news, disavowing the actions of Islamic militants.
Have we? We've seen the occasional Muslim
disavow the actions of Osama bin Laden, saying things like "Islam
is a religion of peace," but this is not a sign of Muslim
moderation. We'll know there are Muslim moderates in this world
when they get on television and say things like: "There is
much in the doctrine of Islam that should not be taken literally.
It is, for instance unacceptable to believe that people can get
into Paradise by killing infidels and dying in the process. In
fact, we're not even sure Paradise exists. Nor are we sure that
the Koran was written by the Creator of the universe. The Koran
is an ancient book of religious wisdom, some of it applies to
our modern circumstance and some of it does not." Find a
Muslim who can talk this way, and you will have found a Muslim
moderate. You will also have found someone who is guilty of blasphemy
and liable to be killed in almost any Muslim community on this
earth. This is the problem with Islam.
8. This is all pretty inflammatory.
Yes. There really is a deal-breaker lurking
here, and there is no use denying it. We should all be genuinely
shaken by the knowledge that an entire civilization appears to
think that the Koran is the wisest book ever written. How we have
a conversation with 1.3 billion people about the dangerousness
and illegitimacy of their core beliefs is a problem for which
there maybe no easy answer. But we must come to terms with the
fact that the spread of technology has moved us to a crisis point.
There is no possibility at all of our having a cold war with an
Islamist regime that has acquired long-range nuclear weapons.
More importantly, moderate Muslims, wherever they are, must come
to terms with this. And they must find some way of marginalizing
and containing the cult of death and martyrdom that has emerged
in the Muslim world.
9. But some would say that it is not religion,
but history, that explains Muslim-and specifically Arab-intolerance.
Doesn't the Israeli occupation play a role here?
You cannot deny that the Israeli occupation
is at least part of the problem. The Israelis settlers are themselves
religious extremists who are putting us all in danger. Their notion
of God as some omniscient real-estate broker is one of the principal
sources of conflict between the West and Islam. But anyone who
thinks western or Israeli imperialism solves the riddle of Muslim
violence must explain why we don't see Tibetan suicide bombers
killing Chinese children. The Tibetans have suffered every bit
as much as the Palestinians. Over a million of them died as a
direct result of the Chinese occupation of their country. Where
are the Tibetan suicide bombers? Where is their cult of martyrdom?
Where are the throngs of Tibetans seething with hatred, calling
for the deaths of the Chinese? They are not likely to exist. What
is the difference that makes the difference? Religion.
10. This brings us to one of the other
implications of your book: you argue that not all cultures are
morally equal, and that those that are morally superior have the
right to impose their cultural values on others.
Yes. I think the civilized world has the
duty, ultimately, to rescue the poor people in the developing
world who are living under tyranny. It does not much matter if
this tyranny is imposed from the top, by a dictator, or from all
sides, by the tyranny of ignorance. This should really be viewed
as a problem of education. People who don't understand how diseases
like AIDS spread must be educated. People who don't understand
that women should be accorded all the civic and moral privileges
of men must be educated. People who think you can get to heaven
by flying planes into buildings must be educated. Whether they
must be conquered first and then educated is for them to decide.
11. What would you say to someone who
has had a profound religious experience and simply knows that
there is a God?
I would have to know the details of the
religious experience. Such experiences rarely suggest anything
at all about the structure of the universe. What they do prove,
beyond any possibility of doubt, is that it is possible to have
extraordinary experiences. We have to realize that there is no
conflict between spiritual experience and reason. The conflict
is between reason and those who make unreasonable claims to knowledge
on the basis of such experiences-or worse, on the basis of books
that recount the experiences of men who have been dead for centuries.
Spiritual experience is arguably the most important human pursuit.
But nothing needs to be taken on faith for us to pursue it.
12. You seem to have focused on all that
is wrong with religion and overlooked all that is right with it.
Religion has inspired some of the greatest art, architecture,
moral teachings, and humanitarian acts.
The fact that people do wonderful things
in the name of faith does not suggest that these things are best
done in the name of faith. There is nothing to suggest that similar
acts of beauty would not occur in the absence of religious dogmatism.
There are very good reasons-which is to say justifiable, rational
reasons-to create art, to build beautiful spaces for people to
inhabit, and to treat other human beings well.
13. Do you really think that we can apply
rational standards to religion? Isn't the whole point of faith
that it is not bound by reason?
I happen to think that the so-called "leap
of faith" is a myth. Beliefs have a certain logical relationship
to one another, to language, and to sensory experience. We are
not free merely to believe whatever we want about the world. In
any case, the leap of faith is doubly a myth because people of
faith rely upon reason whenever they can. The moment something
in their experience appears to corroborate their faith, they seize
it with both hands. The moment prayer actually seems to work-the
tumor shrinks, the child is pulled from the wreckage unscathed-people
of faith are elated to find their faith confirmed. The problem
is that they are not inclined to view the totality of the evidence
with an open mind. Any honest appraisal of the state of our world,
or of human history, will lead you to conclude that the evidence
for an omniscient, omnipotent, and benevolent Creator who takes
an interest in the affairs of men and women is impossible to find.
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