You've done it again Shakes; nothing like it when you strike the nail squarely on the head.
Ever heard about cognitive dissonance? Now where do you think there could be a precise example of this complaint, I know it's a difficult question, but do your best Shakes?
ippy
Hi ipster,
I don't think it's quite cognitive dissonance
per se in the way that the term is usually used; what we see at work in this part of the discussion (and in many other places too for that matter) is an absolutely desperate desire on Alan's part to uphold human exceptionalism - the view that human beings are
special, distinctive, set apart somehow from the entirety of the rest of the living world. Alan really, really,
really wants humans to be set apart from every other kind of living creature that exists, which is why he expends so many useless electrons pushing his ideas of a God-given soul, free will and suchlike. In Alan's classification of the living world there are only two groups: (1) humans and (2) everything else, and I do mean very much in that specific order. That's pretty much it - humans are the ones with souls and free will, everything else is pretty well an operating-on-instinct meat machine.
That this flies in the face of pretty well everything we know about the oneness of life as revealed by evolutionary science is a given, but there's really no point in trying to explain this to someone who is patently so wedded to his beloved ideas not on an intellectual but on a purely emotional basis. People are rarely reasoned out of something they were never reasoned into in the first instance. It can and does happen, but it's neither common nor usual. Alan thinks that atheists like me are missing out for not believing in a God that he sees as an absolutely and utterly undeniable truth which he regards as so obvious that it's as self-evident or even more so than his own existence. I think he's missing out on the staggering beauty, complexity in the specific details but fundamental simplicity and elegance and awe-inspiring grandeur of the unity of every living thing in this world which makes every creature, us included, a more distant or less distant relative of every other. This uplifts and inspires me and I think that anybody who doesn't see this or understand it or, worse by far, doesn't
want to understand it, is very much the poorer for it. It's the sort of emotion that Darwin knew - read the closing paragraphs of the
Origin -, that anybody who has ever been captivated by evolution has known. We as a species have roots, and we can know a great deal - not everything, but a great deal - about those roots. Not to know this is one thing, but not to
want to know is not to want to know where we came from and how we actually did come to be where and what we are. I don't understand this at all; I never have and never will.
That might suggest that the two camps are talking past each other, futilely, doomed to be speaking two mutually incomprehensible languages for ever. That view seems superficially plausible, with the signal and salient difference that I have a Himalayan mountain range of evidence for my view of life, whereas Alan has a paltry pantry of to him intense, to him utterly compelling but basically baseless personal conviction founded upon the jerry-built footings of bald assertion and logical fallacy.
So I don't think that Alan's views are cognitive dissonance as such but are maintained as a flight from it. He
has to maintain his human exceptionalism which is such an integral part of his theism because if that starts to wobble the entire edifice may come crashing down about his ears, and as I've said before, if Alan's worldview unravels it's going to be a very messy spectacle indeed. Some worldviews are incredibly fragile; they're like the blown glass Christmas tree baubles from the 50s and 60s of which I can remember a few still hanging around when I was little (and they were old-fashioned even then) - you could shatter one of the things almost by breathing on it. Worldviews such as Alan's are like a house of cards; start pissing about with them at almost any point in the structure - anywhere, not just the bottom - and the integrity of the whole thing is threatened. If Alan or anybody else with his views ever once started seriously and honestly to question human exceptionalism - to absorb and understand evolutionary science - to see the kinship of all life which has a billion twigs but one trunk - to see ourselves as human animals in our right place as a species amongst species, kneaded and moulded by the selection pressures and pushed and pulled by the instinctual drives that shape everything else - then the house of cards stands a very good chance indeed of no longer being a house of cards but a random scattering of hearts and clubs all over the floor.
Cognitive dissonance is the thing that upsets apple carts, metaphorically speaking (or at least can do so); Alan does everything he possibly can to insulate himself from it, everywhere, all the time.