Atheism in Society | Atheism-Religion Discourse | Reasons for atheism | Religious Naturalism | Richard Dawkins | Secular Humanism | Social Attitudes

The Virtue of Uncertainty

Monday, April 27, 2009

Notorious non-believer Richard Dawkins will ironically be a godlike presence at the Auckland Writers and Readers Festival as he beams in from England for a video interview. On the other hand, former Bishop of Edinburgh Richard Holloway will appear in the flesh.  
by Stephen Jewell
Excerpted from The New Zealand Herald

The 75-year-old Edinburgh resident would surely have relished the opportunity to lock horns again - face to face - with The God Delusion author, whom he has previously met at Scottish literary events.

We've had a couple of good encounters, he laughs. We've treated each other with friendly combativeness. He's an interesting man.

While they might seem like odd bedfellows, Holloway actually has much in common with Dawkins, who is famous for his outspoken views about the non-existence of a supreme being and the irrational nature of religious faith. Holloway has written 12 books, including Godless Morality, which was controversially denounced by the then-Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey after its publication in 1999 for daring to suggest it is not necessary to be religious to be moral.

Holloway left the church in 2000 after suffering a crisis of conscience. Although he now refers to himself as a "Christian agnostic", he still keeps some ties with his erstwhile profession.

I'm still a member of the Christian community as it carries many beautiful values, tropes, metaphors and narratives. I've changed my mind so many times in the past that I now handle what I say with a certain provisionality. I'm not done yet - who knows where I'll end up? - but one of the things I have learned is the virtue of uncertainty. If you absolutely know the mind of that mystery you call God then it leads you to do terrible things because, of course, God is on your side.

Although he doesn't mention him specifically, Holloway alludes to neo-atheists like Dawkins in his latest book Between the Monster and the Saint, claiming that "like strong religionists, they are not content to keep their certainties to themselves, and insist on spreading them to others".

Read the full article here.

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5


Comments

Add comment


 

  Country flag

biuquote
  • Comment
  • Preview
Loading



The meaning of this is all up to you.

 

Have you ever felt the hand of God?

RecentComments

Comment RSS