Wednesday, July 02, 2008

I'd Say "Amen," But . . .

Over at Pharyngula, PZ is on a roll, critiquing an interview in Salon with physicist Karl Giberson, author of Saving Darwin: How to Be a Christian and Believe in Evolution. I haven't read the whole interview yet, so I won't comment on the substantive criticism, but this paragraph of PZ's is brilliant:

Look at the bible as a pastiche, a collection of mutually and often internally inconsistent fragments slapped together for crude reasons of politics and art and priestly self-promotion and sometimes beauty and a lot of chest-thumping tribalism, and through that lens, it makes a lot of sense. It does tell us something important…about us, not some fantastic mythological being. It tells us that we are fractious, arrogant, scrappy people who sometimes accomplish great things and more often cause grief and pain to one another. We want to be special in a universe that is uncaring and cold, and in which the nature of our existence is a transient flicker, so we invent these strange stories of grand beginnings, like every orphan dreaming that they are the children of kings who will one day ride up on a white horse and take them away to a beautiful palace and a rich and healthy family that will love them forever. We are not princes of the earth, we are the descendants of worms, and any nobility must be earned.
As the kids say, quoted for truth.

1 comment:

Elvis Drinkmo said...

Apparently this writer hasn't heard of the the good word handed down to us through the Five Holy Starfleet Captains.

We won't be riding white horses, we'll be riding in starships powered by dilithium crystals and anti-matter. And Earth is special because the Star Trek scriptures teach us that Starfleet Headquarters will be located in San Fransisco.

;)