The Island of Doctor Moreau

The prescience of H. G. Wells. From the Telegraph

Human tissue could be taken from the infirm without their consent and used for research

On Wednesday MPs will vote on a bill which would allow the creation of human/animal hybrid embryos to be used for stem cell research, change the conditions for granting IVF, and possibly liberalise the abortion laws.

The passage through Parliament of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill has been dogged by controversy. Failed attempts to outlaw late abortion have dominated the debate, while scientists, medical ethics experts and religious leaders have clashed over the hybrid embryo issue.

Defenders of the bill have repeatedly stressed the importance of gaining consent from anyone whose tissue is taken for the creation of human/animal hybrid embryos.

We are about to enter the age of the Chimera. Lord have mercy.

Anthony Flew takes on Richard Dawkins

at bethinking

The God Delusion by the atheist writer Richard Dawkins, is remarkable in the first place for having achieved some sort of record by selling over a million copies. But what is much more remarkable than that economic achievement is that the contents – or rather lack of contents – of this book show Dawkins himself to have become what he and his fellow secularists typically believe to be an impossibility: namely, a secularist bigot. (Helpfully, my copy of The Oxford Dictionary defines a bigot as ‘an obstinate or intolerant adherent of a point of view’)….

This whole business makes all too clear that Dawkins is not interested in the truth as such but is primarily concerned to discredit an ideological opponent by any available means. That would itself constitute sufficient reason for suspecting that the whole enterprise of The God Delusion was not, as it at least pretended to be, an attempt to discover and spread knowledge of the existence or non-existence of God but rather an attempt – an extremely successful one – to spread the author’s own convictions in this area.

Dawkins Dogma. Looking for meaning in all the wrong places.

Richard Dawkins has a new TV series wherein he waxes lyrical on the patron saint of materialism, Charles Darwin.

“Over the next six weeks, I’m going to show you how evolution offers a far richer and more spectacular vision of life than any religion,” Dawkins intones, as the sea rolls in behind him, portentously.

“It’s hard to comprehend just how much suffering there is in the natural world,” Dawkins says, at the dead of night, eyes glowing night-vision green. “In the minutes while I say these words, millions of animals are running in fear of their lives, whimpering with fear. They are feeling teeth sink into their throats. They are injured. Starving. Or feeling parasites, rasping away from within. There is no central authority. There is no safety net. Animal life is about suffering, survival and death.”

Richard Dawkins is desperate to find meaning. Having abandoned the religion of his youth, he now seeks inspiration from evolution and proselytises the unwashed with evangelical fervour.

The problem is, however hard he tries, his argument is always circular: the ‘spectacular vision’ afforded by evolution can – by his own findings – be nothing more than a series of electrochemical reactions in a human brain, itself the product of accident. To call the electrochemical reaction ‘spectacular’ is to afford it value – a value that he appears to be trying to establish, but in reality is accepting on faith. If Dawkins is correct, the reaction is neither spectacular nor mundane: it is merely a mechanism.

Dawkins appears to want to comprehend suffering. Ivan speaking to Alyosha in Dostoevsky’s Brothers Karamazov, tries to prove that God cannot exist by saying:

“Imagine that you are creating a fabric of human destiny with the object of making men happy in the end, giving them peace and rest at last, but that it was essential and inevitable to torture to death only one tiny creature…and to found that edifice on its unavenged tears, would you consent to be the architect on this condition?”

Dawkins takes Ivan’s view. The argument against God, though, is again flawed by the unstated assumption that suffering is somehow ‘bad’ and happiness, ‘good’; at the very least the one is seen as better than the other. Since God’s existence is the only frame of reference that can give the concepts of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ meaning, the argument, while compelling on the surface, is self-defeating. Alyosha’s rebuttal to Ivan is not to offer a counter-argument, but to point out that Christ himself suffered and is with us in our suffering; considerably more comforting than, “There is no central authority. There is no safety net. Animal life is about suffering, survival and death”

To paraphrase Malcolm Muggeridge, the most primitive man worshipping a piece of coloured stone in the Amazon jungle is closer to the truth than someone like Richard Dawkins.