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Archive for September, 2007

The God delusion according to Karl Marx

Sunday, September 16th, 2007

In two previous posts I have commented on Richard Dawkins: The God Delusion,

and the response by Terry Eagleton: Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching, the God Delusion of Richard Dawkins.

Terry Eagleton is a leftwing catholic influenced by marxism. Therefore, it may be of interest what Karl Marx thought about religion. I do not take this from the original Marx, but from the English translation of a book (Three Faces of Fascism. Action Francaise, Italian Fascism, National Socialism, R.Piper and Co., Munich 1965, original German 1963) by the German historian Ernst Nolte. He writes on page 550:
“..Marx is far from declaring, as was often done during the Enlightenment, that religion and philosophy are a delusion and fraud perpetrated by priests. The much-quoted words about religion being the opiate of the masses do not in any way stress the poisonous nature of opium. True, religion is merely the “realization in fantasy of human nature”, but it is nevertheless man’s sole legitimate existence as long as this existence possesses no genuine, that is, earthly, reality: “Poverty in religion is simultaneously the expression of real poverty and the protest against real poverty. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, it is feeling in a heartless world, just as it is the spirit of nonspiritual conditions”. ….”And it is precisely for this reason that the classless society can be essentially atheistic, because, instead of combating and supplanting religion, it makes religion’s legitimate intention a reality, thereby rendering it superfluous”.

Obviously, Richard Dawkins is in the tradition of the Enlighenment and (much earlier) of the Emperor Friedrich II of Hohenstauffen (13th century). Religion still flourishes in spite of all the arguments against it, which suggests that some deep seated need for it exists, as suggested by Marx, among many others. Whether this need is due to poverty as suggested by Marx, is open to discussion. I don’t know what Terry Eagleton thinks about this, but I doubt that he would agree. Perhaps religious beliefs are based on evolutionarily old “instincts” as satirically discussed and illustrated in my book Satire, Politik und Kunst (extracts and review of the book at Satire, Politik und Kunst.)

The Beginning of Life and the End of Civilization

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

This is an interesting link.

The article suggests that life on earth originated more or less immediately after conditions became suitable, and how serious the effects of global warming are likely to be. This supports Stuart Kaufman’s work, which indicates that life must have arisen many times in the universe, because life must automatically arise when conditions become suitable, and that suitable conditions are probably not rare. It also supports what, if I remember correctly, the evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr said when asked why he saw no point in looking for intelligent life elsewhere in the universe: civilized life on earth and elsewhere is short-lived, because of man’s (and woman’s?) and other intelligences folly.

In a few words: life arises automatically wherever and whenever it can, and it (at least its intelligent offshoot) self-terminates whenever it can.

Marine Parasitology, latest book review

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007

Here is an extract of the latest review of Marine Parasitology (CSIRO Publishing Melbourne and CABI Oxford), edited by me, as posted on the website of CSIRO Publishing. I shall add the complete review when available.

“This work should be considered the standard in its field.” “Individuals interested in parasites in any natural system would be rewarded by referring to this work.” “The rigor of the material presented is appropriate for scientifically sophisticated readers. Highly recommended.”
S.R. Fegley, Maine Maritime Academy, Choice Reviews Online

For earlier reviews see my post Marine Parasitology.