Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Science explains the end of the world - On Faith - The Washington Post


I won't waste any more time on that, but I do want to mention a less trivial point arising from the question posed by the Washington Post: 'What does your tradition teach about the end of the world?' It's that word 'tradition' that should raise our critical hackles. It refers to a collection of beliefs handed down through generations – as opposed to beliefs founded on evidence. Evidence-free beliefs are, by definition, groundless. What my 'tradition' (or your 'tradition' or the Dalai Lama's 'tradition' or Osama bin Laden's 'tradition' or the bad-trip 'tradition' of whoever wrote Revelation) says about anything in the real world (including its end) is no more likely to be true than any urban legend, idle rumor, superstition, or science fiction novel. Yet, the moment you slap the word 'tradition' onto a made-up story you confer on it a spurious dignity, which we are solemnly asked to 'respect'.

---Sent from Steve's iPad...

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