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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 03/02/01 -- Vol. 19, No. 35

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@avaya.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@avaya.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@avaya.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-447-3652 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       ===================================================================

       1.  I was reading an article about Lewis Wolpert and  some  of  the
       challenging  ideas  he  as  about  one of my favorite topics.  That
       topic is the existence of God.  While the film CONTACT  exaggerated
       the  numbers  to  say  that  95%  of humanity believes in a Supreme
       Being, I could easily believe that it is a majority of those living
       today.   This  has  to  be  the most popularly believed fantastical
       idea.  I say that the  idea  is  fantastical  rather  than  fantasy
       because  I  do  not have any good evidence to say it is fantasy.  I
       know people who are devout atheists  as  well  as  people  who  are
       devout  believers.  Both types of people are people who jumped to a
       conclusion based on what I consider to  be  insufficient  evidence.
       In  fact jumping to believing in God based on insufficient evidence
       is usually considered to be a religious virtue called  Faith.   The
       atheists  I  know  do  not  actually  say that their disbelief is a
       virtue beyond saying  that  it  demonstrates  that  they  have  the
       courage  of  their  convictions.  Frankly, I do not want to jump to
       any more conclusions than I have to based on insufficient evidence.
       That makes me an agnostic.  I cannot say I am a proud agnostic, but
       I am a fervent one.   But  it  is  not  fervent  in  the  sense  of
       religious  fervency.   I do not believe that I am in the right camp
       and everybody else is in the wrong camp.  The fact is that I really
       deep-down  think that everybody is an agnostic and some people just
       do not realize that is what they are.  Agnostic means one who  does
       not know and it is a proposition that nobody has knowledge about.
       The question however arises if nobody knows whether God  exists  or
       not,  why do so many people believe in God.  (For simplicity sake I
       will refer to God in the singular, though I  am  not  intentionally
       leaving  out  polytheistic  religions.  I really mean God or gods.)
       Where does  this  belief  come  from  and  why  is  the  belief  so
       pervasive.   In  a sense a religion is a lot like a computer virus.
       Both a religion and a computer virus are self-replicating  patterns
       of  ideas.   Just  as  it  is  the  function of a computer virus to
       replicate itself and spread to other processors, it is the function
       of  a  religion  to  replicate  itself  and  spread to other minds.
       Different computer viruses carry different payloads.   In  addition
       to  just  spreading  themselves,  they change the processing of the
       computers to which they spread.  Some computer viruses just  spread
       greetings  or  a message to other computers, some work more deeply.
       Some religions carry a positive payload of moral rules  with  them,
       some do not.  I get rather impatient with religions that do not try
       to impart some sort of morality similar to my sort of morality.  If
       a  religion teaches only that one should believe in God or Jesus or
       whatever and come together socially for singing once a  week,  that
       religion  is  a parasite on the human intellect.  It uses up mental
       resources and it does not give anything back.   If  a  religion  is
       going  to  waste  all  this  mental  power,  it  at least should do
       something more socially useful than to just perpetuate itself.

       By far the most popular theory of the origin of a belief in God  is
       the  combination  of  revelation  and  word-of-mouth.  That is that
       there was a point in ancient times when  God  revealed  Himself  to
       humans.  Anybody could look at Him and say, "Oh, of course.  That's
       God."  But not everybody could be there at that place and  time  so
       the  word  spread  by people telling other people.  Some add to the
       story that God wanted people to get the story right so He  inspired
       people not just to write it down, but personally made sure they got
       every word right.  This was how most religions have got  got  their
       own  sacred  texts.   A  lot of them add that those sacred texts in
       other religions are the product of delusion.

       My own theory of the origin of religious belief is embodied in  the
       phrase  "Our  Father  who  art  in Heaven."  God really is a parent
       figure.  In the first days of your existence you are learning about
       the world as fast as you are ever going to be learning.  One of the
       things you probably learn is that there is something big out  there
       that  takes  care  of  you.   It feeds you when you call to it.  It
       comforts you.  It takes care of you.  Still later it  punishes  you
       when  you  do  wrong  and it rewards you when you do what it wants.
       Later you come  to  understand  what  parents  are  and  what  your
       relationship to them is and you dissociate them this concept of the
       big thing that cares for you.  But  those  first  impressions  stay
       with  you and you just create for yourself a giant invisible parent
       in heaven.

       All of this brings me to Lewis Wolpert.  Lewis Wolpert is Professor
       of  Biology as Applied to Medicine in the Department of Anatomy and
       Developmental Biology of University College, London.  He  writes  a
       column  on  science  and  philosophy  for  The  Independent and his
       writings have been the basis for a series of programs on  the  BBC.
       In an article at the daunting URL http://www.telegraph.co.uk/\
         et?ac=000166941319210&rtmo=VDwS8qkK&atmo=99999999&pg=/\
         et/01/1/25/ecfbelif25.html
       Wolpert talks about his beliefs.  What  Wolpert  believes  is  that
       humans  are  a  species  that  believes  in  causality.  There is a
       genetic basis for this belief, Wolpert believes, but  that  is  not
       important  for  this discussion.  That is just about how the belief
       gets there.  We believe that things that happen  have  causes  that
       keeps us alive.  And we formulate theories for what the causes are.
       And this theorizing is actually a survival trait.  It is  not  just
       that  we frequently come up with the right causes, but even that we
       frequently come up with the wrong causes.  It is frequently  better
       to  have  a  bad  theory  than no theory at all.  Suppose you are a
       primitive man.  One day as you are crossing a field, a storm  comes
       up  and  you  are nearly hit by lightning.  In fact the guy who was
       walking next to you is now lying dead and smoking  on  the  ground.
       Pretty scary stuff.  How do you react?  Well if to you it is just a
       chance happening, this is a really frightening  world.   No  matter
       what  you do lightning can reach out and kill you.  How do you live
       like that knowing that death can come at any moment  and  turn  you
       into a fritter.  There is a good chance you crawl into you cave and
       never come out.  But the guy in the next cave thinks he knows.   He
       prays to Bajawa, the rock in the middle of the field.  He lays some
       fruit at the foot of Bajawa every day.  And he is still around  and
       happy.  Suddenly Bajawa has two worshipers not just one.  It may be
       wacky to think that the rock protects people, but it is  better  it
       get  on  with  your  life  with false protection than to give up on
       living because you have no protection at all.

       Wolpert thinks that we  dispell  deeply  held  beliefs,  even  very
       strange  ones,  only  at our own peril.  People with strong beliefs
       are more healthy and do better under adverse conditions.  And  with
       mystical  beliefs  the less one understands them, the more powerful
       they are and the more one can explain with them.  So there is  real
       survival  value in believing in a mystical and unfathomable god.  A
       wrong model of the universe is no worse than  having  no  model  at
       all. [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@avaya.com

           It is easier to fight for one's principles than to 	   live up to them.
                                          -- Anonymous

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