Sunday, August 16, 2009

Atheists are Fussbudget Ninnies

OFTEN ONE WILL HEAR atheists proclaim that we are here due to the random dance of atoms occurring in a vastly uninhabited, ferociously beautiful, yet totally fluke-filled universe. We are "the stuff of stars," as dear old Carl Sagan said.

And I, of course, agree with Carl's statement, being an Earth Science middle school teacher. We are indeed begotten from the star matter (plasma, baby - and that's as close as I ever want to get to it).

We dwell in a tiny cocoon of atmosphere around our tiny, garden planet, protected from solar radiation by an electro-magnetic field that is produced because the outer core of our planet is a billion-trillion tons of molten iron spinning around the inner core of solid iron at about one thousand miles an hour (I am not making this stuff up - who could?) which sends the EM field out one pole, around the Earth, and back in the other. This, by the way, flips every so often, causing the mid-Atlantic ridges to show the reversal in polarity with geologic time scale frequency. Your compass will one day point south. Yep.

And besides this, we are beings dwelling in this tiny, protected, garden planet that can imagine all of this in our puny minds which are inextricably intertwined somehow with seven pounds of gray matter between our ears and who can talk about it with one another due to the manufacture of language in the Wernicke region of our brains. (As Walker Percy said of this in his famous Thomas Jefferson lecture of the humanities in 1989, "The Fateful Rift: The San Andreas Fault in the Modern Mind" - "Draw me a picture of us 'picking out language' from the Wernicke region. Go ahead. Draw me a picture.")

And as G. K. Chesterton pointed out, "It is an act of faith (on the part of scientists, largely unacknowledged) to assert that our thoughts have any relation to reality at all."

So, I find it remarkable that atheists are atheistic, given the above facts. What an amazing pile of remarkable "coincidences" and "random dance-steps!"

My Catholic faith, on the other hand, has produced some of the greatest scientific thinkers of western civilization, bar none, and depends completely upon both common sense and high rationality the likes of which cannot be found elsewhere.

And if our Creator was kind enough to allow each of us into the greatest Adventure of all - namely, being blessed enough to be born and avoiding that man-made obstacle, abortion - surely, surely, we can depend upon Him to see that that which follows this biological existence will be at the proper focus distance to see, provide sufficient existential and ontological substantiation to still remain His be-ings (if it be His will), and be a part of something at least, if not more, miraculous than all astonishing existence we now share.

For more important facts, get your copy of A Little Guide for Your Last Days.

2 comments:

Jeff Miller said...

You might find it interesting in that the latest Niven-Pournelle book "Escape from Hell" Carl Sagan is one of the occupants of Hell.

Anonymous said...

The mathemetical and calculated things of the Universe are such heavy proof for the existence of a living Law, an intelligent Being, and a well thought out plan of creation, that the only way you could say it is not God is if you believe God cannot ever exist no matter what or if you believe that the God whom every monotheist throughout time and space believes in is an unknown thing, something neither science nor philosophy nor theology nor reason can understand or know, even if with God's help. But I suppose the biggest obstacle to accepting the gift of faith for unbelievers is the preconceived notion that God, whom Christians worship, is an evil God, and so, someone you wouldn't want to worship or acknowledge even if it meant eternal damnation; but see, this preconceived notion is not born of fact or truth but is the stuff of fallacy, misjudgment, and sometimes even arrogence and hatred, and if the atheists wishes to hold to this lie even against the truth, he will find himself up against his own consceience, which will gnaw at him to accept the truth, for we are all naturally born to seek and live by truth. If God was truly evil, than it would be right to hate him, but, because He is wholy good, Goodness Itself, it is wrong to call Him evil and it is right to adore and love Him.