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Those who believe in god are DELUDED

PropertyWatcher

Alfrescian
Loyal
BOOK REVIEW
BY KENDRICK FRASIER

The God Delusion. By Richard Dawkins. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, New York, 2006.

That a book so forthrightly titled and forcefully argued as The God Delusion could reach and make an extended stay on the upper strata of the best seller lists over the past months may tell us something about a shifting cultural climate. It may be a changing Zeitgeist (a term the author employs late in his book for just such welcome raisings of consciousness) to counter the excesses of those who have aggressively pushed a narrow religious agenda upon the mainstream.

The book’s success certainly tells us something about the unique abilities of its author, Richard Dawkins. Dawkins, who has made his name as a distinguished biologist and literate explainer and defender of evolution, is, as a public person, also legitimately deserving of his publisher’s moniker as “the world’s most prominent atheist.”

The two—scientist and atheist—don’t necessarily go hand in hand, but Dawkins here meshes his scientific knowledge and scientific worldview with a welcome freshness and directness in examining all aspects of the “god” question, a matter often treated with kid gloves and a philosophical abstruseness intended, if not to be understood, at least not to offend. Dawkins works very hard to be understood, bringing his considerable knowledge, insight, and clarity of expression to his cause.

Dawkins also hopes not to offend—I think he really does try to couch his arguments to appeal to the higher impulses of intelligent believers. But not giving offense is not the highest item on his agenda. In fact, society’s “hands-off” attitude toward religion, an “undeserved respect” by which generations of people have been raised to give religion a free pass, allowing it to avoid the no-holds-barred critical scrutiny all democratic societies apply toward politics and everything else, is one of the things Dawkins very much wants to change.

“I am intrigued and mystified by the disproportionate privileging of religion in our otherwise secular societies. . . . What is so special about religion that we grant it such uniquely privileged respect?”

A number of other such big consciousness-raising themes resound throughout these pages.

1.Atheism can no longer be marginalized and ignored. It is a respected intellectual tradition. Atheists and agnostics far outnumber Jews and even most other religious groups. Dawkins hopes to raise the consciousness of people who have had religion pushed on them and wish they could leave that tradition: “To be an atheist is a realistic aspiration, and a brave and splendid one,” he writes. “You can be an atheist who is happy, balanced, moral, and intellectually fulfilled.”

2.The God hypothesis is a scientific question, one that can, in principle at least, be answered empirically with a yes or no result. The existence of God is thus subject to legitimate scientific scrutiny, bringing to bear all we are learning in the research laboratory to a question that used to be considered one of opinion only. “The presence or absence of a creative super-intelligence is unequivocally a scientifically question, even if it is not in practice—not yet—a decided one,” he writes. Did Jesus have a human father? Was his mother a virgin? Did Jesus come alive again, three days after being dead? “There is an answer to every such question, whether or not we can discover it in practice, and it is strictly a scientific answer.”

3. Evolution by natural selection is the creative force that provides all the biological complexity we see on Earth. This “illusion of design” fools those unfamiliar with evolution (the majority of people, unfortunately) into thinking a master designer must be at work. Biologists know that no such hypothesis is needed.

4.Arguments for God’s existence all have pungent counterarguments. Dawkins himself spends some time on a number of them: The Argument from Beauty, The Argument from Personal “Experience” (the most convincing to those who have had one, “the least convincing to anyone else, and to anyone knowledgeable about psychology”), The Argument from Scripture, The Argument from Admired Religious Scientists, Pascal’s Wager, and Bayesian Arguments.

He has fresh things to say about all such arguments. How do you account for inspired works of art, the religious mind asks? Answers Dawkins: “Beethoven’s late quartets are sublime. So are Shakespeare’s sonnets. They are sublime if God is there and they are sublime if he isn’t. They do not prove the existence of God; they prove the existence of Beethoven and Shakespeare.” “Visions” and other personal experiences of God seem astonishing to the beholder, but “the formidable power of the brain’s simulation software . . . is well capable of constructing ‘visions’ and ‘visitations’ of the utmost veridical power.” He cites data showing that an overwhelming majority of members of the National Academy of Sciences and Fellows of the Royal Society are atheists. So much for admired scientists sharing the religious sensibility.

As for scripture, which means so much to so many, Dawkins cites chapter and verse of utter contradictions and the calls to violence and child-abuse and murder and wonders if religious people have even read the book they admire so highly. Even so, it doesn’t really matter. “Although Jesus probably existed, reputable biblical scholars do not in general regard the New Testament (and obviously not the Old Testament) as a reliable record of what actually happened in history, and I shall not consider the Bible further as evidence for any kind of deity.” He quotes the “farsighted words” of Thomas Jefferson, who wrote to John Adams, “The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the Supreme Being as his father, in the womb of a virgin, will be classed with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter.” (One of his subthemes is that the founding fathers of the American republic were not the “Christians” imagined by today’s religious right but something very close to deists, agnostics, or, yes, even atheists.)

Dawkins saves his biggest guns for the most powerful argument of all, one that doesn’t depend upon personal subjectivity: The Argument from Improbability. Some observed phenomena about life is correctly extolled as statistically improbable. Theists think the argument falls in their favor. Dawkins sees exactly the opposite. The argument, in his view, “comes close to proving that God does not exist.”

In a core chapter “Why There Is Almost Certainly No God,” he calls the argument the Ultimate Boeing 747 gambit. This is reference to the amusing image attributed to the physicist Fred Hoyle. Hoyle said the probability of life originating on Earth is no greater than the chance that a hurricane, sweeping through a scrapyard, would assemble a 747 airliner. It is the creationist’s favorite argument, and it seems powerful to those uninformed by natural selection. This is where Dawkins finds that biologists seem to have something up on some physicists who may understand natural selection intellectually but apparently not viscerally. Suggests he: “Perhaps you need to be steeped in natural selection, immersed in it, swim about in it, before you can truly appreciate its power.”

The argument, Dawkins says, “could be made only by somebody who doesn’t understand the first thing about natural selection: somebody who thinks natural selection is a theory of chance whereas—in the relevant sense of chance—it is the opposite.” In fact, as he sets out to show in the chapter (I think successfully), “Darwinian natural selection is the only known solution to the otherwise unanswerable riddle of where the information content [in living matter] comes from.”

The insights of evolution make biologists wary of the way that the idea of chance is so often misinterpreted. “A deep understanding of Darwinism teaches us to be wary of the easy assumption that design is the only alternative to chance, and teaches us to seek out graded ramps of slowly increasing complexity,” writes Dawkins. “The illusion of design is a trap that has caught us before, and Darwin should have immunized us by raising our consciousness. Would that he had succeeded with all of us.”

He notes that the “scientifically savvy” philosopher Daniel Dennett has pointed out that evolution counters one of the oldest ideas we have: “the idea that it takes a big fancy smart thing to make a lesser thing. . . . You’ll never see a pot making a potter.” But as Dawkins points out over and over throughout this book, the incremental processes of evolution through natural selection do just that. “Darwin’s discovery of a workable process that does that very counter-intuitive thing is what makes his contribution to human thought so revolutionary, and so loaded with the power to raise consciousness.”

Again Dawkins clearly summarizes the point: “Chance and design both fail as solutions to the problem of statistical improbability, because one of them is the problem, and the other one regresses to it. Natural selection is a real solution. It is the only workable solution that has ever been suggested. And it is not only a workable solution, it is a solution of stunning elegance and power.”
 

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
BOOK REVIEW
BY KENDRICK FRASIER
The God Delusion. By Richard Dawkins. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, New York, 2006.
/QUOTE]

Yeah right, listen to him and be a failure in life.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Dawkins

In 1967, Dawkins married fellow ethologist Marian Stamp, and they divorced in 1984. Later that year, Dawkins married Eve Barham − with whom he had a daughter, Juliet Emma Dawkins − but they too divorced, and Barham died of cancer in early 1999.[27] In 1992, he married actress Lalla Ward.[28] Dawkins had met her through their mutual friend Douglas Adams, who had previously worked with Ward on the BBC science-fiction television programme Doctor Who (in 2008 Dawkins made a cameo appearance as himself in the Doctor Who episode The Stolen Earth). Ward has illustrated over half of Dawkins' books and co-narrated the audio versions of two of his books, The Ancestor's Tale and The God Delusion.

Richard Dawkins - "What if you're wrong?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mmskXXetcg
 

troubledtimes

Alfrescian
Loyal
You mean success?

Dawkins was awarded a Doctor of Science by the University of Oxford in 1989. He holds honorary doctorates in science from the University of Huddersfield, University of Westminster, Durham University[112] and the University of Hull, and honorary doctorates from the Open University and the Vrije Universiteit Brussel.[13] He also holds honorary doctorates of letters from the University of St Andrews and the Australian National University, and was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1997 and the Royal Society in 2001.[13]
In 1987, Dawkins received a Royal Society of Literature award and a Los Angeles Times Literary Prize for his book, The Blind Watchmaker. In the same year, he received a Sci. Tech Prize for Best Television Documentary Science Programme of the Year, for the BBC Horizon episode entitled The Blind Watchmaker.[13]
His other awards have included the Zoological Society of London Silver Medal (1989), the Michael Faraday Award (1990), the Nakayama Prize (1994), the Humanist of the Year Award (1996), the fifth International Cosmos Prize (1997), the Kistler Prize (2001), the Medal of the Presidency of the Italian Republic (2001) and the Bicentennial Kelvin Medal of The Royal Philosophical Society of Glasgow (2002).[13]
Dawkins topped Prospect magazine's 2004 list of the top 100 public British intellectuals, as decided by the readers, receiving twice as many votes as the runner-up.[113][114] He has been short-listed as a candidate in their 2008 follow-up poll.[115] In 2005, the Hamburg-based Alfred Toepfer Foundation awarded him its Shakespeare Prize in recognition of his "concise and accessible presentation of scientific knowledge". He won the Lewis Thomas Prize for Writing about Science for 2006 and the Galaxy British Book Awards Author of the Year Award for 2007.[116] In the same year, he was listed by Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2007,[117] and was awarded the Deschner Award, named after Karlheinz Deschner.[118]
Since 2003, the Atheist Alliance International has awarded a prize during its annual conference, honoring an outstanding atheist whose work has done most to raise public awareness of atheism during that year. It is known as the Richard Dawkins Award, in honor of Dawkins' own work.[119]
 

kuntakinte

Alfrescian
Loyal
I would love to be a failure in life too if I could also publish books and thesis !!

And, they are selling !! Please, let me be a failure in life !!!



BOOK REVIEW
BY KENDRICK FRASIER
The God Delusion. By Richard Dawkins. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, New York, 2006.
/QUOTE]

Yeah right, listen to him and be a failure in life.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Dawkins

In 1967, Dawkins married fellow ethologist Marian Stamp, and they divorced in 1984. Later that year, Dawkins married Eve Barham − with whom he had a daughter, Juliet Emma Dawkins − but they too divorced, and Barham died of cancer in early 1999.[27] In 1992, he married actress Lalla Ward.[28] Dawkins had met her through their mutual friend Douglas Adams, who had previously worked with Ward on the BBC science-fiction television programme Doctor Who (in 2008 Dawkins made a cameo appearance as himself in the Doctor Who episode The Stolen Earth). Ward has illustrated over half of Dawkins' books and co-narrated the audio versions of two of his books, The Ancestor's Tale and The God Delusion.

Richard Dawkins - "What if you're wrong?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mmskXXetcg
 

PropertyWatcher

Alfrescian
Loyal
for those who read Chinese

道金斯:达尔文的当代斗犬

柯南
2006-10-25中国青年报

现实世界充斥着各种各样的思想和幻觉,而一位著名的进化论生物学家认为,
用科学和理性审视这个世界是至关重要的。

今年9 月,理查德·道金斯(Richard Dawkins)出版了一本名为《上帝的
错觉》的书。对宗教进行反思并不是什么新鲜事,引人注目的是书的作者。英国
《经济学人》杂志于9月21日发表书评认为,“每个人都应该读一读这本书”。

2004年,英国《展望》杂志请读者投票选出英国最著名的100位公共知识分
子。结果得票最多的是道金斯,他获得的票数几乎是第二名的1倍。2005年,
《展望》杂志又与美国《外交政策》杂志联合评选了最重要的100位公共知识分
子,道金斯名列第三,仅次于美国语言学家乔姆斯基和意大利小说家艾柯。

谁是道金斯?他是一个怎样的人物?有人把他视作科学的代表人物,也有人
把他视作极端的“科学主义者”;有人认为他是一位聪明的科学家,也有人称他
是疯狂的还原论者;有人钦佩他的理性,也有人—尤其是宗教右翼—对他恨之入
骨。有人觉得道金斯过于咄咄逼人,但是也有人觉得这是必要的。此外,道金斯
的对手也来自他的同行,他们曾经进行过多年的论战。

65岁的道金斯的正式身份是英国皇家学会会员、牛津大学教授、数本畅销书
的作者。这样的头衔和荣誉还可以一直写下去。如同美国拥有天文学家卡尔·萨
根一样,道金斯是英国最知名的科学家之一。

作为一位进化论生物学家,道金斯的许多思想都与进化论有关。其中最著名
的一个思想曾经让一些人感到悲观和绝望。当然,这部分是由于这些读者的误解。

基因的生存机器

1972年,一个很偶然的事件让道金斯开始了科普写作。这年,英国产业工人
的罢工导致了电力供应中断,道金斯不得不停下手头的实验室工作,拿起打字机
开始写作。他一直想写一本关于基因和进化的书。然而仅仅写了两章,电力供应
就恢复了。道金斯不得不暂时把这项工作搁置了下来。

直到1975年,道金斯才找到机会完成这本书,这就是后来著名的《自私的基
因》。这本书总共被翻译成了20多种语言,在多个国家出版。即便是在《自私的
基因》出版之后30年,它仍然是一本非常畅销的科普书。

《自私的基因》巧妙地使用了一个比喻来解释生物进化的奥秘。人们通常认
为,基因是生命蓝图的基本组成单位之一,它们为生物体服务。但是按照道金斯
的观点,基因才是这场生存游戏的主角,包括我们在内的所有生物体不过是为了
实现基因复制目的而被基因创造出来的“生存机器”。从这个观点来看,基因是
一种冷酷的存在,因为它们并不真正关心生物体幸福与否,成功地复制基因自身
才是它们的最终目的。因此,道金斯用了“自私的基因”这个比喻。

当然,“自私的基因”只是一个比喻,基因本身不过是一小段遗传物质,不
可能拥有人格化的动机。但是这样一个比喻让道金斯的这本书取得了巨大的成功。
《自私的基因》总共发行了约100万册之多。

对于生物学家,道金斯的这本书的中心思想可以用很简单的一句话来概括,
那就是:基因(而不是个体或者群体)是自然选择的基本单位。事实上,正如道
金斯本人指出的,这个理论是由美国进化论生物学家G·C·威廉斯(G.C.
Williams)等人于上世纪70年代提出的。道金斯把它用比喻的方式加以阐释,成
功地让这个理论广为人知。

《自私的基因》还有一个著名的副产品,称为迷米理论。在这本书中,道金
斯仿照基因(gene),制造了迷米(meme)一词。基因通过遗传的方式一代又一
代地传递,而文化则是通过模仿的方式从一个人传给另一个人。可以说,迷米就
是文化的“基因”。道金斯曾举例说,有一次他告诉同事,他的一位学生有一种
奇怪的低头思考的习惯。他的一些哲学家同事看到道金斯模仿这个学生的习惯之
后,马上意识到这种习惯来自哲学家维特根斯坦,他们随后发现,这位学生的父
母是维特根斯坦的学生。维特根斯坦的这个低头思考的迷米首先传给了他的学生,
然后传给了学生的女儿,最后传给了道金斯。

迷米理论为研究文化的演化提供了一个非常有趣的视角。小到网络俚语,大
到文化传统,都可以用迷米的观点加以研究。如今,《牛津英语辞典》已经收录
了迷米这个词。

从生物学家到公众理解科学教授

在《自私的基因》出版之后,道金斯又撰写了两本关于进化论的图书,分别
是《延伸的表现型》(1982年)和《盲目的钟表匠》(1986年)。前者也是对
《自私的基因》一书的延伸,后者讨论了一个自达尔文时代就争论不休的问题:
地球上的生物究竟是如何诞生和演化的?

道金斯再一次使用了一个比喻来解释这个问题。“盲目的钟表匠”的题目来
自18世纪英国哲学家威廉·佩利的一个钟表匠比喻。佩利认为,如果你在沙滩上
发现一只手表,由于它是如此的精巧,不可能来自天然形成,所以手表一定有一
个设计者,也就是钟表匠;同样,由于生物体太精巧复杂了,它们也应该有一个
超自然的“钟表匠”(设计者)。而道金斯在这本书中指出,没有超自然的“钟
表匠”,生物也可以演化出各种特征。或者说,这个“钟表匠”就是自然选择本
身。只不过,这个自然的“钟表匠”不具有人类钟表匠预见未来的能力,是一位
不能高瞻远瞩的盲目的钟表匠。

为进化论辩护成为了道金斯工作的一个重要组成部分,但是这也不可避免地
对他在牛津大学的本职工作(道金斯从1990年起成为牛津大学的高级讲师,相当
于美国的副教授)产生影响。在英国,大学教授是一种“珍稀动物”。此时,一
位来自美国的百万富翁、时任美国微软公司一个部门的主管查尔斯·西蒙尼
(Charles Simonyi)帮助了他。热爱科学的西蒙尼向牛津大学捐助了150万英镑,
设立了一个新的教授职位,道金斯成为了担任这个职位的第一个人。从此,道金
斯成为了牛津大学查尔斯·西蒙尼教席公众理解科学教授。

这是一个非常特别的职位。它的字面意义表明了道金斯可以把更多的精力投
入到科学普及中。道金斯也确实是这样做的。1995年,道金斯出版了《伊甸园之
河》,把人类进化的历程比作一条从远古流向今天的基因之河。1996年,他的
《攀登不可能山峰》着重讨论了神创论者声称的进化论“不可能”。他在书中指
出,所谓生命进化的不可能,其实都可以通过逐渐的进化过程而实现。

与达尔文同时代的英国科学家托马斯·赫胥黎(Thomas Huxley)为达尔文
的进化论辩护,自豪地宣称“达尔文的斗犬”。道金斯在当代为进化论所做的辩
护,也让他获得了一个类似的称号——“达尔文的罗特韦尔犬”(一种大型德国
犬)。

科学与人生观

在1976年《自私的基因》出版之后,道金斯不仅受到了来自学界的争议,一
些普通读者也被道金斯所描述的人不过是基因的“生存机器”的理论吓坏了。
“一些人问我在早晨怎么还有起床的勇气,”道金斯在他的《解析彩虹》(1998
年)一书的序言中写道,“一个遥远国家的一位教师写信责备我说,他的一位学
生读了我的书后,含着眼泪对他说,她已经懂得了生活的无比空虚和渺茫。这位
老师只好劝他的学生不要再让别的同学看这本书,使他们免受虚无主义和悲观思
想的影响。”

如果人类(以及所有生物体)不过是基因达成复制目的的手段,那么我们还
能有何作为?在道金斯看来,尽管进化是一个盲目的钟表匠,是一个“只能上山
的机器人”,我们却拥有一件来自进化的珍贵礼物,那就是我们的大脑。人类大
脑的出现原本是为了增加基因成功复制的机会,但是它能够反抗 “自私的基
因”,作出高瞻远瞩的决定。那些读者很可能没有注意到道金斯在《自私的基因》
的最后一章中的一句话:“在地球上,只有我们能够反抗自私的复制者的暴政。”

自从达尔文提出进化论之后,进化论常常被误用,最著名的就是鼓吹在人类
社会中间实施弱肉强食的所谓“社会达尔文主义”,尽管这个理论和达尔文没有
关系(最早是由斯宾塞提出的),而且达尔文反对这一理论。道金斯所持的人生
观与进化论有关。他曾说过,作为一个学者,他热情地支持进化论,但是对于人
类社会,他也坚决反对自然的“血红的牙齿和利爪”。正因为人类拥有了可以反
叛自私的基因的大脑,人类才能拥有“理解这个把我们制造出来的冷酷而残忍的
过程的才能、对这个过程的含意深恶痛绝的才能、高瞻远瞩的才能,以及理解整
个宇宙的才能。”

道金斯的人生观不仅仅与进化论有关。一些人认为科学是冷冰冰的,它破坏
了诗意,让人生变得毫无目的。道金斯认为科学也有其自身的诗意和美,而且这
种美可能远胜过人们的想象,一个人能够来到这个世界并了解科学所揭示的这个
世界,这本身就是一种幸运。

为理性辩护

在《解析彩虹》一书中,道金斯还跨出了他一直从事的生物学领域,对伪科
学和轻信进行了分析。道金斯把人类的轻信的本性归结于人类(与其他动物一样)
对于自然界模式(规律)的追寻,但是占星术、特异功能和“另类”医学通常是
虚假的模式。

道金斯还是西方著名的无神论者——不仅仅是怀疑超自然力量的存在,他认
为,上帝存在的可能性就如同一把中式茶壶围绕火星运转的可能性。几乎没有人
会相信火星周围有那么一把茶壶,除非这个传说经过了许多代人的传承。正因为
道金斯对神创论的反驳和对宗教的批判,他成为了西方保守势力的公敌。

今年9月,道金斯出版了《上帝的错觉》,用科学和理性的思维方式去考察
超自然信仰的缺陷。他曾说过,科学家与超自然神的信仰者之间的差别在于,前
者内部之间的争论是用证据解决的,而后者的争论无法通过证据解决,在极端的
情况下还会诉诸暴力。这当然不是危言耸听:在过去的几十年中,人们已经看到
了这样的一种暴力出现在世界的一些地方。在美国,宗教保守势力已经危及到了
科学的发展,例如美国的干细胞研究已经受到了严重的阻碍。

自从萨根和美国生物学家斯蒂芬·古尔德(他曾是道金斯在学术领域的对手)
去世之后,道金斯成为了科学理性最具代表性的人物之一。在这样一个世界里,
道金斯的观点显得特别珍贵。

(XYS20061025)
 

PropertyWatcher

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现代美国达尔文主义者中的老前辈G·C·威廉斯于1957年给这个故事带来一个重要的转折。他回到了我们关于从经济角度进行取舍的观点上。为了理解这一点,我们需要再补充几个背景事实。通常,一种基因不只具有一种效应,并常常作用于身体上明显不同的部位。这种“多效应”不仅是个事实,而且很多都是基因对胚胎发育发挥的效应,而胚胎发育又是一个复杂的过程。所以,任何一个新的突变都很可能不仅有一种效应,而是有几种效应。尽管在这些效应中可能有一种是有益的,但是似乎不会有多于一种的有益效应。这是因为大多数突变效应都是坏的。除了这是个事实之外,从原理上还可以这么说:如果你开始制造一台复杂的装置——比如一台收音机——把它做得更差些比把它做得更好些,会有更多的方法。
  每当自然选择因为某个基因在年青时的有益效应——比如说,让一个男性青年具有性吸引力——而偏爱该基因,就会有不利的一面出现:比如,在中老年时患上某种特殊的疾病。理论上,年龄效应是另外一回事,但是根据梅达沃的逻辑,自然选择不会因为同一基因在老年时表现出来的有益效应,而偏爱青年时的疾病。再者,我们可以再次引用有关修改基因的观点。一个基因有数种效应,每种效应(好的效应和坏的效应)都会在后来的进化中改变其开启时间。根据梅达沃原理,基因的好效应都倾向于在生命早期呈现,而坏效应则倾向于延迟至后期才表现出来。另外,在某些情况中,早期效应和晚期效应之间会进行直接的交换。这在我们对鲑鱼的讨论中已经是不言而喻了。如果一种动物所消耗的资源数量是有限的,比如说,只够使身体强壮并且逃脱危险,早消耗这些资源的任何倾向都会比晚消耗它更受欢迎。消耗晚的动物更有可能在有机会耗尽它们的资源之前就已经由于别的原因而死去。我们在第一章中曾介绍过一种倒叙的方法。将梅达沃的基本观点用这种倒述法来表示,每一个人都是从绵延不断的祖系传下的后裔,祖辈们在他们生命中某个时期都曾是年青的,但是他们中许多人却从未能活到老年。所以,我们继承下的就是那些年青的东西,而不必要继承那些衰老的东西。我们倾向于继承那些使我们在出生之后很久才死亡的基因,而不倾向于继承那些使我们在出生后早早夭折的基因。
  让我们回到本章开头的悲观论点,当实用功能——被最大限度扩大的功能——是DNA的生存时,这并不是获得幸福的妙方。
  只要DNA能够传下去,在其传播过程中,不管是谁或是什么受到损害都无关紧要。对于达尔文的姬蜂基因来说,毛虫最好是活的,被吃掉时仍是新鲜的,至于这样会使毛虫感到怎样的痛苦,则是无所谓的。基因不在乎痛苦,因为它们不在乎任何事情。
  如果大自然是仁慈的,那么它至少会作出使毛虫被从内部活活吃掉之前先行麻醉这样一个小小的让步。但是大自然既非仁慈,也非不仁慈。它既不反对遭受痛苦,也不赞同遭受痛苦。除非影响到DNA的生存,否则大自然对这样或那样的痛苦根本不感兴趣。
  你可以想象一种基因,比如说,当瞪羚在遭到致命一咬时,这种基因能使它们平静下来,这是很容易做到的。这种基因是否会得到自然选择的偏爱呢?除非使瞪羚平静的行动能提高该基因传播给未来世世代代的机会。很难说清楚为什么必需是这样,我们可以因此猜想,瞪羚在被追捕至死亡时承受着可怕的痛苦和恐怖——就像它们大多数终将要承受的那样。自然界中每年遭受磨难的动物,总数大大超过了任何公平的期望值。就在此刻我构思这句话的时间内,数千只动物正在被生吞活剥;其他一些动物则正在惊恐地呜咽着逃命;还有一些正被使人焦躁的寄生虫从内部缓慢地吃掉;数以千计的各种动物因为饥饿,干渴和疾病而正在死去。肯定是这么回事。如果时间充裕,这一事实会自动导致动物群体增长,直至饥饿和苦难的自然状态重现。
  神学家们为“邪恶问题”以及相关的“受难问题”而烦恼不已。
  在我最初写这一段的那天,英国的报纸全都报道了一辆大轿车并无明显原因地撞车的可怕事件,车上满载着一所罗马天主教学校的学生。所有孩子无一逃生。在伦敦《星期日电讯报》上,一位作者这样说:“你怎能相信充满爱心的、全能的上帝能允许发生这样的悲剧?”牧师们已经不是第一次为了这种神学问题而突然大发作了。这篇文章继续引用了一位教士的回答:“对这一问题的简单回答是,我们不知道为什么非要有一个上帝来允许这些可怕事件发生。但是这一可怕的撞车事件向基督徒们确认了这样一个事实,那就是,我们是生活在一个有真正价值的世界里:正面的和反面的。
  如果宇宙中仅存在电子,就不会有邪恶和痛苦问题了。”相反,如果宇宙中仅存在电子和自私基因,像撞车这种毫无意义的悲剧就恰好是我们所能期望的,还有就是同样毫无意义的好运气。这样的一个宇宙将既无邪恶的意图也无好的意图。它表明没有任何意图。在一个充满盲目的物质力量和基因复制品的宇宙中,有些人会受到伤害,另一些人会撞上好运,而你不会发现有道理可言,也不会发现有公正可言。我们所看到的宇宙具有我们所能期望的(如果有的话)明确的特征,本质上,它既无计划,也无目的;既无邪恶,也无正义;除了毫无怜悯之心的冷淡和盲目之外一无所有。就像那位不幸的诗人A·E·休斯曼(A.E.Housman)所描写的那样:大自然,无心无智的大自然,将既不会知晓,也不会挂牵。

  大自然,
  无心无智的大自然,
  将既不会知晓,
  也不会挂牵。
  DNA既不会知晓,也不会挂牵。DNA就是DNA。而我们随着
  它的音乐跳舞。
 

kuntakinte

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WOW !! Interesting piece .......


现代美国达尔文主义者中的老前辈G·C·威廉斯于1957年给这个故事带来一个重要的转折。他回到了我们关于从经济角度进行取舍的观点上。为了理解这一点,我们需要再补充几个背景事实。通常,一种基因不只具有一种效应,并常常作用于身体上明显不同的部位。这种“多效应”不仅是个事实,而且很多都是基因对胚胎发育发挥的效应,而胚胎发育又是一个复杂的过程。所以,任何一个新的突变都很可能不仅有一种效应,而是有几种效应。尽管在这些效应中可能有一种是有益的,但是似乎不会有多于一种的有益效应。这是因为大多数突变效应都是坏的。除了这是个事实之外,从原理上还可以这么说:如果你开始制造一台复杂的装置——比如一台收音机——把它做得更差些比把它做得更好些,会有更多的方法。 <<Truncated>>
  
 

TeeKee

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for those who read Chinese

道金斯:达尔文的当代斗犬

柯南
2006-10-25中国青年报

have you forgotten about this?

537_7b0cd39c_daf4_489b_bbba_72c5b464239a_0.jpg
 

shOUTloud

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so? selective thinking and answers are hallmarks of Christians' response to challenges towards their faith.

the issue is whether Dawkins makes sense, not how many women he screwed.

anyway, Dawkins is against ALL religions not just Christianity so no need to get all hot and bothered. Dun think everyone is out to get your faith.
 

madmansg

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humans are program to look for fair mates in males or females. maybe this is to avoid virus infected mates. however in india and africa , how come all so black ? This is because another evolutrionary force is at work to choose those black as they are better suited to survival the intense sun which cause cancer.
 
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