Don't want to see Ads? Register for your free dotSUB account here!
Authors@Google: Christopher Hitchens
Duration:
1 hour, 7 minutes and 42 seconds
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Genre:
Instructional
Views:
355
(23
embedded)
Posted by:
israeliatheists on Oct 21, 2009
Author Christopher Hitchens discusses his book "God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything" as a part of the Authors@Google series.
Translate and Transcribe
-
Sign In/Register for dotSUB to translate this video.
Share
- Embed Video
- Embed normal player
- Embed a smaller player
- Advanced Embedding Options
-
Embedding OptionsSize:Language:Embed Code
- Embed transcript
- Embed transcript in:
-
Invite a user to dotSUB
Your invitation to join dotSUB was successfulThere was an error inviting that user to dotSUB
Video Transcription
Show in new window
- Hi, everyone. Welcome to today's Authors@Google event.
- After the talk we will have a Q and A session, and I’d like to remind everyone to
- please use the microphone in the middle of the room if you have questions.
- It’s my pleasure to introduce Christopher Hitchens.
- Mr. Hitchens was born in England, and educated at Oxford.
- In 1981, he migrated to the US, and recently became a US citizen.
- He’s the author of a number of notable books including “Why Orwell Matters” and “Letters to a Young Contrarian".
- As one of our most notable public intellectuals, he has been a columnist at “Vanity Fair”, “The Atlantic”, “The Nation”, “Slate” and “Free Inquiry",
- and taught at the New School, UC Berkeley, and the University of Pittsburgh.
- In his new book, “God Is Not Great,” he lines up the case against religion
- which he spent a lifetime developing with anger, humor and a formidable style of argument
- that defines all of Mr. Hitchens’s work.
- About the book, Michael Kinsley wrote in the New York Times,
- “Hitchens has outfoxed the Hitchens watchers by writing a serious and deeply-thought book,
- totally consistent with his beliefs of a lifetime.
- And God should be flattered; unlike most of those clamoring for his attention,
- Hitchens treats him like an adult.
- Ever contrarian and always eloquent, he’s here today to discuss the book,
- take your questions and take on anyone who dares to challenge him to a debate.
- He’ll be signing books afterwards.
- And, with that please join me in welcoming Christopher Hitchens to Google.
- HITCHENS: Thank you, darling. Sweet.
- (Applause)
- Well, thank you so much for that suspiciously grudging introduction.
- And thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen for coming.
- I understand we’ve only got the balance or so of an hour together so,
- I’ll try and break the rule of a lifetime and be terse.
- I think I’ll put it like this.
- It’s true that publishers sometimes want to put a catchy or suggestive or challenging title, subtitle on a book.
- And so, when we hit upon or they hit upon, well,
- how religion poisons and why religion poisons everything,
- I knew what would happen, people would come up to me,
- they'd say, you mean absolutely everything, you mean the whole thing?
- They’d take me literally. I thought, well, all right.
- One of the things you have to do in life as an author is live up to your damn subtitle.
- So, today, I’d defend the subtitle because I think
- the title probably, when it came to me in the shower, I realized it pretty much does speak for itself.
- Unlike that sign outside Little Rock airport, huge -- yellow-and-black sign that you see from the airport
- that says just "Jesus" ,
- a word I have used myself and a name I know
- but putting it like that seems to say both too much and too little, you know what I mean?
- Well, here’s how religion has this effect, in my opinion:
- It is derived from the childhood of our species, from the bawling, fearful period of infancy.
- It comes from the time when we did not know that we lived on an orb.
- We thought we lived on a disc.
- And we did not know that we went around the sun or that the sky was not a dome,
- When we didn’t know that there was a germ theory to explain disease,
- and innumerable theories for the explanation of things like famine.
- It comes from a time when we had no good answers, but because we are pattern-seeking animals,
- a good thing about us,
- and because we will prefer even a conspiracy theory or junk theory to no theory at all,
- a bad thing about us,
- This is and was our first attempt of philosophy, just as in some ways, it was our first attempt at science,
- and it was all founded on and remains founded on a complete misapprehension about the origins,
- first, of the universe and second, about human nature.
- We now know a great deal about the origins of the universe and a great deal about our own nature.
- I just had my DNA sequenced by National Geographic.
- You should all by the way get this done.
- It’s incredibly important to find out how racism and creationism would be abolished by this extraordinary scientific breakthrough,
- how you can find out your kinship with all your fellow creatures originating in Africa,
- but also your kinship with other forms of life including not just animal but plant,
- and you get an idea of how you are part of nature and how that’s wonderful enough.
- And we know from Stephen Hawking and from any others Steven Weinberg and many other great physicists,
- an enormous amount now about what Professor Weinberg's brilliant book calls
- The First Three Minutes, the concept of the Big Bang.
- And we can be assured as we could probably need be that neither this enormous explosion that set the universe in motion,
- which is still moving away from us in a great rate
- nor this amazingly complex billion dollar--billion year period of evolution--
- we can be pretty certain it was not designed so that you and I could be meeting in this room.
- We are no the objects of either of these plans.
- These plans don’t know we’re here.
- I’m sorry to say, wouldn’t know or care if we stopped being here.
- We have to face this alone with the equipment, intellectual and moral, that we’ve been given,
- or that we've acquired or that is innate to us.
- And here’s another way in which religion poisons matters.
- It begins by saying, well, why don't we lie to ourselves instead,
- why don’t we pretend that we’re not going to die,
- or that an exception to be made at least in our own case if we make the right propitiations or the right moves.
- Why do we not pretend that the things like modern diseases which we can sequence now,
- sequence the genes of, like AIDS, are the punishment for wickedness and fornication?
- Why don't we keep fooling ourselves that there is a divine superintendent of all this
- because it would abolish the feeling of loneliness and possibly even irrelevance that we might otherwise --
- -- in other words, why don’t we surrender to wish thinking?
- That poisons everything, in my opinion.
- Right away, it attacks the very basic integrity that we need
- to conduct the scrupulous inquiries, investigations, experiments, interrogations of evidence
- that we need to survive and to prosper and to grow.
- And it's no coincidence, no accident that almost every scientific advance has been made
- in the teeth of religious opposition of one form or another that says we shouldn’t be tampering with God’s design.
- I suppose the most recent and most dangerous one of these is the attempt to limit stem cell research.
- But everyone could probably think of all other forms of scientific research and inquiry,
- especially medical that had led to religious persecution, in reprisal.
- Thirdly, it’s an attack, I think, on what’s also very important to us, our innate morality.
- If there’s one point that I get made more than another to me when I go and debate religious people it's this:
- They say, where would your morals come from if there was no God?
- It’s actually--it’s a question that’s posed in Dostoyevsky's wonderful novel, The Brothers Karamazov,
- One of the brothers says--Snelyakov, actually, the wicked one, says it.
- If God is dead, isn’t everything permitted, isn’t everything permissible?
- Where would our ethics be if there was no superintending diety?
- This, again, seems to me a very profound insult to us in our very deepest nature and character.
- It is not the case, I submit to you, that we do not set about butchering and raping and thieving from each other right now
- only because we’re afraid of a divine punishment or because we’re looking for a divine reward.
- It's an extraordinarily base and insulting thing to say to people.
- On my mother’s side some of my ancestry is Jewish.
- I don’t happen to believe the story of Moses and Egypt or the exile or the wandering and the Sinai.
- And in fact, now even Israeli archaeology has shown that there isn’t a word of truth to that story or really any of the others;
- But take it to be true, am I expected to believe my mother’s ancestors got all the way to Mount Sinai, quite a trek,
- under the impression until they got there that rape, murder, perjury, and theft were okay,
- only to be told when they got to the foot of Mount Sinai, bad news, none of these things are kosher at all. (Laughter)
- They’re all forbidden.
- I don’t think so. I think, I think we can--actually, I have a better explanation ever since
- -- superior as well as better --
- that no one would have been able to get as far as Mount Sinai or any other mountain or in any other direction
- unless they had known that human solidarity demands that we look upon each other as brothers and sisters,
- and that we forbid activities such as murder, rape, perjury, and theft.
- This is innate in us.
- If those activities are not innate, the sociopaths who don't understand the needs of anyone but themselves
- and the psychopaths who positively take pleasure in breaking these rules,
- well, all we can say is, according to one theory,
- they are also made in the image of God which makes the image of God question rather problematic, does it not
- or that they can be explained by a further and better research and have to be restrained and disciplined meanwhile,
- but in no sense here is religion a help where it came to help most which is to our morality, to our ethics.
- Finally, I would say--not finally because I’m finished here, I’m not quite done. Don't relax.
- Everyone has got to drink, something to eat, but on the poison question, I think there’s the real temptation
- of something very poisonous to human society and human relations
- which is the fear of freedom, the wish to be slaves, the wish to be told what to do.
- Now, just as we all like to think and we live under written documents and proclamations
- that encourage us to think that it is our birth right and our most precious need to be free, to be liberated, to be untrammeled,
- so we also knew that unfortunately the innate in people is the servile, is the wish to be told what to do,
- is the adoration for strong and brutal and cruel leaders,
- that this other baser element of the human makeup has to be accounted for
- and it gives us a great deal of trouble around the world as we speak.
- Religion, in my view, is a reification, a distillation of this wish to be a serf, to be a slave.
- Ask yourself if you really wish it was true that there was a celestial dictatorship
- that watched over you from the moment you were born, actually the moment you were conceived,
- all through life, night and day, knew your thoughts, waking and sleeping,
- could in fact convict you of thought crime, the absolute--the absolute definition of a dictatorship,
- can convict you for what you think or what you privately want, what you’re talking about to yourself,
- that admonishes you like this under permanent surveillance, control and supervision
- and doesn’t even let go of you when you’re dead because that’s when the real fun begins.
- (Laughter)
- Now, my question is this--my question is this, who wishes that that were true?
- Who wants to live the life of a serf in a celestial North Korea? I’ve been to North Korea.
- I’m one of the very few writers who has.
- I’m indeed the only writer who’s been to all three axis of evil countries, Iran, Iraq and North Korea.
- And I can tell you North Korea is the most religious state I’ve ever been to.
- I used to wonder when I was a kid, what would it be like praising God and thanking him all day and all night?
- Well, now I know because North Korea is a completely worshipful state.
- It's set up only to do that, for adoration and it’s only one short of a trinity.
- They have a father and the son, as you know, the Dear Leader and the Great Leader
- The father is still the president of the country.
- He’s been dead for 15 years, but Kim Jong-il, the little one, is only the head of the party and the Army.
- His father is still the president, head of the state.
- So you have in North Korea what you might call a necrocracy (Laughter)
- or what I also -- I called them mausolocracy, thanatocracy.
- One--just one short of a trinity; father, son, maybe no holy ghost,
- but they do say that when the birth of the younger one took place, the birds of Korea sang in Korean to mark the occasion.
- This I’ve checked. It did not happen. (Laghter)
- It didn't occur and I suppose I should add they don’t threaten to follow you after you're dead.
- You can leave North Korea. You can get out of their hell and their paradise by dying.
- Out of the Christian and Muslim one, you cannot. This is the wish to be a slave.
- And in my point of view, it’s poisonous of human relations.
- Now, I’ve really babbled for nearly twenty minutes. I'll be quick.
- It is argued, well, some religious people have done great things and have been motivated to do so by their faith;
- the most cited case in point I have found is that of Dr. Martin Luther King, who I know I don’t need to explain to you about.
- Two quick things on that: First, he was it’s true a minister.
- He did preach the Book of Exodus, the exile of an enslaved and oppressed people as his metaphor.
- But if he really meant it, he would have said that the oppressed people, as the Book of Exodus finds them doing,
- were entitled to kill anyone who stood on their way and take their land and their property
- enslave their women or kill their children, and commit genocide, rape, ethnic cleansing and forcible theft of land.
- That’s what Exodus described as happening--the full destruction of the tribes.
- It's very fortunate that Dr. King only the meant the Bible at the most to be used as a metaphor
- and after all he was using the only book that he could be sure his audience has ever already read.
- That’s the first thing.
- during his lifetime, he was attacked all the time for having too many secular and leftist non-believing friends
- the people like famous black secularists like Bayard Rustin, A. Philip Randolph.
- These are the men that did organize the march on Washington;
- which leads me to my third observation which is this:
- It’s a challenge I made now in debates with rabbis, with priests of all Christian stripes, with imams
- I know this sounds like an opening of a joke about some bar, but once also with a Buddhist nun in Miami.
- I asked them all. Here is my--here is my challenge.
- You have to name me an ethical statement that was made or a moral action that was performed by a religious person in the name of faith
- that could not have been made as an action or uttered as a statement by non--a person not of faith, a person of no faith.
- You have to do that. Not so far and I’ve dealt at quite a high level with the religious, no takers.
- No one has been able to find me that.
- That being the case, we're entitled to say, I think, that religious faith serve as the requirements
- whereas if I was to ask anyone in this room, think of a wicked thing said or an evil thing done by a person of faith in the name of faith,
- no one would have a second of hesitation in thinking of one, would they?
- It's interesting to realize how true that is and how much true it's getting.
- Does anyone ever listen to Dennis Prager’s Show?
- He’s a slightly loopy Christian broadcaster, religious broadcaster, I should say.
- He’s more Jewish than Christian--Judaic-Christian broadcaster who quite often rather generously has me on the show.
- And he asked me a question the other day; he had a challenge of his own.
- He said, “You are to imagine that you’re in a town late at night where you have never been before, and you have no friends and it’s getting dark.
- And through the darkness, you see coming towards you a group of men, let’s say ten.
- Do you feel better or worse if you know that they’re just coming from a prayer meeting?” (Laghter)
- This is Mr. Prager’s question to me. I said , “Well, Mr. Prager, without leaving you,
- from just without quitting the letter B, I can tell you I’ve had that experience in Belfast, in Beirut, in Baghdad, in Bombay, in Bosnia, in Bethlehem.
- And if you see anyone coming from a religious gathering, in any of those places, you know exactly how fast you need to run. (Laughter)
- And no one has to explain to you why and I haven’t had to waste any time telling you, have I, ladies and gentlemen?
- So I submit to you that it is those who are people of faith who have the explaining to do,
- who have the justifying to do if this is indeed the case.
- If they can't account for anything about the origin of our cosmos or our species
- if they say that without them, we’d be without morals and make us seem as if we are merely animals without faith,
- if further, everybody can name an instance where religion has made people actually behave worse to one another
- and act as a retardant upon the advances of knowledge and science and information,
- I submit that the case to be made is theirs rather than mine.
- We have a better tradition.
- We’re not just arid secularists and materialists, we on the atheist side.
- We can point, through the Hubble telescope, the fantastic,awe-inspiring majestic pictures that are being taken now of the outer limits of our universe
- and who’s going to turn away from those pictures and start gaping again at the burning bush? (Laghter)
- We have smaller microscopes that can examine for us the miracles of the interior of the double helix and the sheer beauty of that.
- The natural world is wonderful enough, more wonderful than anything conjured by the fools who believe in astrology or the supernatural.
- And we have a better tradition politically
- against the popes and the imams and the witch doctors and the divine right of kings
- and the whole long tradition of civic repression combined with religion that's known as theocracy.
- We have created in the United States, the only country in the history of the world,
- written on founding documents testable, organized, works in progress based on the theory of human liberation
- and the only constitution in the history of world that says that there shall be a separation between the church and the state.
- God is never mentioned in the United States Constitution except in order to limit religion and keep it out of politics and put it under legal control.
- This achievement was described by President Jefferson whose biographer, I am in a small way,
- to the Baptists of Danbury, Connecticut in a letter after they reasoned him for fear of persecution.
- By the way, who do you think Baptists of Danbury, Connecticut were afraid of being persecuted by?
- Anyone knows?
- MALE: The Methodists?
- HITCHENS: No, the Congregationalists of Danbury, Connecticut.
- People forget what it used to be like, see how the Christians loved each other,
- how they tried to repeat the European passion of one religious sect repressing and torturing another one.
- as you probably know, the president wrote back and said,
- “No, you may be assured that there will ever be in this country a wall of separation between the church and the state.”
- So I have a new slogan and I’m taking it on tour
- and I invite you to join me in it and it goes like this,
- “Mr. Jefferson, build up that wall.” (Laughter)
- Okay, thank you very much for coming. (Applause)
- And I’m all yours. And that was 25 minutes; I hope that’s fair.
- And I’ll point out the questions if you like
- because I don't think anyone thinks that I’ve planted my immediate family in this hole, but, Carol, stay of it. Bring it on.
- Thank you for coming to Google. >> HITCHENS: It’s my honor.
- So you make it sound really, really simple. I mean you have explanations for everything.
- HITCHENS: Yeah. >> And I agree with a lot of your arguments and, you know, I lived in, like, a socialist country.
- I mean, I come from Croatia so I, you know, I empathize with a little bit of when you say like the axis of evil
- and especially North Korea being a perfect theocracy, I can relate to that.
- But I don't understand why do you say that these people really want to be enslaved, if you could explain this to me.
- I mean, I think there’s really a system, you know, like set up by a minority which is really a brutal system
- and I don't understand the part, like, you know, like this is something that these people want so.
- HITCHENS: Did you say you were Croatian? >> Yes, yes.
- HITCHENS: Yeah. Well, then you--then I would be upset if you thought I meant that these man-made regimes
- were there because people wanted them to be, no. That’s not what I meant at all about North Korea.
- Particularly, these have been riveted onto people >> Yes.
- I mean, North Korea is a hermetic place unfortunately in that it has ocean on either side of it;
- the Demilitarized Zone which is several miles wide on the south and Russia and China on the north.
- So, you have a place where you can horribly conduct an experiment on human beings, essentially.
- You can isolate them totally. The North Korean State was set up in the same year that Orwell published 1984.
- And you almost think that somebody gave Kim Il-sung a copy of 1984 in Korean and said,
- “Do you think we could make this fly?” (Laughter)
- And he said, “Well, I can’t be sure. We sure can give it the old college try.” (Laughter)
- Because that’s how it feels there. I went there, I thought, I've had his experience —
- I’ll just digress for a second. I’ve had this experience twice in my life.
- Journalists hate cliché. I know it doesn’t always seem like that when you read the papers, but we try and avoid them.
- I went to Prague once under the old days of the communist regime.
- I thought whatever happens to me here, I’m not going to mention Franz Kafka in my essay.
- I’m going to be the first journalist not to do it. (Laughter)
- I went to a meeting of the opposition underground, somebody betrayed us because the secret police came in and, suddenly,
- wham like just broke down the door, dogs, torches, rubber truncheons.
- They slammed me against the wall, you’re under arrest.
- Well, I demand to see the British ambassador. Blah, blah, you’re under arrest. What’s the charge?
- We don't have to tell you that. I thought, fuck, I’ve got to mention Kafka after all. (Laughter)
- They make you do it. Well, I--that’s actually what a cliché is. That’s--communism is a cliché in itself.
- The same in North Korea; I thought I don’t want to mention Orwell; I don't want to mention Orwell; Now I have to mention.
- There’s no--there’s no other stand of comparison.
- No, what I meant about the fear of freedom was this:
- Many, many people don't of course want to live under a hellish starvation regime of gulag type, like that.
- But they, they quite like being told what to do.
- They don't want to be told that life doesn’t--the world doesn’t owe them a living and that they’re on their own
- and they--they quite like it and repeatedly vote for parties and, sometimes, leaders who promise to provide everything
- as long as they'll give up just a little bit of freedom, just a little bit.
- In the trade-off, you’ll get more security and more welfare. It’s a temptation.
- In some cases, it takes an extreme form, and I'm very impressed by how often when I debate with the religious people,
- they will tell me that they’ve--they gravitate towards faith because
- they want someone to, if you like, look after them.
- The whole idea of a heavenly father, for example, is built up on this.
- The old joke says some say God is dead, some say God is dad, you figure.
- Then there are people who--well, Islam for example, the word means,
- the word Islam means surrender, prostration.
- You give everything to God. Everything is in his hands.
- This is implicit totalitarian. That’s what I mean.
- But I think what’s innate in most people is the feeling that they quite like someone to take care of them all of the time
- so it can be hard to argue with them that there is no such person.
- I understand better now but... >>HITCHENS: Okay.
- You see, I--just to follow up a little bit.
- So is there a possibility there to say that then some people are more freedom-loving than others and is this some sort of,
- you know, like--I wouldn’t call it racism but, you know, like, differentiating people by their love towards freedom and all that?
- HITCHENS: No, I’m certain that the same feelings are innate in all people.
- And one day, there will be a North Korean edition of 1984,
- and it will be a huge bestseller there. >> Uh-huh.
- >> HITCHENS: I am as sure of that as I can be of anything.
- Though, at the moment, it’s hard to imagine there’s anyone in North Korea who's even allowed
- to consider the concept of political liberty. It will come because it is innate.
- I have no doubt about that.
- >> To follow up on this fear of freedom and this is an innate idea,
- sorry to beat that horse, but what do you--what do you think would possibly replace this?
- I also think that there are some--I mean it’s obviously much easier to say my life is out of my control
- and these events are out of my control so, you know,
- I’m going to thank God for the good things and, you know, hate the devil for the bad things, whatever.
- So, like, you know, from Plato to Nietsche to Socrates—or Descartes have said
- it’s difficult to choose the life where you're actually deciding and making choices for yourself
- and taking responsibility and appreciating the fact that the world doesn’t care about your existence
- and then doing what you need to do with that, and it is difficult.
- How do we, you know, well--how could we possibly imagine a world where everybody buys into that idea
- and how do we--where would we go like, where would that structure that some people feel they can’t do without,
- where would they get that from? I guess what would—
- what would religion be replaced by so to fulfill this natural need?
- >> HITCHENS: Yeah. Well, I would say that emancipating ourselves from religion
- and from the combined sort of solipsism and masochism,
- this is what I was trying to say to the comrade here a moment ago.
- Religion says to you, remember, the monotheistic ones, you're a miserable sinner,
- your sin is original, you can't escape it, you’re born as a wretch,
- you’re made out of dust or according to the Qur'an, a clot of blood,
- you’re a worm, you’re nothing, but a piece of gunk basically.
- But--and you got to work really hard to get away from the terrible punishment that awaits you for that.
- So total abnegation, but there’s also good news.
- The universe is designed with you in mind, and God has a plan for you personally.
- So just when the person thinks they can't take anymore abuse
- --it’s like being inducted into a cult.
- Just where the person thinks they can't take anymore humiliation, they're told,
- oh, but father loves you and he wants you to join our group. That’s not good for people.
- You’d be better off without it. So would everyone you know,
- so it’s not a matter of what we would put in its place, we wouldn’t.
- We'd be emancipated from that kind of sadomasochism.
- That's a good thing to start off with.
- Second, we have the wonders and beauty of science to study.
- We have instead of ancient texts that are full of lies and myths,
- we have increasingly a wonderful world literature that’s available to anybody who can read even a little.
- most recently, I would cite you, because yesterday was the birthday of India, happy birthday by the way to all Indians here.
- And Pakistanis, though if you insist, I think the partition was a huge mistake.
- There’s a -- and religious partition is the worst kind, and it’s going to lead one day to a thermonuclear war so --
- I didn’t have time to go into that but maybe someone will ask me.
- There's incredible literature in English written by Indians.
- It’s sort of a sub-branch--but I shouldn’t even say sub.
- I mean a branch--a new branch of English writing by Indians in English.
- It's becoming a great part of world literature.
- There’s all this extraordinary excitement. And people say no, no, no, you should -- as Thomas Aquinas said,
- a man of one book, you know, you should be reading a bible, you don't really need anything else,
- they’re destroying libraries in the Muslim world that could have any books that contradict the Qur'an, this is no way to live.
- But having said all that, and said what the --
- and the consolations of philosophy too which aren’t that hard to study are very rewarding.
- And ethical and moral dilemmas that you get out of the study of literature, George Eliot, Dostoevsky, people of that kind, James Joyce.
- Still, it’s only a necessary condition, not a sufficient one.
- There are no guarantees and an atheist can be a nihilist, or a sadist, or a Stalinist, or a fascist, it’d be unlikely the last one but that’s possible.
- Okay. But we--there are no guarantees and in part that it’s the recognition of that,
- that’s the beginning of wisdom as well as I think the beginning of liberty.
- >> One short and one longer one, I just want to be sure,
- I assume that you have read the "Captain Stormfield's Journey To Heaven" by Mark Twain.
- >> HITCHENS: Sorry. Yes, I've read a lot of Mr. Clemens on religion.
- >> Yes. That seemed a sort of a definitive work on the hierarchy structure of a more standard religion.
- >> HITCHENS: Yes. By the way, you can't read too much Twain, ladies and gentlemen, on the subject.
- But now all of his stuff is available. There are websites on Mark Twain and religion.
- It used to be really hard to get his writings on religion even 10 years ago. Sorry.
- >> And my longer question which hopefully won't choke you up.
- Actually, I have several friends who are very well-educated, in some cases in the sciences, who became religious late in life.
- They have been atheist or agnostic, and then just decided they were feeling something and became religious.
- Do you have anything to say on that sort of grounds or why that might be occurring?
- >> HITCHENS: Yes. I suppose I could speculate, but that’s all I would be doing.
- >> HITCHENS: I think for some people, the Hubble View, say, does have the opposite effect from the one it has on me.
- It makes people feel, well, then, whoever designed this must be even more amazing than I thought.
- And that’s--there are attempts made by creationists now to say that. Instead of saying,
- "No, Darwin was wrong. God made all this stuff."
- They now say, "Well, okay, there was evolution, but God did that, too."
- So as you may know arguments that explain everything, explain nothing.
- That’s a definite principle I think of underlying full cognition.
- If they can bend their argument so it can comprehend everything, comprise everything then it isn't an argument.
- But I think that we are certainly made in such a way to be worship-fully inclined, shall we say.
- That tendency is certainly within us.
- And when people think that there's something awe inspiring, what they feel is awe.
- And then what they feel is well, maybe there's some majesty I should be acknowledging here, though that isn't at all a logical step.
- By the way, do you know about "awe?"
- >> In what sense?
- >> HITCHENS: John Wayne played the Roman centurion in one of the films about the crucifixion?
- >> I don’t...
- >> HITCHENS: And there's a certain point the rain has to come down hard,
- and there's thunder and lightning and the veil of the temple splits and so on.
- And John Wayne standing as a centurion is supposed to say, "Truly, this was the son of God."
- So he does this. I forget who the director was--I think it’s Houston.
- And cue rain, thunder and lightning, so Wayne stands there stoically, and under the water, "Truly, this was the son of God."
- And the director's, "John, that was great. That was terrific.
- I just wonder if we could have it with a little more awe." (Laughter)
- So they cue again the rain, thunder, the veil of the temple splits in twain, earthquakes, you know.
- It's all happening and Wayne says, "Aw, truly, this was the son of God." (Laughter)
- >> So this is a kind of a follow-up on Tom's question.
- I have a buddy who styles himself as a kind of an allegorical pagan.
- And he's had a lot of angry criticisms of religion, many of which echo yours.
- But at the same time he feels in himself a kind of a biological need to be part of a circle of believers
- in a community which he feels helps his rather fragile emotional demeanor.
- He goes through, you know, depression and things like that, and he finds that belief --
- So what he'd done is try to find what he feels as the least obnoxious religion he could find and then not take it too seriously.
- What would you say to such a person? (Laughter)
- >> HITCHENS: Well, that used to be called the Church of England -- (Laughter)
- or, the Unitarians, about whom Bertrand Russell said, "The great thing about them is they believe in one god maximum."
- Peter DeVries is very good on this.
- He says people used to be a pagan and polytheist and believe in multiple gods,
- and then they started believing in one god and they're going nearer the true figure all the time.
- This is progress. (Laughter)
- >> On an article, I believe it was in "Slate" that read, you seemed reluctant to endorse if not critical of
- of Richard Dawkins's attempt to sort of organize the atheists under the title of Brights.
- >> HITCHENS: Yes.
- >> And I believe that your comment was that we infidels need no such machinery of reinforcement.
- My question is, if like-minded people do not organize, especially if those whose ideals we oppose are more organized,
- how can we attempt to kind of steer our society the way we would like it to go?
- >> HITCHENS: Well, I was to have said this to the previous question.
- I mean, I’m in some ways the wrong person to ask these questions.
- I’m no longer a joiner up of groups. I don’t feel the belonging need anymore.
- I used to when I was younger and more left than I am now feel that the need to be involved in an organized way.
- Now I don’t, and I think I probably have more influence as an individual than I ever did as a cogwheel in a so-called party.
- A point for anyone to ponder actually who was asked have they ever considered registering independent, for example.
- People may fight harder for your vote if you don’t give it away in advance.
- Separate question, and it’s very important to me that I don’t belong to a church.
- People who believe as I believe don’t need to get together all the time and remind ourselves what we believe,
- reinforce it, ram it home in case we forget the incredible propositions that, you know, we're singing and all those kind of things.
- You just recognize a fellow free-thinker when you meet one. That should be enough.
- And in any country or any language as well.
- There will be in Washington in October the big gathering where Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett and Sam Harris,
- [unclear] and myself and many others are going to be--Victor Stinger
- Because there has been an extraordinary vogue of successful books on this subject now,
- and I think there's a change in the Zeitgeist going on about religion.
- And let me just say this, if that Zeitgeist has been brought about, the change has been brought about in that Zeitgeist,
- it hasn’t been by any organization.
- It's by a group of like-minded people writing their hearts out and refusing to be intimidated by religious bullying.
- Or to allow religious nonsense to be taught in the schools, for example, in place of science,
- or to allow euphemisms to be spread about the behavior of the parties of god in Iraq or elsewhere.
- That’s what created it, not an organization but what you might call an intellectual tendency.
- I think that’s fine. I think it's encouraging.
- >> Hi. A few of the things that you said don’t really seem consistent with our experience in the United States.
- Two things in particular, one is that you said, you know, once people, you know,
- have Hubble telescopes and microscopes, the burning bush is not as interesting.
- And the other thing you said is that, you know, religion kind of fits into, you know, innate human nature for,
- you know, being told what to do or not having as much freedom,
- in the United States, we have the most advanced, wealthy, most powerful nation in probably the history of the world,
- Well and you have probably the most freedom-loving, you know, almost inventive --
- not inventing but really espousing the philosophy of freedom and individuality and trying to, you know, propagate that through out the world.
- Yet, you also have the most religious nation. Well, it's true. I mean, you can argue with the methods but I mean
- there's no question that like we are trying to promote democracy.
- And yet you have, yeah, the most religious nation.
- You have like people going to church is probably an all-time high.
- Religious people affect who our leaders are, you know, to a great degree.
- So how do you explain like that contradiction?
- >> HITCHENS: Well, I don’t think it’s a contradiction because religious, the section of the constitution means you can have religious pluralism.
- Now for example where I come from, originally, you can tell I was born in England.
- The head of the church is the head of the state and the head of the armed forces.
- It's an official church and you have to pay for it and whether you want to or not.
- And on the moment that her majesty the Queen expires the head of the Church of England will become a bat-eared half-Muslim
- with no taste in, for women as far as I can see, the lugubrious Prince Charles, (Laughter)
- who goes to classes on Islam and talks to plants and is a loon. (Laughter)
- That’s what you get for founding a church on the family values of Henry VIII.
- In the United States, you can't have any of that. That would be unconstitutional.
- You can belong to any church you want, the government has nothing to do with that.
- And people I think take a Tocquevillian view, if you like, of the church.
- They go, many of them, to church for social reasons.
- Some of them for ethnic ones, some of them for charitable, some of them for community reasons as you might say.
- If you ask someone now--I've been doing this a lot recently.
- I have debated at every stop of my book tour.
- Okay, so said you are a Baptist minister, yes.
- Well, do you believe in John Calvin's teaching on predestination and hell fire?
- Why do you want to know? Well, because you said you were a Baptist.
- Yeah, but I mean I’m a Southern Baptist, you know that kind.
- Well, come one. They don’t love the question.
- They-- Or ask the Catholics if they really believe what their church teaches or what the Pope tells them.
- Of course they don’t for the most part.
- The fastest growing group of people in the country has been measured as being those of who have no belief or who are atheists.
- By far the fastest growing, it’s doubled in the last ten years.
- People are evidently lying to the opinion polls, that there are not enough churches in the country -- there are plenty of them.
- They’re not enough to take all the people who say that they go to them, just couldn’t be done, couldn’t fit them in.
- I don’t think that people who have doubts about religion are going to tell them to opinion pollsters who call them up at dinner time.
- They will say, yes, I am a Methodist or whatever it is, they’re not going say I sometimes wonder if John Wesley was really the man. (Laughter)
- Not when the multiple choice boxes are being gone through.
- So, but unfortunately, I mean, there are people who think that that’s the way to go politically.
- The president for example thinks that to say someone is person of faith is axiomatically to confer a compliment on them.
- And if you remember, he did it to Vladimir Putin, KGB goon and hood, and increasingly evidently a very dangerous man to have in charge in Russia.
- President meets him and says right away, “Right away, well, I could tell by looking into his eyes
- and seeing he was wearing his grandmother’s crucifix, that he was just the chap for me.”
- Now, in a strong field, I think that’s the stupidest thing the president has yet said. (Laughter)
- And he must, I think, occasionally regret it.
- And I got, tried to get a research to this one to find out just, I just need to know something,
- has Vladimir Putin ever worn his grandmother’s crucifix since?
- Had he ever been seen wearing it before?
- Or did he just think this should be enough for the president of the United States? (Laughter)
- Because if so, it would show that religion was not just metaphysically incorrect,
- but as I have I believe said, a danger and a poison to all of us.
- If our republic can be—and its president can be pushed over, like that,
- like someone offering garlic to a vampire, then we really are in trouble.
- >> Just a follow-up, though, it just sounds like you would have almost no religion in the U.S.
- if you -- if it’s true that you were saying, that once you became an advanced scientific society,
- you know, you’d lose interest in religion which is not the case.
- >> HITCHENS: All right. I’d say a bit more, I mean,
- take the case of the so-called “intelligent design school” they want at least equal time,
- they used to want to ban evolution, now they want equal time in schools.
- So, they brought with their Discovery Institute friends from Washington,
- moves on school boards and courts in Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas and the most conservative County of Pennsylvania around the town of Dover.
- And they have been humiliated in each case.
- And this is in Kansas, in Texas, in Oklahoma and in the most reactionary part of Pennsylvania.
- Thrown off the school board by the electorate and thrown out of court as flat out unconstitutional by the judges, in all cases,
- And I don’t know what they’re going to do next, these rednecks, I don’t know what they’re going to do.
- But, I know why it doesn’t work, and why it’s not going to work,
- because there may be many parents in Kansas who say,
- “Well, I personally think that God made the rocks and so on and only made them 6,000 years ago.”
- But they don’t want their children taught that in school.
- They don’t want to come from a state where they get laughed at when they say where they’re from.
- Oh, ha, you’re from Kansas, that’s the place where… they don’t like that.
- It’s the same, it was the same with the confederate flag issue, quite apart from the racism.
- A lot of people who didn’t want to come from a state that had a confederate battle flag on its --
- Among other things people won’t have their conventions in your state and you’ll suffer for that too.
- You’ll get laughed at when you travel, they don’t want this.
- And nor should they have to put up with it because of a handful of crackpots.
- So, no, I don’t say there aren’t a lot of devout people in this country and I don’t say that science just negates religion.
- But I say that the influence of religion as opposed to scientific rationalism is hugely overestimated, yeah.
- Shouldn’t—shouldn’t impress people to the point where they feel it must - can’t be opposed.
- >> Thank you for coming. I think you already answered one of my questions regarding organizing a larger effort.
- So separate from that I want to get just some comments and thoughts based upon idea of
- if there is going to be an independent movement whether at the atheist or anti-theist movement whether you’re part of it or not,
- if you have any suggestions for the average person that may not have, say, a publishing company or a production company,
- but does have the Internet, you know, does have their own thoughts -- >> HITCHENS: Right.
- >> and a keyboard in front of them, what they can do to either give resources to other people
- or to actually express their thoughts in ways that you find to actually be, you know, exceptional --
- >> HITCHENS: Yes. >> to further some sort of movement, if there may be one.
- >> HITCHEN: Yeah, my friend, Rich Dawkins actually at the end of his book, The God Delusion,
- does have a list which you can look up, and his is an excellent book, I should say, of websites where, so to say, help is available.
- Well, there’s one for example, there is a very important one of called, “Leaving Islam,”
- is about people want to get out and are afraid or are being intimidated,
- ways of actually doing it and finding contact with people who feel the same way.
- Very serious because there are quite a lot of our fellow citizens now who don’t feel that they do have religious freedom
- because they are imprisoned in a religion that can kill them for even considering changing their minds about it, this is no small matter.
- But I tell you what I would do, I would become a subscriber to a magazine called Free Inquiry
- which is published out of Amherst, New York, it’s every month I think,
- a very, very good rationalist and skeptical magazine which has itself a lot of local activities that you can look up.
- And then, there’s another magazine called Skeptical Inquiry, published from nearer here,
- maybe more appeal to people of a scientific or technical bent which does things like they expose frauds that are on TV
- claiming to be able to put you in touch with your relatives, or divine water or all these kinds of nutbags
- that are often featured on prime time shows.
- And puts you also in touch with the work the great magicians, Penn and Teller and James Randy,
- who again show that miracles are easy.
- And they can also show the fraudulence of anyone who tries to exploit them,
- a world of wonder awaits you.
- And these magazine will also show you and point out to the areas where resistance is needed,
- say to the continued attempt to teach nonsense in American schools,
- “Yes, children that concludes the biology period, and now get ready for your creation studies hour
- and after the astronomy class we will have the astrology class for equal time,
- and then the chemistry alchemy period.”
- It’s enough to make a cat laugh, isn’t it?
- There are people who think this is what should be done to stultify American children.
- So, you can meet up with other people could think that that’s a bad idea.
- >> Yeah, two things, an observation and a concern, my first observation is that I think you share something in common with Jesus
- In that both of you have seems to be attacking aspects of religion, but often in his case,
- he attacked specific religious leaders whereas you attack religion itself. And, I was…
- >> HITCHENS: No, our resemblances are often pointed out.
- >> I’m sad to hear, I thought for sure I’d be the first.
- And secondly, the bit of concern, if we start going more and more toward Atheism,
- you mentioned some of the horrible things that happened in the name of religion,
- but I look at one of the greatest genocides or at least mass murders ever,
- was by the Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin when in the name of among another things Atheism,
- they killed an enormously large number of their own people.
- And what do you think would prevent that from happening if indeed you were successful?
- >> HITCHENS: I have a chapter on this in my book because it is a very frequently asked question,
- I think it’s also a very serious one, I have to condense the chapter if I may,
- but here’s the situation. Until 1917, the year of the Russian Revolution, millions of Russians,
- millions and millions of them had for hundreds and hundreds of years been told that the head of the state, the Czar,
- was also the head of the church and was a little more than human, he was the little father of the people.
- He wasn’t quite divine. He was more like a saint than human.
- And he owned everything in the country and everything was due to him.
- That’s how a gigantic layer Russian society was inculcated with servile, fatalistic ideas.
- If you are Josef Stalin, you shouldn’t be in the dictatorship business in the first place
- if you can’t realize this is a huge opportunity for you,
- you've inherited a population that’s servile and credulous and superstitious.
- Well, what does Stalin do? He sets up an inquisition.
- He has heresy hunts, trials of heretics, the Moscow trials.
- He proclaims miracles, Lysenko’s agriculture that was supposed to produce three harvests a year or whatever it was,
- the pseudo-biology that would feed everyone in a week.
- He says all thanks are due at all times to the leader
- and you must praise him at all times for his goodness and kindness.
- And incidentally, he always kept the Russian Orthodox Church on his side, it split.
- It split the church and some of them moved to New York and set up a rival.
- But the Russian Orthodox Church remained part of the regime,
- he was not so stupid as not to know he had to do that,
- just as Hitler and Mussolini made an even more aggressive deal with the Roman Catholic Church and with some of the Protestants.
- And remember the other great axis of evil person of that time, the Emperor of Japan, was not just a religious person but actually a god.
- So Fascism, Communism and Stalinism and Nazism are nothing like as secular as some people think,
- and much more religious than most people know.
- But here's what a fair test would be: find a society that's adopted the teachings of
- Spinoza, Voltaire, Galileo, Einstein, Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson
- and gone down the pits as result of doing that into famine and war and dictatorship and torture and repression.
- That would be a fair test.
- That's the test I'd like to--that's the experiment I'd like to run.
- I don’t think that's going to end up with a gulag.
- >> Hi. Thank you for coming. >> HITCHENS: Thank you for having me.
- >> More ladies asking questions would be awesome and please, I implore you to be really hilarious
- so we can prove Mr. Hitchens wrong about why women cannot be funny.
- >> HITCHENS: I was wondering what you -- what you've done with your chicks here I must say. (Laughter)
- >> We are a technology company.(Laughter)
- So, I'm not religious but just to play a little devil's advocate,
- what do you say to studies that show that people who consistently go to church, who pray,
- who believe in God have, like, lower blood pressure and live longer lives, et cetera?
- >> HITCHENS: Well, I’d say it wouldn't--wouldn't prove much. I mean, the--
- if it hard to prove--I'm not sure I would be able to trust the methodology but suppose it was true,
- the same could be said of being a Moonie for example.
- I mean, it's said--it is said that Louis Farrakhan's racist crackpot Nation of Islam and its sectarian gang
- gets young men of drugs, for all I know it does, it may but that doesn’t recommend it to me.
- Nor does it prove a thing about its theology, if you see what I mean.
- Whereas I can absolutely tell you that of the suicide bombing population 100% are faith based.(Laughter)
- And I don’t think that that in itself disproves faith but I think it should make you skeptical of that kind of random sampling.
- >> Sure. There seemed to be...
- >> HITCHENS: Of the genital mutilation community the same can be said.
- >> I've a lot of progressive religious friends who--I used to be pretty condescending towards religion
- but I feel like I've learned a lot from them and learned about their religious practice
- and what it means to them and as you stated earlier a lot of religious people don’t really believe all the tenets of what their faith says anyway.
- So, I feel like those friends of mine are looking for community and looking for a feeling of oneness
- with other people and with the universe and ultimately on a scientific level that bears out anyway
- because on like a quantum level everything is one and is the same.
- So, I feel like churches at least in this country provide the sense of community
- that I don’t think exists any other way in our culture.
- I don’t feel like I had that growing up and I feel like my friends that went to church
- they can go back to their church now and there are all of these adults that aside from their parents
- that were there to nurture them as they were growing up and then ask how they're doing and I never had that.
- So, I'm jealous of that in a sense.
- >> HITCHENS: It takes a lot to make me cry but you...See me afterwards, I mean, the way it just-- (Laughter)
- look actually it’s what I said about if there's any who read,
- who read de Tocqueville, in Democracy in America should--that's what he said about--about communitarianism and religion.
- It's very--it's the reason why America is so religious but it's a different form of religion.
- Ask yourself a related question, it's amazing to me how many Americans change religion when they get married.
- You hear it all the time, you've heard it.
- I used to be Seventh Day Adventist but my wife was Congregationalist, now I go to the Congregationalists.
- It doesn’t matter the Seventh Day Adventist used to say, if you don’t stay with us you're going straight to hell.
- Change very easily. Go to another church instead.
- Wouldn't consider perhaps not going to one but it shows the--the depth of the strength of religious allegiance.
- I also think that, well, it's notorious about, say, Polish Catholics in Chicago or Greek Orthodox or many Jews,
- the church has been a means of transmitting and preserving an ethnic tradition as well.
- The solidarity in the face of often quiet bleak kinds of life, and now there's even a phenomenon known as churchianity.
- It’s expressed by the mega churches, the people who live half transient lives don’t have very stable employment
- or residence who are often moving around the country.
- On a Sunday they want to know where they can go take the old jalopy and be among friends,
- and these characters are waiting for them believe you me to remove what few savings they do have left from them.
- Because that's another indissoluble fact about American religion just as community and blood pressure may be involved.
- It has to be mentioned in the same breath as open fraud to an absolutely astonishing extent.
- I mean, the shake down community, the genital mutilation community, the suicide bombing community,
- the child abuse I would prefer to say child rape communities, all these are communities of faith, believe you me.
- >> Oh, it's my turn? >> HITCHENS: Sir.
- >> Try to diverge a little from the immediate subjects.
- You expressed your regrets for this perverse impulse in the human spirit which seems to desire to be dominated,
- to prostrate itself before the mysterious altar of power.
- It occurs to me that the current government of this nation has in a calculated fashion,
- exploited this perverse desire and exploited the language which seems to inspire it or appeal to it.
- Now, I'm strongly opposed to a particular policy of this government which is the indefinite detention
- of the so-called terrorist suspects in Cuba and in particular I dislike the way the government tries to justify this policy
- by using these very discourses of power and secrecy which come of a particular religious stamp.
- So I would like to ask and--not to be impertinent how you can square what you've said today
- with other comments you've made apparently in support of this very policy.
- >> HITCHENS: There's no danger of you being impertinent so don’t worry about that.
- I've just returned from Guantanamo, when I say just I was there last month.
- It took me a long time to get down and haven't yet written anything about it
- so you won't know my views as I'm not sure that I know them in full myself,
- but about your question, I know what my views are about indefinite detention in principle.
- I didn't see or must have missed any allusion that all made to religion,
- in the decision to declare them enemy combatants.
- You're suggesting there was a religious justification for the detention policy?
- >> Not a religious justification per se but in my opinion the Bush administration in its public deliveries
- often uses a language of power very much akin to that used by religious tyrants and demagogues down the centuries
- and this language comes up particularly strongly when justifying controversial actions such as Guantanamo Bay.
- >> HITCHENS: Well, again I think we have a disagreement,
- I mean the language they seem to use to me is the language of the secular language of emergency powers and special circumstances
- requiring extraordinary measures and that’s a very old argument especially in the United States,
- it goes back to President Lincoln’s attempt to suspend habeas corpus in the Civil War.
- It reminds me of that and not of any argument about or with theocracy.
- >> Emergency powers and extraordinary rendition and other terms like this
- to me rather smack of secrecy jargon are the same kinds used by preachers.
- >> HITCHENS: Or by secular despots.
- I just don’t think you’re quite carrying your point about the theological.
- If by all means if you want to discuss the question of civil liberties, let’s do so, but it’s a departure from the rubric.
- The Bush administration is not conducting a holy war in this respect.
- It is confronting a holy war, however.
- One thing you can’t miss about the inhabitants of Guantanamo is how faith based they are,
- and that’s part of the reason why we are presented with this problem.
- The difference seems to me to be the following, if you treat them as criminals, as some argue,
- then you can’t say really that you are fighting a war, then it’s only a law and order question.
- If you say you’re fighting a war, then in what sense are these not enemy soldiers?
- If they are enemy soldiers, how can you try them as criminals?
- Why are you holding people as criminals and building a military tribunal,
- I visited the room where they’re going to have them tried, where they will be able to say,
- “Well, thanks for having me here and admitting that I am a soldier,
- when the whole point is that the Geneva Convention says that they’re not.
- So that’s bad enough to begin with and it’s a territory no government has yet had to step onto.
- But in addition, we’re apparently not allowed to do any of those things,
- nor are we allowed extraordinary rendition nor can we have return them to their countries of origin
- in case they get maltreated there by their own governments.
- Well, this leaves the—apparently only two alternatives.
- One is not to take any prisoners.
- And the other is to let everybody go and say we’ve got no right to hold you.
- And neither of these seems to be very attractive. This is as far as I’ve got now with my reasoning.
- >> But do you not dislike the way that’s all of these actions might not be unconstitutional.
- They’re not justified in constitutional terms but in language such as extraordinary rendition, emergency powers.
- >> HITCHENS: Yeah, I do dislike that very much, yes.
- I mean, no one’s ever been able to point out to me that Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus helped to defeat the confederacy for example.
- And I certainly don’t think that the president has the right under the constitution to suspend habeas corpus.
- Only the Congress can do that. It doesn’t mean it can’t be suspended.
- The Congress has to do it, the president cannot. I'm rather a stickler for that kind of thing.
- Call me old fashioned if you will.
- >> Well, I feel I’ve taken up a little too much time now.
- >> HITCHENS: A very welcome question, believe me.
- >> I would posit that the Bush administration has restrained itself or needs to be restrained from using genuine religious language
- in the way it’s approached that so called war and terror
- and I believe the word crusade was used earlier in the campaign by President Bush, it’s not been used since.
- And we remember that the original name of the campaign was infinite justice.
- Another rejected piece of unfortunate language, obviously picked out by some careful PR person.
- >> HITCHENS: Fair enough.
- >> Hi. Thank you very much for coming. I was just having a question about something
- that many people have probably find to be a less serious issue but I'm curious about your thoughts on
- art, music and creativity and how those fit in with your other ideas,
- those were three things that formed communities that maybe we argued on faith, you know.
- The greatest composers throughout history always dedicating their work to God and things of that nature
- and I'm just curious how you view these things and beauty of these things to be similar to the beauty that you suggested you can find in nature
- or how you think that they might be more suited, more fitting in with religion.
- I'm just curious if you think that any would be devalued in this new system or any—with your ideas.
- >> HITCHENS: Yeah, we don’t know, of the extraordinary buildings,
- the great Gothic Cathedrals for example or the, even the Great Mosques of Andalusia.
- We don’t know if the architects who built them that they were themselves convinced that it was for the greater glory of God.
- We just know that at the time you couldn't get a job as an architect if you didn't affirm that.
- And certainly we know what would have happened to you if you said, “What God?”
- That would not just be the end of your career as an architect, so we don’t know that about --
- We don’t know the same about, even the devotional painters, we don’t know if they were believers, or the composers.
- Of the devotional poets, and I'm on stronger ground here as a literary critic, I know a bit more about it.
- People like John Donne or George Herbert, it would be very, very hard to fake writing that if you weren’t a believer.
- It would be extremely hard, where would you get your inspiration from?
- And my feeling is that it’s real devotional poetry and I personally couldn't be without it.
- We’d be much poorer. To stay with the literature if you don’t mind.
- The King James version of the bible, the King James translation, referred to in the New York Times recently as the St. James translation,
- is itself a great work of literature and one couldn't be without it,
- if you don’t understand the beauty of that liturgy, there’s a lot of Shakespeare and of Milton and Blake
- you wouldn’t get, you wouldn’t know what was going on.
- So it’s part of literacy to know it.
- I once wrote a book about the Parthenon, very important building for western civilization,
- great deal to be learned from it and from, by its beauty
- and by its symmetry and by its extraordinary architecture and sculpture.
- But I no longer care about the culture of Pallas Athena and I don’t care about the mystical ceremonies,
- some of them involving animal sacrifice and possibly human, that were conducted on the road from Eleusis.
- And I don’t have to care about Athenian imperialism and what it did to the Greek colonies in the rest of the Mediterranean.
- I can just appreciate the building and some—and know about the philosophical context
- and the plays of Sophocles and all the other things that were going on at the same time
- without any reference to their gods.
- So I propose that what culture largely means to us now is how to deal with civilizational art and great creativity in a post-supernatural era.
- In other words, how to keep all of that that’s of value without having to care about the culture of Pallas Athena for example
- or to be forced to bear in mind that say, St. Peter’s in Rome, actually not I think that impressive a building,
- was built by special set of indulgences, I mean that’s how the money for it was raised.
- We can consider that independently now.
- We can value this building without knowing that. Though I always find it’s somewhat hard to forget.
- >> Right. Okay. I was just curious, I mean I wanted to seek more towards how all these things in art and music and creativity
- are often relayed between individuals as being spiritual or something along that nature whether or not the actual topic.
- >> HITCHENS: I wanted to say a bit more of this when I was speaking first.
- I think that the human need for the transcendent, for the spiritual is undeniable but that’s not the supernatural.
- It’s very important to understand.
- The feeling that people get out of landscape and music, or landscape and music in combination.
- The feeling of war and love at the same time has had extraordinary consequences for many people, or one or other on their own.
- These are the things we can’t do without but there’s no reason to attribute them to the supernatural.
- You’re not glimpsing anything but nature from that. >> Thank you. Thank you.
- >> Hi. So it turns out if you follow the money trail back for a lot of these things,
- this whole creationism, teaching creationism idea, you’ll eventually find political organizations that are trying to energize a base, these bases --
- >> HITCHENS: Yes.
- >> What they’d like to do is to get these people to feel like they’re being attacked.
- And in lot of the discussions we have in your presentation,
- there’s a fine line between attacking people versus attacking ideas, right?
- What do you do to kind of ensure that you’re not going after people
- and not making people feel like you’re telling them that they’re idiots for example?
- All right. How do you make that separation?
- >> HITCHENS: Well, I think my answer’s been anticipated perhaps. >> Right.
- >> HITCHENS: If someone tells me that I’ve hurt their feelings I’m still waiting to hear what your point is.
- >> HITCHENS: I'm very depressed that in this country you can be told that’s offensive
- as if those two words constitute an argument or comment, not to me they don’t, and I'm not running for anything.
- So, I didn't have to pretend to like people when I don’t. (Laughter) >>Right. Thanks.
- >> Hello. Oh, thank you so much for speaking. I think we’re going to have a book signing right outside over here.
- So, if everyone got their copy of the book, thank you very much for coming.
- >> HITCHENS: How very nice of you to do that.
- (Applause)


Report this video as offensive