.....The conversation includes three authors, including brain expert Raymond Tallis. Dennett enters the conversation 12 and a half minutes in.
.....Even more recently, Dennett participated in a debate about religion (with Robert Winston). To hear that, go to Guardian debate. Dennett’s portion starts at 22:47.
.....Among other things, Dennett says
.....If religion isn't the greatest threat to rationality and scientific progress, what is? Perhaps alcohol or television or addictive video games. But although each of these scourges—mixed blessings, in fact—has the power to overwhelm our best judgement and cloud our critical faculties, religion doesn't just disable, it honours the disability. People are revered for their capacity to live in a dream world, to shield their minds from factual knowledge and to make the major decisions of their lives by consulting voices in their heads that they call forth by rituals designed to intoxicate them.You’ll be glad to know that these conversations are thoughtful and intelligent. It ain’t Fox news.
.....Right now, Sayed Parwez Kambakhsh, a young student, is on death row in Afghanistan, sentenced to execution for committing blasphemy. Imagine! We're living in the 21st century and in "liberated" Afghanistan blasphemy is still a capital crime. Most of the rest of the world is unwilling to tell those bent on carrying out this barbaric sentence that they are simply wrong.
.....You don't have to be religious to be crazy, but it helps. Indeed, if you are religious, you don't have to be crazy in the medically certifiable sense to do massively crazy things. And—this is the worst of it—religious faith can give people a sort of hyperbolic confidence, an utter unconcern about whether they might be making a mistake, that enables acts of inhumanity that would otherwise be unthinkable.
.....Other institutions or traditions may encourage a certain amount of irrationality—think of the wild abandon that is often appreciated in sports or art—but only religion demands it as a sacred duty. This might not matter if we could treat religious allegiances the way we treat differences in taste: if you have a taste for kick-boxing or heavy metal bands, that's your business. Not so with religion. Its arena includes not just the participants but all of life on the planet.
.....The better is enemy of the best: religion may make many people better, but it is preventing them from being as good as they could be. If only we could transfer all that respect, loyalty and intense devotion from an imaginary being—God—to something real: the wonderful world of goodness we and our ancestors have made and of which we are now the stewards.