The God Delusion (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Saturday, October 25, 2008, 16:59 (5871 days ago) @ David Turell

It is so easy to refute Dawkins. Note this exerpt from an interview with Tom Wolfe: 
Wolfe: "There's neuroscience the science and there's genetic theory. They are two entirely different things. José Delgado, the Spanish neuroscientist, son of the Copernicus, the Galileo of neuroscience, José M.R. Delgado, puts it very clearly: "The human brain is enormously complicated. We have made only a few small steps in finding out how it works. All the rest is literature." Delgado mentions no names, but if he has noticed them at all, "all the rest" probably includes some of the best known genetic theorists, such as Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett, a zoologist and a philosopher. They are not neurologists. They know precious little about the human brain. They seem to have captivated a big following, especially Dawkins, but not with anything that could be called neuroscience. They're writing speculative literature. Their theory is that the human brain is nothing but a machine, after all, a form of computer, and therefore it has no free will. In any situation we find ourselves we can only do what our evolutionary software—they love computer talk like "software," meaning genetic makeup—has programmed us to do. - So at a recent conference on the implications of genetic theory for the legal system—five distinguished genetic theorists are up on stage—I stood up in the audience and asked, "If there is no free will, why should we believe anything you've said so far? You only say it because you're programmed to say it." You've never heard such stuttering and blathering in response to anything in your life."


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