Ahh, jetzt Ich sehe...
Then you are as blinded by your faith as Theists.Frankly, I don't see how belief in something as silly as ghosts should be respected.
Again, how is that any less ignorant than Theists saying that Atheists are immoral?Atheists are smarter. Smarter people become atheists.
He does a lot of speculation, but when he does that sort of thing, he is normally very explicit about it being mere speculation. He likes to talk about ideas and think about stuff. So do I. But he's usually explains it's speculation and he won't give it much bearing unless it's backed up. When he's talking about scientific claims, I find they're usually backed up with experimental/empirical data... can you give some examples of massive fallacies he's made?
but at many times in The God Delusion he seems to imply that atheists are smarter than theists.
Disbelief in God and immortality among NAS biological scientists was 65.2% and 69.0%, respectively, and among NAS physical scientists it was 79.0% and 76.3%. Most of the rest were agnostics on both issues, with few believers. We found the highest percentage of belief among NAS mathematicians (14.3% in God, 15.0% in immortality). Biological scientists had the lowest rate of belief (5.5% in God, 7.1% in immortality), with physicists and astronomers slightly higher (7.5% in God, 7.5% in immortality).
I could not care less about the arrogance, I care more about the social polarising and scientific misrepresentation,
No question that I enjoy his books, but promoting theories like memetics in the guise of science really makes no sense to me.
He has a point:
http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/sci_relig.htm
http://blog.case.edu/singham/2006/02/08/the_religious_beliefs_of_scientists1
There seems to be a definite correlation between intelligence and athiesm/agnosticism.
SAM:
I've read The Selfish Gene - Dawkins does a good job of popularizing his theories. And in The God Delusion, he takes the stance of a rationalist, someone concerned about the welfare of our species, to attack religion. So what does he misrepresent?
It might fall under the aegis of information theory or the human "sciences." Does he claim memes to be anything more than a useful concept, portray them as scientific fact?
There seems to be a definite correlation between intelligence and athiesm/agnosticism.
Most of the rest were agnostics on both issues, with few believers.
The blind disbeliever is at one far end of the spectrum the bluind believer is at the other - and as much as neither would like to admit it, they have a lot in common.
Again, how is that any less ignorant than Theists saying that Atheists are immoral?
Can you honestly say that it is impossible to believe in God and still be an intelligent person?
If you believe that, then you are pratcicing selective ignorance, and what coudl be more irrational than that?
I think that, as in everything else in life, balance is the key.
No question that I enjoy his books, but promoting theories like memetics in the guise of science really makes no sense to me.
I don't think he ever has promoted memetics as a true scientific theory. Like I said, he likes to speculate and think about things. Indeed, memetics is an interesting theory, but he hasn't written any books about it. He's merely devoted a chapter or two on it. He just posits it as interesting speculation.
It's not a misrepresentation. In The Selfish Gene and with other books he uses it to illustrate that evolution doesn't require RNA or DNA. Natural selection happens whenever the criteria which allows it exists, such as when there is a means for patterns to reproduce themselves with sufficient fidelity, and when those copying mechanisms have a high enough mutation rate for them to create variation. There is nothing special about DNA. Natural selection happens whenever it can. That's what memetics illustrates.
Scientifically it means nothing; if I remove the RNA and DNA, there is no evolution. Not even if I write 10 books on it.
Has he come out and said that it is merely a theory? That it should not be considered scientific fact? As a scientist that should be his primary concern, right?
Popularising a theory does not make it science.
And if he is concerned about the welfare of our species he would not be polarising it.
Is there any other data on intelligence (not related to NAS) and atheism? I could say that the director of the Human Genome Research is a theist, does that make him less intelligent than his contemporaries?
You think there can't be evolution without DNA/RNA?
What is a "hard" atheist? That seems like a redundant term to me. Atheists don't believe there is a god. People believe, or they don't... or they don't know, in which case they're agnostic.
Like I said, I do not believe he means to deliberately mislead, however his work does appear to generate a belief in directed evolution, which is in itself misleading.
I would genuinely like to see the data on IQ and atheism, if there is any, it would be interesting if nothing else. I wasn't ascribing any false argument to you, I have heard this argument several times and it seems rather selective to me. As I do not believe that IQ measures all types of intelligence.
Not unless they have redefined inherited genetic traits recently.