Richard
Dawkins, the biologist, has become something of a celebrity through
his outspoken advocacy of atheism as in his new book “The God
Delusion”. But his approach to religion is still an idealist one.
The
Dawkins approach to the question of religion is, like religion
itself, an idealist one: religion is false, rationally unsustainable;
morally enfeebling and a basis for hatred and division. Presumably
Dawkins sees the death or meaningful diminution of religion by means
of secularist persuasion just as religion hopes to resist
secularisation by what it sees as ethical persuasion.
Dawkins
looks into the biological evolution of homo sapiens for the
origin and growth of the multiplicity of religious faiths. He is
speculative rather than dogmatic on the issue but much more
convincing when showing how the stringency of faith-based social
morality has been softened over time by an intellectual response to
the social development of society. He recognises this but,
unlike Marx and Engels on the question of religion, simply reports it
as a phenomenon under the label of moral Zeitgeist.
Unlike
Dawkins, the pioneers of scientific socialism sought to show religion
as a reflex of the social organisation of society. Marx, in the
Introduction to his Critique of Hegel’s of Philosophy of Right,
wrote:
“This
state, this society, produces religion, a reversed world
consciousness, because they are a reversed world. Religion
is the general theory of that world, its encyclopaedic compendium,
its logic in popular form, its spiritualistic point d’honneur, its
enthusiasm, its moral sanction. The struggle
against religion
is therefore immediately the fight against the other world of which
religion is the spiritual aroma. Religion is the sigh of the
oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, just as it is the
spirit of a spiritless situation. It is the opium of the
people.” (original italics)
It
wasn’t simply a question of religion being false, or brutal or
divisive; it was a weapon of the ruling class, a bulwark in the way
of the emancipation of the working class, a hurdle to be overcome in
the progress to socialism nor could it be overcome while the
conditions that nourished it continued to exist. Thus, the socialist
sees religion as an integral part of the class struggle while the
secularist sees it simply as a harmful, false premise on which to
base a system of moral rectitude. As far as capitalism’s subject
class is concerned, whether those who govern it or those who exploit
it reject or accept faith is irrelevant; the morality of capitalism
is not governed either by humanistic or religious considerations but
by the constraints and compulsions of the marketplace.
Inculcating
religion
Dawkins
deals well, even poignantly, with the religious indoctrination of
children pointing, for example, to the absurd practice of labelling
young children with the faith identity of their parents or guardians.
Even very young children, as young as three or four are referred to
as, for example, ‘Catholic’, ‘Protestant’ or ‘Muslim’
children because society accepts the legitimacy of parents or
guardians or clerics or teachers hijacking the innocence of children
for the inculcation of beliefs more likely to be resisted if they
were offered initially to an older person. Dawkins rightly calls it
child abuse with ramifications sometimes even more devastating than
the sexual abuse of children.
Obviously
socialists agree that the indoctrination of children is a
contemptible invasion of the rights of a child but, grave as it is,
it is less socially heinous than the ruthless inculcation of the
appalling precepts and values of capitalism - accompanied usually by
the notion of a ubiquitous Divine Policeman - to which both children
and adults of all ages are remorselessly exposed.
Science
and the system
Indoctrination
makes a nonsense of the claim that we live in a democracy. Democracy
is about choice and choice is based on information and knowledge. But
nowhere in the world of capitalism are the people offered the
slightest hint that there could be a way of running our society that
might free us from the appalling problems that are built-in,
inevitable aspects of global capitalism. Instead we have intense
conditioning and thought control to the extent were we look on the
utterly absurd, like war and world hunger, as natural and as
inevitable as the seasons.

Capitalism
and its institutions rape our consciousness and rob us of the ability
to think independently. Every situation must be reasoned within the
paradigm of a world in which we are beholden to a class of owners not
only for our daily bread but for every aspect of our life-functions
from the cradle to the grave and unless our needs are consistent with
the profit needs of the owning class they will not be met.
Richard
Dawkins sings the praises of science and in a general sense
socialists join in the
chorus. But science, possibly more than most
other disciplines, is a prisoner of capitalism. The scientists have
to beg at the table of the system for funding to pursue their
projects; their sponsors are usually largely mammoth capitalist
enterprises bent on discerning means of further enriching their
directors and shareholders or capitalist governments dedicated to the
overall concerns of national capitalism.
Just
like the rest of us, the scientist is a prisoner
of the crazy logic
of the system and just
like the rest of us if his or her dedicated function does not hold
promise of profit for those who directly or indirectly employ them,
irrespective of the potential
social benefits of their work, it will be denied funding.
The
first phase in the struggle to end the political and economic
exploitation of our class is to learn to question the thoughts we
inherit from well-intentioned parents and teachers; to challenge the
strictures of the priests, parsons, rabbis and mullahs and to
question why in a world of potential abundance, where a parasite
class of non-productive money shufflers and profit-takers are rich
beyond measure, and the working class that produces all real wealth
endure mere want or dire poverty.
RICHARD
MONTAGUE
|