Like I said, three or four forthright atheists (depending on what you think of Michael Shermer), the rest are theists or faitheists.
I mean, just take a quick look at the essays (not the titles). Only three answer the question, “Does science make belief in God obsolete?” with a clear Yes. Shermer is less clear, but let’s count him as a Yes. The remaining nine answer with No.
I must say, I’d answer “No” straightforwardly to that question. While it may be the case that belief in God is ‘obsolete’, I think what that question means at least needs some unpacking (How is a belief obsolete? Is that a category mistake?), and I don’t think science is necessarily what makes that belief ‘obsolete’.
Reason, perhaps, or good philosophy, might do the trick.
The question was not, “Does science make it clear that it is an error to believe in God?” I have not read the essays, but if I were answering the question about whether religion is obsolete, I doubt my answer would be interpreted as an unambiguous Yes. Obsolescence isn’t about accuracy, it’s about consensus of historicity over contemporary usefulness.
Like I said, three or four forthright atheists (depending on what you think of Michael Shermer), the rest are theists or faitheists.
I mean, just take a quick look at the essays (not the titles). Only three answer the question, “Does science make belief in God obsolete?” with a clear Yes. Shermer is less clear, but let’s count him as a Yes. The remaining nine answer with No.
I must say, I’d answer “No” straightforwardly to that question. While it may be the case that belief in God is ‘obsolete’, I think what that question means at least needs some unpacking (How is a belief obsolete? Is that a category mistake?), and I don’t think science is necessarily what makes that belief ‘obsolete’.
Reason, perhaps, or good philosophy, might do the trick.
The question was not, “Does science make it clear that it is an error to believe in God?” I have not read the essays, but if I were answering the question about whether religion is obsolete, I doubt my answer would be interpreted as an unambiguous Yes. Obsolescence isn’t about accuracy, it’s about consensus of historicity over contemporary usefulness.