ArtK78, on 2013-October-21, 11:04, said:
With all due respect to the many who have posted on this thread, there is a common theme in most of the posts which is consistent with the saying that one of our secretaries has on the wall next to her cubicle:
YOU CAN AGREE WITH ME
OR YOU CAN BE WRONG
True, but unhelpful.
Some of us say: we think such and such based on what evidence is currently available: we expect that much of what we 'know', including some things that we believe very strongly, will eventually be shown to be in error, and if and when that happens, we will be delighted.
Some of us say: we believe such and such based on current interpretations of works of questionable accuracy that purport to ascribe all matters of importance to the existence and behaviour of a supernatural entity, and no amount of evidence will get us to change our mind, unless an authorized representative of that supernatural entity assures us that he (and it is almost always a 'he') has had revealed to him a new version of truth.
While 'moderation' may be a comfortable way of refusing to choose between world views, it is ultimately an acceptance of the religious viewpoint about a concept that Deutsch refers to as justified belief.
You can best appreciate the flaws in advocating that there is a middle ground, of moderation, when one contemplates some of the major issues that have divided secular thinkers from religious thinkers. I am most familiar with Christianity so my examples come from the religion.
In the time of Galileo, scripture was interpreted by the leading scholars of the RCC as requiring that the earth be the centre of the visible universe, while observations using the newly discovered telescope strongly demonstrated that this was not so. The observations that, for example, other planets had moons, and the relative motions of the planets themselves suggested that the earth orbited the sun.
So one school had the sun orbiting the earth and the other the earth orbiting the sun.
This wasn't simply an issue about planetary mechanics. It went directly to the significance of the earth, and thus of humans, in the universe. Moving us away from the centre of the universe, to an object orbiting the sun, downgraded our apparent importance. This was why the RCC banned the publication of the heliocentric theory.
One could either accept the evidence or accept scripture. Where was the ground for the moderate?
With the discovery of the theory of evolution by natural selection, another paradigm shattering decision had to be made. Prior to then, it was generally accepted that humans were fundamentally different from all other animals: we were created in god's image, which no other animal was. We were special, privileged in creation.
The implications of Darwinian evolution included the concept that we shared a common ancestor with other primates. This was impossible to the religious establishment of the day.
Where was the ground on which a moderate could, on this question, say: this I believe?
The history of the enlightenment, in which we are still arguably living, is replete with these sorts of paradigm shifts, and moderation (if viewed as an attempt to accommodate two conflicting views of reality) has no legitimate role to play.
We are not, for example, dealing with moral positions. Is capital punishment appropriate?
Historically it was seen as appropriate for a wide range of offences, including some property offences. Today, in the US, some see it as appropriate for kidnapping or sexual offences, and others see it as immoral in all cases. Moderates might see it as ok for specific types of murder, but not for rape or kidnapping, etc. There can be a spectrum of opinion, and that is when moderates have an important role to play, and indeed I like to think that I am relatively moderate on many social issues, with a somewhat left-wing bent on some.
However, one's approach to understanding the world as it 'is' at the most fundamental level is not one where this sort of middle of the road approach has much application.
Believing in a god of hellfire and eternal damnation for non-believers and the absolute inerrancy of scripture is one extreme. Rejection of any supernatural explanation is the other, so it would seem. But where is the person who shares with the fundie the common belief that all is due to 'god'? Merely substituting a more benevolent god is not a move to the middle ground of moderation.
The difference is binary. When asked to choose between a zero and a 1, there is no option to choose a fraction.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari