JOHN GRAY IS AN ENGLISH POLITICAL PHILOSOPHER with interests in analytic philosophy and the history of
ideas. He retired in 2008 as School Professor of European Thought at the London
School of Economics and Political Science. Gray contributes regularly to The
Guardian, The Times Literary Supplement
and the New Statesman, where he is
the lead book reviewer.
An impressively erudite work, Seven Types of Atheism covers thinkers ranging from St Augustine to
Joseph Conrad. The reach of his mind is remarkable, and every chapter is full
of fascinating facts and factoids.
1) New atheism – the
idea that religion is just bad science – mostly old-fashioned attempts to
explain the world without the benefit of scientific method. According to Gray this
idea is neither novel nor interesting.
2) Secular humanism – in
which a new religion is established, substituting humankind for God – what he
calls “a hollowed-out version of the Christian belief in salvation in history.”
In this category, he includes all kinds of philosophers from John Stuart Mill
to Ayn Rand, of all people.
He walks the reader
through some of history’s most villainous atheists. For example, he quotes a
letter from Ayn Rand in which she describes the “masses” as “millions of puny,
shrivelled, helpless souls” who ought to be “ground under foot.” In this way he
illustrates how her secular religion of “Objectivism” is a religion that can
poison the true believer. I found this
comment fascinating because, as a high school student, I was obsessed with Ms.
Rand’s work – I read the fat book Atlas
Shrugged, for example, six times.
3) Then there is the category
that makes a religion of science. This category includes, he says, “evolutionary
humanism, Mesmerism, dialectical materialism and contemporary transhumanism,” includes
artificial intelligence. According to many in the scientific community, he
says, science will replace the need for religion.
4) Then there are the
political religions, “from Jacobism through communism and Nazism to evangelical
liberalism.” The idea is that everybody in the world actually wants to be free
and independent. However, they don’t know that my group and I have the answers.
So they need to be converted.
5) Another group of atheists
are what Gray calls “God haters” – those like the Marquis de Sade who simply
reject God and all the morality he is said to represent.
6) The sixth group of
atheists includes thinkers like George Santayana and Joseph Conrad. They reject
a creator God, without substituting humanity for the divine.
7) Mystical atheism is his last category. It’s
essentially negative theology – the idea that nothing can be known about God. Philosophers
who reflect these ideas include, for example, Benedict Spinoza, a 17th
Century Dutch philosopher and Arthur Schopenhauer, who was born later. The
people on the planet must submit to necessity. Essentially, the idea of
mystical atheism is that “the phenomenal world as the product of a blind and
insatiable metaphysical will.”
Gray says he personally is most happy with the
last two ideas. “Repelled by the first five categories,” he writes, “I am drawn
to the last two, atheisms that are happy to live with a godless world or an
unnameable God.”
The book is filled with
vivid and engaging descriptions of the ideas of philosophers and other thought
leaders, and comments on odd details about their lives. It is an entertaining,
thought-provoking exploration of the varieties and foibles of various kinds of atheism.
In it, Gray provides a refreshing commentary on the degree to which forms of atheism
are based on Christian belief. It provides illuminating insight into the
history of atheism and the subtle distinctions between approaches to atheism. The
book would be equally interesting for theists, atheists, and those who consider
themselves “spiritual but not religious.”
Ultimately, it is all
too easy to point out that many of the problems that are unanswerable for
atheists are just as unanswerable for believers. “What these secular believers
cannot digest,” writes Gray, “is the fact that gains in ethics and politics
regularly come and go – a fact that confounds any story of continuing human
advance.”
In the end, though, he embraces
atheisms that find mystery in the material world. I’ll drink to that.
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