Hitchens & Wilson On The Huffington Post

Christopher Hitchens and Douglas Wilson have debated the existence of God at many Christian establishments (like King’s College and Westminster Seminary in Philadelphia), but the movie COLLISIONalso shows them going at it in what looks like a tavern. Today, the men interact on the (electronic) pages of the prominent, left-leaning The Huffington Post. An excerpt from Wilson’s post:

If the atheist is right, then I am not a Christian because I have mistaken beliefs, but am rather a Christian because that is what these chemicals would always do in this arrangement and at this temperature. The problem is that this atheistic assumption does the very same thing to the atheist’s case for atheism. The atheist gives us an account of all things which makes it impossible for us to believe that any account of all things could possibly be true. But no account of things can be tenable unless it provides us with the preconditions that make it possible for our “accounting” to represent genuine insight. Atheism fails to do this, and the failure is a spectacular one. Nor does atheism allow us to have any fixed ethical standard, or the possibility of beauty.
It does no good to appeal to the discoveries made by science and reason, for one of the things that reason has apparently brought us is atheism. Right? And not content to let sleeping dogs lie, reason also brings us the inexorable consequences of atheism, which includes the unpalatable but necessary conclusion that random neuron firings do not amount to any “truth” that corresponds to anything outside our heads. This, ironically enough, includes atheism, and so we find ourselves falling out of the tree, saw in one hand and branch in the other.

HT: Abraham Piper

2 Responses to “Hitchens & Wilson On The Huffington Post”

  1. Erik Haugen October 20, 2009 at 5:26 pm #

    Is there some kind of argument missing from the Wilson quote that supports conclusions such as “Nor does atheism allow us to have any fixed ethical standard, or the possibility of beauty” and “The atheist gives us an account of all things which makes it impossible for us to believe that any account of all things could possibly be true” or is he just babbling nonsense? I checked at huffingtonpost.com but didn’t see anything there, either. Maybe the book has something?

  2. acai berry November 17, 2009 at 11:39 pm #

    Hello
    This is a good post and its interesting to read about atheism.I completely agree with your perspective.Thank you very much for this post.Keep up the good work.

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