The New Atheism is scared (A long read article)
...The predominant varieties of atheist thinking, in the 19th and early
20th centuries, aimed to show that the secular west is the model for a
universal civilisation. The missionary atheism of the present time is a
replay of this theme; but the west is in retreat today, and beneath the
fervour with which this atheism assaults religion there is an
unmistakable mood of fear and anxiety. To a significant extent, the new
atheism is the expression of a liberal moral panic...
Today, it’s clear that no grand march [against religion) is under way. The rise of
violent jihadism is only the most obvious example of a rejection of
secular life. Jihadist thinking comes in numerous varieties, mixing
strands from 20th century ideologies, such as Nazism and Leninism, with
elements deriving from the 18th century Wahhabist Islamic fundamentalist
movement. What all Islamist movements have in common is a categorical
rejection of any secular realm. But the ongoing reversal in
secularisation is not a peculiarly Islamic phenomenon.
The resurgence of religion is a worldwide development. Russian
Orthodoxy is stronger than it has been for over a century, while China
is the scene of a reawakening of its indigenous faiths and of
underground movements that could make it the largest Christian country
in the world by the end of this century. Despite tentative shifts in
opinion that have been hailed as evidence it is becoming less pious, the
US remains massively and pervasively religious – it’s inconceivable
that a professed unbeliever could become president, for example.
For secular thinkers, the continuing vitality of religion calls into
question the belief that history underpins their values. To be sure,
there is disagreement as to the nature of these values. But pretty well
all secular thinkers now take for granted that modern societies must in
the end converge on some version of liberalism. Never well founded, this
assumption is today clearly unreasonable...
From
The Guardian
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