ABSTRACT

I have said that the starting point for secular humanism is the rejection of religious belief, and that is where I shall start. I shall look first, very briefly, at the traditional classic arguments for the existence of a god. There is an enormous literature dealing with them, and what I have to say will be perfunctory and will not add anything new, but it is an integral part of my case for humanism and I need to say it. Many modern religious believers and many theologians tend to dismiss these traditional arguments. Of course, they say, no one now relies on them; it is accepted that religious belief cannot be based simply on rational argument, and has to be understood in quite different terms. I shall be looking later at these alternative readings of religious belief, all of which seem to me to be woefully inadequate. The only intellectually honest version of religious belief, in my view, is one which does attempt to support it with reasons and evidence. I am also inclined to think that such arguments play more of a role in the religious thinking of ordinary people than trendy theologians recognise. My mother, who became rather religious in the last years of her life, loved feeding the birds in her garden, and she used to look at them with admiration and say to me, ‘I know you don’t agree with me, but there must be something that started it all.’ Her remark is a sort of cross between what we shall

now consider under the labels of ‘the first cause argument’ and ‘the argument from design’, and I suspect that ideas of this kind play a significant part in the thinking of many believers.