Because I've written so much about
arguments from scale lately, the following statement in
Dennis Prager's op-ed on atheism and consolation caught my eye.
"'And we promise to work for more gun control. But the truth is we don’t
have a single consoling thing to say to you because we atheists
recognize that the human being is nothing more than matter, no different
from all other matter in the universe except for having
self-consciousness. Therefore, when we die, that’s it. Moreover, within a
tiny speck of time in terms of the universe’s history, nearly every one
of us, including your child, will be completely forgotten, as if we
never even existed. Life is a random crapshoot. Our birth and existence
are flukes. And you will never see your child again.'" (emphasis mine)
This sounds very similar to the temporal aspect of arguments from scale: humans do not enjoy a
temporally privileged position in the universe's history.
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Published on January 17, 2013 14:52