• A PLEA FOR ATHETSM

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    A PLEA FOR ATHETSM
    by
    Charles Bradlaugh

    THIS essay is issued in the hope that it may succeed in
    removing some of the many prejudices prevalent, not only against
    the actual holders of Atheistic opinions, but also against those
    wrongfully suspected of Atheism. Men who have been famous for depth
    of thought, for excellent wit, or great genius, have been
    recklessly assailed as Atheists by those who lack the high
    qualifications against which the malice of the calumniators was
    directed. Thus, not only have Voltaire and Paine been, without
    ground, accused of Atheism, but Bacon, Locke, and Bishop Berkeley
    himself, have, amongst others, been denounced by thoughtless or
    unscrupulous pietists as inclining to Atheism, the ground for the
    accusation being that they manifested an inclination to push human
    thought a little in advance of the age in which they lived.

    It is too often the faslaon with persons of pious reputation
    to speak in unmeasured language of Atheism as favouring immorality,
    and of Atheists as men whose conduct is necessarily vicious, and
    who have adopted Atheistic views as a desperate defiance against a
    Deity justly offended by the badness of their lives. Such persons
    urge that amongst the proximate causes of Atheism are vicious
    training, immoral and proffigate companions, licentious living, and
    the like. Dr. John Pye Smith, in his "Instructions on Christian
    Theology," goes so far as to declare that "nearly all the Atheists
    upon record have been men of extremely debauched and vile conduct."
    Such language from the Christian advocate is not surprising, but
    there are others who, while professing great desire for the spread
    of Freethought and having pretensions to rank amongst acute and
    liberal thinkers, declare Atheism impracticable, and its teachings
    cold, barren, and negative. Excepting to each of the above
    allegations, I maintain that thoughtful Atheism affords greater
    possibility for human happiness than any system yet based on, or
    possible to be founded on, Theism, and that the lives of true
    Atheists must be more virtuous -- because more human -- than those
    of the believers in Deity, the humanity of the devout believer
    often finding itself neutralized by a faith with which that
    humanity is necessarily in constant collision. The devotee piling
    the faggots at the 'auto da fe' of a heretic, and that heretic his
    son, might notwithstanding be a good father in every other respect
    (see Deut. xiii. 6-10). Heresy, in the eyes of the believer, is
    highest criminality, and outweighs all claims of family or
    affection.

    Atheism, properly understood, is no mere disbelief; is in no
    wise a cold, barren negative; it is, on the contrary, a hearty,
    fruitful affirmation of all truth, and involves the positive
    assertion of action of highest humanity.

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    Let Atheism be fairly examined, and neither condemned -- its
    defence unheard -- on the 'ex parte' slanders of some of the
    professional preachers of fashionable orthodoxy, whose courage is
    bold enough while the pulpit protects the sermon, but whose valour
    becomes tempered with discretion when a free platform is afforded
    and discussion claimed; nor misjudged because it has been the
    custom to regard Atheism as so unpopular as to render its advocacy
    impolitic. The best policy against all prejudice is to firmly
    advocate the truth. The Atheist does not say "There is no God," but
    he says: "I know not what you mean by God; I am without idea of
    God; the word 'God' is to me a sound conveying no clear or distinct affirmation. I do not deny God, because I cannot deny that of which
    I have no conception, and the conception of which by its affirmer,
    is so imperfect that he is unable to define it to me. If, however,
    'God' is defined to mean an existence other than the existence of
    which I am a mode, then I deny 'God,' and affirm that it is
    impossible such 'God' can be. That is, I affirm one existence, and
    deny that there can be more than one." The Pantheist also affirms
    one existence, and denies that there can be more than one but the
    distinction between the Pantheist and the Atheist is, that the
    Pantheist affirms infinite attributes for existence, while the
    Atheist maintains that attributes are the characteristics of mode
    -- i.e., the diversities enabling the conditioning in thought.

    When the Theist affirms that his God is an existence other
    than, and separate from, the so-called material universe, and when
    he invests this separate, hypothetical existence with the several
    attributes of personality, omniscience, omnipresence, omnipotence,
    eternity, infinity, immutability, and perfect goodness, then the
    Atheist in reply says I deny the existence of such a being"; and he
    is entitled to say this because this Theistic definition is self- contradictory, as well as contradictory of every-day experience.

    If you speak to the Atheist of God as creator, he answers that
    the conception of creation is impossible. We are utterly unable to
    construe it in thought as possible that the complement of existence
    has been either increased or diminished, much less can we conceive
    an absolute origination of substance. We cannot conceive either, on
    the one hand, nothing becoming something, or on the other,
    something becoming nothing. The words "creation" and "destruction"
    have no value except as applied to phenomena. You may destroy a
    gold coin, but you have only destroyed the condition, you have not
    affected the substance. "Creation" and "destruction" denote change
    of phenomena; they do not denote origin or cessation of substance.
    The Theist who speaks of God creating the universe must either
    suppose that Deity evolved it out of himself, or that he produced
    it from nothing. But the Theist cannot regard the universe as
    evolution of Deity, because this would identify Universe and Deity,
    and be Pantheism rather than Theism. There would be no distinction
    of substance -- no creation. Nor can the Theist regard the universe
    as created out of nothing, because Deity is, according to him,
    necessarily eternal and infinite. Gods existence being eternal and
    infinite precludes the possibility of the conception of vacuum to
    be filled by the universe if created. No one can even think of any
    point in extent or duration and say: Here is the point of
    separation between the creator and the created. It is not possible
    for the Theist to imagine a beginning to the universe. It is not


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    possible to conceive either an absolute commencement, or an
    absolute terminltion of existence; that is, it is impossible to
    conceive beginning, before which you have a period when the
    universe has yet to be; or to conceive an end, after which the
    universe, having been, no longer exists. The Atheist affirms that
    he cognizes to-day effects; that these are, at the same time,
    causes and effects -- causes to the effects they precede, effects
    to the causes they follow. Cause is simply everything without which
    the effect would not result, and with which it must result. Cause
    is the means to an end, consummating itself in that end. Cause is
    the word we use to include all that determines change. The Theist
    who argues for creation must assert a point of time -- that is, of
    duration, when the created did not yet exist. At this point of time
    either something existed or nothing; but something must have
    existed, for out of nothing nothing can come. Something must have
    existed, because the point fixed upon is that of the duration of
    something. This something must have been either finite or infinite;
    if finite it could not have been God, and if the something were
    infinite, then creation was impossible: it is impossible to add to
    infinite existence.

    If you leave the question of creation, and deal, with the
    government of the universe, the difficulties of Theism are by no
    means lessened. The existence of evil is then a terrible stumbling-
    block to the Theist. Pain, misery, crime, poverty confront the
    advocate of eternal goodness, and challenge with unanswerable
    potency his declaration of Deity as all-good, all-wise, and all-
    powerful. A recent writer in the 'Spectator' admits that there is
    what it regards "as the most painful, as it is often the most
    incurable, form of Atheism -- the Atheism arising from a sort of
    horror of the idea of an Omnipotent Being permitting such a
    proportion of misery among the majority of his creatures." Evil is
    either caused by God or exists independently; but it cannot be
    caused by God, as in that case he would not be all-good; nor can it
    exist hostilely, as in that case he would not be all-powerful. If
    all-good he would desire to annihilate evil, and continued evil
    contradicts either God's desire, or God's ability, to prevent it.
    Evil must either have had a beginning or it must have been etemal;
    but, according to the Theist, it cannot be eternal, because God
    alone is etemal. Nor can it have had a beginning, for if it had it
    must either have originated in God, or outside God; but, according
    to the Theist, it cannot have: originated in God, for he is all-
    good, and out of all-goodness evil cannot originate; nor can evil
    have originated outside God, for, according to the Theist, God is
    infinite, and it is impossible to go outside of or beyond infinity.

    To the Atheist this question of evil assumes an entirely
    different aspect. He declares that each evil is a result, but not
    a result from God nor Devil. He affirms that conduct founded on
    knowledge of the laws of existence may ameliorate each present form
    of evil, and, as our knowledge increases, prevent its future
    recurrence.

    Some declare that the belief in God is necessary as a check.
    to crime. They allege that the Atheist may commit murder, lie, or
    steal without fear of any consequences. To try the actual value of
    this argument, it is not unfair to ask: Do Theists ever steal? If


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    yes, then in each such theft the belief in God and his power to
    punish has been insufficient as a preventive of the crime. Do
    Theists ever lie or murder? If yes, the same remark has again force
    -- Theism , failing against the lesser as against the gearer crime.
    Those who use such an argument overlook that all men seek
    happiness, though in very, diverse fashions. ignorant and
    miseducated men often mistake the true path to happiness, and
    commit crime in the endeavour to obtain it. Atheists hold that by
    teaching mankind the real road to human happiness it is possible to
    keep them from the by-ways of criminality and error. Atheists would
    teach men to be moral now, not because God offers as an inducement
    reward by and by, but because in the virtuous act itself immediate
    good is ensured to the doer and the circle surrounding him. Atheism
    would perserve man from lying, stealing, murdering, not from fear
    of an eternal agony after death, but because these crimes make this
    life itself a course of misery.

    While Theism, asserting God as the creator and govemor of the
    universe, hinders and checks man's efforts by declaring God's will
    to be the sole directing and controlling power, Atheism, by
    declaring all events to be in accordance with natural laws -- that
    is, happening in certain ascertainable sequences. -- stimulates man
    to discover the best conditions of life, and offers him the most
    powerful inducements to morality. While the Theist provides future
    happiness for a scoundrel repentent on his death-bed, Atheism
    affirms present and certain happiness for the man who does his best
    to live here so well as to have little cause for repenting
    hereafter.

    Theism declares that God dispenses health and infficts
    disease, and sickness and illness are regarded by the Theists as
    visitations from an angered Deity, to be borne with meekness and
    content. Atheism declares that physiological knowledge may preserve
    us from disease by preventing us from infringing the law of health,
    and that sickness results not as the ordinance of offended Deity,
    but from ill-ventilated dwellings and workshops, bad and
    insufficient food, excessive toil, mental suffering, exposure to
    inclement weather, and the like -- all these finding root in
    poverty, the chief source of crime and disease; that prayers and
    piety afford no protection against fever, and that if the human
    being be kept without food he will starve as quickly whether he be
    Theist or Atheist, theology being no substitute for bread.

    It is very important, in order that injustice may not be done
    to the Theistic, argument, that we should have -- in lieu of a
    clear definition, which it seems useless to ask for -- the best
    possible clue to the meaning intended to be conveyed by the word
    "God." If it were not that the word is an arbitrary term,
    maintained for the purpose of influencing the ignorant, and the
    notions suggested by which are vague and entirely contingent upon
    individual fancies, such a clue could probably be most easily, and satistactorily obtained by tracing back the word "God," and
    ascertaining the sense in which it was used by the uneducated
    worshippers who have gone before us, and collating this with the
    more modem Theism, qualified as it is by the superior knowledge of
    to-day. Dupuis says: "Le mot Dieu parait destine a exprimer l'idde
    de la force universelle et eternellement active qui imprime le


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    mouvement a tout dans la Nature, suivant les lois d'une harmonie
    constante et admirable, qui se developpe dans les diverses formes
    que prend la matiere organisee, qui se mele a tout, anime tout, et
    qui semble etre une dans ses modifications infiniment variees, et
    n'appartenir qu'a elle-meme." "The word God appears intended to
    express the universal and etemally active force which endows all
    nature with motion according to the laws of a constant and
    admirable harmony; which develops itself in the diverse forms of
    organized matter, which mingles with all, gives life to all; which
    seems to be one through all its infinitely varied modifications,
    and inheres in itself alone."

    In the "Bon Sens" of Cure Meslier, it is asked: Qu'est-ce que
    Dieu? "and the answer is: "C'est un mot abstrait fait pour designer
    la force cachee de la nature; ou c'est un point mathematique qui
    n'a ni longueur, ni largeur, ni profondetir." "It is an abstract
    word coined to designate the hidden force of nature; or it is a
    mathematical point having neither length, breadth, nor depth."

    The orthodox fringe of the Theism of to-day is Hebraistic in
    its origin -- that is, it finds its root in the superstition and
    ignorance of a petty and barbarous people nearly destitute of
    literature, poor in language, and almost entirely wanting in high
    conceptions of humanity. It might, as Judaism is the foundation of Christianity, be fairly expected that the ancient Jewish records
    would aid us in our search after the meaning to be attached to the
    word "God." The most prominent words in Hebrew rendered God or Lord
    in English are @@ii)#-19@@ 'Ieue,' and @@t)',-*N@@ 'Aleim.' The
    first word Ieue, called by our orthodox Jehovah, is equivalent to
    "that which exists," and indeed embodies in itself the only
    possible trinity in unity i.e., past, present, and future. There is
    nothing in this Hebrew word to help us to any such definition as is
    required for the sustenance of modem Theism. The most we can make
    of it by any stretch of imagination is equivalent to the
    declaration "I am, I have been, I shall be." The word @@ii)#-19@@
    is hardly ever spoken by the religious Jews, who actually in
    reading substitute for it, Adonai, an entirely different word. Dr.
    Wall notices the close resemblance in sound between the word
    'lehowa' or leue, or Jehovah and Jove. In fact @@Zeig ora-r*Lo,@@
    Jupiter and leue-pater (God the father) present still closer
    resemblance in sound. Jove is also @@Zetic@@ or @@eeac@@ or
    @@Ae6g,@@ whence the word Deus and our Deity. The Greek mythology,
    far more ancient than that of the Hebrews, has probably found for
    Christianity many other and more important features of coincidence
    than that of a similarly sounding name. The word @@6)Eo'gl@@ traced
    back, affords us no help beyond that it identifies Deity with the
    universe. Plato says that the early Greeks thought that the only
    Gods (@@eEOY-P@@) were the sun, moon, earth, stars, and heaven. The
    word @@C)SllbN@@, Aleim, assists us still less in defining the word
    God, for Parkhurst translates it as a plural noun signifying "the
    curser," deriving it from the verb @@i-75N@@ (Ale), to curse. Dr.
    Colenso has collected for us a store of traditional meanings for
    the @@IAO@@ of the Greek, and the @@1-111-71@@ of the Hebiew; but,
    though these are interesting to the student of mythology, they give
    no help to the Theistic demonstrator. Finding that philology aids
    us but little, we must endeavour to arrive at the meaning of the
    word "God" by another rule. It is utterly impossible to fix the


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    period of the rise of Theism amongst any particular people; but it
    is, notwithstanding, comparatively easy, if not to trace out the
    development of Theistic ideas, at any rate to point to their
    probable course of growth amongst all peoples.

    Keightley, in his "Origin of Mythology," says: "Supposing, for
    the sake of hypothesis, a race of men in a state of total or
    partial ignorance of Deity, their belief in many Gods may have thus
    commenced: They saw around them various changes brought about by
    human agency, and hence they knew the power of intelligence to
    produce effects. When they beheld other and greater effects, they
    ascribed them to some unseen being, similar but superior to man."
    They associated particular events with special unknown beings
    (Gods), to each of whom they ascribed either a peculiarity of
    power, or a sphere of action not common to other Gods. Thus, one
    was God of the sea, another God of war, another God of love,
    another ruled the thunder and lightning; and thus through the
    various then known elements of the universe, and the passions of
    human-kind.

    This mythology became modified with the com mencement of human
    knowledge. The ability to think has proved itself oppugnant to, and
    destructive of, the reckless desire to worship, characteristic of semi-barbarism. Science has razed altar after altar heretofore
    erected to the unknown Gods, and has pulled down Deity after Deity
    from the pedestals on which ignorance and superstition had erected
    them. The priest, who had formerly spoken as the oracle of God,
    lost his sway just in proportion as the scientific teacher
    succeeded in impressing mankind with a knowledge of the facts
    around them. The ignorant, who had hitherto listened unquestioning
    during centuries of abject submission to their spiritual
    precaptors, at last commenced to search and examine for themselves,
    and were guided by experience rather than by church doctrine. To-
    day advancing intellect challenges the reserve guard of the old
    armies of superstition, and compels a conflict in which human-kind
    must in the end have great gain by the forced enunciation of the
    truth.

    From the word "God" the Theist derives no argument in his
    favour; it teaches nothing, defines nothing, demonstrates nothing,
    explains nothing. The Theist answers that this is no sufficient
    objection that there are many words which are in common use to
    which the same objection applies. Even if this were true, it does
    not answer the Atheist's objection. Alleging a difficulty on the
    one side is not a removal of the obstacle already pointed out on
    the other.

    The Theist declares his God to be not only immutable, but also
    infinitely intelligent, and says: "Matter is either essentially
    intelligent or essentially non-intelligent; if matter were
    essentially intelligent, no matter could be without intelligence;
    but matter cannot be essentially intelligent, because some matter
    is not intelligent, therefore matter is essentially non-
    intelligent; but there is intelligence, therefore there must be a
    cause for the intelligence, independent of matter -- this must be
    an intelligent being -- i.e., "God." The Atheist answers: I do not
    know what is meant, in the mouth of the Theist, by "matter."


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    "Matter," "nature," "substance," "existence," are words having the
    same signification in the Atheist's vocabulary. Lewes used "matter"
    as the symbol of all the known properties, statical and dynamical,
    passive and active; i.e., subjectively, as feeling and change of
    feeling, or objectively, as agent and action"; and Mill defined
    "nature" as "the sum of all phenomena, together with the causes
    which produce them, including not only all that happens, but all
    that is capable of happening." It is not certain that the Theist
    expresses any very clear idea to himself when he uses the words
    "matter" and "intelligence"; it is quite certain that he has not
    yet shown himself capable of communicating this idea, and that any
    effort he makes is couched in terms which are self-contradictory.
    Reason and understanding are sometimes treated as separate
    faculties, yet it is not unfair to presume that the Theist would
    include them both under the word intelligence. Perception is the
    foundation of the intellect. The perceptive ability differs in each
    animal; yet, in speaking of matter, the Theist uses the word
    "intelligence" as though the same meaning were to be understood in
    every case. The recollection of the perceptions is the exercise of
    a different ability from the perceptive ability, and occasionally
    varies disproportionately; thus, an individual may have great
    perceptive abilities, and very little memory, or the reverse; yet
    memory, as well as perception, is included in intelligence. So also
    the comparing between two or more perceptions; the judging and the
    reflecting; all these are subject to the same remarks, and all
    these and other phases of the mind, are included in the word
    intelligence. We answer then, that "God" (whatever that word may
    mean) cannot be intelligent. He can never perceive; the act of
    perception results in the obtaining a new idea, but if God be
    omniscient, his ideas have been eternally the same. He has either
    been always, and always will be, perceiving, or he has never
    perceived at all. But God cannot have been always perceiving,
    because, if he had, he would always have been obtaining fresh
    knowledge, in which case he must at some time have had less
    knowledge than now; that is, he would have been less perfect; that
    is, he would not have been God. He can never recollect nor forget;
    he can never compare, reflect, nor judge. There cannot be perfect
    intelligence without understanding; but following Coleridge,
    understanding is the faculty of judging according to sense." The
    faculty of whom? Of some person, judging according to that person's
    senses. But has "God" senses? Is there anything beyond "God" for
    God to sensate? There cannot be perfect intelligence without
    reason. By reason we mean that phase of the mind which avails
    itself of past and present experience to predicate more or less
    accurately of possible experience in the future. To God there can
    be neither past nor future, therefore to him reason is impossible.
    There cannot be perfect intelligence without will; but has God
    will? If God wills, the will of the all-powerful must be
    irresistible; the will of the infinite must exclude all other
    wills.

    God can never perceive. Perception and sensation are
    identical. Every sensation is pleasurable or painful. But God, if
    immutable, can neither be pleased nor pained. Every fresh sensation
    involves a change in mental and perhaps in physical condition. God,
    if immutable cannot change. Sensation is the source of all ideas,



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    but it is only objects external to the mind which can be sensated.
    If God be infinite there can be no objects external to him, and
    therefore sensation must be to him impossible. Yet without
    perception where is intelligence?

    God cannot have memory nor reason -- memoiy is of the past,
    reason for the future, but to God immutable there can be no past,
    no future. The words past, present, and future imply change: they
    assert progression of duration. If God be immutable, to him change
    is impossible. Can you have intelligence destitute of perception,
    memory, and reason? God cannot have the faculty of judgment --
    judgment implies in the act of judging a conjoining or dis-joining
    of two or more thoughts, but this involves change of mental
    condition. To God the immutable, change is impossible. Can you have intelligence, yet no perception, no memory, no reason, no judgment?
    God cannot think. The law of the thinkible is, that the thing
    thought must be separated from the thing which is not thought. To
    think otherwise would be to think of nothing -- to have an
    impression with no distinguishing mark would be to have no
    impression. Yet this separation implies change, and to God,
    immutable, change is impossible. In memory, the thing remembered is distinguished from the thing temporarily or permanently forgotten.
    Can God forget? Can you have intelligence without thought? If the
    Theist replies to this, that he does not mean by infinite
    intelligence, as an attribute of Deity, an affinity of the
    intelligence found in a finite degree in humankind, then he is
    bound to explain, clearly and distinctly, what other "intelligence"
    he means; and until this be done the foregoing statements require
    answer.

    The Athdist does not regard "substance" as either essentially
    intelligent or the reverse. Intelligence is the result of certain
    conditions of existence. Burnished steel is bright -- that is,
    brightness is the characteristic of a certain condition of
    existence. Alter the condition, and the characteristic of the
    condition no longer exists. The only essential of substance is
    existence. Alter, the wording of the Theest's objection: -- Matter
    is either essentially bright, or essentially non-bright. If matter
    were essentially bright, brightness should be the essence of all
    matter; but matter cannot be essentially bright, because some
    matter is not bright, therefore matter is essenteally non-bright;
    but there is brightness therefore there must be a cause for this
    brightness independent of matter -- that is, there must be an
    essentially bright being -- i.e., God.

    Another Theistic proposition is thus stated "Every effect must
    have a cause; the first cause universal must be eternal: ergo, the
    first cause universal must be God." This is equivalent to saying
    that "God" is "first cause." But what is to be understood by cause?
    Defined in the absolute the word has no real value. "Cause,"
    therefore, cannot be eternal. What can be understood by "first
    cause"? To us the two words convey no meaning greater than would be
    conveyed by the phrase "round triangle." Cause and effect are
    correlative terms -- each cause is the effect of some precedent;
    each effect the cause of its consequent. It is impossible to
    conceive existence terminated by a primal or initial cause. The
    "beginning," as it is phrased, of the universe is not thought out


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    by the Theist, but conceded without thought. To adopt the language
    of Montaigne: "Men make themselves believe that they believe." The
    so-called belief in Creation is nothing more than the prostration
    of the intellect on the threshold of the unknown. We can only
    cognize the ever-succeeding phenomena of existence as a line in
    continuous and eternal evolution. This line has to us no beginning;
    we trace it back into the misty regions of the past but a little
    way, and however far we may be able to journey there is still the
    great beyond. Then what is meant by "universal cause"? Spinoza
    gives the following definition of cause, as used in its absolute
    signification: "By cause of itself I understand that, the essence
    of which involves existence, or that, the nature of which can only
    be considered as existent." That is, Spinoza treats "cause"
    absolute and "existence" as two words having the same meaning. If
    this mode of defining the word be contested, then it has no meaning
    other than its relative signification of a means to an end. "Every
    effect must have a cause." Every effect implies the plurality of
    effects, and necessarily that each effect must be finite; but how
    is it possible from finite effect to logically deduce a universal
    -- i.e., infinite cause?

    There are two modes of argument presented by Theists, and by
    which, separately or combined, they seek to demonstrate the being
    of a God. These are familiarly known as the arguments 'a Priori'
    and 'a posterori'.

    The 'a posteriori' argument has been popularized in England by
    Paley, who has ably endeavoured to hide the weakness of his
    demonstration under an abundance of irrelevant illustrations. The
    reasoning of Paley is veiy deficient in the essential points where
    it most needed strength. It is utterly impossible to prove by it
    the eternity or infinity of Deity. As an argument founded on
    analogy, the design argument, at the best, could only entitle its
    propounder to infer the existence of a finite cause, or rather of
    a multitude of finite causes. It ought not to be forgotten that the illustrations of the eye, the watch, and the man, even if admitted
    as instances of design, or rather of adaptation, are instances of
    eyes, watches, and men, designed or adapted out of pre-existing
    substance, by a being of the same kind of substance, and afford,
    therefore, no demonstration in favour of a designer alleged to have
    actually created substance out of nothing, and also alleged to have
    created a substance entirely different from himself.

    The illustrations of alleged adaptation or design in animal
    life in its embryonic stages are thus dealt with by the late George
    Henry Lewes: "What rational interpretation can be given to the
    succession of phases each embryo is forced to pass through? None of
    these phases has any adaptation to the future state of the animal;
    they are in positive contradiction to it, or are simply
    purposeless; many of them have no adaptation, even in its embryonic
    state. What doe's the fact imply? There is not a single known
    organism which is not developed out of simpler forms. Before it can
    attain the complex structure which distinguishes it, there must be
    an evolution of forms which distinguish the structures of organisms
    lower in the series. On the hypothesis of a plan which prearranged
    the organic world, nothing could be more unworthy of a supreme
    intelligence than this inability to construct an organism at once,


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    without making several tentative efforts, undoing to-day what was
    so carefully done yesterday, and repeating for centuries the same
    tentatives and the same corrections in the same succession. Do not
    let us blink this consideration. There is a traditional phrase
    which is in vogue amongst Anthropomorphists -- a phrase which has
    become a sort of argument -- 'the Great Architect.' But if we were
    to admit the human point of view, a glance at the facts of
    embryology must produce very uncomfortable reflexions. For what
    shall we say to an architect who was unable -- or, being able, was
    obstinotely unwilling -- to erect a palace, except by first his
    materials in the shape of a but, then pulling them down and
    rebuilding them as a cottage, then adding storey to storey, and
    room to room, not with any reference to the ultimate purposes of a
    palace, but wholly with reference to the way in which houses were
    constructed in ancient times? Would there be a chorus of applause
    from the Institute of Architects, and favourable notices in
    newspapers of this profound wisdom? Yet this is the sort of
    succession on which organisms are constructed. The fact has long
    been familiar; how has it been reconciled with infinite wisdom?"

    The 'a posteriori' argument can never demonstrate infinity for
    Deity. Arguing from an effect finite in extent, the most it could
    afford would be a cause sufficient for that effect, such cause
    being possibly finite in extent and duration. Professor Flint in
    his late work in advocacy of Theism concedes that "we cannot deduce
    the infinite from the finite." And as the argument does not
    demonstrate God's infinity, neither can it, for the same reason,
    make out his omniscience, as it is clearly impossible to logically
    claim infinite wisdom for a God possibly only finite. God's
    omnipotence remains unproved for the same reason, and because it is
    clearly absurd to argue that God exercises power where he may not
    be. Nor can the 'a posteriori' argument show God's absolute
    freedom, for as it does nothing more than seek to prove a finite
    God, it is quite consistent with the argumefit that God's existence
    is limited and controlled in a thousand ways. Nor does this
    argument show that God always existed; at the best, the proof is
    only that some cause, enough for the effect, existed before it, but
    there is no evidence that this cause differs from any other causes,
    which are often as transient as the effect itself. And as it does
    not demonstrate that God has always existed, neither does it
    demonstrate that he will always exist or even that he now exists.
    It is perfectly in accordance with the argument, and with the
    analogy of cause and effect, that the effect may remain after the
    cause has ceased to exist. Nor does the argument from design
    demonstrate one God. It is quite consistent with this argument that
    a separate cause existed for each effect, or mark of design
    discovered, or that several causes contributed to some or one of
    such effects. So that if the argument be true, it might result in
    a multitude of petty Deities, limited in knowledge, extent,
    duration, and power; and still worse, each one of this multitude of
    Gods may have had a cause which would also be finite in extent and
    duration, and would require another, and so on, until the design
    argument loses the reasoner amongst an innumerable crowd of
    Deities, none of whom can have the attributes claimed for God.





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    The design argument is defective as an argument from analogy,
    because it seeks to prove a Creator God who designed, but does not
    explain whether this God has been eternally designing, which would
    be absurd or, if he at some time commenced to design, what then
    induced him so to commence? It is illogical, for it seeks to prove
    an immutable Deity, by demonstrating a mutation on the part of
    Deity.

    It is unnecessary to deal specially with each of the many
    writers who have used from different stand-points the 'a
    posteriori' form of argument in order to prove the existence of
    Deity. The objections already stated apply to the whole class; and,
    although probably each illustration used by the Theistic advocate
    is capable of an elucidation entirely at variance with his
    argument, the main features of objection are the same. The argument
    'a posteriori' is a method of proof in which the premises are
    composed of some position of existing facts, and the conclusion
    asserts a position antecedent to those facts. The argument is from
    given effects to their causes. It is one form of this argument
    which asserts that a man has a moral nature, and from this seeks to
    deduce the existence of a moral governor. This form has the
    disadvantage that its premises are illusory. In alleging a moral
    nature for man, the Theist overlooks the fact that the moral nature
    of man differs somewhat in each individual, differs considerably in
    each nation, and differs entirely in some peoples. It is dependent
    on organization and education; these are influenced by climate,
    food, and mode of life. If the argument from man's nature could
    demonstrate anything, it would prove a murdering God for the
    murderer, a lascivious God for the licentious man, a dishonest God
    for the thief, and so through the various phases of human
    inclination. The 'a priori' arguments are methods of proof in which
    the matter of the premises exists in the order of conception
    antecedently to that of the conclusion. The argument is from cause
    to effect. Amongst the prominent Theistic advocates relying upon
    the 'a priori' argument in England are Dr. Samuel Clarke, the Rev.
    Moses Lowman, and William Gillespie.

    An important contribution to Theistic literature has been the
    publication of the Baird lectures on Theism. The lectures are by
    Professor Flint, who asks: "Have we sufficient evidence for
    thinking that there is a self-existent, etemal being, infinite in
    power and wisdom, and perfect in holiness and goodness, the Maker
    of heaven and earth?"

    "Theism," he affirms, "is the doctrine that the universe owes
    its existence, and continuance in existence, to the reason and will
    of a self-existent Being, who is infinitely powerful, wise, and
    good. It is the doctrine that nature has a Creator and Preserver,
    the nations a Governor, men a heavenly Father and judge." But he
    concedes that "Theism is very far from coextensive with religion.
    Religion is spread over the whole earth; Theism only over a
    comparatively small portion of it. There are but three Theistic
    religions -- the Mosaic, the Christian, and the Muhammadan. They
    are connected historically in the closest manner -- the idea of God
    having been transmitted to the two latter, and not independently
    originated by them. All other religions are Polytheistic or
    Pantheistic, or both together. Among those who, have been educated


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    in any of these heathen religions, only a few minds of rare
    penetration and power have been able to rise by their own exertions
    to a consistent Theistic belief. The God of all those among us who
    believe in God, even of those who reject Christianity, who reject
    all revelation, is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. From these
    ancient Jewish fathers the knowledge of him has historically
    descended through an unbroken succession of generations to us. We
    have inherited it from them. If it had not thus come down to us, if
    we had not been born into a society pervaded by it, there is no
    reason to suppose that we should have found it out for ourselves,
    and still less that we should merely have required to open our eyes
    in order to see it."

    If "Theism is the doctrine that the universe owes its
    existence to the reason and will of a self-existing Being who is
    infinitely powerful, wise, and good," then it is a doctrine which
    involves many difficulties and absurdities. It assumes that the
    universe has not always existed. The new existence added when the
    universe was originated was either an improvement or a
    deterioration on what had always existed; or it was in all respects
    precisely identical with what had therefore always existed. In the
    first, if the new universe was an improvement, then the previously self-existent being could not have been infinitely good. If the
    universe was a deterioration, then the creator could have scarcely
    been all-wise, or he could not have been all-powerful. If the
    universe was in all respects precisely identical with the self-
    existent being, then it must have been infinitely powerful, wise
    and good, and must have been self-existent. Any of the alternatives
    is fatal to Theism. Again, if the universe owes its existence to
    God's reason and will, God must, prior to creation, have thought
    upon the matter until he ultimately determined to create; but, if
    the creation were wise and good, it would never have been delayed
    while the infinitely wise and good reasoned about it, and, if the
    creation were not wise and good, the infinitely wise and good would
    never have commenced it. Either God willed without motive, or he
    was influenced; if he reasoned, there was -- prior to the definite
    willing -- a period of doubt or suspended judgment, all of which is inconsistent with the attributes claimed for deity by Professor
    Flint. It is hard to understand how whole nations can have been
    left by their infinitely powerful, wise, and good governor -- how
    many men can have been left by their infinitely powerful, wise, and
    good father -- without any knowledge of himself. Yet this must be
    so if, as Professor Flint conceives, Theism is spread over only a
    comparatively small portion of the earth. The moral effect of
    Christian and Muhammadan Theism on the nations influenced was well
    shown in the recent Russo-Turkish War.

    Every Theist must admit that, if a God exists, he could have
    so convinced all men of the fact of his existence that doubt,
    disagreement, or disbelief would be impossible. If he could not do
    this, he would not be omnipotent, or he would not be omniscient --
    that is, he would not be God. Every Theist must also agree that, if
    a God exists, he would wish all men to have such a clear
    consciousness of his existence and attributes, that doubt,
    disagreement, or disbelief on this subject would be impossible. And
    this, if for no other reason, because that out of doubts and
    disagreements on religion have too often resulted centuries of


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    persecution, strife, and misery, which a good God would desire to
    prevent. If God would not desire this, then he is not all good --
    that is, he is not God. But as many men have doubts, as a large
    majority of mankind have disagreements, and as some men have
    disbeliefs as to God's existence and attributes, it must follow
    that God does not exist, or that he is not all-wise, or that he is
    not all-powerful, or that he is not all-good.

    Many Theists rely on the intuitional argument. It is, perhaps,
    best to allow the Baird Lecturer to reply to, these: "Man, say
    some, knows God by immediate intuition; he needs no argument for
    his existence, because he perceives Him directly -- face to face --
    without any medium. It is easy to assert this, but obviously the
    assertion is the merest dogmatism. Not one man in a thousand who
    understands what he is affirming will dare to claim to have an
    immediate vision of God, and nothing can be more likely than that
    the man who makes such a claim is self-deluded." And Professor
    Flint urges that "What seem intuitions are often really
    inferenices, and not unfrequently errondous inferences; what seem
    the immediate dictates of pure reason, or the direct and unclouded
    perceptions of a special spiritual faculty, may be the conceits of
    fancy, or the products of habits and association, or the reflexions
    of strong feeling. A man must prove to himself, and he must prove
    to others, that what he takes to be an intuition is an intuition.
    Is that proof in this case likely to be easier or more conclusive
    than the proof of the Divine existence? The so-called immediate
    perception of God must be shown to be a perception and to be
    immediate; it must be vindicated and verified; and how this is to
    be especially if there be no other reasons for believing in God
    than itself, it is difficult to conceive. The history of religion,
    which is what ought to yield the clearest confirmation of the
    alleged intuition, appears to be from beginning to end a
    conspicuous contradiction of it. If all men have the spiritual
    power of directly beholding their Creator -- have an immediate
    vision of God -- how happens it that whole nations believe in the
    most absurd and monstrous Gods? That millions of men are ignorant
    whether there be one God or thousands?" And still more strongly he
    adds: "The opinion that man has an intuition or immediate
    perception of God is untenable; the opinion that he has an
    immediate feeling of God is absurd."

    Every child is born into the world an Atheist, and, if he
    grows into a Theist, his Deity differs with the country in which
    the believer may happen to be born, or the people amongst whom he
    may happen to be educated. The belief is the result of education or organization. This is practically conceded by Professor Flint,
    where he speaks of the God-idea as transmitted from the Jews, and
    says: "We have inherited it from them. If it had not come down to
    us, if we had not been born into a society pervaded by it, there is
    no reason to suppose that we should have found it out for
    ourselves." And, further, he maintains that a child is born "into
    blank ignorance, and, if left entirely to itself, would, probably,
    never find out as much religious truth as the most ignorant of
    parents can teach it." Religious belief is powerful in proportion
    to the want of scientific knowledge on the part of the believer.
    The more ignorant the more credulous. In the mind of the Theist
    "God" is equivalent to the sphere of the unknown; by the use of the
    word he answers, without thought, problems which might otherwise

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    obtain scientific solution. The more ignorant the Theist, the more
    numerous his Gods. Belief in God is not a faith founded on reason.
    Theism is worse than illogical; its teachings are not only without
    utility, but of itself it has nothing to teach. Separated from
    Chrisitanity with its almost innumerable sects, from Muhainmadanism
    with its numerous divisions, and separated also from every other
    preached system, Theism is a Will-o'-the-Wisp, without reality.
    Apart from orthodoxy, Theism is the veriest dreamform, without
    substance or coherence.

    What does Christian Theism teach? That the first man, made
    perfect by the all-powerful, all-wise, all-good God, was
    nevertheless imperfect, and by his imperfection brought misery into
    the world, where the all-good God must have intended misery should
    never come; that this God made men to share this misery -- men
    whose fault was their being what he made them; that this God begets
    a son, who is nevertheless his unbegotten self, and that by belief
    in the birth of God's etemal son, and in the death of the undying
    who died as sacrifice to God's vengeance, men may escape the
    consequences of the first man's error. Christian Theism declares
    that belief alone can save men, and yet recognizes the fact that
    man's belief results from teaching, by establishing missionary
    societies to spread the faith. Christian Theism teaches that God,
    though no respecter of persons, selected as his favourite one
    nation in preference to all others; that man can do no good of
    himself or without God's aid, but yet that each man has a free
    will; that God is all-powerful, but that few go to heaven, and the
    majority to hell; that all are to love God, who has predestined
    from etemity that by far the largest number of human beings are to
    be burning in hell for ever. Yet the advocates for Theism venture
    to upbraid those who argue against such a faith.

    Either Theism is true or false. If true, discussion must help
    to spread its influence; if false, the sooner it ceases to
    influence human conduct the better for human kind. This Plea for
    Atheism is put forth as a challenge to Theists to do battle for
    their cause, and in the hope that, the strugglers being sincere,
    truth may give laurels to the victor and the vanquished; laurels to
    the victor, in that he has upheld the truth; laurels which should
    be even more welcome to the vanquished, whose defeat crowns him
    with a truth he knew not of before.

    APPENDIX

    A few years ago a Nonconformist minister invited me to debate
    the question, "Is Atheism the True Doctrine of the Universe?" and
    the following was in substance my opening statement of the
    argument, which for some reason, although many letters passed, was
    never replied to by my reverend opponent.

    "By Atheism I mean the affirmation of one existence, of which
    existence I know only one mode; each mode being distinguished in
    thought by its qualities. This affirmation is a positive, not a
    negative, affirmation, and is properly describable as Atheism
    because it does not include in it any possibility of Theos. It is,
    being without God, distinctly an Atheistic affirmation. This
    Atheism affirms that the Atheist knows only qualities, and only
    knows these qualities as the characteristics of modes. By

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    'existence' I mean the totality of phenomena and all that has been,
    is, or may be necessary for the happening of any and every
    phenomenon. By 'mode' I mean each cognized condition (phenomenon or
    aggregation of phenomena). By 'quality' I mean that characteristic,
    or each of those characteristics, by which in thought I distinguish
    that which I think. The word 'universe' is with me an equivalent
    for 'existence.'

    Either Atheism or Theism must be the true doctrine of the
    Universe. I assume here that no other theory is thinkable. Theism
    is either Pantheism, Polytheism, or Monotheism. There is, I submit,
    no other conceivable category. Pantheism affirms one existence, but
    declares that some qualities are infinite -- e.g., that existence
    is intelligent. Atheism only affirms qualities for phenomena. We
    know each phenomenon by its qualities; we know no qualities except
    as qualities of some phenomenon. By infinite I mean illimitable.
    Phenomena are, of coursd, finite. By intelligent I mean able to
    think. Polytheism affirms several Theistic existences -- this
    affirmation being nearly self-contradictory -- and so usually
    affirms at least one non-theistic existence. Monotheism affirms at
    least two existences: that is, the Theos and that which the Theos
    has created and rules. Atheism denies alike the reasonableness of
    Polytheism, Pantheism, and Monotheism. Any affirmation of more than
    one existence is on the force of the affirmation an absolute self- contradiction, if infinity be pretended for either of the
    existences affirmed. The word 'Theos' or 'God' has for me no
    meaning. I am obliged, therefore, to try to collect its meaning as
    expressed by Theists, who, however, do not seem to me to be either
    clear or agreed as to the words by which their Theism may be best
    expressed. For the purpose of this argument I take Monotheism to be
    the doctrine 'that the universe owes its existence and continuance
    in existence to the wisdom and will of a supreme, self-existent,
    eternal, infinite, omnipotent, ormiscient, righteous, and
    benevolent personal being, who is distinct from and independent of
    what he has created.' By wisdom and will I mean that which I should
    mean using the same words of any animal able to perceive, remember,
    reflect, judge, and determine, and active in that ability or those
    abilities. By supreme I mean highest in any relation of comparison.
    By self-existent I mean that the conception of which, if it be
    conceivable, does not involve the conception of antecedent or
    consequent. By eternal and infinite I mean illimitable in duration
    and extent. By 'omnipotent' I mean supreme in power over
    everything. By omniscient, knowing everything. By 'righteous and
    benevolent' I mean that which the best educated opinion would mean
    when applying those words to human beings. This doctrine of
    Monotheism appears to me to be flatly contradicted by the phenomena
    we know. It is inconsistent with that observed uniformity of
    happening usually described as law of nature. By law of nature I
    mean observed order of event. The word 'nature' is another
    equivalent for the worti universe or existence. By uniformity of
    happening I mean that, given certain conditions, certain results
    always ensue vary the conditions, the results vary. I do not attack
    specially either the Polytheistic, Pantheistic, or Monotheistic
    presentments of Theism. To me any pretence of Theism seems
    impossible if Monism be conceded, and, therefore, at present, I
    rest content in affir&uing one existence. If Monism be true, and
    Atheism be Monism, then Atheism is necessarily the true theory of


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    A PLEA FOR ATHETSM

    the universe. I submit that 'there cannot be more than one ultimate explanation' of the universe. That any 'tracing back to two or
    more' existences is illogical, and that as it is only by 'reaching
    unity' that we can have a reasonable conclusion, it is necessary
    'that every form of Dualism should be rejected as a theory of the
    universe.' If every form of Dualism be rejected, Monism -- i.e.,
    Atheism -- alone remains, and is therefore the true and only
    doctrine of the universe."

    **** ****

    Speaking of the prevalence of what he describes as "a form of agnosticism," the editor of the 'Spectator' writes: "We think we
    see signs of a disposition to declare that the great problem is
    insoluble, that whatever rules, be it a mind or only a force, he or
    it does not intend the truth to be known, if there is a truth, and
    to go on, both in action and speculation, as if the problem had no
    existence. That is the condition of mind, we know, of many of the
    cultivated who are not sceptics, nor doubters, nor inquirers, but
    who think they are as certain of their point as they are that the
    circle will not be squared. They are, they think, in the presence
    of a recurring decimal, and they are not going to spend life in the
    effort to resolve it. If no God exists, they will save their time;
    and if he does exist, he must have set up the impenetrable wall. A
    distinct belief of that kind, not a vague, pulpy impression, but a
    formulated belief, exists, we know, in the most unsuspected places,
    its holders not unfrequently professing Christianity, as at all
    events the best of the illusions; and it has sunk very far down in
    the ladder of society. We find it catch classes which have suddenly
    become aware that there is a serious doubt afloat and have caught
    something of its extent and force, till they fancy they have in the
    doubt a revelation as certainly true as they once thought the old
    certainty." Surely an active, honest Atheism is to be preferred to
    the state of mind described in the latter part of the passage we
    have just quoted.
    **** ****

    Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.

    The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
    scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
    suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
    Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
    nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
    religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
    the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
    that America can again become what its Founders intended --

    The Free Market-Place of Ideas.

    The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
    hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
    and information for today. If you have such books, magazines,
    newspapers, pamphlets, etc. please send us a list that includes
    Title, Author, publication date, condition and price desired, and
    we will give them back to America.

    **** ****

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