He is a British ethologist, evolutionary biologist and author. He is an emeritus fellow of New College.
has helped steer evolutionary science into the 21st century. In recent years, his devastating critique of
religion has made him a leading figure in the New Atheism.
As an evolutionary biologist, Richard Dawkins has broadened our understanding of the genetic origin of our species;
as a popular author, he has helped lay readers understand complex scientific concepts. He's best-known for the ideas
laid out in his landmark book The Selfish Gene and fleshed out in The Extended Phenotype: the rather radical notion
that Darwinian selection happens not at the level of the individual, but at the level of our DNA. The implication:
We evolved for only one purpose — to serve our genes.
(1941 - )
We evolved for only one purpose — to serve our genes
~ Richard Dawkins
Anybody who objects to cloning on principle has to answer to all the identical twins in the world who might be insulted by the thought
that there is something offensive about their very existence. Clones are simply identical twins.
~ Richard Dawkins
We are survival machines -- robot vehicles blindly programmed to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes.
~ Richard Dawkins
Arguments for the existence of God have been codified for centuries
by theologians, and supplemented by others, including purveyors of
misconceived 'common sense'.
~ Richard Dawkins
There is a popular cliché, which says that you cannot get out of computers any more than you put in.
Other versions are that computers only do exactly what you tell them to, and that therefore computers are never creative.
The cliché is true only in the crashingly trivial sense, the same sense in which Shakespeare never wrote anything except
what his first schoolteacher taught him to write - words.
~ Richard Dawkins
You could almost define a philosopher as someone who won't take common sense for an answer.
~ Richard Dawkins
The whole point of religious faith, its strength and chief glory, is that it does not depend on rational justification. The rest of us
are expected to defend our prejudices. But ask a religious person to justify their faith and you infringe 'religious liberty'.
~ Richard Dawkins
Most thoughtful people would agree that morality in the absence of policing is somehow more truly
moral than the kind of false morality that vanishes as soon as the police go on strike or the spy camera is switched
off, whether the spy camera is a real one monitored in the police station or an imaginary one in heaven.
~ Richard Dawkins
Does religion fill a much needed gap? It is often said that there is a God-shaped gap in the brain which needs to
be filled: we have a psychological need for God -- imaginary friend, father, big brother, confessor, confidant --
and the need has to be satisfied whether God really exists or not.
~ Richard Dawkins
Could it be that God clutters up a gap that
we'd be better off filling with something else? Science, perhaps? Art? Human friendship? Humanism? Love of this
life in the real world, giving no credence to other lives beyond the grave?
~ Richard Dawkins
We don't immediately scent
extreme improbability. We can have an interesting argument based
on incomplete evidence, and we can write down the kind of
evidence that would decrease our uncertainty.
~ Richard Dawkins
Christianity, just as much as Islam, teaches children that unquestioned faith is a virtue. You don't have to make the case for what you
believe. If somebody announces that it is part of his faith, the rest of society, whether of the same faith, or another, or of none, is
obliged, by ingrained custom, to "respect" it without question; respect it until the day it manifests itself in a horrible massacre
like the destruction of the World Trade Center, or the London or Madrid bombings.
~ Richard Dawkins
Beliefs. Once entrenched in a culture, they persist, evolve and diverge, in a manner reminiscent of biological evolution.
~ Richard Dawkins
Human psychology has a near universal tendency to let belief be coloured by desire.
~ Richard Dawkins
All religious beliefs seem weird to those not brought up in them.
~ Richard Dawkins
Nothing simply rhythmic, then, would announce our intelligent
presence to the waiting universe. Prime numbers are often
mentioned as the recipe of choice, since it is difficult to think of a
purely physical process that could generate them.
~ Richard Dawkins
Whether we ever get to know about them or not, there are very probably alien civilizations that are superhuman,
to the point of being god-like in ways that exceed anything a theologian could possibly imagine.
Their technical achievements would seem as supernatural to us as ours would seem to a Dark Age peasant transported to the twenty-first
century. Imagine his response to a laptop computer, a mobile telephone, a hydrogen bomb or a jumbo jet.
~ Richard Dawkins
It is an essential part of the scientific enterprise to admit ignorance, even to exult in ignorance as a challenge to future conquests.
~ Richard Dawkins
If God is omniscient, he must already know how he is going to intervene
to change the course of history using his omnipotence. But that means
he can't change his mind about his intervention, which means he is not
omnipotent.
~ Richard Dawkins
False beliefs can be every bit as consoling as true ones, right up until the moment of disillusionment.
~ Richard Dawkins
The crucial difference between gods and god-like extraterrestrials lies not in their properties but in their provenance.
~ Richard Dawkins
We do not - even the religious among us - ground our morality in holy books, no matter what we
may fondly imagine. How, then, do we decide what is right and
what is wrong? No matter how we answer that question, there is a
consensus about what we do as a matter of fact consider right and
wrong: a consensus that prevails surprisingly widely. The consensus
has no obvious connection with religion. It extends, however, to
most religious people, whether or not they think their morals come
from scripture.
~ Richard Dawkins
It is a commonplace that good historians don't judge statements
from past times by the standards of their own. Abraham Lincoln,
like Huxley, was ahead of his time, yet his views on matters of race
also sound backwardly racist in ours.
~ Richard Dawkins
The truth of the holy book is an
axiom, not the end product of a process of reasoning. The book is
true, and if the evidence seems to contradict it, it is the evidence
that must be thrown out, not the book.
~ Richard Dawkins
My belief in evolution is not fundamentalism, and it is not faith, because I know what it
would take to change my mind, and I would gladly do so if the necessary evidence were forthcoming.
~ Richard Dawkins
As a scientist, I am hostile to fundamentalist religion because it actively debauches the
scientific enterprise. It teaches us not to change our minds, and not to want to know exciting things that are
available to be known.
~ Richard Dawkins
He was a powerful man in his own right, who turned the Soviet Union from a backward country into a world superpower at unimaginable human cost. His life was full of controversial decisions and political choices. His regime of terror caused the death and suffering of tens of millions, but he also oversaw the war machine that played a key role in the defeat of Nazism. He is considered one of the most influential and murderous dictators in history of the 20th century and dictator of the Soviet Union for nearly a quarter of a century.
(1879 - 1953)
There is a wisdom of the head, and a wisdom of the heart.
~ Charles Dickens
Life isn't about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself.
~ George Bernard Shaw
You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist.
~ Friedrich NietzscheMore Proverbs
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