Constructivist epistemology is a branch in philosophy of science
maintaining that scientific knowledge is constructed by the scientific
community, who seek to measure and construct models of the natural
world. Natural science therefore consists of mental constructs that aim to explain sensory experience and measurements.
According to constructivists, the world is independent of human
minds, but knowledge of the world is always a human and social
construction. Constructivism opposes the philosophy of objectivism,
embracing the belief that a human can come to know the truth about the
natural world not mediated by scientific approximations with different
degrees of validity and accuracy.
According to constructivists there is no single valid methodology in science, but rather a diversity of useful methods.
Origin of the term
The term originates from psychology, education, and social constructivism. The expression "constructivist epistemology" was first used by Jean Piaget, 1967, with plural form in the famous article from the "Encyclopédie de la Pléiade" Logique et connaissance scientifique or "Logic and Scientific knowledge", an important text for epistemology. He refers directly to the mathematician Brouwer and his radical constructivism.
The terms Constructionism and constructivism are
often, but should not be, used interchangeably. Constructionism is an
approach to learning that was developed by Papert; the approach was
greatly influenced by his work with Piaget, but it is very different.
Constructionism involves the creation of a product to show learning. It is believed by constructivists that representations of physical and biological reality, including race, sexuality, and gender, as well as tables, chairs and atoms are socially constructed. Marx
was among the first to suggest such an ambitious expansion of the power
of ideas to inform the material realities of people's lives.
History
Constructivism
stems from a number of philosophies. For instance, early development
can be attributed to the thought of Greek philosophers such as Heraclitus (Everything flows, nothing stands still), Protagoras (Man is the measure of all things).
Protagoras is clearly represented by Plato and hence the tradition as a
relativist. The Pyrrhonist sceptics have also been so interpreted.
(Although this is more contentious.)
Following the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, with the phenomenology and the event, Kant gives a decisive contradiction to Cartesians' epistemology that has grown since Descartes despite Giambattista Vico calling in Scienza nuova ("New Science") in 1725 that "the norm of the truth is to have made it". The Enlightenment's claim of the universality of Reason
as the only true source of knowledge generated a Romantic reaction
involving an emphasis on the separate natures of races, species, sexes
and types of human.
Gaston Bachelard,
who is known for his physics psychoanalysis and the definition of an
"epistemologic obstacle" that can disturb a changing of scientific
paradigm as the one that occurred between classical mechanics and
Einstein's relativism, opens the teleological way with "The meditation
on the object takes the form of the project". In the following famous
saying, he insists that the ways in which questions are posed determines
the trajectory of scientific movement, before summarizing "nothing is
given, all is constructed" : "And, irrespective of what one might
assume, in the life of a science, problems do not arise by themselves.
It is precisely this that marks out a problem as being of the true
scientific spirit: all knowledge is in response to a question. If there
were no question, there would be no scientific knowledge. Nothing
proceeds from itself. Nothing is given. All is constructed.", Gaston
Bachelard (La formation de l'esprit scientifique, 1934). While quantum mechanics is starting to grow, Gaston Bachelard makes a call for a new science in Le nouvel esprit scientifique (The New Scientific Spirit).
Paul Valéry,
French poet (20th century) reminds us of the importance of
representations and action: "We have always sought explanations when it
was only representations that we could seek to invent", "My hand feels
touched as well as it touches; reality says this, and nothing more".
This link with action, which could be called a "philosophy of action", was well represented by Spanish poet Antonio Machado: Caminante, no hay camino, se hace camino al andar.
Ludwik Fleck establishes scientific constructivism by introducing the notions of thought collective (Denkkollektiv), and thought style (Denkstil),
through which the evolution of science is much more understandable,
because the research objects can be described in terms of the
assumptions (thought style) that are shared for practical but also
inherently social reasons, or just because any thought collective tends
to preserve itself. These notions have been drawn upon by Thomas Kuhn.
Norbert Wiener gives another defense of teleology in 1943 Behavior, Intention and Teleology and is one of the creators of cybernetics.
Jean Piaget,
after the creation in 1955 of the International Centre for Genetic
Epistemology in Geneva, first uses the expression "constructivist
epistemologies" (see above). According to Ernst von Glasersfeld, Jean Piaget is "the great pioneer of the constructivist theory of knowing" (in An Exposition of Constructivism: Why Some Like it Radical, 1990) and "the most prolific constructivist in our century" (in Aspects of Radical Constructivism, 1996).
J. L. Austin is associated with the view that speech is not only passively describing a given reality, but it can change the (social) reality to which it is applied through speech acts.
Herbert A. Simon
called "the sciences of the artificial" these new sciences
(cybernetics, cognitive sciences, decision and organisation sciences)
that, because of the abstraction of their object (information,
communication, decision), cannot match with the classical epistemology
and its experimental method and refutability.
Gregory Bateson and his book Steps to an Ecology of Mind (1972).
Heinz von Foerster,
invited by Jean Piaget, presented "Objects: tokens for
(Eigen-)behaviours" in 1976 in Geneva at a genetic epistemology
symposium, a text that would become a reference for constructivist
epistemology.
Paul Watzlawick, who supervised in 1984 the publication of Invented Reality: How Do We Know What We Believe We Know? (Contributions to constructivism).
Ernst von Glasersfeld, who has promoted since the end of the 70s radical constructivism (see below).
Edgar Morin and his book La méthode (1977–2004, six volumes).
Niklas Luhmann
who developed "operative constructivism" in the course of developing
his theory of autopoietic social systems, drawing on the works of (among
others) Bachelard, Valéry, Bateson, von Foerster, von Glasersfeld and
Morin.
Constructivism and sciences
Social constructivism in sociology
One version of social constructivism contends that categories
of knowledge and reality are actively created by social relationships
and interactions. These interactions also alter the way in which
scientific episteme is organized.
Thomas Kuhn
argued that changes in scientists' views of reality not only contain
subjective elements, but result from group dynamics, "revolutions" in
scientific practice and changes in "paradigms".[4] As an example, Kuhn suggested that the Sun-centric Copernican "revolution"
replaced the Earth-centric views of Ptolemy not because of empirical
failures, but because of a new "paradigm" that exerted control over what
scientists felt to be the more fruitful way to pursue their goals.
But paradigm debates are not
really about relative problem-solving ability, though for good reasons
they are usually couched in those terms. Instead, the issue is which
paradigm should in future guide research on problems many of which
neither competitor can yet claim to resolve completely. A decision
between alternate ways of practicing science is called for, and in the
circumstances that decision must be based less on past achievement than
on future promise. ... A decision of that kind can only be made on
faith.
— Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, pp 157-8
The view of reality as accessible only through models was called model-dependent realism by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow.
While not rejecting an independent reality, model-dependent realism
says that we can know only an approximation of it provided by the
intermediary of models.
These models evolve over time as guided by scientific inspiration and experiment.
In the field of the social sciences, constructivism as an
epistemology urges that researchers reflect upon the paradigms that may
be underpinning their research, and in the light of this that they
become more open to consider other ways of interpreting any results of
the research. Furthermore, the focus is on presenting results as
negotiable constructs rather than as models that aim to "represent"
social realities more or less accurately. Norma Romm in her book
Accountability in Social Research (2001) argues that social researchers
can earn trust from participants and wider audiences insofar as they
adopt this orientation and invite inputs from others regarding their
inquiry practices and the results thereof.
Constructivism and psychology
In psychology,
constructivism refers to many schools of thought that, though
extraordinarily different in their techniques (applied in fields such as
education and psychotherapy),
are all connected by a common critique of previous standard approaches,
and by shared assumptions about the active constructive nature of human
knowledge. In particular, the critique is aimed at the "associationist"
postulate of empiricism, "by which the mind is conceived as a passive
system that gathers its contents from its environment and, through the
act of knowing, produces a copy of the order of reality."
In contrast, "constructivism is an epistemological premise
grounded on the assertion that, in the act of knowing, it is the human
mind that actively gives meaning and order to that reality to which it
is responding".
The constructivist psychologies theorize about and investigate how human
beings create systems for meaningfully understanding their worlds and
experiences.
Constructivism and education
Joe L. Kincheloe
has published numerous social and educational books on critical
constructivism (2001, 2005, 2008), a version of constructivist
epistemology that places emphasis on the exaggerated influence of
political and cultural power in the construction of knowledge,
consciousness, and views of reality. In the contemporary mediated
electronic era, Kincheloe argues, dominant modes of power have never
exerted such influence on human affairs. Coming from a critical pedagogical
perspective, Kincheloe argues that understanding a critical
constructivist epistemology is central to becoming an educated person
and to the institution of just social change.
Kincheloe's characteristics of critical constructivism:
Knowledge is socially constructed: World and information co-construct one another
Consciousness is a social construction
Political struggles: Power plays an exaggerated role in the production of knowledge and consciousness
The necessity of understanding consciousness—even though it does not
lend itself to traditional reductionistic modes of measurability
The importance of uniting logic and emotion in the process of knowledge and producing knowledge
The inseparability of the knower and the known
The centrality of the perspectives of oppressed peoples—the value of
the insights of those who have suffered as the result of existing
social arrangements
The existence of multiple realities: Making sense of a world far more complex that we originally imagined
Becoming humble knowledge workers: Understanding our location in the tangled web of reality
Standpoint epistemology: Locating ourselves in the web of reality, we are better equipped to produce our own knowledges
Constructing practical knowledge for critical social action
Complexity: Overcoming reductionism
Knowledge is always entrenched in a larger process
The centrality of interpretation: Critical hermeneutics
The new frontier of classroom knowledge: Personal experiences intersecting with pluriversal information
Constructing new ways of being human: Critical ontology
Constructivist trends
Cultural constructivism
Cultural
constructivism asserts that knowledge and reality are a product of
their cultural context, meaning that two independent cultures will
likely form different observational methodologies.
Radical constructivism
Ernst von Glasersfeld
was a prominent proponent of radical constructivism. This claims that
knowledge is not a commodity which is transported from one mind into
another. Rather, it is up to the individual to "link up" specific
interpretations of experiences and ideas with their own reference of
what is possible and viable. That is, the process of constructing
knowledge, of understanding, is dependent on the individual's subjective
interpretation of their active experience, not what "actually" occurs.
Understanding and acting are seen by radical constructivists not as
dualistic processes, but "circularly conjoined".
Constructivist Foundations is a free online journal publishing peer reviewed articles on radical constructivism by researchers from multiple domains.
Relational constructivism
Relational constructivism
can be perceived as a relational consequence of the radical
constructivism. In contrary to social constructivism, it picks up the
epistemological threads and maintains the radical constructivist idea
that humans cannot overcome their limited conditions of reception (i.e. self referentially operating cognition). Therefore, humans are not able to come to objective conclusions about the world.
In spite of the subjectivity of human constructions of reality,
relational constructivism focusses on the relational conditions applying
to human perceptional processes. Björn Kraus puts it in a nutshell:
It is substantial for relational
constructivism that it basically originates from an epistemological
point of view, thus from the subject and its construction processes.
Coming from this perspective it then focusses on the (not only social,
but also material) relations under which these cognitive construction
processes are performed. Consequently, it‘s not only about social
construction processes, but about cognitive construction processes
performed under certain relational conditions.“
Critical constructivism
A series of articles published in the journal Critical Inquiry (1991) served as a manifesto for the movement of critical constructivism in various disciplines, including the natural sciences. Not only truth and reality, but also "evidence", "document", "experience", "fact", "proof", and other central categories of empirical research (in physics, biology, statistics, history, law,
etc.) reveal their contingent character as a social and ideological
construction. Thus, a "realist" or "rationalist" interpretation is
subjected to criticism. Kincheloe's political and pedagogical notion
(above) has emerged as a central articulation of the concept.
While recognizing the constructedness of reality, many
representatives of this critical paradigm deny philosophy the task of
the creative construction of reality. They eagerly criticize realistic
judgments, but they do not move beyond analytic procedures based on
subtle tautologies. They thus remain in the critical paradigm and consider it to be a standard of scientific philosophy per se.
Genetic epistemology
James Mark Baldwin invented this expression, which was later popularized by Jean Piaget. From 1955 to 1980, Piaget was Director of the International Centre for Genetic Epistemology in Geneva.
Et, quoi qu'on en dise, dans la vie scientifique, les
problèmes ne se posent pas d'eux-mêmes. C'est précisément ce sens du
problème qui donne la marque du véritable esprit scientifique. Pour un
esprit scientifique, toute connaissance est une réponse à une question.
S'il n'y a pas eu de question, il ne peut y avoir de connaissance
scientifique. Rien ne va de soi. Rien n'est donné. Tout est construit, Gaston Bachelard in "La formation de l'esprit scientifique" (1934)
"And, irrespective of what one might assume, in the
sciences, problems do not arise by themselves. It is, precisely,
because all problems are posed that they embody the scientific spirit.
If there were no question, there would be no scientific knowledge.
Nothing proceeds from itself. Nothing is given. All is constructed."
On a toujours cherché des explications quand c'était des représentations qu'on pouvait seulement essayer d'inventer, Paul Valéry
"We have always sought explanations when it was only representations that we could seek to invent"
Ma main se sent touchée aussi bien qu'elle touche ; réel veut dire cela, et rien de plus, Paul Valéry
"My hand feels touched as well as it touches; real means this, and nothing more"
Intelligence organizes the world by organizing itself, Jean Piaget en "la construction du réel chez l'enfant" (1937)
Criticisms
Numerous
criticisms have been leveled at Constructivist epistemology. The most
common one is that it either explicitly advocates or implicitly reduces
to relativism.
This is because it takes the concept of truth to be a socially
"constructed" (and thereby socially relative) one. This leads to the
charge of self-refutation: if what is to be regarded as "true" is relative to a particular social formation, then this very conception of truth
must itself be only regarded as being "true" in this society. In
another social formation, it may well be false. If so, then social
constructivism itself would be false in that social formation. Further,
one could then say that social constructivism could be both true and
false simultaneously.
Another criticism of constructivism is that it holds that the
concepts of two different social formations be entirely different and
incommensurate. This being the case, it is impossible to make
comparative judgements about statements made according to each
worldview. This is because the criteria of judgement will themselves
have to be based on some worldview or other. If this is the case, then
it brings into question how communication between them about the truth
or falsity of any given statement could be established.
The Wittgensteinian philosopher Gavin Kitching argues that constructivists usually implicitly presuppose a deterministic
view of language which severely constrains the minds and use of words
by members of societies: they are not just "constructed" by language on
this view, but are literally "determined" by it. Kitching notes the
contradiction here: somehow the advocate of constructivism is not
similarly constrained. While other individuals are controlled by the
dominant concepts of society, the advocate of constructivism can
transcend these concepts and see through them.
Atheism (derived from the Ancient Greekἄθεοςatheos meaning "without gods; godless; secular; denying or disdaining the gods, especially officially sanctioned gods") is the absence or rejection of the belief that deities
exist. The English term was used at least as early as the sixteenth
century and atheistic ideas and their influence have a longer history.
Over the centuries, atheists have supported their lack of belief in gods
through a variety of avenues, including scientific, philosophical, and
ideological notions.
In the East, a contemplative life not centered on the idea of deities began in the sixth century BCE with the rise of Jainism, Buddhism, and various sects of Hinduism in India, and of Taoism in China. Within the astika ("orthodox") schools of Hindu philosophy, the Samkhya and the early Mimamsa school did not accept a creator deity in their respective systems. The Vedas of Ceylon
admitted only the possibility that deities might exist but went no
further. Neither prayers nor sacrifices were suggested in any way by the
tribes.
Philosophical atheist thought began to appear in Europe and Asia in the sixth or fifth century BCE. Will Durant, in his The Story of Civilization, explained that certain pygmy
tribes found in Africa were observed to have no identifiable cults or
rites. There were no totems, no deities, and no spirits. Their dead were
buried without special ceremonies or accompanying items and received no
further attention. They even appeared to lack simple superstitions,
according to travelers' reports.
Indian philosophy
In the East, a contemplative life not centered on the idea of deities began in the sixth century BCE with the rise of Jainism, Buddhism, and various sects of Hinduism in India, and of Taoism
in China. These religions offered a philosophic and salvific path not
involving deity worship. Deities are not seen as necessary to the
salvific goal of the early Buddhist tradition, their reality is
explicitly questioned and often rejected. There is a fundamental
incompatibility between the notion of gods and basic Buddhist
principles, at least in some interpretations.
Within the astika ("orthodox") schools of Hindu philosophy, the Samkhya and the early Mimamsa school did not accept a creator-deity in their respective systems.
The principal text of the Samkhya school, the Samkhya Karika, was written by Ishvara Krishna
in the fourth century CE, by which time it was already a dominant Hindu
school. The origins of the school are much older and are lost in
legend. The school was both dualistic and atheistic. They believed in a
dual existence of Prakriti ("nature") and Purusha ("spirit") and had no place for an Ishvara
("God") in its system, arguing that the existence of Ishvara cannot be
proved and hence cannot be admitted to exist. The school dominated Hindu
philosophy in its day, but declined after the tenth century, although
commentaries were still being written as late as the sixteenth century.
The foundational text for the Mimamsa school is the Purva Mimamsa Sutras of Jaimini (c. third to first century BCE). The school reached its height c. 700 CE, and for some time in the Early Middle Ages exerted near-dominant influence on learned Hindu thought. The Mimamsa school saw their primary enquiry was into the nature of dharma based on close interpretation of the Vedas. Its core tenets were ritualism (orthopraxy), antiasceticism and antimysticism. The early Mimamsakas believed in an adrishta ("unseen") that is the result of performing karmas ("works") and saw no need for an Ishvara ("God") in their system. Mimamsa persists in some subschools of Hinduism today.
Cārvāka
The thoroughly materialistic and antireligious philosophical Cārvāka school that originated in India with the Bārhaspatya-sūtras
(final centuries BCE) is probably the most explicitly atheist school of
philosophy in the region. The school grew out of the generic skepticism
in the Mauryan period. Already in the sixth century BCE, Ajita Kesakambalin,
was quoted in Pali scriptures by the Buddhists with whom he was
debating, teaching that "with the break-up of the body, the wise and the
foolish alike are annihilated, destroyed. They do not exist after
death."
Cārvākan philosophy is now known principally from its Astika and Buddhist
opponents. The proper aim of a Cārvākan, according to these sources,
was to live a prosperous, happy, productive life in this world. The Tattvopaplavasimha of Jayarashi Bhatta
(c. 8th century) is sometimes cited as a surviving Carvaka text. The
school appears to have died out sometime around the fifteenth century.
Buddhism
The nonadherence to the notion of a supreme deity or a prime mover is seen by many as a key distinction between Buddhism and other religions. While Buddhist traditions do not deny the existence of supernatural beings (many are discussed in Buddhist scripture),
it does not ascribe powers, in the typical Western sense, for creation,
salvation or judgement, to the "gods", however, praying to enlightened
deities is sometimes seen as leading to some degree of spiritual merit.
Buddhists accept the existence of beings in higher realms, known as devas, but they, like humans, are said to be suffering in samsara, and not particularly wiser than we are. In fact the Buddha is often portrayed as a teacher of the deities, and superior to them. Despite this they do have some enlightened Devas in the path of buddhahood.
Jainism
Jains see their tradition as eternal. Organized Jainism can be dated back to Parshva who lived in the ninth century BCE, and, more reliably, to Mahavira, a teacher of the sixth century BCE, and a contemporary of the Buddha. Jainism is a dualistic religion with the universe made up of matter and souls.
The universe, and the matter and souls within it, is eternal and
uncreated, and there is no omnipotent creator deity in Jainism. There
are, however, "gods" and other spirits who exist within the universe and
Jains believe that the soul can attain "godhood"; however, none of
these supernatural beings exercise any sort of creative activity or have
the capacity or ability to intervene in answers to prayers.
In Western classical Antiquity, theism was the fundamental belief that supported the legitimacy of the state (the polis, later the Roman Empire). Historically, any person who did not believe in any deity supported by the state was fair game to accusations of atheism, a capital crime. For political reasons, Socrates in Athens (399 BCE) was accused of being atheos ("refusing to acknowledge the gods recognized by the state").
Christians in Rome were also considered subversive to the state religion and persecuted as atheists. Thus, charges of atheism, meaning the subversion of religion, were often used similarly to charges of heresy and impiety as a political tool to eliminate enemies.
Presocratic philosophy
The roots of Western philosophy
began in the Greek world in the sixth century BCE. The first Hellenic
philosophers were not atheists, but they attempted to explain the world
in terms of the processes of nature instead of by mythological accounts.
Thus lightning was the result of "wind breaking out and parting the clouds", and earthquakes occurred when "the earth is considerably altered by heating and cooling". The early philosophers often criticized traditional religious notions. Xenophanes
(6th century BCE) famously said that if cows and horses had hands,
"then horses would draw the forms of gods like horses, and cows like
cows". Another philosopher, Anaxagoras (5th century BCE), claimed that the Sun was "a fiery mass, larger than the Peloponnese"; a charge of impiety was brought against him, and he was forced to flee Athens.
The first fully materialistic philosophy was produced by the atomistsLeucippus and Democritus (5th century BCE), who attempted to explain the formation and development of the world in terms of the chance movements of atoms moving in infinite space.
Euripides (480–406 BCE), in his play Bellerophon, had the eponymous main character say:
Doth some one say that there be gods above?
There are not; no, there are not. Let no fool,
Led by the old false fable, thus deceive you.
A fragment from the lost satyr playSisyphus, which has been attributed to both Critias and Euripides, claims that a clever man invented "the fear of the gods" in order to frighten people into behaving morally.
This statement, however, originally did not mean that the gods
themselves were nonexistent, but rather that their powers were a hoax.
Aristophanes (ca. 448–380 BCE), known for his satirical style, wrote in his play the Knights:
"Shrines! Shrines! Surely you don't believe in the gods. What's your argument? Where's your proof?"
The Sophists
In the fifth century BCE the Sophists began to question many of the traditional assumptions of Greek culture. Prodicus of Ceos was said to have believed that "it was the things which were serviceable to human life that had been regarded as gods", and Protagoras stated at the beginning of a book that "With regard to the gods I am unable to say either that they exist or do not exist".
In the late fifth century BCE, the Greek lyric poetDiagoras of Melos was sentenced to death in Athens under the charge of being a "godless person" (ἄθεος) after he made fun of the Eleusinian Mysteries, but he fled the city to escape punishment. Later writers have cited Diagoras as the "first atheist", but he was probably not an atheist in the modern sense of the word. Somewhat later (c. 300 BCE), the Cyrenaic philosopher Theodorus of Cyrene is supposed to have denied that gods exist and wrote a book On the Gods expounding his views.
Euhemerus
(c. 330–260 BCE) published his view that the gods were only the deified
rulers, conquerors, and founders of the past, and that their cults and
religions were in essence the continuation of vanished kingdoms and
earlier political structures. Although Euhemerus was later criticized for having "spread atheism over the whole inhabited earth by obliterating the gods", his worldview was not atheist in a strict and theoretical sense, because he differentiated that the primordial deities were "eternal and imperishable".
Some historians have argued that he merely aimed at reinventing the old
religions in the light of the beginning of deification of political
rulers such as Alexander the Great. Euhemerus' work was translated into Latin by Ennius, possibly to mythographically pave the way for the planned divinization of Scipio Africanus in Rome.
Epicureanism
The most important Greek thinker in the development of atheism was Epicurus (c. 300 BCE).
Drawing on the ideas of Democritus and the Atomists, he espoused a
materialistic philosophy according to which the universe was governed by
the laws of chance without the need for divine intervention (see scientific determinism). Although Epicurus still maintained that the gods existed, he believed that they were uninterested in human affairs. The aim of the Epicureans was to attain ataraxia
("peace of mind") and one important way of doing this was by exposing
fear of divine wrath as irrational. The Epicureans also denied the
existence of an afterlife and the need to fear divine punishment after
death.
One of the most eloquent expressions of Epicurean thought is Lucretius' On the Nature of Things
(1st century BCE) in which he held that gods exist but argued that
religious fear was one the chief cause of human unhappiness and that the
gods did not involve themselves in the world.The Epicureans also denied the existence of an afterlife and hence dismissed the fear of death.
Epicurians denied being atheist but their critics insisted. One
explanation for this kind of crypto-atheism, is that they were afraid of
persecutions.
Epicureans were not persecuted, but their teachings were controversial and were harshly attacked by the mainstream schools of Stoicism and Neoplatonism. The movement remained marginal, and gradually died out by the end of the Roman Empire.
Persecution of atheists
The ancient world was not all roses for atheists though. After some drawbacks in the peloponnesian war, especialy after the failed Sicilian Expedition,
society took a conservative turn and laws against atheism and foreign
religions were promptly taken (Decree of Diopeithes). Anaxagoras was the
first to be exiled under this new law.
The Middle Ages
Islamic world
In medieval Islam, Muslim scholars recognized the idea of atheism and frequently attacked unbelievers, although they were unable to name any atheists. When individuals were accused of atheism, they were usually viewed as heretics rather than proponents of atheism. However, outspoken rationalists and atheists existed, one notable figure being the ninth-century scholar Ibn al-Rawandi, who criticized the notion of religious prophecy, including that of Muhammad, and maintained that religious dogmas were not acceptable to reason and must be rejected. Other critics of religion in the Islamic world include the physician and philosopher Abu Bakr al-Razi (865–925), the poet Al-Maʿarri (973–1057), and the scholar Abu Isa al-Warraq (fl. 9th century). Al-Maʿarri, for example, wrote and taught that religion itself was a "fable invented by the ancients" and that humans were "of two sorts: those with brains, but no religion, and those with religion, but no brains."
Europe
The titular character of the Icelandic sagaHrafnkell, written in the late thirteenth century, says, "I think it is folly to have faith in gods". After his temple to Freyr is burnt and he is enslaved, he vows never to perform another sacrifice, a position described in the sagas as goðlauss, "godless". Jacob Grimm in his Teutonic Mythology observes,
It is remarkable that Old Norse legend occasionally mentions certain men
who, turning away in utter disgust and doubt from the heathen faith,
placed their reliance on their own strength and virtue. Thus in the Sôlar lioð 17 we read of Vêbogi and Râdey â sik þau trûðu, "in themselves they trusted".
citing several other examples, including two kings. Subsequent to Grimm's investigation, scholars including J.R.R. Tolkien and E.O.G. Turville-Petre have identified the goðlauss ethic as a stream of atheistic and/or humanistic philosophy in the Icelandic sagas.
People described as goðlauss expressed not only a lack of faith in
deities, but also a pragmatic belief in their own faculties of strength,
reason and virtue and in social codes of honor independent of any
supernatural agency.
In Christian Europe, people were persecuted for heresy, especially in countries where the Inquisition
was active. Prominent examples of dissent included the Cathers and the
Waldensians. These sects, however antagonistic to the Church, are not
examples of Atheism. While rebellions against the Church occurred, none
could be considered exactly Atheist.
Another phenomenon in the Middle Ages was proofs of the existence of God. Both Anselm of Canterbury, and later, William of Ockham acknowledge adversaries who doubt the existence of God. Thomas Aquinas'
five proofs of God's existence and Anselm's ontological argument
implicitly acknowledged the validity of the question about God's
existence. Frederick Copleston,
however, explains that Thomas laid out his proofs not to counter
atheism, but to address certain early Christian writers such as John of Damascus, who asserted that knowledge of God's existence was naturally innate in man, based on his natural desire for happiness.
Thomas stated that although there is desire for happiness which forms
the basis for a proof of God's existence in man, further reflection is
required to understand that this desire is only fulfilled in God, not
for example in wealth or sensual pleasure.
The charge of atheism was used to attack political or religious opponents. Pope Boniface VIII,
because he insisted on the political supremacy of the church, was
accused by his enemies after his death of holding (unlikely) positions
such as "neither believing in the immortality nor incorruptibility of
the soul, nor in a life to come".
John Arnold's Belief and Unbelief in Medieval Europe
discusses individuals who were indifferent to the Church and did not
participate in faith practices. Arnold notes that while these examples
could be perceived as simply people being lazy, it demonstrates that
"belief was not universally fervent". Arnold enumerates examples of
people not attending church, and even those who excluded the Church from
their marriage. Disbelief, Arnold argues, stemmed from boredom. Arnold
argues that while some blasphemy implies the existence of God, laws
demonstrate that there were also cases of blasphemy that directly
attacked articles of faith. Italian preachers in the fourteenth century
also warned of unbelievers and people who lacked belief.
Renaissance and Reformation
During the time of the Renaissance and the Reformation,
criticism of the religious establishment became more frequent in
predominantly Christian countries, but did not amount to atheism, per se.
The term athéisme was coined in France in the sixteenth century. The word "atheist" appears in English books at least as early as 1566.
The concept of atheism re-emerged initially as a reaction to the intellectual and religious turmoil of the Age of Enlightenment
and the Reformation, as a charge used by those who saw the denial of
god and godlessness in the controversial positions being put forward by
others. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the word
'atheist' was used exclusively as an insult; nobody wanted to be
regarded as an atheist. Although one overtly atheistic compendium known as the Theophrastus redivivus was published by an anonymous author in the seventeenth century, atheism was an epithet implying a lack of moral restraint.
The Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza
contended in the 17th century that God did not interfere in the running
of the world, but rather that natural laws explained the workings of
the universe.
According to Geoffrey Blainey,
the Reformation in Europe had paved the way for atheists by attacking
the authority of the Catholic Church, which in turn "quietly inspired
other thinkers to attack the authority of the new Protestant churches". Deism
gained influence in France, Prussia and England, and proffered belief
in a noninterventionist deity, but "while some deists were atheists in
disguise, most were religious, and by today's standards would be called
true believers". The scientific and mathematical discoveries of such as
Copernicus, Newton and Descartes sketched a pattern of natural laws that
lent weight to this new outlook Blainey wrote that the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza
was "probably the first well known 'semi-atheist' to announce himself
in a Christian land in the modern era". Spinoza had been expelled from
his synagogue for his protests against the teachings of its rabbis and
for failing to attend Saturday services. He believed that God did not
interfere in the running of the world, but rather that natural laws
explained the workings of the universe. In 1661 he published his Short Treatise on God,
but he was not a popular figure for the first century following his
death: "An unbeliever was expected to be a rebel in almost everything
and wicked in all his ways", wrote Blainey, "but here was a virtuous
one. He lived the good life and made his living in a useful way. . . .
It took courage to be a Spinoza or even one of his supporters. If a
handful of scholars agreed with his writings, they did not so say in
public".
How dangerous it was to be accused of being an atheist at this time is illustrated by the examples of Étienne Dolet, who was strangled and burned in 1546, and Giulio Cesare Vanini, who received a similar fate in 1619. In 1689 the Polish nobleman Kazimierz Łyszczyński, who had denied the existence of God in his philosophical treatise De non-existentia Dei, was imprisoned unlawfully; despite Warsaw Confederation tradition and king Sobieski's intercession, Łyszczyński was condemned to death for atheism and beheaded in Warsaw after his tongue was pulled out with a burning iron and his hands slowly burned. Similarly in 1766, the French nobleman François-Jean de la Barre, was tortured, beheaded, and his body burned for alleged vandalism of a crucifix, a case that became a cause célèbre because Voltaire tried unsuccessfully to have the judgment reversed.
The English philosopher Thomas Hobbes
(1588–1679) was also accused of atheism, but he denied it. His theism
was unusual, in that he held god to be material. Even earlier, the
British playwright and poet Christopher Marlowe
(1563–1593) was accused of atheism when a tract denying the divinity of
Christ was found in his home. Before he could finish defending himself
against the charge, Marlowe was murdered.
In early modern times, the first explicit atheist known by name was the German-languaged Danish critic of religion Matthias Knutzen (1646–after 1674), who published three atheist writings in 1674.
Kazimierz Łyszczyński, a Polish philosopher (executed in 1689, following a hasty and controversial trial) demonstrated strong atheism in his work De non-existentia Dei:
II – the Man is a creator of God,
and God is a concept and creation of a Man. Hence the people are
architects and engineers of God and God is not a true being, but a being
existing only within mind, being chimaeric by its nature, because a God
and a chimaera are the same. IV – simple folk are cheated by the more cunning with the
fabrication of God for their own oppression; whereas the same oppression
is shielded by the folk in a way, that if the wise attempted to free
them by the truth, they would be quelled by the very people.
The Age of Enlightenment
Notre Dame of Strasbourg turned into a Temple of Reason
While not gaining converts from large portions of the population,
versions of deism became influential in certain intellectual circles. Jean Jacques Rousseau
challenged the Christian notion that human beings had been tainted by
sin since the Garden of Eden, and instead proposed that humans were
originally good, only later to be corrupted by civilization. The
influential figure of Voltaire,
spread deistic notions of to a wide audience. "After the French
Revolution and its outbursts of atheism, Voltaire was widely condemned
as one of the causes", wrote Blainey, "Nonetheless, his writings did
concede that fear of God was an essential policeman in a disorderly
world: 'If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him',
wrote Voltaire".
Arguably the first book in modern times solely dedicated to promoting atheism was written by French Catholic priest Jean Meslier (1664–1729), whose posthumously published lengthy philosophical essay (part of the original title: Thoughts
and Feelings of Jean Meslier ... Clear and Evident Demonstrations of
the Vanity and Falsity of All the Religions of the World)
rejects the concept of god (both in the Christian and also in the
Deistic sense), the soul, miracles and the discipline of theology. Philosopher Michel Onfray states that Meslier's work marks the beginning of "the history of true atheism".
By the 1770s, atheism in some predominantly Christian countries
was ceasing to be a dangerous accusation that required denial, and was
evolving into a position openly avowed by some. The first open denial of
the existence of God and avowal of atheism since classical times may be
that of Baron d'Holbach (1723–1789) in his 1770 work, The System of Nature.
D'Holbach was a Parisian social figure who conducted a famous salon
widely attended by many intellectual notables of the day, including Denis Diderot, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, David Hume, Adam Smith, and Benjamin Franklin. Nevertheless, his book was published under a pseudonym, and was banned and publicly burned by the Executioner. Diderot, one of the Enlightenment's most prominent philosophes and editor-in-chief of the Encyclopédie, which sought to challenge religious, particularly Catholic, dogma said, "Reason is to the estimation of the philosophe what grace is to the Christian", he wrote. "Grace determines the Christian's action; reason the philosophe's". Diderot was briefly imprisoned for his writing, some of which was banned and burned.
In Scotland, David Hume
produced a six volume history of England in 1754, which gave little
attention to God. He implied that if God existed he was impotent in the
face of European upheaval. Hume ridiculed miracles, but walked a careful
line so as to avoid being too dismissive of Christianity. With Hume's
presence, Edinburgh gained a reputation as a "haven of atheism",
alarming many ordinary Britons.
Fête de la Raison ("Festival of Reason"), Notre Dame, 20 Brumaire (1793)
The culte de la Raison developed during the uncertain period 1792–94 (Years I and III of the Revolution), following the September massacres,
when Revolutionary France was rife with fears of internal and foreign
enemies. Several Parisian churches were transformed into Temples of
Reason, notably the Church of Saint-Paul Saint-Louis in the Marais. The churches were closed in May 1793 and more securely 24 November 1793, when the Catholic Mass was forbidden.
1819 Caricature by English caricaturistGeorge Cruikshank.
Titled "The Radical's Arms", it depicts the infamous guillotine. "No
God! No Religion! No King! No Constitution!" is written in the
republican banner.
Blainey wrote that "atheism seized the pedestal in revolutionary
France in the 1790s. The secular symbols replaced the cross. In the
cathedral of Notre Dame the altar, the holy place, was converted into a
monument to Reason..." During the Terror of 1792–93,
France's Christian calendar was abolished, monasteries, convents and
church properties were seized and monks and nuns expelled. Historic
churches were dismantled. The Cult of Reason was a creed based on atheism devised during the French Revolution by Jacques Hébert, Pierre Gaspard Chaumette, and their supporters. It was stopped by Maximilien Robespierre, a Deist, who instituted the Cult of the Supreme Being. Both cults were the outcome of the "de-Christianization" of French society during the Revolution and part of the Reign of Terror.
The Cult of Reason was celebrated in a carnival atmosphere of parades, ransacking of churches, ceremonious iconoclasm,
in which religious and royal images were defaced, and ceremonies which
substituted the "martyrs of the Revolution" for Christian martyrs. The
earliest public demonstrations took place en province, outside Paris, notably by Hébertists in Lyon, but took a further radical turn with the Fête de la Liberté ("Festival of Liberty") at Notre Dame de Paris, 10 November (20 Brumaire) 1793, in ceremonies devised and organised by Pierre-Gaspard Chaumette.
The pamphlet Answer to Dr. Priestley's Letters to a Philosophical Unbeliever
(1782) is considered to be the first published declaration of atheism
in Britain—plausibly the first in English (as distinct from covert or
cryptically atheist works). The otherwise unknown William Hammon
(possibly a pseudonym) signed the preface and postscript as editor of
the work, and the anonymous main text is attributed to Matthew Turner
(d. 1788?), a Liverpool physician who may have known Priestley.
Historian of atheism David Berman has argued strongly for Turner's
authorship, but also suggested that there may have been two authors.
The freethinker Charles Bradlaugh (1833–1891) was repeatedly elected to the British Parliament,
but was not allowed to take his seat after his request to affirm rather
than take the religious oath was turned down (he then offered to take
the oath, but this too was denied him). After Bradlaugh was re-elected
for the fourth time, a new Speaker allowed Bradlaugh to take the oath
and permitted no objections. He became the first outspoken atheist to sit in Parliament, where he participated in amending the Oaths Act.
Karl Marx
In 1844, Karl Marx (1818–1883), an atheistic political economist, wrote in his Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right:
"Religious suffering is, at one and the same time, the expression of
real suffering and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the
sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the
soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people."
Marx believed that people turn to religion in order to dull the pain
caused by the reality of social situations; that is, Marx suggests
religion is an attempt at transcending the material state of affairs in a
society—the pain of class oppression—by effectively creating a dream
world, rendering the religious believer amenable to social control and exploitation in this world while they hope for relief and justice in life after death. In the same essay, Marx states, "[m]an creates religion, religion does not create man".
Friedrich Nietzsche
Friedrich Nietzsche, a prominent nineteenth century philosopher, is well known for coining the aphorism "God is dead" (German: "Gott ist tot");
incidentally the phrase was not spoken by Nietzsche directly, but was
used as a dialogue for the characters in his works. Nietzsche argued
that Christian theism as a belief system had been a moral foundation of
the Western world, and that the rejection and collapse of this
foundation as a result of modern thinking (the death of God) would naturally cause a rise in nihilism
or the lack of values. While Nietzsche was staunchly atheistic, he was
also concerned about the negative effects of nihilism on humanity. As
such, he called for a re-evaluation of old values and a creation of new
ones, hoping that in doing so humans would achieve a higher state he
labeled the Overman (Übermensch).
Atheist feminism also began in the nineteenth century. Atheist feminists oppose religion as a main source of female oppression and gender inequality, believing that the majority of religions are sexist and oppressive to women.
A. J. Ayer asserted the unverifiability and meaninglessness of religious statements, citing his adherence to the empirical sciences. The structuralism of Lévi-Strauss sourced religious language to the human subconscious, denying its transcendental meaning. J. N. Findlay and J. J. C. Smart argued that the existence of God is not logically necessary. Naturalists and materialists such as John Dewey considered the natural world to be the basis of everything, denying the existence of God or immortality.
The historian Geoffrey Blainey
wrote that during the twentieth century, atheists in Western societies
became more active and even militant, though they often "relied
essentially on arguments used by numerous radical Christians since at
least the eighteenth century". They rejected the idea of an
interventionist God, and said that Christianity promoted war and
violence, though "the most ruthless leaders in the Second World War were
atheists and secularists who were intensely hostile to both Judaism and
Christianity" and "Later massive atrocities were committed in the East
by those ardent atheists, Pol Pot and Mao Zedong". Some scientists were meanwhile articulating a view that as the world becomes more educated, religion will be superseded.
State atheism
Mao Zedong with Joseph Stalin in 1949. Both leaders repressed religion and established state atheism throughout their respective Communist spheres.
Often, the state's opposition to religion took more violent forms. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn documents widespread persecution, imprisonments and torture of believers in his seminal work The Gulag Archipelago.
Consequently, religious organizations, such as the Catholic Church,
were among the most stringent opponents of communist regimes. In some
cases, the initial strict measures of control and opposition to
religious activity were gradually relaxed in communist states. Pope Pius XI followed his encyclicals challenging the new right-wing creeds of Italian Fascism (Non abbiamo bisogno, 1931) and Nazism (Mit brennender Sorge, 1937) with a denunciation of atheistic Communism in Divini redemptoris (1937).
The Russian Orthodox Church, for centuries the strongest of all Orthodox Churches, was suppressed by the Soviet government. In 1922, the Soviet regime arrested the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church. Following the death of Vladimir Lenin, with his rejection of religious authority as a tool of oppression and his strategy of "patently explain," Soviet leader Joseph Stalin
energetically pursued the persecution of the Church through the 1920s
and 1930s. Lenin wrote that every religious idea and every idea of God
"is unutterable vileness... of the most dangerous kind, 'contagion of
the most abominable kind".
Many priests were killed and imprisoned. Thousands of churches were
closed, some turned into hospitals. In 1925 the government founded the League of Militant Atheists
to intensify the persecution. The regime only relented in its
persecution following the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941.
Bullock wrote that "A Marxist regime was 'godless' by definition, and
Stalin had mocked religious belief since his days in the Tiflis
seminary". His assault on the Russian peasantry, wrote Bullock, "had
been as much an attack on their traditional religion as on their
individual holdings, and the defense of it had played a major part in
arousing peasant resistance . . . ". In Divini Redemptoris,
Pius XI said that atheistic Communism being led by Moscow was aimed at
"upsetting the social order and at undermining the very foundations of
Christian civilization":
The central figure in Italian Fascism was the atheist Benito Mussolini. In his early career, Mussolini was a strident opponent of the Church, and the first Fascist program, written in 1919, had called for the secularization of Church property in Italy.
More pragmatic than his German ally Adolf Hitler, Mussolini later
moderated his stance, and in office, permitted the teaching of religion
in schools and came to terms with the Papacy in the Lateran Treaty. Nevertheless, Non abbiamo bisogno
condemned his Fascist movement's "pagan worship of the State" and
"revolution which snatches the young from the Church and from Jesus
Christ, and which inculcates in its own young people hatred, violence
and irreverence."
The Western Allies saw the war against Hitler as a war for "Christian Civilisation", while the atheist Stalin re-opened Russia's churches to steel the Soviet population in the battle against Germany. The Nazi leadership itself held a range of views on religion. Hitler's movement said it endorsed a form of Christianity stripped of its Jewish origins and certain key doctrines such as belief in the divinity of Christ. In practice his government persecuted the churches, and worked to reduce the influence of the Christianity on society. Richard J. Evans
wrote that "Hitler emphasised again and again his belief that Nazism
was a secular ideology founded on modern science. Science, he declared,
would easily destroy the last remaining vestiges of superstition [. . .]
'In the long run', [Hitler] concluded in July 1941, 'National Socialism
and religion will no longer be able to exist together' [. . .] The
ideal solution would be to leave the religions to devour themselves,
without persecutions' ".
Party membership was required for civil service jobs. The
majority of Nazi Party members did not leave their churches. Evans wrote
that, by 1939, 95 percent of Germans still called themselves Protestant
or Catholic, while 3.5 percent were gottgläubig
(lit. "believing in god") and 1.5 percent atheist. Most in these latter
categories were "convinced Nazis who had left their Church at the
behest of the Party, which had been trying since the mid 1930s to reduce
the influence of Christianity in society". The majority of the three million Nazi Party members continued to pay their church taxes and register as either Roman Catholic or Evangelical Protestant Christians. Gottgläubig
was a nondenominational Nazified outlook on god beliefs, often
described as predominantly based on creationist and deistic views. Heinrich Himmler, who himself was fascinated with Germanic paganism, was a strong promoter of the gottgläubig movement and didn't allow atheists into the SS, arguing that their "refusal to acknowledge higher powers" would be a "potential source of indiscipline".
Across Eastern Europe following World War II, the parts of the Nazi Empire conquered by the Soviet Red Army,
and Yugoslavia became one party Communist states, which, like the
Soviet Union, were antipathetic to religion. Persecutions of religious
leaders followed.
The Soviet Union ended its truce against the Russian Orthodox Church,
and extended its persecutions to the newly Communist Eastern bloc: "In Poland,
Hungary, Lithuania and other Eastern European countries, Catholic
leaders who were unwilling to be silent were denounced, publicly
humiliated or imprisoned by the Communists. Leaders of the national
Orthodox Churches in Romania and Bulgaria had to be cautious and submissive", wrote Blainey.
While the churches were generally not as severely treated as they had
been in the USSR, nearly all their schools and many of their churches
were closed, and they lost their formally prominent roles in public
life. Children were taught atheism, and clergy were imprisoned by the
thousands.
Albania under Enver Hoxha became, in 1967, the first (and to date only) formally declared atheist state,
going far beyond what most other countries had attempted—completely
prohibiting religious observance and systematically repressing and
persecuting adherents. Article 37 of the Albanian Constitution of 1976
stipulated, "The state recognizes no religion, and supports atheistic
propaganda in order to implant a scientific materialistic world outlook
in people." The right to religious practice was restored with the fall of communism in 1991.
Further post-war communist victories in the East saw religion
purged by atheist regimes across China, North Korea and much of
Indo-China. In 1949, China became a Communist state under the leadership of Mao Zedong's Communist Party of China. China itself had been a cradle of religious thought since ancient times, being the birthplace of Confucianism and Daoism,
and Buddhists having arrived in the first century AD. Under Mao, China
became officially atheist, and though some religious practices were
permitted to continue under State supervision, religious groups deemed a
threat to order have been suppressed—as with Tibetan Buddhism from 1959
and Falun Gong in recent years. Today around two-fifths of the population claim to be nonreligious or atheist.
Religious schools and social institutions were closed, foreign
missionaries expelled, and local religious practices discouraged. During the Cultural Revolution, Mao instigated "struggles" against the Four Olds: "old ideas, customs, culture, and habits of mind".
In 1999, the Communist Party launched a three-year drive to promote
atheism in Tibet, saying intensifying propaganda on atheism is
"especially important for Tibet because atheism plays an extremely
important role in promoting economic construction, social advancement
and socialist spiritual civilization in the region".
In India, E. V. Ramasami Naicker (Periyar), a prominent atheist leader, fought against Hinduism and the Brahmins for discriminating and dividing people in the name of caste and religion. This was highlighted in 1956 when he made the Hindu god Rama wear a garland made of slippers and made antitheistic statements.
During this period, Christianity in the United States retained
its popular appeal, and, wrote Blainey, the country "was the guardian,
militarily of the "free world" and the defender of its religion in the
face of militant communism". During the Cold War, wrote Thomas Aiello
the United States often characterized its opponents as "godless
communists", which tended to reinforce the view that atheists were
unreliable and unpatriotic. Against this background, the words "under God" were inserted into the pledge of allegiance in 1954, and the national motto was changed from E Pluribus Unum to In God We Trust in 1956. However, there were some prominent atheist activists active at this time. Atheist Vashti McCollum was the plaintiff in a landmark 1948 Supreme Court case (McCollum v. Board of Education) that struck down religious education in U.S. public schools. Madalyn Murray O'Hair was perhaps one of the most influential American atheists; she brought forth the 1963 Supreme Court case Murray v. Curlett which banned compulsory prayer in public schools. Also in 1963 she founded American Atheists,
an organization dedicated to defending the civil liberties of atheists
and advocating for the complete separation of church and state.
Atheist feminism has also become more prominent in the 2010s. In 2012 the first "Women in Secularism" conference was held.
Also, Secular Woman was founded on 28 June 2012 as the first national
American organization focused on non-religious women. The mission of
Secular Woman is to amplify the voice, presence, and influence of
non-religious women. The atheist feminist movement has also become increasingly focused on fighting misogyny, sexism and sexual harassment within the atheist movement itself, especially since the upheaval following Michael Shermer's allegations of sexual assault and coverage of his violent behavior applied by James Randi.
In 2015, Madison, Wisconsin's common council amended their city's
equal opportunity ordinance, adding atheism as a protected class in the
areas of employment, housing, and public accommodations. This makes Madison the first city in America to pass an ordinance protecting atheists.