Dawkins: “Knight of the Mind” on Darwin
A London Times article, Richard Dawkins slaps creationists into the primordial soup, by Kate Muir, describes Richard Dawkins as “a knight of the mind who goes into battle against the ignorance and foolhardiness of the populace.” By this, she means, of course, the antiquated belief in God. I’ve rarely read such drooling adulation in the public media. Dawkins, who will featured in a three-part television series in Britain, Dawkins on Darwin, claims that:
natural selection is “the most important idea to occur to the human mind”, the slow change of species over millions of ideas disproving the religious theory of intelligent design by God.
There is much one could say about this article, but one particular comment of Dawkin’s caught my eye. Muir explains:
Again he lapses into silence, but I now know to sit out these Pinteresque moments rather than interrupt – while most interviewees are floundering, Dawkins is thinking. “There’s a very important misunderstanding of the relationship between Hitler and Darwin, which is relevant to this,” he resumes. “A lot of people think that Hitler sort of was a Darwinian, which he absolutely wasn’t. What Hitler did was to take the principle of domestic breeding of animals and apply it to humans. What Darwin did was to take the principle of the domestic breeding of animals and apply it to nature. It’s all done by nature, by who as a matter of fact survives.”
About three months ago, I wrote a post, The Darwin-Hitler Link, which was written in the context of the controversy stirred by the Ben Stein movie, Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed. This movie suggested that Darwinism was a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for the atrocities committed under Hitler. Of course, the church of science, of which Richard Dawkins is the leading evangelist, contested about the unfairness and illegitimacy of claiming that Darwinism was in any way responsible for Naziism.
Now, whether or not Hitler ever knew of Darwin (which he most certainly did), Dawkins seems to admit that the Hitler and Darwin both based their theories and/or actions on the same basic understanding. Hitler applied domestic breeding principles to human beings, while Darwin applied it to all of nature. Based on this observation, it seems to be a straightforward, non-contestable claim that Hitler’s actions were based on Darwinian principles. Human beings are, on a Darwinian view, nothing more than a part of nature. They are, like any other animal, a product of blind chance and natural selection. To say that it is a misunderstanding that Hitler was “sort of a Darwinian” seems moot in any important sense. Hitler applied the same principles as did Darwin to a subset (human beings) of the total Darwinian set (all of nature, including human beings). Am I missing something, or is not the Darwin-Hitler link established by Dawkins’ statements?
(HT: Al Mohler)

