That wasn’t a bad read. Thanks for posting.
“Neuhaus” said:
A good citizen is able to give an account, a morally compelling account, of the regime of which he is part.
Neuhaus' thesis [my synopsis]:
Every good citizen should be able to give a rational defense of the Union. The DoI which defines the American Union is based on God's granting the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Theists are good citizens because they know God exists; they know of God is good, so they know His laws are good; their rational defense is obvious. Atheists don't believe in God, and thus are free to doubt the very axioms on which the Union was founded. They cannot give a rational defense of the Union; therefore atheists are not good citizens.
“Every good citizen should be able to give a rational defense of the Union”: let's grant that, for argument's sake.
“The DoI which defines the American Union is based on God's granting the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”: this too.
"Theists are good citizens because they know God exists; they know of God is good, so they know His laws are good; their rational defense is obvious": this puzzled me, reading the article. At one point Neuhaus argues against the Enlightenment enterprise of finding a rational basis for God:
“Neuhaus” said:
Descartes determined that he would accept as true nothing that could be reasonably doubted, and Christians set about to prove that the existence of God could not be reasonably doubted. Thus did the defenders of religion set faith against the doubt that is integral to the life of faith.
He says this robs “God” of the doubt that is essential to the life of faith, turns theists into mere believers. Real theism then is an internal conflict, the victory of faith over doubt presumably, which amounts to knowledge of God.
This is a religious notion of "knowledge". It is not I would argue a very secure basis for rational argument. If religious "knowledge" is based in faith versus doubt, who's to say how strong those doubts are, and what effects they have on the theists conduct? Who's to say how exhausting this internal struggle is, how much energy it consumes, how little energy the theist may have left over for fulfilling his duties as a citizen? Who's to say that there aren't moments when doubt has the upper hand, when the theist by Neuhaus' definition isn't a good citizen at all, with no knowledge that the rights granted her by God are absolute, no ability to convincingly defend them?
Separating traditional theism from enlightened reason and then arguing only a traditional theist can adhere to the principles of an Enlightenment document seems a exercise in paradox and futility, to me at least. It seems Neuhaus is hoist by his own petard.
So before we answer the question: can an atheist be a good citizen? – we now, thanks to Neuhaus’ self-contradiction, have a new question to answer: can a theist be a good citizen? For by his own logic, Neuhaus and his theist are in no better shape than the atheist to claim a rational monopoly on good citizenship. Indeed, given the reluctance to believe there are any avenues to good citizenship other than theism, it is doubtful, again by his own logic, that Neuhaus the theist is a citizen at all.
Anyway, that's my first blush of the divine Mr. Neuhaus; just an atheist, what the hell would I know about it, eh?
