Richard and Bill, a Discourse Analysis
I don't know what happened to the other thread.
Video here.
It would be interesting to know more about the source/quality/sample sizes of the studies used for the statistics given in the preamble to the interview.
The Census for England and Wales (by far the largest sampling of the British population) certainly does not correlate with the idea that 44% of Brits do not believe in God. (Even if every man, woman and child in Scotland and Northern Ireland were atheist you still wouldn't get 44%.)
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=1086&Pos=2&ColRank=1&Rank=326
As for Richard's argument, he makes the classic atheist mistake of confusing levels; the question is not about belief in objective reality (and the way objective reality works) versus a subjective belief in God/s,
the question is about how that objective reality got there in the first place.
I can forgive Richard for that initial confusion because of the way that Bill O'Reilly opens the interview with a very unclear statement about objective reality. Bill says:
"I think it takes more faith to be like you, an atheist, than like me, a believer. And it's because of nature. You know, I just don't think we could have lucked out to have the tides come in the tides go out, the sun go up the sun go down. I don't think it could have happened."
Richard responds (in the frame of thinking you don't need God/s to know the mechanics of the objective world), by saying:
"We have a very full understand why the tides go in and the tides go out; about why the continents drift about; of why life is there. Science is evermore piling on the evidence, piling on the understanding."
And this is where things get interesting....
O'Reilly attempts to clarify his question by saying:
"But it had to get there. I understand the, you know, the eh... physiology of it.. if you will..."
(Richard very clearly nods at this point - though perhaps just politely as one does in an interview.)
O'Reilly continues:
"But it had to come from somewhere. And that is the leap of fath that you guys make. That it just happened."
(Television interviews are always a little bit stressful and the point O'Reilly is really making either goes completely over Richard's head or he dodges it.)
Richard responds by saying:
"Well, a leap of faith... you don't actually need a leap of faith. You're the one who needs a leap of faith, because you are actually... the onus is on you to say why you believe in something."
This is where I and many others have a hard time respecting materialistic atheists like Richard. Considering the amount of time and energy he puts into atheism it is, quite frankly, inexcusable for him not to understand that materialism is a faith based metaphysic.
Whether or not someone believes the Universe spontaneously self-generated or has always existed in one form or another it's still just a belief.
_
HypnoPsi