Christopher Hitchens on the Unalterable Celestial Dictatorship of God

I’m no fan of Christo­pher Hitchens. Actu­al­ly, I find him an almost entire­ly dis­agree­able fig­ure. But I have to give him points for cre­ativ­i­ty. Inter­viewed last week (MP3 — iTunes — Feed), Hitchens, the author of the recent best­seller God Is Not Great, gave his spiel on athe­ism and offered a unique argu­ment against God. Not against God’s exis­tence. But against God itself.

For Hitchens, if there exist­ed a God who answered prayers and inter­vened in human affairs, “we would be liv­ing under an unal­ter­able celes­tial dic­ta­tor­ship that could read our thoughts while we were asleep and con­vict us of thought crime and pur­sue us after we after are dead, and in the name of which priest­hoods and oth­er oli­garchies and hier­ar­chies would be set up to enforce God’s law.” Essen­tial­ly, we’d be liv­ing in a super­nat­ur­al Orwellian world.

In a quick cou­ple sen­tences, the the­o­ret­i­cal virtues of an all-know­ing God get turned into a vice. It’s a cre­ative and provoca­tive remark, just the kind that sells books in Amer­i­ca. Many, many books, in fact.

This bit appears about 41 min­utes into his inter­view. Dur­ing the rest of the con­ver­sa­tion, Hitchens con­tin­ues jus­ti­fy­ing his sup­port for the Iraq war and offers his thoughts on who killed Benazir Bhut­to. If you want more Hitchens, and if you want to hear Hitchens behav­ing par­tic­u­lar­ly bad­ly, you can always lis­ten to this oth­er inter­view from last year.

And don’t for­get to check out our large col­lec­tion of Ideas & Cul­ture Pod­casts.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 3 ) |

What a Hurricane Looks Like From Outer Space

This is rather extra­or­di­nary. Here’s what Hur­ri­cane Dean looked like for the crew fly­ing in a NASA space shut­tle last August. You can check out more NASA videos on YouTube here. It’s also added to our YouTube playlist. Thanks to one of our read­ers for point­ing this out.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 2 ) |

R.E.M. George Bush Style

This cre­ative bit has been mak­ing the rounds in the world of web 2.0. If it holds appeal, you can also check out the George Bush ver­sion of U2’s Sun­day Bloody Sun­day and Tony Blair doing the Clash’s Should I Stay or Should I Go?. All videos have been added to our YouTube Playlist. (Feel free to sub­scribe.)

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

Classics from The Atlantic Monthly

The Atlantic Month­ly has been around a long time. Since 1857 to be exact. And, over the many years, it has pub­lished works by leg­endary authors. Quite nice­ly, The Atlantic web site makes avail­able some of these clas­sic writ­ings for free (although if you’re a sub­scriber you’ll get access to much more). Here are a few that we uncov­ered:

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

Who Do We Vote For This Time Around? A Letter from Michael Moore

The Iowa cau­cus is final­ly and mer­ci­ful­ly upon us. And right in time, film­mak­er Michael Moore has offered an analy­sis of the Demo­c­ra­t­ic field of can­di­dates. There’s much here that I don’t par­tic­u­lar­ly agree with here, but Moore makes two large claims that strike me as being fun­da­men­tal­ly (and regret­ful­ly) true:

  • The “Demo­c­ra­t­ic front-run­ners are a less-than-stel­lar group of can­di­dates, and … none of them are the slam dunk we wish they were.”
  • “For months I’ve been want­i­ng to ask the ques­tion, “Where are you, Al Gore?” You can only pol­ish that Oscar for so long. And the Nobel was decid­ed by Scan­di­na­vians! I don’t blame you for not want­i­ng to enter the viper pit again after you already won. But get­ting us to change out our incan­des­cent light bulbs for some irri­tat­ing flu­o­res­cent ones isn’t going to save the world. All it’s going to do is make us more agi­tat­ed and jumpy and feel­ing like once we get home we haven’t real­ly left the office.”

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 1 ) |

The Best Photoblogs of 2007

The best pho­to­blogs of last year, as declared by Photoblogsawards.com. Some beau­ti­ful images here:

Via: Andrew Sul­li­van’s Dai­ly Dish

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Learn the Art of Pho­tog­ra­phy: The Nikon Way

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

George Harrison & The Concert for Bangladesh (1971)

In August 1971, George Har­ri­son and Ravi Shankar staged two ben­e­fit con­certs at Madi­son Square Gar­den in NYC to raise mon­ey for refugees in Bangladesh. (More on the con­cert here.) Also appear­ing on stage were Bob Dylan, Eric Clap­ton and Ringo Starr. Below, we’ve post­ed some footage from the show, and also includ­ed it in our YouTube playlist (feel free to sub­scribe to it). You can also watch oth­er songs from the con­cert here and here.

Just as an fyi, a record­ing of the con­cert was released as an album in 1971 and then as a film in 1972. Pro­ceeds from both still go to UNICEF.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 2 ) |

« Go Back
Quantcast
Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.