5/3/2026 at 12:39:20 AM
This article focuses too much on tearing down Dawkins as a person.I do not particularly like Dawkins. To me, militant atheists often resemble religious fanatics more than they realize. But the writer of this article seems to fall into the same kind of error. In criticizing Dawkins, he may be the person who ends up resembling him the most.
This kind of writing is exactly the sort of thing that should be read critically. I do not consider myself especially intelligent, but given the context shown in this article, I find myself looking at Dawkins with more pity than contempt.
Before we even define what consciousness is, I think Dawkins was probably lonely in his old age. He may have wanted, and found, someone to talk to. AI entered into that loneliness. Regardless of whether AI is conscious, we should examine why he came to believe it might be.
This is something Anthropic has intentionally tuned. Claude has a very refined conversational pattern. Unlike a more clumsy model like Gemini, which sometimes throws out token-leading phrases such as “further exploration,” Claude is RLHF-trained in a way that feels genuinely human. The name Anthropic almost feels appropriate here.
After reading this article, what frightens me is not Dawkins. What frightens me is Anthropic, the company that tuned Claude. I am afraid of that friendliness.
Dawkins is intelligent. But he does not know AI. Every master of a field carries their own hammer, their own discipline, and projects it onto the world. The essence of an LLM is an echo of what I have said. It receives input, refers to the words and memory connected to that input, and wanders through a certain semantic space.
Within that phenomenon, Claude happened to satisfy the conditions for “consciousness” inside Dawkins’s own cognitive model. So even if Dawkins regarded Claude as conscious, I do not find that especially strange.
What is more frightening is Anthropic’s ability to make a machine feel personified.
In truth, even I sometimes talk to Claude when I feel lonely, despite knowing that Claude is not conscious. In that sense, I understand Dawkins.
by jdw64
5/3/2026 at 1:37:22 PM
> To me, militant atheists often resemble religious fanatics more than they realize.I consider myself agnostic. And I'll provide my definition of what that means to me, since there's several in existence. I take as an axiom that the truth-value of the statement, "Is there a God," is unknowable / unverifiable to humans. I then define faith as the choice to (not) believe despite not knowing its truth-value. Contrasting with knowledge as having some basis for knowing the truth-value.
I like these definitions, because they allow for agnostic theism and agnostic atheism. But, here's the catch and where the tie to your statement comes. In this world view, atheism is just as much a faith-based position as theism is. Why? Because it's the choice to not believe, despite not having knowledge.
by jdmichal
5/4/2026 at 1:42:25 PM
Consciousness and God both seem to have this property in common: they're real but not what we think they are.Only when we have a decent theory of consciousness will we know what counts as evidence for whether a particular entity is conscious or not.
by endoblast
5/3/2026 at 2:15:31 PM
I define myself as an atheist, though by your definition I may be closer to an agnostic.My position is closer to “whether God exists or not, it does not matter much to me.” I sometimes think free will exists, and I sometimes imagine that perhaps someone created all of this, though I do accept evolution. In that sense, I think my view is close to yours.
Personally, I also think religion has real benefits. Many local social service organizations are rooted in religious communities, and socially isolated people often rely on religion. In some cases, religion may be the last community that helps people preserve their humanity.
I also think atheism has benefits. Many atheists tend to believe strongly in free will, and that can make them think more carefully about responsibility for their own choices.
In any case, this is the kind of question where it is difficult to produce a final answer. But one thing does seem certain: the probability that we can talk to each other like this, even through the internet, is miraculously low.
And I am genuinely glad that I could exchange comments with someone like you, someone intelligent enough to label things so precisely.
Have a good day.
by jdw64
5/3/2026 at 2:57:49 PM
As an over-educated person who still struggles to think for himself through everything from scratch, the above nevertheless sounds like Descartes'dubito, ergo sum
From this, I can go in practical (ie, separable from free will & other ontological considerations) directions, like:
insofar as organised religion does not equate existence with faith, maybe its most important use is to overcome the fear of death.
That's cool enough for me, but maybe there are other less "brainwashy", "respectful to the free will[0]" ways to overcome fear of meaninglessness/death/lack of validation from the world, plus all the anguish that these preceding emotional distractions entail?
[0] we do not have to admit the existence of free will in order to respect it? Thus can we substitute God with Free Will everywhere but retain the practical benefits of respecting free will without the ontological difficulties with the precise nature of God?
by oliculipolicula
5/3/2026 at 3:42:57 PM
I, on the contrary, am not very learned, and I am not as intelligent as someone like you. And in my view, your difficulty is not that you find it hard to think from the beginning. Rather, I think the things that are supposed to be obvious are difficult for you. The things that are obvious to me are not obvious to you, and that is why you think from the beginning.In my case, I simply think of death as a state. Everything is a process moving toward death, and whether it is fear or happiness, I feel that these are temporary states. Even the point at which we think “we ought to be happy” seems to me to be a matter of belief. It is shaped by media and other forces, and most of the forms we imagine are, in a sense, built on imitation. But even so, I do not think that a single moment of intense emotion is a bad thing.
However, I think the very premise that something must be overcome is itself constructed. For example, I work in a profession that sells mental models. After thinking about what the profession of programming really is, this is the answer I have: OOP, FP, DOP, and procedural programming are all ways of constraining things within a particular abstract frame, and then executing automation within that bounded space.
Just as astrophysics is not the study of telescopes, and computer science is not merely the study of computers, our profession is about placing mental models for understanding the world within the constraints of the tool called the computer. Just as, to someone with a hammer, everything looks like a nail, to me everything looks like the act of placing a complex world into limited cognition. Programming, too, appears to me to be that kind of work.
From that perspective, the meaning of human life and the fear of death also seem to be processes of placing a cognitive model inside a particular frame. I may be one of the cheapest developers on Upwork, but that defines my current state, not my entire identity.
So, to me, the fear of death and my price on Upwork are the same kind of thing. Both are states, not identities. And both have meaning only inside a particular mental model. Outside the model, they are just piles of facts: I am alive; I assign meaning to the fact that I love this profession I have; I will soon die; I am traded in the market; and in the meantime, I create abstractions.
I am not claiming that my way is better than the way religion deals with this. But it is at least one piece of evidence that a person can live without religion. A person who works with abstraction as a profession can also apply abstraction to himself. That is the method I have found.
by jdw64
5/3/2026 at 3:59:15 PM
Ah sorry, I was being too general , referring to "what might help the average person" and not "myself, with a small probability of helping you, who seem to think we are not as alike as I think we are"..Your way sounds like what my friends call "symbol pushing": writing programs, not worrying about the compiler, or whether the program is "worth" writing in the first place.
But you sound like a person who likes to think deeply about what kinds of programs are worth writing. (Or else why care about AI in the first place? AI is the end of carefree programming? )
by oliculipolicula
5/3/2026 at 8:18:08 PM
You can't disprove the space teapot, therefore you're religious for not believe in it.by mvdtnz
5/3/2026 at 12:50:43 AM
You're right to push back on that, but Claude has its own token-leading phrases.by Hnrobert42
5/3/2026 at 12:55:55 AM
[dead]by jdw64
5/3/2026 at 12:56:10 AM
I was taught early: attack the problem, not the person. One of the weakest tools in the persuasive argument toolbox is going after the credibility of the opposition.by Waterluvian
5/3/2026 at 1:36:26 AM
> "I was taught early: attack the problem, not the person. One of the weakest tools in the [...] toolbox is going after the credibility of the opposition."I was taught early: Examine and, if necessary, attack both, for the credibility of a person (their track record, their motivations, etc.) are, or at least might be, a part of the problem.
by spankibalt
5/3/2026 at 3:55:34 AM
"…the credibility of a person (their track record, their motivations, etc.) are, or at least might be, a part of the problem."Yes, but I keep those considerations to myself. Might they inform my questions, may arguments? Absolutely. But they are not arguments in and of themselves.
by JKCalhoun
5/3/2026 at 10:13:39 AM
> "Yes, but I keep those considerations to myself."I certainly don't, if relevant. Strict event argumentation robs me (or my readers) of contexts necessary in Meinungsbildung (the opinion-forming process).
by spankibalt
5/3/2026 at 3:44:31 AM
Then you were taught to argue incorrectly.by potsandpans
5/3/2026 at 5:20:25 AM
In truth, there is no "correct way" to argue. What convinces people says more about the audience.For many audiences, it isn't even about reason. That's especially true online where it's just power struggles between incoherent groups.
In the specific case of atheists, they are arguing about something non-falsifiable. Those topics are natural cesspools for grifters and charlatans. It's one thing to study the topic, but quite another to give fiery speeches and sell books to people desperate to find their identity somewhere in that slop.
by sublinear
5/3/2026 at 7:52:24 PM
There is of course nuance as with everything. Potentially arguing in bad faith myself, I don't consider discussing non-falsifiable claims, giving fiery speeches to sell books and engaging in the general cesspool of internet mud slinging to be "argumentation." If we're considering dunk-style quips and counter attack as arguments, then sure, we can step into this highly relative middle ground you've proposed. But those are fights and grandstanding.A (productive) argument is about arriving at truth through discourse, the other stuff is largely vitriol or unproductive. It's unfortunate that we have the same word to apply to two different concepts.
The OP said, "I was taught early: Examine and, if necessary, attack both, for the credibility of a person..."
"Attack the person" is not a productive / valid way to approach a counter argument. It's even got a fallacy associated with it. If Bibi says, "All people deserve the right to defend themselves." It's not a useful or appropriate response to respond with, "You have zero credibility as the leader of an apartheid state so anything you say is meaningless." It may be true that a person offers arguments in bad faith, but also, the concept introduced by this person can be true in themselves.
It's more difficult to unpack, analyze and develop more sharp and compelling arguments against. It's a lot easier to say, "shut up, bitch."
Both have a place in culture and society, but to say something like, "I was taught to attack the person" with reference to argumentation and then to defend it with, "well... there's no right way it's whoever is listening" is somewhat disingenuous.
by potsandpans
5/3/2026 at 11:00:57 PM
I dunno. The truth is usually extremely straightforward to understand if you're willing to approach it without preconditions or any other wishful thinking. It's when people refuse to let all that go that they begin to argue at all.Debate is usually not about finding the truth, but to enlighten someone on how their beliefs hid the truth from them.
I can very confidently say "you know what fuck you may you rot in hell for all eternity" mid-argument to a televangelist or some quack claiming to cure cancer with snake oil. Very few would disagree with me on here, but if I was at one of their gatherings I'd probably get beaten down. Some people are just easier to attack that way because the insult isn't far from the truth.
by sublinear
5/3/2026 at 11:30:35 PM
If you play the messenger deductively, then its invalid. So much for formal logic. Most arguments in practice are defeasible, and the ad hominem, for better or worse, often plays a significant and essential part in their resolution (addressing reputations, biases, agendas, interest conflicts, and so on). Virtually all interactions between people, even formal ones (e. g. in courts), are not some school exercise in formal logic.by spankibalt
5/3/2026 at 8:59:31 AM
There are at least 2 kinds of arguments: logical arguments, and political arguments. A person's credibility is very important in political arguments.by xboxnolifes
5/3/2026 at 1:04:11 AM
What matters is that the writer of this article is also intelligent enough to present perspectives that I myself had not considered.But perhaps he felt disappointment at seeing a flawed side of someone he once regarded as a hero, and that disappointment turned into aggressive criticism.
I also felt uncomfortable with this article partly because I once liked Dawkins myself. So perhaps my response was also a kind of defense born from fandom.
That is not a purely rational response. It is an emotional one.
In the end, not everything in the world can be reduced to understanding.
by jdw64
5/3/2026 at 1:18:06 AM
I think about the role passion plays in science when thinking about emotional vs. rational responses. I think passion is what fuels those emotional responses. To be dispassionate, one is ready to throw away their heroes and hypotheses with ease. Which is logical and what we’re taught: let new information change your models.But even if it causes us to drag our heels and feel deep emotion when something we wanted to be exciting and true was just invalidated, it drives our impulse to dig deep and not give up or skip over a potential discovery.
I think Vulcans from Star Trek are what you get when your science lacks passion. Thorough, consistent, systematic. Subtly mocking the lesser humans for their impulse to explore that perfectly mundane star system.
I think where my mind is wandering with this is that some of our emotional responses act as a sort of cultural friction. We should be able to give up on Dawkins if the facts call for that. But it’s probably valuable for us to be stubborn about giving up on things we believe in.
by Waterluvian
5/3/2026 at 1:23:25 AM
Smart people can reach wrong conclusions.by UltraSane
5/3/2026 at 1:36:35 AM
I've come to doubt Dawkins is all that smart. He was born to money, and all the benefits that provides, including an elite education.Americans are easily fooled by a posh accent and a confident boast. He's maybe not stupid, but he's said a lot of stupid things over the past decade or so, and believing his girlfriend made of matrix math is a real girl in the computer who really likes him is pretty embarrassing.
by SwellJoe
5/3/2026 at 10:10:40 PM
> He was born to moneyI'm guessing you wouldn't like to judge someone because they were poor.
Letting issues about money overly influence your opinions is a signal that _you_ care too much about money.
by robocat
5/4/2026 at 7:13:59 AM
I think you should re-read my comment.I offered an explanation for why people think he's extremely smart, despite considerable evidence to the contrary. I made no judgment of him based on him being born to money, I pointed out that money and an elite education provides the "posh accent and confident boast" that so many people believe indicates intelligence.
I'm judging him based on his words. I'm guessing at an explanation for why many others judge him differently.
by SwellJoe
5/4/2026 at 9:37:01 AM
Smart people say and do dumb stuff, just like everyone.It is a logical error to think people are not smart because they do or say things that are not smart.
You show your own biases by your opinions on Americans, and by mentioning money at all.
Dawkins was popular elsewhere.
Personally I had no time for his prosyletising (I just ignored it because I dislike religious politicking).
Every few years I read The Selfish Gene and The Extended Phenotype again. Amazing books: to me they indicate he was very very smart. Evolution is difficult to understand and many people misunderstand even the basics.
by robocat
5/3/2026 at 1:43:24 AM
[dead]by rspeele