Read The Great Agnostic Online
Authors: Susan Jacoby,Susan Jacoby
social issues,
31
,
103
â5,
186
; religion-sanctioned injustices and,
199
â200; secular humanist beliefs and,
97
â98,
125
â26; social Darwinist beliefs and,
24
,
106
,
107
,
126
â27.
See also
labor movement
Society for Ethical Culture,
90
Society for the Suppression of Vice,
99
,
100
n
Solomon,
38
â39
“Some Mistakes of Moses” (Ingersoll lecture),
14
,
89
â90,
114
; Yiddish translation of,
28
,
70
sound recording,
97
n
Spadefore, Joseph,
190
â91
Spanish-American War,
95
,
98
,
150
species: emergence of new,
81
n; extinction of,
94
Spencer, Herbert,
24
,
25
,
106
,
115
,
126
â27
Stalinism,
169
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady,
10
,
29
,
32
,
107
,
113
â14,
118
,
121
â22;
Woman's Bible
,
122
Stark, Pete,
55
â56
“Star Route” trials (early 1880s),
101
â2
state governments: anti-contraceptive laws and,
186
; equal protection rights and,
134
; establishment clause and,
64
â65,
136
; federal tensions with,
136
; free speech/religion guarantees by,
133
â34; religion-based laws of,
131
,
136
,
137
â38
Stockton (California) Daily Record
,
181
suffering: animal vivisection and,
189
,
203
â5; divine origin belief about,
86
â89,
95
,
157
,
199
â200; human efforts against,
201
â2; science-based alleviation of,
78
â79,
86
â87
suffrage.
See
voting rights; woman suffrage movement
Sumner, William Graham,
106
â7
Sunderland, Rev. J. T.,
181
â82
supernaturalism: Ingersoll indictment of,
58
,
85
â86,
95
â96,
163
,
167
,
173
; scientific advances vs.,
79
â80,
85
â86,
96
,
167
â68
superstition,
79
â80,
91
,
120
,
167
Supreme Court, U.S.,
110
â11,
112
,
115
,
134
“survival of the fittest,”
24
,
25
.
See also
social Darwinism
Talmage, Rev. Thomas DeWitt,
54
â55
tax policy,
103
,
150
; Catholic bid for religious school support and,
4
n,
64
â66,
67
,
70
,
100
â101,
153
,
154
,
183
,
185
; public schools and,
64
â65,
70
,
106
,
154
,
155
; religious institution exemptions and,
64
â65,
67
,
70
,
99
technology.
See
science and technology
temperance movement,
122
Tennessee,
23
Texas,
71
Texas State Board of Education,
188
theater,
160
theocracy,
58
,
98
,
129
,
136
,
200
,
201
theodicy problem,
86
â89
Tolstoy, Leo,
164
â66; “The Kreutzer Sonata,”
164
â66
torture,
199
Transcendentalists,
172
Triangle Shirtwaist fire (NYC, 1911),
105
Truth Seeker
(freethought publication),
41
,
91
,
99
,
100
n,
152
; Ingersoll eulogies roundup by,
179
â80
Tubman, Harriet,
32
unalienable rights,
128
Underground Railroad,
50
Unitarians,
16
,
32
,
139
,
172
,
181
â82
vaccination,
78
Vaseline (as contraceptive),
100
n,
152
n,
186
Virginia Act for Establishing Religious Freedom (1786),
154
vivisection,
169
â70,
199
,
200
; Ingersoll letter (1890) on,
203
â5
Volney, Constantin,
The Ruins
,
62
Voltaire,
73
,
74
,
113
,
129
,
130
n,
173
,
184
,
192
,
196
,
199
;
Dictionnaire Philosophique Portatif
,
130
voting rights,
112
,
113
â14.
See also
woman suffrage movement
Wagner, Richard, Siegfried's “Funeral March,”
175
Wallace, Rev. George A.,
178
Warren, Sidney,
72
Washington, George,
19
,
20
,
30
n,
132
,
137
,
147
,
155
Washington Post
,
179
“watchmaker” argument,
37
â38,
86
wealth disparities,
6
,
24
,
107
,
149
â50,
162
â63
White, Ronald C.,
Lincoln's Greatest Speech
,
62
n
White House,
112
Whitman, Walt,
10
,
45
â46,
73
,
74
,
75
,
161
; Comstock obscenity charges and,
152
â53; “The Common Prostitute,”
156
; Ingersoll eulogy for,
75
,
206
â11;
Leaves of Grass
,
152
â53
Whittier, John Greenleaf, “The Preacher,”
52
â53
“With His Name Left Out, The History of Liberty Cannot Be Written” (Ingersoll lecture),
18
Woman's Bible
(Stanton),
122
woman suffrage movement,
29
,
32
,
113
â14,
118
,
122
,
124
women: Christian asceticism and,
164
,
165
; Ingersoll's belief in intellectual equality of,
117
,
123
; moral conventions and,
124
â25,
152
,
200
;
nineteenth-century role of,
33
â34; religiosity as group of,
119
â20
Women's Christian Temperance Union,
122
women's rights,
6
,
34
,
39
,
68
,
109
,
117
â25,
171
â72,
200
; birth control as precondition for,
118
â19,
127
,
152
,
171
; divorce and,
120
â21; economic justice and,
105
,
124
â25; educational opportunity and,
119
â20; Ingersoll's last court case defending,
171
â72.
See also
feminist movement; woman suffrage movement
workers.
See
labor movement
yellow fever,
94
*
This remark was made by former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum, a devout and devoutly conservative Catholic, on a Sunday morning television news show in February 2012. He was, ironically, disparaging John F. Kennedy, the nation's first Catholic president, for having famously told a group of Protestant ministers during his 1960 campaign that he believed “in an America where the separation of church and state is absoluteâwhere no church or church school is granted any public funds or political preference.” Earlier in the week, after President Barack Obama had suggested that every American ought to be able to go to college, Santorum's reaction was, “What a snob!”
*
For Crawford's memories of Ingersoll and of the early days of baseball, see Lawrence S. Ritter's
The Glory of Their Times,
chapter 4.
*
I learned this while writing a weekly column, “The Spirited Atheist,” for the
On Faith
blog published by the
Washington Post.
The emails I receive from outraged fundamentalists generally begin with an assertion that goes something like, “You claim to know that there is no God, but you have no proof.⦔ Readers who insist on calling themselves agnostics rather than atheists often voice the same misapprehension and suggest that it is “arrogant” to claim absolute knowledge of the nonexistence of a deity. But I do not claim to possess that knowledge, any more than Ingersoll or Paine did. To the fundamentalists I reply that while there is no evidentiary proof of a negative, there is also no evidentiary proof (other than inadmissible supernatural propositions) of the existence of God. To agnostics who object to the word “atheist,” I suggest that they consult Ingersoll and the dictionary.
*
The gigantic exception to this tendency was Richard Hofstadter, whose
Social Darwinism in American Thought
(1944) and
Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
(1963) remain required reading for anyone who wishes to understand the continuing importance of the battle between religious fundamentalism and modernism in American politics.
*
The Seneca Falls
Declaration of Rights and Sentiments
was written by Stanton, in consultation with Mott, at her kitchen table and was modeled after the Declaration of Independence and the American Anti-Slavery Association's founding document, written in 1833 by William Lloyd Garrison and titled
Declaration of Sentiments.
*
The increase in the number of Americans who do not belong to any church and who consider their outlook on public affairs wholly or predominantly secular was first reported in the
American Religious Identification Survey
conducted by the City University of New York in 2001. The trend has continued during the past decade.
â
Ingersoll's mother, who died when he was only two and a half years old, was a collateral descendent of the prominent New York revolutionary figure Robert R. Livingston, who administered the oath of office to George Washington in 1789, when New York City was the nation's capital.
*
The history of slavery in areas where it was practiced in the North can be even touchier than it is in the South. When I toured Rose Hill, which has been restored by the Geneva Historical Society, in 2001, the guide did not mention that David Selden Rose was a slaveholder. Only when I returned to New York City and began doing some background research in the History and Genealogy section of the New York Public Library did I discover that this had been a plantation in every historical sense of the word.
*
The extension of slavery into new territories was the crux of the famous 1858 debates between Lincoln and the incumbent Illinois senator Stephen A. Douglas. Although Douglas won the Illinois election, the debates, which were widely publicized and reprinted throughout the country, catapulted Lincoln to national prominence and launched his campaign for the presidency in 1860.
*
In “The Preacher,” one of Whittier's many well-known antislavery poems, the lines quoted by Ingersoll are followed by:
And begged for the love of Christ, the gold, / Coined from the hearts in its groaning hold. / What could it matter, more or less / Of strikes, and hunger, and weariness? / Living or dying, bond or free / What was time to eternity?
*
Many historians have suggested that Franklin D. Roosevelt used Ingersoll's “Plumed Knight” speech as the model for his 1928 “Happy Warrior” speech nominating New York's governor Al Smith as the Democratic presidential candidate in 1928.
*
Hundreds of books have been devoted solely to analyzing the purported religious, or antireligious, beliefs of Lincoln. Even a glancing survey makes clear the lack of agreement about the sixteenth president's true views:
Abraham Lincoln, the Ideal Christian
(1913);
Lincoln the Freethinker
(1924);
Abraham Lincoln and Hillel's Golden Rule
(1929);
Abraham Lincoln: Fatalist, Skeptic, Atheist, or Christian?
(1942);
The Religion of Abraham Lincoln
(1963);
Abraham Lincoln, Theologian of American Anguish
(1973); and
Lincoln's Greatest Speech
(2002). The last book, by Ronald C. White, dean and professor of religious history at San Francisco State University, offers a religious exegesis of Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address.