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There
is another fatty acid, capric acid, which is just like the other two
except that it has yet two more carbon atoms in its main chain. A dog
that had never met capric acid would perhaps have no more trouble
imagining its smell than we would have trouble imagining
a trumpet playing one note higher than we have heard a trumpet play
before. It seems to me entirely reasonable to guess that a dog, or a
rhinoceros, might treat mixtures of smells as harmonious chords.
Perhaps there are discords. Probably not melodies, for melodies are
built up of notes that start or stop abruptly with accurate timing,
unlike smells. Or perhaps dogs and rhinos smell in colour. The argument
would be the same as for the bats.

Once
again, the perceptions that we call colours are tools used by our
brains to label important distinctions in the outside world. Perceived
hues - what philosophers call qualia - have no intrinsic connection
with lights of particular wavelengths. They are internal labels that
are
available
to the brain, when it constructs its
model of external reality, to make distinctions that are especially
salient to the animal concerned. In our case, or that of a bird, that
means light of different wavelengths. In a bat's case, I have
speculated, it might be surfaces of different echoic properties or
textures, perhaps red for shiny, blue for velvety, green for abrasive.
And in a dog's or a rhino's case, why should it not be smells? The
power to imagine the alien world of a bat or a rhino, a pond skater or
a mole, a bacterium or a bark beetle, is one of the privileges science
grants us when it tugs at the black cloth of our burka and shows us the
wider range of what is out there for our delight.

The
metaphor of Middle World - of the intermediate range of phenomena that
the narrow slit in our burka permits us to see -applies to yet other
scales or 'spectrums'. We can construct a scale of improbabilities,
with a similarly narrow window through which our intuition and
imagination are capable of going. At one extreme of the spectrum of
improbabilities are those would-be events that we call impossible.
Miracles are events that are extremely improbable. A statue of a
madonna could wave its hand at us. The atoms that make up its
crystalline structure are all vibrating back and forth. Because there
are so many of them, and because there is no agreed preference in their
direction of motion, the hand, as we see it in Middle World, stays rock
steady. But the jiggling atoms in the hand
could
all
just
happen
to move in the same direction at the
same time. And again. And again ... In this case the hand would move,
and we'd see it waving at us. It could happen, but the odds against
are so great that, if you had set out writing the number at the origin
of the universe, you still would not have written enough zeroes to this
day. The power to calculate such odds - the power to quantify the
near-impossible rather than just throw up our hands in despair - is
another example of the liberating benefactions of science to the human
spirit.

Evolution
in Middle World has ill equipped us to handle very improbable events.
But in the vastness of astronomical space, or geological time, events
that seem impossible in Middle World turn out to be inevitable. Science
flings open the narrow window through which we are accustomed to
viewing the spectrum of possibilities. We are liberated by calculation
and reason to visit regions of possibility that had once seemed out of
bounds or inhabited by dragons. We have already made use of this
widening of the window in Chapter 4, where we considered the
improbability of the origin of life and how even a near-impossible
chemical event must come to pass given enough planet years to play
with; and where we considered the spectrum of possible universes, each
with its own set of laws and constants, and the anthropic necessity of
finding ourselves in one of the minority of friendly places.

How
should we interpret Haldane's 'queerer than we can suppose'? Queerer
than can,
in principle,
be supposed? Or just
queerer than we can suppose, given the limitation of our brains'
evolutionary apprenticeship in Middle World? Could we, by training and
practice, emancipate ourselves from Middle World, tear off our black
burka, and achieve some sort of intuitive - as well as just
mathematical - understanding of the very small, the very large, and the
very fast? I genuinely don't know the answer, but I am thrilled to be
alive at a time when humanity is pushing against the limits of
understanding. Even better, we may eventually discover that there are
no limits.

APPENDIX

A
partial list of friendly addresses, for individuals needing support in
escaping from religion

I
intend to keep an updated version of this list on the website of the
Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science:
www.richarddawkins.net. I apologize for limiting the list below largely
to the English-speaking world.

USA

American
Atheists

PO
Box 5733, Parsippany, NJ 07054-6733

Voicemail:
1-908-276-7300

Fax:
1-908-276-7402

Email:
[email protected]

www.atheists.org

American
Humanist Association

1777
T Street, NW, Washington, DC 20009-7125

Telephone:
(202) 238-9088

Toll-free:
1-800-837-3792

Fax:
(202) 238-9003

www.americanhumanist.org

Atheist
Alliance International

PO
Box 26867, Los Angeles, CA 90026

Toll-free:
1-866-HERETIC

Email:
[email protected]

www.atheistalliance.org

The
Brights

PO
Box 163418, Sacramento, CA 95816

Email:
[email protected]

www.the-brights.net

Center
for Inquiry Transnational Council for Secular Humanism Campus
Freethought Alliance Center for Inquiry - On Campus

African
Americans for Humanism

3965
Rensch Road, Amherst, NY 14228

Telephone:
(716) 636-4869

Fax:
(716) 636-1733

Email:
[email protected]

www.centerforinquiry.net

www.secularhumanism.org

www.campusfreethought.org

www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?section=aah&page=index

Freedom
From Religion Foundation PO Box 750, Madison, WI 53701 Telephone: (608)
256-5800 Email: [email protected] www.ffrf.org

Freethought
Society of Greater Philadelphia PO Box 242, Pocopson, PA 19366-0242
Telephone: (610) 793-2737 Fax: (610) 793-2569 Email:
[email protected] www.fsgp.org/

Institute
for Humanist Studies 48 Howard St, Albany, NY 12207 Telephone:
(518)432-7820 Fax: (518) 432-7821 www.humaniststudies. org

International
Humanist and Ethical Union - USA

Appignani
Bioethics Center

PO
Box 4104, Grand Central Station, New York, NY 10162

Telephone:
(212) 687-3324

Fax:
(212) 661-4188

Internet
Infidels

PO
Box 142, Colorado Springs, CO 80901-0142

Fax:
(877) 501-5113

www.
infidels. org

James
Randi Educational Foundation

201
S.E. 12th St (E. Davie Blvd), Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316-1815

Telephone:
(954) 467-1112

Fax:
(954) 467-1660

Email:
[email protected] www.randi.org

Secular
Coalition for America

PO
Box 53330, Washington, DC 20009-9997

Telephone:
(202) 299-1091

www.secular.org

Secular
Student Alliance PO Box 3246, Columbus, OH 43210 Toll-free Voicemail /
Fax: 1-877-842-9474 Email: [email protected] www.secularstudents.
org

The
Skeptics Society

PO
Box 338, Altadena, CA 91001

Telephone:
(626) 794-3119

Fax:
(626) 794-1301

Email:
[email protected]

www.skeptic.com

Society
for Humanistic Judaism

28611
W. 12 Mile Rd, Farmington Hills, MI 48334

Telephone:
(248) 478-7610

Fax:
(248)478-3159

Email:
[email protected]

www.shj.org

Britain

British
Humanist Association

1
Gower Street, London WC1E 6HD

Telephone:
020 7079 3580

Fax:
020 7079 3588

Email:
[email protected]

www.humanism.org.uk

International
Humanist and Ethical Union - UK 1 Gower Street, London WC1E 6HD
Telephone: 020 7631 3170 Fax: 020 7631 3171 www.iheu.org/

National
Secular Society

25
Red Lion Square, London WC1R 4RL

Tel:
020 7404 3126

Fax:
0870 762 8971

www.secularism.org.uk/

New
Humanist

1
Gower Street, London WC1E 6HD

Telephone:
020 7436 1151

Fax:
020 7079 3588

Email:
[email protected]

www.newhumanist.org.uk

Rationalist
Press Association

1
Gower Street, London WC1E 6HD

Telephone:
020 7436 1151

Fax:
020 7079 3588

Email:
[email protected]

www.rationalist.org.uk/

South
Place Ethical Society (UK)

Conway
Hall, Red Lion Square, London WC1R 4RL

Telephone:
020 7242 8037/4

Fax:
020 7242 8036

Email:
[email protected]

www.ethicalsoc.org.uk

Canada

Humanist
Association of Canada

PO
Box 8752, Station T, Ottawa, Ontario, K1G 3J1

Telephone:
877-HUMANS-l

Fax:
(613) 739-4801

Email:
[email protected]

http://hac.humanists.net/

Australia

Australian
Skeptics

PO
Box 268, Roseville, NSW 2069

Telephone:
02 9417 2071

Email:
[email protected]

www.skeptics.com.au

Council
of Australian Humanist Societies GPO Box 1555, Melbourne, Victoria
3001. Telephone: 613 5974 4096 Email: [email protected]
http://home.vicnet.net.au/
~humanist/resources/cahs.html

New
Zealand

New
Zealand Skeptics

NZCSICOP
Inc.

PO
Box 29-492, Christchurch

Email:
[email protected]

http://skeptics.org.nz

Humanist
Society of New Zealand PO Box 3372, Wellington Email:
[email protected] www.humanist.org.nz/

India

Rationalist
International

PO
Box 9110, New Delhi 110091

Telephone:
+ 91-11-556
990
12

Email:
[email protected]

www.rationalistinternational.net/

Islamic

Apostates
of Islam www.apostatesofislam.com/index.htm

Dr
Homa Darabi Foundation

(To
promote the rights of women and children under Islam)

PO
Box 11049, Truckee, CA 96162, USA

Telephone
(530) 582 4197

Fax
(530) 582 0156

Email:
[email protected]

www.homa.org/

FaithFreedom.org
www.faithfreedom.org/index.htm

Institute
for the Secularization of Islamic Society Email: [email protected]
www.secularislam.org/Default.htm

BOOKS
CITED OR RECOMMENDED

Adams,
D. (2003).
The Salmon of Doubt.
London: Pan.

Alexander,
R. D. and Tinkle, D. W., eds (1981).
Natural Selection and

Social
Behavior.
New York: Chiron Press. Anon. (1985).
Life
- How Did It Get Here? By Evolution or by

Creation?
New York: Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. Ashton, J. E,
ed. (1999).
In Six Days: Why 50 Scientists Choose to

Believe
in Creation.
Sydney: New Holland.

Atkins,
P. W. (1992).
Creation Revisited.
Oxford: W. H.
Freeman. Atran, S. (2002).
In Gods We Trust.
Oxford:
Oxford University Press.

Attenborough,
D. (1960).
Quest in Paradise.
London: Lutterworth.
Aunger, R. (2002).
The Electric Meme: A New Theory of How We
Think.
New York: Free Press. Baggini, J. (2003).
Atheism:
A Very Short Introduction.
Oxford: Oxford
University Press.

Barber,
N. (1988).
Lords of the Golden Horn.
London:
Arrow. Barker, D. (1992).
Losing Faith in Faith.
Madison,
WI: Freedom From

Religion
Foundation. Barker, E. (1984).
The Making of a Moonie:
Brainwashing or Choice?

Oxford:
Blackwell. Barrow, J. D. and Tipler, F. J. (1988).
The
Anthropic Cosmological

Principle.
New York: Oxford University Press. Baynes, N. H., ed. (1942).
The Speeches of Adolf Hitler,
vol. 1.

Oxford:
Oxford University Press. Behe, M. J. (1996).
Darwin's Black
Box.
New York: Simon &

Schuster.
Beit-Hallahmi, B. and Argyle, M. (1997).
The Psychology of
Religious

Behaviour,
Belief and Experience.
London: Routledge. Berlinerblau, J.
(2005).
The Secular Bible: Why Nonbelievers Must

Take
Religion Seriously.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Blackmore, S. (1999).
The Meme Machine.
Oxford:
Oxford University Press.

Blaker,
K., ed. (2003).
The Fundamentals of Extremism: The Christian

Right
in America.
Plymouth, MI: New Boston. Bouquet, A. C. (1956).
Comparative Religion.
Harmondsworth:

Penguin.
Boyd, R. and Richerson, P. J. (1985).
Culture and the
Evolutionary

Process.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Boyer, P. (2001).
Religion
Explained.
London: Heinemann. Brodie, R. (1996).
Virus
of the Mind: The New Science of the Meme.

Seattle:
Integral Press. Buckman, R. (2000).
Can We Be Good without
God?
Toronto: Viking.

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