Is Richard Dawkins destroying his reputation? | Sophie Elmhirst
In Dublin, not long ago, Richard Dawkins visited a steakhouse called Darwin's. He was in town to give a talk on the origins of life at Trinity College with the American physicist Lawrence Krauss. In the restaurant, a large model gorilla squatted in a corner and a series of sepia paintings of early man hung in the dining room - though, Dawkins pointed out, not quite in the right chronological order. A space by the bar had been refitted to resemble the interior of the Beagle, the vessel on which Charles Darwin sailed to South America in 1831 and conceived his theory of natural selection. "Oh look at this!" Dawkins said, examining the decor. "It's terrific! Oh, wonderful."
Over the years, Dawkins, a zoologist by training, has expressed admiration for Darwin in the way a schoolboy might worship a sporting giant. In his first memoir, Dawkins noted the "serendipitous realisation" that his full name - Clinton Richard Dawkins - shared the same initials as Charles Robert Darwin. He owns a prized first edition of On The Origin of Species, which he can quote from memory. For Dawkins, the book is totemic, the founding text of his career. "It's such a thorough, unanswerable case," he said one afternoon. "[Darwin] called it one long argument." As a description of Dawkins's own life, particularly its late phase, "one long argument" serves fairly well. As the global face of atheism over the last decade, Dawkins has ratcheted up the rhetoric in his self-declared war against religion. He is the general who chooses to fight on the front line - whose scorched-earth tactics have won him fervent admirers, and ferocious enemies. What is less clear, however, is whether he is winning.
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