Our author’s main point is that immersion into the study of anthropology leads one to accept cultural relativism, and that, in turn, makes one into a freethinker. In what follows I will try to discern the connections, if any, between these three things.
Cultural relativism, in Eller’s understanding, “does not maintain that ‘anything goes’ but merely reports that this goes here and that goes there.” If that were all, then cultural relativism would be a science describing different individuals and cultures. Relativism would be anthropology. But that is a strange definition of relativism. And, of course, Eller thinks nothing of contradicting himself in the next paragraph: “we must abandon the notion of absolute morality” (Natural Atheism, 109), getting closer to the dictionary definition of this term: “the view that ethical and moral standards are relative to what a particular society or culture believes to be good/bad, right/wrong.” In his example of the debate within the Catholic church on the status of Indians soon after the discovery of America, Eller writes that neither those who considered them subhuman nor those who considered them fully human but cared only about converting them to Christianity “considered the relativistic option — to learn from and about them, to tolerate their difference, and to leave them alone.” (116) Our author does not take his own doctrine seriously. It was part of the Western culture at that time to be imperialistic. Who is he to judge that culture? If a culture is intent upon razing and pillaging, that is just its peculiar feature and our response should be “to learn from and about them.” (Learn what? How better to raze and pillage?)
And what does it mean, “to leave them alone”? Is our author against miscegenation, whether of blood or ideas? Must no culture influence another? Must there be no intercourse, whether of commerce, travel, science, etc., between cultures? But if this idea is absurd, then why is it wrong for a person to become a missionary and work within foreign cultures to convert folks there to Christianity? It seems like an eminently peaceful occupation. Eller objects: “Few if any American missionaries ever arranged debates with Indian tribal leaders; instead they threatened them with hell, rewarded or punished them with material goods, and coerced them with military power.” (126) Has it occurred to our author that Indian tribes were unprepared for formal disputations? How many professors even today in the academia are so prepared? And anyway, this is an objection to the means by which conversion was effected, not to the end of conversion itself.
Eller finally cannot completely divorce himself from the natural law. Traditional cultures range “from the happy to the miserable, from the peaceful to the warlike.” (118) Could it be that those cultures are happy because they are in some sense better than those cultures that are miserable? Mises clearly has done his homework on this issue:
The Asiatics and the Africans no less than the peoples of European descent have been eager to struggle successfully for survival and to use reason as the foremost weapon in these endeavors. They have sought to get rid of the beasts of prey and of disease, to prevent famines and to raise the productivity of labor. There can be no doubt that in the pursuit of these aims they have been less successful than the whites. The proof is that they are eager to profit from all achievements of the West. Those ethnologists would be right, if Mongols or Africans, tormented by a painful disease, were to renounce the aid of a European doctor because their mentality or their world view led them to believe that it is better to suffer than to be relieved of pain. Mahatma Gandhi disavowed his whole philosophy when he entered a modern hospital to be treated for appendicitis.
The North American Indians lacked the ingenuity to invent the wheel. The inhabitants of the Alps were not keen enough to construct skis which would have rendered their hard life much more agreeable. Such shortcomings were not due to a mentality different from those of the races which had long since used wheels and skis; they were failures, even when judged from the point of view of the Indians and the Alpine mountaineers. (Human Action, 84ff)
There have been spiritual failures, as well, to come up with a half-decent religion. Even if we assume for the sake of argument that relativism is true, religion is far more than morality. It is a set of articles of faith; it is theocentric work; it is many other things. It can co-exist with a variety of moral theories, intuitions, and rules. Eller reports that he spent two years among Australian aboriginals, “trying to speak their language, eat their food, practice their culture, and enter their universe of meaning and action.” What he failed to grasp, unfortunately, was that his own ideals of unbiased scholarly work were part of his own Western culture and were not shared by his subjects. Even if he was genuinely attempting to try their “cultural glasses” on and “’see’ or think or understand as those others do,” (111) it was he who was studying them; they did not study him, a fact which demonstrates his own superiority as clearly as day.
It is true that every person is born into some family, community, and state. These affect his development from child to adult. But they do not determine his development. Eller writes of religious experiences: “even for the subject, the experience is mere raw data; if I hear a voice, how do I know that it is the voice of God? It could be the voice of Allah, Vishnu, Buddha, Satan, or my cat; each is equally (un)likely.” (43) Cultural influences are, too, mere raw data. Everyone, according to the principle of methodological individualism, once he attains the age of reason, decides for himself which culture he wants to belong to. Logically then, we must speak of individual relativism; indeed, culture always changes in response to new ideas and actions of individual human beings. Culture is not an independent unit of analysis; the individual is. Finally, if individual relativism is taken to mean that happiness is subjective, then no doubt, it’s true. If it’s taken to mean that there is no such thing as objective glory or shame, then it is false.
Eller knows that, of course. When he writes that he wishes religion would go away, is he thinking of eliminating it from his own culture or from every culture? Being a skilled anthropologist, he may not have his own culture at all. He may instead think of himself not only as an anthropological scholar but also as a doctor, a healer of cultures in the manner, perhaps, of Richard Weaver. Religion is a mass delusion, his diagnosis must run, and so every culture will benefit from its destruction. But if that’s not (individual) imperialism, I don’t know what is. Whatever happened to choosing “the relativistic option”? Again, his idea is that meeting the Other, “those who differ yet still deserve their humanity,” (128) will lead you to a more objective view of various cultures. That’s all to the good. But I fail to see why encountering other religions must convince you of the falsity of your own, and if it does so convince you, why it is contrary to reason to choose for yourself the best religion from among those you have studied rather than atheism. Just as Eller is unmoved in his beliefs by the existence of theistic cultures, neither need a Christian or a believer of any other faith be moved by the existence of Eller’s own atheistic culture.
In other words, Eller gives no evidence for his corollary claim that all religions are created equal. The idea that religions and, in particular, Christianity have no methodology to adjudicate their claims is equally unfounded. The methodologies are as diverse as God’s influence in the world: in nature — metaphysics, ethics, psychology, praxeology, cosmology; in grace — biology, religious experience, history, archeology, Biblical interpretation; in glory — the testimonies of saints and Jesus Himself. And I’ve omitted a whole lot of other disciplines studying which can lead one to God. In principle, there are as many paths to God as there are human beings, though paths obviously intersect.
Let me further quote from an old article of mine: “I want to mention the common atheistic idea that the Christian God is equivalent to pagan gods. There is a likeness, according to Barnett, between ‘Ganesh, Jah, Yahweh, Allah, Zeus or any of the thousands of others.’ Nothing could be further from the truth. Pagan gods were within nature; they were a part of the world; the Christian God transcends the created universe. Pagan gods were subject to the same passions that humans were; the Christian God has no passions at all. Pagan gods did wicked things; the Christian God is supremely good. Pagan gods had bodies; the Christian God is a spirit. Pagan gods were not simple nor One nor perfect not timeless nor immutable nor infinite nor loving nor just nor merciful nor omniscient nor omnipotent. The Christian God is all these and more. Pagan gods were not their own existence; the Christian God is His existence. In short, there is no comparison between Yahweh and, say, Zeus. And the evidence of science and philosophy points to the Christian God and not to the gods of the Greek mythology.” Thus, at least these “gods” can be eliminated from consideration from the start, leaving monotheism as the only contender.
Thus, on the contrary, exposure to different cultures will likely result in objective improvements of one’s own. Even hardcore anthropologists need not abandon their own culture. But they may suggest and implement solutions of which other societies were a source. As both a cause and effect of that (i.e., of doing good to one’s own kin, clan, country), one’s attachment to his own culture may increase.
Conclusion. Close familiarity with other cultures and individuals need not make one into a cultural relativist, nor cause one to abandon one’s own religion or religion in general. It is certainly helpful in “freeing one’s mind” and should be required therapy for American self-absorption which has led to so many wars, but one ought not to forget what is true and false and what works and what doesn’t.