Dawkins seems like the kind of guy I would enjoy talking with casually, but to be honest I can't really engage with any aspect of his work.
The problem isn't really with his views on Religion. By and large, his criticism is something I would stand by, and his opinions vis. obscurantist metaphysics and folklore are largely unquestionable.
What I'm not so sure about is his perspective with regards to scientific realism; specifically that of the Biological sciences. It has never seemed right to me that the biological taxonomies and investigations should all be thought to carve nature at any useful joints. Biochemistry and physiology, I'm postively supportive of, and the explanation of organism development through the information content of genetic sequences is absolutely inspired, but it's when you get to subjects like ecology and structural biology that I have problems understanding why the classifications provided are somehow epistemically privileged; at the least, any more so than, say, economics or political sciences.
Evolution is supposed to bridge the explanatory gap between the molecular level, which I could happily accept, and the theories of why such and such is a distinct species/why certain ecological and environmental effects arise, and I'm not sure that it really works as strongly as convention assumes (even if it is capable of providing post-hoc rationalization for why the "right" taxonomy of biology is what it is). I don't find Dawkins convincing in this regard, which makes me wonder whether we shouldn't really be getting a chemist in to defend Science against Religion as opposed to an evolutionary biologist.
The problem isn't really with his views on Religion. By and large, his criticism is something I would stand by, and his opinions vis. obscurantist metaphysics and folklore are largely unquestionable.
What I'm not so sure about is his perspective with regards to scientific realism; specifically that of the Biological sciences. It has never seemed right to me that the biological taxonomies and investigations should all be thought to carve nature at any useful joints. Biochemistry and physiology, I'm postively supportive of, and the explanation of organism development through the information content of genetic sequences is absolutely inspired, but it's when you get to subjects like ecology and structural biology that I have problems understanding why the classifications provided are somehow epistemically privileged; at the least, any more so than, say, economics or political sciences.
Evolution is supposed to bridge the explanatory gap between the molecular level, which I could happily accept, and the theories of why such and such is a distinct species/why certain ecological and environmental effects arise, and I'm not sure that it really works as strongly as convention assumes (even if it is capable of providing post-hoc rationalization for why the "right" taxonomy of biology is what it is). I don't find Dawkins convincing in this regard, which makes me wonder whether we shouldn't really be getting a chemist in to defend Science against Religion as opposed to an evolutionary biologist.