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The Meming of Life » Pigeonhole THIS / Can you hear me now? 7 Parenting Beyond Belief on secular parenting and other natural wonders
Dale is really insightful in this one. Nice defense of the straw-man Dawkins, and the self-critical Sam Harris.
On Faith Panelists Blog: The Problem with Atheism - Sam Harris
Via The Meming of Life. Nice to see Harris being self-critical and original, not resting on his old arguments alone.
Who Was Jesus? | Friendly Atheist by Hemant Mehta
Good comment thread suggests readings on the questions "Did Jesus even exist?" and "Who was he?"
ScienceDirect - Intelligence : Average intelligence predicts atheism rates across 137 nations
Salon.com | God enough
I like the impulse.
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Can you explain what emergence is?
There are things that we just can't deduce from particle physics -- life, agency, meaning, value and this thing called consciousness. The fact is that we can act on our own behalf and make choices. So agency is real. With agency comes value. Dinner is either good or bad. There's consciousness in the universe. We may not be able to explain it, but it's true. So the first new strand in the scientific worldview is emergence.
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Are you rejecting Weinberg's famous comment? "The more we comprehend the universe, the more pointless it seems."
I profoundly believe that Weinberg is wrong. I also happen to think that Weinberg is utterly brilliant. He's one of the best defenders of the pure reductionist stance. But once you've got agency, you've got meaning. This is the beginning of a change in our scientific worldview. Agency is real, so meaning is real in the universe. Value is real, at least in the biosphere. And these things can't be talked about by physicists.
So the reductionist model breaks down when we're talking about how life evolves.
Absolutely. This idea is frightening at first, but then utterly liberating. For 3.8 billion years, the biosphere has been expanding from the origin of life into what I call "the adjacent possible." Once we're at levels of complexity above the atom, the universe is on a unique trajectory. It's doing something that it's never done before.
To take one example, I argue that the evolutionary emergence of the human heart cannot be deduced from physics. That doesn't mean it breaks any laws of physics. But there's no way of getting from physics to the emergence of hearts in the evolution of the biosphere. If you were to ask Darwin, what's the function of the heart? he would have said it's to pump blood. That's what Darwin meant by adaptation. But there may be other causal consequences of the heart, or any other part of you, that are of no functional significance in the current environment, but may become useful in a different environment.
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IHS :: HNN :: Einstein's God: A New Book Explores the Scientist's Spirituality
A good fact-check on the "Einstein was a Theist" canard.
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"I am a deeply religious non-believer," Einstein wrote in a letter to his friend and colleague Hans Muehsam, in 1954. "If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it."
However, his philosophy firmly excluded a belief in the supernatural or a Creator-God.
Todd Macalister's new book Einstein's God: A Way of Being Spiritual without the Supernatural, (Apocryphile Press, Berkeley; 2008) explores the scientist's views on spirituality as expressed through his lectures and personal papers.
Daylight Atheism > Skin Deep
The writer on this site is so worth reading.
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Add Sticky Note
I've been reading this account of a disciplinary hearing against the odious John Freshwater, an Ohio science teacher who allegedly promoted religion in his class, repeatedly and illegally, even after being ordered by school administrators to stop. Among other things, Freshwater brazenly taught creationism in class - directing his students to Answers in Genesis and giving extra credit to those willing to see the anti-evolution documentary Expelled. Most infamously, he was accused of using a Tesla coil to burn a cross onto a student's arm.
However, I want to focus on a different aspect of this story. As often occurs, this case has divided the community, with the religious students who support Freshwater intimidating and demonizing those who don't:
Students carried Bibles to class last spring to support Freshwater.
Classmates of Arie Alvarado questioned her and a few other eighth-grade students who didn’t take part.
"They were calling us atheists," Alvarado said. "I couldn't believe it. One day they're your friend, and the next day you're an atheist and they're completely ignoring you in the hallway."
- If any of you students or teachers out there have direct knowledge of this happening in your own school, I'd love to hear from you. Leave a comment or use the contact form in the sidebar. - on 2008-10-27
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Add Sticky Note
Of course, there's nothing wrong with being an atheist - although many of the Dover plaintiffs were not. Still, the reaction of these hostile believers is telling. They think that the worst insult you can hurl at somebody is to call them an atheist, as though someone's not believing in God necessarily implies that they're an immoral and evil person.
We've seen this sort of demonization before. All too often, believers judge atheists based solely on our lack of belief, not on our actions or our character. It's another manifestation of the pernicious human tendency toward tribalism, which religion does much to encourage.
Tribalism is a tendency that's always been with us, stamped deep into our brains by evolution. It's the urge to label and categorize people, to sort them into groups, and then to judge them based solely on which of these groups they give their allegiance to. Even when tribal distinctions are completely arbitrary, human beings can be passionate to the point of zealousness about them (consider sports fans), even to the point of violence (consider sports riots). And when tribal membership is determined by religion, which most people consider a far more integral part of their identity than sports fandom, the consequences of irrational tribalism are far worse. Those who are outside the tribe, who are labeled as "the Other", will inevitably be blamed by tribe members for everything that is evil and frightening in the world.
- My favorite riff on this, coming from my years living in China, is that BUDDHISTS are RELIGIOUS, but also NON-THEISTIC (at least if they know original Buddhism).
They're also the least dogmatic religion, which is probably why wars and terrorism almost never involve Buddhist causes. - on 2008-10-27
- My favorite riff on this, coming from my years living in China, is that BUDDHISTS are RELIGIOUS, but also NON-THEISTIC (at least if they know original Buddhism).
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Does Religion Cause Immorality? - ExChristian.Net - News and Opinion
Bad headline. The point is: Post-Christian European and non-Christian Asian nations have lower crime rates, so the "no morality without Christian national values" argument is refuted.
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In all the confusion over what Paul said or didn’t say, his real contention is often missed. He explained that his research wasn’t really about the United States; it was about the other well-off Western democracies where religious belief is comparatively low. He wanted to examine the idea that a “secularized” society would do worse than a faithful society, which he called “a common theme of many religious people — not all of them, but many.”
“What my study shows is that’s simply not true,” Paul said in an interview.
“In Western society, there are many, many secularized nations that are performing quite well socially. So that’s the main conclusion,” he said. “What I’ve done is I’ve falsified what I call the creationist social hypothesis, and I’ve done that forever. You can never make the claim again that it’s impossible to have a society that’s non-religious that does well.”
nontheistnexus.com - Interview with Steve Wells from the Skeptic's Annotated Bible
Interesting interview with the creator of the wonderful Skeptic's Annotated Bible.
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