Simon Critchley on Derrida *

Dec 22nd, 2005 | Filed by

His reading of certain philosophers completely transformed our understanding of their work.… Read the rest



Are There Serious Doubts About ‘Darwinism’? *

Dec 22nd, 2005 | Filed by

No.… Read the rest



Put Jesus Back in Xmas Sales *

Dec 22nd, 2005 | Filed by

Fanatics give the impression they would be pleased if a depiction of JC were used to sell cars.… Read the rest



The Big Fluffy

Dec 21st, 2005 8:22 pm | By

Another item from Pharyngula. About the fact that scientists talking about the details of a scientific subject can quickly bore an audience.

It’s true: we aren’t trained to be showmen. We are very good at talking to other scientists – I’m sure Wesley’s talk would have been a pleasure for me to listen to, and I would have learned much and been appreciative of the substance – but most of it would have whooshed over the heads of a lay audience. I wrestle with this in my public talks, too. There’s always this stuff that I am very excited about and that I know my peers think is really nifty and that gets right down to the heart of

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Abdication not the Way to Go

Dec 21st, 2005 7:41 pm | By

I was surprised to read this about Panda’s Thumb at Pharyngula yesterday. I didn’t know any of it. I don’t read Panda’s very often, whereas I do read Pharyngula almost daily, because I love PZ’s steady flow of irascible atheism. I now realize that the absence of irascible atheism is not absence of mind but intentional. No wonder I’ve never formed a habit of reading it.

The Panda’s Thumb has done a terrible job of covering the Mirecki situation. F-. Total flop. Nosedive into the latrine pit…No names, no details, but let’s just say that there are a few people in the group who would be more comfortable with Michelle Malkin’s innuendo or John Altevogt’s slanders than with supporting an

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‘There are Some Problems Here’ *

Dec 21st, 2005 | Filed by

Average literacy of college educated Americans declined significantly from 1992 to 2003.… Read the rest



Literacy Problem *

Dec 21st, 2005 | Filed by

The issue is the declining ability to learn: the inability of students to assimilate information.… Read the rest



Eisenhower Meets Said Ramadan *

Dec 21st, 2005 | Filed by

Islam was seen as a barrier to the spread of Marxist ideology among the masses.… Read the rest



New Biography of Hannah Arendt *

Dec 21st, 2005 | Filed by

Laure Adler says Arendt was blind about the Holocaust. Hmm.… Read the rest



A Broad and Withering Opinion *

Dec 21st, 2005 | Filed by

Judge cited ‘breathtaking inanity’ of board’s decision and board members’ ‘striking ignorance’ about ID.… Read the rest



More Dover

Dec 20th, 2005 11:16 pm | By

It’s hard to tear oneself away from The Panda’s Thumb today. They are having one hell of a party over there. And writing one great post after another while they’re at it.

One on our friend Steve Fuller for example.

Professor of Sociology Steven Fuller may not know much about the history or content of science (see his recent confusion — just like Linus Pauling’s! — between protein and DNA at Micheal Berube’s blog) but he is good the kind of jargoneering that the Discovery Institute and its allies use to confuse the public about science…Fuller proved to be quite compliant generally, but Judge Jones seems not to to have heard his pleas to institute in Dover a kind of

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This Legal Maelstrom

Dec 20th, 2005 6:39 pm | By

None of this should have happened in the first place, but since it did, at least the judge said what’s what. At least he didn’t do a lot of grovelling and respecting and protected space-providing and beseeching and apologizing. At least he came right out and said that the creationist side lied – and lied repeatedly at that. And since he said it, we can repeat it. A judge said it, in a decision, so no one can accuse us of libel if we say what the judge said. So: they told lies! Repeatedly! And they got caught doing it! Nyah!

Said the judge: “It is ironic that several of these individuals, who so staunchly and proudly touted their

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Not in Public School Science Classroom *

Dec 20th, 2005 | Filed by

‘We find that the secular purposes claimed by the board amount to a pretext for the board’s real purpose.’… Read the rest



Judge’s Decision in Dover Case [pdf] *

Dec 20th, 2005 | Filed by

‘while encouraging students to keep an open mind and explore alternatives to evolution, it offers no scientific alternative’… Read the rest



Celebrations at Panda’s Thumb *

Dec 20th, 2005 | Filed by

Hooray hooray hooray.… Read the rest



Unseen Power Theory Ruled Out *

Dec 20th, 2005 | Filed by

Now Pat Robertson will be really cross.… Read the rest



Judge Rules Against ‘Intelligent Design’ *

Dec 20th, 2005 | Filed by

Says several school board members repeatedly lied to cover their motives.… Read the rest



Fluff

Dec 19th, 2005 11:33 pm | By

Mush. Most people can’t seem to think or talk about this subject without resorting to mush. To inaccurate assumptions and woolly language and category mistakes and undefined terms that need defining. To mush.

Editing it today – 33 years later under the same title – is the Guardian’s religious affairs correspondent, Stephen Bates. He defends it enthusiastically. He said: “I am by no means averse to including humanist or secularist writers but I tell all would-be contributors that the column is intended, in my opinion, to be a space for non-polemical or philosophical reflection. This means not attacking the beliefs of others. In my experience, humanists and atheists find this very difficult…”

Well maybe that’s because they’re profoundly puzzled by … Read the rest



Wacka wacka

Dec 19th, 2005 11:05 pm | By

The decision in Dover will be handed down soon.

Legal experts said the big question was whether Judge Jones would rule narrowly or more broadly on the merits of teaching intelligent design as science. Proponents of the theory argue that living organisms are so complex that the best explanation is that a higher intelligence designed them.

Here we are back at that legs question. That sentence does look so very silly. ‘Proponents of the theory argue that living organisms are so complex that the best explanation is that a higher intelligence designed them while somehow not being so complex that it itself requires explanation.’ ‘Proponents of the theory argue that living organisms are so complex that the best explanation … Read the rest



Sands Shift Under the Case for Interventionism *

Dec 19th, 2005 | Filed by

And labels get confused: left, right, realist, internationalist, moral idealist, neoconservative…… Read the rest