FAIR Examines ‘Islamophobia’ *

Oct 15th, 2008 | Filed by

‘The term “Islamophobia” refers to hostility toward Islam and Muslims’ – that begs the question.… Read the rest



The Usual Confusion About ‘Islamophobia’ *

Oct 15th, 2008 | Filed by

Steve Rendall of ‘FAIR’ conflates criticism of Islam with hatred of Muslims, tries to make the former taboo.… Read the rest



FBI Calls Murder of Said Sisters ‘Honor’ Killing *

Oct 15th, 2008 | Filed by

Sisters’ relatives have said the father killed them because they dated non-Muslims and acted too western. … Read the rest



Anthony Appiah on Philosophers *

Oct 15th, 2008 | Filed by

With responses from Michael Walzer and Michael Sandel. … Read the rest



Imran Ahmad on C S Lewis and Narnia *

Oct 15th, 2008 | Filed by

‘It’s enough to turn anyone into a secular humanist.’… Read the rest



Atheist Joking *

Oct 15th, 2008 | Filed by

Christianity makes insolently extraordinary claims but produces terrible apologists.… Read the rest



Is Lolita About Love or Sex? *

Oct 14th, 2008 | Filed by

The novel joins a dark central current that eroticizes children relentlessly and wishes it hadn’t.… Read the rest



Physicist Says Einstein Got His Sums Wrong *

Oct 14th, 2008 | Filed by

No mention of wife.… Read the rest



The Uses of Cheater Detection *

Oct 14th, 2008 | Filed by

Humans want revenge but also forgiveness. Over the long haul forgiveness wins out.… Read the rest



The reading matter in pews is limited

Oct 13th, 2008 3:30 pm | By

Andrew Brown is also eloquent on the subject.

The whole point about the net is that, like books, it gives people a shared space and a shared experience that is not physical. If I sit in an internet cafe – or even, God forbid, an office – and talk to someone on the net, I am far closer to the person to whom I am talking than to the noble workers on each side of me, who would never dream of emailing gossip in the middle of a working day. When I read a book, I am communing with the author, and perhaps with all the
other readers, not with anyone else in the railway carriage.

This is one … Read the rest



Customers need change

Oct 13th, 2008 3:11 pm | By

Someone who works at a public library and is ‘studing an MSc in Information and Library Studies’ at a University was terribly irritated by that piece on libraries the other day.

The article is awash with dismay over the move to allow library users to eat, drink and, heaven forbid, actually talk. Interestingly, they talk about the ’silence rule’- a concept that is completely alien to either myself or just about any other person I have encountered who works in a public library.

Ah, is it indeed. Why?

Don’t bother asking; the library student never says. It’s such an absurd, outdated, stuffy, elitist, stupid idea that it’s simply self-evident what’s wrong with it. Which is interesting, because one would … Read the rest



Andrew Brown on Libraries *

Oct 13th, 2008 | Filed by

Under the pretence of abolishing elitism, you actually entrench it in the cruellest way.… Read the rest



Riots in Acre *

Oct 13th, 2008 | Filed by

Peres said ‘there are several religions in Israel, there is only one law and one police.’… Read the rest



John Lewis: McCain is Sowing Seeds of Hatred *

Oct 13th, 2008 | Filed by

Lewis’s comments follow widely reported outbursts of anger against Obama at McCain campaign events. … Read the rest



Paul Krugman Wins Nobel Prize in Economics *

Oct 13th, 2008 | Filed by

Thinks readers may have more tolerance when he’s being boring, but will not think he’s infallible.… Read the rest



Mill refuses

Oct 13th, 2008 10:58 am | By

On page 301 of C S Lewis and the Search for Rational Religion John Beversluis has a lovely passage from Mill. At the end Mill gives what I have long thought of as the Huck Finn response, but Huck seems to have derived it from Mill, so I will attribute it to Mill in future.

From Mill’s Examination of Sir William Hamilton’s Philosophy:

‘If in ascribing goodness to God I do not mean what I mean by goodness; if I do not mean the goodness of which I have some knowledge, but an incomprehensible attribute of an incomprehensible substance, which for aught I know may be a totally different quality from that which I love and venerate – and … Read the rest



David gets jiggy

Oct 12th, 2008 6:14 pm | By

I read a funny story in II Samuel 6 today. (I was reading about what a shit god can be. There’s this bit in II Samuel 6 where David and some friends are transporting the ark of the covenant somewhere in a cart, and Uzzah put his hand on the ark to steady it because the cart was shaking – so god killed him. That makes a lot of sense – Uzzah tries to help and god kills him for it. Nice guy. David gets cold feet then and puts the ark in storage, not wanting to get smited, then he runs some experiments and confirms that god helps people who have the ark [apart from Uzzah, but that’s not … Read the rest



Ockhamism

Oct 12th, 2008 6:05 pm | By

I’m writing a review of C S Lewis and the Search for Rational Religion by John Beversluis. It’s a gripping read, at least if you’re interested in argument and belief and arguments for belief in god and the problem of evil and theistic epistemology and the difference between rhetoric and argument. Beversluis shows carefully and in detail what is wrong with Lewis’s various claims. It’s a gripping read if you’re interested in reasons for believing things, and if you’re not interested in that, you ought to be; everyone ought to be.

The most gripping chapter, in my view, is chapter 10, ‘C S Lewis’s Crisis of Faith.’ Beversluis argues (and shows, I think) that in his despair after his … Read the rest



Times Higher on Academic Blogging *

Oct 12th, 2008 | Filed by

Many philosophers seem quite happy to post early drafts of their research papers online.… Read the rest



Tom Clark on ‘Misrepresenting Naturalism’ *

Oct 12th, 2008 | Filed by

Naturalism is perfectly supportive of moral responsibility, human flourishing and an open, democratic society.… Read the rest