Victim groups want Cardinal Law dismissed *

Aug 5th, 2010 | Filed by

Law resigned as Boston archbishop in 2002 – and fled prosecution, though the AP story doesn’t mention that.… Read the rest



The touching aspirations of students *

Aug 5th, 2010 | Filed by

“I had so much anger. I wanted to be heard. I thought I could do that by becoming the country’s first female suicide bomber.”… Read the rest



Ashtiani’s lawyer arrested in Turkey *

Aug 5th, 2010 | Filed by

International Committee against Stoning has received information from Iran that the Islamic regime is trying to bring Mostafaei into disrepute.… Read the rest



Wall? What wall? Do you see a wall?

Aug 4th, 2010 6:28 pm | By

Karl Giberson and Lawrence Krauss seem to see things differently. (Now there’s a surprise.) Giberson tells us that science and religion aren’t in tension at all at all.

A religious scientist functions routinely as a scientist in the lab, perhaps looking for the gene that causes hyperbole. While they are engaged in this search they believe that God is the creator. On regular occasions this scientist goes to church, where he or she sings hymns, listens to sermons, volunteers at the soup kitchen, takes communion, and puts money in the offering plate, all the while believing that the scientific picture of the world is accurate. Occasionally this religious scientist may even daydream about finding that gene for hyperbole while listening

Read the rest


Lawrence Krauss on the familiar taboo

Aug 4th, 2010 5:47 pm | By

Lawrence Krauss notes that the NSF does a survey on US science literacy, and always finds that adults in the US tend to say “No! I won’t believe that!” when asked about evolution and the big bang. Until this year, when the NSF fiddled the survey.

the National Science Board, which oversees the foundation, chose to leave the section that discussed these issues out of the 2010 edition, claiming the questions were “flawed indicators of scientific knowledge because responses conflated knowledge and beliefs.” In short, if their religious beliefs require respondents to discard scientific facts, the board doesn’t think it appropriate to expose that truth.

A 2009 Pew survey found that “the most devout are on average least willing to … Read the rest



Waking up one morning

Aug 4th, 2010 4:28 pm | By

Lashings of extraordinary writing in Hitchens’s cancer piece in Vanity Fair. For one thing, there’s the opening, about waking up in a New York hotel room.

have more than once in my time woken up feeling like death. But nothing prepared me for the early morning last June when I came to consciousness feeling as if I were actually shackled to my own corpse. The whole cave of my chest and thorax seemed to have been hollowed out and then refilled with slow-drying cement.

That final (frightening) sentence is an homage to a parallel scene in Kingsley Amis’s Lucky Jim, about a much younger man waking up with a hangover. It’s a set-piece about what a hangover feels … Read the rest



Lawrence Krauss on faith and foolishness *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

Religious beliefs force some people to choose between knowledge and myth, while pointing out how religion can purvey ignorance is taboo.… Read the rest



Abortion ad angers exactly the right people *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

ASA received 1,054 angry complaints about Marie Stopes advert from precisely the sort of hectoring Christian freaks it was designed to piss off.… Read the rest



The Daily Beast on Obama and the Saudi lobby *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

The desert kingdom remains a draconian dictatorship that prohibits even the most basic of liberties.… Read the rest



Terry Glavin on liberalism’s long walk *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

Principled commitment to democracy, universal values and  multilateralism will either define liberalism or be disavowed in favour of dead-end isolationism.… Read the rest



Afghanistan is a great place for women *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

“The trendier option involves incorporating Afghans into modernity by teaching them to live in a globalised present.”… Read the rest



Catholic church fighting sex education in Philippines *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

Bishop does not agree that a high birth rate traps people in poverty. Easy for him.… Read the rest



A dispatch from the front

Aug 4th, 2010 1:06 pm | By

Sorry posting is a bit light. I’ve been busy trying to pull knives out of my back (no use, they’re stuck), and now I have a sudden avalanche of subbing to do for The Philosophers’ Mag and a mere few hours to do it in, so it’s hard to find a spare moment.

Will try to do better.… Read the rest



Jason Rosenhouse on what the civility police really want *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

Which is rudeness directed at their enemies instead of at them and their friends.… Read the rest



Hitchens on being a new citizen of the sick country *

Aug 4th, 2010 | Filed by

‘In whatever kind of a “race” life may be, I have very abruptly become a finalist.’… Read the rest



If music be the food of love, issue a fatwa

Aug 3rd, 2010 4:57 pm | By

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei says music is permitted but bad and nasty.

Khamenei said: “Although music is halal, promoting and teaching it is not compatible with the highest values of the sacred regime of the Islamic Republic.”…”It’s better that our dear youth spend their valuable time in learning science and essential and useful skills and fill their time with sport and healthy recreations instead of music.

Because…music, while permitted, is not a healthy recreation. It’s a recreation, but not a healthy one. It’s permitted, but it’s ungood. Why? Well because it’s pretty, and pleasurable, and emotive, and often sexy, and often exciting. We can’t be having any of that. It’s not healthful. Or useful. Or good. Or compatible with the highest … Read the rest



Want some theophanies?

Aug 3rd, 2010 12:06 pm | By

Comment is Free Belief asks “Can we choose what we believe?” Usama Hasan answers briskly right from the outset.

God exists, obviously.

Oh; all right then! Nothing further to think about. He goes on to point out that the Qur’an says so, and give the sura where it says so. Then he gets to the thinky part.

God is a given, and our lives are an opportunity to learn about and experience God in countless different ways because the universe is a collection of theophanies: God’s infinite variety of names is manifested throughout the diversity of nature that includes our complex, intertwined lives.

He forgets to explain how he knows that.… Read the rest



Khamenei declares music not Islamic enough *

Aug 3rd, 2010 | Filed by

Last month he “issued a fatwa” saying he’s like Mo and all Iranians have to do what he says.… Read the rest



Only scientist MP alarmed at MPs’ ignorance *

Aug 3rd, 2010 | Filed by

Julian Huppert says political leaders tend to come up with a stance and then try to make the evidence fit it.… Read the rest



Government ignored advice on homeopathic “remedies” *

Aug 3rd, 2010 | Filed by

On the grounds that refusal to fund homeopathy would limit patient choice.… Read the rest