The Bad Astronomer *

Feb 16th, 2004 | Filed by

Phil Plait combats simple ignorance as well as deliberate deception.… Read the rest



Idiot Savant? Moi?

Feb 15th, 2004 6:26 pm | By

It can be quite interesting, in an unnerving sort of way, seeing people blogging about Oneself. I’ve been seeing quite a lot of that lately, partly because of the religion and hijab discussions, both of which get people agitated. I’m certainly not going to comment on all of them – I’m not that much of an egomaniac (oh yes you are, oh no I’m not, are, amn’t) – but once in awhile one will suggest an interesting thought or line of inquiry. There is this one for example.

“Some people come into the world as idiot savants, having no choice but to concentrate all their energies on the study of their one small corner of the universe. The results can

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‘Intelligent Design’ in Harvard Law Review *

Feb 15th, 2004 | Filed by

How the pseudoscientific ID movement enhances its credibility and credentials.… Read the rest



Divisions Over Hijab *

Feb 15th, 2004 | Filed by

Teachers are relieved, some Muslims are angry, others are pleased.… Read the rest



Religious Education Should Include Atheism *

Feb 15th, 2004 | Filed by

Institute of Public Policy Research has advice about compulsory RE in schools.… Read the rest



Simon Blackburn Writes a Screenplay *

Feb 14th, 2004 | Filed by

O Martin! O Hannah! The demonic! The abyss of longing! Cut, print.… Read the rest



UK Schoolgirl in Court Over Jilbab *

Feb 14th, 2004 | Filed by

Her religious beliefs won’t allow her not to wear a long, flowing gown.… Read the rest



On and Off the Fence

Feb 13th, 2004 8:52 pm | By

Excellent. There were several people reminding us that many French Muslim and Muslim-background women do in fact support the ban on the hijab at Twisty Sticks yesterday, as I mentioned. And today there are several more. Very good indeed. The prevailing assumption that there is Only One Right Way to think about this issue has been shown up, frankly. I have a lot to say about this, but only time to say a little of it now.

A tangential matter: the Waiting Socialists point out that they weren’t ‘scolding’ me, as I said. No, true, they weren’t. I did think of that as I typed the word – then typed on. Too lazy (or in a rush) to think of … Read the rest



French Opinion Divided Over Ban *

Feb 13th, 2004 | Filed by

Some say debate will help roll back radical Islamic fundamentalism.… Read the rest



‘If they don’t kill me I will testify.’ *

Feb 13th, 2004 | Filed by

There is a desire to gloss over the scale of the Rwanda genocide.… Read the rest



Darwin Day, Religion, the Hijab

Feb 12th, 2004 8:03 pm | By

Happy Darwin Day. It’s appropriate, in a way, to have all these arguments about religion all over the place. It’s as if I’d planned it, but I didn’t. Nope – it was the result of a mutation, I think.

The one at Squiggly Wood I mean Crooked Timber goes on. And there’s another at Matthew Yglesias’ blog. Mostly, I must say, the arguments seem surprisingly feeble as well as repetitive. Why is that surprising – surely part of my point is how obviously shaky it all is. Yes but they’ve had all this time to come up with good arguments! Hundreds of years. But so much of it is just along the lines of ‘How dare you?’ or ‘Who … Read the rest



Richard Hoggart *

Feb 12th, 2004 | Filed by

Which is condescension: offering only junk on tv, or saying junk is junk?… Read the rest



Campaign for Darwin Day *

Feb 12th, 2004 | Filed by

A Darwin Day would send a signal that science matters.… Read the rest



Two Frameworthy Statements

Feb 11th, 2004 9:02 pm | By

Here’s the one I wanted to comment on no matter what. In a discussion of that perennially popular subject, why are there so few conservative academics. I simply wanted to point out (actually I want to frame in gold leaf, and embroider, and carve in stone, and issue in a limited edition with illuminated initials and gold binding) this comment, which pretty much sums up a lot of what B&W is about and what prompted it in the first place:

The labels ‘conservative’ and ‘liberal’ take on new and peculiar meanings in Academia. For instance, I believe in affirmative action, increasing taxes on the rich, socialized medicine, I am pro-legalized abortion, hold Christianity to be institutionalized ignorance, and donate to

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Shoes and Ships and Sealing-wax

Feb 11th, 2004 7:43 pm | By

It’s going to be one of those days when there’s more to comment on than time to comment in. ‘More offences at my beck than I have thoughts to put them in, imagination to give them shape, or time to act them in.’ There’s a very interesting piece by Stanley Fish in the Chronicle of Higher Ed that I want to say something about; there’s a quite fascinating comment at Crooked Timber that I’m going to say something about, come what may; there’s the rest of that rumination on wishful thinking I wrote yesterday that I want to add; there are other odds and ends; and there’s also another interesting discussion at Crooked Timber which I ought to point out. … Read the rest



Happy Darwin Day *

Feb 11th, 2004 | Filed by

Celebrate the adventure of science, and the ‘passion to know’.… Read the rest



John Maddox Reviews Paul Kurtz *

Feb 11th, 2004 | Filed by

‘Explanations requiring the supernatural are now not merely quaint but harmfully distracting to children and other innocents.’… Read the rest



Bad Time and Place to Evangelize *

Feb 11th, 2004 | Filed by

This is your pilot speaking. Are you a Christian? Well why not?!… Read the rest



Presidents Shape Lincoln to Suit Their Needs *

Feb 11th, 2004 | Filed by

Does a picture of Crawford on the wall make Bush another Lincoln?… Read the rest



Doing the Intellectual Diversity Dance *

Feb 11th, 2004 | Filed by

Stanley Fish: the pursuit of truth is not a but the central purpose of the university.… Read the rest