Atheism and utility

Jan 2nd, 2011 2:15 pm | By

Benjamin Nelson has a very interesting post on science communication and atheism and passion at Talking Philosophy. Much of it transcribes a conversation he had with Chris Mooney in 2009, in which both of them agreed on some common ground.

…the most important point that I’m going to emphasize here is that [Mooney’s] stance is self-consciously political. At least to some extent, there is a “difference in goals” between Mooney and the activist atheists — by which, I think, he means a difference in priorities. Mooney does not think that speaking out against religion is a priority, and that it is on the whole detrimental to science education; while others think it is a priority, and that it supports science

Read the rest


Cairo: demonstrations protest sectarianism *

Jan 2nd, 2011 | Filed by

Human rights activists and bloggers are organizing a silent stand along the Kornish of Cairo on Friday afternoon.… Read the rest



Nick Cohen on Hungary and the EU *

Jan 2nd, 2011 | Filed by

Fidesz was elected with a clear mandate for change. If change involves attacking fundamental rights, that does not appear to be Brussels’s concern.… Read the rest



Ashtiani case may be dismissed *

Jan 2nd, 2011 | Filed by

“She said she wanted to sue some of those involved in the campaign to free her for ‘bringing disgrace on me and the country’.” Terrific.… Read the rest



The Conscience of Huckleberry Finn [pdf] *

Jan 2nd, 2011 | Filed by

Jonathan Bennett on Huck, Himmler, and Jonathan Edwards, and the relationship between sympathy on the one hand and bad morality on the other.… Read the rest



What horrible things I had to watch in the pursuance of my duties

Jan 1st, 2011 6:13 pm | By

I mentioned in a comment yesterday that the way bishops and theologians pride themselves on not letting compassion or empathy trump their mindless Absolute Rules reminded me of something Hannah Arendt said in Eichmann in Jerusalem –

The Nazis prided themselves on exactly that – to the point that they got maudlin about it. “Nobody knows how difficult it is for us” sort of thing. Seriously. They did a lot of quiet boasting about their ability to rise above their sympathies.

I found the passage I was thinking of – pp 105-6 in the Penguin edition.

The troops of the Einsatzgruppen had been drafted from the Armed S.S., a military unit with hardly more crimes in its record than any

Read the rest


David Foster Wallace and Wittgenstein *

Jan 1st, 2011 | Filed by

Though it represented a clean break from philosophy, fiction offered something comparable to the feeling of aesthetic recognition in mathematical logic.… Read the rest



Pants on fire

Jan 1st, 2011 11:58 am | By

This is an old item (December 2) but it’s only now been drawn to my attention, and I want to say about it because it’s so remarkably and revealingly malicious and inaccurate. You won’t be surprised to learn that it comes from someone who presents himself as of The Party of Nice. It is Mark Vernon, smearing Richard Dawkins, in a post ostensibly about Christmas frenzy.

(It seemed appropriate that the Guardian should launch it’s [sic] Advent calendar with a piece from that now most hysterical of writers, Richard Dawkins. Ostensibly it celebrated the moral courage of Christopher Hitchens, which I don’t doubt is worth admiring, only 50% of the piece was against the Pope, and 25% of the

Read the rest


Hungover? Try a detox retreat *

Jan 1st, 2011 | Filed by

Tuscan retreat’s therapeutic wellness programme includes detoxifying powder to cleanse the body and painful toxin-eliminating Marma massage.… Read the rest



Thailand: woo goes modern *

Jan 1st, 2011 | Filed by

“Spirit houses” are now being built with modern construction materials like ceramics, glass and granite panels.… Read the rest