Chomsky, bin Laden and the struggle for a shining future

May 15th, 2011 | By Andrzej Koraszewski

Translation by Małgorzata Koraszewska and Sarah Lawson

On Friday, May 6, a towering figure of the left, Noam Chomsky, published his comments on the tragic death of Osama bin Laden in the magazine Guernica. There the learned linguist expresses great doubt whether bin Laden’s statement about his own responsibility for the attack on the World Trade Center can be taken seriously. According to Chomsky, Obama was lying when he said, after the operation in which an unarmed man was killed, that the United States quickly learned that the attacks on the  WTC were carried out by al Qaeda; after all, even “the head of the FBI, Robert Mueller, informed the press that after the most intensive investigation in history, … Read the rest



The Kikonians

May 15th, 2011 4:30 pm | By

I thought the first couple of paragraphs of Joshua Rothman’s interview with Patricia Churchland were more interesting than anything in The Moral Landscape. That sounds very rude, but it’s not meant to – it’s just that TML was fundamentally uninteresting to me because it sidestepped everything that’s genuinely interesting about humans and morality. Churchland, on the other hand, zoomed right in on it.

 She starts by explaining what’s most clearly known about how morality works in the brain. We know, she argues, that human moral behavior is rooted in the brain’s “circuitry for caring”—ancient biological circuitry that we share with other mammals. (When wolves care about their offspring, what happens in their brains and bodies is remarkably similar to

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Bishop says we are not trying to convert kids *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Access Ministries are in Victorian government schools just to…to…to teach values, yes, that’s it.… Read the rest



Muslims for burqa bans *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Tarek Fatah, Taj Hargey, Qanta Ahmed, Mona Eltahawy, and Naser Khader to name a few.… Read the rest



Circumcision party in the Philippines *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Health officials chopped about 1,500 pre-teen boys (not infants, but half-grown boys) in bid for Guinness Book of World Records.… Read the rest



Xian student flips out to prove god exists *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Loiters around “ask an atheist” table, stabs self in hand, fights cops, kicks out window in cop car, assaults 2 cops. Therefore god exists.… Read the rest



Strauss-Khan arrested, accused of sexual assault *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the IMF, was arrested on a plane at JFK airport accused of a sex attack on a hotel maid earlier in the day.… Read the rest



Zurich voters overwhelmingly reject bans *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Only 15.5% of voters in the local referendum backed a ban on assisted suicide, while nearly 22% supported a ban on “suicide tourism.”… Read the rest



Zurich votes no on bans on assisted suicide *

May 15th, 2011 | Filed by

Concerns about suicide tourism carry less weight with voters than their conviction that the right to die is universal.… Read the rest



Adventures in credulity

May 15th, 2011 11:00 am | By

I didn’t know there was a myth that Oliver North told the Iran-Contra investigation and in particular Al Gore (!) that the reason he had such a pricey security system was because he was afraid of “the most evil man in the world” and that that man was Osama bin Laden.

(Actually maybe I did know it, once upon a time. It sounds very faintly familiar now – I may have caught a whiff or a glimpse of it at some point. But if so, the knowledge didn’t stick.)

I was told it yesterday. I was driving an acquaintance back from the airport, and he told me it. He told me it as something he saw – he saw Al … Read the rest



Slowly working away

May 14th, 2011 4:57 pm | By

The Ian Ramsey Centre via the Wayback Machine.

It has an epigraph.

Science and religion are two windows that people look through, trying to understand the big universe outside, trying to understand why we are here. The two windows give different views, but both look out at the same universe. Both views are one-sided, neither is complete. Both leave out essential features of the real world. And both are worthy of respect. Freeman Dyson 

Not really; not really; not exactly; not in the sense implied; not really; not at all.

The Centre also sponsors regional conferences to encourage new networks for examining connections between theology and the sciences; and through its international workshops it enhances the quality of

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NY Times on Synthese, ID, Forrest, and that statement *

May 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Three philosophers have admitted complaining to the editors about Forrest’s article; one was Alvin Plantinga.… Read the rest



Grayling’s top books for a secular good life *

May 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Aristotle, Gibbon, Mill, Hazlitt – enjoy.… Read the rest



Stealth

May 14th, 2011 9:40 am | By

Here we go again. Via Jerry – we learn of a CNN report on a “huge” new study that tells us religion is everywhere. (You don’t say.)

What the CNN report does not tell us, however, is that the “huge” new study was funded by the Templeton Foundation. CNN doesn’t bother to mention Templeton. It doesn’t bother to mention that Roger Trigg is at the Ian Ramsey Centre, which is Templeton up to its eyeballs.

Interestingly, perhaps, I can’t find the IRC’s history on its site or elsewhere (and I have to rush away soon, so can’t dig harder). I know I found it in the past, and I’m pretty sure it was on its site, on the About … Read the rest



Deepa Mehta films “Midnight’s Children” *

May 14th, 2011 | Filed by

The BBC tried to make it as a five-part miniseries in 1997, but the government withdrew permission for that production after Muslim protests.… Read the rest



Belarus: former presidential candidate jailed *

May 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Leading Belarusian opposition politician Andrei Sannikov has been sentenced to five years hard labour for “organising mass disturbance”.… Read the rest



Patricia Churchland on science, philosophy and morality *

May 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Tension is inevitable, because caring broadly raises challenging, practical problems: all those competing moral obligations need to be balanced out.… Read the rest



Massimo Pigliucci on Jonathan Haidt *

May 14th, 2011 | Filed by

Haidt has a tendency to step over from “is” to “ought” in the sort of seamless way that rightly annoyed David Hume.… Read the rest



Like the Force, but without the lightsabers

May 13th, 2011 4:48 pm | By

Jerry has a post (how does he do it while on the road admiring the beauties of Banff?) about a reader who reports on one path out of theism, from the literal kind to “the ground of all being” to the gleaming port of gnu atheism. I seized the opportunity to ask this reader what that meant to her/him, explaining that I always wonder what people mean by it. The answer was both informative and amusing.

When I was in the “ground of all being” stage, I thought of it as a representation of some mystical spiritual energy which imbued the universe with intelligence and purpose. Looking back, they were basically filler words to represent a concept I didn’t want

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Oxford study finds religion pervasive, inescapable *

May 13th, 2011 | Filed by

And guess who paid for that study.… Read the rest