All entries by this author

Ajita Kamal argues for gender equality in freethought *

Sep 29th, 2010 | Filed by

Any organization that challenges superstition and religion in India must make an effort to break established patterns of gender inequality.… Read the rest



Ajita Kamal on the uses of outspoken atheism *

Sep 29th, 2010 | Filed by

Ideas die in a culture when it becomes embarrassing to hold on to them.… Read the rest



Why US universities recruit athletes, not scholars *

Sep 29th, 2010 | Filed by

Too many Jews were getting in, so universities started looking for “manliness.”… Read the rest



Religious belief linked to being a bit dim *

Sep 29th, 2010 | Filed by

As a study found that atheists know more about religion than religious people, experts said that in all fairness that should not really count as news.… Read the rest



Minnesota archbishop “defends marriage” *

Sep 29th, 2010 | Filed by

Church is sending “educational” DVDs to Catholics to reaffirm “the unchangeable nature of marriage.”… Read the rest



Cartoon rejected just for mentioning Mo *

Sep 29th, 2010 | Filed by

A satire on the fear of publishing anything Mo-related prompts fear of publishing anything Mo-related, and doesn’t get published.… Read the rest



Aliens are sabotaging missiles, US pilots claim *

Sep 28th, 2010 | Filed by

Srsly. It’s totally true. They’ve been doing it since 1948. They landed 7 years ago.… Read the rest



Give Fox News a great big hug

Sep 28th, 2010 11:46 am | By

Ajita Kamal of Nirmukta is thinking about many of the same issues we’ve been thinking about around here.

A common misconception is that freethought implies treating all ideas equally. This could not be farther from the truth. Freethinkers are extremely discriminatory of bad ideas, and adopt a refined reasoning process in judging factual claims.

Exactly, and this is why the idea that the Center for Inquiry (for example) is and should be in the business of promoting “diversity” is so silly. Free inquiry isn’t some default state that flourishes is left alone; it has to be protected and encouraged, because there are always lots of people who want to shut it down the better to promote their own … Read the rest



Whose “squawk”?

Sep 28th, 2010 10:42 am | By

It’s strange to see The Chronicle of Higher Education giving Carlin Romano space to promote the Templeton Foundation.

The Templeton Foundation, which specializes in prodding believers and nonbelievers to discuss such things in civilized ways, has published all sorts of booklets, like “Does Science Make Belief in God Obsolete?”…

That’s a very flattering way of describing what Templeton specializes in. To a less infatuated observer it looks more as if Templeton specializes in flattering its own self – as in the CHE blurb for Romano’s piece:

Carlin Romano, critic at large for The Chronicle Review, is a professor of philosophy and humanities at Ursinus College. This essay is adapted from a talk he gave this summer as a Templeton-Cambridge

Read the rest


Ajita Kamal on moderating freethought groups *

Sep 28th, 2010 | Filed by

Most freethinkers are wary of all ideologies. These are not usually the ones that are politically motivated towards promoting freethought.… Read the rest



Narendra Nayak on the rise of intolerance in India *

Sep 28th, 2010 | Filed by

It is not just the saffron gang or the green gang that is responsible for this sort of thinking; it is just that they are the most vociferous and violent.… Read the rest



Jason Rosenhouse on Swinburne on God *

Sep 28th, 2010 | Filed by

The God hypothesis should be given such a low prior probability that truly extraordinary evidence is needed to render it plausible.… Read the rest



Carlin Romano does his Templeton homework *

Sep 28th, 2010 | Filed by

“This essay is adapted from a talk he gave this summer as a Templeton-Cambridge Fellow in Science and Religion.”… Read the rest



Remember the nerds of South Dakota

Sep 27th, 2010 3:29 pm | By

Since I wrote a tut-tutting post about Caspar Melville’s tut-tutting post about gnu atheism last week, in fairness I should add that he promptly asked me to write a piece responding to his for the New Humanist, which I have now done; it will be in the next issue. That’s a generous way with critics, do admit.

The truth is, I really don’t think there’s anything inherently wrong with being bored by gnu atheism. I’m very easily bored myself; I find a great many things irritating; I can certainly understand being fed up with something even if I agree with it. What makes a difference is the context. The context right now is an endless flood of commentary about … Read the rest



Bad science education impairs US economy *

Sep 27th, 2010 | Filed by

US mathematics and science K-12 education ranks 48th worldwide.… Read the rest



How a journalist should report on a scientific paper *

Sep 27th, 2010 | Filed by

First make an obvious pun, then ask an inane question, then say which existing scientific ideas this new research “challenges.”… Read the rest



Hossein Derakhshan could face execution *

Sep 27th, 2010 | Filed by
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression and PEN Canada say the prosecutor in Derakhshan’s case has called for the death penalty.… Read the rest


Blogger Hossein Derakhshan on trial in Iran *

Sep 27th, 2010 | Filed by

He has been charged with “collaborating with enemy states, creating propaganda against the Islamic regime, insulting religious sanctity” and more.… Read the rest



Pragna Patel at protest the pope rally *

Sep 26th, 2010 | Filed by

“Nor am I surprised to learn that the Muslim Council of Britain will be taking part in the papal visit.”… Read the rest



Ben Goldacre on medical ghostwriting *

Sep 26th, 2010 | Filed by

Academics put their names on papers written by commercial medical writing companies working for drug companies.… Read the rest