All entries by this author

Religion is a very private matter except when it isn’t

Jun 4th, 2009 11:58 am | By

The disagreement between incompatibilists and accommodationists goes on. I’m on the incompatibilist side (surprise surprise). One thing in particular that Chris Mooney said stood out for me:

Religion is a very private matter, and given that liberal religionists support church-state separation, we really have no business questioning their personal way of making meaning of the world. After all, they are not trying to force it on anybody else.

But religion is not a very private matter in the sense of being that to the exclusion of being a very public matter. It’s a private matter in the sense of being internal, personal, sometimes bashful, and the like, but that does not mean that it is always and everywhere exclusively private. … Read the rest



Tariq tells Barack what’s what

Jun 4th, 2009 10:58 am | By

The arrogance of Tariq Ramadan is truly breathtaking.

What we expect from the new president is effective and necessary action as well as a change in attitude. Humility is a key factor…Islam is a great civilisation and Barack Obama should bring a message of true and deep respect by announcing that we all have to learn from each other and that he will commit himself to spreading knowledge of cultural and religious diversity in the United States itself. Humility means we all have to learn from one another and America should be ready to learn from Islam and Muslims as well as from the Hindus or the Buddhists.

Islam is not a civilization at all, just as Christianity and Hinduism … Read the rest



According to the law of God

Jun 3rd, 2009 5:09 pm | By

Religion has nothing to offer to morality, because religion as such adds nothing to moral reasoning. Religion as such is an obstacle to moral reasoning, because it injects elements that are irrelevant and false – irrelevant because they are false. Randall Terry on abortion for instance.

George Tiller was a mass-murderer…Abortion is still murder. And we still must call abortion by its proper name: murder. Those men and women who slaughter the unborn are murderers according to the law of God.

Randall Terry has no idea what ‘the law of God’ might be, and neither does anyone else. Billions of people think they do, but in fact no one does. No one has any reliable knowledge of what the … Read the rest



Anthroposophical Doctors and State Funding *

Jun 3rd, 2009 | Filed by

What do Anthroposophical doctors such as Dr Gruenewald do in Anthroposophical schools?… Read the rest



Goldacre on Dodgy Academic PR *

Jun 3rd, 2009 | Filed by

We have communicated to newspapers that we want them to be large and cheap rather than adequately researched.… Read the rest



Ben Goldacre on Man Flu and Other ‘News’ *

Jun 3rd, 2009 | Filed by

People are interested in finding out about medical news, yet they are routinely fed nonsense by the media.… Read the rest



The Roots of Intelligent Design *

Jun 3rd, 2009 | Filed by

The argument is one thing, the ID movement is another.… Read the rest



Chris Mooney Explains *

Jun 3rd, 2009 | Filed by

‘I don’t see what is to be gained by flailing indiscriminately against religion.’ That clears that up.… Read the rest



Jerry Coyne on Mooney and Accommodationism *

Jun 3rd, 2009 | Filed by

The reconciliation of science and faith almost always dilutes science, especially evolution.… Read the rest



A sense of virtue

Jun 2nd, 2009 4:41 pm | By

Clerics will say anything, and they’re allowed to; that’s their job. In some jobs you have to try to get things right and then report them truthfully; in others you’re allowed and indeed encouraged to just make things up. Archbishops are firmly in the second camp.

Many Catholics see in the dismay over MPs’ expenses and the behaviour of the financial markets, a growing public conviction that all is not well in the moral life of the nation. They believe it presents a rare opportunity for the Church to make its voice heard, and see in the archbishop a forceful and articulate spokesman…[The archbish] said the revelations about expenses and the activities of the markets showed rules alone could

Read the rest


Girls Pressured to Wear Hijab at Oslo School *

Jun 2nd, 2009 | Filed by

The assistant principal at the school obviously doesn’t understand what values hijab represents. … Read the rest



Jerry Coyne on Dennis Overbye on Faith vs Science *

Jun 2nd, 2009 | Filed by

Why should wisdom and comfort inhabit a clerical collar instead of a lab coat? … Read the rest



Catholics See Opportunity to Make Voices Heard *

Jun 2nd, 2009 | Filed by

All not well in UK moral life; Catholic church just the ticket to fix that.… Read the rest



Anti-abortion and Violence in the US *

Jun 2nd, 2009 | Filed by

US debate has been framed as defending the defenceless, which can seem to justify violence.… Read the rest



Rules Clarification Now Available *

Jun 2nd, 2009 | Filed by

The Islamic Hotline has good news for British Muslims – keeping the laws of Islam is not as difficult as you thought. … Read the rest



Religious Schools and Equality *

Jun 2nd, 2009 | Filed by

NSS says choice for non-religious parents should be specifically taken into account when opening schools.… Read the rest



Good news for automatons

Jun 2nd, 2009 11:29 am | By

Finally, people who can’t think for themselves have an easy way to get instructions.

A telephone help-line offering advice about the true teaching of Islam is being launched in the UK today. Callers to the Islamic Hotline will get answers to their questions within 48 hours, from scholars trained at one of the world’s principal Islamic universities…The Islamic Hotline believes it has good news for British Muslims – keeping the laws of Islam is not as difficult as you thought.

How nice – submitting to the authority of reactionary outdated self-serving androcentric laws dating from fourteen centuries ago is not as difficult as you thought. It’s still a ridiculous pathetic slavish way to live and to make others live, … Read the rest



Anticipating

Jun 1st, 2009 12:01 pm | By

This is one reason I think the Times article is very odd and in fact unfair.

There is no Muslim outrage about this book yet, but the fear of it is palpable enough for the Sunday Times to write an article about it. And if that outrage does indeed materialize, this will be yet another case, as here and here and here, of Muslims becoming outraged over accurate representations of Islamic texts and teachings.

Yes, it will, but on the other hand, in this case as well as the Jewel of Medina/Denise Spellberg case, it will also be a case of ‘Muslims’ (which is to say, some Muslims) being nudged into becoming outraged. I’m really not sure it’s fair … Read the rest



Blackford on Plantinga and the Concept of Hatred *

Jun 1st, 2009 | Filed by

Easy accusations of hatred are irresponsible, at best.… Read the rest



Andrew Brown on Abortion and Murder *

Jun 1st, 2009 | Filed by

A civilised society cannot contain people who really believe that abortion is murder.… Read the rest