Wednesday, September 16, 2009

9/22 Special St. Louis Event: "Cosmic Dice: Moral Life in a Random World" w/Jeff Schweitzer


Please join us for this special event!

BEYOND COSMIC DICE:

Moral Life in a Random World

with Dr. Jeff Schweitzer
Marine biologist and former Clinton White House
Science Advisor

Tuesday, September 22
7:00 p.m.

The Ethical Society of St. Louis
9001 Clayton Road, St. Louis, MO
Admission: $5


Morality is our biological destiny.  We each have within us the awesome power to create our own meaning in life, our own sense of purpose, our own destiny.  We can move beyond the random hand of birth to pave our own road to a better life.  Whereas religion claims that happiness and fulfillment are found from submission to a higher power, Dr. Jeff Schweitzer will define these terms quite differently.  We will not appeal to religion or god.  Happiness and fulfillment are derived from the freedom to discover within ourselves our inherent good, and then to act on that better instinct, not because of any mandate from above or in obedience to the Bible, but because we can.


Dr. Jeff Schweitzer
is a scientist who has written extensively on topics of morality, religion, politics, and science – how they relate to each other and their importance in today’s polarized social environment.  He is the author of Vote to Save the Planet and the new book, Beyond Cosmic Dice: Moral Life in a Random World. 
Dr. Schweitzer began his scientific career in the fields of marine biology and neurophysiology earning his Ph.D. from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego.  In 1984, he joined the Center for Learning and Memory at the University of California, Irvine, and in 1991 he was appointed as the Chief Environmental Officer at the State Department’s Agency for International Development.
In 1992, he was made Assistant Director for International Affairs in the Office of Science and Technology Policy where he was responsible for providing scientific and technological policy advice and analysis for the President's Science Advisor and the Vice President.
During his tenure at the White House, Dr. Schweitzer realized that one critical element was missing from global efforts to bring science, conservation, and development together: there was no appropriate ethical foundation providing a compelling mandate.  Since his retirement from government, Dr. Schweitzer has devoted himself to the task of articulating and promoting such an ethic, a new way to ensure that humans can grow and prosper indefinitely in a healthy environment.
For more information, please visit www.jeffschweitzer.com or click here to listen to an interview between Dr. Schweitzer and D.J. Grothe on Point of Inquiry, the radio show and podcast of the Center for Inquiry.
Copies of Beyond Cosmic Dice: Moral Life in a Random World will be available for sale and signing at the event.

For more information, please call 000-000-0000 ext. 000, or email grassroots@.

Visit the web address below to tell your friends about this.
 Tell-a-friend!
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Keyword News: [atheism]

Yahoo! Alerts
Wednesday, September 16, 2009 2:21 AM PDT


This atheist blogger sold his soul on eBay
rediff.com Tue, 15 Sep 2009 22:42 PM PDT
Hemant Mehta's atheism-oriented blog works, finds P Rajendran, because of its non-confrontational tone.




See more news stories that match my keyword





Keyword News: [atheism]

Yahoo! Alerts
Tuesday, September 15, 2009 6:21 PM PDT


Cardinal Pell to Debate Christopher Hitchens
Zenit News Agency Tue, 15 Sep 2009 17:46 PM PDT
SYDNEY, Australia, SEPT. 15, 2009 ( Zenit.org ).- The first ever Festival of Dangerous Ideas will pit Sydney's archbishop, Cardinal George Pell, against one of the most prominent exponents of modern atheism, British journalist Christopher Hitchens.




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The "Origins" group: ORIGINS: UNIVERSE, LIFE, HUMANKIND, AND DARWIN

A message from Dr. Terence Meaden to all members of ORIGINS: UNIVERSE, LIFE, HUMANKIND, AND DARWIN on Atheist Nexus!
First anniversary of founding the "Origins" group
Visit ORIGINS: UNIVERSE, LIFE, HUMANKIND, AND DARWIN at:
http://www.atheistnexus.org/groups/group/show?id=2182797%3AGroup%3A109911
--

John Dewey's 150th Birthday Celebration


John Dewey's 150th Birthday Celebration
An International Conference
on Dewey's Impact on America
and the World
The Center for Inquiry is celebrating the 150th birthday of philosopher and educator John Dewey with a three-day conference Oct. 22-24, 2009 at the CFI/Transnational headquarters in Amherst, N.Y.

Speakers include:
Larry Hickman, Director of the Center for Dewey Studies
Philip Kitcher, John Dewey Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University
Paul Kurtz, Professor Emeritus, SUNY Buffalo
and many more senior scholars on all aspects of the thought
and influence of John Dewey

Keynote Address begins at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 22.

Conference runs from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday.

Walk-ins are welcome. Please join us anytime!

CONFERENCE INFORMATION
General Conference Fee:  $30
Students and Friends of CFI: $15
Two optional lunches: $30
TOTAL: $60 (General), $45 (Students & Friends of CFI)

HOW TO REGISTER
Contact Cheryl Catania at 000-000-0000, ext. 000.
Registration Forms and Online Registration available at: www.centerforinquiry.net/research/conferences/
The Center for Inquiry/Transnational is located at
1310 Sweet Home Road, Amherst, N.Y.
across the street from University at Buffalo North Campus
For more information contact John Shook at jshook@ or 000-000-0000.

Visit the web address below to tell your friends about this.
 Tell-a-friend!
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Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Rockford Higher Criticism Examiner: D.M. Murdock's "Christ Conspiracy" no grounds for irreconcilable differences

examiner logo

D. M. Murdock (Acharya S), Freethought Examiner, writes profusely on the subject of mythicism, the theory that no historical Jesus ever existed, and I have read nearly all her published books and e-books, as well as the majority of her articles on... Read more »


Rockford Higher Criticism Examiner, John F. Felix


John F. Felix is a freethinking student of philosophy, science, literature, ancient Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, and a family man just passed the 25-year mark, loving Chicago and Rockford, IL, lifeways. He is a published poet, and performs freelance research for authors and scholars (expertise: creating new versions of ancient e-texts). Send John a message.

Monday, September 14, 2009

AANEWS for Monday, September 14, 2009

A M E R I C A N A T H E I S T S
A A N E W S
#1276 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 09/14/09
http://www.atheists.org
http://www.americanatheist.org
http://www.atheistviewpoint.tv
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A Service of AMERICAN ATHEISTS, a nationwide movement that defends
civil rights for non-believers; works for the total separation of
Church and State; and addresses issues of First Amendment public
policy.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"ATHEIST is really a thoroughly honest, unambiguous term, it admits
of no paltering and no evasion, and the need of the world, now as
ever, is for clear-cut issues and unambiguous speech."
-- Chapman Cohen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In This Issue...
* A public disgrace! Darwin film unable to find US distributor.
* Worth Noting --Karen Armstrong on God, more...
* Join American Atheists
* Dave's blog
* Resources
* About this list...
INTELLECTUAL BANKRUPTCY IN AMERICA: NEW DARWIN FILM
UNABLE TO SECURE U.S. DISTRIBUTOR
Producers of a new film about the life of naturalist Charles Darwin
have been unable to secure a company to handle distribution in the
United States.
According to Oscar-winning director Jeremy Thomas , the theme of
the forthcoming movie "Creation" is deemed "too controversial for
religious America"
The production opened the recent Toronto Film Festival and won rave
reviews. Starring Paul Bettany and Martha West, it traces the agony
and achievements of a young Charles Darwin in his "struggle between
faith and reason" as he penned his landmark work on evolutionary
biology, "On the Origin of Species." The Daily Telegraph newspaper
notes, "it has been sold in almost every territory around the
world, from Australia to Scandinavia ... However, US distributors
have passed on a film that will prove hugely divisive in a country
where according to a Gallup poll conducted in February, only 39%
of Americans believe in the theory of evolution."
In the course of the movie, Darwin agonizes over the sudden death
of his 10-year-old daughter and his loss of faith in God.
Production of the film has been closely followed by Christian
bloggers and web sites, and only recently was mentioned in the
mainstream media. Its release "is virtually certain to provoke
massive controversy" and spark new debate over evolution, science
and religion according to one Telegraph reviewer. The producers
have even opened a special resource service aimed at trying to
answer objections from Christian organizations who may find the
film blasphemous and objectionable.
One Christian web site, Movieguide.org, is characterizing Charles
Darwin as "a racist, a bigot and a 1800s naturalist whose legacy
is mass murder." It also described evolutionary theory as
"half-baked," and stridently claimed that Darwin's work resulted
in the horrific deeds of Adolf Hitler and his Nazi henchmen, along
with "atrocities, crimes against humanity, cloning and genetic
engineering." The Daily Mail reports that producer Jeremy Thomas
is astounded that such opinions find a wide and credulous audience
fully 150 years after the publication of Darwin's seminal work,
and that religious sensibilities constitute a near-insurmountable
barrier to finding an American distributor for this film.
"The film has no distributor in America," Mr. Thomas opined.
"It has got a deal everywhere else in the world but in the U.S.,
and it's because of what the film is about. People have been
saying this is the best film they've seen all year, yes nobody in
the U.S. has picked it up."
And more: "It is unbelievable to us that this is still a real hot
potato in America," says Thomas. "There's still a great belief
that He made the world in six days. We live in a country (the
United Kingdom) which is no longer so religious. But in the U.S.,
outside of New York and Los Angeles, religion rules."
Thomas is only partially correct, though in his assessment of
the American religious landscape. Religious fundamentalists are
not a majority of the population; and the ranks of us who describe
ourselves as having "no religion" -- a figure that includes Atheists,
Freethinkers, Humanists and other "seculars" -- has been steadily
growing. It is the fundamentalist Christians, though, who are among
the most politically organized in the country, as they saunter forth
to carry out "the Great Commission" and forge a "godly society."
The fact that religious prejudice can intimidate Hollywood
distributors and studios in so blatant a fashion is testament to
a number of disturbing trends.
One is the regrettable complacence of the scientific and
educational communities who, until recently, assumed that
creationist fantasies were a relic of the 1920s and small pockets
of backwoods provincialism. With a public school system and the
gradual enlightenment of the population, surely fundamentalist
ideas concerning the origins of life would dissipate. After all,
mainstream Protestant bodies and even the Roman Catholic Church
announced that there was no conflict between modern scientific
findings (like evolutionary processes, "deep time" and insights
into the chemistry of life itself) and their brands of religion.
Why worry?
The second is a deadly combination of ideological revanchism and
sheer determination by fundamentalists to proselytize and organize.
Creationism is alive and well, from the lavish Creationist Museum in
Petersburg, Kentucky to dozens of advocacy and legal groups seeking
to introduce this religious doctrine into the public schools under
the veneer of providing students with "alternative" explanations"
of how life and the universe began. We ignore these ideological
initiatives at our peril. America remains a sophisticated
technological society with a first-rate scientific establishment
(although some see erosion of this position); but socially and
culturally, we fail to live up to those lofty standards.
The fact that a film about Charles Darwin cannot be brought --
at least for now -- to audiences in America is evidence of the
religiously-driven intellectual bankruptcy plaguing our land. It is
also a call for all enlightened Americans to, well, get our hands a
bit dirty in the battle over teaching creationism, and the rest of
"good science," in schools and defending Darwin in the public square.
When, during the opening of the Creationist museum in Kentucky a
year ago Freethought activist Edwin Kagin organized the Rally for
Reason," he received widespread support. Some potential allies,
though,decided to sit out this battle, surmising that a public
demonstration at the gates of the newly-minted museum, would simply
draw unwarranted attention to the event. In other words, advocates
of "good science" and fact-based public policy should, presumably,
ignore the vocal and politically savvy movement of creationists and
"Intelligent Design" partisans in hopes that they will -- what? --
go away?
That is a gamble we as a culture simply cannot take.
We hope that "Creation" finds a willing and enthusiastic distribution
company in the United States, and that the public supports this
film at the box office. Failing this, we further tarnish our
international image and continue to jeopardize the education of
further generations.
-- Conrad Goeringer,
Editor, AANEWS
Links used in this report:
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/6173399/Charles-Darwin-film-too-controversial-for-religious-America.html>
Charles Darwin film 'too controversial for religious America' A
British film about Charles Darwin has failed to find a US distributor
because his theory of evolution is too controversial for American
audiences, according to its producer.
http://rallyforreason.arkonuts.com/
Web site for The Rally for Reason
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creationism
Wikipedia entry on creationism
http://creationthemovie.com
Web site for "Creation," the film.
**
WORTH NOTING...
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iQgwgq_BKyyMd7Ujvs9ZaVpheDpgD9AJTF0G0>
Muslim woman presses French panel for burqa ban Her voice trembling
with emotion, the leader of an advocacy group for Muslim women and
girls urged a French parliamentary panel on Wednesday to press for
laws that would ban the wearing of Islamic body- and face-covering
veils. Sihem Habchi appeared as the first witness before a newly
created parliamentary group studying Islamic clothing such as burqas
and niqabs - part of France's effort to integrate its growing Muslim
population while preserving its heritage and secular roots.
<http://westernstandard.blogs.com/shotgun/2009/09/godless-work-edmonton-atheists-to-pitch-in-to-clean-alberta-highways.html>
Godless work: Edmonton atheists to pitch in to clean Alberta highways
In a press release today, the Society of Edmonton Atheists announced
its plan to participate in the Government of Alberta's "Caring for
Alberta Highways" program. On Sunday, this merry band of heathens
will be cleaning the stretch of Highway 2 North near the city's
international airport. The godless work will begin in the morning
and last until the organization's 3.2 kilometre stretch of adopted
road is free from litter.
<http://atheism.about.com/b/2009/09/06/americans-dont-believe-in-churchstate-separation.htm>
Americans Don't Believe in Church/State Separation Americans may
believe in the importance of religious liberty, but for some reason
they don't also believe in separating church from state. These views
aren't compatible unless one thinks that a religious government
would protect the rights of religious minorities. More likely I
think, though, is that most Americans just don't think very deeply
or seriously about the positions they adopt.
<http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2009/08/elizabeth_mosque_organizes_nat.html>
Elizabeth mosque organizes national prayer gathering for Muslims in
Washington, D.C. A mosque in Elizabeth, Dar-ul-Islam, is spearheading
a national prayer gathering next month in Washington, D.C., that
organizers are billing as the first event of its kind -- organized
prayer for tens of thousands of Muslims outside the U.S. Capitol
building. The event will not include political speeches or placards,
just prayer, said Hassen Abdellah, president of Dar-ul-Islam and
a main organizer of the event, which is scheduled for Sept. 25.
http://www.slate.com/id/2227245/entry/2227455/
The Architect of 9/11 In 1994, Mohamed Atta traveled to Istanbul
with a student group and continued onward to visit Dittmar Machule
in northern Syria, where the professor was doing fieldwork on
a Bronze Age village under excavation. But Atta found himself
more interested in the traditional urbanism of the nearest major
city, Aleppo. Atta was hardly the first student of Middle Eastern
architecture drawn to Aleppo. Along with Fez in Morocco and Sana'a
in Yemen, Aleppo is considered among the best-preserved cities in
the Arab world. When he decided to write his thesis on the city,
he returned later that year to conduct more extensive research.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/215180
Out, Out, Damned Atheists: Karen Armstrong weighs in on God. The
latest salvo in the war between the atheists and the believers
comes from the doyenne of religious intellectual history, Karen
Armstrong. Her tone is one of high-minded irritation. Her argument
is compelling. To oversimplify: "faith" and "reason" are not like
political parties. You don't join one after having been convinced
via argument of its validity.
<http://www.evolutionnews.org/2009/09/a_mind_even_if_its_just_a_coup.html>
A Mind, Even if It's Just a Couple of Pounds of Meat, Is a Terrible
Thing to Waste (From Discovery Institute) - The world is awash
with charities. Most are quite worthwhile. For pennies a day, you
can send a child in an impoverished country to school, and kindle
a lifetime of learning. But there remain many unmet needs. What
about people living in ideological poverty? We've all heard the
stories. Materialist philosophers of the mind who deny that the mind
exists. Full professors of evolutionary biology who misunderstand
demonstrations of the existence of God that are routinely mastered
by teenagers in Introductory Philosophy courses. Atheist authors
of letters to Christian nations who excoriate religion and ignore
the unparalleled atrocities of atheism. Unrepentant Trotskyites
who scold Christians for adherence to a messianic ideology.
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204731804574391183769432284.html?mod=googlenews_wsj>
Faith-Based Double Standards In 2001, President Bush issued his
first executive order as president. He created a program to encourage
religious organizations to receive taxpayer funds to perform social
services. The Office of Faith-Based Initiatives, as it was called,
infuriated many. Civil libertarians said it violated the separation
of church and state, liberals suggested that the office was paying
off political supporters, and even Christian conservatives worried
about the tentacles of government regulation.
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/6173399/Charles-Darwin-film-too-controversial-for-religious-America.html>
Charles Darwin film 'too controversial for religious America' A
British film about Charles Darwin has failed to find a US distributor
because his theory of evolution is too controversial for American
audiences, according to its producer.

<http://www.politicsdaily.com/2009/09/11/religion-in-america-in-decline/>
Religion in America in Decline Religion in America is on the decline
and has been dropping since the turn of the century. That's not an
atheist's happy dream. It's the conclusion of researchers at Faith
Communities Today (FACT), the multi-year study of American religion
quarterbacked by the Hartford Seminary's Hartford Institute for
Religion Research.
http://ieet.org/index.php/IEET/more/3405/
How Atheists View Religion The struggle between religion and reason
for the hearts and minds of the people goes back at least as far
as ancient Greece and has been played out time and again through
the ages. Throughout the 21st century, modern civilization
will confront a wide range of intellectual, moral, and social
challenges. One of the most difficult issues to settle will be the
proper role of religion in the public sphere.
**
CELEBRATE YOUR INTELLECTUAL INDEPENDENCE! JOIN
AMERICAN ATHEISTS AT OUR NEW, LOW RATE
Here's a "stimulus package" for Atheists! We know that times are
difficult. Nonbelievers are like everyone else in the country
--you can get laid off or put on part-time, you can see important
investment and home value evaporate. And many people are cutting
costs, postponing vacations, cutting back whenever and wherever
they can.
So, American Atheists is making it easier than ever before to join
up in the fight for Reason, separation of church and state, and
the effort to give America's unbelieving community "a place at the
table" in the discussion over First Amendment public policy. You
can join American Atheists for only $20 per year; you receive the
American Atheist Magazine, a leading journal for news and opinion;
plus all of the discounts and other benefits of membership. It's
easy to do! Visit
<http://www.atheists.org/store/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=26>
to sign up using our secure, on-line transaction server.
Your membership in American Atheists shows that you care about taking
a stand for Reason, civil liberties for Atheists, and the total,
absolute separation of church and state! Membership is open to all
who agree with our Statement of Aims and Purposes. Joining American
Atheists, though, also has it rewards! Benefits and Privileges of
Membership include.
Membership dues and donations to American Atheists are tax
deductible.
Your personal Membership card qualifying you at Conferences,
Conventions and other organizational activities for special
Membership Discounts.
A beautiful Certificate of Membership suitable for framing signed
personally by the President of American Atheists.
Participation in our on-line discussion group, AACHAT.
Participation in our special "Atheist Singles" program (see below).
A special 10% discount on ALL books and products offered through
American Atheists Press.
A special discount when you present your Membership Card for
registration at American Atheist Conventions, Regional Atheist
Meets and other select activities.
A subscription to the American Atheists Magazine - a leading source
of news about AA activism and First Amendment issues!
Eligibility in the new American Atheists Scholarship Program. The
Scholarships will provide generations of American Atheist families
with funds, and help to defer costly education expenses.
Members of American Atheists benefit from our Savings Partners
program of discounts on goods and services from both local and
national businesses. And there's a special gift waiting for you when
you join American Atheists! By joining American Atheists, you're
making a major contribution in helping to protect civil liberties
for Atheists, and preserve Jefferson's "wall of separation" between
government and religion. Let us hear from you today!
<http://www.atheists.org/store/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=26>
**
SILVERMAN BLOG SHAKING UP CYBERSPACE!
It is one of the fastest growing blogs in the
Atheist/Freethought/Secular Humanist community, and you can get in
on the discussion!
Dave Silverman, Communications Director for American Atheists is in
the Blogosphere at http://nogodblog.com. It's filled with insight,
wit, hot news, controversial opinion -- and polite, thoughtful
commentary. So join the conversation! Sign up (it's free) by
visiting http://www.atheists.org and click on the blog navigation
button, or go directly to http://nogodblog.com .
**
RESOURCES FROM AMERICAN ATHEISTS
* For membership information about American Atheists, send
mail to info@. Kindly include your name and postal
mailing address. Ask for a free membership info packet. You may
also visit http://www.atheists.org and click on the "Membership"
navigation button.
* For a free catalogue of American Atheist Press books, videos and
other products, send mail to catalogue@. Kindly include
your name and postal mailing address, and request a copy of the
AAP catalogue. You may also shop directly at http://www.atheists.org
--click on the "Shopping" navigation button.
* Current members in good standing of American Atheists may sign up
for our free E-mail Discussion Group list, aachat. We have over 150
participants who discuss topics such as Atheism, religion, First
Amendment issues, creationism and much, much more. Contact the
Moderator, Ed Gauci through egauci@ .

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Freethought Examiner: 'The Christ Conspiracy' in the Huffington Post

examiner logo

My friend Dr. Robert Eisenman, a well-known Bible scholar, has just scored a major coup—albeit one that may not be immediately recognized—in his article for the Huffington Post entitled, "Redemonizing Judas: Gospel Fiction or Gospel... Read more »


Freethought Examiner, D.M. Murdock


D.M. Murdock, also known as Acharya S, is an independent scholar of comparative religion and mythology from a "freethinking" perspective. She is the author of The Christ Conspiracy, Suns of God, Who was Jesus? and Christ in Egypt. Her work was featured in the movie Zeitgeist and Bill Maher's Religulous. Her main website is TruthBeKnown.com.

Freethought Examiner: Does religion cause immorality?

examiner logo

In July, the journal Evolutionary Psychology published a study concerning religiosity and its effects on society by "independent scholar" Greg S. Paul, who  produced results that many people these days would not be terribly surprised... Read more »


Freethought Examiner, D.M. Murdock


D.M. Murdock, also known as Acharya S, is an independent scholar of comparative religion and mythology from a "freethinking" perspective. She is the author of The Christ Conspiracy, Suns of God, Who was Jesus? and Christ in Egypt. Her work was featured in the movie Zeitgeist and Bill Maher's Religulous. Her main website is TruthBeKnown.com.

CSI Workshop: "UFOs - The Space-Age Mythology" 10/09


Announcing a special CSI workshop in Tucson, AZ

UFOs: The Space-Age Mythology
October 9-11, 2009
Radisson Suites
6555 East Speedway Blvd.
Tucson, Arizona 85710

For over 60 years the interpretation of "Things" in the sky has led to mythology about "Aliens" and their "Spacecraft."  These myths are fused with images from science fiction and enhanced by spiritual mysticism.  Anomalous events in the sky are enlarged by anecdotal stories and conspiracy theories of "Space Gods" coming to earth for either salvation or destruction.  Can "Lights in the Sky" really save us from the modern world?  This workshop will consider these and other questions about the role of science and skepticism in evaluating extraordinary claims.

Featuring:







  • James McGaha, retired USAF pilot, skeptic, astronomer, and
    director of the Grasslands Observatory














  • David Morrison, director of the NASA Lunar Science Institute and senior
    scientist for astrobiology at the NASA Ames Research Center














  • Robert Sheaffer, author, skeptical investigator, and founding director of Bay Area Skeptics













  • Dave Thomas, physicist, mathematician, and president of
    New Mexicans for Science and Reason








Join us Sunday afternoon for a tour of the Pima Air & Space Museum!
For more information, please visit ufocon.org.
Or contact Barry Karr at skeptinq@ or 000-000-0000, ext. 000.
Keep up with CSI and other events on Facebook.





Visit the web address below to tell your friends about this.
 Tell-a-friend!
If you received this message from a friend, you can sign up for Center for Inquiry.

Secular Humanism Online News, September 2009



Vol.5 No.9


In This Issue:


SAVE THE DATE!

The 30th anniversary conference of the Council for Secular Humanism
OCTOBER 7 - 10, 2010
MILLENNIUM BILTMORE HOTEL
506 South Grand Avenue
Los Angeles, CA


DETAILS COMING SOON!



*SPECIAL E-NEWS FEATURE
The Iranian Revolution (Part 2)
*By Ibn Warraq

The internal dynamics in Iran have changed; a victory for Mousavi would have a different meaning now, after all the bloodshed and the true nature of the hardliners, than it would have had on June 12. Mousavi has become a symbol of real change, and anti-regime aspirations. The Iranian people have created a different political momentum, with new meanings, which Mousavi himself could not have foreseen. The outcome is something far more secular, the turmoil has thrown into question the Islamic regime’s basic, religious mandate for rule. Perhaps he himself never intended to throw the Islamic regime’s basic mandate into question; but now he can be seen as the symbol of that questioning. Mousavi is said to have declared to Supreme Leader Khamenei, “You are facing something new: an awakened nation, a nation that has been born again and is here to defend its achievements.”
An important point to note is the internal strife among the ruling clergy in Iran. On Friday, July 17, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president, gave a sermon. He is a staunch supporter of Mousavi and Ahmadinejad’s main opponent, and is not afraid to criticize the ruling Mullahs. Thousands of protesters made their presence known outside the mosque, defiantly shouting “Allah-u Akbar” and “death to the dictator.” Members of the Islamic militia were there also, not afraid to use force. The pro-regime crowd shouted “Death to America!” The pro-Mousavi populace replied, “Death to Russia!”  Back came the Khomeinists, “Death to Britain, Death to Israel!”  Only to be met with:  “Death to China.”
Michael Ledeen sums up this confrontation in this manner:
“Which pretty much sums up the contemporary strategic landscape, enacted in a Persian morality play in front of a mosque in Tehran.  I rather think the actors understand the stakes better than we do, for they know that the Russians and Chinese are encouraging the mullahs to emulate the repression in Chechnya and Sinjiang, while blaming the actions of pro-freedom dissidents on ‘outside forces,’ most notably the United States.  The Iranians know that a victory by the regime will be understood as a terrible defeat of America, while the fall of the regime will likely reignite the democratic revolution that toppled Soviet Communism and other nasty dictatorships from the South Pole to Siberia.”
Nonetheless, once again the hardliners seem to have the upper hand, and seem firmly in control.
The part played by women in the Green Revolution also needs to be noted. Their courage is inspiring. Various Iranian dissident groups outside Iran have their own interpretation of the events inside Iran. I have worked with and lectured to such groups over the last ten years in Washington, D.C., Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, and in Europe in Stockholm, Paris, London, and Rome. Without exception, they have all been secularists, and they have all been run by women. One such courageous woman working in London is Azar Majedi, the head of several organizations (see www.azarmajedi.com ), and someone I have had the honor to work with. What follows is a paraphrase of some of her thoughts on the Green Revolution. Though there may well be a large measure of wishful thinking in her Marxist analysis, it is important to know what Iranian women outside Iran are thinking. She has access to sources inside Iran which many of us do not:
What we are witnessing in Iran is not only a political movement against a dictatorship, against social injustice; it is also a movement against religious institutions, and for cultural and moral emancipation. The political uprising in Iran has a strong anti-religious character. The women’s liberation movement is the most important player in the fight against the Islamic Republic. WLM is the antithesis of the Islamic regime. The Islamic regime promotes a misogynist ideology. Subordination and enslavement of women is its credo, the Islamic veil is its flag and gender apartheid is fundamental to its political system. WLM is not able to achieve any significant advancement without first doing away with this regime. The women’s liberation movement in Iran embodies a revolutionary liberating force. The first large demonstration against the regime was organized by women and for women’s rights, as early as March 8, 1979.
What role should the outside world play; in particular the United States? Many conservative analysts feel President Obama has not shown nearly enough support for the protestors and the opposition. These pundits feel that the present U.S. Administration has adopted a potentially disastrous policy of appeasement: Munich and Chamberlain all over again. As Michael Ledeen reminds us: “Anyone who has studied appeasement knows what lies ahead:  more conflict, more fresh blood, and ultimately a bigger war against us.  We can say to Obama what Churchill said to Chamberlain: you had a choice between war and dishonor. You chose dishonor, and you will have war.”
Ibn Warraq is a leading scholar of Islam. He is a Free Inquiry columnist, a Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Inquiry, a supporting organization of the Council for Secular Humanism, and the author of "Why I Am Not a Muslim," "What the Koran Really Says," and more recently, "Defending the West."


The Humanism of Senator Edward Kennedy
By Paul Kurtz

[Editor’s note: This article and the one that immediately follows first appeared on the Center for Inquiry blog Free Thinking.]
The death of Edward Kennedy and Eunice Kennedy Shriver within two weeks of each other brings back my memory of a fascinating meeting that I had with them in 1972; and how grateful I was for their many expressions of humanism.
I was invited to spend three days with Eunice and Sargent Shriver at their home. At that time Sen. Edward Kennedy was considering a possible run for the presidency and there was a meeting in Washington in which he gave a memorable talk to many journalists and friends. While there I also visited the home of Ethel Kennedy, the wife of Robert (Bobby) Kennedy.
At that time I was editor of The Humanist magazine, and I was invited because the Kennedys knew about humanism and expressed general sympathy with its moral and social principles. We discussed humanism in general terms as a progressive philosophy of individual freedom and a concern for social justice, and they shared a commitment to these values.
Although the Kennedys are officially Roman Catholic, they nevertheless supported a liberal social agenda. Eunice was a sponsor of the Special Olympics for the disabled. Sen. Edward Kennedy often deviated from the Church's doctrines, as he was divorced and most recently came out in support of stem cell research (although the Vatican vehemently opposes it). Known as the Lion in the Senate, he has battled for human rights. He has been a strong proponent of the current legislation on universal health care. He was a supporter of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Voting Rights Act, the Fair Housing Act of 1968; he was a consistent defender of civil liberties, and an early opponent of the Vietnam War.
I surely do not deny the fact the Kennedys were members of the Roman Catholic Church; but at the same time they shared important values with secular humanists. The mother, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy was of course devout, but her children were generally either nominal or liberal in their faith.
The purpose of the 1972 meeting at which liberal journalists and thinkers were invited, was to gauge Sen. Kennedy's possible chances for a run for the presidency-coming only a few years after the unfortunate drowning death of Mary Jo Kopechne on Chappaquiddick Island in 1969. Edward Kennedy and Ms. Kopechne were together in the car that went off the road. A cloud of suspicion overhung Edward Kennedy's role in that accident; for he did not report the incident until 10 hours later. One purpose of our participation, I gather, was a trial balloon to "test the waters," so to speak. That was a long time ago, and Sen. Kennedy has had a distinguished record in the Senate ever since.
The point that I wish to make here is that secularists and humanists have many allies among religious people; and that although unbelievers may not be happy with their supernaturalism, there are many other bonds that tie citizens together, and we should be willing and able to work with them on issues of common concern.
Paul Kurtz is Founder and Chair Emeritus of the Council for Secular Humanism and the Center for Inquiry.


The Late Ted Kennedy on Church and State
By Derek C. Araujo

On August 25 America lost one of the most effective lawmakers ever to serve in the United States Senate. Edward M. Kennedy was a devout Catholic who understood the constitutional limits on religious intrusion into government.  Like his brother John, Ted held a deep appreciation for the constitutional principle of separation of church and state.  On this issue he was by no means perfect; he sponsored the ill-advised, so-called Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 with Orrin Hatch.  But Senator Kennedy generally held a thorough understanding of religious liberty, church-state separation and the intersection of piety and politics. 
That understanding was on display in his October 1983 speech to Jerry Falwell's Liberty Baptist College (now Liberty University).  Many of today's lawmakers would learn from a careful listening to this speech (available online here). Some choice remarks include the following:
Respect for conscience is most in jeopardy, and the harmony of our diverse society is most at risk, when we re-establish, directly or indirectly, a religious test for public office. That relic of the colonial era, which is specifically prohibited in the Constitution, has reappeared in recent years. . . . Two centuries ago, the victims were Catholics and Jews. In the 1980s the victims could be atheists; in some other day or decade, they could be the members of the Thomas Road Baptist Church.
[I]n applying religious values, we must respect the integrity of public debate. In that debate, faith is no substitute for facts.
I hope for an America where neither "fundamentalist" nor "humanist" will be a dirty word, but a fair description of the different ways in which people of goodwill look at life and into their own souls. I hope for an America where no president, no public official, no individual will ever be deemed a greater or lesser American because of religious doubt -- or religious belief.
Rest in peace, Senator.  Although the Jerry Falwells of the world will not miss you, we humanists surely will.
Derek C. Araujo is Vice President and General Counsel of the Center for Inquiry and the director of CFI's legal department.


Camp Inquiry Rocks!
By Angie McQuaig

[Editor’s note: Camp Inquiry, an annual residential summer camp for humanist and skeptical children, is a project of the Council for Secular Humanism’s supporting organization, the Center for Inquiry.]
Where can you find science,
Nature, art, and magic, too
Making music, paper airplanes
So many things to challenge you?

The high rafters of the camp lodge rang out with the sound of voices set to the exuberant strum of Monty Harper’s guitar. Forty-five youngsters (aged seven to sixteen), over eighty of their parents, fourteen staffers, and one of world’s leading cosmologists joined in the song collectively written by the campers over the previous week, with the expert guidance of Mr. Harper, a professional children’s songwriter.
Camp Inquiry, Camp Inquiry, Camp Inquiry
I-N-Q-U-I-R-Y
Inquiry makes your brain cells fly!

This theme song for Camp Inquiry was one of dozens of original compositions that were showcased at the emotional Saturday evening closing ceremonies of the Center for Inquiry’s innovative camp for critical thinking held this past July 6-12  located in Holland, New York, now in its fifth year.
“We ended up with lots of great songs,” Mr. Harper commented. “The kids were incredibly creative and talented and enthusiastic. I guided them where needed, but mostly I tried to just stay out of the way and let them do their thing. The ones that performed on Saturday night were so proud and excited. They created many lasting memories and the kids came away feeling empowered to express themselves artistically whenever they feel the need.”
Songwriting and performing were just two of the activities in the well-rounded program featuring outdoor education, art, scientific inquiry, team building, and recreation.
Where can you hear lectures
To learn about the planets and outer space?
Where can you see magic
Popping up all over the place?

Throughout the week, kids were entertained and taught by three magicians who presented the physics and psychology behind feats such as sleight of hand, mind reading, and walking on glass. One of the magicians, Scott Dezrah Blinn, observed: “It was thrilling, inspiring and a little bittersweet to see how eager the kids were to be in an environment where they were free to express themselves and encouraged to question everything. They didn't have to accept things just to fit in. They were in a community of peers and leaders who knew what it was like to be bright, to be curious, opinionated and misunderstood.”
Proving that reality is as amazing as illusion, stellar speakers like Kevin Grazier and Lawrence Krauss led discussions and hands-on activities to illustrate principles of physics and cosmology.
“Who would have thought a crew of kids ranging from teenagers on down would be excited to listen to a talk about cosmology and would have the attention span to survive the whole thing and then ask questions! I came away feeling amazed at the polite kindness the kids showed toward each other and their excitement about learning anything and everything,” said Krauss.
Camp counselors, many of whom were trained scientists, marveled that one seven-year-old camper responded to a question posed by Dr. Krauss by listing all four of the fundamental forces of nature.
Lead counselor Laurie Tarr shared the consensus of the staff: “The children who attended Camp Inquiry '09 were an exceptional group. Not only were they all smart, friendly, funny kids who enjoy learning, they also asked the most amazing questions and provided even more amazing answers.”
Where can you make new friends,
Sometimes crazy, always smart?
Friends from around the country;
You’ll always hold them in your heart.

In the end, Camp Inquiry was about creating a community of inquirers. As Monty Harper put it, “It was an I-have-found-my-people moment.” They parted with hugs, tears, and, for many, promises to return for Camp Inquiry 2010.
Camp Inquiry, Camp Inquiry, Camp Inquiry
It’s the place we love to go.
Come and feed your need to know!

Angie McQuaig is a distinguished educator whose PhD is in educational leadership. She serves as director of Camp Inquiry, an educational program for youth emphasizing humanistic, scientific, and critical thinking.


AFRICAN AMERICANS FOR HUMANISM (AAH) UPDATE
By Norm R. Allen Jr.
From August 7-9, 2009, some AAH members and other Black non-theists met in Atlanta for the First Annual Black Non-theist Conference. Gary Booker of Atlanta put forth the call for the gathering. Attendees came from Georgia, Kentucky, California, New York, South Carolina and other states.
The gathering was not so much a formal conference as an opportunity for those in attendance to discuss their personal paths to non-theism and plans for making humanism, freethought, rationalism, and naturalism more attractive to people of African descent.
Booker was interested in promoting critical thinking in general. He criticized AIDS deniers and Afrocentrists promoting the belief that the melanin pigment makes Black people superior to Whites. Booker said that though many people believe that these ideas were thoroughly discredited in the 1990s, they still persist in some circles.
Many conference participants discussed some of the negative ways in which religion and irrationality have influenced Black people throughout the years. Some spoke of the negative influences of Christianity on enslaved African Americans. Others talked about how great it felt to meet with other likeminded freethinkers.
I invited a scholar named Shondrah Tarrezz Nash to the conference. Nash is an associate professor of sociology from Morehead State University in Kentucky. I am helping her to conduct a study of African American skeptics via in-depth interviews and/or written surveys. Nash is interested in examining the experiences of African American humanists, as well as gathering individual critiques of the Black church, past and present. She is seeking to fill a gap in the sociological literature.
African American humanists interested in becoming involved in this sociological study may contact Shondrah Nash at s.nash@. She may be reached by phone at (606) 783-2453. Her fax number is (606) 783-5070. Her conventional mailing address is Shondrah Nash, Morehead State University, Department of Sociology, Social Work and Criminology, 330 Rader Hall, Morehead, Kentucky, 40351. Those electing to participate will not have their names or any data associated with them identified in any publication stemming from the research.
In the spring of 2010, the Center for Inquiry/Washington, D.C. plans to hold a meeting focusing on the interests of African American humanists. More information will be made available as plans develop.
In Africa, the Center for Inquiry’s anti-superstition campaign is still going strong. The campaign has gone to Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and Malawi. The main focus has been on combating the persecution of alleged witches, especially children. However, the campaign will also give attention to homeopathy, superstition and mental health, and other issues.
Leo Igwe of the Center for Inquiry/Nigeria has been attacked by religious fanatics at a conference in Calabar, Nigeria. In Kenya, due to fears of increased persecution, African humanists are having difficulty persuading alleged witches to discuss their plight in the media. In Gambia, many African humanists are reluctant to become fully immersed in the campaign because their nation’s president supports the persecution of alleged witches, and it is dangerous to openly defend them.
This anti-superstition campaign has much potential. However, African humanists are up against tremendous odds, and religionists from outside Africa are spending millions of dollars to promote faith. For that reason, we at the Center for Inquiry/Transnational are trying to raise funds to more effectively combat superstition in Africa. We are interested in hosting more seminars and taking the campaign to other African nations. We welcome contributions from our supporters throughout the world.
Norm R. Allen Jr. serves as the Executive Director for African Americans for Humanism.


Quantity of Life Trumps Quality of Life
By Sheldon F. Gottlieb, PhD

At least since the Truman administration, elected and non-elected officials have been aware that there is a need for a universal health insurance plan (UHIP). One nongovernmental organization with a leadership position in lobbying for a UHIP is the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Thus, somewhat surprisingly, the recent Bishops Conference came out against President Obama’s HIP.
The reason for this seeming paradox in the Bishop’s behavior of supporting the morality of social justice and opposing the President’s HIP pertains to the Church’s opposition to abortion. Note: abortion is a constitutional (legal) right in the United States.
It would seem that the Catholic Bishops, using health and welfare as the target, declared war on the American citizenry. Citizens desiring an HIP who are now proponents of abortion are expected to accept the Catholic Bishop’s demand that abortions not be funded.
Roman Catholicism claims to be the religion most concerned with social justice and with the right to life. However, the Church, by its current actions, has moved away from the central question: What kind of life will people have if they cannot get health care? Quality of life is something the bishops do not deem worthy of consideration when it comes to abortion.
The bishop’s stance seems to imply that the quantity of life trumps quality of life.
Thus, the attitude of the Catholic bishops appears to be: “Citizens of the United States: you and your children should suffer and die if you fund abortion.” Social justice is sacrificed, and citizens who do not accept Catholic teachings are also victims.
Politicians and clerics of all faiths must be concerned that we now live on a planet with a population of over six billion people—which is projected to increase to 9 billion within two to three decades—a reality that directly contributes to the problems and miseries in the world. That the number one problem we face is curbing population growth, especially in the undeveloped and developing nations.
The Roman Catholic Church, its bishops, and other antiabortionists owe the American public a logical justification for their unjust, antisocial conclusions and actions.
Sheldon F. Gottlieb, PhD is the author of THE NAKED MIND. He can be e-mailed at   shellyeda@


Virtually or Otherwise, Trek the Freethought Trail
By Tom Flynn

To the degree a website is ever done, the Freethought Trail website (www.freethought-trail.org) is done. This website explores the surprisingly rich radical reform heritage of west-central New York State, a region within about a hundred-mile radius of the Council for Secular Humanism’s Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum in Dresden, New York. Owing in part to the influence of the Erie Canal, during the 19th century this region was the Southern California of the nation: a social bellwether, a cauldron of radical ideas and reforms. The site profiles causes from abolitionism to women’s rights, anarchism to freethought, and highlights some 80 historical sites, marked and unmarked.
Visit the wooden study in which Mark Twain completed some of his most heretical writings. Tread the streets upon which the 19th century woman suffrage movement was launched. Visit the otherwise unremarkable street corner in Watkins Glen that defined America’s legal standard for obscenity for almost 70 years. Meet the freethinkers like Robert Green Ingersoll and Matilda Joslyn Gage, household words in their time but little remembered today because they dared to challenge religion.
Planning to visit the region? Online navigation aids offer turn-by-turn directions between the sites you choose, in the sequence you choose. Or enjoy the Trail experience as a virtual tourist.
Redevelopment of the Freethought Trail website and promotion across west-central New York was made possible by a grant from the James Hervey Johnson Charitable Educational Trust. Visit http://www.freethought-trail.org today!
Tom Flynn is Executive Director of the Council for Secular Humanism and editor of Free Inquiry magazine.


In The Media
By Nathan Bupp

The Buffalo News ran a front page story (Outside faith, a rising tide of 'nones') on September 3 about the rise of the non-religious in American society. The reporter, Jay Tokasz, visited the Center here in Amherst, New York during our CFI summer institute, ( A Secular Summit ) aimed at exploring nonbelievers and their cultural impact. On hand for this event were well-known demographers Barry Kosmin, Phil Zuckerman, and Luke Galen. All three have spent a considerable amount of research time analyzing and reporting on the internal characteristics of atheists, agnostics, and humanists.
While visiting the Center, Tokasz took the opportunity to interview all three of these experts. As one can tell from reading the article, only Kosmin survived the final editorial cuts. Nonetheless, his contribution is an important part of the story. The story also features comments from CFI’s Vice President of Education and Research, John Shook, and an important reference in the final paragraphs to CFI’s presence around the country by way of its growing network of Centers for Inquiry:
The Center for Inquiry now has 10 affiliate centers throughout North America and "faith- free" communities for skeptics and the nonreligious in a dozen other cities.
"The centers we have provide a kind of alternative," said John R. Shook, vice president for education and research. "What it is essentially is people who have grown disenchanted with religion for whatever reason."
The centers offer programs such as secular parenting groups and secular celebrations and rights of passage ? the equivalents of what religious people would find in churches and synagogues.
 

The Buffalo News article can read in its entirety here.  
Nathan Bupp, Vice President of Communications for the Council for Secular Humanism and the Center for Inquiry


The Virtual CFI Community
When you can't make it to an event...
We know it's not always possible to make it to an event, but that doesn't mean you have to miss out!  CFI has a thriving online community where the free thinking never stops.
Check out our new blog, Freethinking, at www.centerforinquiry.net/blog.  Regular contributors include Ron Lindsay (CFI's new CEO), Tom Flynn (ED of CSH and editor of Free Inquiry magazine), Joe Nickell and Ben Radford (CSI Investigators Extraordinaire), and others.

If you're looking for more of a two-way discussion, the CFI Forum is the place for you.  You'll find lots of different topics where you can jump right in and join the free thinking and debating.  Meet others who share your values from all over the world, and participate in CFI's "virtual community" online.
Would you rather listen to a great interview on CFI topics?  Point of Inquiry is the premiere radio show and podcast of the Center for Inquiry featuring the leading minds of the day, including Nobel Prize-winning scientists, public intellectuals, social critics, and renowned entertainers.  You can listen to the episodes on your computer, copy them to a CD for your car or home stereo, or download them to your iPod or MP3 player, in addition to hearing the show on a few dozen campus and community radio stations across North America.


Finally, we're happy to say that CFI has been granted a coveted YouTube nonprofit channel which is allowing us to make available hundreds of hours of CFI programming for FREE without the standard 10-minute-content-limit reloading frustrations.  You'll find program listings on our own CFI Digital Media page or you can go directly to our CFI YouTube channel.  If you'd like, you can subscribe to the CFI channel and you'll be notified every time we add a new program to the list.

Secular Humanism Online News is edited by Nathan Bupp, Vice President of Communications for the Council for Secular Humanism and the Center for Inquiry. nbupp@
 

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The Council for Secular Humanism is committed to free inquiry, reason, and science, the separation of Church and State, civil liberties, nontheism and humanist ethics. It does not endorse candidates or parties, nor does it take political positions as a corporate body. We open our publications to a wide range of opinions, including dissenting viewpoints; opinions expressed in columns and articles do not necessarily represent the views of the Council.

See the Redesigned CSI Web Site

















Dear John Felix,
The Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) is proud to announce a new design and new enhancements to the former Web site at http://www.csicop.org.
The Web site began in 1996 by volunteer Patrick Fitzgerald, starting with just some basic information about the magazine and CSICOP. Over the years, more and more features were added, such as the inclusion of magazine content, a storefront with merchandise, and Web-exclusive content. Recently, the in-house Web development team headed by Alan Zoppa at the Center for Inquiry began the redesign and update.
Zoppa said “This isn't just a content refresh or a redesign, the site has been nuked from orbit and rebuilt from the ground up. Today on csicop.org, you'll find a site on the bleeding edge of emerging Web standards. I've kept all our favorite articles from Skeptical Inquirer and Skeptical Briefs in place, but they're now cross-indexed by issue, author, and column. You can subscribe to anything or everything with RSS, or watch for updates on Facebook and Twitter.”
Barry Karr, executive director of CSI, said “We needed an overhaul of this Web site for a while, based on e-mails and talking with our subscribers.”
As with those first early Web pages, the new Web site will feature the publications of CSI, Skeptical Inquirer and Skeptical Briefs, as well as a description of the mission of CSI. The later additions will also be included, such as the online store, and our Web-exclusive columns by Austin Dacey and Chris Mooney. Some of the newer Web 2.0 technologies are being utilized and featured more prominently, such as linking to Facebook and Twitter, and RSS feeds which will help link-up with bloggers. The URL, www.csicop.org, remains the same.

Tim Binga
Director, CFI Libraries

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