Tuesday, July 31, 2012

John Searle

July 31, 2012

On this date in 1932, John Searle was born in Denver, Colo. He graduated from Oxford University in 1955 with a B.A., and returned to complete an M.A. and Ph.D. in philosophy in 1959. He has received honorary degrees from six other universities, including the University of Wisconsin, which he attended for three years before receiving his degree at Oxford. He is an accomplished philosopher and professor who currently teaches philosophy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has published 22 books about various topics in philosophy, including Speech Acts: An Essay in the Philosophy of Language (1969) and Mind, Language, and Society (1999). Searle has received numerous awards, including the National Humanities Medal in 2005 and the Mind and Brain Prize in 2006. His major areas of interest include the philosophy of language and the mind.

Searle is most famous for inventing the Chinese Room Argument, a rebuttal to the idea of artificial intelligence. In the Chinese Room Argument, Searle argues that computers do not have real intelligence, similarly to how a person who follows English instructions for writing in Chinese does not really understand Chinese. Searle’s Chinese Room Argument is still widely debated today, and Pat Hayes even defined the field of cognitive science as “the ongoing research program of showing Searle’s Chinese Room Argument to be false” (via Stevan Harnad’s 2001 essay, “Minds, Machines and Searle II: What’s Wrong and Right About Searle’s Chinese Room Argument?”). When Free Inquiry, a secular humanist magazine, asked Searle in 1998 if he believed in god, Searle replied, “I don’t.” In that interview, he calls himself “a kind of agnostic.”
“On the available evidence we have about how the world works, we have to say that we’re alone, there is no God.” 

— John Searle, interviewed in Free Inquiry, 1998

Compiled by Sabrina Gaylor (FFRF)

Paul D. Boyer

July 31, 2012

On this date in 1918, Nobel Laureate Paul D. Boyer was born in Provo, Utah, the middle child in a family of six in a loving home. Although Paul became a "Deacon" in the Mormon church at age 12 and graduated from Brigham Young University, where he met his wife Lyda, his pursuit of science during graduate studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison altered his perspective. He earned his doctorate in 1943. Moving to Stanford to do postdoctoral research in a war project, he and his wife ceased going to Mormon meetings. In 1955, he went to Sweden on a Guggenheim Fellowship. Dr. Boyer spent 17 years as a faculty member of the University of Minnesota, where, in 1956, he was appointed to the Hill Foundation Professorship. In 1963, he and his family, including two daughters, moved to Los Angeles, where Dr. Boyer continued research into biochemistry at UCLA. In 1965, he became director of the newly created Molecular Biology Institute.
Boyer has pointed out that, as might be expected, "belief in God and in a Hereafter dropped considerably as the level of scientific achievement increased." A recent survey shows that only ten percent of members of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, representing "a pinnacle of achievement for American scientists," believe in a god. Dr. Boyer shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1997 with John E. Waller and Jens C. Skow "for their elucidation of the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP)." In his Nobel autobiography, Dr. Boyer referred to himself as a "devout atheist," and added: "I wonder if in the United States we will ever reach the day when the man-made concept of a God will not appear on our money, and for political survival must be invoked by those who seek to represent us in our democracy." He and his wife, Lyda, continue to travel widely in retirement. Paul D. Boyer is a Life Member of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.
“My views have changed from a belief that my prayers were heard to clear atheism . . . Over and over, expanding scientific knowledge has shown religious claims to be false.

None of the beliefs in gods has any merit.”

Paul D. Boyer, "A Path to Atheism," Freethought Today, March 2004

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)



Monday, July 30, 2012

Thorstein Veblen

July 30, 2012

On this date in 1857, Thorstein Veblen was born on a farm in Valders, Wisconsin. Veblen conducted his undergrad studies at Carleton College, did post-graduate work at Johns Hopkins, and earned his Ph.D. at Yale in 1884. He taught at a variety of schools, including the University of Chicago, Stanford, and University of Wisconsin. His book,The Theory of the Leisure Class, 1899, was the most famous of the nine he wrote. Many progressives, ranging from Charlotte Perkins Gilman to Margaret Sanger, were strongly influenced by it. In it, Veblen introduced the term "conspicuous consumption." Veblen also studied the place of science in civilization. While an evolutionist, he repudiated the unscientific application of evolution known as "social Darwinism." Raised Lutheran, he was often denounced for his atheism, and was rejected when he applied for a post at the religious St. Olaf University. "The administration personally liked him, but his religious views prevented his appointment," reported his controversial biographer Joseph Doffman, Thorstein Veblen and His America (1934). It has been averred that Veblen's sole political act was to sign a petition urging Robert La Follette of the Progressive Party to run for president. D. 1929.
“Dr. Veblen has answered my letter concerning his attitude toward Christianity. He was asked to express himself with reference to the Bible, the divinity of Jesus, redemption, and the interpretation of the Scriptures by the Lutheran church. He answers about as follows: The historical content of the Bible must naturally submit to the same criticism as all other historical material, without prejudice to scholarship. No one could be more interested in this than the student of social life. With reference to the divinity of Jesus, he agrees with what Jesus himself has said in the so-called synoptical gospels, and all later theories should go back to them for proof. Concerning redemption, he cannot believe that Jesus has atoned for the world, nor that the theory to the effect that Christ is the world's proxy is correct, and he believes that these gospels can be interpreted in a more liberal fashion.”

Letter from Th. N. Mohn to the Rev. Pastor J. Olsen, July 30, 1890, on why Veblen's views made him objectionable to St. Olaf College
http://www.naha.stolaf.edu/publications/volume15/vol15_5.htm

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Eleanor Smeal

July 30, 2012

On this date in 1939, Eleanor Smeal was born in Ohio. She graduated from Duke University and earned her M.A. from the University of Florida. She was president of the National Organization for Women (1975-1982; 1985-1987), working to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. She helped to pass the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (1978), Violence Against Women Act (1998) and the Civil Rights Act (1991), along with other important legislation. In 1987, Smeal co-founded the Feminist Majority Fund and Foundation and became its president. Smeal has been influential in fighting for women’s rights: She organized the first national abortion rights march in Washington, D.C. (1986), created the National Clinic Access Project (1989), which ensures that women have access to abortion, and helped found the Campaign to Stop Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan (1997). The World Almanac named her the fourth most influential woman in the U.S. in 1983. She is the author of How and Why Women Will Elect the Next President (1984), and co-produced the videos “Abortion for Survival” (1989) and “Abortion Denied: Shattering Women’s Lives” (1990). She has two children: Tod and Lori.

Smeal was raised Roman Catholic, but left the Catholic Church because she disagreed with its opposition to abortion and birth control. Smeal won the 1994 Freethought Heroine Award from FFRF and spoke at FFRF’s 1994 annual convention in Madison, Wis. In a statement on Feb. 24, 1997, Smeal said: “Extremists are putting their religious beliefs above the U.S. Constitution. Or they are using religion as a cover not only to threaten the lives of those who believe in reproductive choice and choice in lifestyles, but democracy itself.”
“Dogma is extremely harsh on women.” 

— Eleanor Smeal, Freethought Radio, Jan. 27, 2007

Compiled by Sabrina Gaylor (FFRF)

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Wil Wheaton

July 29, 2012

On this date in 1972, Richard William Wheaton III was born in Burbank, Calif. He started acting in 1981, when he was only eight years old, and later appeared in movies such as “Stand By Me” (1986) and “Toy Soldiers” (1991). Wheaton’s most famous role was as Wesley Crusher on “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” in which he was a regular cast member from 1987 to 1990, as well as returning occasionally as a guest star until 1994. Wheaton’s acting career continues, with recent notable roles including Wil Wheaton on ”The Big Bang Theory.” He also does voice acting for animated television shows and videogames, including “Teen Titans” and multiple “Grand Theft Auto” titles. He founded Monolith Press in 2003, and is the author of Dancing Barefoot (2004), a collection of autobiographical stories, and Just A Geek: Unflinchingly Honest Tales of the Search for Life, Love, and Fulfillment beyond the Starship Enterprise (2005). Wheaton also has a popular website and blog, http://wilwheaton.net, which was voted “Best Celebrity Blog” by Forbes.com in 2003 and “Weblog of the Year” in the 2002 Weblog Awards.

“I’m an atheist,” Wheaton proclaimed during an interview with the “Nerdist” podcast on Feb. 22, 2011. Wheaton described fan reaction to his personal ethical code, summed up as “Don’t Be A Dick,” saying, “People started calling it Wheaton’s Law, and I’m like, I’m an atheist, but that’s kind of like Jesus’ law. It’s a good law.” He elaborated on his views about religion on a 2006 blog post titled “The sins of the father”: “I also have nothing but contempt for the so-called spiritual leaders who prey upon [religious] people for their own personal financial or political gain.” Wheaton describes himself as supporting “freedom from religion” on the warning page of his website.
“I’m so fed up with being told that I’m a bad person because I don’t subscribe to the same exact narrow views [Christians] have.” 

— Wil Wheaton, personal blog post titled “Seriously. What would Jesus do?” 2006

Compiled by Sabrina Gaylor and Eleanor Wroblewski (FFRF)

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Meg Bowman

July 28, 2012

On this date in 1929, Prof. Meg Bowman was born in North Dakota to "pillars" of the Methodist Church. Meg found one other avid reader in her small town who became her best friend, an atheist like Meg. Meg became active with the Progressive Party in 1948, earning her B.A. from Colorado College, 1954, a Master's from Arizona State University in 1961, and a Ph.D. in 1985. She organized the Fremont Human Rights Commission in the 1960s, persuaded the city of Fremont, Calif., to establish an active Human Relations Commission, and regularly participated in civil rights and peace marches. She has been active in the Fremont Unitarian Fellowship, the area chapter of National Organization for Women, the San Jose Unitarian Church, the Older Women's League, and at one time co-chaired the Feminist Caucus of the American Humanist Association. Since 1986, Meg has helped sponsor impoverished young women through school in Kenya and Romania. She is retired from the San Jose State University sociology department. She has written many books through Hot Flash Press, including Memorial Services for Women, and Feminist Classics: Women's Words that Changed the World. An intrepid world traveler, Meg has organized many international tours with a feminist and freethought slant.
"Why burn? The answer is simple. Read the Bible — the Koran — the theologians and philosophers of the world."

Meg Bowman, Why We Burn: Sexism Exorcised, 1988. For more about Meg Bowman, see Women Without Superstition

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Friday, July 27, 2012

Helen Taylor

July 27, 2012

On this date in 1831, Helen Taylor was born in England. Her mother married John Stuart Mill in 1851. When her mother died seven years later, Helen took care of her esteemed stepfather. Helen assisted Mill in writing his landmark Subjection of Women (1869). After his death in 1873, Helen edited his Autobiography and Essays on Religion (1874). She was elected to the London School Board three times between 1876 and 1882, and championed disadvantaged children. She not only agitated for abolition of school fees and for subsidy of school meals, but worked to stop abuses at industrial schools. Taylor, a strong feminist and suffragist, attempted to run for Parliament in 1885, but her nomination papers were refused. D. 1907.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Thursday, July 26, 2012

 Susan Blackmore

Book by Susan Blackmore:
 CONSCIOUSNESS ISBN 978-1-444-10487-5

Can science explain human consciousness, or understand the minds of animals or machines? Or is consciousness itself an illusion?
This groud-breaking textbook by best-selling author Susan Blackmore brings together all the major theories of consciousness studies, from neuroscience and psychology to quantum theories and Eastern Philosophy.

The 'last great mystery of science', consciousness was banned from serious study for most of the last century, but is now a popular and fast expanding area for students of psychology, philosophy and neuroscience.

The book examines a diverse range of topics, including:

* how subjective experiences arise from objective brain processes
* the basic neuroscience of consciousness
* the nature of self  and free will
* out-of-body and near-death experiences
* the effect of drugs, dreams and meditation
* the evolution of consciousness

The new edition has been fully revised to include the latest developments in neuroscience, brain scanning, vision and robotics, and has a new website (www.hodderplus.co.uk/psychology) with self-assessment exercises, references, references with links to online papers, help with exercises, and links to what's on in the thriving field of consciousness studies.

For all those perplexed by what it means to be - to exist - this book could transform your consciousness.

Susan Blackmore is Visiting Professor of Psychology, University of Plymouth, UK. Her previous books include Ten Zen Questions, Conversations on Consciousness and  The Meme Machine.

Please visit http:/www.hodderplus.co.uk/psychology/  for additional resources accompanying this book.

A quote from this book, p359.
Practice - Living without psi.
The possibility of ESP is comforting. We might sense when a loved one is in danger, share our deepest feelings with others, or find ourselves guided by a supernatural power. For this exercise, try living without such comfort.


If you believe in psi, or angels, or life after death, or spirits, take this opportunity to live without them. You need not abandon your beliefs for ever; just set them aside for a few days and see how the world looks when you know you are completely on your own.


Sceptics should do this too. You may be surprised to find yourself willing something to happen even though you know you cannot affect it, or hoping someone will just know when you need them. Ask yourself this: Do we live better or worse for a belief in the paranormal? Don't give a glib, intellectual answer. Look and see what happens when you try to root it out completely.

George Bernard Shaw

July 26, 2012

On this date in 1856, George Bernard Shaw was born in Dublin. After his parents separated, Shaw moved to London at age 20 where he built a long, distinguished and often controversial career as a critic, journalist, stage director, women's rights advocate, war critic, religion critic and, most notably, playwright. In his lifetime, Shaw wrote over 50 plays ranging from tragedies to comedies to powerful social critiques. Some of his most famous productions include "Man and Superman" (1903), "Saint Joan" (1923), "Caesar and Cleopatra" (1901), "Major Barbara" (1905), and "Pygmalion" (1913). Shaw's strong allegiance to socialism as a means to improve the lives of the working class was evident throughout much of his literary and dramatic work. In 1884, his belief in social equality led Shaw, along with fellow freethinkers Beatrice and Sidney Webb, to leadership roles in the Fabian Society, a socialist movement which attracted famous freethinkers such as Bertrand RussellVirginia Woolf and Annie Besant. Together with atheist Graham Wallas and the Webbs, Shaw cofounded the London School of Economics in 1895 to promote "the betterment of society" (LSE website). Shaw won the Nobel Prize (though he refused the monetary award) for his contribution to literature in 1925 and an Academy Award for Best Screenplay in 1938 for the film "Pygmalion."
Shaw's work sometimes overtly criticized religion such as his play, "Androcles and the Lion," (1912) and short story, "The Adventures of the Black Girl in Search for God," (1938). "Shaw was a Rationalist long before he was a Socialist" (Joseph McCabeA Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists, 1920). While Shaw claimed to have become an atheist at age ten, in the 1890s he began to reject atheism and classify himself as a mystic. However, throughout most of his life he remained critical of organized religion and especially the Christian church. "There is nothing in religion but fiction" (Back to Methuselah, 1924) and "It is not disbelief that is dangerous to society, it is belief" ("Androcles and the Lion," 1912) were both penned after he developed stronger beliefs in mysticism. Near the end of his long life, Shaw requested that "the form of a cross or any other instrument of torture or symbol of blood sacrifice" be omitted from all memorials to him. He also wrote of his final resting place that, "Personally, I prefer the garden to the cloister" (Warren Allen Smith, Who's Who in Hell, 2000). D. 1950.
“Whether Socrates got as much out of life as Wesley [John Wesley, founder of Methodism] is an unanswerable question, but a nation of Socrateses would be much safer and happier than a nation of Wesleys.”

George Bernard Shaw, "Preface to Androcles and the Lion," 1912

Compiled by Bonnie Gutsch (FFRF)

Stanley Kubrick

July 26, 2012

On this date in 1928, Stanley Kubrick was born in the Bronx. He sold his first still photograph at 16 to Look and joined the magazine's staff a year later. His movies included "The Killing" (1956), "Spartacus" (1960), "Lolita" (1962), "Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb" (1964), "2001: A Space Odyssey" (1968), "A Clockwork Orange" (1971), "Barry Lyndon" (1975), "The Shining" (1978) and "Eyes Wide Shut (1999). D. 1999.
“The whole idea of god is absurd. If anything, '2001' shows that what some people call 'god' is simply an acceptable term for their ignorance. What they don't understand, they call 'god' . . . I chose to do Dr. Clarke's story as a film because it highlights a critical factor necessary for human evolution; that is, beyond our present condition. This film is a rejection of the notion that there is a god; isn't that obvious?”

Stanley Kubrick, interview, American Cinematographer (1963), cited by Warren Allen Smith in Who's Who in Hell

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Mick Jagger

July 26, 2012

On this date in 1943, Michael Philip Jagger was born in Dartford, Kent, England. He was one of the founders of the iconic band The Rolling Stones in 1962, and became its lead singer and songwriter. The Rolling Stones is known for its influential hits such as “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” (1965), “Get Off of My Cloud” (1965) and “Paint It, Black” (1966). Jagger toured with The Rolling Stones in many different countries, including the famous “The Rolling Stones Tour of the Americas ‘75” and the more recent “A Bigger Bang Tour” in 2005-2007, one of the highest grossing tours ever performed. The Rolling Stones were awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1986.

In 1971, Jagger helped create the Rolling Stones Records label. Jagger achieved further fame as a solo artist with five albums including “She’s The Boss” (1985), and as an actor and producer who founded the Jagged Films company. He has acted in films such as “Performance” (1968) and “Ned Kelly” (1970), and his music appeared in the 2004 film “Alfie.” In 2003, Jagger was knighted as Sir Michael Jagger for his Services to Music. He married twice and has seven children.

“Like most English people I’m not a great believer,” Jagger said in a 2007 interview with The Independent. “I’ve read Richard Dawkins’ book and it’s very persuasive. I’m more in awe of the universe and that’s not really a belief in God.” Jagger has also spoken out about the harm of religion. “Killing for ideas is the most dangerous form of killing at all. Being willing to die for your ideas rather than your country is another concept, but dying for an idea, like in religion, is absurd,” Jagger said in an interview with High Times in 2003. Some sources say that Jagger now practices Buddhism.
“I don’t have belief in the Holy Book. I don’t think many English people do.” 

— Mick Jagger, to The Independent, 2007

Compiled by Sabrina Gaylor (FFRF)

Aldous Huxley

July 26, 2012

On this date in 1894, Aldous Huxley, grandson of Thomas Henry Huxley and brother of Julian Huxley, was born in Surrey. An eye disease blinded Aldous at age 16 for about a year and a half. He regained enough vision to study, read and become a successful novelist. Two volumes of his poetry were published while he was still a student at Oxford. He launched a successful career as a satiric writer of novels, which included: Crome Yellow (1921), Antic Hay (1923), Those Barren Leaves (1925), Point Counter Point (1928), Brief Candles (1930), Brave New World (1932) and Eyeless in Gaza (1936). His screenplays included "Pride and Prejudice" (MGM's version of the Austen book), "Madame Curie" (1938), and "Jane Eyre" (1944). Huxley observed toward the end of his life: "It is a bit embarrassing to have been concerned with the human problem all one's life and find at the end that one has no more to offer by way of advice than 'Try to be a little kinder.' " D. 1963.
“If we must play the theological game, let us never forget that it is a game. Religion, it seems to me, can survive only as a consciously accepted system of make-believe . . .

You never see animals going through the absurd and often horrible fooleries of magic and religion . . . Asses do not bray a liturgy to cloudless skies. Nor do cats attempt, by abstinence from cat's meat, to wheedle the feline spirits into benevolence. Only man behaves with such gratuitous folly. It is the price he has to pay for being intelligent but not, as yet, quite intelligent enough.”

Aldous Huxley, Texts and Pretexts,1932

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Daniel Everett

July 26, 2012

On this date in 1951, linguist Daniel Everett was born in Holtville, Calif., to a working-class family. A voracious reader, Everett became interested in linguistics after viewing "My Fair Lady" as a high schooler. He met Keren Graham, the daughter of Christian missionaries, in high school and, at 17, became a born-again Christian. A year later, he and Keren married. After graduating from the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago in 1975, they both enrolled in an international evangelical organization, the Summer Institute of Linguistics (S.I.L.), with the mission of "spreading the Word of God" by translating the bible into the languages of preliterate societies. Everett was chosen to work with the Piraha, a small tribe of about 350 people in the jungles of Brazil. S.I.L. had sent prior missionaries to this tribe before, but due to the complexity of the Piraha language, none had succeeded in mastering it. Among other challenges, it is a language that is as likely to be hummed or whistled, as it is to be spoken. Keren, Everett and their three young children were sent to the Piraha village at the mouth of Maici River. The Piraha have resisted all efforts from outside influences, steadfastly maintaining their own culture. The preliterate Piraha live and speak in the present and "shun outsiders' knowledge," Everett said (The New Yorker, April 2007). Everett's conclusion that the Piraha language lacks grammatical recursion (sentences embedded within sentences, a concept promoted by foremost linguist Noam Chomsky, and considered a cornerstone of language) has created controversy in the field of modern linguistics. Everett discovered the Piraha have no creation myths; they don't draw pictures or make up stories about the ancient past. They believe in spirits, with which they may have a direct encounter, but "there's no great god who created all the spirits," Everett noted (Science News, Dec. 2005).
The Piraha consistently responded to missionary stories about Jesus Christ by asking, "Have you met this man?" Everett said: "They lived so well without religion and they were so happy. Also they didn't believe what I was saying because I didn't have evidence for it . . . I began to think: what am I doing here, giving them these 2000-year-old concepts when everything of value I can think of to communicate to them they already have?" (New Scientist, Jan. 19, 2008). Influenced by the Piraha's way of seeing the world, Everett eventually lost his faith and became an atheist. It took 19 years before he told his wife and, when he did, their marriage ended and two of his three children disassociated themselves from him. Daniel Everett serves as chair of linguistics, languages and cultures at Illinois State University at Normal. His book, Don't Sleep, There Are Snakes: A Life in the Amazon, was published by Random House in 2008.
“I went from being a Christian missionary to an atheist.”

Daniel Everett, Interview, New Scientist, Jan. 18, 2008

Jane Esbensen (FFRF)

Lucy Colman

July 26, 2012

On this date in 1817, abolitionist infidel Lucy Colman (nee Danforth) was born in New England, a descendant of John and Priscilla Alden through her mother's side. She was twice widowed. When her second husband was killed in a work-related accident, Lucy was left to support her 7-year-old daughter. With workplace door after door slammed in her face because of her sex, Lucy discovered "woman's wrongs." She wrote: "I had given up the church, more because of its complicity with slavery than from a full understanding of the foolishness of its creeds."
She turned to teaching in Rochester, earning less than half what a male teacher made. Susan B. Anthony discovered her and invited her to address a teachers' association. Lucy created a sensation by urging the abolition of corporal punishment in schools (see quote). She became an abolitionist lecturer, sacrificing security, comfort and wages to work against slavery. Often mobbed, she found that the racist ringleaders were nearly always clergymen. Lucy became a "who's who" in the ranks of the women's movement. Frederick Douglass conducted the funeral for her daughter, who died suddenly at college. Lucy later taught at a "colored school" in Georgetown and held many philanthropic positions. She wrote regular columns for the leading freethought publication, The Truth Seeker. D. 1906.
“If your Bible is an argument for the degradation of woman, and the abuse by whipping of little children, I advise you to put it away, and use your common sense instead.”

Lucy Colman, paper delivered at New York teacher's convention ("The Truth Seeker," March 5, 1887). For more on Colman, see Women Without Superstition

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Who or What are Religious Liberals?
By  Rodney Sheffer
All religious people place credibility in ideas that have neither evidentiary support nor empirical backing of any kind. For the most part these religious people believe propositions or ideas that fit into a preconceived frame of reference or world view in which they find comfort. The fact that these seriously flawed ideas or propositions are irrational or illogical, or deny and defy the known laws of the universe, are apparently irrelevant to the believers. These people can find comfort in convenient, but irrational falsehoods. When people can find comfort in falsehoods they are dangerous, especially when they are in a policy making position, e.g. legislators at any level.

Since religious faith is predicated on subjective speculation and unsupported conjecture which allows for unconstrained interpretation we can expect serious intellectual errors to follow. This has been the history of Western Civilization for millennia. More blood has been shed, and more people have died, as a consequence of these religiously inspired intellectual errors than for all other causes combined. When people continue to make the same religiously inspired errors while expecting different outcomes we are inclined to label such behavior as stupidity. While Europe has seen millions of people who have abandoned their allegiance to organized religion--especially Christianity--Americans still overwhelmingly continue to subscribe to religions that increasingly represent a retreat into the thinking of the tenth century of the Common Era.  While the numbers of people in America who disavow any alliance with an organized religion is growing significantly, they are still a substantial minority.

Among religious believers, there is a huge spectrum of commitment to the dogma and doctrine of any sect. Some people are rigidly bound to a literalist/fundamentalist interpretation of their religion, and others are very flexible and open to various interpretations.

Those who are religiously conservative are those who cling hysterically to the status quo--they are frightened by change--they are not receptive to new knowledge. Ordered evolutionary change or alternative religious views so necessary in any modern culture are viewed as a threat to their comfort level. Innovation or experimentation in religious practices are anathema to them. Religious conservatives are quite prone to being intolerant of diversity and alternative views of reality. Hence, they are quite prone to bigotry.

Religious liberals are those who are cognizant of the intellectual weaknesses of their religion and who are open to novelty in a religion that is evolving in tune with their society and culture. These people are not inclined to wanting to superimpose their beliefs on those of a different persuasion. Religious liberals are disposed to see their religious experience as a journey of discovery, innovation and evolutionary change. Religious liberals are receptive to, and easily accommodate, new knowledge. Religious liberals have a higher level of intellectualism and educational attainment than religious conservatives. The failings of religious liberals is that they provide cover for the religious conservatives and are not critical of the un-evolved and less sophisticated positions of the conservatives. Hence the religious community is riddled through and through with cognitive dissonance that morphs into hypocrisy.

The religious liberal/conservative dichotomy will, in all likelihood, persist for as long as people choose to sort themselves into the two different camps of believers. The rational alternative to religious liberalism or conservatism is for those of both persuasions to come to grips with the realities of the 21st Century, and adopt a world view that is devoid of superstition and magical thinking. In so doing, the inordinately dangerous element of religious thought that is an intellectual malignancy in our modern culture can be abandoned as an ancient and archaic meme that has outlived any alleged usefulness. This newer, more modern, world view is called Secular, Scientific, Ethical Humanism.
(623 words)
Rodney Sheffer

A Magician in the Classroom
Using Magic and Mentalism to Teach Skepticism

by Paul Goodin
Anyone who teaches can relate to running into the occasional brick wall when trying to convey new ideas. To teach critical thinking and impart a skeptical outlook is difficult in and of itself. But when you are teaching where a majority of the students have strong religious convictions, it can be an even greater challenge.
Although I teach an advanced writing course, I believe critical thinking is as important to writing as grammatically sound work. If the sentences are well structured but the content is not intellectually sound, then it is still poor quality. With the plethora of self-proclaimed psychics and healers reaching greater numbers on the Internet, I found an unusual avenue to introduce the theme of skepticism— magic and mentalism.
I discovered my amateur magician’s skills were a valuable tool to use to introduce a topic that might otherwise be unpalatable to a group where a majority of them hold strong, unmoving religious convictions. This is when the mentalist (a.k.a. charlatan) in me comes out. I spin a tale of how, as a child, it was discovered I had a special “gift,” later tested at the Rhine Institute. I then demonstrate some of the tests performed to determine if I was psychic, or merely intuitive. I bend a spoon, key, or roofing nail, and follow that with a book test, an effect with Zener cards, and perhaps a cold reading. My method is similar to that discussed in Michael Dougherty’s 2004 article in Skeptic (“Educating Believers,” Vol. 10, No. 4, 31–35). He created a curriculum that “was primarily an exploration of different paranormal phenomena, with special focus on psychic predictions, alien visits and abductions, astrology, and numerology.” He also led students to believe he possessed paranormal abilities. But, unlike Dougherty, I do not allow several weeks to go by before I reveal the truth. Instead, I ask students to write a reaction paper and discuss if they think that I possess psychic powers and intuitive abilities, or if they think that it’s just a trick. Like Dougherty, I explore common logical fallacies. But my approach differs from his in that I expand my pedagogy beyond the limitations of paranormal phenomenon. I discuss with my students how critical thinking is necessary in everything from pseudoscience to buying a car.
Although student reactions vary from class to class, they are usually consistent on the whole. Approximately one third of the class think my “experiments” were tricks, a third believe I was psychic, and a third feel either I was not psychic but had good intuition, or they are not sure. Once I reveal the truth, their reactions are interesting.
A few are angry at being deceived while others realize the lesson learned (i.e., just because I am their instructor does not mean I can be trusted); they are also reminded that the theme of the course is skepticism. The ones who thought I did tricks, of course, feel vindicated. Some reaction papers reveal that the foundation of many of their beliefs are faith based. Bible quotes are not unusual. My most memorable paper came from a student who brought her Bible to class everyday. She began her first sentence with “I believe Mr. Goodin is an agent of the devil.” This surprised me because it usually takes my students at least five weeks to discover this.
When explaining my methods, I walk a fine line between debunking their beliefs and revealing magician’s secrets. My rule of thumb is that if James Randi or Skeptic magazine has discussed the methodology, then I do not consider my explanations as exposure. After explaining my methods, a few students have come up to me after class and said “I know you said it was a trick, but I know you’re really psychic. Don’t worry, I won’t tell anyone.” The few students who insist that what they see is real are the ones who have the greatest difficulty with the course material.
One of my concerns with teaching skepticism is similar to those discussed in Scott Calvin’s article in Skeptic (“Crazy Ideas 101,” Vol. 15, No. 1, 14–17). In Calvin’s class, he uses crazy ideas in physics as his theme. He has his students present a theory and then “simulate the dishonesty sometimes employed in presenting ideas like these, the presenters are allowed to fabricate data and misuse sources, if they so choose.” He then assigns other members of the class various tasks to investigate which are related to the theory. These range from verifying the legitimacy of the sources used to investigating logical consistency, to checking “credentials and conflicts of interest of the primary developers of the theory.” Though Calvin’s course is in Physics and mine is Advanced Writing, I too want students to practice true critical thinking as opposed to learning to discredit specific beliefs. It is one thing to reveal fraudulent practices of psychics, but it does little in the long run to help students apply skeptical thinking in real world situations. It is imperative to give students the tools to verify reliable sources as well as being able to explain why a theory is fallacious. Having students of differing majors (e.g., science, humanities) my assignments must be varied by necessity. This allows students to explore their own interests, which helps combat classroom apathy.
Writing about psychics is a good topic to start with since all students have strong opinions on the subject, and this helps them focus on research methods and basic grammatical structure. Often, those who believe in psychics use YouTube clips of Sylvia Browne, John Edward and James Van Praagh as evidence. The students who debunk psychics (about 85% of the class) refer to Randi.org and Penn & Teller’s Showtime series Bullshit. They complain that in their county libraries they have no problem finding books written by self-proclaimed psychics, but are hard pressed to find adequate sources disproving them. Some students make a distinction between psychics and faith healers, believing that the psychics are using tricks while the healer is working from divine guidance. When I press them on the lack of consistency, they cite Benny Hinn among others as proof. One year, I had a student who attended a Hinn appearance and was selected for healing; her ailment remained. Though Hinn had her back flipping across the stage, it was not revealed she was a former gymnast. She lost her faith in him.
The next assignment I give the students, however, proves to be a little more challenging. We discuss the subjectivity of history and look at two specific events: the Holocaust and the rape of Nanking. Since they are not familiar with these topics they are forced to apply their critical thinking skills more broadly. The idea of revisionist history is discussed by having the students read part four of Michael Shermer’s book, Why People Believe Weird Things. With Nanking, for example, we look at how two sides perceive the same event. One source used is Iris Chang’s 1998 book, The Rape of Nanking. It is an excellent example since Chang includes clippings from Japanese newspapers that present the horrific events there rather differently from how she herself documented them.
Once the students have practiced skeptical thinking for several weeks, I assign them exercises to gauge their comprehension through a number of 1–2 page reaction papers. For one assignment, since it is close by, I send them to the Creation Museum and ask them for: (a) their initial impression, and (b) if they think the museum truly addresses scientific subjects as accurately as it purports. Most of the class cite the museum’s contradictions of scientific facts. Some, however, say they are glad they went because it confirmed the validity of their religious convictions. While these students recognise that psychics are fakes, they still willingly believe the museum’s outlandish assertions—that dinosaurs boarded Noah’s ark, or the notion that T-Rex transformed from a herbivore into a carnivore at the instant of Adam’s fall from grace.
To give students an opportunity for peer critique, I assign a 10–15 minute presentation. They take one of the 25 fallacies of thinking presented in Shermer’s book, explain it to the class and show examples of how/when these occur in our lives. Their efforts are often creative and well done. One thing that keeps students on their toes is knowing that their fellow classmates will quiz them. With high caliber classes that are rather competitive, a sub-par presentation is a rare occurrence.
The final project gives students a chance to choose a belief they find unsupportable and to personally investigate “Why People Believe Weird Things.” The topics range from Bigfoot and alien abduction to countless claims investigated in the Penn & Teller series. The results are almost always papers in which the student has taken that extra step to think critically, and in some cases to reexamine the belief system in which they were raised.
I often end the semester with a quote from Carl Sagan: “If we are not able to ask skeptical questions, to interrogate those who tell us that something is true, to be skeptical of those in authority, then we’re up for grabs.” I then ask my students how Sagan’s statement applies to the research they have done. Moreover, I ask what have they learned from the entire process of critical thinking. Besides improving their research abilities, I inquire about how skeptical thinking has changed their thought processes.
Each year, I see a dramatic increase in students who come into the class with critical thinking skills. Perhaps it is due to watching programs such as Penn & Teller’s and reading sources such as Skeptic that give them the tools they need. On the other hand, it could just be that the students who believe in psychics and the like are merely avoiding taking my class. END

Eric Hoffer

July 25, 2012

On this date in 1902, Eric Hoffer was born in New York City to German immigrants. By age five, Eric was reading in both English and German. Struck by unexplained blindness at age seven, Eric regained his sight at 15. The experience of reading deprivation turned him into a nonstop, inveterate reader. He started working as a migrant in California at age 18 and spent most of his life as a dockworker, writing in his spare time—which won him the sobriquet of "the longshoreman philosopher." His first book, The True Believer (1951), is a classic. Nine other books were published during his lifetime. His autobiography, Truth Imagined, was published posthumously. D. 1983.
“The facts on which the true believer bases his conclusions must not be derived from his experience or observation but from holy writ . . . To rely on the evidence of the senses and of reason is heresy and treason.
. . .
Thus the effectiveness of a doctrine should not be judged by its profundity, sublimity or the validity of the truths it embodies, but by how thoroughly it insulates the individual from his self and the world as it is. What Pascal said of an effective religion is true of any effective doctrine: It must be 'contrary to nature, to common sense and to pleasure.' ”

Eric Hoffer, The True Believer, 1951

Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)

Tuesday, July 24, 2012


Vern Bullough

July 24, 2012

On this date in 1928, Vern Bullough was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. He earned a B.A. in history and languages from the University of Utah in 1951, an M.A. in history from the University of Chicago in 1951, a Ph.D. in the history of medicine and science from the University of Chicago in 1954, and a B.S. in nursing from California State University at Long Beach in 1981. Bullough was a sexologist and historian, as well as a professor of nursing, sociology and history. He was Dean of the Faculty of Natural and Social Sciences at State University of New York at Buffalo, and was one of the founders of the Center for Sex Research at California State University. Bullough received numerous awards for his work, including the prestigious Kinsey Award in 1995. He was a strong supporter of civil liberties who worked with the ACLU and the NAACP. Bullough has published and edited numerous books, many co-written with his first wife, Bonnie Bullough, who was also a nurse and sexologist. Their collaborations include The Subordinate Sex: A History of Attitudes Toward Women (1973) and Sexual Attitudes: Myths and Realities (1995).

Bullough was co-president of the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) from 1994-1997 and vice-president from 1997-1998, and he received a Distinguished Humanist Service Award from the IHEU in 1992. Bullough was an honorary associate of the Indian Rationalist Association, and also worked with the Humanist Academy. He is the author of the 1994 essay, “Science, Humanism, and the New Enlightenment.” D. 2006.
“[Vern Bullough] will be sorely missed as one of the leading secular humanists in North America and the world.” 

— Paul Kurtz, founder of the Center for Inquiry and Council for Secular Humanism, quoted on the IHEU website.

Compiled by Sabrina Gaylor and Bonnie Gutsch (FFRF)

Simon Bolivar

July 24, 2012

On this date in 1783, Simon Bolivar was born in Venezuela to a wealthy family. Bolivar traveled extensively in Europe and the United States while formulating his strategy to liberate South America from the sway of Spanish priests and rule. Today, Bolivar is acknowledged as "El Libertador" and the "George Washington of South America" for liberating Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Panama from the Spaniards, and as the founder of Bolivia. He became the first president of the Republic of Columbia (now Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, and Venezuela) in 1819. In 1824, he converted the southern region of Peru into the Republic of Bolivia, where he became its first president. After attempts to murder him, Bolivar was forced into retirement. He was a noted anticlerical. D. 1830.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)



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Science of Ghosts: Searching for Spirits of the Dead
 
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Science of Ghosts: Searching for Spirits of the Dead [Paperback]

Joe Nickell (Author)

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Book Description

June 26, 2012
Are ghosts real? Are there truly haunted places? How can we know?From the most ancient times, people have experienced apparent contact with spirits of the dead. Some have awakened to see a ghost at their bedside or encountered a spectral figure gliding through a medieval castle. Others have seemingly communicated with spirits, like the Old Testament's Witch of Endor, the spiritualists whose darkroom seances provoked scientific controversy in the last two centuries, or today's "psychic mediums," like John Edward or Sylvia Browne, who seem to reach the "Other Side" even under the glare of television lights. Currently, equipment-laden ghost hunters stalk their quarry in haunted places—from urban houses to country graveyards—recording "anomalies" they insist cannot be explained.
Putting aside purely romantic tales, The Science of Ghosts examines the actual evidence for such contact—from eyewitness accounts to mediumistic productions (such as diaphanous forms materializing in dim light), spirit photographs, ghost-detection phenomena, and even CSI-type trace evidence.
Are ghosts real? Are there truly haunted places, only haunted people, or both? And how can we know? Taking neither a credulous nor a dismissive approach, this first-of-its-kind book solves those perplexing mysteries and more—even answering the question of why we care so very much.

Decisions, Decisions: The Problem with “You Decide.”


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Sounds Sciencey

Sharon Hill

July 2, 2012

scale being stepped on by a foot
What typical ploy is used on a Bigfoot news site, in a documentary on ancient aliens, and when soliciting a vote for a political candidate? It’s the “you decide” gambit. But it’s not as straightforward as it seems to just state your case and leave the audience with their decision to pick the “best” option. As with everything that requires evaluation, how you decide is based on a complicated process of what you are given, how you are given it, and how it fits into your framework of the world.
My memory may be biased, but doesn’t it seem like every unsolved mystery television program has ended with the proposition “you decide?” At the close of various documentaries about Bigfoot, UFOs, or psychic powers, the narrator dramatically summarizes the evidence and asks, “Is this fact or fiction? You decide.” As I learned more about the tactics used in these kinds of presentations, I became annoyed by that closing bit. This piece might best be labeled “Sounds Reasonable-ish.” It applies to many sciencey sounding claims made by the media and information sources.
The premise of “you decide” is that we, the source, will give you information about a choice you can make (e.g., believe or not, use this or not, pick this one or not). Then, you, intelligent person, can judge for yourself what the best decision is. It sounds democratic. It appeals to your vanity as a smart, responsible person. But in this case, it's a sly marketing trick.
People like to think they are being rational and that they do a decent job of fairly weighing both sides of an issue before forming a conclusion. But many factors come into play. How often do we fully assess and understand what we are given and how we might have been influenced? Not very often. And that's the core of what's wrong with proposing, “you decide.”
As I noted, paranormal purveyors pull this maneuver. It's a particularly handy gambit for those organizations or individuals promoting a view that lacks scientific backing–Creationism and intelligent design proponents, vaccination choice or anti-vax advocates, fear mongering groups warning about health risks from certain consumer items or promoting all-natural, chemical-free products. They will feed you their story and put you, the concerned parent and/or conscientious consumer, in the position to choose what appears to be the logical and ethical choice. This works as an effective manipulation to get you to accept their position.

False Balance and False Choice

When presenting information to the public in order to persuade acceptance of a position, two false setups may be used: false balance and false choice. Once you recognize them, you can spot them all over the place.
The journalistic idea of balance is that a story should portray both sides. A pro-topic spokesperson (or advocate) and a token skeptic are featured in newspaper articles or TV news clips. We get the pro and con. Sort of. That’s only two sides. I have a hard time coming up with a real-life scenario that isn’t multi-faceted and complicated. Some have no right choice or multiple right choices. Granted, TV news and newspaper formats are limited in time and space so the complexity of a situation has to be greatly simplified. The real world reaction to an issue is far more complicated than unambiguously choosing option A over B.
Often, the choices we make are based on our current situation, or we try to pick the “least of all evils” option because there is no ideal option—I’m thinking of elections, of course. Negative ads for candidates are the most egregious examples of false balance. All they present is the bad, and that’s the sort of gunk that sticks in your head and is recalled when the candidate’s name is mentioned. Yet those ads frequently end with, “Do you want to see candidate X do that to your town/state? Come this Election Day, you decide!” Oh great, thanks for poisoning the well.
Certain media sources will tout their fair presentation of news. But their attempt at balancing viewpoints may be completely out of line with the accuracy and weight of the evidence that supports those points. If you take away nothing else regarding the “you decide” gambit, remember and use this:
Not all positions are equally worthy of serious consideration. 1
There are endless examples of situations in which alternatives are not equal but are presented side-by-side as if they should be treated as such. Some views have the backing of substantial evidence and scientific knowledge, while others are just someone speculating or making it up whole cloth. The trouble is, without some prior knowledge, you may not know whether the information you are being presented is an accurate assessment or problematic.
Your local reporters or the producers of a pseudo-documentary show may also not have prior knowledge of the topic and thus may present a view that is falsely balanced to the audience: one poorly supported side is artificially propped up to look legitimate and equal to the other. That’s not my idea of fair at all. This is a particular problem with science reporting because science is a specialized topic that requires significant research to understand it.
In 2011, I interviewed Lauri Lebo, a local reporter who covered the famous Kitzmiller v. Dover trial, which reaffirmed that intelligent design has no place in science class. She said that journalists were nervous about reporting on science news: “Everyone is afraid to speak the truth about everything because they’ll be told they are biased. That’s a terrible way to approach science coverage!” Very few journalists have a scientific background. Due to time constraints, they can only briefly research the subject and frequently rely on eyewitnesses (as if one person’s experience can trump decades of accumulated knowledge) or one expert. So, the public receives pseudoscientific ideas presented alongside a well-tested, well-established scientific theory. In these days of information overload, do reporters have a responsibility to go beyond just putting all views out there? Or should they strive to provide context for the choices? There is a justifiable excuse to be biased; the stronger case should be presented with greater vigor in the name of accuracy.
Were we to go by literal weight of evidence alone—say, the weight of peer reviewed, established documentation—the anti-evolutionist would be crushed under mounds of paper. To counter that reality, creationists use emotional and seemingly logical or rational arguments—ploys like “teach the controversy” or “academic freedom”—to underpin their case. They also dish out false information, unconfirmed “facts,” and only their half of the story. But to those who have a philosophical leaning toward the creationism story (or any paranormal or pseudoscientific idea), the non-scientific or science-like arguments are compelling enough for them to choose that view. It takes practice to spot the flimsy foundation of some of these sensational ideas and not just eat up whatever you are given because it tastes good and digests easily.
The use of false choice is another byproduct of space and time constraints in today’s media outlets. Or, it could be just shallow thinking. False choice (a.k.a. false dichotomy, false dilemma) is when the options are only A or B. Is the Loch Ness monster real or a hoax? Did this person see a UFO or are they lying? The real world presents us with far more explanatory options than just two. To suggest the options are limited to two is dishonest since it excludes the vast middle ground. It can also be used to sort you into a camp: skeptic vs. believer, for example, where skeptic means “cynical and closed-minded.” Quite sneaky—and wrong. When I spot false dilemmas, I note the lack of critical thinking and flag that information source as potentially untrustworthy.

Informed Decision or Opinion

It's a busy world out there. We don’t always have the time to carefully consider a question. The process of deciding is often based on heuristics (thinking short-cuts, rules of thumb, generalizations, and common sense) and ideology (body of doctrine, myths of belief). Deciding upon the believability of paranormal or fringe claims is likely not a matter of fairly weighing the evidence but rather reliance on what feels right to you. When a person evaluates a casual issue that has little influence on daily life and well-being (such as ghosts, UFOs, or Bigfoot), rarely has that person scoured the literature for evidence and various viewpoints. Instead, the influence comes from stories heard or perhaps even personal experiences for which a definitive explanation is lacking. It’s easy to say “There may be something to it…” and “It’s possible….” It’s also fun to entertain those thoughts when there is usually no great societal impact (though some might argue that there is). With the ubiquity of paranormal- and supernatural-friendly communities and activities out there, it makes it easy to buy into those beliefs.
Public opinion polls are everywhere in the media. They provide the illusion of participation and serve as an outlet for passing judgment. Websites overflow with these question boxes because they are interactive and make the participant feel as if they are contributing to deciding on an issue. Websites’ poll results are unscientific and practically worthless as data because of the selection methods, poorly worded questions, and incomplete choices. “Do you think UFOs exist?” is an example of a bad question format. It raises questions before you can answer it. What do you mean by “UFOs”? “Exist” truly as unidentified objects or as people perceive them? I particularly notice poll questions that are worded as if science is a democracy, such as: “Should creationism be part of the science curriculum?” or “Do you think vaccines are safe?” Next time you see an online quick-click poll, evaluate the question carefully to see if the options they give are actually all the options available for an answer. Their purpose is not to be definitive about the issue (as participants may assume) but instead to appeal to the “you decide” gambit.

If You Choose Not to Decide, You Still Have Made a Choice

How many times have we skeptically minded people been told that we are closed-minded because we don’t outwardly accept the reality of an alternative treatment, psychic powers, or a spiritual encounter? In keeping an open mind, you don’t decide: I don’t know if psi exists. It’s possible, but the data so far are not at all convincing to me. Or, I may change my mind: Psi doesn’t exist as far as we know right now but there is the possibility that someday it may be measurable via a new method.
The same set of evidence can be interpreted differently depending upon what the interpreter considers reliable evidence, what their biases are, and their existing knowledge about the subject. Or, the analyst may decide that there isn’t enough evidence to come to a conclusion. Scientists nearly always wish for more data to, hopefully, make things clearer. That’s why scientific theories are continually tweaked and honed based on the incoming evidence over time that sharpens or changes them. We can’t always have all the information we wish we did in order to make a clean judgment. So, as a good critical thinker, the right choice is to withhold our decision.
To conclude this glimpse into the “you decide” gambit, I’ll express my hope that you look for and spot its use and misuse. Asking an audience to decide on a choice is only fair if you are an honest broker of all the information available: you weigh the presentation of evidence based on its quality and reliability and present all options, not just two. When asked to decide, remember that your choices may be unlimited.

Reference

1. Pigliucci, M. (2012) Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science from Bunk. University of Chicago Press.

Sharon Hill

Sharon Hill's photo Sharon Hill specializes in issues of science and the public and runs the Doubtful News website. Sharon can be reached at shill@centerforinquiry.net.