










1151. Religion 'linked to happy life'
Comment #146364 by Bonzai on March 19, 2008 at 2:10 am
Steve,
I don't disagree with your point about the rapture cults and the evangelical movement in general.
But this is quite apart from whether they believe in is real, This is the kind of fantasies that are actually harmful. I am also not sure whether is fair to say that people who believe in an afterlife automatically give up on this one or wish it to come to an end asap. That is not the impression I get from any of my religious friends.
There is always a gulf between what the dogmas say people should believe and what they actually believe. Since we are talking about people rather than religious texts, we must keep in mind that the human condition is always a lot more ambiguous than logic or religious texts. Human beings are neither rational nor consistently irrational.
I said in the beginning of my post that the claim that religion is good for health may be true or false, my point was simply that it is a question separate from whether religion beliefs are true and should be evaluated based on evidence, not the philosophical commitment to atheism. I think that would depend on the actual contents of what one believes, not just that he or she believes in some God. You probably get a nervous break down, instead of any health benefit from believing the slave driver, control freak of a God of the OT. But it would be a mistake to think that all Christians believe in such a God, being a Christian doesn't compel one to be a fundamentalist.
1152. Religion 'linked to happy life'
Comment #146348 by Bonzai on March 19, 2008 at 1:38 am
dlitt,
As far as I am aware no study ever claims cocaine is good for your health, I think either you are missing the point or I am missing yours.
Koreman,
I don't know if people derive any benefit from a hell and brimstone kind of God, I think it is a favourite atheist strawman, People who derive comfort from belief usually see their God as a source of redemption and forgiveness rather than a cosmic Stalin as described in a literal reading of the Bible. If you want to criticize beliefs, at least make an attempt to understand where believers are coming from instead of always trying to stereotype them with crude caricatures, Dostoevsky wrote some of the most powerful books with religious themes, his was not the God of the American evangelicals.
1153. Religion 'linked to happy life'
Comment #146319 by Bonzai on March 19, 2008 at 12:03 am
Brain English
Is this one of those articles that suggests that because a belief in something appears to be healthful. That something then is real?
1154. In Britain, creationist theory is evolving
Comment #145527 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 5:14 pm
Is Pathfinder yet another wooter creation? It gives a new meaning to creationist.
1155. In Britain, creationist theory is evolving
Comment #145525 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 5:11 pm
They should teach ID and creationism as case studies in general courses such as "science and pseudoscience" or "intellectual self defense" which aim at a larger audience than biology majors. I think it is am important part of a general education. Students should be exposed to them and be intellectuallly equipped to dissect their fraudulent claims.
1156. Bishop accuses gays of 'conspiracy' against the Catholic Church
Comment #144956 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 5:08 am
There is a genetic factor just as there may be a genetic component to the kind of food we like. But sexuality is not genetically determined, it has a bearing but I don't believe that there is a one to one mapping. Other factors are involved. Were the ancient Greeks and many pre Christian pagans genetically different from us? I doubt it.
1157. Bishop accuses gays of 'conspiracy' against the Catholic Church
Comment #144951 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 4:50 am
Why to they put the back-page button next to the back-space button?! just lost another post.
1158. Bishop accuses gays of 'conspiracy' against the Catholic Church
Comment #144948 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 4:46 am
Sorry, just corrected some grammar and spelling. I got carried away when I rant and rave.
1159. Bishop accuses gays of 'conspiracy' against the Catholic Church
Comment #144943 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 4:39 am
If it isn't the issue then what is the explanation for the Churches stance? If we are not likely to chance then I fail to see how homosexuality could ever be an "attack" on the family
Whilst there are those who might be unsure, or might like either sex equally, I think most people pretty much know where they stand. There is no need to experiment when the difference in reaction between meeting a male and a female is so stark.
1160. Bishop accuses gays of 'conspiracy' against the Catholic Church
Comment #144936 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 4:25 am
Well, I think this assumes that sexuality is changeable.
1161. Bishop accuses gays of 'conspiracy' against the Catholic Church
Comment #144883 by Bonzai on March 17, 2008 at 12:46 am
MAXD
OH this might offend someone, or this might scare person x, or on and on and on. I think it is high time we stopped trying to shut people up because we are...offended, or hurt or frightened by what they say. Instead our first response ought to be fighting back with better ideas.
1162. The atheist delusion
Comment #144870 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 11:10 pm
Anthropological and historical data certainly would give you some insights about human nature. For example if someone argues that patriarchy, or private property or whatever is human nature you may be able to find societies organized along different principles so demonstrating that these features are not inante.
Economics text books postulate a certain human nature, namely the rational profit maximizer aka greedy bastard. Since they make the bold assertion I think they should be expected to produce some evidence.
There are situations where you may not have a clue about what the right answer may be , but even limited data would allow you to rule out a lot of wrong ones.
1163. The atheist delusion
Comment #144867 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 10:44 pm
TCT
I think the scientific method should be applied as long as it is feasible. Even when it is not formally, a rational discourse that insists on corroborative evidence, to the extent that it is possible, is still desirable provided we don't put more faith into what is warranted by the data and our tools; it is not all or nothing.
My view is that our methods become more limited as complexity grows and as the questions we ask become more detail. But in a limited way Dr.Benway's principle still applies, provided we know not to ask questions beyond what our tools can yield meaningful answers; or if we have to, take the answers with a big grain of salt.
I think I am somewhere between you two.
1164. The atheist delusion
Comment #144860 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 9:48 pm
There's still careful observation and description, and corroboration. That's what Darwin did. That's science
1165. The atheist delusion
Comment #144856 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 9:25 pm
Whether this is reality or not is not a question we can answer.
1166. The atheist delusion
Comment #144830 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 8:25 pm
SPS
There are promising alternatives to capitalism in ParEcon and ParPolity.
1167. The atheist delusion
Comment #144818 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 8:09 pm
MaxD
One can have a suspicion of what the best course for some thing is and then say we are moving in the right direction without believing in some Marxian vision of history.
1168. In Britain, creationist theory is evolving
Comment #144772 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 5:50 pm
I think an important part of education is to have your preconcieved ideas challenged. It would be a sad day for education if teachers are afraid to teach the scientific truth of evolution because they have to "respect the religious sensitivity" of the pupils. In other words to hell with evidence and facts if they sit uncomfortable with the Bronze age myth that the pupils happen to subscribe to lest their feelings get hurt.
What the hell has happened to intellectual integrity? Cultural relativism has certainly gone too far.
1169. Two More Fleas
Comment #144686 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 3:27 pm
Hello,
There is a nice picture in your link which shows a bunch of grown men wearing funny caps, down on their knees and giving heaven the arse as a gesture of piety (mooning God?). The heading of the article is "the atheist delusion". There is something disconnected between the title and the picture. I wonder who is deluded.
1170. 'Anonymous' takes anti-Scientology to the streets
Comment #144678 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 3:16 pm
I am surprised that anyone would take the scientologists seriously. I am going to start a religion of computer worshiping saying that we are all simulations in master X-B170 so that I too can get tax write offs.
1171. The atheist delusion
Comment #144676 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 3:08 pm
Scull in a washing machine,
Zara,
Don't defy me. I beat you before, I'll beat you again.
1172. In Britain, creationist theory is evolving
Comment #144662 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 2:31 pm
Sanderson said the British government is taking over funding of about 100 Islamic schools even though they teach the Koranic version of creationism. He said the government fears imposing evolution theory on the curriculum lest it be branded as anti-Islamic.
1173. In Britain, creationist theory is evolving
Comment #144641 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 1:55 pm
Other than saying evolution is wrong what is the central "theory" of creationism? What are its positive contents?
Let's say by some disaster the creationists are allowed equal time in the biology class room what are they going to say? I mean, it would only take a few second to finish their syllabus because it is just one sentence "God did it."
Looking at the bright side like the Monty Python advised, at least you can save some money on text books if these clowns get their way and exams are going to be really easy.
1174. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144625 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 12:59 pm
Its not a coincidence that people lose their religion when they learn properly about evolution, learn properly about the history of their church and the History of human societies and culture. When they learn about the brain.
1175. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144618 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 12:42 pm
Goeff,
I think where we disagree is the proportion of those who are "born again" or whatever, as against those who are brought up with it.
Of course, it's difficult to quantify "how religious" someone is, but, to use a more global example, lifelong Muslims seem no less intense than recent converts, to me.
1176. In Britain, creationist theory is evolving
Comment #144568 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 10:51 am
JanChan,
I think they do worth debating at least in the school setting as the students in the audience might mistaken a refusal to answer as inability to answer.
1177. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144561 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 10:37 am
Geoff
Take the recent PEW survey, for example; conversions & immigration don't materially affect the fact that non-christian religions are statistically negligible in the US.
1178. Selling science to the masses
Comment #144536 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 10:08 am
TCT,
Thanks for the link.
1179. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144531 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 9:55 am
You downplay "looking at the numbers", but surely that's the most important fact? Take the recent PEW survey, for example; conversions & immigration don't materially affect the fact that non-christian religions are statistically negligible in the US.
1180. Selling science to the masses
Comment #144525 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 9:38 am
We should grant the public at least a common sense grasp of methodological naturalism.
1181. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144518 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 9:20 am
Spinoza,
If we had been born in Constantinople, the most of us would have said: "There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is his prophet." If our parents had lived on the banks of the Ganges, we would have been worshipers of Siva, longing for the heaven of Nirvana."
1182. Selling science to the masses
Comment #144508 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 9:06 am
T.H. Huxley wrote a really nice article called 'We are All Scientists' drawing out the routine use we all make every day of the same ways of thinking which characterise science. I would say that getting people to feel ownership of the scientific method, and to recognise the power that it has in their own lives, would be a positive step.
1183. Selling science to the masses
Comment #144494 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 8:23 am
In Canada the public doesn't have the same hostility towards science that some posters describe in the Southern U.S., but their understanding is still quite distorted based on what I see in the media,--with the caveat the media image may be distorted. There are several things I notice in particular.
1.Very often science is confused with technology.
So there is this idea that science = gadgets.
2.science is "sold" primarily as a ticket to economical prosperity. The news tell us we need X number of graduates in science for a knowledge based economy, never mind the fact that the fastest growing sector is the low waged, low skill service sector.
This is a horribe idea. As they say you learn to hate what you have to do solely to get your pay cheque.
Children are sent the message at a very young age that science is just a good meal ticket with some bonus of playing with cool machines. If I were told that everyday I would be turned off from science too,
3. Science is often presented as some kind of gala tricks on a par with magic show, That kind of presentation doesn't necessarily enhance one's scientific understanding in a meaningful way.
4. Science is cold and boring. It is all about mechanically applying formulae and following procedures, it is only for a kind of particularly austere individuals,--nerds or geeks,-- who have neither imagination nor social skills. Many intelligent and educated people in the humanities have that impression.These intelligent people in the humanities who hate science may end up working for the media and influence public opinions with their negative stereotypes about science and scientists.I think the way science is taught in high schools probably contributes a lot to that impression.
A local newspaper once came up with a list of questions to test the readers' scientific literacy. Half of the questions were about who discovered what. They were not even science questions! The people who came up with the test themselves didn't know what science is.
I don't have a specific answer to what should be done to communicate science more effectively, but I think it would be misguided to present science as simply a collection of fun facts and neat tricks..It is a systematic world view. It is a set of methodology to understand the world. A guy who can rant off a long list of scientific facts in trivia pursuits does not necessarily have a very good knowledge of science. Facts are useless if you don't know what to make of them.
1184. Fleabytes
Comment #144473 by Bonzai on March 16, 2008 at 6:59 am
For atheist songs you should check out a punk band called "bad religion". The lead singer Greg Graffin
is actually an evolutionary biologist who teaches at UCLA. The music is so so IMO but the lyrics are nice, the acoustic version of some of the songs are good too..
Here is their theme song:
See my body, it's nothing to get hung about.
I'm nobody except genetic runaround.
Spiritual era's gone, it ain't comin' back.
Bad Religion, a copout, that is all that's left
Hey Mr. Mime, stop wasting my time,
With your factory precision.
Factory precision is your
Bad Religion, regurgitate
Indecision, it's not too late.
Bad Religion, Bad Religion.
Ay!
Don't you know the place you live's a piece of shit?
Don't you know blind faith through lies won't conquer it
Don't you know responsibility is ours?
I don't care a think about eternal fires.
Listen this time, it's more than a rhyme,
It's your indecision.
Your indecision is your
Bad Religion, regurgitate
Indecision, it's not too late.
Bad Religion, regurgitate
Indecision, it's not too late.
Bad Religion, Bad Religion,
Bad Religion.
1185. The business of natural selection
Comment #144389 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 10:54 pm
I don't know how effective this algorithm is but it seems reasonable that if given enough information about a macroscopic system and it's environment the future could be predicted with some measure of accuracy
1186. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144384 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 10:27 pm
Spinoza
Again, RD did reasonably well confronting our mortality, which of course makeS the faith-based sqirm
1187. Fleabytes
Comment #144315 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 3:30 pm
It could be two people using the same account, I know a husband and wife couple who used to do that on another forum. When people expressed surprise at the fact that this person was posting self contradicting messages he explained that it was his wife. Now maybe he was imagining that he had a wife.. who knows.
It is just the internet, I don't think anyone would go through great length to pretend to be an atheist only to say bravo David. I think even David is not that deranged.
Got to go out before the sun sets, it is warm today. Screw work.
EDIT: OK. Almost forgot wooter, There are really some compulsive obsessive deranged characters on the net. Really have to catch some sun when it is still there or I will become weird too..if I am not already..
1188. Fleabytes
Comment #144307 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 3:18 pm
I am sorry to say that, but Paula you may want to stay away from the computer for a while, Go watch some TV, play with the dog or the neighbour's dog if you don't have one. I know, I know I am still here, but it is only because I need to get some work done on my computer and I am procrastinating. :)
1189. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144301 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 3:09 pm
Dr. Benway,
My earliest memory of doubt: wondering why the Bible stories were filled with miracles but nothing miraculous seemed to be going on in my small corner of the world. Miracles seemed really cool and they would make the claims about heaven and hell more convincing. I wished I could witness at least a couple of miracles. Maybe a burning bush in the backyard with a glowing white beautiful angel materializing beside, saying "Fear not!"
1190. The atheist delusion
Comment #144221 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 12:03 pm
You are mixing hard science and soft science, and idealising the results of using the scientific method on the kind of questions that I am implicitly talking about: Race, Gender, Sexuality, Social Structures, Law etc
1191. The atheist delusion
Comment #144220 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 11:57 am
Steve,
Dennett makes an interesting point regarding selection of religion.
1192. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144208 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 10:30 am
Vaal,
I have just revised and edited my post tremendously.
1193. Richard Dawkins on The Alan Colmes Show
Comment #144197 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 9:59 am
Vaal
Are you not surprised that it took to the 19th Century for somebody to come up with evolution. It seems fairly obvious, although with the benefit of hindsight.
1194. Deadly Sins 101
Comment #144175 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 8:49 am
The Hitler Youth thing is a cheap shot, even Ratz doesn't deserve it, give it a rest.
1195. Selling science to the masses
Comment #144173 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 8:45 am
Why do they have to use the word "selling" as if it involves something dishonest? I usually avoid people who talk to me because they want to sell me something,
I don't know how Dawkins would feel for the implication that he is somehow on a par morally with a guy trying to sweet talk you into buying used cars from him.
1196. The business of natural selection
Comment #144162 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 8:27 am
It is yet more hype.
At one point it was using neural networks to pick stocks, which died a quiet death.
A few years ago they were talking about using chaos theory to do business,.I heard business professors on TV and obviously these clowns knew nothing about chaos theory beyond a few sound bites. Maybe they meant creating a lot of confusions so that they can make money by pulling a fast one, I have no idea.
I actually hate business type with an even bigger passion than I do religious fundamentalists. At least the fundies have some genuine human emotions, I can't say the same about the talking suits. The other day I was reading a book in a coffee shop, this woman behind me began to yack away on her cell phone. She was going on and on about "synergy", "the butterfly effect" and so on, for almost half an hour she was babbling gibberish in business lingo peppered with bastardized scientific jargons. I couldn't even be sure the conversation made sense to her, certainly not to me. I felt like telling her to STFU and pouring coffee all over her notebook. But then I decided to leave before I lost it and got arrested for assault.
1197. I don't believe in atheists
Comment #144154 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 8:08 am
While I am not a big fan of Harris' and I find his explanation of Islamic terrorism very simplistic,--Scott Atran really ripped him to pieces over this IMO,--I can't say he is "comfortable with torture" based on that article.
It seems he was making a "lesser evil" kind of argument. It might be flawed but it is not like he was "comfortable" with torture in the way most of us would understand the phrase "comfortable with". That conveys the impression that he thought torture is no big deal and recommended it as an acceptable, normal way to do business. I don't think that is a fair representation of his position.
1198. Two More Fleas
Comment #144142 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 7:45 am
ww
surely for something to be "fine-tuned", there has to be an agency/force/intelligence doing the fine-tuning..
1199. Two More Fleas
Comment #144137 by Bonzai on March 15, 2008 at 7:07 am
Brian English,
Science shouldn't care what others read into discoveries. All that matters is that science seeks the truth. Where ever that goes. There will always be numbnuts who misuse or misrepresent scientific knowledge.