Brand marketing challenges in changing times – AdNews – AdNews

This is a free article from AdNews print magazine August edition. You candownload adigital version of AdNewsandsubscribe to the premiumprint edition here.

As new avenues for marketing continue to open up and brands have more opportunity to connect with their consumers than ever before, it is increasingly difficult to create a meaningful brand message that resonates seamlessly across all platforms. Especially in markets heavily saturated by mobile devices.

The consumer is in control and you have no story

The consumer journey is no longer linear. Consumers are now in control of their own buying experience; they are already informed and are looking at brands to answer their needs across numerous mediums. They are disinterested in brand narrative and care more about where the product is sourced, ease of access to the product and its impact on them and the real-world.

With this in mind, brands need to execute on their vision effectively to form a relationship with their customer, a relationship that can be maintained, so that customers become loyal. Subsequently, this means that marketers need to be decisive and deliver bad execution, no matter how great the vision, is the main reason marketers fail. Closing the gap between vision and execution is the challenge, and to do so you need to have the right marketers or agencies with the right skills to implement and execute on both.

Channel agnosticism continues to stretch and mobile continues to dominate. New-era marketing channels such as Snapchat and InstagramLive are here to stay and these real-time micro-moments form a pivotal point in the consumer journey. Brand storytelling has well and truly changed; take Brand Filters in Snapchat for example. Consumers now create and curate their own branded stories and distribute these themselves, providing powerful real-time content. This not only acts as a form of content marketing, but it also provides in-depth information on the consumer given the context, timing and reason for their sharing.

One channel too many and the data rat race

With so many new, as well as traditional marketing channels available, brand marketers need to understand which to use and when. As consumers continue to channel surf, delivering the right message, on the right channel, at the right time is imperative. Controlling all of these touchpoints and ensuring unified messaging in an increasingly fractured communications landscape, is a fine art.

Once you have chosen a channel, the customer experience, is now affected by the utilisation of personal data. As more and more emphasis is placed on tailored user experience, brand managers need to look at what they do with data and how it fits into their long term strategy.

This growing trend for personalisation has led to a rat race of customer information gathering and brands need more and more data to continue to stay ahead. An easy differentiator for a brand in a crowded market place is the depth to which they know their customer and how they choose to use this data. But it is rare that marketers actually know how to effectively use this data, with many lacking an understanding of how to use it in application.

More marketing opportunities and more customer data are all well and good, though the downside is that investing in so many channels is costly. But costs are significantly reduced through the reuse and repurpose of assets across platforms. This efficiency empowers brands to achieve greater consistency of brand message at the global, local and regional level without spending more.

The power of a partner

With so many moving parts, it is no surprise that brands are putting so much importance on their strategic agency partnerships to streamline processes and gain efficiencies. A successful partnership is one where there is a deep understanding between agency and brand of the bigger picture and the smaller milestones passed to get there.

As brands seek to do more with less, as budgets plateau and channels increase, it is easy to get carried away. Working with a strategic partner can give you a fresh perspective and can help you execute cross-channel campaigns efficiently, without compromising on effectiveness. With the right partner, message and channel, brands can place customers in an echo chamber where their brand message reverberates seamlessly from every device.

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Brand marketing challenges in changing times - AdNews - AdNews

LEBRECHT LISTENS | Barenboim Assembles A Dream Team – Musical Toronto

Elgar: The Dream of Gerontius (DG)

Elgar: The Dream of Gerontius (DG)

(out of five)

The first thing you need to know about Daniel Barenboims live performance with the Staatskapelle Berlin is that it is the best-sounding Gerontius on record. No British string section has ever played the work with such sweet serenity. No British winds ever breathed with such deep assurance. Strange as it may seem, the Berlin musicians and chorus singers feel this most English of works in their fingers and bones. There is something akin to love in their playing.

This is not to disparage past recordings, all by English forces, notably the Halles with John Barbirolli and two-thirds of a dream team in Janet Baker and Richard Lewis; or the LPO with Adrian Boult and Nicolai Gedda, Helen Watts and Robert Lloyd. Nor would I want to be without Sakari Oramos recent Birmingham selfie release. All three are passionate accounts. This one just sounds lovelier, less effortful. The critical faculty of disbelief is suspended for the duration.

Daniel Barenboim shares with the composer a breezy agnosticism and a love for English moderation. His approach to the oratorio is broadsided, utterly secure, without shocks or fancy gestures. The intended soloists were Jonas Kaufmann, Sarah Connolly and Thomas Hampson. The first two called in sick, to be replaced by Catherine Wyn-Rogers and Andrew Staples. Their voices are, perhaps, a shade less full but the cohesion of soloists, orchestra and chorus is admirable. Never a huge devotee of post-Handel English oratorios, I dont think Ive enjoyed a Gerontius this much before.

Elgar: The Dream of Gerontius (DG) is available atAmazon.co.uk.

Norman Lebrecht is one of the most widely-read commentators on music, culture and cultural politics. He is a regular presenter on BBC Radio 3 and a contributor to the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Standpoint, Sinfini and other publications. His blog, Slipped Disc, is among the most widely read cultural sites online, breaking exclusive stories and campaigning against human abuse and acts of injustice in the cultural industries.

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LEBRECHT LISTENS | Barenboim Assembles A Dream Team - Musical Toronto

Keeping pace with momentum investors, ignoring the VIX and why it may be time to buy Canadian – The Globe and Mail

Long ago when I was a mutual fund analyst, I would tell the brokers that if they let me pick the beginning and end dates for performance history, I could prove both that it was a great buying opportunity and it was among the worst funds in its category.

Take Mackenzie Financials Cundill Value Fund (a fund I liked a lot in my previous life) as an example. To prove it was a great buy, it would be easy to emphasize the 2016 returns where the funds 10.5 per cent appreciation outpaced the average global equity fund by more than 700 basis points. To argue the fund was mediocre, Id point to the three year average annual return that was worse than 95 per cent of the competition.

So is it a good or bad fund? Neither, at least based on this cursory look at performance.

Each fund, and by extension each investing style, is best suited to specific market conditions.

The momentum investing strategy, with its agnosticism on valuations and emphasis on stock price and earnings strength, has been the top performer in the past five years. Momentum-based managers have been comfortable holding the extremely expensive FANG stocks that were leading global equity markets higher, as long as their prices and earnings continued to climb.

Im not suggesting history is about to repeat itself but momentum investors were also riding high in the late 1990s, with a similar dependence on the technology sector, before getting obliterated in the 2000 to 2002 period.

For mutual funds and individual investor portfolios, all performance data must be taken in context. An investor with strong trailing portfolio returns over the past five years has every right to be proud of themselves, but they also have to make sure that their holdings are also positioned to benefit from the next five years.

Are the same growth drivers that drove returns in the past in many cases technology stocks and dividend paying companies benefitting from declining interest rates sustainable?

-- Scott Barlow is The Globe's in-house market strategist

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Stocks to ponder

Air Canada. The airline demonstrates just how fickle the business can be. The carriers gains this week take its stock back only slightly beyond the $21 a share it went public at in 2006. For investors, the past 11 years have been one long round trip. Ian McGugan examines the industry.

BSM Technologies Inc. The Toronto-based company, whose equipment and software help owners of truck, rail and other fleets track their vehicles, has grown through acquisition and could be a takeover target, according to David Barr, president of PenderFund Capital Management Ltd. in. Vancouver. Shirley Won looks at six budding stocks that trade for less than $5 a share.

AcuityAds Holdings Inc. The Toronto-based technology firm has rallied 89 per cent year-to-date. There are six buy recommendation on the stock with a 46-per-cent price return anticipated over the next year. Jennifer Dowty analyzes at the stock.

Ross Stores Inc. This discount fashion retailer is a seemingly contrarian pick given the pressure on retailers from e-commerce giants such as Amazon.com. But it passes all the criteria Berkshire Hathaway would use. John Reese examines three stocks from a Warren Buffett-inspired portfolio.

Theratechnologies Inc. Shares of the specialty pharmaceutical company have shot up nearly 200 per cent over the past year on the promise of a newer product and some analysts say the run may not be over yet, according to Brenda Bouw.

Cineplex Inc. The industry leader that took a rare tumble on Wednesday, falling over 8 per cent. For patient long-term investors, this pullback may represent a buying opportunity with a potential reacceleration in the share price in late-2017 or early-2018. Jennifer Dowty breaks down the stock.

The Rundown

Investors, heres a case for buying CanadaCanadian investors have been criticized since forever for having too much of a home bias. In that context, the push into international ETFs is laudable. Now, investors seem to have a home aversion to some extent, according to Rob Carrick.

Why investors shouldnt be reading too much into the fear indexPessimists see the decline of the VIX and disappearance of volatility as evidence of investor complacency a dangerous precursor to many of historys most severe corrections. But while an underappreciation of the markets risks is a legitimate concern, many investors are putting too much stock in the VIX index, writes Tim Shufelt.

Its the world, not Donald Trump, thats making the Dow great againWhile the U.S. President may want to make America great again, his countrys major stock indexes are globalized to an extent that surprises many investors. The companies in the S&P 500, a broadly based index of large U.S. businesses, derived 44.3 per cent of their sales from outside the United States in 2016, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. Ian McGugan explains.

Canada should fight for shareholder rightsAt some point, someone tries to take things just too far, and all hell breaks loose. This is what happened when Snap Inc., owner of the Snapchat messaging app, went public earlier this year in the United States with shares that gave investors no vote at all on virtually all corporate matters, writes David Milstead.

How to make the right choices when investing in REITsReal estate investment trusts should be an integral part of every income investors portfolio. They offer steady income, relative safety, and tax advantages if held outside a registered plan. The question is, how should you hold them? Gordon Pape explores the possibilities.

Others

Rob Carrick: The financial disadvantages of living alone

Charity fund managers navigate difficult second quarter

Fridays Insider Report: Companies insiders are buying and selling

Thursdays Insider Report: Companies insiders are buying and selling

Wednesdays Insider Report: Companies insiders are buying and selling

Number Crunchers

Eight U.S. restaurant stocks that are looking oversold

Eleven Canadian stocks with solid fundamentals that analysts ignore

Fifteen large-cap stocks built to weather the storm

Ask Globe Investor

Do you have a question for Globe Investor? Send it our way via this form. Questions and answers will be edited for length.

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Click here to see the Globe Investor earnings and economic news calendar.

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Keeping pace with momentum investors, ignoring the VIX and why it may be time to buy Canadian - The Globe and Mail

David Hume and the Shroud of Turin – Patheos (blog)

So The alternative to the miraculous answer is always to be preferred because it will always be more probable.

In other words, Miracles are impossible therefore miracles dont happen.

As more and more scientific research is completed on the Shroud of Turin, however, Humes argument becomes more and more strained.

The toss up is this: The Shroud of Turin is either the burial cloth of Jesus Christ on which is recorded evidence of the resurrection OR it is a forgery OR it is just a mysterious artifact for which we do not yet have a natural explanation.

The most stunning evidence from the shroud is the mysterious image itself. The image was not painted. It was not burnt on with conventional heat application processes. According to the latest research by Dr Paolo Lazzaro, the image was seared onto the linen by a super intense blast of ultra violet light. Not only was this impossible in the Middle Ages, but it is impossible today. We dont have the technology to reproduce this kind of image.

Therefore we need to ask, which is more difficult to believethat the Shroud is the burial cloth of Jesus or that some medieval forger was able to blast ultraviolet light on the shroud to produce the image in a manner still undeterminedusing a technology that is still way beyond that available today?

It is actually easier to believe that the Shroud is authentic.

The only other option (and one which an increasing number of Shroud skeptics take) is to shrug and say, Well, it is a mysterious artifact that we cannot explain.

But when you add that the image not only shows a crucified man, but a crucified man with the particular distinguishing marks of Jesus Christ crucifixion (the crown of thorns, the unbroken legs, the spear wound in the side, the flogging) it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain such disinterested agnosticism.

I suppose the authenticity of the Shroud will never be proven in a completely watertight way, but with the accumulation of evidence it is increasingly difficult to deny.

If, according to Hume, we must choose the most probable answer we would choose the proposal that it is the burial cloth of Christ and the image is supernatural evidence of his resurrection.

In other words, in this one case, the miraculous answer is the most probable.

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David Hume and the Shroud of Turin - Patheos (blog)

Scientists, Theologians Ponder If Latest Biological Findings Are More Compatible With Religion – Sojourners

When Charles Darwin published his landmark theory of evolution by natural selection in the 19th century, religious leaders were confronted with a powerful challenge to some of their oldest beliefs about the origins of life.

Then evolutionary theory was expanded with the insights of genetics, which gave further support for a scientific and secular view of how humans evolved.

Faith and tradition were forced further onto the defensive.

Now, exciting progress in biology in recent decades may be building up a third new phase in the scientific explanation of life, according to thinkers gathered at a University of Oxford conferencefrom July 19-22.

Although this 21st-century wave has no single discovery to mark its arrival, new insights into developing technologies such as genetic engineering and human enhancement may end up giving another important boost to the belief that science has (or eventually will have) the answers to lifes mysteries.

Some scientists, theologians, and philosophers see in this ever deeper knowledge of how genes work a possible alternative to the more reductive approach to evolution one that brings in a broader view that also considers the influence of the environment.

Unlike the earlier views, which seemed to lead toward either agnosticism or atheism, the theologians see this new biology or holistic biology as more compatible with religious belief.

Weve added definition to the picture of evolution that has deepened and enriched our understanding of biological processes, Donovan Schaefer, an Oxford lecturer in science and religion who co-organized the conference, told the opening session of the July 19-22 meeting.

But he added: It would be naive to imagine that the grander questions about biology, religion, the humanities, and evolutionary theory generally have been put to death.

The achievements on their list include new fields like epigenetics, the science of how genes are turned on or off to influence our bodies, and advances in cognitive and social sciences that yield ever more detailed empirical research into how we behave.

Waiting in the wings are new technologies such as genome editing, which can modify human genes to repair, enhance, or customize human beings. Scientists in China are believed to have already genetically modified human embryos, and the first known attemptto do so in the United States was reported on July 26.

Schaefer compared todays deeper understanding of biology to the higher resolution that photographers enjoy, now that photography has advanced from film to digital images.

Genes once thought to be fairly mechanical in influencing human development leading to the my genes made me do it kind of thinking have been found to be part of complex systems that can act in response to a persons environment.

Since scientists succeeded in sequencing the genome in the late 1990s, they have found that epigenetic markers that regulate patterns of gene expression can reflect outside influences on a body.

Even simpler living objects such as plants contain a complex internal genetic system that governs their growth according to information they receive from outside.

To theologians who see a new biology emerging, this knowledge points to a more holistic system than scientists have traditionally seen, one more open to some divine inspiration for life.

In this view, the fact that epigenetic markers can bring outside pressures to bear on the genome deep inside a human means genetics is not a closed system, but part of the wider sweep of nature in which they, as religious thinkers, also see Gods hand.

Nature is so complex and rich, and that prompts questions about why on earth is this the case? If youre an atheist, how do you explain a universe that seems to have the capacity to produce these things in the first place? asked Alister McGrath, an Oxford theologian who is director of the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion that hosted the conference.

This in turn opened a space for theologians to augment the discussion about the new biology, he said.

Massimo Pigliucci, a philosopher at New Yorks City College with doctorates in genetics and evolutionary biology, also said scientism the idea that science can answer all lifes important questions was too limited.

Science informs and grounds certain philosophical positions; it doesnt determine them, he said. But the data cant settle ethical questions.

Pigliucci agrees with the trend to use the evolutionary paradigm to analyze fields outside of biology, including topics such as ethics and morality.

The life sciences tell us that the building blocks of what we call morality are actually found presumably they were selected for in nonhuman social primates, he said. Science gives you an account of what otherwise looks like magic: Why do we have a moral sense to begin with? How did we develop it?

Not all present agreed that science could explain religion.

Some suspect that biology has triggered some kind of devotion and there are too many people who practice this cult, said Lluis Oviedo, a theologian at the Pontifical University Antonianum in Rome.

His own research has found at least 75 books and academic articles trying to explain religion through evolution, and he knew of about 20 more on the way, he said.

Although he thinks, the time of explaining through radical reduction is over, he admitted few biologists seemed ready to accept the more holistic new biology.

Even some scientists at the conference, while ready to engage with the philosophers and theologians, showed less interest in discussions about whether a new biology was emerging.

Im pragmatic, explained Ottoline Leyser of the University of Cambridge, whose lecture on plant genetics was one of the conferences highlights.

Theologians in the decades long science and religion debate, which argues the two disciplines complement each other, have also become more pragmatic as their dialogue proceeds.

Oxfords McGrath said the theologians had become more modest in the claims they made about what religion could contribute to this debate. Unlike some more doctrinaire scientists, he said, they did not think they had all the answers.

They dont say These observations in nature prove or disprove God, he said. Our religious way of thinking gives you a framework which allows you to look at the scientific approach to the world and understand why it makes sense, but at the same time also to understand its limits.

Those things need to be in the picture if were going to lead meaningful lives.

Via Religion News Service.

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Scientists, Theologians Ponder If Latest Biological Findings Are More Compatible With Religion - Sojourners

CIO – The C Suite

By Bianca Allery, Communications Manager, 3CXTechnology & InnovationPublished: 1 August 2017

When implementing new technologies, such as a Unified Communications solution, the main concern used to be the underlying infrastructure. However, far more attention is now being paid to the applications themselves instead of the network that underpins tem. This is due to the growth of the cloud, after all why worry about the infrastructure underpinning services when they are being hosted by another business many miles away? Yet even with in-house services, the shift in attention is noticeable.

However, this new way of looking at IT management underlines the many challenges issues that have been tied up in background infrastructure. Companies now expect that any new applications they introduce will be implemented quickly, easily and at a low cost. Yet as CIOs well know, it isnt always that simple. Applications and solutions may have very particular software and hardware demands, from installing the correct hardware PBX, to running software on the right operating system. As the role of the CIO evolves, they no longer have time to manage every detail of IT infrastructure. Instead, they just need to know that software works, whether on the cloud or for part of the 90% of desktop users still reliant on Windows.

Back to the futureHistorically, when organisations have invested in new technology, it has traditionally been brought in alongside its own software. While the software would ideally be fine-tuned for its purpose, it would also have its own demands, such as the need to run on a specific operating system.

Understandably, this caused major headaches for organisations, as they needed to maintain multiple operating systems, all of which are deemed necessary because of the add-on programmes they support. This strategy was both expensive, due to the cost of purchasing and managing these systems, and insecure because of the gaps created when systems are not updated regularly; particularly when developers stop providing security updates for legacy systems.

The advent of cloud has fuelled the ongoing simplification of IT infrastructure. After all, if the organisation can access software on-demand, it no longer needs to worry about the underlying infrastructure. At the same time, there is a growing expectation that applications will work on any operating system, so that a business can access Unified Communications whether it runs Windows, iOS, Linux or even a combination of all three mixture of the three and then some.

Nine to fiveAlong with this change in expectations has come a change in the CIOs role. At one point, CIOs were predominantly concerned with infrastructure and day-to-day IT operations, however modern CIOs now command a more strategic role leading the direction of IT in support of wider business strategy, rather than just focusing on the tech. In this environment, the applications become critical. For example, if an organisation seeks to target expansion in Latin America, it will want to know if its CRM and communication applications can support local languages. It will be less worried about what server and OS those applications sit on. The more time CIOs can spend thinking about how technology supports these strategic initiatives, rather than thinking about what is happening under the hood, the more effective they will be.

One of the simplest ways for CIOs to do this, is by adopting a software agnostic approach. Companies need to be able to add the necessary applications to the operating system used on any desktop, laptop or mobile, without limitation. Software agnosticism will ensure that CIOs can create a simplified, forward-looking and productive environment, which will be able to develop alongside the technical IT changes the future will present. The CIOs that grasp this concept, and adopt this approach to simplify their business for the future, will ultimately be the ones who are successful in the long run.

For more information please visit http://www.3cx.com

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CIO - The C Suite

Defining Faith – Patheos (blog)

This last weekend, I participated in the Gateway to Reasonconference in St Louis, Missouri. One of the speakers there was John Loftus.Hes an author of religious philosophy with a bachelors degree from Great Lakes Christian College, a Master of Divinity degree from Lincoln Christian University, and a Masters of Theology degree from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. Now to me, all of that is equivalent to having advanced degrees in Aesops fables. But at least we know that he should have a pretty good idea what faith is according to the Christian tradition. In his presentation at that conference, he defined faith thusly: Apart from the overt acknowledgement that faith is irrational, this is essentially the same definition given by EVERY former theologian, and I know several. Some of them are with the Clergy Project, where professional ministers, priests, and pastors realize they just cant pretend anymore.

Faith is the acceptance of the truth of a statement in spite of insufficientevidence. . . . Faith is a cop-out. If the only way you can accept an assertionis by faith, then you are conceding that it cant be taken on its own merits.Dan Barker; Losing Faith in Faith: From Preacher to Atheist

This definition is also commonly implied in the hymns, sermons, and even scriptures of all three of the most popular religions.The Quran (for example) saysthose who are mindful of God, believe in the unseen.The Bible describes faith as things hoped for but not seen, looking at things that arenot seen, and not seeing what is seen. All according to the circular argument of the question begging fallacy in addition to confirmation bias and so on; where we are expected to see what is not there, and we are blessed if we believe impossible absurdities for no good reason. Because you have to believe everything youre told, or else risk a fate worse than death if you just cant convince yourself of what you know cant be true.

To illustrate another aspect of faith, if you think your brother is telling you the truth, then regardless whether his testimony would be considered evidence by others evaluating all sides collectively, were still talking about why you accept his particular claim individually: especially when pitted against evidence or other testimony to the contrary. You might believe him solely on his authority as your brother. In which case, you dont need any evidence to back him up. You might even go so far as to deny evidence against himwhich of course would be dishonest. Do you accept what he says without question or reservation, simply because he says so? Or do you first need to see facts that show whether what he says is true? This is the difference between faith and reason.

With faith, you could have evidence, but you dont need it.With evidence, you dont need faith, and wouldnt want it.

This is why dictionaries also reflect the common usage that faith is a firm belief or complete trust that is not dependent on evidence, but may be accepted on the assumption of authority instead.That definition is also admitted by many current believers too, sometimes including even the part about it being irrational. Several times believers have confessed to me that they dont care what the facts are because they dont really want to know what the truth is. Why cant I believe what I want to believe? Many have said theyll take the authority of scripture as the only sources of truth in this world, and that everything else in the whole of reality is a lie. One guy even admitted to me that hed rather take a bullet in the ear than listen to reason and give up his faith.Many otheradmissions by religious people make clear that their belief matters more tothem than does truth, and this is explicitly expressed by the 2nd centuryapologist Tertullian:

We want no curious disputation after possessing Christ Jesus, no inquiringafter enjoying the gospel! With our faith, we desire no further belief.

And the Son of God died; it is by all means to be believed, because it isabsurd. And he was buried and rose again; the fact is certain because it isimpossible.

After Jesus Christ we have no need of speculation, after the Gospel noneed of research. When we come to believe, we have no desire to believeanything else; for we begin by believing that there is nothing else whichwe have to believe.

Religious faith must be a helluva drug.

I often hear the faithful making these admissions, but they usually wont unless theyre only talking to each other. Whenever I catch them making that confession, I point it outlike I did when Pastor David C Pack did that in one of the videos aimed at his own subscribers.I did it again with Pastor John Christy. I found one of his sermons, which I showed in one of my presentations. In it he confessed that he (and by extension his entire congregation) were delusional by definition. Because hes gonna believe whatever he wants to believe regardless what the facts are, because [he admitted] he doesnt care whether its really true or not. Of course I have many other examples like that too.

Faith means not wanting to know what is true. Friedrich Nietzsche.Faith is believing what you know aint so. Mark Twain

Many sectarian organizations publish a statement of faith (as if this were something to be proud of) wherein they admit that their beliefs are required, not indicated. They assert unsupported speculation as absolute truth, stating facts that are not facts, which is already dishonest. But then they also use apologetics to systematically make up excuses to rationalize or reject any and all arguments or evidence there could ever be against their desired/required belief, admitting only that theyll never admit when theyre wrong. This makes faith the most dishonest position it is possible to have.

Faith does not ignore the facts,it ignores the power of the factstelevangelist, Benny Hinn

Thats why Im an apistevist, one who will not believe anything on faith. We either believe certain claims because of our past experience, knowledge of probabilities, trust in credentialed expertise, objectively verifiable facts and so on, or we believe on faith instead, just cuz some perceived authority said so. But any belief that requires faith should be rejected for that reason. The only thing in the universe that desires or requires your faith is a bad salesman.

I often see equivocation used as a defense of such indefensible beliefs, confusing the religious context with the colloquial context of having faith *in* someone. The reason why I might believe what my wife says is not the same reason that I believe she exists. Religious faith is not a synonym of trust. Theres a prefix and suffix required. Faith is a [complete] trust [that is not based on evidence].

Now realize that a rational person is typically defined as having reason and being open to reason, meaning that they should only believe what they have good reason to believe, rather than believing anything on faith. They also have to be reasonable, being able to be reasoned with. But since apologists typically refuse to admit when theyre proven wrong, or that they even could be wrong, because God has revealed it to me in such a way that I know it for certain (for example) then this is the second point where faith is irrational by definition.

For this reason, believers will sometimes completely invert their definition of faith to the opposite of itself whenever theyre trying to seem reasonable to unbelievers, such that suddenly faith depends on evidence. Then theyll say that I got the definition wrongeven though Ive already shown that an overwhelming consensus of definitive/authoritative and uncontested sources from every relevant field that proves I obviously got this right.

This reversed redefinition that faith suddenly demands evidence appears to be a combination of the logical fallacies of projection, tu quoque, strawman, equivocation, and false equivalence that I see frequently repeated by most defenders of the faith. Every logical fallacy has been used as an argument for God, and every argument for God is a logical fallacy. Believers assume their belief without reason and defend it against all reason. They know how unreasonable that is, but theyre hoping you dont know that. So in such cases, they stand firm behind a cloak of seemingly rational intellectual argumentsto create the illusion that their belief was determined by, or could be effected by reason.

But every time they do that, they betray themselves one of two ways:Sometimes theyll tell me there is no evidence of evolution and thus my belief in atheism requires more faith than their belief in supernatural things. Of course this is a Freudian admission that they already realize that faith is not based on evidence, and they just dont want to admit that to me.

Otherwise, if they pretend to believe what they do because they were convinced by the evidence, then Ill inquire as to what evidence supports their belief. I invariably learn that they never had any reason that would qualify as actual evidence: not one verifiable fact that is either positively indicative of that conclusion nor exclusively concordant with it.

Either that or they redefine and thus negate every other relevant word toosuch that facts are no longer factual and evidence cant be evident anymore. Sometimes theyll invert or pervert both of these at once, effectively turning faith into science and evidence into subjective speculation, as if the make-believers are trying to trade places with rational thinkers.

Either way, this exercise shows that their faith is typically based on a presupposed assumption of authority instead of any evaluation of objectively verifiable data. Regardless whatever bullshit excuse they use to hide this fact, the real reason they believe as they do is almost always unchallenged cultural conditioning. Theyve simply bought the lie theyve been fed since they were children. They dont know how to question that, or dont want to, and typically never believed anything elseeven if they pretend they were once atheist.

Atheist: anyone who is unconvinced that an actual deity really exists.

Theists like to change the definition of atheism as necessary too. Theyll minimize the number of admitted unbelievers by saying that atheists are only those who know for certain that no god exists, and that everyone else is merely agnosticas if that makes any difference. (Gnostism pertains to knowledge rather than belief. Agnosticism says no one can know anything about the nature of the supernatural, but that has nothing to do with one believes there is a god or not. You can be atheist and agnostic. You can also be theist and agnostic. Theyre not mutually-exclusive.) But if believers want to pretend to have once been atheists who have since seen the light and turned to God, then theyll use the etymological definition of lacking-theism, of simply not yet practicing the religion they were almost always born into. They usually know no other way.

The same goes for when they say they used to believe in evolution-ism, yet they still cant tell you what that even is or show you anything they honestly believed about it.

Ive actually known three people who could confirm having once been atheist; two were even activists. However when I inquired as to what evidence brought them back to their faith, it turned out there never was any. One simply missed the community of her church. Another said she just didnt want any flak from the overwhelmingly religious environment she lived in. Another initially claimed to have been convinced by the evidence, but after continued interrogation, she still could not cite any. Instead she finally admitted that she changed her mind only because the guys at the Christian table in her college were hot. Seriously. So even on the rare occasion that an atheist does convert, there still isnt either logic or evidence compelling that decision, as there would have to be for me.

So if you ever find yourself having this argument with a spiritual devotee who says their faith depends on evidence, and/or that evidence is either subjective impressions or philosophical argumentsrather than what either common language or a court of law would recognize as actual factual evidence, then let them know that we can all see through their smoke screen.Then challenge them with the following questions:

What body of facts convinced you that your previously materialist perspective was wrong, and that there is a supernatural/magical aspect to the universe?

What body of facts convinced you that a bona fide deity not only could exist but actually does exist? How does it exist? How does it do anything? Especially when it comes to helping you get that job, find your keys, or win the big game?

What body of facts convinced you that your particular denomination of one of many different faith-based belief systems was significantly more accurate than all the other seemingly man-made mythologies including the older ones yours is apparently based on?

What did you believe before learning these facts that changed your mind? And why did you believe whatever that was?

What body of facts convinced you that any of humanitys supposedly sacred fables of any religion even could have any divine authority, such as several such tomes to other gods discordantly claim?

[If youre talking to a creationist, throw in this one too.]What body of facts convinced you that all the worlds best-educated expert specialists in any field are all wrong, and that the theories of evolution, cosmology, and atomic chemistry are all fundamentally fatally flawed?

My experience has been that these questions unmask the problem with faith-based beliefs so well that it is highly doubtful that any believer trying to promote faith as a rational position would risk exposing their true condition by answering any of these. Because they know that if they do, we will see that theirFaith [as it is commonly defined according to a consensus of definitive/authoritative religious or secular sources] really is a firm belief or complete trust, which is not based on, or not dependent onevidence [as that too is commonly defined, again according to virtually every relevant source for both scientific and common language].

If the above definition was not correct, whether about all religious faith or any particular believers allegedly exceptional brand of faith, then they should have no problem answering all the preceding questions. Theyd even want to. How could they not? Even if they believed they had metaphysical evidence, they still could answer these and reveal their reasoning. But if they already know that this definition really is correct, and that it is applicable to their particular faith, but they dont want you to see through their obfuscation, there will be some excuse as to why they wont, or dont have to answer any of these. Because faith really is the most dishonest position it is possible to have.

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Defining Faith - Patheos (blog)

‘As I Have Always Said’: Trump’s Ever-Changing Positions on Health Care – The Atlantic

In the aftermath of the Republican health-care collapse early Friday morning, President Trumps response proved surprisingly restrained. There were no personal attacks on senators who voted against the plan, no multi-tweet tantrum. There was just one remark (followed hours later by a non sequitur about ending filibusters). That remark was, however, no more candid than many of Trumps prior statements:

As I said from the beginning. Its an amusing statement because Trumps views about health care have been anything but consistent. Rather, there have been three constants: agnosticism about what a plan should look like; a fanatical desire to notch a win regardless of the quality of that win; and a refusal to give up.

In the meantime, Trump has vacillated frequently, mostly pinging between three incompatible positions: first, that Obamacare should be repealed and replaced; second, that Republicans should repeal Obamacare and worry about a replacement later; and third, as here, that Republicans should simply let Obamacare die. Lets consider a somewhat simplified timeline of Trumps views.

September 27, 2015: Repeal and replace

Obamacare's going to be repealed and replaced, Trump told Scott Pelley on 60 Minutes. Obamacare is a disaster if you look at what's going on with premiums where they're up 45, 50, 55 percent.

He was vague on the details, but insisted that all Americans will have insurance. There's many different ways, by the way. Everybody's got to be covered I am going to take care of everybody. I don't care if it costs me votes or not. Everybody's going to be taken care of much better than they're taken care of now.

November 11, 2016: No preference

Jump ahead to right after the election. Trump told The Wall Street Journal he has no fixed position, but would consider just trying to fix the existing law. Either Obamacare will be amended, or repealed and replaced, he said.

November 13, 2016: Simultaneous repeal and replace

Two days later, Trump was again on 60 Minutes, where he told Lesley Stahl he wants both to eliminate the law and to put in place a new one at the same time.

Lesley Stahl: And there's going to be a period if you repeal it and before you replace it, when millions of people could loseno?

Donald Trump: No, we're going to do it simultaneously. It'll be just fine. We're not going to have, like, a two-day period and we're not going to have a two-year period where there's nothing. It will be repealed and replaced. And we'll know. And it'll be great health care for much less money. So it'll be better health care, much better, for less money. Not a bad combination.

January 9, 2017: Simultaneous repeal and replace

Despite Trumps statements, Republican leaders began floating the idea of repealing Obamacare first and replacing it later, likely recognizing that while a majority of the GOP caucus in both houses favors repeal, they have divergent views about what a replacement look like. (After seven years of promising repeal, leaders still had no viable plan.) But Senator Rand Paul believes that Congress should do both at once, and he convinced Trump to go along with it. The Wall Street Journal reported:

I believe we should vote on replacement the same day we vote on repeal, Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.) said in an interview Monday. Mr. Trump called the senator on Friday night to say he agrees completely, Mr. Paul said.

January 15, 2017: Insurance for everybody

Trump told The Washington Post that he was close to unveiling a plan with the leaders of the House and Senate that would give insurance to everybody, lower deductibles, and lower premiums.

Although he was coy about its detailslower numbers, much lower deductibleshe said he is ready to unveil it alongside Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).Its very much formulated down to the final strokes. We havent put it in quite yet but were going to be doing it soon, Trump said.

Were going to have insurance for everybody, Trump said. There was a philosophy in some circles that if you cant pay for it, you dont get it. Thats not going to happen with us.

As of late July, Republicans have not offered any plan remotely resembling this.

March 7, 2017: Trump backs House plan

On March 6, House Republican leaders unveiled their repeal-and-replace plan, which immediately took fire from all sides. Conservatives saw it as far too timid, but it also failed to meet the criteria that Trump had laid out. It increased premiums, slashed Medicaid (despite a Trump campaign promise not to touch entitlements), and would resultthe CBO said a week laterin 21 million more uninsured Americans by 2021. Nonetheless, Trump backed the plan:

March 24, 2017: Wait for Obamacare to collapse

On March 24, the House bill collapsed, with Speaker Paul Ryan pulling it and acknowledging he didnt have the votes to pass it. I've been saying for the last year and a half that the best thing we can do politically speaking is let Obamacare explode, Trump says in the Oval Office. He said he planned to move on to tax reform and let Democrats come to him when the current system collapses.

I honestly believe the Democrats will come to us and say, look, let's get together and get a great healthcare bill or plan that's really great for the people of our country, he said. And I think that's going to happen.

April 2, 2017: Repeal and replace

Trump scolded anyone who was so foolish as to take him at his word when he said he was going to move on and let Obamacare collapse:

April 30, 2017: Lower premiums and deductibles

The president again promised that any plan will have lower premiums and deductibles:

May 4, 2017: Trump praises the Houses second repeal-and-replace plan

On May 4, the House managed to pass a revised version of their bill, salvaging a significant victory from what had seemed like defeat. Trump threw a party in the Rose Garden for House leaders.

And I will say this, that as far as Im concerned, your premiums, theyre going to start to come down. Were going to get this passed through the Senate. I feel so confident. Your deductibles, when it comes to deductibles, they were so ridiculous that nobody got to use their current planthis nonexistent plan that I heard so many wonderful things about over the last three or four days. And this is, make no mistake, this is a repeal and replace of Obamacare.

June 13, 2017: Trump calls the House plan mean

Despite his public praise for the House plan, he told senators that it is mean, mean, mean during a meeting at the White House and added, We need to be more generous.

June 26, 2017: Wait for Obamacare to collapse

With the Senate process faltering, Trump once again returned to the idea of simply allowing the existing market to collapse:

June 30, 2017: Repeal now, replace later

Four days later, Trump returned to the leadership plan he had rejected back in January at Rand Pauls suggestion. He now thought it might be best to repeal and worry about the replacement down the road:

July 17, 2017: Repeal now, replace later

On July 12, Vice President Pence traveled to Kentucky, where he promised simultaneous action: And before the summer is out, we will repeal and replace Obamacare. But five days later, Trump was once again pushing the repeal-and-wait strategy.

July 18, 2017: Wait for Obamacare to collapse

No sooner had Trump reaffirmed his commitment to repeal-and-wait than he changed his mind, once again deciding the best thing to do is allow the current system to collapse. The next day, he tweeted:

July 22, 2017: Simultaneous repeal and replace

Five days later, Trump was once again backing the Senates repeal-and-replace plan.

July 28, 2017: Wait for Obamacare to collapse

So much for that. With the Senate plan having collapsed again, Trump claimed he had always supported simply letting the system run its course. In addition to his early morning tweet, he told an audience on Long Island, You know, I said from the beginning, let Obamacare implode, and then do it. I turned out to be right. Let Obamacare implode.

* * *

The historical record shows just how untrue Trumps claim to have always supported letting Obamacare fail is. Other than his commitment to do something about Obamacare, everything else has been negotiable. One element of this is surely Trumps continued illiteracy about both the existing health-insurance market and what the current plans will dosee, for example, his repeated promises of lower premiums. But it also reflects his determination to win. When your priority is a win at all costs, its less important what sort of win that is. Thats also why Trumps most recent insistence that hes going to let Obamacare collapse should not be taken at face value, nor should the apparent death of the bill be considered final. Several times now, the Republican repeal effort has been declared dead, and several times it has been brought back to life mostly by force of the presidents determination to act. Its the one thing that really hasnt changed.

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'As I Have Always Said': Trump's Ever-Changing Positions on Health Care - The Atlantic

Scientists, theologians ponder if latest biological findings are more compatible with religion – National Catholic Reporter

When Charles Darwin published his landmark theory of evolution by natural selection in the 19th century, religious leaders were confronted with a powerful challenge to some of their oldest beliefs about the origins of life.

Then evolutionary theory was expanded with the insights of genetics, which gave further support for a scientific and secular view of how humans evolved.

Faith and tradition were forced further onto the defensive.

Now, exciting progress in biology in recent decades may be building up a third new phase in the scientific explanation of life, according to thinkers gathered at a University of Oxford conference July 19-22.

Although this 21st-century wave has no single discovery to mark its arrival, new insights into developing technologies such as genetic engineering and human enhancement may end up giving another important boost to the belief that science has (or eventually will have) the answers to life's mysteries.

Some scientists, theologians and philosophers see in this ever deeper knowledge of how genes work a possible alternative to the more reductive approach to evolution one that brings in a broader view that also considers the influence of the environment.

Unlike the earlier views, which seemed to lead toward either agnosticism or atheism, the theologians see this "new biology" or "holistic biology" as more compatible with religious belief.

"We've added definition to the picture of evolution that has deepened and enriched our understanding of biological processes," Donovan Schaefer, an Oxford lecturer in science and religion who co-organized the conference, told the opening session of the July 19-22 meeting.

But he added: "It would be naive to imagine that the grander questions about biology, religion, the humanities and evolutionary theory generally have been put to death."

The achievements on their list include new fields like epigenetics, the science of how genes are turned on or off to influence our bodies, and advances in cognitive and social sciences that yield ever more detailed empirical research into how we behave.

Waiting in the wings are new technologies such as genome editing, which can modify human genes to repair, enhance or customize human beings. Scientists in China are believed to have already genetically modified human embryos and the first known attempt to do so in the United States was reported July 26.

Schaefer compared today's deeper understanding of biology to the higher resolution that photographers enjoy now that photography has advanced from film to digital images.

Genes once thought to be fairly mechanical in influencing human development leading to the "my genes made me do it" kind of thinking have been found to be part of complex systems that can act in response to a person's environment.

Since scientists succeeded in sequencing the genome in the late 1990s, they have found that epigenetic markers that regulate patterns of gene expression can reflect outside influences on a body.

Even simpler living objects such as plants contain a complex internal genetic system that governs their growth according to information they receive from outside.

To theologians who see a "new biology" emerging, this knowledge points to a more holistic system than scientists have traditionally seen, one more open to some divine inspiration for life.

In this view, the fact that epigenetic markers can bring outside pressures to bear on the genome deep inside a human means genetics is not a closed system, but part of the wider sweep of nature in which they, as religious thinkers, also see God's hand.

"Nature is so complex and rich and that prompts questions about why on earth is this the case? If you're an atheist, how do you explain a universe that seems to have the capacity to produce these things in the first place?" asked Alister McGrath, an Oxford theologian who is director of the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion that hosted the conference.

This in turn opened a space for theologians to augment the discussion about the "new biology," he said.

Massimo Pigliucci, a philosopher at New York's City College with doctorates in genetics and evolutionary biology, also said scientism the idea that science can answer all life's important questions was too limited.

"Science informs and grounds certain philosophical positions; it doesn't determine them," he said. "But the data can't settle ethical questions."

Pigliucci agrees with the trend to use the evolutionary paradigm to analyze fields outside of biology, including topics such as ethics and morality.

"The life sciences tell us that the building blocks of what we call morality are actually found presumably they were selected for in nonhuman social primates," he said. "Science gives you an account of what otherwise looks like magic: Why do we have a moral sense to begin with? How did we develop it?"

Not all present agreed that science could explain religion.

"Some suspect that biology has triggered some kind of devotion and there are too many people who practice this cult," said Lluis Oviedo, a theologian at the Pontifical University Antonianum in Rome.

His own research has found at least 75 books and academic articles trying to explain religion through evolution and he knew of about 20 more on the way, he said.

Although he thinks, "the time of explaining through radical reduction is over," he admitted few biologists seemed ready to accept the more holistic "new biology."

Even some scientists at the conference, while ready to engage with the philosophers and theologians, showed less interest in discussions about whether a "new biology" was emerging.

"I'm pragmatic," explained Ottoline Leyser of the University of Cambridge, whose lecture on plant genetics was one of the conference's highlights.

Theologians in the decadeslong science and religion debate, which argues the two disciplines complement each other, have also become more pragmatic as their dialogue proceeds.

Oxford's McGrath said the theologians had become more modest in the claims they made about what religion could contribute to this debate. Unlike some more doctrinaire scientists, he said, they did not think they had all the answers.

"They don't say These observations in nature prove or disprove God,'" he said. "Our religious way of thinking gives you a framework which allows you to look at the scientific approach to the world and understand why it makes sense, but at the same time also to understand its limits."

"Those things need to be in the picture if we're going to lead meaningful lives."

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Scientists, theologians ponder if latest biological findings are more compatible with religion - National Catholic Reporter

The Great American Eclipse – Washington Blade

Marie Curie (Photo public domain)

Its a known scientific fact that I love science. Marie Curie is a goddess to me. It is miraculous that I have any curiosity at all. I was raised floridly Catholic. If you had a question, God was the answer. Q: Why is the sky blue? A: God.

So you can just stop blaming that curiosity-killing cat.

Besides the biological sciences, I love astronomy. Maria Mitchell, the first American woman to become a professional astronomer, is a rock star to me. I studied the less mathematical branch of astronomy called, Hey honey, Im out here just looking at the stars.

My hitchhikers guide through the constellations was the childrens book illustrator H.A. Reys The Stars: A New Way to See Them. He redrew constellation diagrams so that you could actually recognize the Twins of Gemini walking and holding hands. You might also recognize the name H.A. Rey for his Curious George series, which was about an adorably curious monkey, not about Incurious George and his pet goat.

I never studied astrology. My dear Catholic mother, unlike my dear Hindu mother-in-law, thought astrology was the devils art, so would never tell me the actual time of my birth. Consequently any reading of my chart is based on imprecise information. The fakery generally induces complete amnesia in me. I can never remember what was said at a session; have never successfully taped a session and a note-taking friend, allowed to accompany me once, fell soundly asleep before the sun even rose in my first house.

My astrological agnosticism has also skepticized other solar and lunar alignment events.

In August 1987, the exceptional alignment of the Sun, moon, Mars and Venus with eight planets in our solar system was called The Harmonic Convergence. The big Converge was supposed to be a shift that would cause a five-year period of energy cleansing. Not so much. Instead it was the tail end of the Reign of Reagan and a raging AIDS epidemic.

For 2000, experts predicted that the Y2K Millennium bug would cause network crashes, global dysfunction, power failures, data transmission interruption and other end-time internet catastrophes. Jan. 1, 2000 did bring some monster hangovers but the apocalypse foretold seems to have only now arrived in Y2K17.

The next big look-up event is more solar than stellar the total solar eclipse on Monday, Aug. 21, 2017. You might not have heard much about the The Great American Eclipse. Dont feel bad. It has gotten less press than the buildups to The Convergence or The Y2K. Our current prehistoric parallel political universe, with its Orange cis-narcissist Sun King and all the human sacrifices he demands, has totally eclipsed actual solar events.

And this eclipse with its fabulous sounding Path of Totality is, if youll pardon the expression, huge. The last solar eclipse in America in 1991 was seen only for a brief moment in Hawaii.

This 2017 eclipse will make landfall in Oregon and then will throw some total shade through Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, finally through South Carolina and then on out to sea. Even though the eclipse will pass through the blue states of Oregon and Illinois, the actual districts it will unenlighten are red, as is the rest of the path. Towns along the route are expecting thousands of revelers to celebrate at Solarfests, Moonstocks, and Eclipse Experience weekends.

Despite my avowed agnosticism, I find myself squinting at eclipse path maps, and reading them as if they are necromantic charts sure to yield some clue to our own path forward. Sometimes I read as if it were an X-ray negative and the ecliptic path is searing a path of enlightenment diagonally across a darkened country.

Provincetown is north of the eclipse path and will have only a penumbral eclipse experience. Some will think the dimming is a hangover from the Gods and Goddesses themed Carnival Week a few days before.At my Path of Totality party, I will be glowing in my Marie Curie goddess dress.

Kate Clinton is a longtime humorist who writes regularly for the Blade.

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The Great American Eclipse - Washington Blade

20 years after ‘Contact’ came out, the rest of pop culture still hasn’t caught up – Washington Post

We all have our own gatewayformative blockbuster. For me, first contact came during the hot summer of 1997 when a summer-camp trip to the movies sent me down a wormhole with Jodie Foster. Contact, Robert Zemeckiss sprawling, melancholy movie about Ellie Arroway (Foster), the scientist who first detects a signal from another world, may not be a box-office champ or a pure classic. But the movie, which came out 20 years ago today, set a marker for what smart, emotionally compelling science fiction can look like. And thinkingback on it as a professional critic, I see that Contact is one of the Rosetta stones that helps me understand why I love what I love today.

In Contact, Ellie (played as a little girl by Jena Malone) grows up with a father who teaches her to monitor shortwave radio frequencies and nurtures her love of the stars before dying, leaving her an orphan at age 9. As an adult, she becomes a talented scientist whose peers believe she is wasting her time and energy on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. But after she receives funding from a reclusive billionaire (John Hurt), Ellie discovers unambiguous evidence that someone is out there, and decodes the message they have sent, which turns out to be schematics for a mysterious machine.

Unlike in most movies about contact with aliens, the extraterrestrials inContact are almost peripheral. Its the conflicts between humans that matter.

Ellies opponents are people like David Drumlin (Tom Skerritt), who favors applied science and pulls her funding in an effort to push her onto what he sees as an appropriate career path; national security adviser Michael Kitz (James Woods), who wants to militarize the work on Ellies discovery; and Richard Rank (Rob Lowe, weaponizing his handsomeness), the leader of a Christian Coalition-type organization who tries to stymie Ellies work on the grounds that aliens might not share human morality. The things that divide them are not how seriously they take an obvious alien threat, the tension in so many first-contact movies, but what counts as a worthy goal in science, who should control major advances and once the machine turns out to be a transport who should represent humanity to the stars. The big explosion, when it comes, is not the result of an alien attack, but a suicide bomber who believes we should stay here on Earth.

Its not so much the hard science fiction in Contact that has stayed with me as the films sense of whats important. Whats most realistic and compelling about the movie is its understated curiosity about how humanity would respond to a discovery of this magnitude. Contact, like Kim Stanley Robinsons Mars trilogy, is a sharp argument that by skipping to the most dramatic, conflict-oriented outcome, pop culture is leaving dozens of promising stories on the table. There are more things in our arcane policy debates about heaven and Earth than are dreamt of in action filmmakers philosophy.

Ellie herself is a character type thatremains relatively rare: a brilliant scientist who is passionate, enthusiastic, occasionally girly. Contact is a movie that doesnt think female characters have to be only one thing.

While the characters in the movie sometimes punish Ellie for being emotional, Contact itself never does. Of course it makes sense that she would have strong reactions to the degradation of the scientific research she believes in, or to Drumlins tendency to run her down and then claim credit for her work. Her alternately quavering and furious response to the panel that has convened to select the first passenger to another part of the universe doesnt demonstrate weakness. Instead, Ellies response reveals the hypocrisy of Palmer Joss (Matthew McConaughey), who exposes her agnosticism because he wants to keep her safe on Earth, and the scheming of Drumlin, who fakes a piety he doesnt really feel to outflank her. Fosters limpid eyes and quivering chin are some of Contacts best special effects.

In keeping with that confident approach to emotion, Contact isnt afraid to be a sweeping romance in whichbig ideas fuel chemistry. Ellie and Palmers meet-cute involves his research on the impact of technology on indigenous communities; the first thing that attracts her to him, beyond McConaugheys laconic charm, is Palmers defense of pure rather than merely applied science. Ideas, particularly Palmers conviction that aliens first contact should be with someone who believes in God, keep them apart for much of the movie, which is realistic: Ellie would be hopelessly compromised if she threw over her lifes work for the theologian who blocks her from her dearest ambition, even if he is drawling and cute. Palmers big romantic gesture is to show up and supportEllie when she gets the opportunity to be the one to make first contact after Drumlin is killed in a terrorist attack. Intellectual arguments dont substitute for sexual heat in Contact theyare the heat.

Fosters performance as Ellie isnt aggressive or extravagant; it doesnt loom over the movies that have followed it.But I think of her every time I watch Amelia Brand (Anne Hathaway) head off into the abyss to try to save humanity in Interstellar, or Ryan Stone (Sandra Bullock) struggle to save herself in Gravity. Ellies cerebral, optimistic quest to prove we arent alone in the universe is a counterpoint to Ellen Ripleys (Sigourney Weaver) ferocious battle for survival in the Alien franchise, an argument that in space, no one can hear you scream, but someone just might introduce you to the greatest secrets of the universe.

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20 years after 'Contact' came out, the rest of pop culture still hasn't caught up - Washington Post

The Most Catholic of Catholic Families – Commonweal

A danger of having a priest for a dad: he just might write a homily about you. At nineteen, shortly after running away with a man she met on an online poetry forum, Patricia Lockwood found herself sitting in church one Sunday, listening to her dad preach a homily titled The Prodigal Daughter.

Lockwood took it in stride. At the time my reaction alternated between embarrassment and amusement, but now I see it must have been prophetic, she writes in her memoir, Priestdaddy. All these years I have been tending the pigs of liberalism, agnosticism, poetry, fornication, cussing, salad-eating, and wanting to visit Europe, but I am back home now, and the pigs can't come with me.

Twelve years after she first leaves the rectory, a series of misfortunes leaves Lockwood and her husband, Jason, jobless and broke. With nowhere else to go, the couple pack up their belongings and moves into the Kansas City rectory shared by Lockwoods mother, Karen, and her father Greg, a Roman Catholic priest.

Lockwoods situation is improbable in a lot of ways, the least of which is having a married Catholic priest for a father; as she puts it, the mercy of the church exists for me on this earth in an unusually patriarchal form. And although she never attended college, Lockwood has published poetry in The New Yorker and the London Review of Books, amassed over sixty-seven-thousand Twitter followers, and earned a significant cult following for her dark, subversive sense of humor.

Lockwood had previously published two books of poetry, Balloon Pop Outlaw Black and Motherland Fatherland Homelandsexuals, but living with her parents inspired her to try a new writing project: recording life with her irrepressible and quirky family. The result is Priestdaddy, a wry, observant, and funnyif ultimately unevenaccount of growing up in possibly the most Catholic of Catholic families.

Born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Lockwood was raised in all the worst cities of the Midwest, moving each time her father was assigned to a new parish. In an interview with the New York Times Magazine, Lockwood recalls living in five different rectories and attending six different schools. Growing up, her life (unsurprisingly) revolved around the Catholic Church. She sang in a choir and attended a youth group called Gods Gang that was 40 percent shag carpet and 60 percent Bible verses.

After a whirlwind internet courtship, Lockwoods husband Jason proposed to her in the parking lot of a Krogers grocery store (the most matrimonial of all grocery stores) the first time they met in person. They spent the next twelve years roaming the country while Jason worked as a newspaper editor and Lockwood wrote poetry. After she left home, Lockwood also quietly left the Catholic Church. It was like forgetting a language you spoke a long time ago, when you were a child, she says. During the eight months they live in her fathers rectory, Lockwood isthrown out of the bohemian, free-wheeling life she and Jason created for themselves and back into a world where dinner with the bishop is the social event of the month.

Lockwood is in a unique position to rediscover this world, and she generally does so with astuteness and a wicked sense of humor. She hasnt forgotten the language of her former homeland so much as turn[ed] it inside out, repurpose[ed] it, and occasionally use[d] it to tell jokes. Her poetry experiments with explicit sexual humor and religious imagery, but Priestdaddy is more concerned with rediscovering a world Lockwood chose to leave, and finding her new place in it. Back again in that world, Lockwood reexamines her upbringing, her family, and her former church. She treats her eight-month stay in the rectory as an anthropological mission of sorts, reexamining the terrain of her childhood. Everyone gets a window. This is what mine looks out at, she writes.

Priestdaddy jumps seamlessly back and forth between past and present. Memories from the authors Midwestern childhood are interrupted by sketches of daily life at the rectory: Karen reading about demonic rosaries on the internet or Greg playing his electric guitar with a tone-deaf enthusiasm that sounds like a whole band dying in a plane crash in 1972.

According to his daughter, Fr. Greg doesn't have a conversion story; he has an origin story, like Superman or Batman. This tells you everything you need to know about Greg Lockwood and his larger-than-life personality. Greg met Karen in high school, married at eighteen, and joined the Navy. Onboard the nuclear submarine the USS Flying Fish, he experienced what he calls the deepest conversion on record. His daughter attributes his conversion to the seventy-two times the crew watched The Exorcist over the course of the patrol. You're a drop of blood at the center of the ocean. All of a sudden you look up at a screen and see a possessed twelve-year-old with violent bedhead vomiting green chunks and backwards Latin, Lockwood writes. You would convert too, I guarantee it.

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The Most Catholic of Catholic Families - Commonweal

Face to faith – Open Democracy

It is better to be united in our ignorance than divided in our certainties.

Credit: Flickr/SteveRhodes. Some rights reserved.

From time to time stories appear in our newspapers of priests or ministersmaybe even a bishopwho have lost their faith. Such headlines are misleading and far too simplistic. It is not faith which is lost, but beliefs: by contrast, faith is transformed.

Beliefs can be naturally outgrown and discarded during our lives as we fulfill St Pauls eloquent prophecy: When I was a child I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man I put away childish things.

Although this process ought to continue throughout life, for a priest or minister it is most comfortably achieved after one is retired. Working clergy may regard it as their duty to defend the system, to loyally justify the church, to be sensitive to the feelings of its people, and to take care not to destroy another persons faith.

But all of these things can make us more cautious than we would like to be. That is important, because spiritual growth and development must be continuous, even if that means leapingnot lapsinginto agnosticism, recognizing that there is much of mystery in life and that we do not know all the answers.

At the heart of this process we come to see Christianityalong with Judaism and Islammore as historical religions than simply faith-based; man-made rather than divinely created. As such, they have to be judged by the evidence of history, and their scriptures scrutinized just like any other historical document.

History may then indicate that all ancient religionsand maybe some modern creeds toohave arisen largely out of pre-scientific mythologies in which what is called the supernatural lies at the center. An essential aspect of growing up demands that we reject the idea of the supernatural and recognize that the natural is wonderful enough.

Few people can deny that Christianity has often been a form of blessing to many people, and that the church has sometimes been beneficial to the improvement of human society. In the realm of the arts, in music, painting and literature, religious belief has inspired incomparable beauty and innovation; and in human behavior, incredible heroism and self-sacrifice.

But there is a darker side which, in our growing, we increasingly come to see as outweighing the lighter on the scales of human judgment. Dogma has dominated reason. Superstitions have been encouraged as facts. Charity and love have been subordinated to inquisition and cruelty. Fear has governed where hope should have reigned. The wisdom and experience of half of humankindwomenhas been ignored and belittled.

A distorted picture has emerged and prevailed over the original teachings of the guru of Christianity: Jesus. Growing up entails re-evaluating the one who saw himself as the son of man, rather than the son of God.

In no area of life can this process of transformation be seen more clearly than in the realm of morality. So it is not surprising that this subject has come to the fore, and that the issues involved have received more attention in the 20th and 21st centuriesespecially in the aftermath of the Second World War during which human immorality was exposed in all its naked horror. It really did seem possible that after 1945 that humankind might come of age.

In the years that followed, the issue of sexuality in particular came to dominate both thought and practice. Liberation became the buzzword in theology, in personal and social relationships, in race relations and in national aspirations. Andif at times this led in destructive or uncomfortable directions for someso be it, for we have come to realize that it is better to be united in our ignorance than divided in our certainties.

That, surely, is a sign of maturity.

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Face to faith - Open Democracy

Celebrating diversity – News24

IN general, the South African Constitution, as is clear from its preamble where reference to deity occurs, reflects a bias in favour of religion, as opposed to atheism and agnosticism. This bias in favour of religion is a departure from the pure principle of equality between believers and non-believers as set out in section nine.

In particular, section 15 of the Constitution provides that everyone has the right to freedom of conscience, religion, belief and opinion. It states further that religious observances may be conducted at state and state-aided institutions provided that:

those observances follow rules made by appropriate authorities;

they are conducted on an equitable basis; and

attendance at them is free and voluntary.

This provision obviously reflects a bias in favour of religion in general, unlike the position in the United States where religious exercises, such as prayers, are not permitted in the schools. In the U.S., the idea of neutrality does not even permit one minute of silence for meditation or voluntary prayer.

How section 15 is actually interpreted and applied in practice is a great challenge, particularly when there is a dominant religion, as is the position in South Africa,with the Christian religion.

So for instance, mandatory school prayers obviously constitute a violation of religious freedom, but even voluntary prayers could constitute a violation by putting pressure on children to participate. Also, is it practical to allow for religious observances for every religious faith, regardless of how large or small their representation in a school?

It is therefore the interpretation of the above provision of the Constitution, which is central to the recent landmark judgment of Judge Willem van der Linde in the South Gauteng High Court, in which he categorically ruled against the promotion of one religious denomination over any other at public schools by declaring that neither a school governing body nor a public school may lawfully hold that it subscribes to only a particular religion to the exclusion of others.

This seminal judgment was initiated in May by the Organisation for Religious Education and Democracy (Ogod), which brought an application to the high court seeking an order ruling against having a dominant religion observed in public schools.

It had profound reservations about the practices of scripture reading and singing of hymns in assembly, and the decoration of the walls of the school with Bible verses.

It was argued by the schools in question that as a result of religious freedom they are entitled to have an ethos or character, determined by their governing bodies, based on the community that feeds the schools with pupils. This reflects a conservative or fundamentalist Christian theological approach, as expressed by the Christian View Network, which did not approve of the ruling by Van der Linde. However, such an approach must inevitably lead to the domination of one religion over others.

Ogod brought the application against six Afrikaans state schools.

The gravamen of its argument was that the religious practices at these schools gave rise to the suppression of the scientific teaching of evolution, and a dogmatic religious ethos that in effect was a form of coercion and a gross abuse of the rights of pupils.

In his judgment, Van der Linde declared that public schools are indeed not rarefied but public ones that need to achieve universal and non-discriminatory access to education.

Referring to section 15 of the Constitution, the judge stated that provision for religious policies and observances must be conducted on a free, voluntary and equitable basis. As a result, he declared unequivocally that in this country, our diversity is celebrated, not tolerated.

He therefore questioned the acceptance by schools using rules laid down by the governing body, to hold out to be exclusively a single denomination, be it Christian, Muslim, Buddhist or atheist. What is clear from the judgment is that although religious observances and practices in schools are permissible, protecting children from coercion is essential. This allows broad-based religious education, rather than dogmatic instruction that promotes one religion over another.

It is therefore, according to Reverend Ian Booth, chairperson of Diakonia Council of Churches, not the responsibility of public schools to teach and instruct children in their respective faiths. This should be done in places of worship.

This is the viewpoint of a minister with a liberal Christian theology, in contrast with that expressed by the Christian View Network. In the pluralistic society that South Africa is, cultural and religious tolerance are essential for social cohesion.

This is necessary to protect our celebrated diversity. In this regard, Van Lindes judgment makes a fundamentally sound contribution to our jurisprudence, which has been widely welcomed by most religious commentators, who include leaders in the Hindu, Tamil, Muslim and Christian faiths.

George Devenish is an emeritus professor at UKZN and one of the scholars who assisted in drafting the Interim Constitution in 1993.

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

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Celebrating diversity - News24

Proof of God’s existence is on the streets of Kamloops – CFJC Today Kamloops

All my life, Ive been skeptical about the existence of a supreme being. I was raised an atheist, but drifted toward agnosticism quite some time ago.

I dabbled in studying a bit of religion while in university and it convinced me I just dont have the wherewithal, nor the blind faith, to get it. (Believe it or not, I still have the textbooks, two volumes of Christendom, A Short History of Christianity and its Impact on Western Civilization.)

But in the past couple of weeks, Ive become convinced there must be a God, or some higher level of intelligence or, at least, a higher level of control. A supreme CEO, perhaps.

The proof is on the streets of Kamloops. Every day, hundreds of drivers try to kill themselves on those streets and, every day, for the most part, they somehow escape.

They are so bad at what they do, these drivers, that they constantly put themselves and others in mortal danger. They are careless, unskilled and, in some cases, shockingly stupid.

The fact they do this day after day leads me to the conclusion that someone or something is protecting them, and it must be God. Nothing else makes sense.

Christian belief has it that God has given humans free will. Why he/she would do this, I dont know. Regardless, people have been given the blessing/curse of doing what they please without interference from above.

Theres a whole thing about whether free will is actually compatible with determinism, the latter suggesting theres only one possible outcome to an action. And then you get into side arguments about the actual meaning of free will and so on.

In my view, all you have to do is drive around town to find out what free will is, because people in cars exercise it moment by moment, and very often very poorly.

In just a couple of hours on Friday, while I was out and about doing some chores, I counted more than a dozen incidents that could have had disastrous consequences. They included a near collision resulting from someone ignoring I dont mean simply cutting it close, I mean absolutely ignoring a red intersection light.

In another case, a pedestrian nearly got clipped in a crosswalk. (The classically stupid move at crosswalks is for drivers to swing around another vehicle that is stopped when a pedestrian is crossing.)

Parking lots are notoriously dangerous places. I watched with fascination as somebody blithely sped across empty parking spaces, no doubt because it saved maybe two seconds getting from A to B.

And, of course, theres the pervasive phenomenon of texting and talking while driving, not to mention everyday speeding.

No doubt, you experience the same things on an average day. Multiply what you and I observe by the thousands of other drivers out there, and you can appreciate how amazing it is that people arent getting killed by the hundreds each and every day.

In China, they are 700 people a day die in road accidents there. India is only slightly less. In Canada, six.

Sure, those other countries have a lot more people, but still. Maybe God has a selective sense of humour. He/she lets all these drivers run amuck, and then saves them from themselves.

He (in the interests of brevity, at this point Ill dispense with gender-equity in referencing God but please accept that I have good intentions) plays a game of inches and milliseconds. Wed call it luck, but that seems too easy. We cant possibly be that lucky.

God created us to be in a hurry, to be careless and to ignore everything we learn in driving school. As Im writing this, Im having second thoughts about his sense of humour explaining whats going on.

Maybe he saves us from ourselves as atonement for messing up in the first place. He could have made us good drivers, but he clearly didnt foresee the age of the automobile, so now hes hit on a percentages scheme. For every 10,000 stupid driving tricks, he lets something bad happen. Otherwise, wed get suspicious.

Still, I find it reaffirming that, in my advanced years, God has at last revealed himself to me.

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Proof of God's existence is on the streets of Kamloops - CFJC Today Kamloops

Australia’s most religious and non-religious postcodes based on who answered the Census question regarding religion – NEWS.com.au

The latest Census release show those ticking "no religion" rose to 29.6 per cent, and for the first time in Australia's history it has overtaken Catholics. So are we becoming a nation of non-believers?

New South Wales has our most religious suburb, according to Census 2016 data.

AUSTRALIAS most religious and non-religious postcodes have been revealed in the latest Census data by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Ninety-three per cent of residents in the New South Wales postcode 2190, which encompasses the suburbs Greenacre and Chullora, in Sydneys south-west,stated they had a religious, secular or other spiritual belief, according to information consultants at the ABS.

The area has been identified as Australias most religious.

Nearly half (41.4 per cent) of the population claimed a religious affiliation to Islam and the same percentage spoke Arabic, while 23.1 per cent identified as Catholic.

Only 6.1 per cent stated they had no religion.

Also included were 11 people (0.04 per cent) who said they had a secular belief which the ABS said could include agnosticism, atheism, humanism, rationalism and others not classified.

According to Census stats, the most common ancestry of residents in the area was Lebanese (31.1 per cent), followed by Australian (10.1 per cent) and English (7.1 per cent).

While 53.3 per cent of residents were born in Australia, 68.6 per cent had both parents born overseas, with the highest percentage coming from Lebanon.

The figures were based on postal areas with at least 100 usual residents, and based on persons who answered the question regarding religion (which is not compulsory).

Census stats reveal an insight into Australias most religious postcode.Source:Supplied

A whopping 72.7 per cent of households spoke a language other than English, while the median age was 33 years old. Children aged 0-14 made up almost a quarter of the population. (24.1 per cent).

One of the suburbs, Greenacre, is home to Australias largest Islamic School, the Malek Fahd Islamic School, which is fighting to keep its federal government funding.

According to The Conversation, Muslims were almost entirely absent from many neighbourhoods and suburbs, and there were only a few (located in Melbourne and Sydney) where they made up more than 50 per cent of the population. This includes the neighbouring suburb of Lakemba.

Despite fears Australia is becoming a Muslim country, those ticking no religion in the Census has now overtaken the number of Catholics.

Its the first time in Australias history the number of people who claim no religion has overtaken Catholics, although the number of Christians in total still made up 51 per cent of the population.

The least religious suburb according to the ABS is found on the other side of the country, in a small, sleepy town in Western Australia with the postcode 6705, where 66.5 per cent of the population in Gascoyne Junction stated that they had no religion.

The area includes heritage-listed sites from early colonial Australian days and has a high proportion of indigenous people.

More than half (58.4 per cent) of the 278 people who live in the area, identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander.

Other suburbs that have been identified as particularly unholy include Melbournes terrace-lined North Fitzroy, while Fairfax is reporting Erskineville in Sydneys inner-west was now officially Australias most ungodly suburb.

Nationally, the latest Census drop showed those ticking no religion rose from 22.6 per cent to 29.6 per cent nearly double the 16 per cent in 2001.

Meanwhile, those identifying as Catholic dropped from 25.3 per cent to 22.6 per cent.

The number of Christians in total still made up 51 per cent of the population, but this is much less than the 88 per cent in 1966 and 74 per cent in 1991.

Islam (2.6 per cent) and Buddhism (2.4 per cent) were the next most common religions reported.

Those who did not answer the religion question, which is a non-compulsory question in the Census, was 9.6 per cent, up slightly from 9.2 per cent in 2011.

We remain a predominantly English speaking country, with 72.7 per cent of people reporting they speak only English at home. Tasmania had the highest rate of people speaking only English at home with 88 per cent, while the Northern Territory had the lowest rate at 58 per cent.

An earlier release of Census data in April showed the typical Australian was now a 38-year-old married woman with two children.

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Australia's most religious and non-religious postcodes based on who answered the Census question regarding religion - NEWS.com.au

Should Tyler Cowen Believe in God? – New York Times (blog)

A little while ago the prolific and intellectually-promiscuous Tyler Cowen solicited the strongest arguments for the existence of God, and then with some prodding followed up with a post outlining some of his reasons for not being a believer. I cant match Cowens distinctive mix of depth and pith, but I thought Id take the liberty of responding to some of his reasons in adialogic style, with my responses edited in between some of his thoughts. Nothing in here should be construed as an attempt to make the Best Argument for God, and the results are rather long and probably extremely self-indulgent, so consider yourself forewarned. But here goes.

*

Cowen:Not long ago I outlined what I considered to be the best argument for God, and how origin accounts inevitably seem strange to us; I also argued against some of the presumptive force behind scientific atheism. Yet still I do not believe, so why not?

I have a few reasons: We can distinguish between strange and remain truly strange possibilities for origins, and strange and then somewhat anthropomorphized origin stories. Most religions fall into the latter category, all the more so for Western religions. I see plenty of evidence that human beings anthropomorphize to an excessive degree, and also place too much weight on social information (just look at how worked up they get over social media), so I stick with the strange and remain truly strange options. I dont see those as ruling out theism, but at the end of the day it is more descriptively apt to say I do not believe, rather than asserting belief

The true nature of reality is so strange, Im not sure God or theism is well-defined, at least as can be discussed by human beings. That fact should not lead you to militant atheism (I also cant define subatomic particles), but still it pushes me toward an I dont believe attitude more than belief. I find it hard to say I believe in something that I feel in principle I cannot define, nor can anyone else.

Me:Perhaps, but since you raise the strangeness of subatomic particles you might consider a third possibility for thinking about origins: Alongside strange and remain truly strange and strange and then somewhat anthropomorphized, there might be a category that you could call anthropomorphic/accessible on the surface and then somewhat stranger the deeper down you go.

This often seems to be the nature of physical reality as we experience and explore it. When we work on the surface of things, the everyday mechanics of physical cause and effect, we find a lot of clear-seeming laws and comprehensible principles of order. When we go down a level, to where the physical ladders (seem to) start, or up a level, to our own hard-to-fathom experiences of consciousness, we seem to brush up against paradox and mystery. So up to a point the universe yields to our fleshbound consciousness, our evolved-from-apes reasoning abilities, in genuinely extraordinary ways, enabling us to understand, predict, invent and master and explore. But then there are also depths and heights where our scientific efforts seem to trail off, fall short, or end up describing things that seem to us contradictory or impossible.

And by way of analogy it might be that there is a similar pattern in religion and theology. The anthropomorphizing tendency that makes you suspicious, the ascription of human attributes to God and the tendency of the divine to manifest itself in humanoid (if ambiguously so) forms, the role of angels and demons and djinn and demi-godsand saints and so forth in many religious traditions all of this might just reflect a too-pat, too-anthopomorphic, and therefore made-up view of Who or What brought the world into being, Who or What sustains it. But alternatively and plausibly, I think it might represent the ways in which supernaturalrealities are made accessible to human perception,even as their ultimate nature remains beyond our capacities to fully grasp.

Which is, in fact, something that many religious traditions take for granted(the Catholic Church, for instance, does not teach that angels are really splendid androgynes with wings), something thats part ofthe architecture of ordinary belief (most people who habitually visualize God as an old man with a white beard would not so define him if pressed), and a big part of what the adepts of religion, mystics and theologians, tend to stress in their attempts to describe and define the nature of God.

Note, too, that this stress on surface accessibility and deep mysteryis not something invented by clever moderns trying to save the phenomenon of religion from its critics. It is present from ancient times in every major religious tradition, providing a substantial ground of overlap between them David Bentley Hart is good on this, in a book that offers a partial answer to the definitional issue you raise and in Western monotheism it shows up in such not-exactly-obscure places as the Ten Commandments (no graven images for a reason) and the doctrine of the Trinity. (You will not find something that better fits the bill of strange and remains truly strange than what the Fathers of the Church came up with to define the Godhead.) Or, for that matter, in the story of Jesus of Nazareth, who in the gospel narrativesis quite literally an anthropomorphic God, and then after his resurrection becomes, not a simple superman but something stranger sometimes recognizable and sometimes not, physical but transcending the physical, ghostly and yet flesh whose attributes the gospel writers report on in a somewhat amazed style without attempting to circumscribe or technically define.

Again, anthropomorphism is the initial layer, the first mechanism of revelation. The strangeness you understandably think is necessary for plausibility, given our limitations, lies above or down beneath.

Of course the analogy to Newtonian/Einsteinian physics breaks down in various ways, not least of which is that there is often a basic agreement among scientists about the first layer, the understandable and predictable and lawbound aspectsof the physical world, whereas the religious cannot agree upon (or conduct laboratory tests to prove) which anthropomorphic supernatural revelations are trustworthy and should control practice and theological commitment. Thus specific religious belief, as opposed to a general openness to the idea of God, tends to beeither intensely personal, culturally-mediated, probabilistic, or some combination thereof in a way that believing in the laws ofphysics is not. But that brings us to your next point

Cowen: Religious belief has a significant heritable aspect, as does atheism. That should make us all more skeptical about what we think we know about religious truth (the same is true for politics, by the way). I am not sure this perspective favors atheist over theist, but I do think it favors I dont believe over I believe. At the very least, it whittles down the specificity of what I might say I believe in.

I am struck by the frequency with which people believe in the dominant religions of their society or the religion of their family upbringing, perhaps with some modification. (If you meet a Wiccan, dont you jump to the conclusion that they are strange? Or how about a person who believes in an older religion that doesnt have any modern cult presence at all? How many such people are there?)

This narrows my confidence in the judgment of those who believe, since I see them as social conformists to a considerable extent. Again, I am not sure this helps atheism either (contemporary atheists also slot into some pretty standard categories, and are not generally free thinkers), but it is yet another net nudge away from I believe and toward I do not believe. Im just not that swayed by a phenomenon based on social conformity so strongly.

Me: Okay, butas you note the conformity problem exists with every human school of thought and inquiry, every moral and political theory of what is good and what should be condemned. We are always creatures of our time and place and parentage, and converts of any kind not only religious, but political and intellectual are by definition exceptional.

Yetthe cultural contingency of all beliefs does not prevent people from reasonably holdingfairly strong views about a lot of non-religious issues. So its not clear to me why it should requireagnosticism as opposed to humility in belief in religious matters either.

For instance: Does the fact that my heritage and cultural context inclines me to regard human life as sacred mean that I mustretreat to agnosticism about the moral status of the Shoah? (Nazis even more than Wiccans are strange these days, but that doesnt prove that anti-Nazism is just so much cultural prejudice.) Does the bias instilled by the fact they were mostly born and raised in a commercial republicmean that the faculty of George Mason should cease evangelizing on behalfof free-market economics? Yes, moral theory is unlike economics which is unlike theology, but in each case we have plenty of examples of people converted from one view to another by reasoned argument and so long as conversion is possible, the fact that most people dont convert is hardly a knock-out blow against the potential truth of one argument or another, and the value of holding at least provisional commitments.

Moreover just as arguments about moral theory and economics often work because they proceed from a basic conceptual common ground, so too do arguments in religion. Even if choosing a specific religion is a knotty problem, the various religions do have a lot of shared beliefs that supernatural realities exist, at least, and then beyond that commonalities in their ideas of God, and then beyond that in many cases a shared belief in certain revelations.

Your example of Wicca and my own Christianity are in some senses particularly far apart, but in other ways less so, since a Christian might reasonably regard Wiccan beliefs as not so much false as dangerous, touching on realities that might be real but are best left unexplored either because they might be demonic or because they are simply unseely, to borrow the language of the folklorists and poets. The Wiccan, meanwhile, might well have some sort of revisionist Jungian reading of the Christian gospels that incorporates them into her own cosmological picture. Overall, I do not find the Wiccan world-picture nearly as strange and implausible as I find eliminative materialism, and its perfectly possible to have a fruitful Christian-Wiccan argument even if we might have persecuted one another in the past just as its possible to have a fruitful argument between a constitutional monarchist and a republican even though the French Revolution wasa bloody affair.

So theidea that religious controversy is simply a clash of instilled habits, while certainly often true, need not be necessarily true, and (again as with other non-scientificquestions) isnt true when serious people debate the issues in good faith.

I would also add that in the present cultural context most of the believers that you, a professor and blogger, are likely to end up arguing with will be people whose religion is notat all simply an inheritance but rather something reasoned toward and held in defiance of intellectual convention, whereas your agnosticism is presently such an academic commonplace as to be its own form of conformism. It seems to me that by those premises you shouldnarrow your confidence in that agnosticism, and give religious commitment a slightly longer look.

Cowen: I do accept that religion has net practical benefits for both individuals and societies, albeit with some variance. That is partly where the pressures for social conformity come from. I am a strong Straussian when it comes to religion, and overall wish to stick up for the presence of religion in social debate, thus some of my affinities with say Ross Douthat and David Brooks on many issues.

Me: Ill take the affinities I can get though one possible religious response would be to reject this one, on the grounds that (to rip off Flannery OConnor) if its just socially usefulthen to hell with it. But thats not my take; instead, I think the fact that religion has net practical benefits (with some variance as you say!), and not only practical in some strict utilitarian sense but also aesthetic (that religiously-infusedsocieties produce better art and architecture is of course technically a de gustibus issue but come on, its true), is itself suggestive evidence for the claim thatreligious beliefs point to something real. One can come up with plenty of other explanations, but still, a harmony between religious ideas, human flourishing and great aesthetic achievement iscertainly consonant with the idea that we are restless until we rest in Him. And in a similar vein the claims from atheists that if we could pinpoint the evolutionary origins of religious belief we would somehow explain it all away always strike me as strange, because most evolved features of human nature evolved the way they did because they were adapted to some actual reality and why shouldnt the religious instinct be the same? But on to your next point

Cowen: I am frustrated by the lack of Bayesianism in most of the religious belief I observe. Ive never met a believer who asserted: Im really not sure here. But I think Lutheranism is true with p = .018, and the next strongest contender comes in only at .014, so call me Lutheran. The religious people Ive known rebel against that manner of framing, even though during times of conversion they may act on such a basis.

I dont expect all or even most religious believers to present their views this way, but hardly any of them do. That in turn inclines me to think they are using belief for psychological, self-support, and social functions. Nothing wrong with that, says the strong Straussian! But again, it wont get me to belief.

Me:Well sometimes believers dont present things this way because their religion is, as you say above, an inheritance rather than a chosen thing,and so they arent inclined to be Bayesian about it for the same reason that the average patriotic American doesnt give you percentages when you ask what system of government is best. And sometimes they dont because the practice of religion encourages a quest for a personal relationship with God, and once youve embarked on that kind of quest after perhaps making a calculation before you leap, as your point about conversion concedes you cant always be worrying aboutthe percentage odds that youre making a mistake. (There are similar issues in romantic love!)

But theres also plenty of apologetic literature, some of it crude and some of it sophisticated, that makes what amount to implicitly odds-based arguments: Everything from Pascals wager to C.S. Lewiss lunatic/liar/Lord trilemma falls into that broad category, and authors of varying religious traditions, past and present, are constantly making arguments for why their ideas are a better intellectual bet than Muhammeds or Luthers or Joseph Smiths or the Buddhas or whomevers. Indeed its onlyin contemporary liberal circles that these sort of arguments are considered ill-mannered and impolite which, again, might narrow your confidence that the agnosticism assumed in those circles is held for genuinely good, well-thought-through and well-defended reasons.

Also, as it happens, because Im a weirdo I mentally play this kind of Bayesian game with all myself fairly often. For instance, when people ask me what effect Pope Franciss maneuvering around divorce and remarriage might have on my confidence in Catholicisms truth, the answer is thata big enough shift would lead me to downgrade my belief in Catholicisms exclusive truth claims relative to other Christian confessions, and raise the odds that there simply is no One True Church and all the various confessions have pieces of the garment Jesus and the apostles left for us. Whether thinking along those lines is wise or pious is an open question, but oddsmaking definitely forms part of my mental religious architecture. And ifwatching me play the game might help convertyou(I doubt it, but Ill risk the embarrassment), Ill play it at the very end of our dialogue but first lets take up your last two points.

Cowen: I do take the William James arguments about personal experience of God seriously, and I recommend hisThe Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Natureto everybody its one of the best books period. But these personal accounts contradict each other in many cases, we know at least some of them are wrong or delusional, and overall I think the capacity of human beings to believe things some would call it self-deception but that term assumes a neutral, objective base more than is warranted here is quite strong. Presumably a Christian believes that pagan accounts of the gods are incorrect, and vice versa; I say they are probably both right in their criticisms of the other.

Me: My sense of things is that mystical experience tracks the pattern I noted above: Theres a commonality at the level of the ineffable, where mystics Western and Eastern, Christian and Sufi tend to sound somewhat alike in their descriptions of what they cant describe, and then theres diversity and contradiction when it comes to the more anthropomorphized encounters, where angels or the Virgin Mary or the God Krishna show up to deliver a vision or a message.

This diversity and contradiction is a good reason to be wary of founding your religious beliefs on any single persons experience or message, and it might be a case against dogmatism in religion, period. But I think even if you dont find any particular revelation convincing enough to let it control how you interpret the entire cosmos, a more parsimonious explanation than mass delusion and self-deception could still lead you reasonably to the forms of religious syncretism that were common in the pre-Christian world, to the pagan traditions that treat the gods of polytheism as personalized and localized manifestations of the Godhead, or to pantheism or gnosticism in their various forms. We see through a glass darkly, but the fact that we are all catching different glimpses of divinity should make us suspect that while the differences counsel humility, there really is something there to see.

And I would add that as a Christian I dont regard the pagan accounts of the gods as precisely wrong so much as partial, mythologized (often consciously and deliberately), and incomplete. There is nothing in Christian cosmology that precludes the Christian God manifesting Himself partially in non-Christian societies through mystical encounters that are experienced and interpreted in line with pre-existing beliefs, and indeed Christians (especially in the Catholic tradition) have in many case appropriated pagan traditions by treating them, in part, as providentially-intended preparations for Christianity.

At the same time Christians also believe as a matter of faith that there are other spiritual powers in the universe besides the Triune God, which allows for the belief that pagan accounts might reflect angelic or demonic encounters. And finally there is also nothing in Christian cosmology that precludes the possibility of other forces besides angels and demons. In the early Old Testament its quite a while before the Israelites discover, as it were, that the God speaking to them is different in kind rather than degree from other gods; nobody knows who the Nephilim were; belief in ghosts is as common in Christian cultures as in others; medieval and early modern Europeans often treated the realm of faerie as a kind of third space, a nonaligned spiritual territory, and in some cases explicitly re-read and rewrote their ancestors pagan traditions as faerie stories.

These kind of attempted reconciliations are obviously unnecessary if you dont accept the Christian revelation. My point is just that even if you do, the possible validity of a range of diverse and contradictory-seeming religious encounters doesnt have to go out the window. Indeed even when encounters happen completely under the metaphysical canopy of Catholic belief, the church itself can still end up concluding as it seems to be with the mystics of Medjugorje that some of them are really heaven-sent and some are not, that the same person or group of people can have a real vision and then subsequently a false or made-up or misinterpreted one. Even where God seems to be breaking in or speaking unusually directly, the through-a-glass-darkly rule still applies.

Cowen: I see the entire matter of origins as so strange that the transcendental argument carries little weight with me if there is no God, then everything is permitted!We dont have enough understanding of God, or the absence of God, to deal with such claims.In any case, the existence of God is no guarantee that such problems are overcome, or if it were such a guarantee, you wouldnt be able to know that.

Me: This seems like an overstated response to an overstated claim. I agree, there are conceptions of the Absolute that would justify all sorts of (what we would consider) atrocities and conceptions of His non-existence that still persuade people to be moral realists rather than ax-wielding Raskolnikovs. But consider a more modest version of the argument: Namely, that the Judeo-Christian conception of the nature of God and the modern small-l liberal consensus on human rights and moral wrongs cohere together fairly well, as a picture of how the universe and moral universals interconnect, whereas that same liberal consensus is a much poorer fit with the de facto atheism and materialism of many of its present-day proponents.

I think this modest claim is simply, well, true: Schemes for a Darwinian ethics generally have a brazen artificiality to them when they arent leaping merrily toward tooth-and-claw, might-makes-right conclusions; in the genealogy of modern morals the Christian worldview is a progenitor of rights-based liberalism in a fairly straightforward and logically-consistent way; and the alternative syntheses are a bit more forced, a bit dodgier, and a bit prone to suddenly giving way, as the major 20th century attempts at genuinely post-Christian and post-liberal societies conspicuously did, to screaming hellscapes that everyone these days considers simply evil.

I concede that a worldviews coherence doesnt prove anything definitive about its truth. You can certainly preserve a preference for human rights or any other feature of the contemporary consensus on non-theological grounds. But in the quest for truth, coherence still seems like a useful signpost, and looking for its presence still seems like a decent-enough place to start.

Cowen: Add all that up and I just dont believe.Furthermore, I find it easy not to believe. It doesnt stress me, and I dont feel a resulting gap or absence in my life. That I strongly suspect is for genetic reasons, not because of some intellectual argument I or others have come up with. But there you go, the deconstruction of my own belief actually pushes me somewhat further into it.

Me: This is weak sauce, Tyler. Youve just complained about the ethno-cultural pattern in belief and why it makes you more skeptical of religious truth claims. If you think you have a genetic bias toward a happy agnosticism, shouldnt that sort of deconstruction make you more intellectually skeptical of your own irreligious conclusions, not less especially since, again, agnosticism in our own era comes with higher social status in the academic circles you inhabit than does actual religious commitment? The world is very strange, Im comfortable leaving it at that is not a conclusion you would accept in the debates to which you are personally-cum-genetically predisposed. Doesnt your willingness to accept it on this question, one whose great importance I hope you would be willing to concede, seems a touch what word should I reach for ah, perhaps complacent? Arent you manifesting the very vice you just spent a book critiquing, however gently, in your fellow Western Brahmins? Why not be the change you seek?

As I admitted above, the game that a man of your Bayesian temperament would need to play to get to some limited form of religious commitment might seem a little ridiculous or embarrassing or flippant. But as I promised, Ill play it now myself.

What Im looking for when I gamble on a world-picture is something that makes sense of the four major features of existence that give rise to religious questions the striking fact of cosmic order, our distinctive consciousness, our strong moral sense and thirst for justice and the persistent varieties of supernatural experience. The various forms of materialism strike me as very weak on all four counts, and the odds that what Thomas Nagel called the materialist neo-Darwinian conception of nature is true therefore seem quite low. All these numbers will be a little arbitrary, but for the sake of the game Ill set the probability that a hard materialism accurately describes reality at 2 percent (and I think Im being generous there).

So what does? Well, if you decide treat every religious revelation as essentially equally plausible or implausible and decline to choose between them, the best world-picture candidates are either a form of classical theism as it would have been understood by most pre-modern thinkers and continues to be understood by many theologians today (again, read David Bentley Hart for a recent and compelling case), or else a form of pantheism or panentheism or panpsychism in which God/consciousness/the universe are in some sense overlapping categories, and all spiritual/supernatural experiences are partial and personal and culturally mediated glimpses of a unity.

Both of these possibilities seem to have more explanatory power across my four categories than does, say, a hard deism (which makes the varieties of religious experience a lot harder to explain) or a dualism or a gnosticism (both of which seem a little unparsimonious, and also somewhat poor fits for the data of religious experience) or a literalist polytheism (which begs too many questions about cosmic order, which is why philosophically-serious polytheists often tend to be pantheists or classical theists at bottom). And the latter possibility, some sort of pantheism, seems to be where a lot of post-Christians who are too sensible or too experienced to accept a stringent atheism are drifting it shows up in different forms in writers like Barbara Ehrenreich, Sam Harris, Thomas Nagel, Anthony Kronman, even Philip Pullman, and it pervades a great deal of pop spirituality these days. Indeed it might be where I would end up if I radically changed my mind about the credibility of the Christian story; Im not entirely sure. (It would probably come down to questions of theodicy; Ill spare you the provisional thought process.)

For now, Ill give odds as follows (again, treating all revelations equally): Classical theism 45 percent, the pantheistic big tent 40 percent, gnosticism 6 percent, hard no supernatural deism 4 percent, dualism 3 percent. Which still leaves that 2 percent chance that Daniel Dennett has it right.

I told you this would seem a bit silly (and I know Im leaving out various combinations and permutations, sorry, maybe someday Ill tackle process theology but not today). But pressing on, I dont actually think you can treat all revelations equally, because theyre all so strikingly different and theres no good reason to treat them interchangeably. Instead, I think what youre looking for is a kind of black swan among revelations, a tradition that seems particularly plausible in the historical grounding of its claims and whose theological implications fit in well with the combination I proposed to you earlier, the mix of the comprehensible and the unfathomable that would do justice both to a divine Otherness and a divine desire to be known by us, the most godlike (and devil-like) beings in the created universe so far as we can tell.

And, no surprise here, I think the combination of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament is the darkest swan in the sea of religious stories the compendium of stories, histories, poems and prophecies and parables and (yes) eyewitness accounts that most suggests an actual unfolding divine revelation, and whose unlikely but overwhelming role as a history-shaping force endures even in what is supposed to be our oh-so-disenchanted world. As a wise man once remarked (it was you), the Bible as a whole is one of the most beautiful, strange, and open-to-multiple-interpretation books that there is, and its emergence from a minor but oddly-resilient nation of Semites is both more strikingly unlikely and less contingent on a single religious personality than the genesis of any other holy book and thats even before you dig into what Christians consider its culminating revelation, a miraculous story that unfolds not in myth or prehistory but at an apex of earthly civilization, in the harsh light of recorded history, with multiple overlapping testimonies to its reality that two thousand years of criticism have not even begun to convincingly discredit.

Reasonable people can disagree with this take, but thats mine. Im betting on the Judeo-Christian story as an extended revelation unlike any other on the theology that the early Christians came up with to explain what happened in their midst, which balances the reasonable with the paradoxical in ways that fit the ordered strangeness of reality itself on Christianitys subsequent world-altering influence as a fulfillment of the brazenly implausible predictions that both Israels prophets and the gospel writers made about just how far Yahwehs rule could spread and finally on the mix of consistency and resilience, revival and reinvention in the central strand of Christianity across two millennia, which is why I make my home in the Roman Catholic Church.

You want those embarrassingly crude numbers on all this? Fine. Lets give Western monotheism a 60 percent chance of containing the most important and dispositive revelation. Then within Western monotheism, Judaism alone seems to me much less likely than does Christianity and Judaism together, so Id put Judaism-as-primary-revelation at 20 percent, Christianity as the fulfillment of Judaism at 65 percent, some Jewish-Christian-Islamic synthesis that weve failed to grasp at 10 percent, and Muhammed as the seal of the prophets at 5 percent. Then within Christianity itself, lets give it a 50 percent chance that Roman Catholicism is the truest church (pending Francis-era developments, as I said), a 20 percent chance that Catholicism and Orthodoxy have an equal claim, a 5 percent chance thats its Orthodoxy alone, a 10 percent chance for the Anabaptists, a 5 percent chance for the Calvinists, and 10 percent that the church is simply too broken for any specific body to have exclusive claims, in which case nondenominationals and big-tent Anglicans probably have the right approach.

There: Ive probably blasphemed, weakened my Catholic credentials, endangered my soul, insulted my religious brethren, picked pointless fights with Muslims and Calvinists, and betrayed a juvenile understanding of statistics.

So the least you can do, Tyler, after all of this, is to spend a few more Sundays in your local church.

See the article here:
Should Tyler Cowen Believe in God? - New York Times (blog)

Atheist group stops coach-led prayer at Kansas schools – The Garden City Telegram

(TNS) A group that advocates for separation of church and state recently announced that it had stopped coach-led prayer at two school districts in western Kansas.

Prayers are common at athletic games in Kansas, some coaches say, but school employees must not be involved in them.

The Freedom From Religion Foundation, which describes itself as a voice for atheism, agnosticism and skepticism, sent a letter in mid-June to Cheylin USD 103 and Weskan Schools USD 242 saying it is illegal for public school coaches to lead their teams in prayer.

The letter said basketball players from Cheylin High School, in Bird City, and Weskan High School prayed together after a game in January, with both coaches participating in the prayer.

Dave Hale, superintendent of Weskan, said in an e-mail that there was no coach-led prayer at the game.

They are misleading you, Hale wrote. It was 100% student driven. I will tell my coaches to not be in the vicinity in the future but never have my coaches instigated, encouraged, or led these prayers.

The coaches were in the circle with heads bowed but did not speak, Hale said.

The foundation received a complaint from someone in Kansas, said Chris Line, Patrick OReiley Legal Fellow at the Freedom from Religion Foundation.

The foundation, based in Wisconsin, fights prayer in schools, religious displays such as nativity scenes on government property and privately owned businesses offering discounts for bringing in a church bulletin.

According to a news release from the foundation, Superintendent Allaire Homburg responded by writing, You have my assurance that this will not happen again.

Homburg did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Line said Hale contacted the foundation Thursday to let it know that Weskan coaches would be advised not to participate in or encourage post-game prayer.

We now consider this entire matter to be satisfactorily resolved, Line said in an e-mail.

In its letter to the Cheylin school district, the foundation referenced Supreme Court decisions such as Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe, when the court ruled that a school districts policy of allowing student-led, student-initiated prayer over an intercom at football games was unconstitutional.

The court also ruled that nothing in the Constitution as interpreted by this Court prohibits any public school student from voluntarily praying at any time before, during, or after the schoolday.

Prayer at athletic events

Prayers at games have been around since Brandon Clark, who coaches football at Derby, played sports himself.

Its been a part of (athletics), and theres ways you can go about it and theres ways you cant go about it just because of the rules that are in place, Clark said. We dont all have the same faith and beliefs, and as a coach you cant put your faith or beliefs on your players, but it (prayer) can be student led.

Clarks team often prays before a game or occasionally with the opposing team. The prayers are led by students. Clark says he has never led a prayer.

The National Federation of State High School Associations advises in an article that student-athletes acting on their own, without any involvement of the school or its personnel, may engage in prayer or religious activity. Members of a team may, therefore, spontaneously decide to take a knee in the locker room for a pre-game prayer or gather on the field for a post-game prayer or engage in other religious activity solely as individuals acting privately.

Schools should ensure that coaches and other school personnel remain detached from student religious activities, the federation says.

Dont want to force anyone

Ron Russell, cross country and track and field coach at Northwest High in Wichita, said he used to see much more prayer in schools.

He used to lead prayers for students but stopped after he and other school employees were advised by district lawyers not to be involved. He said he knows of other coaches who also stopped leading prayers in the past several years.

His team still has student-led prayers before practice, but Russell said he spends the time doing other work.

The same goes for a prayer group that used to meet at the City League track and field meet. Coaches were advised that students couldnt use the intercom for the prayer and that coaches shouldnt participate, but students continued to get together spontaneously to pray.

We dont want to force anyone to do anything they dont feel comfortable with, they dont want to participate in, Russell said.

He understands why he cant participate in prayer with students, but Russell said he wishes he could.

Most of the coaches and people Ive talked to have been very in favor of the prayer, Russell said. I dont think it hurts anybody by having a simple prayer.

Continue reading here:
Atheist group stops coach-led prayer at Kansas schools - The Garden City Telegram

An Interview on Humanism and Superstition in Lagos – Conatus News

James-Adeyinka Shorungbe is the Director of the Humanist Assembly of Lagos, Nigeria. It is a secular congregation in Nigeria. Here he talks with Scott Douglas Jacobsen about the Humanist Assembly of Lagos, the impediments to both critical thinking and humanism in Nigeria, pervasive superstition, the general perception of those attending the Humanist Assembly of Lagos, and more.

*This audio interview has been edited for clarity, concision, and readability.*

Scott Douglas Jacobsen: So, you are the director of the Humanist Assembly of Lagos. What are some tasks and responsibilities that come along with that position?

James-Adeyinka Shorungbe: Essentially, organising the affairs of the organisation, charting annual programs to promote critical thinking in Lagos (Nigeria), maintaining relationships with other organisations such as IHEU, IHEYO, NHM. HAL is also a founding member body of the humanist movement in Nigeria so I was actively involved in that regard.

Jacobsen: What are some of the impediments to the education and advocacy for both critical thinking and humanism within Nigeria?

Shorungbe: First, Nigeria is a society highly entrenched in superstition. So that is a major, impediment, to promoting critical thinking. In order to address that, education and awareness has to be done. While the government is trying to improve the literacy level from its current level of just under 60%, a number topics that promote critical thinking are not being taught in schools.

Evolution is not being taught in schools. Anthropology is not taught in schools. History is not taught, and so on. So theres education but low application of critical thinking to challenge the norm. Creationism is the only story taught in schools. So this creates an entire mindset of citizens who are highly superstitious. You also have the movie industry churning out a lot of superstition which the citizens all buy into and believe literacy as factual.

As a major impediment, superstition is a big, big problem. To address this, not enough of our message is getting out there. To be honest, I dont think were doing enough to get our message out there in terms of awareness and enlightenment. We have barely scratched the surface in terms of addressing superstition in Nigeria.

Jacobsen: With a large portion of the population having a superstitious mindset, what is their general perception of the Humanist Assembly in Lagos?

Shorungbe: The few people who we have interacted with, they generally do not understand humanism or humanists. Their perception is anything that doesnt recognise any divine being is straight evil, paganism, evildoers, etc. People weve had interactions with, often ask shocking questions like, So you mean you dont believe in God?

When you try to get across the message that human problems and human situations can be solved by humans and are best solved by human efforts, we always get push backs, No, no, no, you need to have divine intervention. It is something strange to them, to the societyvery strange.

Jacobsen: If you were to take a survey of public attitudes and beliefs, how many humanists can one expect to find in Nigeria, or even Lagos specifically?

Shorungbe: Because Nigeria is a very conservative society and a lot of people do not openly identify as humanists, atheists, and freethinkers, agnostics, etc. it is a bit difficult to count. Many official forms and data gathering applications usually only have the two main faiths as beliefs. However, when you go to online forums, when you go on social media, there are quite a lot of Nigerians who express themselves as nonbelievers.

There was research conducted bythe Pew organisation. It stated that as many as 23% of Nigerians are humanists, freethinkers, and nonreligious. In a population of 180 million, 23% would come to 3 to 5 million Nigerians, but many are not outspoken. But in terms of the outspoken ones, we have very few humanists who are openly affiliated with humanism and agnosticism online and offline.

Jacobsen: Do you think that having an umbrella organisation will play an important part in solving issues like teaching correct scientific theories in the biological sciences and evolutionary theory in schools?

Shorungbe: Yes, definitely, it is. With an umbrella body, you have a louder voice. You have more clout. That is one of the reasons why in Nigeria a number of associations are all coming under the umbrella of the national body, Nigerian Humanist Movement. Aside from the online community of The Nigerian Atheists and a couple of chat groups, we are still fragmented in Nigeria.

The Humanist Assembly of Lagos is one of 2 organisations that is formally registered and trying to break barriers and putting the voice out there for other humanists to appreciate that they are not alone. That you can be different. That you can be good without any divine belief. The importance of having an umbrella body is very critical. Now, with an umbrella body, we can have representation to push through the Nigerian National Assembly, through government bodies, etc. We can better organise ourselves to ensure the adoption of more scientific methods in schoolsfor example, becoming advocates for the teaching of evolutionary theory in school curricula.

Jacobsen: What are some future initiatives of the Humanist Assembly of Lagos? How can people get in contact to help or donate to the organisation?

Shorungbe: For the future, we will be looking to organise events that can showcase and promote humanism as well as critical thinking. Events such as film screenings, lectures, debates etc. We are also toying with the idea of a radio show to enlighten the general public and kick-start discussions within the public sphere. A radio where speakers would come on and talk about everyday human issues and how these can be addressed without thinking they are caused by divine or superstitious means.

Just to enlighten the public of the various challenges one has in life and how they can be addressed by practical action, which do not require divine intervention.

Essentially promoting humanism, freethinking, atheism, agnosticism on a national level.

To get in touch with us, you can contact us via email: humanistassemblylagos@yahoo.com. We also have a page on Facebook, Humanist Assembly of Lagos, and Twitter under@humanistalagos.

Jacobsen: Thank you for your time, Adeyinka.

Go here to read the rest:
An Interview on Humanism and Superstition in Lagos - Conatus News

The Jewish Millennial Project – San Diego Jewish Journal

What interested us here at the San Diego Jewish Journal was not what the numbers say but what the Jewish millennials say about the fundamental questions at the heart of the matter What is religion? What is Judaism? How does it impact your life? Where does it belong in your future? And how does Israel and its politics effect connections to that Judaism? You wont find survey results or trend data on the following pages. Instead, youll find earnest reflections on very personal questions, offered openly and honestly straight from the mouths of Jewish millennials, that is, San Diegans aged 24 to 34. Hopefully, this is only the beginning of the conversation.

____

Dor Ashur, 32 | Born in Haifa, Israel. Grew up in Los Angeles. | Raised going to Chabad synagogue semi-regularly, currently unaffiliated but participating in community events and organizations. | Mechanical engineer working as a patent agent, studying to become an attorney

I feel like Im much more culturally Jewish than religiously Jewish. Im not the kind of person who blindly believes in things. I think that the culture of Judaism has its purposes. I feel like there are many aspects of Judaism and any other religion that make life more worthwhile having recurring traditions just kind of stops the regular drudge of life. With that being said, I dont believe theres a G-d. I totally understand that other people have that belief, but it isnt for me. Its not something that I hide. Im not a closet atheist. I think humans manufacture explanations for a lot of things.

I think that religion is also a form of pre-government law. When you have a tribe, when you dont have a government, you want to have the rule of law over each other I feel like thats kind of how it evolved. There are a lot of morals that can be learned through studying Judaism and different religions but the Torah is not necessarily what makes sense now.

I still enjoy going to services, saying prayers. Not because I believe it, but because I enjoy that tradition.

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Andrew Breskin, 34 | San Diego | Raised Conservative, currently Orthodox | Owner of a kosher wine distribution business and adjunct business law professor

I think today, religion, most people dont really know what religion is. Most people havent studied the big questions of their religion or someone elses religion. What does it mean to practice? What do we actually believe and what do we specifically not believe? I think a lot of people have felt Jewish, maybe today people feel less Jewish, but in terms of religion and practice and observance, I think most people just have never taken the time to explore that. Im still not sure how to communicate exactly what I feel about [religion]. I think its a life choice. Its conscious choices to incorporate what Judaism is into your daily life and how you view things, how you make choices

I think today culturally Jewish is like tikkun olam where you feel like you just have to volunteer or do something good for someone else, but I think millennials like me think the tikkun olam thing is going to run its course. There has to be more to Judaism than being the worlds oldest rotary association or Kiwanis club. There has to be meaning behind it. And I think eventually, people are looking for authenticity and self awareness that ultimately I think will retrace back to people figuring out where did this all come from?

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Noah Silow-Carroll, 26 | Born in Washington, D.C. Grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey | Raised Conservative, currently in San Diego, not very active Jewish community-wise. | Systems engineer

Iguess I should head this off by saying I dont really believe in G-d. For me, [Judaism] is really about the traditions, the community, the lessons that you learn from it. An example of that is, my family would always do Friday night dinner growing up. Wed observe the Sabbath and created a closer family tie. Going to synagogue with my dad and seeing other friends from school or other Jewish things that I did. I would not go to pray to G-d but to be part of the community.

If you take the Bible as something trying to teach us lessons, not something that actually happened or something that was given to us by G-d, [like] dont be jealous of your neighbor, treat other people how you want to be treated, that kind of thing. Its a set of traditions and customs that are enjoyable and teach some nice lessons.

Often when it comes to politics and Judaism its a question of do you vote solely based on the politics in relation to Israel or do you vote based on everything else? I have my opinions and they tend to line up with liberals on the Democratic side I dont put that specific focus on the Israel policy. I feel like theres often the idea that if you say anything bad about Israel it means youre anti-Israel whereas I believe I can be pro-Israel while still believing that settlements are bad and that Israel should be doing a lot more to try and reach a peace deal or a two-state solution.

I think with [my] generation that didnt experience quite as much anti-Semitism theres less of a need for us to not say anything critical of Israel. I would consider myself pro-Israel but I think its dumb to just blindly say Israel is completely right and anything bad you say about Israel is bad.

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Rachel Eden, 34 | Born in Philadelphia, grew up in San Diego | Raised #itscomplicated, currently Orthodox | Preschool director

Rabbi Benzion Klatzko, hes the founder of shabbat.com amongst other things, he says that Judaism is not a religion, its a relationship. I really love that and it really rings true in terms of how I approach my Judaism. I really wasnt particularly excited to be religious when I was a teenager. It felt so, like, weighing me down with obligation and not liberating.

I started exploring more and more, and asking a lot of questions and slowly I was like, wait, theres more to it than this. Then I started really challenging and arguing and getting to a place that I want to embrace Judaism for everything that it is part of, including connecting with G-d and being spiritual.

I argued, I drove teachers absolutely crazy. They thought I was going to convert and leave Judaism all together. But I think I had to argue my way into understanding and grasping what Judaism really was for me and what was truth, all those big questions.

Im not a black-and-white kind of person. Theres always going to be gray areas for me, but I made a decision at that point in my life, about four years ago I was out in Israel studying on and off. I came to a point where I had enough to say Im willing to accept this package.

For me, the question is more are millennials different than the generation before? I think the answer is we have to be, because our environment is different. Our parents grew up in a world where they went to work at 8, 9 oclock and got home at 5 and they were done for the day. In our generation, we dont turn off, were constantly at work. I hear a lot about how millennials are lazy, but to me theyre working a lot harder than the generation before them.

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Matt Ferry, 33 | Los Angeles | Raised Reform-ish, currently Torah Observant probably Orthodox would be a more standard definition. | Technology transactions attorney

The tendency now is to go toward agnosticism or atheism and abandon what things used to be as the old way, as medieval. Thats with good intentions, we dont want to live in the dark ages. We want there to be equality, we want there to be intellectual freedom. Those are all good things, but I started to think maybe youre throwing the baby out with bathwater a little bit. This is a way of life and philosophy and theology that is one of the ancient religions of the world it has been around for more than 3,000 years. Denominations have only existed in the past 300, within Judaism. So your question is how do I define my Judaism? Id say its through connection.

The big questions is there a G-d? If there is, what does that mean for me? I dont think its easy to say if you have an answer or not. You never act with 100 percent certainty in any decision you make in life. Id say I have evidence that points in that direction.

Religion, I think, is a modern term. I think religion among many of my peers probably does have negative connotations. Its associated with things in history that become a quest for purity and the quest for purity means everybody who is unpure has to be destroyed. The quest for purity itself can be dangerous no matter whose hands its in, religious or non-religious.

Millennials arent different from any people in any other generation. Whats changed is our world, our economy. Lets say you used to work for Xerox or Hughes Aircraft, you work there your whole career, you get your pension. Nowadays its a start-up, you dont have security but you have innovation, ideas and your own schedule. Thats what we have in our religious lives as well. The establishment for establishments sake is not what were willing to accept. If there is something in there, then ok, but if theres not then why am I going to drive myself crazy with this?

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Marina Yanay-Triner, 29 | Born in Vinta, Ukraine. Grew up between Israel and San Diego | Raised celebrating the holidays because we lived in Israel, but we werent religious about it, currently celebrating holidays and having family Friday night dinners. | Vegan blogger

I think [religion] is a way to calm people down, essentially, to make them trust that everything will be ok. And tradition. And some wisdom. I dont like everything that happens in religion or in Torah, but there are a lot of wise interpretations that I like to listen to. I love tradition and I love reforming tradition taking the things that I like and leaving out the things that I dont like. I think theres a lot of tradition and respecting the history of the people and everything that they went through. For my family, the discrimination that they faced in Ukraine. I grew up with so many stories, so I really want to hold that memory.

Now I feel so blessed that I can just do what I want and practice whatever I want and nobody says anything about it. Ive never faced discrimination ever and Ive lived in four countries.

I feel like when Im around Palestinians I feel the most Jewish, which is really weird but there is something that we connect with on our values and our religion. I dont know how to explain it but I feel it for sure.

When I moved to Israel I was very open to whatever I was going to see there, whoever I was going to meet. I have a lot of family and friends who entirely disagree with me. I wish that Israel was not a Jewish state. I dont think it should be because we have Muslims and Christians and Jews and all sorts of other types of people living there. The fact that its Jewish is the biggest problem, in my opinion.

After living here [in San Diego] and going back and forth I just realized that its not working and a lot of people are getting harmed by it. And no, its not going to influence my Judaism. I think the opposite, because I think that the Palestinian culture, and the Christian [culture], all of us in that area can beautifully live together and make each other flourish. But the hatred that exists is because, in my view, because its a Jewish state and its like These are the rules and you are second class because youre not Jewish. Its not something that is going to change. We cant tell them, Well, you know, heres a way for you to be first class like everybody else. That creates a lot of hatred towards Jews. I think it can be separate very easily.

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Zach Warburg, 28 | San Diego | Raised Conservative, currently an agnostic Jew; Its more the community for me. | Research biologist at a biotech firm

Im not religious, but I do consider myself really Jewish. Not just culturally, I feel connected to the state of Israel. I also feel connected to traditions of Judaism which I think transcends culture a little bit, and I also feel ethnically associated with Judaism as well. Religion to me means having faith, giving yourself into the belief in G-d, that the Torah was passed down (which I believe is possible). Im agnostic, not fully non-religious. Im seeking something, I just havent found it yet. I think some people are very stern and at least they feel they know its false. Me, I dont think I can make that assumption.

I think religion gave birth to lots of traditions and cultures, but its become much deeper. Its just part of our soul and the soul of our values. So I think values is a huge part of what makes us Jewish.

To me personally, to not eat pork and not eat shellfish, that connects me with my identity. Its also important to me to have a Seder because thats a time to reconnect with community as well as Judaism and I think the High Holidays are a very important time. I think a lot of aspects of the Torah and the Talmud are also applicable whether or not you come from a religious standpoint. I think some people draw a deeper meaning from Judaism that may not be religious but might not [just] be cultural [either].

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Adina Wollner, 26 | San Diego | Raised and currently still practicing Conservative Judaism. | Software engineer

Iguess on the day-to-day, [religion] is the customs that I follow because my family and my community and my history have followed these rules and halichot [teachings] in this certain way. I think that religion is a guide to the values of life that one should live by. I think, to me, when it comes to Jewish religion, the community really has a major impact on that I dont know too much about many other religions but I really think there is something special about the Jewish religion in building community.

The trips that I went on [after being a Lone Soldier in the IDF for two years] back to Israel with the purpose of learning more about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict really allowed me to have a much more nuanced view, and much more educated view of what was going on, versus mostly seeing Jews living in Israel. I think theres a dream of Israel the Herzilian dream of a utopian Israel that has all these different groups living peaceably together in this incredible country. I think that is still a valid dream, but then you also have to look at the reality of Israel as a state amongst all other nations with very real issues of demographics, race, not the friendliest neighbors, and a very difficult history. But I do think I hold Israel almost to a double standard I do hold it higher, and I do hold it accountable to what I think that a Jewish state should uphold. I dont mean religiously [but on a moral level].

I didnt grow up in a time when there was any existential threat to Israel. My parents definitely did in 67 and 73. My grandparents know 48 and prior when there was no Israel. I think its hard to say now that Israel has been around for 69 years as an established, strong state not to say that she doesnt have some problems but I dont have any reason to believe that she wont be here tomorrow, or in 10 years for my children. I think maybe thats a little bit of whats changed for my generation, that we take for granted that Israel exists.

I definitely plan on keeping Judaism as part of my life. One of the things Im looking for when I go up to San Francisco [to start a career with Apple] is what synagogues do I want to be involved with, what young Jewish communities are up there. But the one thing that has been on my mind looking into real adulthood is, Ive been used to the fact that when its a High Holiday I can just take off. But when youre in the real working world you only have a certain number of vacation days. Im curious how do people balance that? Do they have any sort of vacation or is everything given to [Jewish holidays]? I think that is somewhere Im going to struggle with finding a balance.

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Sarah Edelstein, 24 | San Diego | Raised Reform, currently identifying with Progressive Judaism/Post-Denominational | Illustrator and designer

[Judaism] is probably one of the most constant things about myself. I think it means a few different things. I graduated with a BA in Jewish studies so to me its always going to mean something that is academic and professional. there is a nerdiness to it, loving Jewish knowledge, loving Jewish learning, working in and with Jewish communities. And then theres the personal as well, that manual for living your best life and looking to your tradition for guidance for how to carry yourself in the world and that link to ones past. Ill use the example of the last job I had, I was working in the medical cannabis industry. At first, what I was doing felt very Jewish in terms of helping people, empathy, care and compassion for the sick. The moment that it started to feel like it wasnt, I left. Thats not to say that Judaism is the only thing in my moral compass, but its so intimate to who I am and how I make decisions that when something has stopped feeling like the Jewish thing to do, I stop doing it.

*Do you know a Jewish millennial who we should talk to for this project? Contact our editor: editor [at] sdjewishjournal dot com.

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The Jewish Millennial Project - San Diego Jewish Journal