Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Blogger Template Hacks

I am definitely not a computer scientist, or even nearly so.

However, I spent quite a few hours learning some of the language involved in Blogger 3.0 (layouts), and I did some Google work and bastardized others' scripts to produce a website I'm proud of (given my almost-nonexistent programming background):
http://www.gatorfreethought.org/


The reason I'm posting about it is because I wanted to share the post template in order to make life easier for others. I put in a few HTML comments to make it easier to analyze.

If you find it useful, please let me know. If you have questions, though, you might want to ask someone else, since I'm a novice :-) Please comment.

Here is the template as a .txt file, and here it is as an XML file (probably want to R-click and "Save As").

Funny Article in Onion on Evolution

Intelligent Design Creationism, the Disco Institute's underdeveloped brainchild, has been parodied by The Onion today, although you might not realize it at first.

One of creationists' favorite claims involves the "Cambrian Explosion" -- simply replace "Triassic Period" in this article with "Cambrian Explosion" and you'll get the humor.

The basic question applies as much to the Cambrian as to "irreducible complexity" -- how does one recognize supernatural intervention? What's humorous is that when examples like the flagellum are pointed out, one must ask, "So God 'poofed' the flagellum into being, but everything else in the organism evolved?" The point is, just like with the Cambrian, if there is some issue of complexity, or if some facet of knowledge has not yet been thoroughly explained by science, this is a "gap" for a god to fit in. But all around this "gap" are perfectly reasonable explanations for everything else.

Since gods like these get squeezed out of all the other gaps, these gaps become very, very rare. And so one is left with a ridiculous belief system, like that parodied in the article, where you accept 99.9% of the world as naturally-explained, but fill 0.01% of our ignorance with your god.
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Tuesday, May 29, 2007

"Submissive Jesus" Video

If you've already seen this, then you are probably laughing right now.

Review of Physics-based Theological Arguments

Retired Prof. of Physics Mark Perakh has just posted a great review of physicist Joseph Stephen M. Barr's cosmological arguments for god's existence.
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Monday, May 28, 2007

Is our children learning?

As I was reading about the FCAT science scores, it reminded me of some ground I covered a while back. Before that, some stunning facts:
Fifth graders leapt from 35 percent being at level 3 or higher last year to 42 percent at level 3 or higher this year. That’s a very encouraging sign and shows a wonderful commitment to science education at the elementary school level. Eighth graders climbed 6 percentage points to 38 percent this year, and 11th graders inched up 2 percentage points to 37 percent passing at level 3 or higher.

This despite the political pressure that led to,
...Wednesday's results were overshadowed by the state's admission that it made errors in scoring last year's FCAT. State officials are recalculating the third-grade reading scores after finding that the assessment was too easy.
That was no "error" -- it was a calculated move to reduce the bright glaring obvious failure of our science education system, and deflect a little of the responsibility from Jeb et. al during the election (to help the GOP).
"Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?"— King W, Florence, S.C., Jan. 11, 2000
I would say, "Nope. But neither "is" our adults."

The government recently released its 2006 Science & Engineering Indicators (SE). You can download the entire v2 as a PDF (2.7 MB). The SE serve many functions, but I wanted to highlight, in particular, its assessment of science literacy in America (and other countries), and consider its impact on our culture. The tables of interest are in chapter 7, "Science and Technology: Public Attitudes and Understanding". They are available as Excel files (.xls) and PDF files:
  • 7-10 (PDF) "Correct answers to specific science literacy questions, by country/region: Most recent year"
  • 7-11 (PDF) "Correct answers to scientific terms and concept questions: Selected years, 1995–2004"
  • 7-12 (PDF) "Correct answers to science literacy questions, by respondent characteristic: 2004"
  • 7-13 (PDF) "Public understanding of nature of scientific inquiry, by respondent characteristic: 2004"
I haven't yet had time to review the data extensively, but suffice it to say, 2004 (most recent year) was the worst year since 1995 for general scientific literacy, across most categories, if not all. I am not surprised.

Can we ever expect a scientifically-illiterate society to acknowledge rationalism, humanism, and atheism as valuable worldviews/positions? What hope do atheists have for expecting religious dogma and superstition to diminish, and reason and freethought to catch on, in a society where a large majority of the population has no grasp on basic scientific principles and methods, to substantiate a naturalistic outlook? If people have no scientific basis to give them answers to some of the basic questions of natural history and philosophy, should we expect them to have anything other than faith? Here are some numbers to consider, reported as the % answered correctly (2006 SE, Table 7-10):
  1. The center of the Earth is very hot. (True) 78
  2. All radioactivity is man-made. (False) 73
  3. It is the father’s gene that decides whether the baby is a boy or a girl. (True) 62
  4. Lasers work by focusing sound waves. (False) 42
  5. Electrons are smaller than atoms. (True) 45
  6. Antibiotics kill viruses as well as bacteria. (False) 54
  7. The universe began with a huge explosion. (True) 35
  8. The continents have been moving their location for millions of years and will continue to move. (True) 77
  9. Human beings are developed from earlier species of animals. (True) 44
  10. Does the Earth go around the Sun, or does the Sun go around the Earth? (Earth around the Sun) 71
Jesus H. Frickin' Christ. 29% of US adults don't know THAT THE EARTH ORBITS THE SUN!!!!!! And this is about the same pie slice of Americana that abhors stem cell research, and stubbornly clings to approval of the worst (and most stupid) president in all US history. If you sample this same demographic for the percentage who identify as being: religious right, fundamentalist, home-schooled or church-schooled, what do you think you'll get? R2 values ~1, I'll bet.

Now, compare these numbers to the 2002 SE report:
  1. 70% of American adults do not understand the scientific process;
  2. Double digit percentage gains in belief of haunted houses, ghosts, communication with the dead, and witches in the past decade;
  3. U.S. depends heavily on foreign born scientists at all degree levels, as high as 45% in engineering;
  4. Belief in pseudoscience is relatively widespread and growing;
  5. 60% believe some people posses psychic powers or extrasensory perception (ESP);
  6. 30% believe some reported objects in the sky are really space vehicles from other civilizations;
  7. 30% read astrology charts at least occasionally in the newspaper;
  8. 46% did not know how long it takes the Earth to orbit the sun (1 year);
  9. 45% thought lasers work by focusing sound waves (they focus light);
  10. 49% believe antibiotics kill viruses (they kill bacteria);
  11. 66% don't believe the Big Bang theory widely accepted by scientists;
  12. 48% believe humans lived at the same time as the dinosaurs;
  13. 47% don't believe in evolution which is widely accepted by scientists;
  14. 55% couldn't define DNA;
  15. 78% couldn't define a molecule; (particularly sad to me, a chemist)
  16. 32% believe in 'Lucky Numbers'.
And we call our period in history "progress"...There's always plenty of superstition, ignorance, and religious/pseudoscientific nonsense to fill in people's heads while these abysmal standards exist.
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Sunday, May 27, 2007

Carnival of AiG's Creation Museum

**UPDATE: Check out this amazing compilation of resources debunking the lies and silliness of AiG's grand experiment in "How We Can Waste $27M on Human Ignorance": DefCon presents
http://www.defconamerica.org/creationmuseum/**

Tomorrow morning at 10 AM the glorious Creation Museum of AiG is opening to the public. America's collective IQ will dip ~20 points, and progress in public understanding of science will be rolled back about 300 years.

PZ set up a "creation carnival" of posts related to AiG and its pseudo-science in general. It has 65 entries! Check it out.


Read these for some background:
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Thursday, May 24, 2007

63% of US Wants Timetable for Withdrawal; 62% Want Benchmarks with "Teeth"

So says the latest NYT/CBS News poll.

Surprise, surprise. Will the Dems get the message? Don't capitulate to King W.

It also says:
As for Mr. Bush,. 23 percent approve of his handling of the situation in Iraq, 72 percent disapprove; 25 percent approve of his handling of foreign policy, 66 percent disapprove; and 27 percent approve of his handling of immigration issues, while 60 percent disapprove. On the economy, 38 percent approve of his handling of the issue, and on the campaign against terrorism 40 percent approve, matching his career low on the issue.

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Something to Lower Your b.p.

After reading the post I just put up, you may need this to lower your b.p.

In Case You Need Reminding...

Jesus' General has a list of a few little errors in judgment made by the present Administration. Just a few, of course.

If you want a few more, see this extensive timeline.

I genuinely would love to see someone create another timeline of failures of any president in history to try to "let history be the judge" of whether King W really is the worst president in history. Because my intuition (that he indeed is) would love to be validated.
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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Surge

The "surge" -- Bush validates himself yet again:


From the GAO report "Rebuilding Iraq" May '07, page 34, figure 8.

(HT: Juan Cole, this image mine)
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Monday, May 21, 2007

Atheism as Religion with Respect to the 1st Amendment

My wife received a letter from her uncle TM, pastor of a church in rural VA, that I wanted to share an excerpt from, and a piece of my response to. He said (in part):
It is a good thing to question our faith, because if we can’t question our faith and still believe, then we have no faith in the first place. But while we are questioning, we need to examine how deep and powerful or how shallow our Christian experience was. And every true intellectual I knew at Berea and at Virginia Tech went through a questioning phase in their faith. I went to a great number of meetings and seminars lead by atheists and agnostics at Berea and Virginia Tech, because I wanted to hear their thinking and read what they were reading. I hope that [nsfl] reads more and more and explores the entire realm of intellectual thought on atheism while he is still forming his theories. Because, honestly, he has not had enough time to process enough information to totally change his mind yet, unless he is a person who leaps from one faith to another throughout his life on emotion. And, ironically, this is one of the criticisms that atheists use against Christians—that we base our faith on emotionalism Atheism is a faith, and atheists are believers, according to the Supreme Court.
Eddie Tabash has a great paper summarizing the legal interpretations of the Establishment Clause. I wrote him back and said (in part):

I thought one of your points below worth responding to at length regarding "atheism is a religion". This largely depends on your choice of definition for "religion". There are many different dictionary definitions, and some of them would indeed include atheism, where religion is defined as "a set of beliefs" or something similar. But many definitions include some mention of the supernatural and/or a deity, which obviously excludes atheism as a religion.

I found an excellent review of this complex issue in a Harvard law journal on human rights:
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/hrj/iss16/gunn.shtml

The Supreme Court (and other courts) have taken the position that atheism should be legally protected as a religious freedom -- i.e. the freedom of not practicing religion at all. And so they have had to confer religious protections to people whose religious freedoms were violated.

A long time ago in Torcaso v. Watkins (1961), the Court made a footnote in which secular humanism was given religious status in order to protect a nonbeliever from being given a religious test for office:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torcaso_v._Watkins

Much more recently (2004), the Court clarified issues surrounding the freedom of the states to provide funds to further religious education in Locke v. Davey. A student received a state scholarship, but was not allowed to use the money to attend a religious school to become a minister. They had two conflicting issues -- the freedom of religion in which things like "religious persecution" are protected, versus the issue of church-state separation in which the government cannot give aid to one religion at the exclusion of others. They had to weigh the definitions of "religion" as whether getting a theology degree was a religious pursuit, and if so, whether his right to religious non-discrimination was being violated by withholding the scholarship.
http://atheism.about.com/library/decisions/fund/bldec_LockeDavey.htm
http://www.restorethepledge.com/FACTS/sermons/sermon004.html

In the latest high-profile case (2005), Kaufman v. McCaughtry, a Wisconsin prisoner was denied the right to form a study group composed of nonbelievers, because prison officials declared that only religious groups could form such groups, and that the prisoners were nonreligious. The case was complex (as they usually are), but the federal appeals court (7th) decided that the prisoners were being religiously discriminated against, even though they were explicitly nonreligious.
http://atheism.about.com/b/a/195836.htm
http://www.atheists.org/flash.line/court36.htm
http://www.ca7.uscourts.gov/tmp/361FFJUD.pdf

I think the best way to summarize it is this: in issues concerning individual liberty, the courts have ruled that atheists are protected from religiously-affiliated discrimination and religious faith tests for public office -- they use the sort of definition like "a set of beliefs about human existence, values, etc." so that they can protect *all* individuals from these issues.

In issues concerning church-state entanglement, the courts use a stricter definition -- religion in that sense must have some element of the supernatural or a deity in order to fail the Lemon Test. So while atheism is undeniably a set of beliefs *about* God and gods in general, it is (obviously) the antithesis of faith in those entities, and is thus not a religion under definitions which include an element of the supernatural, which is almost *every* definition of religion:
http://www.google.com/search?&q=define:religion

I would conclude by saying that atheism : religious faith :: bald : hair. Baldness is a state pertaining to and concerning hair (the absence thereof), just as atheism is a state pertaining to and concerning religious faith (the absence thereof). It means one lacks faith in a deity, not that one, "has faith that no deity exists."
I'm sure others could go on for days with this somewhat-complex topic on the intersection of law and atheists' 1st Amendment protections, but I thought the simple excerpt one worth sharing.

Egnor Lies on Eugenics and Darwin, AGAIN

I mentioned before a run-in I had with a very egnorant MD. He issues a faux challenge, then threatened litigation when the challenge was met. My experience was similar to that of others who also directly addressed this silly little man's arguments from ignorance, and got nothing in return.

Anyway, now I can't say that the guy above in question (an egnorant person) is one and the same as this other guy here who I'm linking to (since it might cost me something) -- draw your own conclusions; but this latter guy (Egnor) isn't just ignorant of evolutionary biology (while flaunting pretentions to authority) -- he's completely f*@#ing dishonest:

Dr. West notes that the linkage between Darwinism and eugenics isn’t just philosophical and moral. It’s logical. Darwin proposed that Caucasian Europeans (like himself) were the pinnacle of human evolution, and that they emerged by a struggle for survival. Altruism degraded the process by which the human race could advance. Darwin famously wrote in the 5th chapter of Descent of Man that the smallpox vaccine had regrettably allowed weak human beings to survive, and "excepting in the case of man himself, hardly any one is so ignorant as to allow his worst animals to breed."

Ironically, Darwinists saw eugenics (a term coined by Darwin’s cousin Francis Galton) as the humane solution to the altruism-driven degeneration of the human race. Rather than exterminate the weak, they reasoned that it would be better to take control of evolution and prevent the weak.
I addressed this issue at some length a few months back. Lying creationists always cite *part* of what Darwin said, and always conveniently leave off the rest of his words. This dishonest hack has just followed suit. In Chapter 5, Darwin does indeed write about the problem with vaccinations and how they allow people without natural resistances to survive to reproduce and pass on this lack of resistance:
With savages, the weak in body or mind are soon eliminated; and those that survive commonly exhibit a vigorous state of health. We civilised men, on the other hand, do our utmost to check the process of elimination; we build asylums for the imbecile, the maimed, and the sick; we institute poor-laws; and our medical men exert their utmost skill to save the life of every one to the last moment. There is reason to believe that vaccination has preserved thousands, who from a weak constitution would formerly have succumbed to small-pox. Thus the weak members of civilised societies propagate their kind. No one who has attended to the breeding of domestic animals will doubt that this must be highly injurious to the race of man. It is surprising how soon a want of care, or care wrongly directed, leads to the degeneration of a domestic race; but excepting in the case of man himself, hardly any one is so ignorant as to allow his worst animals to breed.
It sounds pretty evil, doesn't it? But at the same time, it sounds like he's not yet passing a conclusive ought in here, only saying that it seems that our actions to preserve the lineages of people with serious heredity flaws is "highly injurious to the race of man." So far, he hasn't prescribed any actions, only attempted to describe our humanistic efforts to preserve life. So...what does Darwin think of these actions? Well, the sentences directly after clarify it for us:
The aid which we feel impelled to give to the helpless is mainly an incidental result of the instinct of sympathy, which was originally acquired as part of the social instincts, but subsequently rendered, in the manner previously indicated, more tender and more widely diffused. Nor could we check our sympathy, even at the urging of hard reason, without deterioration in the noblest part of our nature. The surgeon may harden himself whilst performing an operation, for he knows that he is acting for the good of his patient; but if we were intentionally to neglect the weak and helpless, it could only be for a contingent benefit, with an overwhelming present evil [emphasis added].
Hardly supportive of eugenics, and instead a statement of contest to it -- an appeal for us to maintain "the noblest part of our nature" and calling eugenics "an overwhelming present evil."

This is not to mention the fact that whether or not Darwin was a racist, or a sexist, or a murderer, has nothing to do with the facts of evolutionary history. But it's a useful way to keep those who are emotionally predisposed to reject evolution from even trying to answer the question of whether or not it's true. Make them afraid -- "Evolution = eugenics = evil!" -- and thus keep them ignorant.

I hate lying frauds and hacks.
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Study Does *Not* Support "Free Will" in Fruit Flies

While the noise and spin machines have touted the PLOS study as evidence of "free will" in animals (god only knows what they're thinking, since if it were true, it counter indicates their belief that humans have a "special" spirit and concomitant freedoms of mind/will), Mark Chu-Carroll does what mathematicians do best -- cuts through the bs and nonsense:
Basically, this means that simple models of animals brains, even applied to relatively simple scenarios, don't work very well. Assuming that an animal brain will produce behaviors that consist of the combination of some deterministic behavior with some simple random input is, apparently, incorrect. The behavior of an animal is more complicated than that. How complicated? We're not sure. The basic simple models of randomness - gaussian systems, power-law systems, non-linear chaotic systems - all do not produce a behavior with the complex traits that we see in the data collected for this experiment. But the data is also not consistent with any simple deterministic system. So there's something complex going on.

This does not mean that the fly has some kind of "spirit" which is deciding "Hey, I think I'll twitch now". Nor does it mean that the behavior of the fly cannot be modeled by any deterministic process with some kind of random input. In fact, the data suggests exactly the opposite: the strong fractal structure shown for the data suggests that there is some combination of complex deterministic structure and randomness. Just that it's not the kind of very simple one that we might have expected from something as a simple as a fly.
When the models fail to fit the data, it does not indicate that the data cannot be fitted to any model. It simply proves that we haven't yet found one that works. Period. End of story.
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The Science of Climate Change

So I finally got around to watching An Inconvenient Truth -- rented it from the UF Library West, in fact.

While I had already heard many of the climate change skeptics' arguments, and I was already aware of the consensus position, one particular thing jumped out at me from the film: the study cited by Gore, performed by Naomi Oreskes, which purportedly summarizes the scientific consensus on the issue by finding 0 out of 928 papers disagreeing with the consensus position. Here is a long excerpt of the article in Science:

The scientific consensus is clearly expressed in the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Created in 1988 by the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations Environmental Programme, IPCC's purpose is to evaluate the state of climate science as a basis for informed policy action, primarily on the basis of peer-reviewed and published scientific literature (3). In its most recent assessment, IPCC states unequivocally that the consensus of scientific opinion is that Earth's climate is being affected by human activities: "Human activities ... are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents ... that absorb or scatter radiant energy. ... [M]ost of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations" [p. 21 in (4)].

IPCC is not alone in its conclusions. In recent years, all major scientific bodies in the United States whose members' expertise bears directly on the matter have issued similar statements. For example, the National Academy of Sciences report, Climate Change Science: An Analysis of Some Key Questions, begins: "Greenhouse gases are accumulating in Earth's atmosphere as a result of human activities, causing surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures to rise" [p. 1 in (5)]. The report explicitly asks whether the IPCC assessment is a fair summary of professional scientific thinking, and answers yes: "The IPCC's conclusion that most of the observed warming of the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas concentrations accurately reflects the current thinking of the scientific community on this issue" [p. 3 in (5)].

Others agree. The American Meteorological Society (6), the American Geophysical Union (7), and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) all have issued statements in recent years concluding that the evidence for human modification of climate is compelling (8).

The drafting of such reports and statements involves many opportunities for comment, criticism, and revision, and it is not likely that they would diverge greatly from the opinions of the societies' members. Nevertheless, they might downplay legitimate dissenting opinions. That hypothesis was tested by analyzing 928 abstracts, published in refereed scientific journals between 1993 and 2003, and listed in the ISI database with the keywords "climate change" (9).

The 928 papers were divided into six categories: explicit endorsement of the consensus position, evaluation of impacts, mitigation proposals, methods, paleoclimate analysis, and rejection of the consensus position. Of all the papers, 75% fell into the first three categories, either explicitly or implicitly accepting the consensus view; 25% dealt with methods or paleoclimate, taking no position on current anthropogenic climate change. Remarkably, none of the papers disagreed with the consensus position.

Admittedly, authors evaluating impacts, developing methods, or studying paleoclimatic change might believe that current climate change is natural. However, none of these papers argued that point.

This analysis shows that scientists publishing in the peer-reviewed literature agree with IPCC, the National Academy of Sciences, and the public statements of their professional societies. Politicians, economists, journalists, and others may have the impression of confusion, disagreement, or discord among climate scientists, but that impression is incorrect.

To be fair, Richard Lindzen followed this study up with an op-ed criticizing the methodology, but so far as I know, there is no counterargument that relies upon an examination of the literature like hers. Lindzen pointed out there are only 905 abstracts available (not 928), and that the consensus position is only explicitly endorsed in 13 of these abstracts.

Pretty stark, eh?

Also see New Scientist, Real Climate, and the science page at Al Gore's site.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Best. Interview on Falwell. Ever. -- Hitchens Last Night on H&C

Watch it HERE:


I laughed so hard at the end -- "If you gave Falwell an enema he could be buried in a matchbox!" Bwahahahah

PS: If anyone thinks Hitchens is too much an asshole, or that his accusation that Falwell's apology was fake, read this:
Here's something I missed from before Falwell died or I would have written about it. Everyone remembers Falwell's infamous remarks to Pat Robertson on the 700 Club, blaming all of his usual political enemies for 9/11. I'll paste the exchange below the fold:

JERRY FALWELL: The ACLU's got to take a lot of blame for this.

PAT ROBERTSON: Well, yes.

JERRY FALWELL: And, I know that I'll hear from them for this. But, throwing God out successfully with the help of the federal court system, throwing God out of the public square, out of the schools. The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked. And when we destroy 40 million little innocent babies, we make God mad. I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way, all of them who have tried to secularize America. I point the finger in their face and say 'you helped this happen'.

PAT ROBERTSON: Well, I totally concur, and the problem is we have adopted that agenda at the highest levels of our government. And so we're responsible as a free society for what the top people do. And, the top people, of course, is the court system.

After that, both Falwell and Robertson flat out lied about it. Robertson told Fox News a couple days later, "I thought it was totally inappropriate at the time." Nonsense. At the time he said, "I totally concur" and even expanded on those comments. Falwell's first response was to claim that he was being misrepresented, then when that excuse didn't fly (because the video was being played all over TV, for crying out loud) he offered a fake apology (TRANSCRIPT).

Falwell told CNN: "I would never blame any human being except the terrorists, and if I left that impression with gays or lesbians or anyone else, I apologize."

But as it turns out, just last week before he died, Christiane Amanpour interviewed him on CNN and he said he was standing by what he said then. Watch the video HERE.

So he made an appalling statement, then he lied, then he offered a fake apology, and then he went back on the apology. And remember, folks, this is the voice of the "moral" majority.
About as moral as a cockroach, peddling ignorance and making $200 million a year for it.
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Sectarian Bible Curriculum in Public Schools Brings First Lawsuit

There's a new legal challenge to the supposedly-objective Bible study program promoted by the National Council on Bible Curriculum in Public Schools (NCBCPS). I wonder why?

A little while back, some rotten ol' liberal analyzed the NCBCPS curriculum and found that:
In both the curriculum and other NCBCPS materials, teachers are urged not to impose religious beliefs upon their students. In my professional judgment as a biblical scholar, however, this curriculum on the whole is a sectarian document, and I cannot recommend it for usage in a public school setting. It attempts to persuade students to adopt views that are held primarily within certain conservative Protestant circles but not within the scholarly community, and it presents Christian faith claims as history:
  • The Bible is explicitly characterized as inspired by God.
  • Discussions of science are based on the claims of biblical creationists.
  • Jesus is presented as fulfilling “Old Testament” prophecy.
  • Archaeological findings are cited as support for claims of the Bible’s complete historical accuracy.
Furthermore, much of the course appears designed to persuade students and teachers that America is a distinctively Christian nation — an agenda publicly embraced by many of the members of NCBCPS’s Board of Advisors and endorsers.
Okay, fine, so the reviewer of the curriculum was Dr. Mark A. Chancey, who teaches biblical studies in the Department of Religious Studies in Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. Not exactly a typical liberal, so maybe we ought to pay attention to his assessment. Just maybe...

Then again, Chuck Norris is on the Board of Directors, and D. James Kennedy is on the Board of Advisors with the NCBCPS. What more needs to be said? That's pretty much all we needed to know to realize how objective this curriculum would be, and that it's a tool for mass proselytizing in the public school system, at taxpayer expense.

In recent years, many prominent educators have urged U.S. public schools to teach the Bible as part of literature or culture classes, contending that students need to understand the book's influence on literature, history and current events. More schools are starting to offer such classes, in some cases with a push from their state legislatures. Georgia last year passed a law providing money to encourage high schools to offer Bible electives. This month, the Texas House of Representatives almost unanimously approved a bill, now in the state Senate, that would offer training to teachers leading classes on the Old and New Testaments.

But the spread of Bible instruction is raising questions about the separation of church and state. That is particularly true in school districts that have adopted the National Council program, one of two competing national curricula now available.

The curriculum sold by the Greensboro, N.C.-based National Council concentrates on the Bible's role as literature and as an influence on American history. Founder Elizabeth Ridenour says that nearly 400 districts have adopted the National Council curriculum since 1992. (WSJ)

Beautiful. The NCBCPS has fired back a response (.doc, click HERE for .pdf) to the Texas Freedom Network, my favorite line is,
"The NCBCPS curriculum has never been legally challenged." (paragraph 5)
Maybe then, but not anymore, praise the lard! :-)
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Whodathunkit? Creationism and Psychology

There's a great article in Science about the disparities in the psychological/neurological makeup of adults who are very resistant to scientific knowledge and trusting in the consensus and authority of scientists generally. I think they're on to something with looking at how children are made to absorb information from trusted relations without skepticism and how this fact of biology is exploited by religion and politics. It's a good one, and I'm posting the full-text below:

Review
Childhood Origins of Adult Resistance to Science
Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg

Abstract

Resistance to certain scientific ideas derives in large part from assumptions and biases that can be demonstrated experimentally in young children and that may persist into adulthood. In particular, both adults and children resist acquiring scientific information that clashes with common-sense intuitions about the physical and psychological domains. Additionally, when learning information from other people, both adults and children are sensitive to the trustworthiness of the source of that information. Resistance to science, then, is particularly exaggerated in societies where nonscientific ideologies have the advantages of being both grounded in common sense and transmitted by trustworthy sources.

Review

Scientists, educators, and policy-makers have long been concerned about American adults' resistance to certain scientific ideas (1). In a 2005 Pew Trust poll, 42% of respondents said that they believed that humans and other animals have existed in their present form since the beginning of time, a view that denies the very existence of evolution (2). Even among the minority who claim to accept natural selection, most misunderstand it, seeing evolution as a mysterious process causing animals to have offspring that are better adapted to their environments (3). This is not the only domain where people reject science: Many believe in the efficacy of unproven medical interventions; the mystical nature of out-of-body experiences; the existence of supernatural entities such as ghosts and fairies; and the legitimacy of astrology, ESP, and divination (4). This resistance to science has important social implications, because a scientifically ignorant public is unprepared to evaluate policies about global warming, vaccination, genetically modified organisms, stem cell research, and cloning (1).

Here we review evidence from developmental psychology suggesting that some resistance to scientific ideas is a human universal. This resistance stems from two general facts about children, one having to do with what they know and the other having to do with how they learn.

The main source of resistance concerns what children know before their exposure to science. Recent psychological research makes it clear that babies are not "blank slates"; even 1-year-olds possess a rich understanding of both the physical world (a "naïve physics") and the social world (a "naïve psychology") (5). Babies know that objects are solid, persist over time (even when out of sight), fall to the ground if unsupported, and do not move unless acted upon (6). They also understand that people move autonomously in response to social and physical events, act and react in accord with their goals, and respond with appropriate emotions to different situations (5, 7, 8).

These intuitions give children a head start when it comes to understanding and learning about objects and people. However, they also sometimes clash with scientific discoveries about the nature of the world, making certain scientific facts difficult to learn. The problem with teaching science to children is thus "not what the student lacks, but what the student has, namely alternative conceptual frameworks for understanding the phenomena covered by the theories we are trying to teach" (9).

Children's belief that unsupported objects fall downward, for instance, makes it difficult for them to see the world as a sphere—if it were a sphere, the people and things on the other side should fall off. It is not until about 8 or 9 years of age that children demonstrate a coherent understanding of a spherical Earth (10), and younger children often distort the scientific understanding in systematic ways. Some deny that people can live all over Earth's surface (10), and when asked to draw Earth (11) or model it with clay (12), some children depict it as a sphere with a flattened top or as a hollow sphere that people live inside.

In some cases, there is such resistance to science education that it never entirely sticks, and foundational biases persist into adulthood. One study tested college undergraduates' intuitions about basic physical motions, such as the path that a ball will take when released from a curved tube (13). Many of the undergraduates retained a common-sense Aristotelian theory of object motion; they predicted that the ball would continue to move in a curved motion, choosing B over A in Fig. 1. An interesting addendum is that although education does not shake this bias, real-world experience can suffice. In another study, undergraduates were asked about the path that water would take out of a curved hose. This corresponded to an event that the participants had seen, and few believed that the water would take a curved path (14). Figure 1:


The examples so far concern people's common-sense understanding of the physical world, but their intuitive psychology also contributes to their resistance to science. One important bias is that children naturally see the world in terms of design and purpose. For instance, 4-year-olds insist that everything has a purpose, including lions ("to go in the zoo") and clouds ("for raining"), a propensity called "promiscuous teleology" (15). Additionally, when asked about the origin of animals and people, children spontaneously tend to provide and prefer creationist explanations (16). Just as children's intuitions about the physical world make it difficult for them to accept that Earth is a sphere, their psychological intuitions about agency and design make it difficult for them to accept the processes of evolution.

Another consequence of people's common-sense psychology is dualism, the belief that the mind is fundamentally different from the brain (5). This belief comes naturally to children. Preschool children will claim that the brain is responsible for some aspects of mental life, typically those involving deliberative mental work, such as solving math problems. But preschoolers will also claim that the brain is not involved in a host of other activities, such as pretending to be a kangaroo, loving one's brother, or brushing one's teeth (5, 17). Similarly, when told about a brain transplant from a boy to a pig, they believed that you would get a very smart pig, but one with pig beliefs and pig desires (18). For young children, then, much of mental life is not linked to the brain.

The strong intuitive pull of dualism makes it difficult for people to accept what Francis Crick called "the astonishing hypothesis" (19): Dualism is mistaken—mental life emerges from physical processes. People resist the astonishing hypothesis in ways that can have considerable social implications. For one thing, debates about the moral status of embryos, fetuses, stem cells, and nonhuman animals are sometimes framed in terms of whether or not these entities possess immaterial souls (20, 21). What's more, certain proposals about the role of evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging in criminal trials assume a strong form of dualism (22). It has been argued, for instance, that if one could show that a person's brain is involved in an act, then the person himself or herself is not responsible, an excuse dubbed "my brain made me do it" (23). These assumptions about moral status and personal responsibility reflect a profound resistance to findings from psychology and neuroscience.

The main reason why people resist certain scientific findings, then, is that many of these findings are unnatural and unintuitive. But this does not explain cultural differences in resistance to science. There are substantial differences, for example, in how quickly children from different countries come to learn that Earth is a sphere (10). There is also variation across countries in the extent of adult resistance to science, including the finding that Americans are more resistant to evolutionary theory than are citizens of most other countries (24).

Part of the explanation for such cultural differences lies in how children and adults process different types of information. Some culture-specific information is not associated with any particular source; it is "common knowledge." As such, learning of this type of information generally bypasses critical analysis. A prototypical example is that of word meanings. Everyone uses the word "dog" to refer to dogs, so children easily learn that this is what they are called (25). Other examples include belief in germs and electricity. Their existence is generally assumed in day-to-day conversation and is not marked as uncertain; nobody says that they "believe in electricity." Hence, even children and adults with little scientific background believe that these invisible entities really exist (26).

Other information, however, is explicitly asserted, not tacitly assumed. Such asserted information is associated with certain sources. A child might note that science teachers make surprising claims about the origin of human beings, for instance, whereas their parents do not. Furthermore, the tentative status of this information is sometimes explicitly marked; people will assert that they "believe in evolution."

When faced with this kind of asserted information, one can occasionally evaluate its truth directly. But in some domains, including much of science, direct evaluation is difficult or impossible. Few of us are qualified to assess claims about the merits of string theory, the role of mercury in the etiology of autism, or the existence of repressed memories. So rather than evaluating the asserted claim itself, we instead evaluate the claim's source. If the source is deemed trustworthy, people will believe the claim, often without really understanding it. Consider, for example, that many Americans who claim to believe in natural selection are unable to accurately describe how natural selection works (3). This suggests that their belief is not necessarily rooted in an appreciation of the evidence and arguments. Rather, this scientifically credulous subpopulation accepts this information because they trust the people who say it is true.

Science is not special here; the same process of deference holds for certain religious, moral, and political beliefs as well. In an illustrative recent study, participants were asked their opinion about a social welfare policy that was described as being endorsed by either Democrats or Republicans. Although the participants sincerely believed that their responses were based on the objective merits of the policy, the major determinant of what they thought of the policy was, in fact, whether or not their favored political party was said to endorse it (27). Additionally, many of the specific moral intuitions held by members of a society appear to be the consequence, not of personal moral contemplation, but of deference to the views of the community (28).

Adults thus rely on the trustworthiness of the source when deciding which asserted claims to believe. Do children do the same? Recent studies suggest that they do; children, like adults, have at least some capacity to assess the trustworthiness of their information sources. Four- and five-year-olds, for instance, know that adults know things that other children do not (like the meaning of the word "hypochondriac") (29), and when given conflicting information from a child and from an adult, they prefer to learn from the adult (30). They know that adults have different areas of expertise: Doctors know how to fix broken arms, and mechanics know how to fix flat tires (31, 32). They prefer to learn from a knowledgeable speaker than from an ignorant one (29, 33), and they prefer a confident source to a tentative one (34). Finally, when 5-year-olds hear about a competition whose outcome was unclear, they are more likely to believe a person who claimed that he had lost the race (a statement that goes against his self-interest) than a person who claimed that he had won the race (a statement that goes with his self-interest). In a limited sense, then, they are capable of cynicism (35).

These developmental data suggest that resistance to science will arise in children when scientific claims clash with early emerging, intuitive expectations. This resistance will persist through adulthood if the scientific claims are contested within a society, and it will be especially strong if there is a nonscientific alternative that is rooted in common sense and championed by people who are thought of as reliable and trustworthy. This is the current situation in the United States, with regard to the central tenets of neuroscience and evolutionary biology. These concepts clash with intuitive beliefs about the immaterial nature of the soul and the purposeful design of humans and other animals, and (in the United States) these beliefs are particularly likely to be endorsed and transmitted by trusted religious and political authorities (24). Hence, these fields are among the domains where Americans' resistance to science is the strongest.

References and Notes

  • 1. H. Nowotny, Science 308, 1117 (2005).[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  • 2. "Teaching of Creationism is Endorsed in New Survey" New York Times, 31 August 2005, p. A9.
  • 3. A. Shtulman, Cognit. Psychol. 52, 170 (2006). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 4. M. Shermer, Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and Other Confusions of Our Time (Owl Books, New York, 2002).
  • 5. P. Bloom, Descartes' Baby (Basic Books, New York, 2004).
  • 6. E. Spelke, Cognition 50, 431 (1994). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 7. G. Gergely, Z. Nadasdy, G. Csibra, S. Biro, Cognition 56, 165 (1995). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 8. V. Kuhlmeier, K. Wynn, P. Bloom, Psychol. Sci. 14, 402 (2003). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 9. S. Carey, J. Appl. Dev. Psychol. 21, 13 (2000). [CrossRef] [ISI]
  • 10. M. Siegal, G. Butterworth, P. A. Newcombe, Dev. Sci. 7, 308 (2004). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 11. S. Vosniadou, W. F. Brewer, Cognit. Psychol. 24, 535 (1992). [CrossRef] [ISI]
  • 12. S. Vosniadou, in Mapping the Mind, L. Hirschfeld, S. Gelman, Eds. (Cambridge Univ. Press, New York, 2003), pp. 412–430.
  • 13. M. McCloskey, A. Caramazza, B. Green, Science 210, 1139 (1980).[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  • 14. M. K. Kaiser, J. Jonides, J. Alexander, Mem. Cogn. 14, 308 (1986). [ISI] [Medline]
  • 15. D. Kelemen, Cognition 70, 241 (1999). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 16. M. Evans, Cognit. Psychol. 42, 217 (2001). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 17. A. S. Lillard, Child Dev. 67, 1717 (1996). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 18. C. N. Johnson, Child Dev. 61, 962 (1990). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 19. F. Crick, The Astonishing Hypothesis (Simon & Schuster, New York, 1995).
  • 20. This belief in souls also holds for some expert ethicists. For instance, in their 2003 report Being Human: Readings from the President's Council on Bioethics, the President's Council described people as follows: "We have both corporeal and noncorporeal aspects. We are embodied spirits and inspirited bodies (or, if you will, embodied minds and minded bodies)" (21).
  • 21. The President's Council on Bioethics, Being Human: Readings from the President's Council on Bioethics (The President's Council on Bioethics, Washington, DC, 2003).
  • 22. J. D. Greene, J. D. Cohen, Philos. Trans. R. Soc. London Ser. B 359, 1775 (2004). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 23. M. Gazzaniga, The Ethical Brain (Dana, Chicago, 2005).
  • 24. J. D. Miller, E. C. Scott, S. Okamoto, Science 313, 765 (2006).[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  • 25. P. Bloom, How Children Learn the Meanings of Words (MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2000).
  • 26. P. L. Harris, E. S. Pasquini, S. Duke, J. J. Asscher, F. Pons, Dev. Sci. 9, 76 (2006). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 27. G. L. Cohen, J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 85, 808 (2003). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 28. J. Haidt, Psychol. Rev. 108, 814 (2001). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 29. M. Taylor, B. S. Cartwright, T. Bowden, Child Dev. 62, 1334 (1991). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 30. V. K. Jaswal, L. A. Neely, Psychol. Sci. 17, 757 (2006). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 31. D. J. Lutz, F. C. Keil, Child Dev. 73, 1073 (2002). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 32. J. H. Danovitch, F. C. Keil, Child Dev. 75, 918 (2004). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 33. M. A. Koenig, F. Clement, P. L. Harris, Psychol. Sci. 15, 694 (2004). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 34. M. A. Sabbagh, D. A. Baldwin, Child Dev. 72, 1054 (2001). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 35. C. M. Mills, F. C. Keil, Psychol. Sci. 16, 385 (2005). [CrossRef] [ISI] [Medline]
  • 36. We thank P. Harris and F. Keil for helpful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. Neither author received any funding for the preparation of this article.
I really think this is a great article, and that it points to something real and different about people's psychological and neurological makeup: the ability to trust others in positions of presumed "authority". Some people have no problem trusting priests and politicians, and I think in large part this is due to their being raised to think that "worldly things" are not important, and to really believe that some people hear from God, or know things about God that others don't. If those ideas aren't inculcated early on, during the non-skeptical phase, they're much harder to get people to buy, unless said person is biologically less resistant to requiring evidence for extraordinary claims. Gullibility and naivete are really functions of the brain more than of culture. (HT: Panda's Thumb)
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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Cooler Than Jurassic Park, and Much Cheaper

Guess what's coming to Branford, a mere hour away?

Why, a great new scientific museum, that's what! It's called Noah's Park, and it's gonna teach us all about Jebus ponies...uh, I mean dinosaurs!



BRANFORD (FBW)—Noah's Park, a Gospel fossil park emulating the blockbuster movie, "Jurassic Park," is gearing up at the Middle Florida Baptist Assembly grounds thanks to the cooperation of several Southern Baptist associations.

The fossil exhibit, brainchild of former pastor and self-taught creationist Tom Baird, is a ministry that uses dinosaur fossils and a planetarium to prove that the biblical narrative of a great flood that destroyed nearly all life on the earth is true, he said. Not only do the fossils and stars show there was a great judgment, Baird said, but they also show God will keep His promise and come again.

With speech sprinkled with references to Scripture, Baird tells the story of the "glories of God" and his judgment on the earth, illustrating the account with dusty dinosaur bones and distant stars.

Awesome! I think Gator Freethought should take a field trip up there over the summer, with a video camera of course, to document the scientific wonders of creation. You can see the driving directions and map here. The lat/lon are from the campsite's webpage.
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Yet More Experts Declare Surge and US Policy in Iraq a Failure

70,000 Iraqi casualties (documented, so a very conservative estimate) and almost 3,500 American soldiers died in order to prove to us that our Administration completely failed in its efforts to make us safer, and we now have to figure out a way to fix the mistakes they made.

"Iraq faces the distinct possibility of collapse and fragmentation, UK foreign policy think tank Chatham House says."

In the report Accepting Realities in Iraq, experts argue:
Dr Stansfield argues that with the myriad conflicts in Iraq following societal, religious and political divides and often involving state actors, the multinational forces are finding it exceptionally difficult to promote security normalization. The recent US 'surge' in Baghdad looks likely to have simply pushed insurgent activity to neighboring cities and cannot deliver the required political accommodation. A political solution will require Sunni Arab representatives’ participation in government, the recognition of Moqtada al-Sadr as a legitimate political partner, and a positive response to Kurdish concerns. Further, it would be a mistake to believe that the political forces in Iraq are weak and can be reorganized by the US or the international community, there must be ‘buy-in’ from the key Iraqi political actors.
It's time for Bush the "commander guy" to listen to the bipartisan Baker-Hamilton report, commanders in Iraq like Major General John Batiste and Major General Paul Eaton, and non-partisan foreign policy experts like Chatham House. It's also time to impeach Bush and Cheney, but unfortunately, none of these is likely to happen.
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Dobson Straddles Line of Legality

In the WingNutDaily today, a paper well-known for its integrity and accuracy in reporting, they give air to Dobson's flagrant disregard for the law surrounding non-profit organizations and their abilities to endorse candidates. This year, he's clearly endorsed Newt, while advocating against either Giuliani or McCain. He's done this before, so it's really no surprise. These organizations receive literally hundreds of millions of $ in tax-free donations, and they are able to use it to promote their version of Christianism and influence politics in a blatantly unconstitutional fashion. These frauds should have their tax exemptions pulled immediately.

Luckily, I think their power is on the wane insofar as the public at large's support of them (Barry Lynn cited 17% of people identifying themselves with the Religious Right, but MSNBC seems to indicate it at 16%, either way, this is approximately equal to the number of nonreligious Americans at 14%). Unfortunately, they still retain far too much influence in areas they have absolutely no business influencing: foreign policy on Iran and war-related executive policy.
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Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Religious and Church-state Issues

Last night, Larry King had on some talking heads (big names) to discuss religion and politics:

They are, in Louisville, Kentucky, Reverend Albert Mohler, Jr. president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Time.com described him as "the reigning intellectual" of the Evangelical movement in this country. And in Washington is David Kuo, the Washington editor of Beliefnet.com, the best-selling author of "Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction." He's former special assistant to President Bush, deputy director of the Office of Faith-Based Community Initiatives.

In Orlando is Reverend Jim Wallis, best-selling author of "God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It." He's president and executive director of "Sojourners"

"Call to Renewal;" editor-in-chief of "Sojourners" magazine.

In Washington, Reverend Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. He's a best- selling author, including the book, "Piety & Politics: The Right-Wing Assault On Religious Freedom."

And in Boston, our man, David Gergen, who served as White House adviser to Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan and Clinton; editor-at- large, "U.S. News & World Report"; and professor of public service at Harvard's JFK School of Government.
You can pretty much predict the dialogue. I like how Wallis tries to pretend the religious litmus test clause of the Constitution isn't really that important...cause we need to know a candidate's "moral compass". Riiiiiiiight. What tells us the character of a candidate isn't their professed belief, but their record of action and behavior. It takes little effort to convince people with words how much you love Jebus, but it takes a bit more to show a lifetime of consistent moral behavior and strong principles. Why people on the Religious Right are so easily suckered by speeches, in the presence of contradindicating evidence, (think Newt Gengrich) is beyond me.

The full transcript of the show and a few clips online.

This is old news, but I had to put my $0.02 in on the David Paszkiewicz issue -- if I, as a high school teacher, had said that God was a fairytale and that we evolved from material causes only, I would be fired. There is no doubt about it. And I completely respect that: teachers should not have the ability to use their classroom as a platform on religious views. But this teacher gets away with telling kids *IN CLASS* that they'll go to hell if they don't accept Jesus and that the Big Bang is "unscientific". Just because some of the board members agree with him; not because what he said wasn't unconstitutional. I hate double standards like this.

Remember the dumbass I mentioned who sued her church when she was "slain in the spirit" and got injured? She won the case. Only in America, folks...
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Dust in the Wind

Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions.
Albert Einstein

It is an empirically-proven fact that most people believe what their parents/local culture believe with respect to politics, religion and philosophy in general.

Like it or not, we are largely the products of our genetics and upbringing, the former of which is determined by blind chemical processes, the latter by chance -- no one chooses their parents or culture.

I spoke with an old friend yesterday, a very intelligent man -- did his chemistry postdoc at Harvard -- who told me that believing in God helps him be a better person, and to believe in things that he otherwise would have a hard time believing in. He told me that it really didn't matter to him whether it was true if God existed or not; he used religion as a way to enhance his life and outlook. Given the above quotes and facts of the matter regarding who we are and what we believe, I can see his point. That's why I'm not an evangelical atheist.

My problem is that I can't make myself believe in something that I find lacking evidence, or something contradicted by evidence. And that's why I'm an atheist with respect to the Western concepts of God and agnostic with respect to some Eastern and philosophical concepts of a god (nexus of causality, grounding of existence, etc.).

...while we may be dust in the wind, we're stardust, at least. Moby sang that we're all made of stars. All of us. That comforts me a bit.

This resonates with me today. I don't know why, but maybe you will.
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