Archive for the 'religion' Category

Doré Bible Gallery

"The Creation of Light" to "Zechariah's Vision of Four Chariots" - and links to collections of woodcuts from selected books of the New Testament.
 

Snake Handler

 

Rock my Religion

I remember seeing part of this in Nesbit classes in school, but I guess there's more to it than just Patti Smith.
 

For Catholics, a Door to Absolution Is Reopened

Everything old is new again. "There is a limit of one plenary indulgence per sinner per day."
 

The Annual Hajj Pilgrimage

Big Picture style collection of photos of Muslim pilgrims performing the hajj.
 

The Magic of the State

Forgot about this, but it's why I ended up reading the book in the first place. Now I need to reread the interview.
 

You’ve Been Left Behind

"We have set up a system to send documents by the email, to the addresses you provide, 6 days after the 'Rapture' of the Church. This occurs when 3 of our 5 team members scattered around the U.S fail to log in over a 3 day period."
 

Sympathetic Magic

Fraser's description for two related magical principles: that two things that were like each other could influence each other, and two things that have been in contact could influence each other.
 

Clarence Larkin Charts

How come none of these appear in Tufte's books?
 

Christian Heresy

I've been reading Baudolino over the weekend and it reminded me that whenever one reads Eco set in the medieval period, it's probably wise to have a list of heresies to refer back to every once in a while.
 

Don’t Know Much About Biology (An evolutionary biologist responds to Sen. Brownback’s NYT editorial)

"Doesn't somebody at the Times keep an eye out for gross errors of fact on the editorial pages?" Professor Coyne is of course much more capable of opening up a can of whoopass on the Senator. All to the good. Let's pigpile on that mofo.
 

What I Think About Evolution

I have the kneejerk reaction that disbelieving in evolution should disqualify you from chief executiveship. But I read the whole thing because I also think people who discuss their beliefs intelligently should be listened to. Too bad this is nonsense.

The Senator, and need I remind everyone, potential Republican candidate for President, begins his opinion piece strongly enough, by noting that there are shades of gray between absolute belief in evolution and absolute belief in creationism. Senator Brownback is quick to point out that he turns to his religion to explain the origins of life and the "fundamental truth" of "[t]he unique and special place of each and every person in creation" and is content to accept what he calls "microevolution, small changes over time within a species."

And there we hit a rhetorical snag. What the Senator terms "microevolution" is in fact "evolution." Small changes happening over time within a species is essentially what the broad theory of evolution describes in toto. The prefix "micro-" both diminishes the conceptual importance of evolutionary theory and also makes it seem that the totally reasonable acceptance by the Senator of, again, what is in essence evolutionary theory under a different name in somehow in contrast to the more outlandish theory of "non-micro evolution" which the Senator appears to have created, in the fashion of his God, out of thin air.

Furthermore, the Senator continually returns throughout his op-ed to the idea that Faith consists of some set of tools or other for getting a handle on the world. He defines faith in a number of different ways:

  • "faith deals with spiritual truths"
  • "Faith seeks to purify reason"
  • "Faith supplements the scientific method by providing an understanding of values, meaning and purpose"
  • "faith — not science — can help us understand the breadth of human suffering or the depth of human love"

It might be naive of me (speaking as someone with limited faith), but I conceive of faith as being a highly-charged synonym for belief. Nothing more nor less. To be clear, I don't want to diminish the value of faith by stripping it of the various powers invested in it by the Senator. But, to my mind, each of the above definitions of faith is wrong.

  • Faith is one of the things that causes us to assume there are spiritual truths, so in that sense faith deals with spiritual truths. But it does not reveal them, and it is not the only human impulse which deals with them. Surely reason has been put to the task of defining spiritual "truths" as well? Not to mention science (which, Senator, is not the same thing as reason).
  • Reason seeks to purify reason. "Purify" is a muddled term here anyway (ironically), but I don't see how faith has anything at all to do with purifying reason in any sense of the word.
  • Philosophy and ethics provide an understanding and development of values, meaning and purpose. Again, faith may indicate that such things exist, and are knowable, and philosophy and ethics may certainly be based upon religious doctrine or teachings of the faithful. But they need not be.
  • I think he's thinking of empathy here.

Faith is not the exclusive realm of the religious - I would freely admit that I have faith in the theory of evolution, having not exhaustively tested it for myself in a controlled environment. I get that that means I'm making a leap, there. But I'm comfortable with that. The theory of evolution even, in my darker moments, brings me some comfort. Likewise, reason is not exclusive to scientists - Sts. Thomas Aquinas and Augustine are merely two examples of what must be a very large number of historical examples of people of faith who used the techniques of reason in the course of the practice of that faith (please note also that I don't believe faith to merely be a term referring to Christian or Catholic belief - but my tip of the mind knowledge of theologians in other traditions, including my own, is somewhat lacking, for which I offer my apologies).

Mr. Brownback repeatedly draws a clear semantic distinction between the faithful and scientists. "People of faith" vs. "Biologists." This is clearly a fallacy, as many scientists are people of various faiths and there are many faithful people who can accept at least a little bit of science. It seems as if we can reasonably conflate the two categories which the Senator has divided from each other needlessly, except to underscore that from where he stands, there is a clear conflict that must be waged.

Furthermore, Mr. Brownback makes repeated assumptions about the nature of life and reports them as facts or "truths" - spiritual or otherwise, without offering supporting evidence. "The unique and special place of each and every person in creation is a fundamental truth," he writes. But it isn't. It's not. Which is to say, Mr. Brownback has not proved this "truth" to my satisfaction and based on the evidence I'm aware of, it remains an open question. However, I am entirely comfortable with the Senator instead stating that he believes or has faith that each and every person has a unique and special place and indeed would find such a stated belief to be quite heartwarming (Needless to say, the term "creation" also indicated an incredible assumption on the part of the Senator).

In all of these respects - renaming evolution "microevolution," semantic creep as to the meaning of the word "faith", a nonsensical division between the "faithful" and the "scientists" and "faith" and "reason" (even as he seems to be attempting to reconcile the two) - Mr. Brownback does himself and the faithful he purportedly speaks to and for a disservice. His argument is against a straw man and reveals itself to be founded in what seems to me to be an irrational fear that he was not created by God on some kind of vast and unknowable assembly line.

Here's what I think about evolution: it is extraordinary that complex forms of life (not limited to human beings) could have come into existence and continued to exist for so long. And yet, given the known vastness of the universe and, indeed, what we have learned about evolution over the past hundred-odd years, it is also inevitable. That life may have begun accidentally and (until someone manages to prove otherwise) was certainly not intentionally "created" is perhaps inevitable, still amazing, and even more amazing in its inevitability. That's why evolutionary theory brings me comfort, though it does not (and need not) reassure me that there is any underlying meaning or intentionality to my existence and the existence of my fellow creatures.

 

Available Emblems of Belief for Placement on Government Headstones and Markers

Three things:
- Big ups to the VA for posting the newly approved Wiccan symbol so quickly.
- The Atheist symbol is possibly the lamest thing I've ever seen.
- Copyright?
 

if:book: meta-wikipedia

collection of articles about wikipedia - metawikipedia is my fave