Mike Rinder left Scientology

From an interesting Radar magazine article about the “Anonymous” protests against Scientology and various high-level defections (including church head David Miscavige’s niece, which I’ve already reported here), I learn that Mike Rinder, former head of Scientology’s Office of Special Affairs, defected last year. Rinder was the main public spokesperson for the Church of Scientology. Chuck Beatty, a 27-year veteran of the Church, observes in the article that Rinder leaving Scientology is like Goebbels leaving the Nazi Party. Rinder, an Australian who joined the Scientology Sea Org at the age of 18, left the Church in the summer of 2007. Congratulations, Mr. Rinder. Welcome back to reality. I hope you will speak out about your experiences. (Via Dispatches from the Culture Wars.)

March 28, 2008 · 1 min

Scientology OT levels leaked through Wikileaks

All of Scientology’s Operating Thetan (OT) levels have now been leaked through Wikileaks, which may account for considerable slowness of that website. Although at the very least large parts of these documents have previously leaked on the Internet (via Usenet) back in the mid-nineties, which led to multiple lawsuits by the Church of Scientology against those responsible, this may be the first time the entire 612-page manual of OT levels 1-8 has been circulating on the Internet. I think it’s likely that Scientology will be filing a copyright infringement lawsuit against Wikileaks, which is distributing the document in a single large PDF. ...

March 28, 2008 · 2 min

An argument in support of Matt Nisbet

I thought I’d try to come up with an argument for Nisbet’s general position (though I don’t support the claims that all publicity is good publicity or that particular people should shut up), and came up with this (posted as a comment on Nisbet’s blog): Suppose U.S. demographics on belief and nonbelief were reversed, so that atheists made up 80%+ and those who explicitly believed in God were about 4-5% of the population (with the difference filled by agnostics, closeted believers, etc.). Suppose further that demographics of believers in science were reversed–with most physicists and biologists being religious believers, who commonly said things like “the Big Bang shows evidence of a beginning of time, started by a creator God,” and “the intricate design of biology shows the hand of God." ...

March 25, 2008 · 7 min

Expelled screening coming to Phoenix

Although the “Expelled” RSVP page mysteriously dropped all upcoming screenings after the media coverage of P.Z. Myers being barred from a screening in Minnesota, a few cities have appeared on the list again and Phoenix is one of them. This could be a chance to see the film without giving its dishonest producers any money–I’ve signed up. (Free is the only way I’ll bother to see this film.) The site now explains the cancelled screenings as follows: Due to unavoidable changes in the travel plans of the producers of “Expelled”, several of our screenings have been canceled or are being rescheduled to a new date or time.While that may be true, I wonder if it’s merely an excuse to drop all of the existing registrants and do more stringent screening of who is allowed to be admitted. ...

March 25, 2008 · 2 min

Simon Blackburn on respecting religion

Via Chris Hallquist, an interesting paper by the atheist philosopher Simon Blackburn, titled “Religion and Respect” (24pp. PDF). Worth noting as an abbreviated summary of the paper is the H.L. Mencken quote referenced by a commenter on Hallquist’s post: “We must respect the other fellow’s religion, but only in the sense and to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is beautiful and his children smart.” Geoff (2008-03-25): Hey Jim, you need to catch up on your stack of books! I'm sure that somewhere in there is Louise Antony's "Philosophers Without Gods", from which the Blackburn piece is taken. I blogged about it here last August. I really think that it belongs in the canon of "New Atheist" books, along with the works of Dennett, Dawkins, Grayling, Hitchens, Harris, Carrier et al. ...

March 25, 2008 · 1 min

Ex-terrorists turned Christian evangelists

It was only a matter of time. Where John Todd, Mike Warnke, “Lauren Stratford,” and others found that they could get attention and money by claiming to be ex-Satanists/witches/Illuminati converted to Christian evangelists, we now see “ex-Islamic terrorists” turned born-again Christians and hitting the lecture circuit, and getting paid for appearances at the U.S. Air Force Academy, as the New York Times reports. The Times article ends with the most obvious question: Arab-American civil rights organizations question why, at a time when the United States government has vigorously moved to jail or at least deport anyone with a known terrorist connection, the three men, if they are telling the truth, are allowed to circulate freely. A spokesman for the F.B.I. said there were no warrants for their arrest.Of the three speakers, Zak Anani, Kamal Saleem, and Walid Shoebat, Anani is described as the most explicitly preaching born-again Christianity rather than providing information about Islamic terrorism. He also seems to be the one with the clearest record of making false claims about his own background: Anani, now an evangelical Christian, claims to be an expert on the topic because he killed 223 people in Allah’s name, “two-thirds of them by daggers.” He even claims to have killed a man for waking him up at 3 a.m. to pray. Anani, born in Lebanon, said he joined a militant Muslim group in the early 1970s at age 13, and made his first kill shortly after. … He said he was soon promoted to troop leader and formed his own regiment, but later met a Christian missionary and converted. ...

March 23, 2008 · 5 min

Millennium reruns

We’ve been watching reruns of “Millennium” on the Chiller channel, and just saw “Jose Chung’s Doomsday Defense," about the fictional religion of “Selfosophy.” This episode was written by Darin Morgan, who also wrote “The X-Files” episode, “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space," one of the best shows of that series. Fantastic. The opening sequence can be seen here. One big difference between Selfosophy and Scientology–the Selfosophists give the visiting cops copies of the Selfosophy book. Scientologists would have made them pay for it. Charles Nelson Reilly, who played Jose Chung, just died last May. I was pleased to see that they worked a clip from the crazy Sid and Marty Krofft TV series “Lidsville” into the opening story of Selfosophy. Too bad they didn’t also include a reference to “Uncle Croc’s Block," which inspired me to some childhood musical creativity.

March 23, 2008 · 1 min

Expelled from Expelled

P.Z. Myers of Pharyngula, who is actually featured in the dishonest Ben Stein intelligent design propaganda movie “Expelled,” was denied admittance to a screening and asked to leave the premises. His guest, however, was permitted to attend, and was apparently, quite astonishingly, unrecognized–Richard Dawkins. (Myers provides a few more details here.) The New York Times contacted “Expelled” producer Mark Mathis about it, and he claimed that Dawkins was intentionally allowed in and insinuating that Myers would cause trouble at the screening. (Anyone who has met Myers in person knows this is ridiculous.) Here’s video of P.Z. Myers and Richard Dawkins describing their respective experiences. Jeffrey Overstreet gives what appears to be the spin that will be used to respond to this event, based on the clearly mistaken description of Myers’ removal from student Stuart Blessman: I just happened to be standing directly in line behind Dawkins’ academic colleague. Management of the movie theatre saw a man apparently hustling and bothering several invited attendees, apparently trying to disrupt the viewing or sneak in. Management then approached the man, asked him if he had a ticket, and when he confirmed that he didn’t, they then escorted him off the premises. Nowhere was one of the film’s producers to be found, and the man certainly didn’t identify himself. If a producer had been nearby, it’s possible that he would have been admitted, but the theatre’s management didn’t want to take any chances.Myers points out: ...

March 22, 2008 · 10 min

Causing violence

This cectic comic is a good one: (Hat tip to Dave Palmer on the SKEPTIC list.)

March 13, 2008 · 1 min

Richard Dawkins lecture at ASU

Tonight we attended Richard Dawkins’ lecture (first stop of a 2008 college tour) at ASU’s Grady Gammage auditorium on “The God Delusion,” which was the 2008 Beyond Center lecture, introduced by Paul Davies. The lecture was accompanied by a giant screen on which the words of the lecture appeared for the hearing-impaired, apparently based on voice recognition. I was pretty impressed–it was far more accurate than the typo-laden closed captioning that you can see on television, and kept up pretty closely with him, but it did make errors from time to time (some of which it corrected). My favorite uncorrected error was early on, when Dawkins was making the point that atheists disbelieve in just one more god than the countless gods that theists disbelieve in, and listed Zeus and Wotan among them. When Dawkins said “we don’t worship Wotan,” the captioner said “we don’t worship Voltaire." Dawkins began by saying that “this is the largest audience I have ever addressed.” Originally ASU just asked people to submit a form on a web page to indicate desire to attend, but they had such great response that they had to issue tickets through Ticketmaster. There were more people who didn’t get tickets who also showed up, and some of them were able to be seated in empty seats which were held for ticket holders who didn’t show up by 7:15 p.m. (the lecture started at 7:30 p.m.). The auditorium was very nearly full to its capacity of 3,017 seats. I still haven’t yet read Dawkins’ The God Delusion, but I believe most of his lecture was drawn from the book’s content, accompanied by a slide presentation. At the end, he showed some twenty books that have been published in response to the “new atheists,” most of which were directed at his book. For good measure, he included a picture of the cover of a book titled The Dog Allusion. He also responded to those atheists who have criticized him for intemperate and inflammatory language directed at religion, pointing out that far more inflammatory language may be found in London restaurant reviews (with several hilarious examples). He disagreed with the idea that religion deserves special treatment to be exempt from criticism, and quoted a passage from his book describing the God of the Bible which could be considered intemperate and inflammatory (e.g., God is “a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sado-masochistic, capriciously malevolent bully”), but which he characterized as less inflammatory than the restaurant reviews. I think it was quite similar in character to the restaurant reviews he quoted, only less hyperbolic and more accurate. He ended with some “consciousness-raising,” showing a photograph of three four-year-olds taken at a Christmas pageant play published in a British newspaper, along with its caption, which described them as “Muslim,” “Sikh,” and “Christian.” Dawkins asked us to imagine instead that they were labeled “conservative,” “liberal,” and “socialist,” or “atheist,” “agnostic,” and “secular humanist,” observing that these are all equally absurd. While it would be accurate to describe them as children of parents who are Muslim, Sikh, and Christian, a four-year-old is not old enough to have considered opinions on cosmology or anything approaching a critical world view. (My thought was that this is somewhat agist, and there are many adults haven’t given their religious views much more thought than most four-year-olds. But I think his basic point is sound.) During the Q&A, he was asked if he thought four-year-olds could be atheists, and he said he thought the same point applied–it’s not accurate to describe a four-year-old as an atheist, either. In another question, someone asked whether Dawkins had a background in theology, to which he referred the audience to P.Z. Myers’ “The Courtier’s Reply” at Pharyngula, which he recommended that everyone Google and read as he didn’t think his paraphrase did it full justice. One individual asking a question said that he is an atheist with a friend who is a very intelligent Mormon who he frequently converses with and believes he has helped lead to some mutual understanding and perhaps even some change in his views. He questioned Dawkins’ approach. Dawkins responded that “seduction” is not his style, but commended the questioner and stated his approval for different styles of atheism, comparing it to a “good cop, bad cop” methodology. I found little to disagree with in Dawkins’ presentation (and little of which I’ve described above, due to lack of note-taking). There were perhaps a few points where he presented metaphysics as science, but I agree with his point that science and religion are not “non-overlapping magisteria” (as Stephen Jay Gould put it) and that religions do make empirical claims and are criticizable when they contain false, ridiculous, unsupportable, and immoral statements. UPDATE (March 7, 2008): John Wilkins has posted some critical comments about Dawkins’ lecture, which may be a topic of discussion when I meet him on Saturday for beer and conversation with John Lynch. John Wilkins writes that: In particular I was annoyed that those of us who do not condemn someone for holding religious beliefs were caricatured as “feeling good that someone has religion somewhere”. Bullshit. That is not why we dislike the Us’n’Themism of TGD. We dislike it because no matter what other beliefs an intelligent person may hold, so long as they accept the importance of science and the need for a secular society, we simply do not care if they also like the taste of ear wax, having sex with trees, or believing in a deity or two. Way to go, Richard. Good bit of framing and parodying the opposition. Real rational.While I agree with Dr. Wilkins that the particular beliefs he lists are not objectionable, I very much do care if people hold beliefs which cause them to engage in political actions such as denial of rights to homosexuals, female genital mutilation, honor killings, issuing of fatwas, suppression of factual information and dissemination of misinformation about evolution, and so forth, which I believe is the primary concern of Dawkins, as well. The mere belief in God is not a problem (as Thomas Jefferson famously wrote, “it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg”), it’s all the additional baggage that religion typically brings along that causes the problems. (Likewise, mere lack of belief in God is not a problem, but it also seems to frequently be accompanied by political baggage.) Wilkins writes as though the majority of religious believers in the world fall under 100-200 on the scale in this video for calculating your “God Delusion Index," while I suspect Dawkins’ (and I know that my) concerns are primarily with those who score much higher than 100. (My own score was not zero–it was 45.) A few other blog posts reacting to Dawkins’ lecture: Labyrinth: A Maze of Ramblings Lone Locust Productions A post at the Motley Fool atheist forum I also should mention that Dawkins used one of my favorite arguments for the falsity and social transmission of religion, which is that people tend to believe the religions of their parents (and this is still the case despite the fact that in the U.S. a large minority of people tend to change religious sects within a religious tradition). Dawkins showed a map of the world displaying large geographic areas as represented by adherents of particular religions, and commented on how odd that fact is, if religion is supposed to be true. For contrast, he showed the same map, with the names of religions replaced with various scientific theses, and observed that that doesn’t happen. (In actuality, it does happen from time to time in science–some scientific disputes have divided upon regional lines, though typically evidence on the dispute builds and the regional division goes away, replaced by consensus.) John Wilkins is unhappy about Dawkins’ advocacy of truth as something that we care about from science, stating that we only care about good enough (pragmatism), not truth. I disagree–I don’t think that even “good enough” can be talked about without reference to true predictions, at the very least, and I think Dawkins is quite right to care about truth. Certainly it can be hard to establish what is true (it’s often easier to establish what isn’t true), and it’s a mistake to become wedded to a particular theory as true if that causes you to ignore anomalies and contrary evidence, but I likewise think it’s a mistake to say that science doesn’t care about getting true explanations. I’d also like to add a comment about one of the exchanges in the Q&A that came from a religious believer (of whom there were many in the audience–I was coincidentally seated a few seats away from a gentleman who is in my parents’ Bible study class, who had with him a worn and heavily annotated copy of Dawkins’ book as well as a copy of one of the critiques published, The Dawkins Delusion). That person suggested that Dawkins was mistaken to assert (which he didn’t, at least not at the lecture) that religion was the primary cause of war without providing empirical evidence. He stated that this is certainly something that can be empirically studied, and that he doubts that it is true. He also stated that studies have shown that religious believers tend to be happier, are more likely to give to charitable causes, even non-religious charitable causes, than the secular, and so forth. (I’ve previously blogged about studies which show that religious believers are more generous than the secular, and conservatives more generous than liberals.) Dawkins’ response was that he didn’t say what the questioner thought he did, and also observed that the two largest wars in the world’s history (WWI and WWII) were not about religion, and that the studies referred to by the questioner may be correct, but that they miss the point. For Dawkins, having better social consequences is not a reason to believe in religion if the religion is not true–it’s truth that is the closest thing to sacred for Dawkins. UPDATE: P.Z. Myers takes issue with John Wilkins’ criticisms of Dawkins. A poor quality video of the lecture (via cell phone?) is on Google Video. UPDATE (March 13, 2008): Chris Hallquist reports on Dawkins’ appearance in Madison, Wisconsin. UPDATE (March 24, 2008): Near the end of Dawkins’ talk, he showed this YouTube video of a Marcus Brigstocke rant about religion. (Thanks for the link, Tim K.) ...

March 7, 2008 · 15 min
Mastodon Verification