Bertrand Russell on God (1959)

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Debate:Intelligent Design/Evolution

charles_darwin_l1Here is an 8 part youtube video series of a debate on evolution and intelligent design. I was pleasantly surprised by the exchange for the most part even though it is dated. The debate was in 1997 and so there has been a lot of development in this discussion since that time but it was still good and it makes you think. This is a 5 on 4 debate with 9 relevant and highly educated and very well prepared speakers. On the ID side you have William F. Buckley Jr, William Demski, Michael Behe, Phillip Johnson and David Berlinksi and on the evolution side you have Ken Miller, Bary Lynn, Eugenie C. Scott and Michael Ruse. In my opinion, the star of the debate is clearly Ken Miller but there was still many good contributions to the discussion on both sides.

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Faith… What’s the Point?

faith-clouds-sky-imageDoes faith actually give us information that we cannot get with our senses? Can we gain knowledge by faith? Or is it an assumption that we make about what someone told us that God has said? Or is it something that we throw up like a white flag of surrender when we realize that we don’t have enough information but we still feel like we have to defend our belief?

In the Bible we are told:

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Evolution is a Fact and a Theory

evolutionGreat article on the distinction between what we know and what we don’t know about evolution. There is a good quote from Stephen J Gould in this article talking about this as well. Many people point out that there are differing theories about HOW evolution happened and so it is therefore all up for grabs and only a theory that is very debatable. What this article points out is that that question is not IF evolution happened, but HOW.

Evolution is a Fact and a Theory
by Laurence Moran

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Divinely Directed Dozer of Destruction

killdozer_newsThis is a story from back in 2004 which I did not see at the time. Someone just forwarded an article to me about it the other day. It is a story about a disgruntled Colorado man who seemed to experience some pretty unfair treatment in his small Colorado town of Granby. His frustration culminated in building a steel and concrete reinforced bull dozer and destroying 15 buildings and many cars and finally by taking his own life. A video montage of this even is below or you can read a story about it which includes a lot more details here and a discovery channel story on it here. What I would like to comment on is this man’s feeling that he was guided by God or some higher power.
I am not trying to single this man and his crazy actions out as a representative example of believers in any way. Although I can sympathize with his frustrations, his actions are hardly condoned especially because his clear intention was to also take a number of people’s lives. I also know that many believers will think that this man is crazy and that God was most certainly not guiding him to do this. What I do think that it illustrates however is the way that humans can be clearly deceived by their own circumstances and by their own beliefs to think that God is on their side and leading or speaking to them and feel that they have clear evidence for this. The man who did this, Marvin Heemeyer, made audio tapes of his plans and his thinking before the event so we have some insight into what he was thinking.

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The Balony Detection Kit

I saw this in Skeptic.com today. Good video by Michael Shermer on some basic principles for discerning between true and false claims.

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Some Thoughts on Health Care Reform

dr-hibbert-from-the-simpsonsYesterday I caught the tail end of a show on NPR’s Marketplace on health care reform. There is of course lots of talk about this right now with all the potential changes coming down the pike from the American Congress and President Obama. I found this interview particularly interesting because it was with George Halvorson who is the CEO of Kaiser Permanente. I always like to hear what people who are in the health care industry think about the nationalization of health care so my ears perked right up when I heard what they were talking about.

I am usually against nationalizing health care but I want to remain open minded and rethink things as much as possible. My main interest is more pragmatic and I would like to be able to have a health care system that is capable of giving the highest quality of care to the most people. I realize that in any system there are going to be downfalls and problems but we need to think of which is the best system which gives us the most upside and the least amount of downsides.

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Book Review: Losing My Religion by William Lobdell

loosing_religionLOSING MY RELIGION: How I Lost My Faith Reporting on Religion in America — and Found Unexpected Peace.

I heard about this book while listening to the Hugh Hewitt radio program. The author is a long time friend of Hewitt’s and so Hugh had him on the show for an hour to discuss his book and to take calls about it. Although my viewpoints have changed quite a bit over the years, Hugh Hewitt is still one of the conservative talk radio guys I really like and his interview with Lobdell is one reasons why. He did a two part interview with Lobdell which can be found here and here. This interview will give you a little glimpse into Lobdell’s story and personality. Hugh is an Evangelical Christian and he has callers on his radio show call in and talk to Lobdell about his book. Although the interview drags on a bit at times, I think it is good because it shows Lobdell’s sincerity and that he was a meaningful and true Christian who truly struggles with his loss of faith.

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A Skeptical Discussion of Miracles

051126_mary_vsml_7p.widec I have been going through old archives of one of my favorite podcasts, Reasonable Doubts and came aross Episode 21, Miracles with Guest Joe Nickell. The guest Joe Nickell is a paranormal investigator and the hosts discuss with Joe his approach to dealing with claims of the miraculous. They talk about visions, weeking statues, Speaking in tongues and other phenomenon which are said to be the miraculous work of the supernatural.

Miraculous claims abound today just like they did in the ancient world. We want to believe in the supernatural and in miraculous claims. It’s mysterious and exciting and it gives us hope that this natural world is not all that there is. For many, miracles are a proof for their faith, be it in God, Jesus, Astrology, UFO’s, Ghosts or whatever else. The interesting thing is that each group who believes that a miracle is a testament to the truth of their faith or beliefs looks with skepticism on other groups claims of the same thing. And if miracles are to be a proof of anything, it would seem that they are a proof of nothing since so many conflicting belief systems seem to be derived from them.

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Conversation with Hitler on Morality

Interesting discussion on morality from a youtube vlogger. Most memorable quote is at the very end of the video,

The problem is not that people don’t believe in objective morality, the problem is… that they do.

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