Scientology OT levels leaked through Wikileaks
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.
Posted by Lippard at 3/28/2008 09:55:00 AM 2 comments
Labels: copyright, law, religion, Scientology
Posted by Lippard at 3/27/2008 02:17:00 PM 17 comments
Labels: conspiracy theory, creationism, Discovery Institute, Expelled, intelligent design, movies, skepticism
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 09:17:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: James Randi, skepticism, The Amazing Meeting
The truth is that many download sites are just electronic dung heaps, using fake awards, dubious SEO and content misappropriated from PAD files in a pathetic attempt to make a few dollars from Google Adwords. Hopefully these bottom-feeders will be put out of business by the continually improving search engines, leaving only the better sites.He notes the following sites which wrote him to say to stop wasting their time, indicating that they actually check submissions:
The author wonders whether download sites that certify software as "100% clean" actually scan submitted software for malware, but says to test it would be unethical. Actually, something very much like his test could be done, using the EICAR antivirus test file instead of his text file.www.download-tipp.de (German)
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 08:19:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: security, technology
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 08:03:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Scientology, technology
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 07:48:00 PM 1 comments
Labels: education, science, SkeptiCamp, skepticism
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 05:27:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: creationism, Expelled, intelligent design, movies
He began calling on others in the crowd, who asked friendlier questions. But Maggie and I quickly realised that we'd seen some of these people before - earlier that evening, in fact, working at the movie's registration table. These friendly audience members worked for the film? Had Mathis planted questioners?Another amusing bit:
Another man in the front row wondered about the film's premise that supporters of ID are being silenced. He pointed out that a recent trial about the teaching of intelligent design held in Dover, Pennsylvania, gave supporters of intelligent design all the time in the world to make their case, but most of the 'leading lights' of ID didn't even show up.And she ends with:
When Mathis was responding, the guy asked another question, and the producer shot back, "How about you let me finish talking?" Then, a security guard for the film approached the calmly seated man and told him, "I may have to ask you to leave."
"Does anyone else see how ironic this is?" the guy asked.
"Shut up!" someone shouted from the back.
I asked how ID explains the complexity, but he said, "I don't have time for this," and walked away.Read the whole thing.
Throughout the entire experience, Maggie and I couldn't help feeling that the polarised audience in the theater was a sort of microcosm of America, and let me tell you - it's a scary place. I also couldn't help thinking that the intelligent design folks aren't being silenced, so much as they're being silent. Because when it comes to actually explaining anything, they've got nothing to say.
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 05:14:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: creationism, Expelled, intelligent design, movies
Also getting asteroids named after them: Rebecca Watson (Skepchick), Phil Plait (Bad Astronomy), and P.Z. Myers (Pharyngula).On March 23, 2001, David Healy and Jeff Medkeff discovered an asteroid about a mile in diameter, in the asteroid belt on the Mars side of the solar system. It was designated 165612.
Until today.
Now that asteroid is officially known as Stackpole. The International Astronomical Union approved the designation on March 21.
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 12:43:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona, science, skepticism
As I've said elsewhere, I'm glad that the National Center for Science Education doesn't take a position on theism vs. atheism and involves many religious believers who support the promotion of good science.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."
Presumably Nisbet would tell those religious scientists that they shouldn't say things like that in public, even if they firmly believe them to be true, because they would cause the atheist majority to stop listening to the part that's actually science. And I think he'd have a point. To the extent that Dawkins and Myers go beyond the science into areas like philosophy and normative ethics, they are making non-scientific claims that are not entailed by the scientific evidence (though I happen to agree with them that atheistic views fit much better with the evidence than religious views). A division *can* be drawn, and if your goal is persuasion, *somebody* needs to draw the division and communicate with the audience that otherwise wouldn't listen without including the nonscientific parts that will turn them off.
But, contra Nisbet, that somebody doesn't need to be everybody, or Dawkins or Myers in particular.
Posted by Lippard at 3/25/2008 08:07:00 AM 9 comments
Labels: atheism, ethics, philosophy, religion, science