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Posts Tagged ‘cfi’

Friday Five

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Every Friday the crew here at Edger will rank the top five blog posts, videos, science news, and anything else of interest to the freethought community.

5. On the Evolutionary Origins of Religion

The cultural naturalism report brings us this descriptive post on the debate over the evolutionary origins of religion.

“The divide on the question of the naturalistic origins of religion is between the adaptationists and the by-product theorists. The adaptationists are led by David Sloan Wilson and Jonathan Haidt, while Daniel Dennett is the major proponent of the religion-as-a-by-product hypothesis. In this essay, I outline the issue briefly and mention some implications of these ideas.”

4. Daylight Atheism: Advice to an Atheist

Deacon Duncan from the evangelical realism blog gives us this well reasoned and contemplative analysis of how an atheist should act during a particular case of public prayer.

“By standing during the prayer, and visibly pledging to support the community without sacrificing their personal principles, atheists can lead by example, demonstrating that tolerance can be helpful, non-violent, and principled.”

3. Why ‘Stayin’ Alive’ could literally save your life

In another awesome mix of science and music, scientists at the university of Illinois have discovered an ingenious way to ensure people conducting CPR achieve the ideal number of compressions per minute to resuscitate the heart.

“Nadkarni said he has seen ‘Stayin’ Alive’ work wonders in classes where students were having trouble keeping the right beat while practicing on mannequins.  When he turned on the song, ‘all of a sudden, within just a few seconds, they get it right on the dot.’”

2. All aboard the atheist bus campaign

The Atheist Bus Campaign finally got underway this week in London, with Richard Dawkins matching donations.  Ariane Sherine wrote about the campaign in the Guardian.  This was definitely worthy of the number one spot this week, simply because of the exposure and controversy it will generate.

“Your donations will give atheism a more visible presence in the UK, generate debate, brighten people’s day on the way to work, and hopefully encourage more people to come out as atheists. As Richard Dawkins says: “This campaign to put alternative slogans on London buses will make people think – and thinking is anathema to religion.”"

1. CFI Pushes Back Against Religious Restrictions on Free Expression

And Edger’s number one spot this week goes to Austin Dacey and the Center for Inquiry, who represented those who believe in freedom of speech at the ninth session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland.  CFI has been working alongside the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) to combat the defamation of religions enactment.

“Austin Dacey drafted and read a statement urging the Council to abandon the dangerous notion of the defamation of religions, asserting: “Rights belong to individuals, not ideas. . . . Belief depends on the freedom to doubt, to dissent, to discover.””


Progress at the UN

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

CFI’s own Austin Dacey, representative to the United Nations, has been making some headway with the help of the International Humanist and Ethical Union in blasting apart the proposed “defamation of religion” additions to the Human Rights Council.

Basically the idea behind “defamation of religion” would be that individual countries could pass laws preventing you from criticizing religions.  This is a short step from basically having the UN endorse blasphemy laws.

You can follow the latest updates from Dacey’s blog, The Secular Conscience, but here’s a quick summary of the (positive) progress they’ve been making:

The tide really does seem to be turning in the debate on combating defamation of religion – even to the point where there are hopes among some delegates that the concept will soon be buried, at least in the Human Rights Council.

Following attacks by France and Belgium last week on the notion of defamation of religion, several NGOs joined the attack on Thursday with several strong statements.

The Cairo Center for Human Rights Studies with Article 19, the European Center for Law and Justice, and Center for Inquiry in a joint statement with IHEU were among those who weighed in.

Gregor Puppinck of the European Centre for Law and Justice stated that they could not support the concept of defamation of religions or phobias when applied to religions or beliefs. The concept of phobia should not be employed as it did not describe reality but psychological instability. The use of the concept phobia victimised a part of the population. They also recalled that the concept of defamation was incompatible with human rights. It endangered the rights of religious minorities and would lead to international approval for blasphemy laws.

Center for Inquiry Promo Video

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

I am proud to present to you CFI’s most recent promo video. The official site for the video contains more info.

[youtube]_o2_U0ggvb8&fmt=18[/youtube]

I quoth the CFI site hosting the video:

The methods and values of scientific thinking have expanded our knowledge about life and our place in the universe. This modern knowledge—based on experience and evidence—has brought enormous benefit to humanity, yet many people still choose to rely on ancient texts and beliefs to guide their lives and their nations.

The Center for Inquiry exists to change this situation. We are here to promote the scientific outlook, to expand the methods and values of science into all areas of human endeavor.

We invite you to learn more about the ways we are using education, outreach, and activism to advance reason and human values around the world. Then, if these values are as important to you as they are to us, we ask you to join CFI.

Let your voice be heard. With your help, we can ensure that our time—your time—will be a time of science and reason.

Some of the brightest lights or our day are in this video. It contains Steven Pinker, Daniel Dennett, Susan Jacoby, Ann Druyan, Laurence M. Krauss, Damon Linker, E.O. Wilson, Jennifer Michael Hecht, Richard Dawkins, and Paul Kurtz.

The video is fantastic and for very good reason. Lauren Becker, a field organizer for CFI, along with Rich Blundell, president of Omniscopic and CFI supporter, produced the video, and I, yours truly, created all the graphics used in the video.

However, there are some observations I would like to make about the video. Again, it is awesome, but that is mainly due to the fact that I greatly respect and admire the work of everyone featured in the film. I am not entirely sure what the target audience for that video is, but I think in future promotional videos, younger student leaders need to be featured so that the video will appeal to a younger generation. I guess this has been a long-standing problem with CFI and the skeptical/secularist movement in general. There needs to be a greater showing of the many young people who are part of the movement. Plus, I have no idea how appealing this video will be to people who are not already familiar with CFI’s mission.

Nevertheless, I love this video. Lauren and Rich did a fantastic job and I am proud of them and CFI.

On a side note, if you noticed that Dawkins’ head was too close when he was shown for the second time in the video, don’t fret. Due to the contraints in time that was the best shot available.

The Course of Reason- Episode 2

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

The Center for Inquiry has just released their second episode of the new student freethought oriented The Course of Reason podcast.

On the Center for Inquiry’s The Course of Reason podcast Justin Trottier, Tyler Handley, and Debbie Goddard discuss campus-related news and events in the world of freethought activism, engage in educational segments, conduct interviews and panels with freethought leaders from around the world, and provide student leaders with information and resources for successfully organizing, participating in, and running a campus freethought group.

Join the podcast’s Facebook fan page