September - Free Inquiry Group
Transcription
September - Free Inquiry Group
FIG Leaves Volume 21 Issue 8 September Meeting: September 2012 Tuesday Sept. 25, 7-9 PM, Hannaford Suites, Cincinnati Open Clean Elections ‑ Your Voice Rich Stevenson, Green Party Candidate for US Congress For our September FIG Meeting, Rich Stevenson, Green Party Candidate for the U.S. Congress will speak on “Open Clean Elections ~ Your Voice.” The Republican and Democratic Conventions have just concluded and the phrase “God Bless You and God Bless the United States of America” or some variant was uttered to end every speech. As part of FIG’s mission, we desire to increase the public discourse and allow for more perspectives outside the two party system. Rich provided the following synopsis of his presentation: What needs to be done for more people to have a voice in politics and our governments. Everyone knows. Take money out of political campaigns. Two huge history making reforms are needed. My proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution must be ratified and we must re‑enact the 1933 Glass‑Steagall Act to separate commercial bank and financial bank functions. Regulations. Many basic reforms are needed. The proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United States will firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights. Furthermore, natural persons who are eligible to vote shall have exclusive rights to support political campaigns with contributions and expenditures. Legal entities that are not eligible to vote shall have no rights to make campaign contributions or expenditures to influence elections or to support political campaigns of any kind. Just people. You and me. The proposed amendment and basic financial regulation will create a new political paradigm. You and I will be the voice of government through our non‑partisan representatives. The financial interests of the 99% will be served. More information about Rich can be found at http://cs2pr.us/Rich/issues.html#Issues Inside Page June-July Meeting - Revival!....... 2 Poem: on the roadway by paul j. cech........................................... 3 Things To Do, Things To See....... 4 Science Book Club....................... 4 In the News.................................. 5 Atheist Sexual Harassment: The god is in the Details by Herb Silverman.................................. 6 Pictures from FIG Annual Picnic.8 God Fixation Won't Fix This Nation - FfRF............................ 9 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think Are True by Guy P Harrison Book Review by Peter Boghossian.............................. 10 Events Sept. Meeting Tuesday, Sept. 25 at 7-9 pm Hannaford Suites Hotel Cincinnati, OH Oct. Meeting October FIG Meeting: Tuesday, October 30, 7‑9 PM at the Hannaford Suites Cincinnati A Brief History of Cincinnati Occulture Justin Moore For our October Meeting, Justin Moore will join us for a Halloween‑themed presentation exploring the history of the Occult in Cincinnati. Cincinnati, the Queen of the West, has long been known as a conservative city. Even born and bred Cincinnatians may think of our city more in terms of the Reds, Skyline Chili and Goetta while ignoring our contributions to literature, the fine arts, music and cultural life in general. On the other hand the people involved in the arts tend to be of a more liberal and bohemian character and it is this side of the city, with all its colorful cast and vibrant nightlife that is often forgotten. Even further removed from most people=s consciousness are the practitioners of The Art, or Magick as it has been called ‑spelled with a Ak@ to distinguish it from parlor tricks and illusionary. It encompasses areas of study such as Alchemy, Qabalah, Neoplatonism, Gnosticism and Hermeticism Tuesday, Oct. 30 at 7-9 pm Hannaford Suites Hotel Cincinnati, OH as well as Folk Cures and Witchcraft, all subjects shunned or deemed heretical by mainstream religion. However, many of the most interesting artists of the 20th century were influenced by occult philosophy and through their art it has seeped into the cultural background. Cincinnati has been home to a number of influential authors, artists and practitioners of the occult arts from the 1800=s to the 21st century. The talk will give an overview of these Masons, pagans, heathens, their influence and legacy. Fig Leaves June-July Meeting Revival! I am sometimes asked about what we do at our A atheist meetings.@ ADo you all sit around and say, =Yep, there=s no god=?@ Or, Ado you spend all your time bashing religion?@ I answer that we have educational programs and only occasionally bash religion. And when we do, we bring in a professional to do the job right! So it was that we held a ARevival@ at our last FIG meeting led by none other than Brother Sam Singleton, Atheist Evangelist. Brother Sam hails from the Ozark region of Missouri and knows all the intricate fallacies and foibles of the Pentecostal religions prevalent in that area. Revivals are held in churches, fields and probably swamps. Anywhere that people can be gathered to have their souls saved and fill the collection basket. Sam recreated the feeling of a lively revival through the use of organ music, singing, hand clapping and speaking in tongues. Fortunately no poisonous snakes were introduced into the service. Several FIG members were given speaking parts to contribute during this hilarious ceremony. Following a sing‑a‑long of ARye Whiskey@ was Sam=s Sunday School Class. The Sam Singleton version of the King James Bible, so abbreviated that it fits on one page, was the holy document used to tell the stories of biblical times. Sam deleted most of the bibledegook and all but the main characters. The four key concepts of the Singleton Bible are as follows: 1) AThe Bible may as well have taken place in Texas for all the sense it makes.@ This is obviously a tongue in cheek reference to a former President of the USA. 2) AThe Bible is unspeakably perverse. That=s why we speak of it.@ Genocide, incest and crazy rules that all carry the death penalty etc. 3) AGod could learn a lot from Satan but is insufficiently self aware.@ More genocide and incest with God inventing aliases to shift the blame. AThat wasn=t me that drowned all those people. I=m Jehovah, that was Yahweh!@ 4) AThe Old Testament is the story of humankind=s attempts to live with God=s mistakes.@ 5) AThe New Testament is the same old shit.@ The first half of the New Testament is about a failed carpenter called Jesus and his gang of followers. The second half is about Paul creating Christianity in his own misogynistic, homophobic, anti‑Semitic, paranoid image. He names himself the first evangelist and his legacy of hatreds and prejudices continues in Christianity today. 2 September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 FIG Leaves - Thoughtful articles, letters, reviews, reports, anecdotes, and cartoons are very welcome. Submit in Electronic format via the internet to figmessage at gofigger dot org; or on disk or typewritten via mail to Editor, FIG Leaves, P.O. Box 53174, Cincinnati, OH 45253. Contributions received before the first Friday of the month will be considered for publication that month. All material printed in FIG Leaves may be reproduced in similar publications of nonprofit groups which grant FIG Leaves reciprocal reprinting rights as long as proper credit is clearly attributed to FIG Leaves and the authors and do not necessarily reflect opinions of the editor or the Free Inquiry Group, Inc., its board, or officers. FIG Board of Directors: President: Shawn Jeffers Vice President: Chuck Byrd Secretary: Susan Davis Treasurer: Bryan Sellers, Librarian: Terry Kassnel Newsletter: Wolf Roder. PR: Michele Grinoch Social Media: Emily Mullen Webmaster: Dennis Davis Immediate Past President: John Welte Memberships run from: 1 January to 31 December. One year: $30 Family: $40 If you join during the year, you receive a $2 discount for each month that has passed. We request contributions above membership dues. Contributions are tax deductible. © copyright 2012 The Free Inquiry Group, Inc. Fig Leaves Brother Sam=s talk was interrupted several times when FIG members were Aslain in the spirit@ and began speaking in tongues, which sounded like Awalla walla walla.@ Cries of AGod Damn@ came from the crowd when the spirit moved the participants. Brother Sam related his personal story of evangelism. At a certain point he realized his religion was wrong in both senses of the word. It was untrue and immoral. Like many atheists he studied many religions before coming to the conclusion that they were all about the same. He read the Bible completely. That drove the last nail into the coffin of his religion. Brother Sam was now an atheist! Many FIG members were given parts to read during the testimony part of the program. On cue for the most part, we enthusiastically shouted our parts and spoke in tongues. AWalla walla walla!@ We praised Brother Sam instead of some fictional deity. Praising Brother Sam brought home one of the main points of his Asermon.@ In only one verse of the Bible is a person thanked by another human being. All the rest of the thanks go to God even when a human was deserving of another human=s gratitude. The only thing worse than not expressing gratitude when it is due, is thanking the wrong party. It is uncivilized. God gets thanked for random circumstances that prevent someone from experiencing calamity. Instead of thanking God for such Amiracles@ Brother Sam thanks an actual living person. Instead of thanking God when rescue or surgery is successful Brother Sam thanks the medical personnel that actually did something. Please express sincere gratitude to those who deserve thanks. It www.freeinquirygroup.org is the civilized Sam Singleton Atheist Evangelist thing to do. At the altar call, the two people who were not raised with religion were asked to come forward. Brother Sam gave each of them a rock and instructed them to place it in their shoe. He asked them to work it down in their shoe until their weight was on it. Before removing the rock he asked them to reflect how they would feel going through life with such an impediment. After removing it he asked them to reflect on how good it felt to be rid of that. APsalms 27 says, =And God was their rock.=@ Since our meeting, Brother Sam appeared in Chicago to speak in the prestigious Bughouse Square Debates. He won and was awarded the coveted Dill Pickle Award from the Newberry Library. This fulfilled a lifelong dream of Brother Sam= s; to speak on the same stage and win the same award as the famous atheist and orator Clarence Darrow. Congratulations Brother Sam! B reported by John Welte on the roadway on the roadway beneath a sign telling readers to follow jesus the carcass of a doe sparks divergent thoughts did it choose to follow jesus was it blinded by the light did it know the end was near did it repent within the waning darness of night paul j. cech revised august 24, 2012 September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 3 Fig Leaves Things to do.... Things to see... Upcoming Meetups Monday, September 17, 2012 6:30 PM Monthly Monday @ The Washington Platform Thursday, October 4, 2012 7:00 PM First Thursday @ The Hofbräuhaus Monday, October 15, 2012 6:30 PM Monthly Monday @ The Washington Platform Thursday, November 1, 2012 7:00 PM First Thursday @ The Hofbräuhaus Science Book Club 2012 Schedule, books, and dates All meetings are on 3rd Sunday of month at 2:30 pm except in June on 4th Sunday because Father=s Day falls on 3rd Sunday. All meetings at the Hamilton County downtown Public Library in room 3A except for April and May (room 3B) as noted below: September 16 C Thinking In Pictures : And Other Reports From My Life With Autism, Temple Grandin 2006 October 21 C Drama Of The Gifted Child : The Search For The True Self, Alice Miller 2008 November 18 C The Revenge Of Gaia: Earth's Climate In Crisis And The Fate Of Humanity, James Lovelock 2006 December 16 C How We Decide, Jonah Lehrer 2009 4 September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 The Center for Inquiry Institute and CFI—Indiana are proud to host a one‑day conference on Defending Science Challenges and Strategies featuring Rationally Speaking’s Julia Galef and Massimo Pigliucci! October 6, 2012, 9am‑5pm Indiana State Library 140 N. Senate Avenue Indianapolis, IN 46204 The team of Massimo Pigliucci and Julia Galef are coming to Indianapolis on Saturday, October 6, 2012. An episode for their podcast Rationally Speaking (www.rationallyspeakingpodcast.org) will be recorded during our institute. They will also give talks about the challenges and strategies needed for defending science today. Joining them to speak on the urgent need to defend science are researcher Jason Rodriguez and CFI=s John Shook. $60 for the public, $50 for Friends of the Center, $20 for students (valid student ID required) (Note: A lunch break will be provided for attendees to visit nearby restaurants) For more information about the CFI Institute, please visit our web site. Specific questions? Email our CFI Indiana Executive Director or contact a CFI Institute representative or call us at (716) 636‑4869 ext. 408 Directions to The Hannaford Suites Hotel 5900 East Galbraith Rd. 1) Take Exit 12 onto Montgomery Rd. 2) From the off Ramp at Exit 12: From the North Turn Left rd fo na tes n i OR From the South Ha Su N - Turn Right 3) Continue on Montgomery Rd. to East Galbraith Rd. Turn Left. 4) After you go under I-71, turn right into the Hotel Exit 12 driveway. www.gofigger.org Fig Leaves Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Light The Night Walk Help CFI Light the Night in the Fight Against Cancer We at the Center for Inquiry are proud to announce an exciting new project we=ve joined in which pro‑science and secular groups like CFI are uniting to raise $1,000,000 to fight cancer. Light the Night is the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society's evening walk and fundraising event to pay tribute and bring hope to people battling blood cancer. Each fall, in communities all across the US and Canada, thousands of participants raise funds for vital, lifesaving research and patient services and, on these special nights, they carry illuminated balloons to show the support of a caring community. Light the Night walkers raise funds and walk as individuals or on a team with friends, family and co‑workersCand this is where we need your help. This year, for the first time ever, freethought, atheist, skeptic, and secular humanist groups are coming together as one unified team to pool our efforts and become the first team in LLS history to raise $1,000,000 in its first year. Our team is Foundation Beyond Belief (FBB) and we need you to help this worthwhile cause by joining a local FBB Light the Night team. To find a team near you, go to the FBB International Team page and scroll down to the list of cities. (We already have many CFI FBB teams, so be sure to look for a CFI team in your city.) If there=s not an existing FBB team at a walk site near you, you can create a new team using the instructions found here. If there isn=t a Light the Night walk site near you, you can still join and raise money as a AVirtual Team.@ Donations from all the local FBB teams will be aggregated together under the FBB International Team and will count towards our $1,000,000 goal! How will we ever raise $1,000,000 ? A million dollars is a LOT of money, but we have a not‑so‑secret weapon: the Stiefel Freethought Foundation has pledged to match every dollar we raise www.freeinquirygroup.org up to $500,000! As an extra incentive, the top fundraising teams will have the opportunity to direct up to $5,000 in SFF grants, with half going to a local qualifying freethought nonprofit and the rest to qualifying FBB Allies of their choice, such as CFI. (More information about the incentive program can be found here.) This is a great opportunity to rally behind something big that reflects our shared values: the healing power of scientific research, education, and compassionate patient care. Please sign up for an existing team or create a walk team for your group under the FBB International Team banner and join all of us in the fight against cancer. Thank you! For more information, visit CFI's Light the Night page, and send questions to Lauren Becker at [email protected]. The Cincinnati Team for Light the Night is Skeptical Society of Cincinnati FBB (contact Colin Thornton) The walk is on October11, 2912 at Sawyer Point Their website is http://pages.lightthenight.org/soh/Cinci12/ SkepticalSocietyofCincinnatiFBB September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 5 Fig Leaves Atheist Sexual Harassment: The god is in the Details By Herb Silverman, The Washington Post, 9 August 2012 I= ve attended countless atheist and humanist conferences and never heard anyone justify sexual harassment. But I=ve heard heated discussions about what sexual harassment is. Alas, the god is in the details. In a previous century, when I first became active in the secular movement, participants were mostly old white men who sat around talking about the need for diversity. At an American Humanist Association board meeting in 1998, a fellow board member suggested that a Ayoung@ person of 53 would be a good candidate for the board. I said I hoped for the day when some current board members would be too young for AARP eligibility. That day has arrived. Almost all AHA board members are younger than I, a nice change from when I was the youngest, and many are years away from AARP. Five of the 12 board members and two of the four officers are women. Similar demographic changes have taken place within other national nontheistic organizations, reflected in part by the appearance of relatively new organizations like the children=s Camp Quest, the Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers, and the Secular Student Alliance. And with diversity in people comes diversity in attitudes and behavior. I think most atheists view themselves as feminists. There was a mild controversy when the Secular Coalition for America recently hired Edwina Rogers as our new executive director. The controversy was not because she is a woman (we and other nontheistic organizations have had a number of women in leadership positions), but because she is a Republican, a rarity in our movement. But that=s a diversity story for another time. Suffice it to say that most atheists were willing to grant Rogers the time and opportunity to show that she is an effective advocate for our mission, because we believe in evidence. Nontheistic organizations have long had sexual harassment policies that covered their employees and workplaces, but not conference attendees. This oversight is being corrected because of complaints from a number of attendees at such events, still often dominated by men. I don=t think women are saying that sexual harassment is more prevalent among atheists than in the general 6 September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 population, but our conventions need to be safe and welcoming places for women. Here are a couple of reasons I think we might have had problems or misunderstandings. Many unattached men and women complain about how difficult it is to find non‑religious partners in our religion‑saturated culture. So an atheist gathering could be a wonderful meeting place. Sexual attention is not inherently inappropriate in such settings, but Ano@ still means Ano.@ Also, many open and active atheists have developed thick skins because of insults they have endured from theocrats. So they might falsely assume they are communicating with someone whose skin is equally thick. Inexcusable behavior is inexcusable, which is why some sensitivity information for meeting participants might be in order. A billboard at 417 North James in Columbus, one of several put up by Freedom From Religion Foundation around Columbus, Ohio. The organization that placed the billboard supporting atheism says it has been taken down for the second time after eliciting a complaint, according to The Associated Press, Thursday, July 7, 2011. (AP Photo/Columbus Dispatch, Kyle Robertson, File) (AP) Context is almost everything. It=s not unusual to hear a man say at an atheist conference something like, AA woman should not teach or usurp authority over the man, but be silent.@ Both men and women laugh because they know it comes from 1 Timothy 2, and is actually believed by some Christians. Similarly, my wife laughs when I recite the only prayer she has ever heard from me: AThank God I was not born a woman.@ She knows it to be the daily morning prayer of Orthodox Jews, and she is thankful I=m not an Orthodox Jew like some of my relatives who recite this prayer in earnest. www.gofigger.org Fig Leaves Since sexual harassment is not always clear to both parties, what=s an atheist (or anyone else) to do? Here=s a general guideline to prevent escalation. If you are asked to stop, stop. Nontheistic groups are beginning to hand out anti‑harassment policies at gatherings or, more affirmatively, a conference code of conduct. This is a new code of conduct for American Atheist conferences. Interestingly, it mentions being dedicated to providing a harassment‑free conference experience for everyone, regardless of gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, or religion (italics mine). Depending on attendees, some might view several talks as a form of religious harassment. Both theists and nontheists know there are right ways and wrong ways to treat others. Some people just need reminders. Herb Silverman is the founder and president of the Secular Coalition for America . Quote What religious language can often do is allow us to get outside of ourselves and mobilize around a common good. On the other hand, what those of us of religious faith have to do when we=re in the public square is to translate our language into a universal language that can appeal to everybody. And both Lincoln and King www.freeinquirygroup.org did this and every great leader did it, because we are not just a Christian nation. We are a Jewish nation; we are a Buddhist nation; we are a Muslim nation; Hindu nation; and we are a nation of atheists and nonbelievers. B Barack Obama, 18 April 2008 Unquote September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 7 Fig Leaves Pictures from our Annual FIG Picnic Great Talk, Great Food, Great Weather! A Good Time Was Had by All! 8 September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 www.gofigger.org Fig Leaves In time for the Democratic National Convention, the Freedom from Religion Foundation (FfRF) has placed a patriotic message with a secular twist on two prominent billboards in Charlotte, NC. The billboard, drawn by editorial cartoonist Steve Benson, depicts Uncle Sam wagging his finger and warning: AGod fixation won=t fix this nation.@ Those traveling from the airport to the convention will be treated to a highly visible view of FfRF=s redwhite-and-blue message on a billboard on Interstate 77 and another near Charlotte=s downtown. The billboards, which FfRF refers to as an Aelection-year caveat,@ were scheduled to go up on August 30. AOur equal-opportunity message to both political parties and all public officials is: Get off your knees and get to work!@ said FfRF Co-President Dan Barker. AGod fixation, the preoccupation by our nation and its elected officials with religion, is holding back progress scientifically, intellectually and morally.@ FfRF put the same message up in Tampa on August 23 for the benefit of this year=s Republican convention. FfRF, a nonpartisan state/church watchdog group, is continuing a tradition started in 2008, when it placed a billboard message saying AKeep religion out of politics@ in Denver and Minneapolis for the national party conventions. FfRF spokeswoman Annie Laurie Gaylor cited as an example of the dangers of religion in politics and government the Apandering@ decision by both parties to give in to a request by the head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to deliver convention prayers. Cardinal Timothy Dolan gave the closing prayer for the Republicans and will also pray at the Democratic convention. AThe Catholic bishops are trying to unduly influence and interfere with U.S. politics, particularly by trying to www.freeinquirygroup.org kill the health care contraceptive mandate despite the fact that most American women are not Catholic and most Americans use and support contraception,@ Gaylor noted. AIt=s disturbing that both parties kowtow to Timothy Dolan.@ FfRF ran hundreds of TV commercials this summer in regional markets featuring actress and playwright Julia Sweeney, a well-known former Catholic, objecting to the bishops= anti-contraceptive attacks. The Madison, WI based group represents more than 19,000 freethinking members nationwide, including 485 members in North Carolina, and an active NC chapter, the Triangle Freethought Society. (The Separationist, Newsletter of the Secular Humanists of the Low Country, September 2012, p.7) September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 9 Fig Leaves BOOK REVIEW 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think are True. By Guy P. Harrison (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2012) review by Peter Boghossian Rarely has a skeptic gone to battle against nonsense with the warmth and humor found in 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think are True. Author Guy P. Harrison, an award‑winning journalist and long‑time advocate for science and reason, delivers a grand tour though the bizarre ecosystem of irrational beliefs and extraordinary claims. Harrison deftly and compellingly demonstrates how science and reality are preferable to superstition and delusion. Who needs make‑believe, he asks, when nature offers so much excitement and so many mysteries waiting to be solved? Readers will find first‑rate skeptical treatments of UFOs, psychics, ESP, Atlantis, Bigfoot, astrology, Nostradamus, the Moon landing hoax, Area 51, and other usual suspectsCbut they will also discover topics that are not as well considered by the skeptical community, but should be. For example, skeptical perspectives on biological race categories, and the race‑sports dynamicCcovered in the pages of Skeptic Magazine in the 1990s but not discussed recentlyCare thoughtful additions to the skeptical canon. Moreover, his arguments about how television news distorts our view of the real world, even for smart people who should know better, is yet another topic that further differentiates this book from the available literature. Add to this his analysis of how global warming is assessed as a political issue rather than a matter of science, and readers have a comprehensive, provocative tome that will captivate as it educates. Still another differentiating characteristic of 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think are True, is that it has the potential to make a lasting impression on those who harbor beliefs that are out of alignment with reality. Harrison genuinely attempts, and succeeds, at being gentle and sympathetic toward people who hold unwarranted beliefsCeven as he mercilessly and systematically annihilates justifications for the beliefs 10 September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 under examination. He articulates how we are all vulnerable to falling for bad ideas and misinterpreting reality due to the influence of culture and the way our brains routinely deceive us about reality. For example, Harrison explains how vision and memory can be misleading. He writes that human memory is not the biological version of a DVR playback system that most people imagine; memory is more like having a little old man who lives inside your head. When you want to remember something, you have to tap him on the shoulder and then listen to the creative tale he weaves about your past. And like most storytellers, the old man adds a bit here, subtracts a bit there, embellishes, distorts, and even lies in an attempt to deliver to you the best story possible. For an individual, however, memories can feel like a perfectly reliable replay of what happened, no matter how inaccurate they happen to be. All of this has obvious implications for UFO encounters, ghost sightings, psychic readings, and so on. But beyond this, Harrison helps people feel as if it was not their fault that they were unduly influenced and that this influence skewed the mechanism of belief formation; now that they are aware of influences that take them away from reality they can realign their beliefs on the basis of reliable evidence, and do so without shame, guilt or recrimination. Harrison=s gentle touch doesn=t mean he won=t play rough when it=s needed. Chapters on alternative medicine and the anti‑vaccine movement include scathing condemnations of those who promote medical quackery over evidence‑based healthcare at the expense of human lives. Through detailed examples, he explains the gravity of what=s at stake because of the tragedy of unreason. For example, Harrison reveals his understandable frustration and anger regarding the strange phenomenon of torturing and killing Awitches@ in the 21st century. From the abuse of Achild witches@ by Christians in Africa to the murder of Asorcerers@ in rural India by people who fear magic, he shows that humankind has not completely exited the Dark Ages. However, rather than simply state the obviousCthat killing people for being witches is tragically ignorant and morally repugnantCHarrison goes further to clearly explain how faith‑based thinking in all forms is non‑thinking and therefore risky. He shows how even believing in something that seems benign on the surface, such as Bigfoot or the Bermuda Triangle, is a www.gofigger.org Fig Leaves symptom of sloppy thinking that could lead one directly into the grip of a belief that=s pernicious or even fatal. Fortunately, Harrison does not sidestep religion. He pulls no punches in thorough skeptical assaults on prayer, prophecies, miracles, faith healing, angels, heaven, and gods. He avoids condescension toward believers, but provides the necessary brutal frankness regarding the weakness of their claims. Like any well‑versed skeptic, Harrison does not claim to disprove or to know that many of these misaligned beliefs are definitively false. Rather, he shows that a multiplicity of claims people believe as true do not have sufficient evidence to warrant belief. (His personal observations at a Benny Hinn faith healing spectacle are informative and highly entertaining. He also shares his own experience of being prayed for after a cycling accident and his encounter with a Aspirit guide@ during a vision quest). This is a book that both believers and skeptics should read. Many believers are likely to enjoy having Science Cafes are free monthly events that bring together scientists with their community to share stories about their research and discoveries. Cincinnati is home to many working scientists who are performing breakthrough studies in our own backyard, but these scientists rarely have a chance to speak about their amazing research to members of the community. Everyone is invited to attend, enjoy a dinner of fish and chips, drink a frosty lager, and learn about the wonders of scientific progress. How cool is that? Science Cafes generally follow the schedule: 6pm ‑ Dinner and Pre‑Talk Discussion 7pm ‑ Speaker (talks usually run 45 minutes‑1 hour) 8pm ‑ Q&A, Trivia, Prizes and Speaker Meet & Greet Feel free to join us for all or part of the event. The ACincy Science Cafe@ will always encourage our speakers to allow plenty of time for questions and answers. The organizers want these events to be a conversation, and not a lecture. We often save time for fun trivia and correct answers are awarded door prizes! ACincy Science Cafe@ is put on by The Skeptical Society of Cincinnati, a member of the NOVA ScienceNOW network. We also are partnering with University of Cincinnati=s Sigma Xi organization, the Free Inquiry Group, and the Association of Rational Thought to bring these events to the Cincinnati Area. www.freeinquirygroup.org their beliefs challenged in this often gentle and always thoughtful way. Seasoned skeptics will find plenty of fresh information and new ways to approach conversations with believers. Readers will also appreciate his vigorous defense of the skeptical worldview, in particular how it protects one from harm and frees one up from empty distractions in order to live life more fully. Finally, numerous interviews with prominent scientists and notable people add to the book=s comprehensiveness. Each chapter ends with a useful list of recommended books, documentaries, and Web sites related to the particular topic of that chapter. 50 Popular Beliefs That People Think are True also includes humorous cartoon illustrations, as well as some photographs and statistical illustrations. It is an ideal text for an introductory Science and Pseudoscience or Critical Thinking course. It is clear, comprehensive, non‑threatening yet thought provoking while remaining accessible. It=s also a much welcomed and needed addition to every skeptic=s reading list. Please Let Us Have Your E-Mail Address! Whenever we send out an E-mail, several rejections are returned. If you want to stay in touch with FIG, please make sure we have your correct and up-to-date E-mail address. We also need your current snail mail address. To confirm your E-mail and Snail-mail address if it has changed, please send an E-mail to Brian Sellers at [email protected]. FIG Accepting Credit Card/PayPal Donations FIG now can accept donations online through PayPal ‑ pay with your credit card or PayPal account. A link for a PayPal donation is available on www. gofigger.org. OR You can also donate online by using this web address ‑ http://tinyurl.com/3dtvpp4 OR You can also find the information on our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/gofigger. September 2012 Vol. 21 #8 11 October FIG Meeting September FIG Meeting Tuesday Oct. 30 7-9 pm Hannaford Suites Hotel Tuesday Sept 25, 7-9 pm Hannaford Suites Hotel If you have a Facebook account, become a Fan of FIG. To join you can type in this long weblink: http:// www.facebook.com/#!/pages/ Cincinnati-OH/FIG-Free-InquiryGroup-of-Cincinnati-and-NorthernKentucky/306015475868 or it is much easier to search for “Free Inquiry Group” and find it the first option on the search page. By being a Fan you can receive FIG updates and meeting notices and RSVP for events such as the monthly FIG Community Dinners. FIG Is On Facebook FIG Leaves P.O. Box 53174 Cincinnati, OH 45253 FIG The Free Inquiry Group, Inc. (FIG) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1991. FIG is allied with the Council for Secular Humanism as well as an affiliate of the American Humanist Association and of the American Atheists. Though most of our members are secular humanists, we welcome to our meetings anyone interested in learning about or furthering our purpose. Our Purpose To foster a community of secular humanists dedicated to improving the human condition through rational inquiry and creative thinking unfettered by superstition, religion, or any form of dogma. In accordance with our purpose, we have established the following goals: • To provide a forum for intelligent exchange of ideas for those seeking fulfillment in an ethical secular life. • To develop through open discussion the moral basis of a secular society and encourage ethical practices within our own membership and the community at large. • To inform the public regarding secular alternatives to supernatural interpretations of the human condition. • To support and defend the principles of democracy, free speech, and separation of church and state as expressed in the Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Rights. For more information, write the Free Inquiry Group at the address above, e-mail - figmessage at gofigger dot org, or visit our web site at gofigger.org or freeinquirygroup.org.