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November, 2008
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Religion -
General
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Posted by Wayne de Villiers
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Wednesday, 11 February 2009 |
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Creationism is not the only enemy of science in today’s classroom. Within the self proclaimed “fastest growing school movement in the world”, Steiner Waldorf schools foster their belief system with a deception which is quite chilling.
Anthroposophy - the word is not even in the dictionary, and my spell-checker is foxed by it - the pseudo religion/science which lies at the heart of Steiner education (and also biodynamic agriculture, anthroposophical medicine, and cosmetics - Weleda and Dr. Hauschka) is the guiding force within these classrooms, and yet in the schools the word is barely heard, let alone explained. Schools are cagey and evasive at the mere mention of the word, and swiftly move on. It is deliberately buried. This is a religion which recruits by intentionally not setting out its beliefs. Surely this is the behaviour of a cult? Most people think of Steiner schools as gentle places - a creative pedagogy, where every toy is wooden, and phrases like “free to learn” and “natural” are used with abandon. Only occasionally do their more ludicrous beliefs get a mention: the supernatural, the occult, belief in karma, demons, angels, Atlantis, medieval temperaments, spirit worlds, astral forces and… gnomes! The schools routinely champion themselves as a radical alternative to the mainstream, their websites drawing people in with vague and general terminology and gushingly self-congratulatory advertisements for Steiner and the movement. But they invariably make one huge omission: that “anthroposophy” guides their every move, and that anthroposophy’s central tenet is “racial hierarchies”. |
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Religion -
Atheism
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Posted by Wayne de Villiers
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Monday, 12 January 2009 |
There's surely something very strange about asking the Advertising Standards Authority whether there is a God or not. Under the direction of Lord (Chris) Smith, the former publishing director of Hello! magazine, the managing director of Boots Opticians, the Poet Laureate and other members of the ASA council are being asked to rule on a question which has occupied philosophers for centuries. The only member of the board who, I think, has any claim of expertise in the area is one Gareth Jones, the professor of Christian Theology at Canterbury Christ Church University. He must feel that his day has finally arrived.
To recapitulate: some months ago, a humanist comedian, Ariane Sherine, proposed an advertising campaign promoting atheism. Some influential supporters, including Richard Dawkins and the British Humanist Association, took her up on it. A proposed advert was submitted to the ASA: it insisted, reportedly, on a qualifying adverb. And the following sentiment went up on the sides of London buses: "There's probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life."
It's absurd of the ASA to have insisted on the word "probably". Imagine the uproar if it became a legal requirement to insert qualifications in religious statements – "God Probably Loves You." We accept statements of faith for what they are. Only the most pointless sophistry would say that scepticism about religion needs to be treated differently. Intellectual atheists may say that they are merely awaiting the proof which would overturn their assumptions, but few of us are actively holding our breath here. "There Is No God" would have done perfectly well.
Enter one of this column's favourite comic characters, Mr Stephen Green of the extremist group Christian Voice. Even the revised version of the slogan is not acceptable to him, and he has complained to the ASA. "I believe," Mr Green said, "the ad breaks the Advertising Code anyway, unless the advertisers hold evidence that God probably does not exist." Brilliant! |
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Science -
General
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Posted by Wayne de Villiers
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Thursday, 08 January 2009 |
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# 10 .... Goosebumps
Humans get goose bumps when they are cold, frightened, angry, or in awe. Many other creatures get goose bumps for the same reason, for example this is why a cat or dog’s hair stands on end and the cause behind a porcupine’s quills raising. In cold situations, the rising hair traps air between the hairs and skin, creating insulation and warmth. In response to fear, goose bumps make an animal appear larger - hopefully scaring away the enemy. Humans no longer benefit from goose bumps and they are simply left over from our past when we were not clothed and needed to scare our own natural enemies. Natural selection removed the thick hair but left behind the mechanism for controlling it. #9 Jacobson’s Organ Jacobson’s organ is a fascinating part of animal anatomy and it tells us a lot about our own sexual history. The organ is in the nose and it is a special “smell” organ which detects pheromones (the chemical that triggers sexual desire, alarm, or information about food trails). It is this organ that allows some animals to track others for sex and to know of potential dangers. Humans are born with the Jacobson’s organ, but in early development its abilities dwindle to a point that it is useless. Once upon a time, humans would have used this organ to locate mates when communication was not possible. Single’s evenings, chat rooms, and bars have now taken its place in the process of human mate-seeking. #8 Junk DNA While many of the hangovers from our “devolved” past are visible or physical, this is not true for all. Humans have structures in their genetic make-up that were once used to produces enzymes to process vitamin C (it is called L-gulonolactone oxidase). Most other animals have this functioning DNA but at some point in our history, a mutation disbled the gene - whilst leaving behind its remnants as junk DNA. This particular junk DNA indicates a common ancestry with other species on earth, so it is particularly interesting. |
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Religion -
General
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Posted by Wayne de Villiers
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Friday, 02 January 2009 |
For the first time in 80 years the Vatican will from tomorrow stop automatically adopting Italian laws because of potential “anti-Catholic” legislation. Amid fears of new laws on euthanasia and gay marriage, the Vatican’s legal chief said that the rupture was due to growing contrast between Italian civil legislation and ”the irreversible principles of the Church”. According to the L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican daily, Monsignor Jose’ Maria Serrano Ruiz, head of the Vatican State Court of Appeal and president of the Commission for the Revision of the Code of Vatican Law, said the move was also motivated by the ”exorbitant number” of Italian laws, as well as their ”instability”. It also however had to do with the growing contrast between Italian civil legislation and ''the irreversible principles of the Church'', Monsignor Serrano Ruiz said. Under the Lateran Treaty of 1929 between Italy and the Vatican, signed by the then Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and Cardinal Pietro Gasparri, the Vatican Secretary of State, Italian laws are automatically incorporated into the Vatican legal code. |
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Religion -
Atheism
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Posted by Wayne de Villiers
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Tuesday, 09 December 2008 |
How a conservative commentator created the movement’s favorite holiday season outrage.
What would Christmas be without warnings of the secular crusade to destroy it? Thanks to the fulminations of cable news cranks and evangelical moralists, the War on Christmas has become an annual outrage. The story typically goes as follows: secular elements have intimidated stores into replacing the phrase “Merry Christmas” with “Happy Holidays;” nativity scenes have been removed from public spaces under threat of ACLU lawsuits; a decadent culture is moving ever closer to eradicating Christian morality; and America slouches towards Gomorrah.
Judging from the panicked tone of movement conservatives, this year’s War on Christmas campaign threatens the country’s moral fiber more than ever. According to The Wall Street Journal’s Daniel Henninger, the secular Grinch has claimed the economy as its latest casualty. “A nation whose people can't say 'Merry Christmas' is a nation capable of ruining its own economy,” he fumed on November 20. Having laid off 20 percent of its staff the day after Election Day, Christian right mega-ministry Focus on the Family declared “Merry Tossmas” imploring its supporters to toss out holiday season product catalogs that wish shoppers “Happy Holidays.” (The 201 freshly unemployed staffers might have more practical reasons to trash their catalogs.) |
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Religion -
Atheism
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Posted by Wayne de Villiers
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Monday, 08 December 2008 |
There is a song of Bob Dylan's, Highway 61 Revisited, that conjures up a little bit of black comedy in a dialogue that pretty much characterises the God of the Old Testament:
God said to Abraham, "Kill me a son" Abe said, "Man, you must be puttin' me on" God said "No," Abe said "What?" God said, "You can do what you wanna but The next time you see me comin' you better run" Abe said, "Where d'you want this killin' done?"
Here is the Jehovah or Yahweh who demanded that we "fear" him -- and he didn't just mean treat him with respect, as his words are often glossed. No, he really wanted people to be afraid of him. He was a jealous god; he spent a lot of the Old Testament smiting his enemies and those in his chosen people's Lebensraum. Smite, smite, smite! In the first few books of the Bible several hundred thousand non-Israelites get wiped out, on God's orders, in what can only be called ethnic cleansing.
This is Yahweh, whom I like to call Yod. Of course, by the time we get to the New Testament, he's a god of love -- him and Barry White. Amazing what having a son and then sending him to earth to get tortured to death can do for your emotional life. You do less smiting! But the interested reader would have to investigate books such as Jack Miles's brilliant pair, God: A Biography and Christ: A Crisis in the Life of God, or Karen Armstrong's excellent A History of God, to find out how that transition in God's personality takes place. |
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