Professor Ceiling Cat and others at the Aspen Ideas Festival

June 21, 2015 • 1:30 pm

My Big Road Trip is actually beginning with a professional gig at the Aspen Ideas Festival. This appearance involves an hourlong discussion with Eliot Gerson, executive VP of the Institute, about my book Faith versus Fact. It will take place on Friday, July 3, in the Lauder Room of the Koch Building in Aspen, Colorado. That will be followed by a book signing at the venue. I believe there’s another signing at 4 p.m. the same day at the Festival bookstore.

I’ll be participating in Festival 2, one of whose themes is “Faith, Conflict, and the Future of Religion”.  I’m not sure who else will be speaking in that track, but I see from the list of speakers three possible candidates: Karen Armstrong, Reza Aslan, and Ayaan Hirsi Ali, and I also suspect that all three of these, and perhaps one more person, will be on a panel about the effects of faith. I just noticed that Richard Dawkins will also be there, so perhaps he’ll be the fourth. Now that would be a panel!

I don’t care about meeting the unctuous Armstrong or the mendacious Aslan, but I’d love to meet Hirsi Ali, as she’s a hero of mine. Reports will follow.

Faith v. Fact: Audiobooks and recent broadcasts

June 16, 2015 • 10:45 am

I have four business items—the announcement of an audiobook and three broadcasts.

First, I’ve signed a contract that will make Faith Versus Fact into an audiobook. For those of you who prefer listening, you will eventually have it on CD (or however they do these things; I’ve never listened to an audiobook). Someone told me that most audiobooks are abridged; I have no idea whether that’s true, or whether mine will be.

Second, an audio transcript of my appearance on last Friday’s Brian Lehrer show is available here.  Lehrer did ask a rather invidious question at the end, but I deflected it.

Also, my 17-minute interview on Sunday’s Left Jab Radio is also archived here. The interviewer was remarkably sympathetic, though I see that I need to work on saying “you know” less often!

Finally, for Canadian readers, you can catch my television appearance on Steve Paikin’s The Agenda tonight on TVO; the show starts at 8 pm and is repeated at 11 pm (presumably Toronto time). I’m not sure when I come on, but our one-on-one chat lasted about 25 minutes. I’ll put up a link later when it’s archived.) One reader informs me that based on the ordering in the show’s schedule, I may go first.

As lagniappe (?), here are a few more photos of my trip to Canada.

First, here are the speakers and organizers of the INR5 conference in Vancouver. I won’t list the names; you’ll surely recognize some of them. I believe the photo was taken by Melissa Chen and circulated by Vyckie Garrison, who’s in the front row with a drink. I will point out the two main organizers: Bill and Kathy Ligertwood: Bill’s second from right in the front row, and Kathy is slightly crouched down in front of him, her hands on the shoulders of Tom Melchiorre, a key person in the meeting’s logistics. Lawrence Krauss and Seth Andrews had departed before the photo was taken.

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I chat with Eric Adriaans, the new head of the Centre for Inquiry, Canada, in the CfI offices (the two photos below are from Mark Taylor). He kindly gave me a copy of the Charlie Hebdo that came out after the terrorist attack—the issue with the weeping Muhammad on the cover. It’s a collector’s item now.

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Buy the damn book, already!

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Publicity: I espouse nonbelief in National Geographic, and a podcast with Godless Spellchecker

June 1, 2015 • 11:40 am

The round of books and articles connected with Faith versus Fact continues, and I’ll highlight some reviews later as they come in. I recognize that readers may not want to look at all this book-related stuff, as some of it is repetitive, but I’m putting the links here for those who wish to know what is posted.

A while back, National Geographic kindly interviewed me for their “Book Talk” section, and has just posted my Q&A in an article called “In age of science, is religion ‘harmful superstition’?” I was grateful to appear in its pages, as this is not traditionally the kind of thing that National Geographic handles. But remember when you read it that it is the unedited transcript of a phone conversation, which explains why my answers aren’t in perfect prose. (Of course, they would have been were I Steve Pinker!) Here’s a bit of the Q&A (I’ve asked them to correct the spelling of T. S. Eliot):

Do you have a spiritual life? If so, what does it look like?

Spiritual is an amorphous term. I study evolution and every day I read something that strikes me as amazingly wonderful. If you call that spiritual, then, yeah, I’m spiritual. Richard Dawkins says the same thing. Spirituality can run the gamut from amazement at nature to a feeling that there’s something beyond the material universe.

But I don’t like the use of the word “spiritual” unless you define it clearly. I am spiritual in the sense that I have this awe and wonder before nature. I love James Joyce and T.S. Elliott, I’m moved by Dylan Thomas. It doesn’t have anything to do with God. It has to do with a commonality of feeling prompted by nature and the arts. So I prefer to use the word humanist rather than spiritual. The minute you say you’re spiritual, people automatically start thinking you’re religious.

*******

And Stephen Knight, aka “Godless Spellchecker,” had an hourlong conversation with me about the book—but also about other stuff, notably the idea of “trigger warnings,” whose discussion is at the end of the podcast.

Godless Spellchecker’s website is here; you may remember this blogger and podcaster as one of the people who exposed C. J. Werleman as a serial plagiarist (see here and here)—a fine piece of detective work.

 

 

Book talk: Politics and Prose

May 28, 2015 • 3:59 pm

Jason Rosenhouse said he’d publish a report on his Evolution Blog about my talk last night at Politics and Prose in Washington, D. C. His report will surely be more objective than mine, but I thought I’d put up a few photographs of the event taken by reader Brian D. Engler, and a few thoughts.

Politics and Prose is a very famous independent bookstore on Connecticut Avenue in Washington, and has lots of book events, many with well-known authors (Ralph Nader spoke the night before I did, and apparently people are still chewing him out for taking away Democratic votes!). It’s a lovely store and they set up chairs and a lectern (and book-signing table) in the rear of the store.

I talked for half an hour without slides, speaking for about 15 minutes about how the book came about, what I discovered in my adventures in reading theology, and then gave a brief precis of what the book was about. You can see the setup below, showing about 30-40% of the audience. I was gratified that so many people were interested in the topic.  The bookstore moderators and workers were very gracious, and they know how to run an event (the woman in charge, whose name I’ve unfortunately forgotten, is sitting in the chair at the left background).

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I was quite exercised at times, though I hope not strident. The audience seemed attentive, and was more of a “choir” than the audience at my talk at Chicago’s University Club. But they were by no means all in favor of what I said. In the Q&A, several people wanted to talk at length, not so much to ask questions as to reprove me for my thesis. The rabbi I mentioned earlier said that he could still be a rabbi and not teach anything supernatural, but that he taught instead about morality and meaning. He added that if I understood Judaism better I would understand how to find spiritual truth. I wasn’t clear what, exactly, he was trying to say, but rather than battle with him, I just said that if he could help people without invoking divine beings then that was fine with me. He added, though that he could also discern religious “truths” through faith alone. I asked him to name one. He couldn’t really, and perhaps I should have said that he wasn’t really a supernaturalist but a secular humanist. At any rate, his long tirade (not a question; I must learn to tell people to ask questions rather than bloviate at length) seemed aimed at telling me that if I were a better Jew, I would learn that faith could bring truth. I could have engaged him further, but there were people in line (many of them) with real questions, and so I ended that discussion.

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One woman, a nurse, also wanted to speak at length without having a question. She said that she couldn’t go to work every day without having faith that she was helping people, and also that some people were sustained by faith in their time of need. Finally, she said that she knew that prayer and faith had cured several of her patients. My response (she was quite exercised) was that her “faith” was really “confidence based on experience in her own abilities and in medical care”; that yes, people’s faith could make them feel less anxious; but that studies had shown no value whatsoever in either faith healing or prayer in helping people get better. I told her to read about those studies in my book.

Several people seemed to conflate religious faith with other kinds of faith. One person asserted confidently that when he reads a science book, he has the same kind of faith in the scientist that he does when listening to a preacher or reading scripture. Ergo, he said science is based on faith. I told him that I discuss exactly this question in the book, and that the “faith” we have in popular science writers like Brian Greene, Richard Dawkins, Lisa Randall, Brian Cox, and so on is not the same as believers have in clerics: those scientists have attained renown because their work has been continually vetted by other scientists. It seems to be a common misconception that faith in what a scientist or doctor says is exactly the same kind of faith that believers have in their priest. The difference, of course, is that there is no way for the pronunciations of  a cleric to be checked and verified reliably by other clerics. (Or, if they were, they’re likely to be repudiated: imagine an imam pronouncing on the validity of what the Pope says!). I wrote an article in Slate on this very issue (part of which appears in my book), and I hope people can think harder about the different meanings of the word “faith.”

Perhaps one of the most common criticisms of science by believers, then, is that, like religion, it is based on faith. I interpret this to mean, “You are as bad as we are.”

I enjoyed chatting with many people at the book signing (about half said “Maru” and asked for a cat drawn in, so I know I have lots of readers whom I haven’t met). Many were also nonbelievers (i.e., the “choir”), and thanked me for the book or my website. One guy brought a laminated picture of his cats (he once had eleven) and gave it to me, which was sweet; and a woman gave me a CD she made which, I believe, contains music or art based on the fossil record. I spoke to several people as well who were “closet” atheists, groping to find a way to become more public.  I always tell them to take their time, that nobody will force them to declare their atheism. Several of them faced ostracism from friends and family if they declared their unbelief. I could see that they were very distressed about this, and I thanked Ceiling Cat that I never had to face that problem.

The book-signing:

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Someone told me the other day that the work that we’re doing as secularists may not bear fruit for decades in America, and I think that’s right. We won’t see an America anything like Sweden in our lifetimes. Speaking with another reader after the signing, I told him that sometimes I felt like a workman on a Gothic cathedral—someone who knows that the edifice on which he’s working will never be completed in his lifetime, that he’ll never see the final splendor of Chartres or Notre Dame. That is a bit depressing, because we won’t be around to see a wholly secular America, and we certainly won’t see it from Heaven! But I am convinced that one day it (I mean the secular America, not Heaven) will come.

My Five Books interview: recommendations for books dealing with the incompatibility of science and religion

May 22, 2015 • 8:18 am

When WEIT came out, I was interviewed by Sophie Roell of the “Five Books” section of The Browser.  Then was asked to choose five “popular” books about evolution that people could read if they wanted to learn about my branch of science. That interview (a transcription of a phone conversation, so the language is informal) is here.  It proved quite popular on the site, and I was pleased because Sophie is a terrific interviewer and asked good questions. (Unlike many interviewers, she actually read the books—all five of them—plus WEIT).

Now, six years on, Sophie interviewed me again on the occasion of the publication of FvF. This time I was asked to choose and discuss five books about the incompatibility of science and religion—books that could be useful to the average educated reader. I didn’t choose accommodationist books, for that wasn’t my brief.

This morning, our discussion, “Jerry Coyne on the incompatibility of religion and science was published on Five Books. I won’t list the books here, or reprise what I said about them, for you can read that at the site.

Although this is a done deal, if you think I omitted relevant books (remember, I was limited to five), do place a comment below. And remember, this is the transcription of a phone call, so it’s a conversation and not perfectly publishable prose. (Were I Steve Pinker, they’d be equivalent!)

 

Upcoming book-related events and talks

May 20, 2015 • 10:30 am

Please excuse a bit of self-promotion: there will be an inordinate number of book-related announcements this week, just to keep people up to date.  This is a list of upcoming events, and I’ll add others when they materialize:

Thursday, May 21: Tomorrow I’ll be speaking at noon at the spiffy University Club of Chicago (76 E. Monroe St.). I believe tickets are $25, but that includes lunch. You can get more information at (312) 726-2840. There will be a book signing, I believe. The magic word to get a cat drawn in your book, as it will be for this whole series of talks, is “Maru.”

Friday, May 22: In two days I’ll be doing a reddit AMA (“Ask me anything”) event from 1 p.m. to at least 3 p.m. Eastern Time, and it may go on longer. You can post questions (in advance) or observe the goings-on here. The occasion of the conversation is the book, but the theme is, of course, that every issue is fair game. It’s your chance to ask about evolution, religion, or anything else; I’ll do my best to answer the substantive questions. (Don’t ask about boots!)

Wednesday, May 27: I’ll be giving a short (20-30 min) talk about the genesis of my book (excuse the pun) and a precis of the contents at the famous Politics & Prose bookstore in Washington D.C. The event (details here) is at 7 p.m., and there will be both a Q&A and a book-signing afterwards.

Sunday, June 7: I’ll be speaking at 10 a.m. at the Imagine No Religion 5 meeting in Vancouver (june 5-7), sandwiched between Harriet Hall and Lawrence Krauss. My topic won’t be science vs. religion, but “You don’t have free will.” The conference has a terrific line-up, with lots of science, but unfortunately the tickets are sold out and the waitlist is closed. Faith vs. Fact will be on sale, and I’ll be glad to sign it.

Wednesday, June 10: The Centre for Inquiry Canada is sponsoring a book talk in Toronto at 7:30 p.m.  Information is here; there will be a Q&A after the talk and then a book-signing (“Maru”).

And two pictures sent by readers. First, the book in Montreal, as a staff selection!:

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And in the “new releases” section of Powell’s in Portland, the hippest bookstore around. I’m right beneath Underwater Babies!

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