Readers’ wildlife photographs

November 19, 2015 • 7:30 am

Today we have a set of diverse photos from reader Susan Heller, along with her notes (indented):

Here are a few pix from the San Diego area in California for you, showing some of the things I’ve run into in recent years.

A Bighorn Sheep [Ovis canadensis] in the Anza Borrego Desert.  There’s a canyon there where you are guaranteed to see them.  Last time I was there I watched 16—a couple of rams, 6 females and 6 babies—make their way across a bouldery hillside. They are so nimble!

Borrego

The little possum [Didelphis virginiana] showed up on a lawn behind my house, so I left him there thinking his mother would return. Two hours later I found him in my house!  So I took him to a possum rescue lady in Valley Center, who told me he needed a couple more weeks of bottle feeding and she’d take him on.  She graduates them from her house to a pen where they can practice digging for food, before she releases them.

IMG_0014b

The huge crab (?) spider lived on a rosebush in my front yard for a long time.  I don’t know spiders, so I’m guessing what he was.

IMG_0728

The long-eared owls (Asio otus) appeared in a small flock in a camp ground in the Anza Borrego desert a few years ago.  They hung around for a couple weeks, then disappeared and we haven’t seen them since.  The dimorphism is wonderful!
IMG_3610

The lazy raccoon [Procyon lotor] eating dog food lives under my sister’s deck: it’s one of several mothers who raise litters there, and last time I visited she had five babies with her.

IMG_4098

The Allen’s Hummingbird [Selasphorus sasin] has been a resident in my backyard all summer; it’s interesting that Allen’s seems to be nudging the Anna Hummingbird out of the area. This one is a feisty little guy, guarding his feeder with twittering attacks on the interlopers, who are often house sparrows (how they learned to slurp up the sugarwater is beyond me. No one else has this problem here but me – and the Allen’s).

IMG_8321b

Burrowing Owl [Athne cunicularia] from the Salton Sea area.

IMG_8862b_1

My old moggie, Shelly.  I got him as a rescue cat when he was 8 years old and it took him several years to calm down (the scars on my arms attest to this). That’s why he’s included here in ‘wildlife.’ He was a great kitty, and lived to 20.

Shelley 12-2006

Correction of earlier post

November 19, 2015 • 6:24 am

On Tuesday I published a satirical dialogue between a Westerner and a jihadist, “I am a jihadist and I am tired of not being given credit,” that appeared on Faisal Saeed Al-Mutar’s website and his Facebook page. As there was no attribution, I assumed that he had written it. However, as Hemant Mehta at The Friendly Atheist noted, it was not Faisal’s work, but that of Joseph Rosenthal.

Joseph R. wrote it, sent it to Faisal, who then posted it online without attribution. Faisal tells me Joseph gave him permission to do that, but it should be noted that Joseph wrote it, not Faisal. I have contacted Joseph to verify this. Faisal has since updated his Facebook post to include the attribution.

I have no idea why this was posted without attribution, leading several of us to give Faisal credit for it, but the issue now stands corrected.

Thursday: Hili dialogue

November 19, 2015 • 5:03 am

Well, it’s getting colder as the northern Hemisphere winter approaches, but my email bulletin from CNN warns that our warm fall, which was very noticeable in Chicago, is a harbinger of global warming:

October 2015 was the warmest October on record and the warmest month ever recorded relative to the month’s average temperature, a new NOAA report says. It was the sixth straight month setting a global temperature record.

The temperatures got a boost this year from what may end up being the strongest El Nino ever recorded reaching its peak. El Nino, which is characterized by warming of ocean waters in the tropical Pacific Ocean, is helping to drive global temperatures upward this year, but El Nino cannot fully account for the warming. The overall trend continues to climb higher thanks largely to man-made climate change and greenhouse gas emissions.

But as the winter approaches in Dobrzyn, I’m told that both Hili and Cyrus are putting on their winter weight, and you can certainly see that in the photograph below! As Malgorzata says, “They are eating too much and moving too little,” and I’m informed that Hili managed to purloin the ham out of Andrzej’s sandwich yesterday—while he was holding it!

Hili: We both need to exercise more.
Cyrus: That’s true.
Hili: But do we really feel like it?

P1030610
In Polish:
Hili: Oboje potrzebujemy więcej ruchu.
Cyrus: To prawda.
Hili: Ale czy nam się chce?

 

The aliens are here

November 18, 2015 • 3:07 pm

by Matthew Cobb

This video is ABSOLUTELY REAL.

It is a stop motion video of a very weird fungus, Clathrus archeri, which is known as Devil’s Fingers. It was filmed in the UK and posted on YouTube by jwentomologist. According to Kew Gardens:

Clathrus archeri is native to Australia and New Zealand, and has been introduced elsewhere. It is now present in parts of Europe, where it was first recorded in 1914 in France, apparently introduced with military supplies at the start of the First World War. It is also found in North America, especially in California, where it was first reported in 1982 and considered to have been introduced with exotic plants.

It was first found in Britain at Penzance in Cornwall and later was found to be established in parts of Sussex. Since then it has been found in Bedfordshire, Hampshire, Kent, Suffolk, Surrey, and the Channel Islands, and is apparently slowly expanding its distribution.

The genus Clathrus differs from Phallus in having either a lattice-like fruitbody or tentacle-like arms rather than a single stem on which the gleba (fertile tissue) is produced. Clathrus species are commonly known as ‘cage fungi’, as many of them are lattice-like in form and lack free arms.

Clathrus archeri is a distinctive fungus, developing from a gelatinous egg stage, and almost squid-like in form, with a short stalk-like base and reddish spore-bearing arms.

The egg-stage is ovoid in shape and 4 – 6 cm high by 2 – 4 cm wide. The surface is whitish and soon becomes marked with furrows which outline the arms. The endoperidium (inner layer of fruitbody wall) is greenish-brown and gelatinous. The gleba (spore-bearing tissue) is olive-brown, blackish at maturity, mucilaginous (sticky), and borne on the inner face of the arms. The receptacle has a short, hollow stem 3 – 6 cm high and 1 – 3 cm wide and is pale below and pinkish above. It has four to eight slender, pointed, chambered, pink to reddish arms each 5 – 10 cm long. These are joined at the tip at first, but soon break free, spreading and drooping. The spore mass is olive-brown.

Anyone who’s come across one of these things in the wild, chip in below. I still think it looks like an alien. Mind you, what would I know? What do aliens look like? How would we know? What is ‘knowing” when it comes to aliens. etc etc etc.

And now for something completely different

November 18, 2015 • 2:15 pm

by Grania

We all know two truths about the internet; one, it was invented by Al Gore and two, it was created to post cat pictures.

However, there can be an educational or cultural element to posting cute cat pictures on Twitter, as Emily Steiner shows. She’s a Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania, and because her interest is medieval literature, she knows where to go to find these gems:

 

 

 

(Click the white button to animate the one below if it doesn’t play automatically in your browser; it’s a nice animation for a tw**t!)

Cats, it would seem, never change.

And now I am ful slepy.

Halloween-costume fracas spreads to my university

November 18, 2015 • 1:00 pm

Well, Halloween is long gone, but the issue of costumes, of cultural appropriation and of offense continues, and is now a big topic in the student newspaper, The Chicago Maroon. A new article, “Apology sparks discussion on role of admin in Halloween costumes,” describes what happens when one student (yes, a single student) wore a Halloween costume meant to resemble a “cholo”. Not knowing what a cholo is, I looked it up and found this:

From Urban Dictionary:

A cholo is term implying a Hispanic male that typically dresses in chinos (khahki pants), a wifebeater sleeveless teeshirt or a flannel shirt with only the top buttoned, a hairnet, or with a bandana around the forehead, usually halfway down over the eyes. Cholos often have black ink tattoos, commonly involving Catholic imagery, or calligraphy messages or family names.

Cholos often drive low riders.

A farcical example of a cholo from the movies is Cheech, from Cheech and Chong.
A first year student named as Parker Groves dressed as a cholo for Halloween, attending a University student function:

On October 30, the Council on University Programming (COUP) held “Boos n’ Ribs,” a Halloween-themed version of its annual live music and food festival, in Ida Noyes Hall. The event also featured a costume contest. Groves, who said that a friend asked him if he wanted to go to Boos n’ Ribs right before it started, hastily chose to wear a bandanna and a plaid shirt, with only the top button buttoned.

He said that the design was inspired by Stand and Deliver, a 1988 drama film about Hispanic high school students in Los Angeles who overcome disadvantaged backgrounds to learn advanced mathematics. Groves, who identifies as White, added that he did not know that the costume would offend; prior to coming to college, he had worked at a Taco Bell near his hometown in Colorado, where he said that the “cholo” stereotype was a common joke in a work environment where many of his co-workers were Hispanic.

“About talking about ‘cholos’ and gang life, it was always kind of a joke with them, between me and them. So I wasn’t aware of the offensive nature that could have. In retrospect, I should have known better. But at the time, I was only acting on what I knew, which was that a number of individuals joked around about stuff like that,” Groves said.

I presume Groves looked like this:
B1JfCZfIcAAiiOG
 Despite his background and experience with the notion of cholos, Parker was subject to a shaming campaign and was forced to apologize. A student named Vincente Perez, who was offended by a similar Halloween costumes last year,

At 5:21 p.m., COUP uploaded that photo, along with photos of other entrants into the costume contest, to the Boos n’ Ribs Facebook page, where viewers could vote for the costumes that they liked best. That night, Perez said that he saw the picture online, but hesitated before commenting on it.

“I saw the pictures when they were posted. At the time, I dropped the issue, because I didn’t want to be personally attacked. But other people messaged me and said ‘I can’t deal with this,’ and another friend of mine started sharing the photo, so I eventually commented,” Perez said.

COUP has since removed the photo from the Boos n’ Ribs page. Perez said this was a misstep in addressing the issue, which was that he considered the photo to be an affront to his identity.

“It’s not just that it’s offensive to me; that’s what people don’t get. I’m hurt because that’s part of my ethnic identity. It erases the prevalence of police brutality and the labeling of Latinos as criminal,” Perez said.

Well, one can argue whether the cholo costume was offensive (after all, not all of them are criminals!), and whether it even speaks to police brutality. If I had to wear a costume, I wouldn’t wear that one! But it’s harder to argue that these costumes should be banned, or that the University of Chicago should take a stand about which costumes are appropriate and which are offensive. Nevertheless, both Perez and the shamed student Groves agree on the need for University action:

Both Groves and Perez said that they would support increased University involvement in identifying culturally appropriative costumes in advance of next Halloween. Groves said that he would support a message or e-mail from the University with examples of unacceptable costumes in order to inform the student body; Perez said that he wants the administration to actively condemn instances in which students wear unacceptable costumes.

“It’s a tricky issue, but the University has to take a more staunch stance against appropriative costumes. It has happened every year since I’ve been here. President Zimmer talks about the balance between free speech and civil behavior…but when the University says nothing, it makes activists look like the only people who take issue with the costumes.”

The University of Chicago policy on freedom of expression, which is great—and a model for the policies of other universities—has said everything that needs to be said about this:

In a word, the University’s fundamental commitment is to the principle that debate or deliberation may not be suppressed because the ideas put forth are thought by some or even by most members of the University community to be offensive, unwise, immoral, or wrong-headed. It is for the individual members of the University community, not for the University as an institution, to make those judgments for themselves, and to act on those judgments not by seeking to suppress speech, but by openly and vigorously contesting the ideas that they oppose. Indeed, fostering the ability of members of the University community to engage in such debate and deliberation in an effective and responsible manner is an essential part of the University’s educational mission.

In other words, the University of Chicago will not intervene in this case. Although I don’t want an atmosphere of racism and intolerance on this campus, I also don’t want students to run crying to the University, demanding that its administrators “take a staunch stance” and get involved in determining whether costumes are appropriate or offensive. They can protest, as Perez did, but he clearly wants his Academic Parents to produce guidelines. That’s not going to happen.

 

DNA: optimised source code?

November 18, 2015 • 11:30 am

by Matthew Cobb

There’s a great XKCD up today (click to embiggen, I’ve had to shrink it to not bump into the ads):

I initially tw**ted this with the comment “Truth. Biology is impossible”, because the cartoon emphasises that the information DNA contains is way more complicated than most non-biologists imagine. It’s a classic mistake of physical scientists (especially mathematicians and physicists) to think that biology obeys the same kind of rigorous lawfulness of those subjects – when they study biology they soon realise that living things are far more complicated than anything in physics or maths. As Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal, put it: an insect is more complex than a star.

But thinking about it, I think although Randall (the author) has his heart in the right place, he’s still suffering from some the classic physical scientist’s assumptions (he used to be a NASA roboticist). Leaving aside the issue of the conditionality of gene expression (that may be what is meant by ‘feedback and external processing’ in the first panel), the female character explains that ‘DNA is the result of the most aggressive optimisation process in the universe’. It is the comparison of the 3.8 billion years of ‘optimisation’ of DNA with the few years of Google optimisation that makes the character in the hat conclude that ‘biology is impossible’.

This isn’t right. DNA is not subject to ‘the most aggressive optimisation process in the universe’. Our genes are not perfectly adapted and beautifully designed. They are a horrible, historical mess. That is partly what distinguishes biology from physics and maths – it is the outcome of historical processes – evolution and natural selection* – which leave their past traces in the genome.

For reasons we don’t understand, many eukaryotic genes (that is, genes in organisms with a nucleus – so all multicellular organisms and some single-celled forms, too) are sometimes split up, interspersed by apparently meaningless sequences, called ‘introns’. Although the average intron is only 40 bases long, one of the introns in the human dystrophin gene is more than 300,000 bases long! In some rare cases, the intron of one gene can even contain a completely separate, protein-encoding gene.

This isn’t the result of ‘optimisation’: it’s due to the fact that, as François Jacob put it,  evolution does not design, it tinkers. It fiddles around with stuff to hand, and as long as it works, that’s all that matters.

We know that only 5% of the human genome encodes proteins (when Francis Crick was working on the meaning of the genetic code in the 1950s, he assumed that’s all that a gene would ever do). We now know that another 5-10% is regulatory DNA, which produces RNA that regulates the activity of other genes. As to the remaining 85% – around 2.7 billion base pairs – it appears mainly to be ‘junk’, which has no apparent function – if it were deleted, it would not affect the fitness of the organism at all.

There’s been a lot of argument about this, in particular since the ENCODE project suggested that virtually every bit of our DNA seemed to produce some kind of chemical reaction in a cell, which they argued meant that it was functional. But when scientists synthesised genuinely random bits of DNA, they found that they, too, could produce a reaction. If biochemical activity is produced by much of our DNA, it is indistinguishable from random noise.

I wrote about this in my book Life’s Greatest Secret:

Different species can have substantial differences in the size of their genomes, which do not seem to be related to anything in their ecology or degree of apparent physiological complexity. (…) This problem is called the ‘C-value paradox’ or ‘C-value enigma’ – ‘C’ is the amount of DNA in a genome. Some of these differences may be due to a well-known phenomenon: chunks of genomes can be duplicated during evolution, particularly in plants, which can double their genome size in one generation when chro- mosome duplication goes slightly awry. Because of factors such as duplication, the variation in genomic size that we see between species resists any overall functional explanation. This is highlighted by what is known jocularly as the onion test: the onion genome contains around 16 billion base pairs, or five times that of a human.

Another example – viruses can insert themselves into our DNA, using our cells to reproduce themselves. Sometimes they end up getting stuck, and are copied over and over. So, for example, the remnants of these invasive viral sequences make up an astonishing 45 per cent of the human genome, with one element, known as Alu, leaving genetic traces that make up around 10 per cent of your DNA.

That isn’t optimisation – it’s a millenia-long history of infection!

In some cases, these viral remnants can actually be repurposed by natural selection – tinkering with a vengeance – and such viral sequences are now thought to be at the origin of one of our most vital organs – the placenta.

On a final note, in some cases, within this amazing noise, there are also astonishing examples of complexity which do indeed appear to be the result of optimisation – and they would boggle the mind of anyone, not just a cocky computer scientist in a hat. In Drosophila there is a gene called Dscam, which is involved in neuronal development and has four clusters of exons (bits of the gene that are expressed – hence exon – in contrast to the apparently inert introns).

Each of these exons can be read by the cell in twelve, forty-eight, thirty-three or two alternative ways. As a result, the single stretch of DNA that we call Dscam can encode 38,016 different proteins. (For the moment, this is the record number of alternative proteins produced by a single gene. I suspect there are many even more extreme examples.)

In other words, DNA is even more complicated than Randall imagines – it is historical, messy, undesigned. And when occasionally it is optimised, the degree of complexity is mind-boggling. Biology is not quite impossible, it is just incredibly difficult!

__________________________________________________________________

* These are not the same thing! Evolution is a change in the frequency of a particular allele, or form, or a gene. Many alleles – different DNA sequences – produce no change in any character and are therefore selectively neutral. They can change their frequency without natural selection being involved.

Similarly, natural selection simply means the differential survival of different forms of organism in a species. If the differences in form have no genetic basis then natural selection will not lead to a change in allele frequencies, and therefore evolution. For example, if there was natural selection against pink flamingos, which get their colour from their environment, not their genes, then this would not lead to the evolution of a new form in the population (unless there is a genetic character for tending to go and eat only food that enables them to turn pink).

Darwin’s genius was to realise that evolution by natural selection was a way for adaptations to appear. To get this to occur you need variability in a population, for that variability to have some genetic basis and for it to lead to differential survival. With that combination of three factors, and sufficient time, you end up with the amazing variety of life we have on the planet.

A Sophisticated Theologian argues that, after Paris, we need religion more than ever!

November 18, 2015 • 9:45 am

Reader Mark called my attention to an article in Monday’s Washington Post: “In light of the Paris attacks, is it time to eradicate religion?” According to Ben Goren’s Rule, any question posed in a newspaper article is invariably answered in the negative, and indeed, it is here. That’s expected, of course, when the author is, as in this case, a Protestant theologian. But his answer is unsatisfying and, surprisingly, the article is poorly written—even more surprising given that the author is Miroslav Volf, identified thusly by the Post:

Miroslav Volf teaches theology at Yale University and directs Yale Center for Faith and Culture. His most recent book is “Flourishing: Why We Need Religion in a Globalized World” (Yale University Press, 2016).

In fact, Wikipedia, in a very long article, says that Volf is “one of the most celebrated theologians of our day.” Clearly Volf is a Sophisticated Theologian™, so we can expect him to give us the very best arguments for retaining religion. But he fails.

Here is my summary of Volf’s main points (his words are indented):

Religion is here to stay, and in fact is growing.

First, if the hope for the world depends on eradication of religion, we should all despair. Religions are in fact growing in absolute and relative terms. In 1970, there were 0.71 billion unaffiliated or non-religious people, while in 2050, there will be 1.2 billion. That’s impressive growth, until you compare it with the projected growth of religions.

Between 1970 and 2050, the number of Hindus is projected to grow from 0.43 to nearly 1.4 billion, the number of Muslims from 0.55 billion to 2.7 billion and the number of Christians from 1.25 billion to 2.9 billion. And due to the immense popularity of the democratic ideal, religious adherents are becoming increasingly politically assertive.

Religions may be growing in absolute numbers, but that’s because the world population is growing. What’s important is whether religion are growing in “relative terms”, that is, is the proportion of believers increasing? And here Volf’s claim that this is also true is just wrong. A Pew survey this year shows that, among all religions, only Islam is growing in relative terms, while the others are holding steady or shrinking. The estimated projections over the next 35 years, when there will be a 35% increase in the world population:

PF_15.04.02_ProjectionsOverview_populationChange_310px

Well, be that as it may, Volf goes on:

Religion will be with us forever.

The sooner that humanity either eradicates or quarantines off religion, the better our world will be. This conclusion would be too hasty, however.

. . . It is impossible to eradicate or quarantine religion. Any attempt to do so would result in far more bloodshed than religious people have perpetrated throughout their long histories.

Note the tropes of pest control: “eradication” and “quarantine.” Apparently he sees opponents of religion as an Orkin-like movement bent on annihilation.  In fact, antitheists envision a peaceful process of secularization based on changing people’s minds and fixing the social conditions that give rise to faith.

And as for the “impossibility” of that happening, it is in fact precisely  what is happening in the U.S. and Europe. Northern Europe in particular was once quite religious but is now largely atheistic. The inhabitants of countries like France and Sweden have given up their childish things—perhaps because social conditions have improved. And even the U.S., where Volf lives, is becoming more secular.

So why else should we want religion to remain with us. Volf gives mor reasons:

Most world religions (including the Abrahamic ones) promote a message of peace and tolerance.

For most religions, the distinctions between true and false religion, justice and injustice, and good and evil are central. Each religion insists on the goodness of the way of life it promotes, rejecting other ways of life as imperfect, misguided or even wicked.

Also, most world religions are based either on positive revelation (Moses, Jesus or Muhammad) or on spiritual enlightenment (Buddha or Confucius) granted to foundational figures.
Note Volf’s distinction in the first paragraph between “true” and “false” religion. As we all know, that’s bogus. All religions are false in terms of their factual assertions. If by “true” or “false” he means the degree of adherence to scripture, well, Old + New Testament Christianity is not a paradigm of goodness, but it’s still “true” if you take Old Testament assertions literally. And we all know that extreme Islamism is no more “false” than is its more moderate relatives: read the Qur’an, which according to the vast majority of Muslims must be taken literally. And if you do read the Qur’an, which after all is the basis of the religion that spawned Volf’s essay, you would have to interpret it pretty tortuously to see it as a “positive religion.” Finally, it is the divisiveness of faith, the very fact that each religion sees others as “imperfect, misguided, or even wicked,” that is largely responsible for what happened in Paris.
Of course all religions insist on the “goodness of the way of life” they promote: how could they do otherwise? Seriously, “we are promoting a bad way of life”?  But this is circumlocution: the question is whether the ways of life they promote are really good.  And this is where Volf comes a cropper, for he doesn’t distinguish between “good” behavior that he thinks can be tortured out of scripture, and the ways that religion really makes people behave:
But all world religions have resources not just to avoid underwriting violence but to promote cultures of peace in pluralistic environments. Religions have significant resources precisely because they claim to be true for all human beings at all times and places, as I argue in my new book “Flourishing: Why We Need Religion in a Globalized World.

Yes, and it those absolute and timeless truth claims that are causing problems. The “significant resources” are not resources but bugs—bugs of dogmatism. A religion that doesn’t evolve by responding to secular currents of morality, currents that involve greater justice for women, gays, minorities, and so on, is a religion that harmful and retrograde. Clearly, right now Islam isn’t able  to promote peace in “pluralistic environments.” France is one such pluralistic environment. Doesn’t Volf see how the facts contradict his claims?

Religions embrace pluralistic and enlightened values. 

It is in this section that Volf really appears blinkered. Here are what Volf sees as the “four fundamental values that religion embraces” (he actually gives only three):

First, equal moral value of all citizens. Because world religions are universalistic, they affirm the equal value of all people. They do not distinguish between moral “insiders” and moral “outsiders.” They all embrace some version of the Golden Rule with its underlying principle of reciprocity.

 Here Volf is confusing the way he’d like religions to be with the way they really are. If he thinks that religions don’t distinguish between moral insiders and outsiders, he hasn’t read the Qur’an, is unaware of the continuing conflict between Muslims and Jews or between Sunni and Shia Muslims, doesn’t know about the Partition of India in 1947, is ignorant of what happened in Northern Ireland, hasn’t heard of the Jewish morning prayer in which men thank God for not making them women or gentiles, doesn’t know about the pervasive Muslim demonization of gays and infidels, and isn’t even aware of the Right’s insistence in his own country that we live in a “Christian nation.”
Second, freedom of religion. World religions can and many do embrace full freedom of religion, which includes freedom to adopt and change religion as well as freedom to propagate religion.
“Many do” is the operative term here. One might as well say, “Many don’t.” There is no freedom of religion in many Muslim lands, and, in fact, many countries outlaw blasphemy or have state religions. Here are three figures from Wikipedia showing where blasphemy is a crime, where apostasy is a crime, and where there is state religion. Note that the overlap is almost entirely in Muslim countries:
Blasphemy laws:
Screen Shot 2015-11-18 at 8.27.06 AM
Apostasy laws (all in Islamic countries):
Screen Shot 2015-11-18 at 9.31.35 AM
State religions:
Screen Shot 2015-11-18 at 8.27.38 AM
“Full freedom of religion” my tuchus!
Volf continues to peer through his rose-colored spectacles:
Third, separation of religion and rule. Just because world religions have what Nietzsche called “two worlds” account of reality, transcendent and mundane, and give primacy to the transcendent realm, they contain a clear impulse to construe “religion” and “politics” as two distinct, though intersecting, cultural territories.
In much of Islam, politics and religion are inseparable, and the wish of many worldwide Muslims to see sharia law imposed not just on their own community, but on everyone, shows Volf’s ignorance.  And, of course, many Protestants in the U.S. want a theocracy. Is Volf ignorant of that, too?
Volf never gets to Fundamental Value Number Four, and although I may have missed it, I think it’s a mistake. And perhaps his conclusion contains a mistake as well:

For the sake of the identity and reputation of the religions themselves and for the sake of justice and peace in the world, religions need permanent reformation.

At the heart of reformation must lie the conviction that, as the Apostle Peter put it in the first public sermon he preached, that “we must obey God rather than any human authority” (Acts 5:29), asserting that “religion” and “state” are two distinct cultural systems. Such reformation of religions will not stop the blood and tears from flowing, but religions will no longer be implicated in the carnage.

I think he screwed up here, for Peter’s statement is the precise basis for religious malfeasance. I suspect a typo or poor editing. But at any rate, to expect Muslims who favor sharia law to accept a distinction between the political and the religous is to expect a miracle.

In the end, I think that Volf’s love of liberal Christianity has blinded him to what many religions really preach, and what many of the faithful really believe. He appears to think that, if properly interpreted, all religions are as tolerant and benign as his own. But that’s the rub, for “properly interpreted” is tautological, which to Volf seems to mean “religions that see the world the way mine does.” The fact is that religions don’t and can’t, for the conflicting moral codes of religion cannot be harmonized, based as they are on incompatible beliefs about gods and what they want.

Volf’s essay is, I suspect, based largely on fear: a fear that many religions—particularly the one whose adherents struck in Paris—aren’t really as benign as his own, and will continue to inspire murder, suffering, and oppression. Perhaps he also fears the increasing level of nonbelief in his own land. To quell these fears, Volf spends an entire article telling us that “true” religion doesn’t do these things. But of course it does, and Volf’s apologetics, which call for even more religion after a religiously-inspired mass murder, are ironic, lame, and pathetic.

By all means let us have “true” religion: religion that is tolerant, not divisive, and having a genuinely universal and beneficent moral code. That “true religion”, by the way, is called “humanism”.