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What's new: The
Sagan Society
will be more or less offline
for Summer 2003.
Thanks to everyone who took an
interest in our events this year.
Here
is our content from the last update in April:
Rationally
Speaking
- April is lamb season,
isn't it? This month, Rationally Speaking columnist Massimo Pigliucci asks the
difficult question, "Whence
animal rights?" His answer seeks a clear path past the rampant emotionalism, vast
oversimplifications and dodgy pseudo-arguments that normally shape discussion in this
area. In the end, he gives an account of the core issues that must be addressed in any
rational discussion of the issue.
IN THE NEWS
Religion, culture, politics, science
- Silence is Patriotic:
Why go anywhere but The
Onion for incisive political commentary?
- Christian tolerance on
display: Open displays of prejudice and hostility by public officials are
generally frowned upon, but blatant bigotry is
apparently A-OKAY if the target is a God-less heathen... as freethought activist Herb
Silverman discovered when half of the Charleston City Council got up and walked out on this thoughtful invocation decrying
prejudice.
- Ironic educational twist
of the week: A student
satanist hammers home a simple logical point to those who want religion in our
schools. Legally and logically, allowing religion into public schools requires allowing
ANY religion into public schools. *snicker*
- An educational
"outing" in Arkansas: Harrassment of gay teens in high school is hardly
a new story, but usually the harrassment comes from other students. At Jacksonville Junior
High, the abuse and
preaching came from teachers and administrators.
- Religious faith as a brain
disorder: The evidence is building that religious visions can be directly
attributed to temporal lobe epilepsy.
- Rationality, consistency
and international law: Does the U.S. invoke international law only to turn around
and defy it whenever convenient? You be the
judge.
- Whose side is God on?
There seems to be a perverted pseudo-reasoning at the heart of the "prayer
warrior" movement: People on both sides of a war pray for victory. But no one can
deny that overwhelming military supremacy will ultimately decide this war, or any other.
Therefore if one believes that God does intervene in Earthly wars, one must believe that
God is always on the side of whomever has military supremacy. Not only does might make
right, military
might makes divine right.
This scary syllogism is brought to you buy the good Christians at:
http://www.prayforourpresident.com/ and
http://www.presidentialprayerteam.org/.
- Just what we need -
another public display of piety: The House of Representatives passed this
resolution on Thursday calling for a national day of humility, prayer and fasting in
this time of war and terrorism. Never mind the transparent contradiction with the First
Amendment. Never mind the very selective reading of history in the whereases, wherein Ben
Franklin's call for prayer during the Constitutional Convention is noted while the
rejection of that motion is omitted. Never mind the blatant lies, such as the claim that
prayer serves as "a means of producing unity and solidarity among all the diverse
people of this Nation" when actually it serves as a means to display our elected
officials' piety as publicly as possible and to inform Americans of no faith that they are
decidedly second-class citizens (at best). Even if you gloss over these things, can you
think of even one single action of the current administration that could properly be
characterized as demonstrating genuine humility rather than monumental arrogance? Amidst
the current flood of expensive propoganda and cheap rhetoric, the level of hypocrisy
displayed by this resolution sets a new high-water mark.
Previously
IN THE NEWS
Religion, culture, politics, science
T-shirts
- Sagan Society t-shirts are still
available: Contact TSS Webmaster George Felis
to arrange purchases. Click here to see the design. (Be
warned: It's a large PDF file because that's all the webmaster had handy.)
The Sagan Society's Mission Statement
The Sagan Society is UGA's
campus-wide student-faculty organization dedicated to promoting reason and the objective
examination of contemporary issues. It is the goal of the Sagan Society to provide an open
and accessible forum for the thoughtful and critical debate and the exchange of ideas on
the issues important to all of our lives.
Who we are and what we do:
The Sagan Society was established at The University of Georgia, Athens in April
1998. We are named in honor of Carl Saganteacher, astronomer, author, and
spokesperson for science. Since our founding, we have gained over 300 Subscribers
from across campus. Sagan Subscribers attend lectures and events that are
coordinated by the officers and advisors.
For the past few years, we've presented one of the most dynamic and intellectually
challenging series of lectures on campus. Our mission is to raise the level of dialogue on
widely discussed issues and create dialogue on rarely discussed issues.
We are creating a community of scholars and friends. Please join us.
For questions about The Sagan Society, please email:
sagan@arches.uga.edu.
For questions or comments about this website, please contact the Webmaster.
last updated May 4, 2003 |
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