Charlie Kirk, and the Simplex Republican Mindset

  • The assassination of Charlie Kirk, and reflecting on past political assassinations;
  • Despite RFK Jr., there is no single cause to autism;
  • Braeden Sorbo as another right-wing Republican, like Charlie Kirk, who thinks women shouldn’t have the right to vote;
  • Paul Krugman: Being a cultist means never admitting that you were wrong;
  • A Fox News Host just wants to kill mentally ill criminals.
– – –

Today is the day that 31-year-old right-wing activist Charlie Kirk was assassinated in Utah.

I’ve had occasion to mention Kirk a number of times on my blog as an example of the far right mindset that rejects civil rights, says gay people should be put to death, and tells Taylor Swift to submit to her husband and have lots of a children. A very tribal, even Neanderthal (except that might be an insult to Neanderthals) mindset.

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Human Nature, Politics | Leave a comment

Jerry A. Coyne: FAITH VS. FACT, post 2

Subtitled “Why Science and Religion are Incompatible”
(Viking, May 2015, xxii + 311pp, including 46pp of acknowledgements, notes, references,and index)

(Earlier: post 1)


Summary: Chapter 2: What’s Incompatible?

This chapter considers science, religion, their incompatibility, and their conflicts of method, outcome, and philosophy.

Science is “a method for understanding how the universe (matter, our bodies and behavior, the cosmos, and so on) actually works.” Scientists are subject to confirmation bias just like everyone else, but the scientific toolset is designed to correct errors. Scientific truth is always provisional, it can change; in a sense scientists can prove a theory wrong, but never right. Still, fields like evolution have so much evidence they are taken as true, especially since it’s easy to imagine evidence that would overturn it (none of which has been found). Science must incorporate falsifiability, and be open to alternative explanations. If something is wrong, it will be found out quickly. That’s why it’s silly to think that evolutionists conspire to prop up a theory they know to be wrong. On the contrary, anyone who did overturn it would gain instant fame. Science requires replication of results; it involves parsimony; it lives with uncertainty. It’s the same everywhere in the world.

Religion is, to choose a common definition: “Action of conduct indicating belief in, obedience to, and reverence for a god, gods, or similar superhuman power; the performance of religious rites or observances.” Characteristics include theism, a moral system, and the idea that God interacts directly with you in a personal relationship. Author considers issues about whether religion looks for truth (it *claims* truth), how most believers believe in a literal (not metaphorical) god; that religions make many empirical claims (but different ones from religion to religion); that many take these claims literally while some (the accommodations) insist some are to be read metaphorically (but how do you tell which ones?); how most people simply reject facts that conflict with their faith; how evolution in particular is a big problem for such people; and how many are religious not for the truth claims but because for them religion is a community (and are in fact quite ignorant of the details of their doctrines).

The incompatibility of science and religion involve their different methods for getting knowledge about reality, their different ways of assessing the reliability of that knowledge; and their different conclusions about the universe.

Conflicts of Method include evidence on the one hand and revelation, authority, and dogma on the other. Science relies on principle of falsifiability, while religion resorts to apologetics. Religion cherry-picks its truths, turns scientific necessities into theological virtues, and fabricates answers to hard or insoluble questions. Religion hijacks the evolved human tendency to be trustworthy when young. Your religion is mostly an accident of your birth. If there is ‘one true religion’, as a matter of chance, it’s likely not yours.

Conflicts of Outcome: why don’t the methods of faith correspond to the results of the methods of science? There seems to be no verified facts about reality that came from scripture or revelation that was later confirmed by science.

Conflict of Philosophy: Science doesn’t presume naturalism; it’s a conclusion arising from the success of science to explain things without resorting to supernatural explanations. If certain supernatural claims were true, e.g. about the efficacy of prayer, science would detect evidence of those effects. It never does. The provisional conclusion of science is that no supernatural powers or entities exist. This is ‘philosophical naturalism.’


Comments

On one level this discussion is obvious and straightforward, if not to the religious (as I alluded to yesterday); but there’s another level that this book and others like it don’t explore. Which involves: *Why* are people attracted to supernatural explanations? About which a book could be written. And second, how, I think, that to a large degree it doesn’t matter to most people so much what’s **true** about the universe, as that one shares a philosophy and a submission to a particular doctrine with one’s family and community – as a bolster against other tribes.


Raw Notes. There are lots of good bits from these 70 pages of the book that my summary above doesn’t do justice to.

\

Ch2, What’s Incompatible?

Quote from Natalie Angier about the Ph.D. who wrestles powerpoints by day and reads internally contradictory holy books by night and think both are convincing.

How author learned about science: by being thrust into Harvard where everyone argued, trying to pick holes in every argument, finding problems. Not personal attacks, but a kind of quality control…

What Is Science?

Not just an activity, or a set of provisional facts. Science is “a method for understanding how the universe (matter, our bodies and behavior, the cosmos, and so on) actually works.” (p28.7) A set of tools.

Feynman: The first principle is that you must not fool yourself—and you are the easiest person to fool. P28b

Scientists like everyone else are subject to confirmation bias.

Author equates truth and fact (p29b); scientific truth isn’t absolute, but can change. Big examples: geocentrism, N rays.

In a sense scientists can prove a theory wrong, but never right. Still fields like evolution have so much evidence they are taken as true, especially since it’s easy to imagine evidence that would overturn it (none of which has been found).

What are the components of the scientific toolkit? The common one is ‘hypothesis, test, confirm’. But it’s not always like that. You have to gather facts before you can form a hypothesis. And some topics don’t allow tests, but observations—cosmology. And along with predictions, theories can make ‘retrodictions’, making sense of previously known facts. And science is quantitative.

And science incorporates the idea of falsifiability; there must always be a way of showing a theory to be wrong. While the faithful make up excuses for, e.g. ‘God will not be tested.’

Scientists also ask, are the alternative explanations? Could something have gone wrong? If there is, it will be found out quickly. This is why it’s silly to think that evolutionists conspire to prop up a theory they know to be wrong. On the contrary, anyone who did overturn it would gain instant fame… p35

Science also involves replication of results.

And science entails parsimony, the idea that the simplest explanation for something is usually best.

And science lives with uncertainty. We don’t know how life began. Scientists live with it; Feynman quote p38.

There is also the international character of science, its collectivity. Science is the same everywhere in the world. (The Bible has a scientific test about which god is real, Baal or Yahweh, p39m).

Broadly speaking science is any endeavor that uses the tools of reason, observation, and experiment, including historians, biblical scholars, car mechanics. Story about Stephen Jay Gould encountering a plumber, p40-41, using logical means to find a leak in a very scientific manner, but also claiming to be a staunch creationist.

                What Is Religion?

There are many definitions, but author chooses a common one that corresponds to the three Abrahamic faiths: “Action of conduct indicating belief in, obedience to, and reverence for a god, gods, or similar superhuman power; the performance of religious rites or observances.”

Three characteristics: theism, that god interacts with the world; embrace of a moral system (laid out for obedience by that god); and the idea that God interacts directly with you in a personal relationship. We’ll focus on the empirical claims made by religions, whether they are the claims of the church, of theologians, or of regular believers.

                Does religion look for truth?

It seems obvious that religion assumes the existence of God; but some theologians minimize this, claiming religion is more about morals or building a community. Examples of Francis Spufford and Reza Aslan (p44t), who reduce holy books to collections of metaphors – in contrast of course to the vast majority of ordinary believers.

In contrast, the Bible makes empirical claims about god – examples with comments from Richard Swinburne and Mikael Stenmark. And John Polkinghorne, who emphasized the need for an empirical grounding of faith. Ian Barbour. Francis Collins.

                Existence Claims: Is There a God?

Belief in gods is universal and strong. Surveys—93% in Indonesia, 4% in Japan. In the US, 70%. Most of these believe in an involved and intervening god. Many are quite literal. More intellectual believers have more nebulous and impersonal descriptions – Richard Swinburne, Alvin Plantinga – a spirit or force about whom we can say little. But most believers are very specific about his attributes.

                Other Empirical Claims of Religion

Long list from the Nicene Creed of specific claims. A monotheistic God, but in three parts; the creation of the universe; his son, born of a virgin, sacrificed to redeem believers from sin, and so on. Heaven and hell.

Of course these conflict with the claims of other faiths – Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, who don’t recognize Jesus as the Messiah. Etc etc.

Again, polls show literalism of these claims is widespread. P51. Especially in the US, but in Britain too – Julian Baggini thought otherwise, did his own poll, and changed his mind. P52. Muslims are especially pious and literalistic – about God and Muhammad, about how the Quran should be read literally, word for word, p53m.

Accommodationists typically attribute religious violence as due to politics or social dysfunction, an idea which simply extends the claim that religions don’t involve truth claims about the universe. Pinker vs Wieseltier.

                Is Scripture Literal or Allegorical?

A recurrent theme is theology is that as science has disproved scriptural claims, these claims have morphed into being mere allegories. Liberal believers say things like, the Bible is not a textbook of science. Some claim the idea of literalism is a recent phenomenon. Andrew Sullivan, claiming that no one with a brain can think the story of Adam and Eve is meant literally. Yet Catholicism has insisted on it. Other references of same. Aquinas discussing Saint Augustine. Augustine was a literalist about many things since refuted by science: the young earth, creation, Noah and his Ark.

And if you do claim that certain parts of the Bible are to be read metaphorically – how do you tell which parts are metaphorical and which are meant to be real? “This is particularly difficult for Christians, because the historical evidence for Jesus—that is, for a real person around whom the myth accreted—is thin. And evidence for Jesus as the son of God is unconvincing, resting solely on the assertions of the Bible and interpretations of people writing decades after the events described in the Gospels.” P59t

And most people, according to surveys, would simply reject facts if they conflicted with their faith.

                Evolution: The Biggest Problem

The clearest example of religion’s resistance to science is evolution—which has implications that “are distressing to many believers”. Polls show evolution is rejected by believers. “Yet when it comes to evolution, many Americans remain in the Bronze Age.” P60.2  It’s not an artifact of ignorance of evidence – look at all the science popularizers like Dawkins, Sagan, etc etc. Americans deny evolution because of religion. Many religious people say things like “Nothing could make me give up my beliefs.”

                Can You Have Faith Without Truth Claims?

Many, maybe most, people are religious not because of arguments about God and scripture, but because for them religion is a community, about feelings and emotions. Surveys have shown many religious people are in fact quite ignorant of the details of their doctrines. (p61b). Jonathan Haidt sees religious communality as primary.

But would they remain religious if claims about Jesus or Joseph Smith were undermined? We do know that many who abandon religion do so because of losing belief in its doctrines. P62m.

Theologians downplay empirical claims – except when talking to ‘regular’ believers. Example Alvin Plantinga.

The Incompatibility

Not logical, or practical; rather, “mutually intolerant” p64m. Author claims science and religion are *in*compatible because they have 1) different methods for getting knowledge about reality; 2) different ways of assessing the reliability of that knowledge; and 3) arrive at different conclusions about the universe.

Religious ‘knowledge’ not only conflicts with scientific knowledge, but also knowledge from other religions.

Gould’s idea they are complementary fails on two counts.

Issues of methodology can be summarized by asking “How would I know if I was wrong?”

Conflicts of Method

Science relies on evidence, and can imagine evidence that would prove a truth wrong; religion relies of revelation, authority, and dogma. Some religious claims are untestable because they occurred in the past, but science can point out the absence of evidence for such claims. Religion relies on confirmation bias, starting with one was taught in childhood, then accepting only those facts that support those prejudices. ‘Apologetics’ work to defend religion against counter-arguments.

                Faith

Faith is the confident belief in something for which there is insufficient evidence to persuade all reasonable people of that belief. Also dictionary definition p67m Faith is routinely regarded as a virtue; doubting Thomas. Fideism is the idea that faith is hostile to reason. It is taken as a virtue to have faith in things that are absurd. Even today, the Pope denigrates curiosity. Martin Luther said reason was the enemy of faith. Believers sometimes accuse scientists of having ‘faith’, as if this makes both just as bad as the other; more on this in chapter 4.

                Authority as the Arbiter of Truth

Church dogmas or theologians are the arbiters of religious truth; science has no equivalents. No texts or scientists are regarded as inerrant. They have confidence in some authorities, because they have earned that trust.

Some religious dogma has been settled *by vote* over the centuries – examples among Catholics p71. Such changes don’t come from new information, but from secular currents in society. Hell is now seen as ‘separation from God’, not an underground barbecue. Mormons changed their policy on blacks.

                Falsifiability.

Religion would welcome evidence if it validated their claims; but when evidence doesn’t support their claims, they usually result to apologetics. E.g. resurrection of Jesus; William Lane Craig states that nothing could shake his belief. Justin Thacker. These statements are irrational. Karl Giberson, about how some claims are unfalsifiable. Needless to say, this is not how science works.

                Cherry-picking your truths from scripture or authority

Critics of atheists claim that the Bible isn’t a book of science. Yet many believers think the Bible does give us facts. But to think parts of the Bible are mere parable begs the question of how to decide which parts are which; by implication, the literalists are more intellectually honest. We can’t know what the Bible’s authors meant when they wrote it; most of it reads as if relating literal truths. That’s how many people read it, and Quran. Any story in the Bible can be literal or a metaphor; take your pick. In practice, the things that science has falsified tend to become metaphors…

                Turning Scientific Necessities into Theological Virtues

Some apologists will claim theology is made better once science has ‘corrected’ parts of scripture. Evolution makes life so much more interesting!

                Fabricating Answers to Hard or Insoluble Questions

Why is God hidden? They have answers for that too, though they make little sense and depend on wordplay. Some simply reject the need for evidence. Immortality? Natural evil.

                Applying Different Standards…

Truth claims of Scientology, Mormonism, Christian Science. Most believers reject these, but only because these three religions are fairly new. People don’t react to their own religions the same way because they were indoctrinated through family and friends. “Religion has hijacked the evolved tendency…” p83.8 Your religion is mostly an accident of your birth, and as an adult you have are emotionally invested in its truth, and so subject to confirmation bias.

More examples of various religious claims. There are a dozen ‘major’ religions, but thousands of branches. Religions are just incompatible with science, they’re incompatible with each other.

There might be one true religion, but as a matter of chance, it’s likely not yours. Don’t you care if you’re following the right one? John Loftus and the ‘outside test for faith’ p86t. [[ Comment I had here moved above in this post. ]]

The various scientific disciplines share the same form and toolkit of science.

Scientific Truth is Progressive and Cumulative; Theological ‘Truth’ Isn’t.

Scientific progress is apparent and common across the world. Theology changes, but doesn’t advance. Hell is reconfigured as ‘separation from God’. The C Church eliminates its list of banned books. And morality advanced, as society advances.

But religion hasn’t come any closer to understanding the divine; whether gods exist; whether there is one or many, and so on. There are fundamentalists and apophatic theologians…. Changes in theology are driven by science or changes in secular culture. Religious morality is usually one step behind secular morality (p88.7)

Yet there are apologists who claim all this as a virtue; that theology hasn’t changed means it’s reached its goal of perceiving truth better than science has – J.P. Moreland, p89m.

                Conflicts of Outcome

If the methods of faith were reliable, the results should correspond to the results of the methods of science. But they don’t. Disproved claims of religion include many scientific claims, as well as historic claims (no evidence for the exodus of Israelites from Egypt, or of the miracles surrounding the Resurrection).

If such ‘natural truths’ cannot be verified, why credit the harder-to-test ‘divine truths’?

Author has challenged anyone to give him a single verified fact about reality that came from scripture or revelation that was later confirmed by science.

                Conflicts of Philosophy

The issue is whether gods are even a realistic possibility.

Naturalism is not a premise of science; it’s a conclusion arising from the success of science to explain things without resorting to supernatural explanations.

In fact, scientists like Newton did invoke supernatural explanations, e.g. God. It was later scientists who developed explanations that did not require those – famous anecdote about Laplace p92.

There are some who claim science can *only* be about what is not supernatural – Lewontin p93t – but in principle science is open the confirming supernatural events, e.g. studies about the efficacy of prayer (or of ESP, etc.). There *could* be evidence from such studies – but there is not. Thus the provisional conclusion of science is that supernatural powers or entities do not exist; an attitude called ‘philosophical naturalism’. [provisional: see 95b]

 

 

Posted in Book Notes, Religion, Science | Leave a comment

Intellectual Vacuity, False Christian History, and Stories

The Atlantic, Jonathan Chait, 9 Sept 2025: The Intellectual Vacuity of the National Conservatives, subtitled “The post-liberal American right set out to destroy the guardrails that restrained anti-Semitism, without giving any thought to what might happen next.” [gift link]

This is an essay about how the political parties have evolved in recent decades.
Continue reading

Posted in Religion | Comments Off on Intellectual Vacuity, False Christian History, and Stories

Jerry A. Coyne: FAITH VS. FACT, post 1

Subtitled “Why Science and Religion are Incompatible”
(Viking, May 2015, xxii + 311pp, including 46pp of acknowledgements, notes, references,and index)

For this next book, I’m going to split summary and notes up into multiple posts. And include some general comments along the way. This is another of what I think as ‘foundational’ nonfiction books in my library, those I consider fundamental treatments of their subjects, those I consider at the core of my own references for this blog and for my worldview.

The most remarkable thing about this book is that it addresses an obvious point that many people simply do not understand, or refuse to understand, or don’t care to understand. You see this over and over again, generally of course among conservatives. Speaking as if the elements of their religious faith should be allowed equal standing with the conclusions of many centuries’ of systematic investigation and verification (i.e. science). I’ve said before that sometimes I suspect that religious faith taught early on simply cripples one’s ability for rational thought. The idea of linking facts and evidence seems elusive to some people, when they can simply assert what they wish to be true, because that’s what they were taught at an early age and that’s what everyone in their community believes. It’s part of their culture.

The basic issue is that one can have “faith” in *anything*, while science is tied to the reality of the world. Why is this not apparent? Because it doesn’t matter to most people.


Summary, Preface and Chapter 1

Preface: The Genesis of This Book
In 2013 the author had a debate with someone who claimed “faith is a gift.” But science and religion regard “faith” in different ways, which makes them incompatible for discovering what’s true about the universe. Both make existence claims about what is real (this was the emphasis of the “new atheists” in the 2000s). The toolkit of science is reliable; that of religion not. Author thus rejects so-called “accommodationism,” the idea that science and religion are complementary (or are “different ways of knowing”). The book focuses on religions that make existence claims, mostly on the Abrahamic faiths.

Ch1, The Problem
Both science and religion make claims about what is real. The former can, and has, disproved many claims of the latter (the creation, the flood, etc.); the latter has no way to challenge the claims of the former. Many people realize this and try to have it both ways, through some kind of “accommodationism.” Yet most people still place faith over science, and take empirical claims about God, the Resurrection, prayer, etc., at face value, without any rational basis, just as believers in pseudoscience take ESP, astrology, and alien abductions. A true “theory of God” would entail five criteria: that God is real; that his properties involve what God actually does; that this theory is testable; that we do test it by observation or experiment; and that this theory explains things otherwise unexplainable. It’s not disrespectful to treat religious dogmas as hypotheses to be examined.

In science, faith is a vice, while in religion it’s a virtue.

Rational scrutiny of religion asks believers only two questions:

1, How do you know that?
2, What makes you so sure that the claims of your faith are right and the claims of other faiths are wrong?

\\

(There are four further chapters:

Ch2, What’s Incompatible?

Ch3, Why Accomodationism Fails

Ch4, Faith Strikes Back

Ch5, Why Does It Matter?)


Comments

This book, like Bering’s, can be seen as yet another follow-up to the “new atheist” books of the mid-2000s.

I think believers would find Coyne’s two questions naive, or irrelevant. It doesn’t matter to most people what is factual; it only matters that they belong to a family and a community of similar believers. In such communities even the doubters learn not to question, not to express contrary opinions. It’s more important to belong.

Given all the discoveries about human nature and its biases, we understand that there are lots of “facts” that simply strain human credulity, because they lie outside the range of human intuitions, which evolved to handle challenges in the ancestral environment at human scales.

While the tenets of faith have *evolved* to appeal to those base intuitions. If every human has a father, so must the universe. ‘Redemption” is an extension of the aspects of human nature like cooperation and forgiveness and altruism, without which our modern societies would not be possible. Because religious ideas evolve, too. As anyone familiar with religious history knows.



Raw Notes, Preface and Chapter 1

Preface, The Genesis of This Book

Author recalls a 2013 debate in which his opponent claimed ‘faith is a gift’. This book is “about the different ways that science and religion regard faith, ways that make them incompatible for discovering what’s true about our universe”. Both science and religion make existence claims about what is real; the toolkit of science is reliable; that of religion is unreliable. He takes a stance divergent from ‘accommodationism’, that religion and science are somehow complementary.

This is part of a wider war between rationality and superstition.

What distinguishes the works of the ‘new atheists’ is the observation that religious claims are *truth* claims about which we can request evidence. [[ The new atheists were Harris, Dawkins, Hitchens, and Dennett, who wrote popular and controversial books in the 2000s. ]]

Author has personal interest; this conflict arises especially in his profession, that of evolutionary biologist. He hears the opposition when he teaches: charges about being a tool of Satan. He wrote a book about evolution [[ reviewed here ]], only to discover many faithful simply discounted the facts before their noses. Anecdote about talk to a group of businessmen: “I found your evidence convincing, but I still don’t believe it.”

So author read a lot about accommodationism, discovering that the arguments of theology are similar to those of pseudoscience.

Caveats: this book is not concerned with those religions that make no existence claims; focuses mostly on the Abrahamic faiths; recognizes some liberal version of these make only very vague truth claims (versions not held by most people). What most people believe is not, as some claim, a straw man version of religion. (Then p xviii outlines the content of the book.)

The thesis is that understanding reality is best achieved by science, and is never achieved using the methods of faith.

(Author won’t discuss what might replace religion; see book by Phil Kitcher. And won’t discuss history or evolution of religion.)

Ch1, The Problem

No one tries to reconcile religion with sports or literature; because science and religion are competitors about discovering truths about nature.

The conflict has been around since 16th century Europe. Two titles published in the late 1800s captured it: one by John William Draper in 1875, the other by Andrew Dickson White in 1896. These books had their critics. The conflict has not gone away; the number of books about “science and religion” just keep growing. The lack of harmony is shown by the *increasing* number of foundations and conferences etc about the subject.

Some scientists promote accommodationism because, frankly, they need grant money… p7

Or associations that just play it safe. Examples; BioLogos; statements about supposed compatibility. Ironically, most scientists *are* atheists. (…p13 because nonbelievers are drawn to science… or science promotes the rejection of faith.)

Despite such statements, most people would put faith over scientific claims. And most polls indicate that people do think science and religion are often in conflict.

One reason churches are losing members is because younger people see religion as antagonistic to science.

Why has this issue been revived in recent years? Advances in science that have pushed back claims of religion; the rise of the Templeton Foundation; and New Atheism.

Darwin; the push for creationism began around 1960, morphing in ID…

In contrast evidence for evolution grows across many fields. Advances in other fields… p15m

The list of things needing God to explain keeps shrinking.

And the rise of the ‘nones’; churches try to embrace science as best they can.

Templeton Foundation – p17ff. The big questions. Its prizes and grants.

List of New Atheist bk, p21t. Mostly written by *scientists*, and including the theme that religions make empirical claims. The typical examples: God, the resurrection, prayer, etc p22t. More than half of all Americans take these literally. Islam has its own set of claims, as does Christian Science, Hindus, Scientology, etc etc.

Thus we can ask about evidence and reasons to believe. Five criteria for a ‘god theory’ p23-24. Competing claims, religions have splintered; thousands of rival claims.

It is not disrespectful to treat god and religious dogma as hypotheses to be examined.

In science faith is a vice, while in religion it’s a virtue.

Rational scrutiny of religious faith asks believers two questions:

  • How do you know that?
  • What makes you so sure that the claims of your faith are right and the claims of other faiths are wrong?

 \\\\

 

Posted in Book Notes, Religion, Science | Comments Off on Jerry A. Coyne: FAITH VS. FACT, post 1

Suicide of American Greatness

  • Stephen Greenblatt on how a scientific superpower is destroying itself;
  • Scientists demolish Trump’s DOE report;
  • Short items about the search for anti-Christian bias that’s turned up only petty grievances; Jim Wright wonders what Trump or MAGA actually *like* about America; another note about how they certainly don’t like Tom Hanks; Paul Krugman on “sleazy smearer” Scott Bessent; and a final item about an energy moron.
– – –

Living in history.

NY Times, guest opinion essay by Stephen Greenblatt, 8 Sept 2025: We Are Watching a Scientific Superpower Destroy Itself [gift link]

The Trump administration’s assault on America’s universities by cutting billions of dollars of federal support for scientific and medical research has called up from somewhere deep in my memory the phrase “duck and cover.” …

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Human Nature, Science | Comments Off on Suicide of American Greatness

How About a Nobel Prize for Belligerence?

More about Trump’s actions vs his aspirations. You’d think Trump were running to win a Nobel Prize not for peace, but for belligerence.

NY Times, David French, 7 Sept 2025: It Doesn’t Seem Wise to Let Trump Decide What War Is

(This echoes the topic yesterday about RFK Jr. finding a simple-minded explanation for autism.)
Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Culture, Lunacy, Politics | Comments Off on How About a Nobel Prize for Belligerence?

Simple Conservative Answers to Complex Problems

  • RFK Jr blames autism on Tylenol;
  • Trump wants a Nobel Peace Prize but at every turn advocates war;
  • Robert Reich on Trump and the art of extortion;
  • They’re redacting the Epstein Files of Republicans only, is the rumor;
  • Philip Glass: String Quartet #5.
– – –

As predicted, RFK Jr. has come up with a simple, simple-minded answer to the problem of autism.

CNN, 5 Sep 2025: Upcoming HHS report will link autism to common pain reliever, folate deficiency in pregnancy, Wall Street Journal reports

How clever of RFK to have found the solution after so many decades of actual autism researchers have failed to do so! (Has he checked whether this correlation exists in other countries? I doubt it.) That’s the conservative mindset for you: simple solutions to complex matters. And none of the actual medical experts are on board with this.

Continue reading

Posted in conservatives, Morality, Music, Politics | Comments Off on Simple Conservative Answers to Complex Problems

Jesse Bering, THE BELIEF INSTINCT

Subtitled: “The Psychology of Souls, Destiny, and the Meaning of Life”

(Norton, hardcover, 2011, 252pp, including 47pp notes, additional reading, and index.)
(UK title The God Instinct: The Psychology of Souls, Destiny and the Meaning of Life, also 2011)

I have a short shelf of eight or ten books that I’ve read over the past decade or more that I’ve never gotten around to writing up here, mostly because they’re very substantial books and I took *lots* of notes on them, so the chores of boiling them down to blog posts has been daunting. But these are some of the books that have most influenced my thinking, and so I’m making a new resolution to get these posted by the end of the year. Aside from the present book, they include two by Pinker, and others by Dawkins, Hitchens, Coyne, and Harris. (Then there are even older ones that I took notes on back in the ‘90s and 2000s, long before I began posting such notes on this blog. I’ll see what I can salvage from them too.)

This book by Bering I bought when it came out in early 2011. I think the author was unknown to me, and I may or may not have read reviews of the book. It followed books in the 2000s by the “new atheists,” including Harris, Dawkins, Hitchens, and Dennett, that pointed out various things non-believers had noticed about religion that the religious apparently had not considered. Critics found the strident, and found reasons to dismiss them. (After all, they had *grown up* with their religions.) Bering, coming along a few years later, provided a new perspective, answering *why* people are subject to beliefs in souls and supernatural beings. Short answer: human nature, just as we had read about in Wilson’s ON HUMAN NATURE and later in Pinker’s HOW THE MIND WORKS and THE BLANK SLATE. And not just human nature, but human nature as evolved by natural selection to promote survival. That is, there’s survival value to believing things that are not true. Cool, huh?

Anyway, my approach to this book and the others will be to read through my notes and clean up their readability, without necessarily trying to condense them, and post them. But along the way I’ll extract some key points, and list those first, as a summary ahead of the full notes.

Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Psychology, Science | Comments Off on Jesse Bering, THE BELIEF INSTINCT

And the Moon Rose Over an Open Field

  • Paul Krugman, with graphs, wonders why the right rejects progress;
  • Robert Reich on why we don’t trust Donald Trump — because he disregards the truth;
  • Hemant Mehta on how the “nones” aren’t exactly “godless”;
  • How Trump is a Russian asset; how MAGA is rehabilitating Hitler (!); Tom Nichols on how the world no longer takes Trump seriously; and a piece about RFK Jr.’s testimony today before the Senate;
  • And a lovely cover of Simon and Garfunkel’s “America.”
– – –

 

Again today the usual batch of items, a sort of “Goings On Around MAGA USA.” Of them, here’s one that digs deepest into fundamental principles.

Paul Krugman, 3 Sep 2025: Why Does the Right Reject Progress?, subtitled “The perverse push to make America miserable again”

He begins by discussing vaccines, and the resistance to them.

Continue reading

Posted in Human Nature, Music, Politics, progress, Religion | Comments Off on And the Moon Rose Over an Open Field

Conservative Logic, or Illogic

  • A note about my post about Atwood’s THE HANDMAID’S TALE;
  • Florida ends vaccines mandates, because you shouldn’t be forced to follow laws, right?;
  • How the GOP suddenly realizes some people should not be allowed guns;
  • How Trump has learned to speak to his MAGA base.
– – –

I just finished a post about Margaret Atwood’s 1985 novel THE HANDMAID’S TALE, which is about a religious theocracy that responds to a dramatic change in human fertility. It’s about how human morality adjusts to changing circumstances. And how religions respond by reinforcing the most basic tribal morality: survival above all. That was then; this is now. Such thinking applied to our current environment goes haywire. Conservatives don’t think anything can be learned.

\\\

NY Times, 3 Sep 2025: Florida Moves to End Vaccine Mandates for Schoolchildren, subtitled “The state would be the first to scrap requirements that children be vaccinated to attend school, among other rules.”

Continue reading

Posted in conservatives | Comments Off on Conservative Logic, or Illogic