Dr. Sherlock to discuss his conversion to Catholicism

The USU Religious Studies Club is hosting a presentation by Dr. Sherlock about his recent conversion from Mormonism to Catholicism. For those who are not familiar with him, Dr. Sherlock is a philosophy professor at USU. His conversion to Catholicism is notable because he has long been an important (though some think heretical) Mormon intellectual.

The presentation is this Wednesday, March 2, at 4:00 PM in Old Main 121. You won’t want to miss it. But if you cannot make it, I’ll likely post a recording of the talk later this week.

Is there an afterlife?

Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris debate Rabbis David Wolpe and Bradley Artson.

Sorry for the recent slew of video/image posts. I haven’t found time to write much lately. Hopefully that changes soon.

Update: the YouTube video has been taken down. Until I find another embeddable link, you can watch the entire debate here.

Link bomb #16

In Cache Valley news, a group of Hyrum students seek to form a ‘no cussing’ club. If you don’t want to use certain language, fine—don’t use it. But what will creating a group accomplish to that end? To me, this just smacks of self-righteousness, and that’s a greater social ill than cussing.

Slate Magazine reviews The Book of Mormon musical. “What Parker and Stone do isn’t religion-bashing. It’s religion-teasing. And it’s born more from fascination than disdain.” Indeed, Slate suggests the musical’s creators are rather fond of Mormonism.

This guy bribes a homeless man to remove “God” from his sign for $20 bucks. It’s exploitative, sure, but the debate and negotiations are fascinating.

Gay-rights activist Eric Ethington had his car tires slashed at BYU while meeting with students there about Utah county non-discrimination ordinances. His car boasted a couple of LGBT bumper stickers, making it an easy target at the conservative campus.

Mormon blogger Joanna Brooks challenges Elder Oaks assertion that religious freedom is under attack by gay rights.

Greta Christina digs up Pascal Wager’s coffin only to put yet another nail in it.

One of my favorite documentarians, BBC’s Louis Theroux, meets with Israeli zionists. His documentary serves as an important reminder that Islamists are not the region’s only religious fanatics.

The Christian Delusion is being called the best atheist book of 2010 and among the most exhaustive and accessible critiques of Christianity. Here are three essays that didn’t make into the book, but are still good reads: ‘God and Animals’, ‘Modern Democracy’, ‘The Will of God‘.

Common Sense Atheism asks, “Can theists and atheists reasonably disagree?” And a related question: Can you love religious people if you hate their religion?

Despite the majority of Americans believing that the Bible is the word of God, most are ignorant as to what the Bible says—especially where it concerns sex. Newsweek spells out what the Bible really says about sex.

If you care to read a 50-page journal article on the history of Mormon attitudes toward masturbation, then enjoy.

Are intuitions good evidence? When I think ‘intuition’, I think of the anti-intellectualism of Stephen Colbert following his gut. But this article notes that, for good or ill, intuition informs our philosophical and religious beliefs.

Whenever I want to read something that’s guaranteed to annoy me, I read the letters to the editor in the BYU’s Daily Universe. It’s a perpetual parade of petty complaints, like men fretting about the length of ladies’ skirts and shorts. The latest letter to irk me was published Monday. The student wrote to demand that the school take action against her Democratic classmates for wearing “Choose the Left” shirts, which she felt was tantamount to sacrilege.

Oscar-winning director Paul Haggis discusses his disillusionment with Scientology in a lengthy article in The New Yorker.

The Afghan government has arrested two men for converting to Christianity, a crime that carries the death penalty in Afghanistan and several other Muslim countries. And a 14-year-old Bangladeshi girl dies after receiving 100 lashes for alleged sexual indiscretions.

Scientists aim to resurrect the woolly mammoth in five years. My mouth is already watering for the inevitable mammoth burger.

South Dakota, a state that has unsuccessfully attempted to ban abortion twice, recently considered a law that might legalize killing abortion providers. Thankfully, as February 16th, South Dakota has indefinitely shelved the bill due to public outrage.

A faithful Mormon again uploads the anti-Prop 8 video that, two years ago, she removed on threat of having her temple recommend and church callings revoked.

Futurist author Ray Kurzweil predicts that, by 2045, the human brain will be able to adopt a machine body as its host, effectively making man immortal. P.Z. Myers is skeptical. At his popular blog Pharyngula, he called Kurzweil a “huckster” and the founder of a new religion: Singularitarianism.

Pure Mormonism’s advice to unmarried LDS couples: Go ahead and skip that temple wedding.

Okay, here come the lists: the top 8 Bill O’Reilly science fails; the top 10 transhumanist technologies; the 30 most offensive church signs of all time.

This defense of Fawn Brodie makes a compelling argument that Mormons owe the critical Joseph Smith biographer a “huge debt of gratitude.”

The loneliness of atheism

One of SHAFT’s primary functions is as a social sanctuary of sorts. In so religious a state as ours, where people with no religious beliefs are sometimes ostracized, it’s important that atheists/agnostics find like-minded or sympathetic company. Otherwise, being an atheist/agnostic in Utah can be a lonely experience.

I’ve had the good fortune never to experience that kind of loneliness—at least not for extended periods of time. Both my family and friends are accepting of my atheism, so my relationships haven’t suffered for it. If anything, my social life has been enhanced as an atheist, having met a lot of extraordinary people through SHAFT.

No, the loneliness I feel is more profound, more persistent. It’s a loneliness that isn’t diminished even when I’m surrounded by people. It’s that feeling that you’re stuck in your own head—that because you cannot express every thought, nobody will ever truly know you.

This, of course, is nothing unique to atheists. Perhaps it’s the human condition. But this mind-as-prison loneliness, for me, worsened without a belief in god.

Atheist author Christopher Hitchens often remarks that he’s relieved there is no god. He abhors the notion of a god who monitors our thoughts as tyrannical. “Who wishes,” he asks in the introduction to The Portable Atheist, “that there was a permanent, unalterable celestial despotism that subjected us to continual surveillance and could convict us of thought-crime[?]”

Like Hitchens, I find that god, the Abrahamic god, objectionable. I do, however, wish that there were some being who knew my every waking thought—the good, the bad, and the ugly. And when I did believe in such a being, I felt less lonely. (To be sure, believing that my thoughts were being monitored was cause for anxiety. But that anxiety was outweighed by the comfort of having someone totally understand you, and more than you understand yourself.)

So to compensate for no longer believing in any omniscient being, I try to be radically open, honest, and expressive. It borders on voyeurism, really. And often my frankness comes at the expense of social tact. On first dates, for example, I volunteer all the most embarrassing information about me. If they’re still interested in me after these disclosures (and they rarely are ha ha), then they’re worth dating.

My blogging, too, has largely been driven by this loneliness. It allows me to free some thoughts from my head—well, to the extent that I can articulate them into words.

All that said, I don’t regret losing my faith. I enjoy a happy, meaningful life. But I do nonetheless miss aspects of the religious experience, including that sense of being understood.