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April Meeting

The April Meeting was held yesterday at the Carlton Castletroy Park Hotel.  The theme of the meeting was Humanism in the news and it turns out that there is a lot of humanism related stories.  We only looked at the Irish Times and only for the last 6 weeks or so and generated some lively discussion on the stories reviewed.  These were :

1.    It seems as if religion is the last taboo by BREDA O’BRIEN

Religious practice has many positive effects, and we should try and harness those benefits.  Are people returning to the “comfort blanket” of religion in a time of recession?

Its a sad reflection on religion if it is reduced to the fear engendered by the recession to increase its numbers. Full Article

2.    Is religion good for you? By SHANE HEGARTY

A response to the Iona Institute document saying that religious practice makes you happier, healthier, and less likely to stray as a teenager or as a spouse.  This is a great piece of criticism and the best quote in it is “(The report is also quite amusing in how it talks in its main text about Richard Dawkins and The God Delusion without mentioning either by name. Say it: Dawkins, Dawkins, Dawkins. He won’t materialise in a puff of sulphur.)” Full Article

3.    Humanists launch campaign against judicial religious oaths by PATSY McGARRY, Religious Affairs Correspondent A report on the The Humanist Association of Ireland poster campaign on Dart trains in the capital against the practice of judges and presidents of Ireland being obliged to take an oath. FullArticle

4.    A row that goes all the way back to creation By FIONOLA MEREDITH As the Ulster Museum in Belfast prepares for its grand reopening after a major makeover, curators didn’t plan on a blazing row over plans to host a Darwin exhibition in its new science galleries. Full Article.

5.    New school model still tramples on rights of the non-religious by DICK SPICER, chairman of the Humanist Association of Ireland.  OUR STATE is unique among developed democracies in compelling children to attend school and then not providing them with a religiously neutral educational choice and schools, although they are funded by the taxpayers, are not “national” in the sense of accommodating all our children equally. Full Article

6.    Hospice group asked to back doctor-assisted suicide By PATSY McGARRY

THE IRISH Hospice Foundation has been asked to support “legal doctor-assisted suicide” where requested by terminally ill patients. Its support has also been sought for the creation of an “advance healthcare directive” whereby a person may stipulate in advance the circumstances where he or she would refuse treatment.  The requests have been made by the Humanist Association of Ireland (HAI) in a submission to the Irish Hospice Foundation. Full Article

7.    Saying goodbye your own way by ARMINTA WALLACE

With society becoming increasingly secular, civil funerals can provide a more personal ritual for those who are uncomfortable with the pomp and dogma of church services. Full Article

8.    How Darwin helped shape Irish writing by FINTAN O’TOOLE

The way in which Irish writers responded to Darwin’s beliefs forged a whole new cultural space here.  Full Article

9.    Moral equivalence is of little use to those dying without dignity by LEN DOYAL

An opinion piece putting forward his arguments for the legalisation of euthanasia following his prevention from speaking at Cork University Hospital. Full Article

We discussed the meeting schedule and decided to make the May meeting and evening one.  It will take place on the 19th May at 20:00, with the venue to be decided.  Hopefully this will be more conveinent for more members as the Sunday morning seems to be too early for some.

April Meeting

I’ll start with an apology.  I undertook to organise the April meeting for last Sunday but failed to get my act together on time and book the venue.  My stated excuse is pressure of work, but people who know me may have other views.  I’ve also neglected to post anything for some time – I’ll make the single apology cover both omissions.  The next meeting is as follows:

Date                          :            Sunday 26th April 2009

Time                         :           11:00

Venue                      :           Castletroy Park Hotel – now the Carlton

Suggested theme :               Humanism in the news.  There has been a considerable amount of humanist related news about recently e.g. HAI campaign about religious oaths, and it would make a very interesting meeting to explore these items.

Friday Music

This is where it will all end!

But not yet, Lord

According to an article in The Economist Religious people seem curiously reluctant to meet their maker.

HOW do a person’s religious beliefs influence his attitude to terminal illness? The answer is surprising. You might expect the religious to accept death as God’s will and, while not hurrying towards it, not to seek to prolong their lives using heroic and often traumatic medical procedures. Atheists, by contrast, have nothing to look forward to after death, so they might be expected to cling to life. In fact, it is the other way round—at least according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association by Andrea Phelps and her colleagues at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Religious people seem to use their faith to cope with the pain and degradation that “aggressive” medical treatment entails, even though such treatment rarely makes much odds.

Read the full article here.

Friday Music

I feel that we need to become more catholic in our musical tastes.  ScientificGospel.com  is a music gerne created by Dr. Stephen Baird to spread scientific knowledge and argue for rational enquiry and thought.  Here is an example of their work.

Can This Be True?

dscf003311This just appeared on the Dublin Road in Limerick.  Can it be telling the truth?  I’m not well up on this but I’ve started to do a little research.  It looks like there are two elements of disinformation here. The message about adult stem cell cures is seriously overstated and they must be using a very low threshold for a definition of a treatment.  The message about embryonic stem cell research is technically true but the reason for this is that there hasn’t been enough time for treatments to be developed because of the delays imposed by the opposition of the anti-science crowd.   Of course here they are setting the bar high for a definition of a treatment.

Come on science geeks – time for you to get researching and blogging a response.

Friday Music – Roy Zimmerman

This guy does the best unexpected rhymes that I’ve come accross in ages. Who would think of rhyming “survival of the fittest” with “bull shit test”?  Should raise a smile among all rationalists.

The Pope is Right?

Mark Henderson, the science editor of The Times sees some value in the Pope’s latest outburst against homosexuality.   

In his address to Vatican staff, Benedict XVI declared the Church’s belief in a natural order of men and women, and asked “that this order, set down by creation, be respected”

Henderson’s contention is that in general religious people object to homosexuality because it is a moral choice outside the norms of natural behaviour.  Most gay men and women do not believe that they have made a choice about their lifestyle and their view is supported by science.  Science is proving that homosexuality is naturally occuring accross the animal kingdom and that in humans it is in every known culture.

The Pope is calling for an ecology of man; well he should take his own advice and respect the ecology as it exists.  As Henderson says:

 Science has made it clear that homosexuality is part of the rich diversity of that creation. That is something we should all respect – the Pope included.

Read the full article here

Pope and Homosexual Behaviour

Good to see that the pope has his priorities right. 

Pope Benedict said today that saving humanity from homosexual or transsexual behaviour was just as important as saving the rainforest from destruction. “(The Church) should also protect man from the destruction of himself. A sort of ecology of man is needed,” the pontiff said in a holiday address to the Curia, the Vatican’s central administration.

See Irish Times here.   I am almost speechless at the idea that people can be viewed as chattles or foliage to be farmed/protected by some self-appointed farmer or park ranger.  I’m sure there are some great jokes here – I just can’t see them right now.

Santa Vs. God

Dear Children

Dear Children

 

The Check list You'll need

The Check list You'll need