“God is dead, and this is the best thing that could happen to us!”

My colleague at UMM, Michael Lackey, is interviewed by DJ Grothe on Point of Inquiry. He’s written a book on freethought in the American black community, and the interesting point is that black atheists embraced unbelief as a refuge from the Christian rationalizations for oppression — they saw religion as fundamentally anti-democratic, coming as it did from a closed system of knowledge.

You’ll also hear a discussion of post-modernism; hang out with enough English professors, and you’ll begin to realize it’s not as crazy as the caricatures make it out to be.

Four-way stops must be outlawed in Minnesota

They just don’t work. Maybe you’ve heard of “Minnesota nice”, this strange passive-aggressive attitude around here that compels everyone to compete at being the most polite and deferential…and it completely defeats the function of the 4-way stop at an intersection. The rule is simple—whoever first comes to a complete stop gets to be the first to proceed through the intersection—but real Minnesotans can’t grasp it. It’s nice to let someone go through first, so you’ll sometimes run into these situations where two cars are parked at the crossroads, with each driver waving for the other to go ahead, and they just sit there. Then they’ll both edge forward, stop abruptly as they notice the other fellow trying to advance, and the gesticulating commences again.

I just made a trip to the grocery store when I came upon two cars stopped, one to the left and the other to the right, their drivers flapping their arms madly and not going anywhere. My arrival seems to have made the situation worse, because they added me to their pattern of waving. Come on, I’m last at the intersection, I’m supposed to be last to proceed! It’s easy!

Anyway, I’m from Washington. I gave them 15 or 20 seconds, then said screw it, and went ahead.

Palinoscopy

Here’s the VP debate exactly as I remember it: Palin was cheerful, folksy, always evading the questions and changing the subject she was prepped for, and completely devoid of substance. I especially liked the introductory ground rules, which the media have taken to heart: “Due to the historically low expectations for governor Palin, were she simply to do an adequate job tonight, and at no point cry, faint, run out of the building, or vomit, you should consider the debate a tie.”

The ‘folksiness’ grates, as Patricia Williams notes — it’s a misleading proxy for authenticity, and authenticity is too often regarded as a proxy for competence and knowledge. We need leadership that actually has some skill in managing, now that we’re deep in this crisis the last folksy boob we elected led us into, and instead we’re getting a beauty queen whose major qualification seems to be the ability to drop the ending “g” from words. That would be OK if she had some ability beyond that, but nope, it’s not there.

Another example of the contrast: Biden and Palin were asked to name the past vice presidents they admire most. Palin fumbled, mentioned first Geraldine Ferraro (who only ran for VP) because she “shattered part of that glass ceiling”, and then named Bush Sr., because she liked vice presidents who went on to become presidents. (Right. Chills run down the spine, don’t they?) Biden didn’t hesitate and said Johnson, because of his knowledge of politics.

Oh, but Palin does have one other talent: she’s a well-trained attack dog. I think we can expect much more of this kind of slander from the Republicans in the next few weeks. She has come right out and accused Obama of associating with terrorists now.

Mrs Palin described Mr Obama as someone who saw the US “as being so imperfect… he is palling around with terrorists who would target their own country”.

Mr Obama served on a charity board several years ago with Mr Ayers, who is now a professor at the University of Illinois.
The White House hopeful, who was a child when Weather Underground was active, has denounced Mr Ayers’ radical past.

I expect she’ll start talking about how Obama is a Muslim who will want to be sworn in on a Koran soon. It’s all going to be lies and innuendo from the Republican side from here on out, and it might just work — especially if she says it with a dimple and a smile and a few lazily formed gerunds.

Berkeley notices a creationist

Parents in the Berkeley Unified School District are horrified to discover that one of their elementary school teachers is a creationist. Berkeley is like another weird world: this is so common everywhere else, and Berzerkeleyites are so shocked when it happens among their own. I was actually amused at what the creationist teacher did, though.

Parents said that Martin had listed Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and Harry Potter under fiction on the blackboard, which promptly reduced some of the 8-year-olds to tears, after which she made the comment about God. [“the only thing they should believe in was God”]

They said that Martin then said that she didn’t believe in evolution or the Big Bang theory either.

Usually it’s us atheists portrayed as the disillusioning bastards who shatter small children’s happy consoling beliefs (and it’s true: nothing warms the shriveled valves and atrophied muscles of my tiny dark heart than to visit department stores at Christmas time and announce to the waiting lines of tots that Santa is dead).

But seriously, it’s about time the sheltered elite enclaves woke up to the fact that the creationist movement is working its tendrils in everywhere.

Radio reminder

Listen to Atheists Talk radio on Sunday morning — it could be an interesting one. First up is Stephen Matheson to talk about his position, theistic evolution. I hope that Mike Haubrich applies a little pressure there…otherwise, you guys better be prepared to call in with tough questions. The second half will be on the Islamic threat to secularism.

As usual, here is when it is on in your part of the world:

Honolulu Sun 4:00 AM     Sao Paulo Sun 11:00 AM     Addis Ababa Sun 5:00 PM
Anchorage Sun 6:00 AM Rio de Janeiro Sun 11:00 AM Baghdad Sun 5:00 PM
Vancouver Sun 7:00 AM St. John’s Sun 11:30 AM Aden Sun 5:00 PM
San Francisco Sun 7:00 AM Reykjavik Sun 2:00 PM Riyadh Sun 5:00 PM
Seattle Sun 7:00 AM Casablanca Sun 2:00 PM Antananarivo Sun 5:00 PM
Los Angeles Sun 7:00 AM Lisbon Sun 3:00 PM Kuwait City Sun 5:00 PM
Phoenix Sun 7:00 AM Dublin Sun 3:00 PM Moscow Sun 6:00 PM
Edmonton Sun 8:00 AM London Sun 3:00 PM Dubai Sun 6:00 PM
Denver Sun 8:00 AM Lagos Sun 3:00 PM Tehran Sun 6:30 PM
Guatemala Sun 8:00 AM Algiers Sun 3:00 PM Kabul Sun 6:30 PM
San Salvador Sun 8:00 AM Madrid Sun 4:00 PM Tashkent Sun 7:00 PM
Tegucigalpa Sun 8:00 AM Barcelona Sun 4:00 PM Mumbai Sun 7:30 PM
Managua Sun 8:00 AM Paris Sun 4:00 PM New Delhi Sun 7:30 PM
Mexico City Sun 9:00 AM Brussels Sun 4:00 PM Kolkata Sun 7:30 PM
Winnipeg Sun 9:00 AM Amsterdam Sun 4:00 PM Kathmandu Sun 7:45 PM
Houston Sun 9:00 AM Geneva Sun 4:00 PM Karachi Sun 8:00 PM
Minneapolis Sun 9:00 AM Zürich Sun 4:00 PM Islamabad Sun 8:00 PM
St. Paul Sun 9:00 AM Frankfurt Sun 4:00 PM Lahore Sun 8:00 PM
New Orleans Sun 9:00 AM Oslo Sun 4:00 PM Almaty Sun 8:00 PM
Chicago Sun 9:00 AM Copenhagen Sun 4:00 PM Dhaka Sun 8:00 PM
Montgomery Sun 9:00 AM Rome Sun 4:00 PM Yangon Sun 8:30 PM
Lima Sun 9:00 AM Berlin Sun 4:00 PM Bangkok Sun 9:00 PM
Kingston Sun 9:00 AM Prague Sun 4:00 PM Hanoi Sun 9:00 PM
Bogota Sun 9:00 AM Zagreb Sun 4:00 PM Jakarta Sun 9:00 PM
Caracas Sun 9:30 AM Vienna Sun 4:00 PM Kuala Lumpur Sun 10:00 PM
Indianapolis Sun 10:00 AM Stockholm Sun 4:00 PM Singapore Sun 10:00 PM
Atlanta Sun 10:00 AM Cape Town Sun 4:00 PM Hong Kong Sun 10:00 PM
Detroit Sun 10:00 AM Budapest Sun 4:00 PM Perth Sun 10:00 PM
Havana Sun 10:00 AM Belgrade Sun 4:00 PM Beijing Sun 10:00 PM
Miami Sun 10:00 AM Warsaw Sun 4:00 PM Manila Sun 10:00 PM
Toronto Sun 10:00 AM Johannesburg Sun 4:00 PM Shanghai Sun 10:00 PM
Nassau Sun 10:00 AM Harare Sun 4:00 PM Taipei Sun 10:00 PM
Washington DC Sun 10:00 AM Cairo Sun 4:00 PM Seoul Sun 11:00 PM
Ottawa Sun 10:00 AM Sofia Sun 5:00 PM Tokyo Sun 11:00 PM
Philadelphia Sun 10:00 AM Athens Sun 5:00 PM Darwin Sun 11:30 PM
New York Sun 10:00 AM Tallinn Sun 5:00 PM Adelaide Sun 11:30 PM
Montreal Sun 10:00 AM Helsinki Sun 5:00 PM Melbourne Midnight Sun-Mon
Boston Sun 10:00 AM Bucharest Sun 5:00 PM Canberra Midnight Sun-Mon
Santiago Sun 10:00 AM Minsk Sun 5:00 PM Sydney Midnight Sun-Mon
Santo Domingo Sun 10:00 AM Istanbul Sun 5:00 PM Brisbane Midnight Sun-Mon
La Paz Sun 10:00 AM Kyiv Sun 5:00 PM Vladivostok Mon 1:00 AM
San Juan Sun 10:00 AM Khartoum Sun 5:00 PM Auckland Mon 2:00 AM
Asuncion Sun 10:00 AM Ankara Sun 5:00 PM Suva Mon 2:00 AM
Halifax Sun 11:00 AM Jerusalem Sun 5:00 PM Chatham Island Mon 2:45 AM
Buenos Aires Sun 11:00 AM Beirut Sun 5:00 PM Kamchatka Mon 3:00 AM
Montevideo Sun 11:00 AM Amman Sun 5:00 PM Anadyr Mon 3:00 AM
Brasilia Sun 11:00 AM Nairobi Sun 5:00 PM Kiritimati Mon 4:00 AM

Anathem

Neal Stephenson writes ambitious books. I got hooked with Snow Crash(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll), an amazingly imaginative book about near-future virtual worlds; Zodiac(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll) is required reading for anyone interested in chemistry and the environment; I had mixed feelings about Cryptonomicon(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll), but only because it was two books in one, and only one of those books was excellent; The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll) was a fabulously weird exploration of a New Victorian culture with nanotechnology; and
I ate up his big trilogy, The Baroque Cycle (Quicksilver(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll), The Confusion(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll)
, and The System of the World(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll)), which I consider his best to date — historical fiction bubbling over with a fascinatingly skewed perspective on the Enlightenment. He’s definitely one of my favorite authors. He’s an acquired taste; he often seems to abandon the narrative of his book to go noodling about with strange ideas, and it can be frustrating if you read a book with the goal of getting to the end. On the other hand, all of those little distractions and detours seem to culminate in fireworks, so as long as you’re willing to go along for the ride, they’re great.

Now he has a new one out, Anathem(amzn/b&n/abe/pwll), and I don’t know whether I’ll be able to finish it. I’m about halfway into it, and it’s a difficult read (most of his books are), but no fireworks. It definitely has an interesting idea at the core, but it doesn’t seem to be one that translates into an interesting novel.

The premise is that it is a story of an alien culture where the philosopher-mathematicians are set aside and isolated from the general population, living in monastery-like “concents” where they live a life focused on ritual and contemplation of their work, undistracted by the outside world of saeculars or even the interests of the applied science and technology class, the itas. The life of these mathematicians very much parallels the life of monks in our world, except they aren’t religious at all — they’re even called “avout” (rather than devout) to emphasize the agnostic nature of their existence. Every once in a while, the outside world intrudes: there are regular events every decade, century, or millennium when the doors of the concents are opened and avouts briefly mingle with the extramuros, or world outside, and in times of need the saeculars will evoke individual avouts, calling them to work in their specialty in the world beyond the concent. Anathem is about a small group of avouts who are suddenly called to carry out a little peregrination after astronomers notice something peculiar in the sky.

As I admitted, I’ve only made it halfway through so far, so perhaps there is some excitement coming up, but I have to admit: the lives of scholastic hermits are excruciatingly boring. No offense intended to any mathematicians reading this, but I think even you would find these math monks tedious, since the excitement (I presume) of their discipline is only described vaguely and indirectly, since no actual math is directly described in the text (there are a couple of appendices that describe some proofs). Of course, this is a small blessing to the rest of us, because perhaps the only thing more dreary than describing the lives of obsessed mathematicians would be a book describing the actual mathematics of a collection of obsessed mathematicians. It does not, however, enthuse the reader to contemplate how easily this book could have been rendered even more uneventful and abstract.

So far, in my progress through the book, we have explored this strange world of Stephenson’s and been introduced to the life of the avout, and a small group of central characters. They have been evoked, and are crossing over the North Pole on their way to a remote continent, where, somehow, they are going to solve (I presume) they mystery of a pattern of lights observed in orbit around the world, which for some so-far unexplained reason, has unsettled many influential people among the saeculars. Not much has happened, actually. It’s a fine exercise in science-fiction world-building, especially if you are fond of dessicated academics, but as stories go…it’s a little less than enthralling.

I should mention that being halfway through it means I’m on page 450.

Like I said, I’m beginning to doubt that I will make it to the end of this epic journey. I am parched and fading, and there aren’t even any fireworks. I may bring it along on my next plane trip, but even there I fear it will only promote more napping while airborne.

The book has another flaw, which you may deduce from my summary. Stephenson is making up words like a Pentecostal on a meth/caffeine/LSD cocktail. I can understand why he’s doing it — it’s to give his philosophomathematicians an atmosphere of the cloister and the cathedral while not freighting them with any kind of religious sense — but it makes the whole book even more wearing. I got this book for fun (fireworks!), it’s already turning into a hard slog, and on top of that, I have to learn a whole new language in order to understand it? Ouch. Even the title is one of his odd hybrid words!

Randall Munroe seems to be feeling the same way I do.

i-6938b17fab84d9cf964e88d4ca07b31a-xkcd_anathem.jpg

This book is only for True Fans™ of Neal Stephenson, and even at that, I suspect there will be much shuffling of feet and averted eyes when it comes up for discussion at the SF cons.

The heritage of Abraham

How about those modesty police?

In Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, where the rule of law sometimes takes a back seat to the rule of God, zealots are on a campaign to stamp out behavior they consider unchaste. They hurl stones at women for such “sins” as wearing a red blouse, and attack stores selling devices that can access the Internet.

In recent weeks, self-styled “modesty patrols” have been accused of breaking into the apartment of a Jerusalem woman and beating her for allegedly consorting with men. They have torched a store that sells MP4 players, fearing devout Jews would use them to download pornography.

“These breaches of purity and modesty endanger our community,” said 38-year-old Elchanan Blau, defending the bearded, black-robed zealots. “If it takes fire to get them to stop, then so be it.”

And the significant difference between Judaism and Islam is…? I guess it’s merely a matter of degree: a Muslim cleric wants women to wear clothing that covers up all but one and only one eye, while the Jewish fundamentalists, I presume, still allow women to use both eyes. So far.

Hey, I have a suggestion for all those fearful people who want to punish women for being so darn tempting. Instead of targeting women, let’s have all orthodox, fundamentalist men fitted with devices that measure penis enlargement, and that set off blinking lights and whistles mounted on the gentleman’s hats when significant arousal is detected. Then the clerics and rabbis and orthodox mobs can patrol the streets and stone anyone with a flashing hat — one way or another, the visible responses to perfectly ordinary human forms will disappear, the clerics will be able to claim victory over temptation, and they can stop abusing innocent women.

I’m sure there’s a clever dick somewhere who can come up with such a device.