Michael Shermer's Blog, page 22
August 24, 2010
The Free Exercise of Stupidity Dr. Laura, the Ground Zero Mosque, and the 1st Amendment
Recently, two of the biggest media story brouhahas were Dr. Laura's N-word gaff and the Ground Zero mosque, both of which commentators insist are First Amendment issues. They are not. Here's why. First, let's review the First…
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of...
August 17, 2010
Was Jesus a Conservative or a Liberal?
The ancient art of cherry picking passages from the Bible to support this or that argument has found new life in recent decades as conservatives claim Jesus as their political ally and in the past year with the Tea Party movement invoking Christ's conservativism. What Would Jesus Do? (WWJD?) has morphed into Who Would Jesus Vote For? (WWJVF?) Was Jesus a conservative? I don't think so, but the entire enterprise of politicizing historical figures with modern labels is fraught with fallacy.
Empl...
August 3, 2010
The Passion of Saint Mel (Gibson that is)
To understand the lunatic rantings of Mel Gibson you need know only a few core characters of the man, starting with his first name, which comes from Saint Mel (or Moel), a fifth-century Irish saint who worked to evangelize Ireland in the name of the Papacy. Saint Mel is the patron saint of the Roman Catholic diocese of Ardagh, where Mel Gibson's mother came of religious age.
The young (modern) Mel was brought up by his Traditionalist Catholic father, Hutton Gibson, where the doctrine of...
August 1, 2010
Our Neandertal Brethren

According to the late Harvard University biologist Ernst W. Mayr, the greatest evolutionary theorist since Charles Darwin, "species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups."
Reproductive isolation is the key to understanding how new species form, and many types of barriers can divide a population and split it into two different groups: geographic (such as a...
July 20, 2010
My Dinner (and Drinks) with Christopher (Hitchens that is)
The conjunction of reading Christopher Hitchens' new memoir, Hitch 22, and the news of his treatment for esophageal cancer, reminded me that I should share my (admittedly limited) experiences of dining (and drinking) with one of the greatest literary masters and creative thinkers of our age.
First, I'm half way through listening to the unabridged audio book of Hitch 22, which I wholeheartedly recommend because Christopher reads it himself in that inimitable classically-educated British accent ...
July 13, 2010
Nash Equilibrium, the Omerta Rule, and Doping in Cycling
The Tour de France is underway and it is already shaping up to be one of the grandest and most epic races in the event's century-long history. If you haven't seen a stage yet be sure to tune into the Versus Network that covers it every day, with repeat airings all day and evening. Lance is still in contention even after several crashes. In fact, I've never seen so many crashes in a Tour before. This event is so hard it is not surprising that, as usual, allegations and suspicions of doping...
July 5, 2010
When Scientists Sin
how science is (mostly) self-correcting

In his 1974 commencement speech at the California Institute of Technology, Nobel laureate physicist Richard P. Feynman articulated the foundation of scientific integrity: "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest person to fool… After you've not fooled yourself, it's easy not to fool other scientists. You just have to be honest in a conventional way after that."
Unfortun...
June 29, 2010
'I didn't know the mic was on': Public Talk v. Private Talk
The recent flap over the inopportune comments by General Stanley McChrystal and his staff in the presence of and even directly to a Rolling Stone magazine journalist, and the ensuing hue and cry "off with their heads" for what amounts to something akin to alcohol-fueled barroom B.S.ing and locker-room boys-will-be-boys jock talk, affords an opportunity to distinguish between public talk and private talk.
Private talk is what we say in private to our spouses, family, friends, and colleagues...
June 15, 2010
The Pattern Behind Self Deception
Last week I blogged about lying: "Everyone Lies: Why?"
Deception is one thing, self deception is quite another. This week TED.com has posted my new TED talk, delivered at the last TED conference, in which I present material from my forthcoming book on the neuroscience of belief, tentatively entitled The Believing Brain, a central theme of which is how we are so easily deceived and how we deceive ourselves. Here is a brief summary of the thesis of the talk, although because it is so visual I s...
June 1, 2010
When Ideas Have Sex
increases prosperity and trust

In his 1776 work An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, Scottish moral philosopher Adam Smith identified the cause in a single variable: "the propensity to truck, barter, and exchange one thing for another." Today we call this free trade or market capitalism, and since the recession it has become de rigueur to dis the system as corrupt, rotten or deeply flawed.
If we pull back and take a long-horizon...
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