Re "Richard Dawkins [had] just made a spectacularly crass statement about 
"stupid" people praying in the aftermath of the Boxing Day tsunami.":
 

 Today I was ruminating on this current earthquake in Nepal. Back in the 
distant past, to find the earth trembling under your feet and creating such 
destruction must have seemed obviously the responsibility of a powerful god (or 
demon). Thanks to the accumulated knowledge we today owe to the painstaking 
application of the scientific method we now know that these events are a 
consequence of the Indian subcontinent "crashing" into the Asian land mass (at 
the rate of 5cm a year!) so we don't need a supernatural explanation. 
 

 Please let's not feel superior to our ancestors. Their explanation was 
probably the best hypothesis at the time.
 

---In [email protected], <[email protected]> wrote :

 
 

---In [email protected], <turquoiseb@...> wrote :

 Thanks again for posting thought-provoking material, Salyavin. While the 
whiners are busy pointing fingers and blaming others for not posting anything 
of value, you point out how lame they are by...wait for it...simply posting 
something of value. 
 

 I thought it was interesting, especially as real lives depend on a Palestinian 
state.
 

 It popped up on Richard Dawkin's Facebook page last night and I was going to 
post a back-story but I was busy watching the snooker (no sense of priority me):
 

 In 2004 I got a letter printed in the Guardian and it was about Richard 
Dawkins. He'd just made a spectacularly crass statement about "stupid" people 
praying in the aftermath of the Boxing day tsunami. Obviously if God was going 
to help he would have stopped the thing in the first place but an intellectual 
appraisal of where to direct their energy isn't what people really needed to 
hear at that moment in time.
 

 My letter was about how Dawkins - who held the chair for the public 
understanding of science at Oxford University - might be better off working 
towards a scientific understanding of the public. And here it is. May it help 
him keep his foot out of his mouth.
 
 

 From: salyavin808 <[email protected]>
 To: [email protected] 
 Sent: Wednesday, April 29, 2015 10:33 PM
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Faith v Facts
 
 
   
 JERUSALEM — MOST of us find it mind-boggling that some people seem willing to 
ignore the facts — on climate change, on vaccines, on health care — if the 
facts conflict with their sense of what someone like them believes. “But those 
are the facts,” you want to say. “It seems weird to deny them.”
 
 And yet a broad group of scholars is beginning to demonstrate that religious 
belief and factual belief are indeed different kinds of mental creatures. 
People process evidence differently when they think with a factual mind-set 
rather than with a religious mind-set. Even what they count as evidence is 
different. And they are motivated differently, based on what they conclude. On 
what grounds do scholars make such claims?
 Faith vs. Facts 
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/19/opinion/sunday/t-m-luhrmann-faith-vs-facts.html?_r=2

 
 
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/19/opinion/sunday/t-m-luhrmann-faith-vs-facts.html?_r=2
 
 Faith vs. Facts 
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/19/opinion/sunday/t-m-luhrmann-faith-vs-facts.html?_r=2
 People reason differently when they think about God.


 
 View on www.nytimes.com 
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/19/opinion/sunday/t-m-luhrmann-faith-vs-facts.html?_r=2
 Preview by Yahoo 
 

 


 


 











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