Justice, Religion, Sexuality
Grok Headline matches for Justice, Religion, Sexuality
What Use is Religion?
What Use is Religion?
09/04/2004 05:17 PMRichard Dawkins discusses religion with a Darwinian outlook .. What
Use is Religion?
secularhumanism.org/library/fi/dawkins_24_5.htm
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XML and Religion
XML and Religion
06/05/2005 11:19 PMI suspect that most people who read me also read Adam Bosworth.
But if you don’t, do.
Religion
Religion
09/22/2004 07:03 PM
Redemption
and the Power of Man. In Christianity, redemption is
essentially an act of divine grace, the salvation of a sinful humanity
that is incapable of saving itself. In Judaism redemption depends
entirely on man, who is responsible for his own fate. To what extent
did Judaism
influence the
development of progressive, pluralistic democracy?
"Its religion gone mad"
"Its religion gone mad"
04/19/2004 09:36 AM"Religion sites"
"Religion sites"
04/08/2005 10:10 AMWhat the world needs now: Another
religion
What the world needs now: Another
religion
03/06/2004 01:59 AMYoism is a made-up "open source" religion that replaces God with an
impersonal Divine Mystery that seems to be loosely defined as "The
Stuff that Is and the Scientifical Laws It Follows," so that the proof
of Yo's existence consists of saying that the universe exists. Yoism
pledges to build Heaven on Earth, and, best of all, without self
sacrifice! I'm confident Yoism is built on the best of intentions. I'm
just having trouble getting past the unintentional self-parody. I
guess that makes me a small person. Thanks to Ross Knights for the
link....
Technology and Religion
Technology and Religion
03/14/2005 04:21 PMTechnology and Religion1) PBS:
Can Religion Withstand Technology?http
://www.pbs.org/kcet/closertotruth/explore/show_14.html2) Institute for the Future Blog: Emerging Technologies and
Their Social
Implicationshttp://blogger.iftf.
org/Future/000510.html3) Cybertheologyhttp://www.cybertheology.net/
4) National Faculty Leadership Conference:
Theology/Technologyhttp://esoptron.umd.edu/th
eo_techno/5) TechNewsWorld: Technology and
Religionhttp://www.techne
wsworld.com/story/33078.html6) Wired: on Muslims and
technologyhttp://w
ww.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,66305,00.html7)
Cornells Minister of Technologyhttp://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/02/issue/
forward_cornell.asp?trk=nl8) Readings in Faith and
Sciencehttp:
//itest.slu.edu/theologicalview/readings2/index.htmlThis issue of Topic in Depth explores the relationship between
technology and religion in today's world. This first website, from
PBS, features interviews with "a skeptic, a devout Muslim scientist,
and an expert in the sociology of religion" who address the question,
Can Religion Withstand Technology? (1). This blog from the Institute
for the Future discusses how religion is making use of technology (2).
One way that religion and technology interact, of course, is through
the use of the Internet in communicating religious ideas, as is
evidenced by this collection of websites listed on cybertheology (3 ),
which also offers a number of articles on theology and technology.
This next website from researcher at the University of Maryland (4) is
"dedicated to illustrations of the trends to refer to and use
metaphors from technology in conveying fundamental ideas in theology"
and presents some of the data collected so far as part of this
research project. In this article from TechNewsWorld (5), an associate
deputy of interfaith relations for the Episcopal Church discusses his
views on "the future of religion and technology -- and what he views
as their joint role in the survival of humanity." Wired offers this
perspective on how technology has impacted Islamic traditions (6). W.
Kent Fuchs, Dean of Cornell University's College of Engineering,
discusses the ways that religion and technology can help each other in
this short article (7 ). Finally, this website (8) offers a large
selection of articles specifically addressing Faith and Science from
the Institute for Theological Encounter with Science & Technology.
This will be added to Theology Resources Subject Tracer™ Information
Blog. [ From The NSDL Scout Report for Math, Engineering, and
Technology, Copyright
Internet Scout Project 1994-2005.
http://scout.wisc.edu/]
"Which religion is the right one for
you? (new version)"
"Which religion is the right one for
you? (new version)"
03/28/2005 03:19 PMGimme that New-Time Religion
Gimme that New-Time Religion
07/27/2004 06:10 AMBy Dale Short (Birmingham Weekly) Posted with permission. It
may be no coincidence that every explosion we see in an action movie
nowadays looks the same. Destruction is no longer a loud bang and a
flash of light; it's become a stylized slow-motion ballet of jagged
fragments that tumble and ricochet outward from the explosion's exact
center toward the viewer and beyond, an artists perspective-drawing
turned nightmare. The destroyed object is no more, this surreal
display seems to tell us, but the ramifications of the blast have only
begun. Its chain of events reaches further into the future than we can
imagine, consequences as relentless as they are unforeseeable, but
already stirring in us some primal memory of doom.
Science Fiction and Religion
Science Fiction and Religion
01/19/2004 10:41 AMI was reading an interview with Ted Chiang, and the first lines struck
me: All science fiction is fundamentally post-religious literature.
For those whose minds are shaped by science and technology, the
universe is fundamentally knowable. Faith dissolves, replaced by a
sense of wonder at the complexity of creation.What do you think of
this?
Karl Marx On Religion
Karl Marx On Religion
03/19/2003 10:25 PM Perhaps Karl Marx's best known quotation is his description of
religion as "the opiate of the masses." This quote is often
misrepresented by those ideologically opposed to Marx as though Marx
were advocating immediate and total obliteration of all religions. On
the contrary, Marx viewed religion as the sole solace, often, of the
oppressed proletarian classes. He would not have dreamed of tearing
this away, their only consolation in life. Lutheranism was
the prescribed Prussian state religion, and career advancement for
non-Lutherans and especially Jews was difficult to impossible. But
for Marx, religion in general was merely a symptom of a much larger
issue -- the fundamentally predatorial economic relationship between
the bourgeois class and the proletariat -- rather than religion being
a fundamental problem in itself. As Napoleon put it, "Religion is
great stuff for keeping the poor from murdering the rich."
English Literature and Religion
English Literature and Religion
06/05/2004 02:51 PM
Englis
h Literature and Religion.
All religion leads to extremism
All religion leads to extremism
06/05/2005 10:51 PMSalman Rushdie attacks an article in the Guardian by Dylan Evans which
proposes a moderate atheist stance. The problem with...
Low Power FM Religion Radio
Low Power FM Religion Radio
04/06/2005 11:57 AM
Religion
radio co-opts low power FM. Remember the fight over
low power
FM? It was
supposed to help establish community radio stations. It seems that
some Christian broadcasting stations have been snapping up low power
FM licenses to implement translators, which extend the broadcast area
of their main signal. Some groups have been
speaking out
about this, yet the FCC only acted after it appeared that some of the
licenses were being obtained fraudulently for resale. (via
Jorn)
Google Finds Religion
Google Finds Religion
05/04/2004 04:59 PMYahoo! May 4 2004 9:42PM GMT
Sikh religion goes high-tech
Sikh religion goes high-tech
08/31/2004 07:09 PMThe Tribune Aug 31 2004 10:54PM GMT
China rules on religion 'relaxed'
China rules on religion 'relaxed'
12/19/2004 03:03 PMChina has announced new rules on religious groups aimed at ending
discrimination on grounds of belief.
kuro5hin.org || Karl Marx On Religion
kuro5hin.org || Karl Marx On Religion
03/19/2003 10:46 PMKarl Marx On Religion
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Religion Feeds Sudan's Fire
Religion Feeds Sudan's Fire
08/22/2004 02:31 AMPolitical rivalries, ethnic strife and poverty have fueled the
clashes, but that has not stopped combatants from invoking religion
and challenging the devotion of their rivals.
Religion Experts Ask How Jesus Would
Vote (AP)
Religion Experts Ask How Jesus Would
Vote (AP)
08/18/2004 08:46 AMAP - Just a few miles from George W. Bush's former office at the state
Capitol, a panel of religious experts weighed a question with
relevance to many people of faith: How would Jesus vote?
MS (nearly) ditches the PC religion with
home net plans
MS (nearly) ditches the PC religion with
home net plans
01/08/2004 08:24 PMMaybe it's not the PC, stupid...
American teens using the Web for
religion: UNC study
American teens using the Web for
religion: UNC study
12/18/2003 02:14 AM
Many American teenagers read Web sites
for religious information , according to a new study
from the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill .
"Forty percent of those teens who say that their faith is extremely
important to them report using the Internet to visit religious
Websites a few times each month or more often," said Dr. Christian S.
Smith, study principal investigator. "Another 20 percent who describe
their faith as very important also say they visit religious Websites a
few times each month or more."
The study is associated with the National Study of Youth and
Religion , funded by the
Lilly Endowment .
(via James
Downing )
If Religion Writers Rode the Campaign
Bus...
If Religion Writers Rode the Campaign
Bus...
07/16/2004 06:56 PM... what would be different? It's a question best put to journalists
and writers who know something of religion. So we did that, over at
The Revealer, where a
forum<
/a> on the "R" word is underway: "In search of religion on the
campaign trail." Journalists and bloggers on the god beat--plus an
atheist--turn their attention to politics and its rituals. Here's the
deep background.
Bill allows mixing of religion, politics
Bill allows mixing of religion, politics
06/07/2004 08:42 PMAmericans increasing use of internet for
religion
Americans increasing use of internet for
religion
04/09/2004 04:01 PM
Americans are increasingly using the internet
for religious purposes, according to a
new
study from the
Pew Internet and American Life
Project .
The study's findings include:
64% of the nation’s 128 million Internet users have done things
online that relate to religious or spiritual matters.
...
Those who use the Internet for religious or spiritual purposes are
more likely to be women, white, middle aged, college educated, and
relatively well-to-do...
The “online faithful” are devout and they use the Internet for
personal spiritual matters more than for traditional religious
functions or work related to their places of worship. But their
faith-activity online seems to augment their already-strong
commitments to their congregations.
While it is now clear that many netizens use cyberspace to affirm
their faith, it is less clear to
what extent Americans are using the net to explore other
religions.
(via
ResourceShelf )
AirBeagle | On Politics, Religion and
Society
AirBeagle | On Politics, Religion and
Society
06/11/2004 05:02 AMContact
contact.airbeagle.com
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Toronto Sun Columnist: Coren - It's
religion gone mad
Toronto Sun Columnist: Coren - It's
religion gone mad
04/18/2004 01:41 AMThis is something deeper, darker, than an imagined fight against a
foreign foe .. Toronto Sun Columnist: Coren - It's religion gone mad
.. the
truth
canoe.ca/NewsStand/Columnists/Michael_Coren/2004/04/17/424075.
html
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Open Source Isn ' t Religion Just
Good Business
Open Source Isn ' t Religion Just
Good Business
05/26/2004 07:43 PMeWeek-4 hours agoAfter talking with MySQL and Red Hat executives,
David Coursey finds that open source isn't just for communists
after allthere's a real business rationale ...
Thoughts on magic, religion, metaphors
and technology...
Thoughts on magic, religion, metaphors
and technology...
04/18/2004 06:51 PMSo this is one of those posts that nothing good can come from. This
is because it's one of those posts that is inspired by something so
profoundly clumsy and grotesquely insensitive that I stumbled upon
elsewhere that I'm almost loathe to link to the original source. And
I'm going to make it worse, I fear, because in order to get some kind
of interesting aesthetic resonances I'm going to smash it together
with a bit of horrific ethnic sterotyping, cod technology
might-be-April-Fools technocrap and some wodges of clumsy
Occidentalism. Nothing good can come from such clumsiness, and I want
to start off saying before I go any further that I'm a bit ill and
that the sheer depths of my ignorance on almost every aspect of what
follows should not be underestimated. This is an extended riff around
a theme. No more.
Basically the whole thing starts and ends with an extremely dodgy
thread on Barbelith - more
specifically a thread in the Temple section of the
board. This section has the honour of being essentially the best board
on the internet about Chaos Magick, paganism and alternative
spiritualities. This is in itself a pretty good thing. On the other
hand, it's also a bit of a ghetto that doesn't mix that well with the
rest of the community. I find it even more problematic because for the
most part I don't believe in any of it. I'm basically interested in
Magickal practice only in as much as I'm interested in how models of
said practice that concentrate on language and sigils tend to
intersect with structuralist and post-structuralist thought on
language as a conceptual binding agent for the modernist universe. At
which point, of course, I should shut up before I sound like a
complete twat.
Anyway - back to the questionable thread in question, which has
been posted by one of the fun new guys who have been turning up on the
site pretty regularly since we opened up the site to Google spidering. The thread is
called - rather depressingly - Al queda wizards and
is, essentially, about whether Al Qaeda used practicing magicians in
order to influence the success of their attacks on the States and
across the world. Let me say straight off that it is, in my opinion, a
pretty dumb insensitive thread written by a pretty dumb insensitive
person. And yet the thread has tweaked my interest because of another
post which reads as follows:
"But djinn and efreeti on the battlefield would be so
cool, especially if they went up against the robot tanks and
battlesuits that are in development."
Which got me thinking about technology and the way we use it to
make the dreamed-of real. Because whether or not we're at such a place
where technologies are able to meet the fantasy desires of human
beings - and whether or not those dreams would inevitably have to come
with deep-seated provisos and qualifiers and restrictions - it's
pretty clear that these fantasies and beliefs and aspirations and
desires are starting to be made real. Moreover it's
increasingly clear that our aspiration is to do this - that technology
is moving more and more towards the attempt to fulfil things that have
been human fantasies for hundreds or thousands of years.
Let's start with some simple examples - which fantasies have we
seen become technologised and then become commonplace? A few hundred
years ago, it was the magical objects that were the focus of our
aspirational children's fantasies - fairy stories of enchanted carpets
that could whisk you anywhere you wanted, cave-doors that would only
open if you knew the correct passwords, magical talking beasts that
could aid you in your quests, objects that responded to your whim in
some way from a distance. And these objects gradually become
technologised in our myth-making as they become increasingly close to
plausible. The talking horses and magic carpets became the talking
cars full of gadgets, the magic carpets secret military helicopters
hidden in atolls. The man who could call down the power of the sun
became the man with the orbiting satellite. And then the cars in
real-life got GPS and computer controlled suspension and cruise
controls and the televisions started keeping programmes for you that
you liked and the houses started turning the lights on when you got
home or responding to your voice-print. Magic became aspirational
fantasy technology became real-life technology. And it'll keep
happening. It's not that any sufficiently advanced technology is
indistinguishable from magic - it's that the aimof all
technological advancement is to aspire towards the appearance of
magic.
Some fantasies were born from a scientific mindset - a modernist
frame of being - but had no relationship to science itself. Many of
these were fantasies of aspirational human powers - extensions and
enhancements of the self that are best exemplified by super-heros and
comic books. These characters - given their gifts by collisions of
lightning and mysterious chemicals or by the rays of strange exotic
suns - might as well have been purely mystical in origin for all their
relationship to any laws of thermodynamics that I'm familiar with. But
that too started to change. A few decades ago a fresh pass of the
fantasy crystals of TV-land created the six-million dollar man. And
technologists started to try and buildworkable jet-packs. Our
sensibilities with regard to fantasy started to change and our
super-heroic figures started blurring more in with the realms and
limits of technological possibility. And now our soldiers are wearing
nanofibre weaves that make them nigh-on indestructible and have
extended senses that make normal humans look comparatively useless.
Binoculars become smart-glasses, clothing becomes exo-skeletal or
supportive and people keep working on the jet-pack every few decades.
And why? Because fundamentally people want to fly like the birds
fly and they'll keep dreaming about it until someone has made it
real - however long it takes.
And while the extreme ends of super-heroics are visible on the
horizon, even now we can see traces of the future possibilities of
implants and genetic development in the cyborgised grannies with
hi-tech hips and knees. The next few hundred years will see the
development of human beings in directions that will astonish us.
Any sufficiently advanced (and rich) human being will be
indistiguishable from a super-hero (or a super-villain - but more
on that later).
Which brings me to the religious and mystical aspirations like the
idea of djinn and efreeti on the battlefield. Fundamental dreams and
concepts that have lived in the narratives of cultures for millennia.
And immediately I'm drawn to attempts to bring about religious events
with technology that I've read about in Wired. Unfortunately I read it
in an April (Fools?) issue of Wired so I don't know if I believe it or
not (I'm thinking not), but the story remains online and it's scary
and plausible enough to support the weight of my flimsy argument even
if it's not true: How a hologram, a blimp and a massively multiplayer game
could bring about the end of the world. The article suggests that
a prophecy says that a temple made of light will descend onto the
site of Solomon's temple in Jerusalem - and some rather nutty
technologists are proposing to make it happen with mist, some
holograms and a convenient blimp. Apparently, there's no collision
with what is understood by the religions in question (Judaism and
fundamentalist Christianity) except that a lamb must be sacrificed
onto the altar and they're wondering how its blood could be spilt on
something with no physical substance. Prophecy is a different thing to
fantasy, and this story may be total bunk, but the promise remains -
could technology be used to satisfy another few aspirational desires
in ways that - to all outsiders - would look like magic...
So what about djinn and efreeti on the battlefield? Will they be
battling robots? Well, we already have concepts of smart
dust, and self-organising swarms and
motes. We already have illustrative science
fiction concepts that place distributed technologies in the Middle
East. Who's to say that resurgent interest in technology combined with
non-Christian value systems might not generate technologies that are
built around radically non-Western metaphor sets or aspirations? Who's
to say that cultures that are based around the ultimate stability of
the nation-state might not concentrate on representations of the
enhanced body politic, the ultimate Westerner/Viking/ThunderGods,
while cultures who have a different relationship to statehood, a
different relationship to land and a different land to have a
relationship with (or who are concentrated around religious
identities, or in extreme cases have an understand of warfare at the
cellular guerilla level, or have a more nomadic heritage - but
generally just have a radically different set of metaphors and
aspirations to cast into matter in the heat of technology) might view
their goal to make the very land itself swarm up and fight back - to
make the powerful spirits of their traditions emerge from narrative
and into reality.
The world of the future, then, is full of the products of our
fantasies but is it a better place? As ever it's impossible to say.
The story of the human race is no different from that of most other
creatures - there's always a tension between what's good for the
individual and what good for the collective or the environment or
ecosystem within which they operate. And fantasy is a singular thing,
the product of one mind wanting to put itself in the centre of an
idealised future. But not everyone can be in the centre and so as
individuals get catered for more and more, there's ever more reason
for people to ignore the collective and concentrate on their own gain.
Arguing that the future is full of dreams fulfilled doesn't make it
necessarily Utopian - it simply means that individuals are able to
experience things they've only dreamed of before. Whether the indirect
consequence of this is that they're also forced to experience a
degradation in society and the environment that they've only dreamed
of before is unclear. Most likely balances will be struck, equilibria
found, and fantasy will move on through to the creation of more
authentic experiences, new and more vigorous attempts to become the
individual godheads we all secretly crave to be (in one field or
another). And only the variety of cultural backgrounds that we have
around us can hope to provide us with enough metaphor sets to provide
us with enough new avenues for discovery to last us in the longer
term. The future we're looking towards may be one where memetic
biodiversity is severely threatened as all our dreams come true.
Addendum: Think of this as the product of an unsound
metabolism and don't take it too seriously. The satisfaction I'm
getting from such a large mind-dump is enormous, but don't take that
as sufficient reason to believe that anything within it is even
slightly plausible. It might get edited for sense over the next couple
of days as I try to find out what it's supposed to be about.
Read the
comments
Note to alternative browsers: Drop the
religion
Note to alternative browsers: Drop the
religion
08/30/2004 10:21 AMZDNet Aug 30 2004 1:53PM GMT
the american street: Atrios Has A
Religion Problem
the american street: Atrios Has A
Religion Problem
04/25/2004 04:49 PMadds his voice .. Chuck Corrie ..
Currie
reachm.com/amstreet/archives/000640.html
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Losing His Religion: Adrian Lamo
Interview
Losing His Religion: Adrian Lamo
Interview
04/09/2004 04:04 PMOpen Source isn't ReligionJust
Good Business
Open Source isn't ReligionJust
Good Business
05/25/2004 05:53 PMOpinion: David Coursey talks to MySQL and Red Hat executives,
and finds Open Source isn't just for communists after allthere's
a real business rationale for letting people have your source code.
Religion show stand fall probed
Religion show stand fall probed
08/30/2004 06:38 AMAn investigation starts into the collapse of seating at a religious
festival that injured more than a dozen people.
Open Source isn't ReligionJust Good
Business
Open Source isn't ReligionJust Good
Business
05/25/2004 07:26 PM"I care not for a man's religion whose
dog and cat are not the better for it."
- Abraham Lincoln
"I care not for a man's religion whose
dog and cat are not the better for it."
- Abraham Lincoln
08/16/2004 08:35 PMIt's been a while since I mentioned our dogs. Lucy and Mischa, the two
Rescued Greyhounds, and Pico, their tiny-but-deadly little Italian
Greyhound brother. They are all doing well, given the heat and the
obligatory fussings from every single skimpy-topped...
Intolerance in Northern Ireland:
Religion, and Now Race
Intolerance in Northern Ireland:
Religion, and Now Race
01/22/2004 08:20 AMBelfast, once the engine of violence between Catholics and
Protestants, is being seized by a new kind of hostility racism.
Science fiction writers listed by
"religion"
Science fiction writers listed by
"religion"
04/09/2005 05:56 AMCory Doctorow:
This is a long list of science fiction writers grouped by "religion,"
though there's some confusion (I'm listed as "Jewish," even though I'm
an athiest; I'm ethinically Jewish but it's certainly not my
religion). Still, it's fascinating to see the number of Mormon,
Lutheran and Baha'i writers in the field.
Link
(
Thanks, Isaac
B2!)
"Michael Crichton on the latest
religion: environmentalism"
"Michael Crichton on the latest
religion: environmentalism"
12/16/2003 08:48 PMGrok Description matches for Justice, Religion, Sexuality
GrokA matches for Justice, Religion, Sexuality
Justice, Religion, Sexuality