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What I'm reading now:
The God Virus: How religion infects our lives and culture
God Hates You, Hate Him Back: Making Sense of The Bible by CJ Werleman
Microcosm: E. Coli and the New Science of Life (this is excellent. Well written and fascinating. Highly recommended)
God Is Not Great (Hitchens is extremely erudite but I agree with him a lot here. Excellent so far)
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark (Listening to the audio version. Excellent!)


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Nonsense: Red Herrings, Straw Men and Sacred Cows: How We Abuse Logic in Our Everyday Language
Atheist Universe: The Thinking Person's Answer to Christian Fundamentalism (Recommended. The first half is a great read. Thorough and detailed but easy to understand.)
Letting Go of God (I listened to the audio version. It was poignant and funny. Highly recommended!)
His Dark Materials Trilogy (The Golden Compass; The Subtle Knife; The Amber Spyglass) (best trilogy I've ever read!)

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Happy Atheist Love

Science

The great thing about science is it makes people Prove they are right, with facts, and repeatable experiments. It’s very cool.

How do you tell science from pseudo-science? Thanks to Dr. Steven Novella of the Skeptic’s Guide to the Universe, we now have a handy list to get us started.

Some Main Features of Pseudo-Science by Dr. Steven Novella on The Skeptic’s Guide to the Universe podcast. Episode 164, September 10, 2008.

  • Hostility towards scientific criticism. So if you make a scientific claim and the scientific community calls you out on it, you complain that you’re being picked on, or that there’s a conspiracy against you. In fact, that’s just how good science is done, under scrutiny and criticism.
  • Making a virtue out of ignorance. Someone with no background in science says that’s a good thing.  In fact, the best science is the most creative, and the way to get creative is to be well educated and knowledgeable about what you’re investigating.
  • Heavy reliance on testimony and anecdotal evidence rather than specifically referenced research. Very applicable in the medical realm.
  • Fundamental principles are often based on a single case. For example the founder of chiropractic thought he healed someone of deafness by manipulating a man’s neck, when in fact the hearing pathway never goes anywhere near the neck.
  • Claims often promise simplistic solutions to often complex problems or questions. The ”theory of everything” is a huge red flag here. There is no one simple scheme or answer to explain all that there is. So the more someone tries to explain with less, the more skeptical you should be of it.
  • Starting with the conclusion and working backwards. So if you have a fixed conclusion already, then you can just retrofit the information to suit your conclusion. So then you can cherry-pick all the information that supports your conclusion while ignoring all the information that refutes it. This is the heart and soul of pseudo-science. The key to science is that you have to move forward. You start with a hypothesis and you revise your predictions based on observations of your testing and experiments. If you start with the answer, you are not doing science.
  • Having a fixed belief. Never changing a hypothesis. So for example, straight chiropractic is saying the same thing they were saying a hundred years ago. Homeopathy has never changed what it says, never takes in new information and modifies how it works. Creationism is a fixed belief. Fixed beliefs are not science.
  • Techno-Babble. Using scientific language but ultimately meaningless jargon. Language is used properly when it increases the precision and makes things less ambiguous. If you listen to a pseudo-scientist, they use big words to add complexity without increasing precision is a red flag. Or using words that are made to confuse or impress.
  • Using bold or absolute statements rather than conservative qualifying statements that a careful scientist uses.
  • You can’t prove me wrong. Attempting to shift the burden of proof away from the claimant. This is backwards. If it’s your theory the burden of proof is on you to prove it correct.
  • Overturning established science left and right for your one theory. This is just incredibly implausible.
  • Making vague references to data. Scientists have shown, there is data etc, but nothing people can check up on or look at themselves.
  • Failure to consider all hypotheses. Cherry-picking the information again. Limiting the hypotheses to the one they want and a few token supporting ones, so that it looks like it’s well received. But when the list is prematurely or falsely limited, they’ve rigged the game.

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