November 21, 2023

Knowledge, Belief, and Their Relation to ‘Truth’ Nicole Scott Free Inquiry

In an article titled “What Is Faith?” (FI, October/November 2021), Richard Packham suggested a tripartite breakdown of faith or belief: (a) necessary, unavoidable faith; (b) harmless faith; and (c) dangerous or stupid faith. As these labels indicate, his typology incorporates judgments or evaluations of the consequences, the utility, or, we might say, the “worthiness” of

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Is God Big Enough for the Universe? Psychological Reflections on Religious and Scientific Beliefs Nicole Scott Free Inquiry

The authors of Genesis proclaim that God made the heavens and earth in less than a week. This feat must have amazed these Bronze Age authors, even though they thought the heavens extended only so far as the sky above them. For them, the heavens included only five of our solar system’s eight planets visible

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Ingersoll’s Eternal Horizon of Progress Nicole Scott Free Inquiry

The following article was adapted from the keynote address given at the thirtieth anniversary celebration event at the Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum in Dresden, New York, on August 12, 2023.—The Editoris Seth Andrews with Margaret Downey. Image credit: Debbie Allen Today we remember and honor one of the greatest minds of the past several

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What Would Ingersoll Think of America in 2023? Nicole Scott Free Inquiry

Robert Green Ingersoll (1833–1899) was an American lawyer, writer, and orator during the nineteenth century. He was nicknamed “the Great Agnostic” for his promotion of agnosticism. The Council for Secular Humanism, copublisher of Free Inquiry, owns and operates the Robert Green Ingersoll Birthplace Museum in Dresden, New York. On August 12, 2023, the Museum hosted

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To Have and Not Be Had: Meaning through Hedonism Nicole Scott Free Inquiry

A common objection to atheism is the argument from personal incredulity—the idea that because something seems incomprehensible it must therefore be false—in which the believer claims, “I don’t understand how anyone can find life meaningful if they don’t believe in God.” It so happens that as an atheist, I don’t understand how anyone can find

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From the archives: Cosmic Crystal Crankery – An examination of ‘New Age’ crystalline nonsense Stephen Moreton The Skeptic

This article originally appeared in The Skeptic, Volume 3, Issue 2, from 1989. Having been a mineral collector for 15 years I can say that I am well and truly hooked on crystals but emphatically not in the New Age sense. For me the attraction lies in the aesthetic appeal and the scientific interest. For

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