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		<title> Secular Philosophy</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[Copyright 2007 Secular Philosophy]]></description>
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			<title> Secular Philosophy</title>
			<description><![CDATA[ Secular Philosophy]]></description>
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		<copyright>Copyright 2008, Secular Philosophy</copyright>
		<managingEditor>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com (Secular Philosophy)</managingEditor>
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			<title>Alive Mind Releases Pledge of Allegiance Blues for the 4th of July</title>
			<link>http://www.secularphilosophy.com/index.php?entry=entry080703-135140</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><em>Pledge of Allegiance Blues</em> documents the journey of Rev. Dr. Michael Newdow, the blues-singing California physician and his battle to protect the separation between church and state, a battle that took him all the way to the United States Supreme Court where he defended the landmark &quot;under God&quot; lawsuit. From the controversy over the Ten Commandments monument in the Alabama State Courthouse to a historical analysis about the intertwining of religion and government in American history, <em>Pledge of Allegiance Blues</em> is a smart and funny examination of the often tense relationship between church and state. With toe-tapping musical numbers by Newdow, a cast of characters including attorney Alan Dershowitz, publisher Larry Flynt, and radio talk-show host Sandy Rios, this critically acclaimed documentary provides a contemporary and provocative look at one man&rsquo;s campaign to defend his constitutional rights.</p><p>&ldquo;Both as a lesson in law and as an entertaining personality profile, <strong>Pledge of Allegiance Blues</strong> is highly recommended. Three and a half stars&rdquo;<br />-<em>Video Librarian</em> </p><p> <a href="http://alivemindmedia.com/static.php?page=pledge">Read more here...</a></p>]]></description>
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			<author>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com</author>
			<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jul 2008 20:51:40 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>The Atheism Tapes Review from NoGodBlog.com</title>
			<link>http://www.secularphilosophy.com/index.php?entry=entry080512-095651</link>
			<description><![CDATA[By David Silverman (<a href="http://www.atheists.org/nogodblog/index.php/2008/05/11/the_atheist_tapes_to_contribute_to_maaf">NoGodBlog.com</a>, American Atheists) <p>I'm really happy to have been able to view and review <strong>The Atheism Tapes</strong>. This two-DVD set presents itself as the &quot;leftovers&quot; of the &quot;Brief History of Disbelief&quot;, which included interviews from Dennett, Dawkins, Arthur Miller, etc. But in reality this is far more than the set of &quot;deleted scenes&quot;. </p><p>What is presented in <strong>The Atheism Tapes</strong> are jewels of knowledge -- rare and valuable. To say I learned something is an understatement, as each speaker presented an interesting view of the world and how religion &amp; Atheism play their respective roles. The fact that they are further helping the Cause with this promotion is a cherry on top.</p><p>I loved this DVD, and I'm sure to watch it over and over again.</p><p><a href="http://www.neoflix.com/cart/LOR10/LOR12331ATH01">Buy the DVD! </a></p>]]></description>
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			<author>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com</author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 12 May 2008 16:56:51 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Non Believers in the Military</title>
			<link>http://www.secularphilosophy.com/index.php?entry=entry080428-092838</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/26/us/26atheist.html?_r=2&amp;sq=atheist%20military&amp;st=nyt&amp;adxnnl=1&amp;oref=slogin&amp;scp=1&amp;adxnnlx=1209399031-Evdy2PAQe1jS0Dr+hJZbAw">An article in Saturday&rsquo;s New York Times</a> brought to our attention here at Alive Mind the intolerance in the U.S. armed services of soldiers who do not subscribe to traditional belief systems. In order to show our support for Jeremy Hall, our featured affiliate of the week is the Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers. <a href="http://www.cinemaclicks.com/trackingcode.php?aid=63&amp;linkid=N26">When you purchase a copy of The Atheism Tapes this week, we will make a $3.00 contribution to the MAAF.</a> </p><p>&nbsp;</p>]]></description>
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			<guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.secularphilosophy.com/?entry=entry080428-092838</guid>
			<author>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com</author>
			<pubDate>Mon, 28 Apr 2008 16:28:38 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>The Soul with Daniel Dennett</title>
			<link>http://www.secularphilosophy.com/index.php?entry=entry080403-091053</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<div>This is a clip of Daniel Dennett from <a href="static.php?page=store">The Atheism Tapes with Jonathan Miller</a>.</div><div><br /><div><div><div><div style="text-align: center"><div><div id="showplayer"><div id="showplayer"><object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0" name="showplayer" width="400" height="255"><param name="name" value="showplayer" /><param name="width" value="400" /><param name="height" value="255" /><param name="quality" value="best" /><param name="src" value="http://blip.tv/scripts/flash/showplayer.swf?enablejs=true&amp;feedurl=http%3A%2F%2Falivemind%2Eblip%2Etv%2Frss&amp;file=http%3A%2F%2Fblip%2Etv%2Frss%2Fflash%2F926158%3Freferrer%3Dblip%2Etv%26source%3D1&amp;showplayerpath=http%3A%2F%2Fblip%2Etv%2Fscripts%2Fflash%2Fshowplayer%2Eswf" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" name="showplayer" width="400" height="255" quality="best" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/flash/showplayer.swf?enablejs=true&amp;feedurl=http%3A%2F%2Falivemind%2Eblip%2Etv%2Frss&amp;file=http%3A%2F%2Fblip%2Etv%2Frss%2Fflash%2F926158%3Freferrer%3Dblip%2Etv%26source%3D1&amp;showplayerpath=http%3A%2F%2Fblip%2Etv%2Fscripts%2Fflash%2Fshowplayer%2Eswf"></embed></object></div><br /></div></div></div></div><br /></div><br /></div></div><div> </div><div> </div><div> </div><div> </div><div> </div><div> </div><div> </div><div><br /></div><div> </div>The never-before-released complete interview on DVD is exclusively available for <a href="static.php?page=store">purchase here...</a><p>&nbsp;</p><p><a href="http://blog.secularphilosophy.com/">Read more here... </a></p>]]></description>
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			<author>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com</author>
			<pubDate>Thu, 03 Apr 2008 16:10:53 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>About Secular Philosophy </title>
			<link>http://www.secularphilosophy.com/index.php?entry=entry080117-120752</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to Secular Philosophy, a site dedicated to the exchange of ideas and debate relating to all things secular with an emphasis on philosophy. Here you will find exclusive films, books and blogs by <a href="http://blog.secularphilosophy.com">Daniel Dennett</a>, <a href="http://www.colinmcginnblog.com">Colin McGinn</a> and <a href="http://blog.secularphilosophy.com">Massimo Pigliucci</a> and <a href="http://blog.secularphilosophy.com/static.php?page=rowlands">Mark Rowlands</a>, as well as the Center for Inquiry&rsquo;s <em>Point of Inquiry</em> podcast every Friday evening.  </p><p>Hosted by D.J. Grothe, <em>Point of Inquiry</em> streams live interviews with Nobel Prize-winning scientists, social critics and theorists, as well as renowned artists and entertainers. Each conversation focuses on issues relevant to the secular cause: religion and society, humanist values, philosophy and scientific inquiry. On Secular Philosophy, you can listen to the interviews, subscribe to the podcast and download them as mp3s.  </p><p>In addition, we have acquired the exclusive rights to release on<a href="http://www.secularphilosophy.com/static.php?page=store"> DVD The Atheism Tapes</a>, the source material companion series to Jonathan Miller&rsquo;s ground breaking <em>A Rough History of Disbelief</em>, which aired on PBS. <a href="static.php">The Atheism Tapes</a>, produced and hosted by Jonathan Miller with the BBC, compiles off -the-record interviews with six of today&rsquo;s leading thinkers who reveal why they are atheists: Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Colin McGinn, Arthur Miller, Denys Turner and Steven Weinberg discuss their personal intellectual journeys and defense of non theism from a wide range of perspectives.  </p><p>This series is <a href="http://alivemindmedia.com/static.php?page=store">exclusively available</a> on our newly launched <a href="http://www.alivemindmedia.com">Alive Mind </a>label and is not available in stores. Subscribe to the Alive Mind newsletter and receive a 10% coupon. or, better yet, join our growing <a href="http://alivemindmedia.com/static.php?page=affiliate">affiliate network</a> and help us spread the word about secular philosophy and <a href="http://www.secularphilosophy.com/static.php?page=atheismtapes">The Atheism Tapes</a>. </p>]]></description>
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			<author>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com</author>
			<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 2008 20:07:52 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Atheism Tapes</title>
			<link>http://www.secularphilosophy.com/index.php?entry=entry080111-105918</link>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>As part of the making of <strong>A Brief History of Disbelief</strong>, Jonathan Miller filmed conversations with some very distinguished minds. Jonathan, of course, could not resist the temptation to make these conversations wide ranging and so &ndash; naturally enough &ndash; their final contributions to <strong>A Brief History of Disbelief</strong> are only a small part of the original interviews. </p><p>Now this <a href="static.php?page=store">six-part series, exclusively available on Alive Mind</a>, is an opportunity to see and hear the conversations at much greater length as Jonathan Miller goes head to head with Daniel Dennett, Denys Turner, Richard Dawkins, Colin McGinn, Arthur Miller and Steven Weinberg. More often than not, modern television documentaries are forced &ndash; for perfectly acceptable reasons, to discard most of the contributions harvested during the making of the programs. Now, for the first time we are able to offer the audience the opportunity to see the original contributions in their &ldquo;original&rdquo; context AND to see a &ldquo;director&rsquo;s cut&rdquo; of these conversations between Jonathan and his distinguished cast.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><img src="images/TAT-DD.jpg" alt="Daniel Dennett" title="Daniel Dennett" hspace="8" width="180" height="240" align="left" /><strong>Daniel Dennett </strong>is a high octane American philosopher with an acerbic mind and a wicked sense of humour. His books (<em>Darwin&rsquo;s Dangerous Idea; Consciousness Explained; Freedom Evolves</em>) are international best sellers. In his conversation with Jonathan, Dennet explains how Darwin&rsquo;s theories unravelled the religious mindset: </p><p>&ldquo;Darwin really broke the dam for disbelief&rdquo;, he expands on his famous theory of Skyhooks &amp; Cranes &ndash; the competing miraculous and rational explanations of phenomena - and he discusses the extent to which people need &ldquo;magic&rdquo; in their lives. Between them, Jonathan and Daniel discuss whether, as sceptics, they should resist the temptation to be as rude as they would like to be towards believers: </p><p><em>I mean we don&rsquo;t tell fat people they&rsquo;re fat, we don&rsquo;t tell ugly people they&rsquo;re ugly, we don&rsquo;t, we don&rsquo;t - everyday we could go around saying things to peoples faces that would be perfectly true and we could prove them and it would just be really mischievous&hellip; but there are times when I think it would be much better if we were a lot franker and ruder about religious belief</em> </p><p>And they wonder whether or not there will ever be a world without religion. </p><p> DANIEL <em>I think a lot of people want their life to have a meaning </em></p><p><em>JONATHAN Yes, but there must be something better than religion</em> </p><p>DANIEL <em>Yes, we certainly hope there is. What&rsquo;s it going to be?</em></p><p><img src="images/TAT-DT.jpg" alt="Denys Turner" title="Denys Turner" hspace="8" width="180" height="199" align="left" /><strong>Denys Turner</strong>, the Cambridge theologian and Professor of Divinity argued with Jonathan, the case for and against atheism, in an intellectual struggle that lasted, in its entirety, two full and exhausting hours. But they enjoyed themselves immensely without ever coming to any agreement. The conversation was complex and dense and defied simplification. As a result it was not used. But this half hour version gives these two mental gymnasts enough room to entertain us with the kind of questions that Denys feels are seldom if ever asked by scientists and sceptics, because they know that they have no simple answers. Questions like &ldquo;Why is there anything &ndash; rather than nothing at all?&rdquo;</p><p> DENYS <em>Well I think that you've got to find a way of avoiding a certain kind of question if you're going to be a proper card-carrying atheist. Marx once said that each age asks only such questions as it can answer and it&rsquo;s the cutting back on the agenda of questions which seems to me to be the important issue here</em></p><p> JONATHAN <em>But if you can ask the question &ldquo;why is there anything at all&rdquo; and your answer seems to be there is something which accounts for it (ie: God) - then I find myself, well why is there &ldquo;God&rdquo; then? Why does the question not go into a series of infinite regresses asking the question about why the cause of it all or the bringer about of it all does not itself, himself, or herself require some sort of explanation?</em> </p><p>DENYS <em>But now you see you and I are, at least engaged in an argument!</em> </p><p>Filmed in the surprisingly modern, glass and steel office of this contemporary theologian, this conversation is both provocative and challenging. </p><p><img src="images/TAT-RD.jpg" alt="Richard Dawkins" title="Richard Dawkins" hspace="8" width="180" height="246" align="left" /><strong>Richard Dawkins</strong> hardly needs an introduction and you might have thought that you have heard all you need to from this Oxford Professor who seems to have made it his life&rsquo;s work to publicly tackle religion wherever he finds it. Oddly enough though in this intimate conversation over coffee filmed in the relaxing atmosphere of Jonathan&rsquo;s own kitchen, Dawkins displays a gentler and more contemplative side &ndash; and he reveals the deep religious convictions of his youth.</p><p><em> Between 9 and 15 I was pretty devout, I used to, I mean I got confirmed, I used to pray, I used to sort have little fantasies at school, in boarding school, sort of creeping down to the chapel and praying and having sort of visions of angels and things.</em> </p><p>But he and Jonathan also discuss the difficult rough edges of Darwin&rsquo;s theories and develop the argument, touched upon in Jonathan&rsquo;s discussion with Daniel Dennet, about the extent to which it is necessary or important to challenge religion and religious people. </p><p><img src="images/TAT-CM.jpg" alt="Colin McGinn" title="Colin McGinn" hspace="8" width="180" height="225" align="left" /><strong>Colin McGinn's </strong>conversation with Jonathan is already used at some length within the series but the selected pieces only scratch the surface of their entire discussion. Colin is one of Great Britain&rsquo;s most distinguished philosophers and despite failing his 11 plus and being educated in a Blackpool Secondary Modern School, he rose through Oxford to become a Professor and is now teaching and writing at the University of Miami in Florida. His books are selling fast in your local bookshop and his no-nonsense manner of speaking, (not to say his dress-sense &ndash; or lack of it) are rewriting our notion of what a philosopher should be like. In his far ranging conversation with Jonathan, Colin sets up and then dismantles some of the many arguments in favour of God &ndash; he even puts up a few of his own! He also discusses the impact of Bertrand Russell on his own life at the age of 18 and what has become known as the &ldquo;Russell effect&rdquo; whereby people read Russell and promptly lose their faith. </p><p><em>Russell represented to me an alternative to religious idealism, it was a more you know secular idealism. I realised you could have some of the aspects of religion which appealed to me - you could have that without religion - and the bits that didn&rsquo;t appeal to me, you know the virgin birth, that&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;ve done every since - basically the same thing.</em> </p><p><img src="images/TAT-AM.jpg" alt="Arthur Miller" title="Arthur Miller" hspace="8" width="180" height="206" align="left" /><strong>Arthur Miller</strong> should also need no introduction. Probably the most distinguished living playwright in America, Arthur Miller rarely gives interviews but welcomed the opportunity to tussle with his English namesake (they are of course no relation). Apart from expressing his scepticism about the unholy alliance between religion and politics, some of which was used in the series, Arthur Miller looks back to his own early experiences of growing up in a Christian and surprisingly anti semitic country. His chilling accounts of American Nazi&rsquo;s in the 1930&rsquo;s have their modern counterparts today. But most touchingly Arthur Miller believes that religious faith probably survives because people find it so hard to cope with the death of their loved ones. His own beloved wife had only recently died and he talks about his own difficulties, </p><p><em>My wife of 40 years died about a year and a half ago and I&rsquo;m surrounded by all her stuff of her life and the idea that she&rsquo;s not here is still, it defeats some impulse, to recreate her, but I know what that impulse is, its simply the inability to accept this absurdity, that all that consciousness and all that beauty simply isn&rsquo;t there anymore. </em></p><p><img src="images/TAT-SW.jpg" alt="Steven Weinberg" title="Steven Weinberg" hspace="8" width="180" height="206" align="left" /><strong>Steven Weinberg</strong> is a prolific author of popular science books and (just in case anyone should doubt his credentials) he is a Nobel Prize winning physicist. He is the professor of physics and astronomy at Texas University. Having invited Jonathan to join him in his own home in Austen Texas, Steven discusses the role of science in the undermining of faith. Like Jonathan he accepts that many of the discoveries in his own field (physics) had little impact on religion and he regrets (laughing) that it was &ldquo;just a biologist&rdquo; (Darwin) who really did the damage. Steven has recently written many articles about the absurdities and dangers of religion but he is optimistic about America being able to escape from what appears to be a fundamentalist revolution that is taking over the political agenda. He sees the danger elsewhere</p><p><em>I think what&rsquo;s much more frightening in the world is Islam - where people, it seems to me, take their religion seriously to the point of madness. I think, you know, there have been times in the history of the world when Islam was a far more tolerant religion than Christianity but that is not the case now.</em> </p><p>However in a worthy philosophical manoeuvre, Steven sees hope in the attitudes to extremists. After all you can only criticise them on the grounds that they are &rdquo;morally&rdquo; wrong and the only morality that can be used to &ldquo;trump&rdquo; the fundamentalists&rsquo; religious views, is a secular morality. </p><p><em>For example George Bush said that these terrorists have &ldquo;hijacked a great religion&rdquo;. Because their actions, their terrorist actions, don&rsquo;t fit his idea of religion. You see what&rsquo;s really happening there, is that instead of using religion to decide what is moral, he is actually using his moral sense, (which fortunately, in this case, is a perfectly good reasonable enlightened moral sense) to decide what is &ndash; or is not - religious - and if that&rsquo;s the case, then what&rsquo;s the point of the religion? </em> </p><p>This is a series of half hour conversations between fascinating and intelligent men. It is designed to appeal to the viewers who, provoked by the contributions to A Short History of Disbelief will want to hear what these distinguished minds have to say in a more discursive environment. But it&rsquo;s also designed to appeal to those who might not watch the series but who would simply be fascinated to listen to what these men have to say.</p>]]></description>
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			<author>elizabeth@alivemindmedia.com, jay@lorberhtdigital.com, rita@lorberhtdigital.com</author>
			<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jan 2008 18:59:18 GMT</pubDate>
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