Friday, October 06, 2006

blog 2.0!!


well, it's here. i've appreciated the gracious people at blogspot and their clunky software for hosting this site and giving me my first foray into blogging culture. but, in the words of the m people, "i'm moving on up". i’m switching to wordpress for four reasons: 1) better content organization, as with categories; 2) straightforward creative license with html, css, and php; 3) integration with my parent site bohemianscientist.org; and 4) a very kind host (hats off to you, lomak). though unlikely, the old posts from this site may begin to trickle on, slowly. please update your bookmark (or your 'list of sites to avoid'), take two advil for the pain, and read me in the morning.

(read on)

Sunday, October 01, 2006

are humans getting dumber?


just found out about the very small release of mike judge's new film idiocracy and read a nice review at slate. apparently, it's everything you'd expect from the creator of beavis and butthead in the time of george w bush: a humor that laments incompetence and laziness. i'm in no rush to see it, thanks to a few other reviews, one of which sums it up best: the movie is "so puerile and gross that[,] though the movie wants to say something about the dumbing down of America, it winds up not so much commentary as part of the problem." there's also a conspiracy theory saying that the distributor (FOX) intentionally squelched the film...

(read on)

mr. wilson!!!

what was supposed to be a week away from blogging turned into a healthy month; i'll be making up lost time in the next few days.

first up, e.o. wilson's new book The Creation: A Meeting of Science and Religion came out this past month and was just reviewed in the magazine
first things by particle physicist
stephen barr. he compliments wilson's engaging prose on the intricacies of nature and the debt we owe it, but ultimately recognizes wilson's insistence on naturalism for what it is--idolatry. wilson's commitment to the "ancient, autonomous creative force" of nature has been unabashedly prevalent in all of his books on religion and science, including one i reviewed (consilience: the unity of knowledge) for the journal revisions: a journal of christian perspective (see pdf or html).

while he emphasizes that we should take care of the environment, he accuses Christians of being anti-green because of their belief in an afterlife. this misrepresentation of the christian camp has continued for far too long, despite pleas and arguments to the contrary (briefly, one quick-and-dirty argument for pro-green christianity is that God has created this world for His glory and has created us to be stewards of it... so, we should be).

one nice point that barr brings up is wilson's poor understanding of Christianity: "he plays with the word creation, even choosing it as the title of his book, while evincing no grasp of whati it means. in its traditional and profounder meaning, creation is that timeless act whereby God holds all things in existence. it is not an alternative to natural theories of origin or natural explanations of change [...] did this insect evolve or is it created by God? to ask tat is as silly as to ask whether polonius died because hamlet stabbed him or because shakespeare wrote the play that way."

(read on)

Thursday, August 24, 2006

blogpuku

forgive my anticipated blogging hiatus; thanks to qualifying exams, i won't be at it again till september 8 or so. but by then, i'll be due for some lengthy entries. in the meantime, please meditate on and accept my ritual seppuku-styled (though, fortunately, transient) shaming as a small token of my self-induced retribution and sincere apologies (that's me, with the ponytail).

(read on)

Thursday, August 17, 2006

hearty HAR HAR: brain genes in humans

a new study from ucsc shows that a gene active during cortical development in humans is a lot different from its counterparts in other mammals. HAR1F, active in Cajal-Retzius cells during development and possibly interacting with the protein reelin (involved with cortical layering), was recently identified in a non-coding region of human DNA: it had changed forms 18 times compared with its analogue in chimps. meanwhile, it (and a second, related HAR gene) are virtually identical in non-human mammals. the hunt for what makes our brains so special is taken up with equal fervor in computational biology and theology, and, as always, the findings in one don't by necessity negate the claims of the other...

see the original article, or nature's reader-friendly intro, or the BBC coverage.

(read on)

Saturday, August 12, 2006

chick eggs the next cash cow?

nature ran an article this week on the ethics and economics of human egg donation. the gist is that scientists and ethicists are concerned about whether to pay women for eggs obtained for research on therapeutic human cloning. paying women for their ova has gone on for a while... in our daily princetonian, we had the first national ad for egg donorship back in '97 ("looking for 5'8"-5'11", blonde, SAT >1400, female of Swedish descent to donate some eggs for $40,000"). america has continued to have occasional cases in which a couple will pay exhorbitantly for some cute eggs, though i think remuneration is outlawed in britain. but IVF and research are two different issues, and only a few known madcap opportunists--such as woo suk hwang, of south korean shame--have paid for (or coerced women into donating) human eggs.

on june 30th, a task force set up by the International Society for Stem Cell Research released a draft of guidelines, which simply demonstrate how little consensus there is on the issue. according to the article, it's open to public debate till september 1, at which point, i suppose, public debate is officially closed.

my current thinking is that the whole question is irrelevant. i go against the establishment on this one, but i'm actually against IVF in principle, since it necessarily generates unused embryos. if it hadn't been for these storehouses at hospitals and fertility clinics, there never would have been such contention about "what we should do with all these embryos from 30 years of IVF!" and we could have addressed the social policy regarding ES cells with a little more clarity. sadly, the 'byproducts' of IVF are still oft ignored (or forgotten) even by more conservative politicians... perhaps because its benefits have already been realized by the conservative community. at any rate, there are lots of issues here (not the least of which is the potential to solve more than one problem by adopting "at-risk kids") that require some ethical and scientific maturity. unfortunately, as jon stewart helps us recognize, we're not there yet. but, more to the point, because of the deep moral issues associated with the status of the human embryo, i'm not convinced it should be used for research using federal funding. private funding? not so sure... but with regard to whether the cash would put too much pressure on underprivileged women to undergo a dangerous, invasive procedure, we have a precedent. in america, private organizations pay habitually-pregnant crack addicts to have their tubes tied. sure, it funds their next couple of hits. but no matter how strong a libertarian you are, you've got to admit that it's a pretty good idea.

(read on)

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

the godhead: "mother, child, and womb"

in response to a friend's claim that the traditional conception of the trinity (God the father, son, and holy spirit) can be exchanged for any other instructive "metaphor", i write this:

i appreciate, [friend], your desire to be inclusive and open-minded...demonstrating the very spirit of Christ. i do think, though, that we need to be careful and consistent with our terms. the labels--father, son, and holy spirit--of the trinity aren't metaphors--what is the metaphor of a holy spirit? while our understanding of the persons of the trinity might be sullied by our flawed fathers or sinful sons, let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater.

the trinity represents an organic relationship that is simultaneously unitary and trinary (electrical engineers, stop cringing :)... the mystery of the trinity has been mulled over since tertullian... and it culminated in unitarians and others who found the idea of an ontological trinity unintelligible (moses stuart and w.a. brown, for example). but, we find reference to a trinity of these particular three persons throughout the Bible (the father and son in both testaments, and the spirit first explicitly manifested in acts).

karl barth revived the trinity with some 220 pages on its doctrine in his dogmatics, and presents the three persons in terms of God's speaking: He is Revealer (father), Revelation (son), and Revealedness (holy spirit). (your guess is as good as mine on the office of the spirit..he says the spirit is the very content of the revelation). barth explains their offices in terms of truth revealed (john 1), but doesn't reject or recast the persons of the trinity: they are still father, son, and holy spirit.

at best, there might be room for didactic analogies to the trinity, in light of man's weakness, where analogy refers to an aspectual comparison to reality whereas a metaphor is a wholistic comparison (where the former is meant to explain a relationship in part, the latter in full). historically, people have used analogies such as mist, cloud, rain; intellect, affections, will, (augustine); thesis, antithesis, synthesis, (hegel); subject, object, and subject-object, (olshausen). all of these lack the divine personality inherent in the father-son-spirit relationship. and while mother-child-womb might have value for describing a specific personal relationship in the mystery of the Godhead, it can't replace the specific biblical relationships (see matthew 3.16, 4.1; and all of john, especially 1.18, 3.16, 5.20-22, 14.26, 15.26, and 16.13-15). i really appreciate this explanation, from berkhof's systematic theology (which has a good general discussion of the doctrine of God, and specifically the trinity, pp 82-99) :

The communicable attributes of God stress His personality, since they reveal Him as a rational and moral Being. His life stands out clearly before us in Scripture as a personal life; and it is, of course, of the greatest importance to maintain the personality of God, for without it there can be no religion in the real sense of the word: no prayer, no personal communion, no trustful reliance and no confident hope. Since man is created in the image of God, we learn to understand something of the personal life of God from the contemplation of personality as we know it in man.

in the end, the nature of the trinity is a grand mystery beyond our capacities, but praise God that we can even meditate on Him! in mystery is opportunity, enabling us to share in love the joy of the gospel with others, and to appreciate the personal struggles of others as they wrestle with divine truth: " to the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might win Jews; to those who are under the law, as under the law, that I might win those who are under the law; to those who are without law, as without law (not being without law toward God, but under law toward Christ), that I might win those who are without law; to the weak I became as weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some. Now this I do for the gospel’s sake, that I may be partaker of it with you." (i cor 9)

let's remember both the unfathomably perfect and the intimately personal nature of the Godhead, and our responsibility to share His love!

(also, thanks [other friend] for making the important distinction between pca and pcusa [which the article somewhat blurred]... the pca def has a rich, biblical, and necessarily Christ-centered theological tradition. i'd wholeheartedly recommend the small pca congregation i've joined in downtown LJ:new life mission church of la jolla.)

(read on)

Monday, July 24, 2006

the failure of liberal christianity

the la times ran a nice op-ed last week on the disintegration of the american liberal church--that is, the people who deny the divinity of Christ, ignore biblical directives on homosexuality, and take feminism to the absurd. at one conference, "participants 'reimagined' God as 'Our Maker Sophia' and held a feminist-inspired 'milk and honey' ritual designed to replace traditional bread-and-wine Communion."

while you might be sympathetic to some or all of these causes, consider that the traditional theology of the Church is focused on the divinity of Christ... A celebration of women (or men!) that obscures the sacrament of God has no place in a service of worship: we kneel at the foot of the Cross, sprinkled with Christ's blood; we don't coo in Sophia's arm, milking at her teet.

{also note when you're reading the article, the presbyterian church USA referred to in the oped is entirely different from the "presbyterian church in america (PCA)", which unabashedly affirms the Word of God as Truth, and Jesus Christ as Savior.}

a representative quotation:

It is not entirely coincidental that at about the same time that Episcopalians, at their general convention in Columbus, Ohio, were thumbing their noses at a directive from the worldwide Anglican Communion that they "repent" of confirming the openly gay Bishop V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire three years ago, the Presbyterian Church USA, at its general assembly in Birmingham, Ala., was turning itself into the laughingstock of the blogosphere by tacitly approving alternative designations for the supposedly sexist Christian Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Among the suggested names were "Mother, Child and Womb" and "Rock, Redeemer and Friend." Moved by the spirit of the Presbyterian revisionists, Beliefnet blogger Rod Dreher held a "Name That Trinity" contest. Entries included "Rock, Scissors and Paper" and "Larry, Curly and Moe."

(read on)

Thursday, July 13, 2006

but it's myspace!

according to slashdot, hitwise says myspace overtook yahoo mail as the internet's most popular site. today, slashdot summed up the tons of responses they received to the original post in a waste-no-time review. it's informative (and encouraging to see that many people--albeit slashdot readers--recognize the social evils associated with the site)

"Reader caitsith01 speaks for many with an evaluation of MySpace as "for the most part intensely narcissistic and inane," and writes "People are presented with a tool for publishing absolutely anything, about any topic they choose. Instead of presenting thoughtful, creative or otherwise valuable content, the vast majority elect to pointlessly ramble about themselves in minute detail or engage in endless back and forth with other users about nothing in particular. Which is fine, but it shouldn't have the legitimacy of other web content. [...] Perhaps it's time to move past the blog hype and to consider some method for differentiating personal diaries (i.e., what used to be a personal homepage), social chit chat (i.e., what used to be a bulletin board, IRC, or IM activity), and publications with actual content. Right now the net is awash with an ever-expanding tide of rubbish and there is very little to assist in finding the few really interesting and high quality publications among the garbage. Ultimately it's depressing that, given the ability to communicate our ideas to anyone on earth, most of us can't come up with anything better than pictures of ourselves drinking too much and mass-produced but ineffectual rebelliousness."

(read on)

is dna the language of god?

nature this week covered a new book by geneticist and public christian francis collins, best known for heading up the human genome project. the article's pretty drab, but i'm anxious to check out a copy of the book. i also enjoyed reading vehement atheist PZ Myers' blog response to the article (in which he's quoted) along with other comically atheistic musings on his site.

the summary: collins writes book about how faith and science are compatible. typical atheists like dawkins bash it. but because collins disses creationism and ID, he gets praise from some unlikely people, like the head of an anti-ID lobbying group.

judging from the article, the book seems to push for greater dialogue about faith and science and for greater lay appreciation of the fact that they are not mutually exclusive (the article cites that 40% of scientists in america are also christians). a call to the discussion table by a scientific figurehead is certaintly welcome. but i'm anxious to see if the book lays out some suggestions for the exchanges once we're seated. the critical thing missing in many of today's "debates" about religion and science (including the ones that go on daily in labs) is nuts-and-bolts philosophy. to be sure, most scientists are at home in the land of logic, but don't have time and/or desire to read nuanced tomes on epistemology. still, as long as someone knows the arguments--and the onus of responsibility, i think, sits on the christians' shoulders here--the claims and conclusions of christianity and secularism can lead to fruitful debate... and, in many cases, a reconsideration of whether naturalism is an air-tight worldview.

Genomics luminary weighs in on US faith debate
Erika Check
Top geneticist asks the God question.

Is it really possible to combine dedication to science with belief in God? In a new book, prominent US scientist Francis Collins sets out his case for combining a strong religious faith with a zeal for the scientific method. But his views have already sparked debate, with critics suggesting that more talk of religion is the last thing that science needs.

Collins, who directs the National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and headed the Human Genome Project, has never hidden the fact that he is a devout Christian. But he has never spoken quite so publicly about his faith. He says he felt compelled to write his book because the popular debate on faith and science has become dominated by extreme voices, leaving many feeling that there is no way to reconcile religious and scientific views of the world. "Our society is not well served by portraying a future which is either entirely secular or entirely religious in a fundamentalist way," he says.

Collins also hopes the book, The Language of God (Free Press, 2006), will provoke thought in academia, where, he says, the subject of faith isn't exactly popular. "In most academic circles, a discussion of spiritual matters tends to clear the room fairly quickly."

Discussion, Collins suggests, might rectify the misconception that most scientists are atheists. Surveys find that about 40% of US scientists believe in God, but Collins says that is not reflected in science's public face. That hurts science, he argues, because it drives away curious people who might also be religious believers.

Collins takes a strong stand against some religious beliefs, such as creationism and 'intelligent design'. He considers both to be views that restrict faith to covering gaps in scientific knowledge, leaving it in a tenuous position.

Instead, Collins embraces a theology sometimes called theistic evolution, or BioLogos. This embraces the idea that human evolution occurred through natural selection according to God's plan, and that God instilled humanity with certain characteristics, including a 'moral law', that can't be explained by science.

"The moral law is a signpost to a God who cares about us as individuals," Collins says. "God used a mechanism of evolution to create human beings with whom he could have that kind of fellowship."

Many scientists disagree strongly with such arguments. Some suggest that science is on the defensive today — not just in the United States — and that society needs exactly the opposite of what Collins suggests: less talk about faith and more about reason. Religious concerns are largely behind the US law restricting federal funding of stem-cell research, for example. And many feel threatened by the influence of intelligent design in science education.

In the United States, "the default position right now is to assume that religion is perfectly OK", says Paul Myers, a biologist at the University of Minnesota in Morris and author of the popular science blog Pharyngula. "Collins is taking that default position, and while a large majority of scientists will shrug their shoulders, a few voices will be shouting out, saying 'wait a minute, this is nonsense'."

"I cannot see how this could be good for science — supernaturalism is fundamentally anti-scientific," says Richard Dawkins, a biologist from the University of Oxford, UK. "Scientists work hard at trying to understand. Supernaturalism is an evasion of this responsibility. It's a shrug of the shoulders."

Dawkins acknowledges that, particularly in the United States, there might be tactical reasons for trying to get on with religious people. "That is a perfectly reasonable political stance, but it has nothing to do with truth."

Others welcome Collins's book, however. "I think it's helpful when scientists of Francis's prominence speak out on the compatibility of faith and science," says Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education, a group based in Oakland, California, that lobbies against creationism.

Scott agrees with Collins that so far the harshest voices have achieved most prominence, and that this situation doesn't help either side. "Creationists love quoting Dawkins and Daniel Dennett," she says. "But those individuals don't represent the fairly sizeable proportion of non-theists who are not out to destroy religion."


(read on)

Sunday, July 09, 2006

a winner on sex

two opeds on premarital sex, one each from nytimes contributor lauren winner and chuck colson. i'm most impressed with winner's assessment of the flawed 'chastity pledge':

"Pledgers promise to control intense bodily desires simply by exercising their wills. But Christian ethics recognizes that the broken, twisted will can do nothing without rehabilitation by God's grace. Perhaps the centrality of grace is recognized best not in a pledge but in a prayer that names chastity as a gift and beseeches God for the grace to receive it."

i've argued a version of this point with my own grandmother at thanksgiving dinner: without Christ, abstinence doesn't make much sense (of course, if you're stoically reasoned, you'll recognize that most if not all research demonstrates that abstinence is the healthier choice). i'm chaste because i'm a christian.

at any rate, the fact that abstinence education hasn't worked in practice (see below) is important to recognize for policy. but, more important, i think, is that this fact can be used in arguments against a successful naturalistic moral system. think about it... maybe i'll post on it later.

both articles are reproduced below.
______________________________________
Saving Grace
Lauren F. Winner.
New York Times. May 19, 2006. pg. A.25

Lauren F. Winner is the author of ''Girl Meets God'' and ''Real Sex: The Naked Truth About Chastity.''

The recent Harvard study that found teenagers' virginity pledges to be ineffective should come as a surprise to no one. Several studies had already come to that conclusion. If we are truly to help our teenagers adopt the countercultural sexual ethic of abstinence until marriage, Christians concerned about the rampant premarital sex in our communities need to rethink, rather than simply defend, young people's abstinence pledges.

It is awfully easy for Christians to blame our community's sexual sins on the mores of post-sexual revolution America -- to criticize Abercrombie & Fitch catalogs, to natter on about how ''Grey's Anatomy'' portrays sexual behavior that doesn't square with Christianity.

But perhaps it's more important that we reconsider how we talk about sex in the church. For although the church devotes an immense amount of energy to teaching about sexuality -- just go to the Christian inspiration section of your nearest Barnes & Noble and compare the number of books about chastity to books that challenge, say, consumerism -- many Christians still ''struggle with'' (in that euphemistic evangelical phrase) premarital sex, adultery and pornography.

So why is the church's approach to teaching chastity falling short? Consider the popular ''True Love Waits'' virginity pledge: ''Believing that true love waits, I make a commitment to God, myself, my family, my friends, my future mate and my future children to a lifetime of purity including sexual abstinence from this day until the day I enter a biblical marriage relationship.''

This pledge and others like it are well meaning but deeply flawed. For starters, there's something disturbing about the assumption that teenagers are passively waiting for their future mates and children, when the New Testament is quite clear that some Christians are called to lifelong celibacy. (Paul, for example, did not have a mate or children, and Dan Brown's fantasies notwithstanding, Jesus's only bride was the church.) Chastity is not merely about passive waiting; it is about actively conforming our bodies to the arc of the Gospel and receiving the Holy Spirit right now.

Pledgers promise to control intense bodily desires simply by exercising their wills. But Christian ethics recognizes that the broken, twisted will can do nothing without rehabilitation by God's grace. Perhaps the centrality of grace is recognized best not in a pledge but in a prayer that names chastity as a gift and beseeches God for the grace to receive it.

The pledges are also cast in highly individualistic terms: I promise that I won't do this or that. As the Methodist bishop William Willimon once wrote: ''Decisions are fine. But decisions that are not reinforced and reformed by the community tend to be short-lived.''

During our first year of marriage, my husband and I lived in a small apartment inside a church. On Tuesdays, Alcoholics Anonymous and Al-Anon met downstairs. As I got to know some of the regulars, I began to wonder if there wasn't something the church could learn from the 12-step groups in our midst.

After all, what are 12-step groups but communities of people expecting transformation? People show up because they want to change, and they know that making a promise by themselves -- I will stop drinking -- won't cut it. Alcoholics Anonymous explicitly recognizes that transformation works best when a community comes alongside you and participates in your transformation.

Christians, like 12-step group attendees, are people who are committed to becoming, to use the Apostle Paul's phrase, new creatures. Living sexual lives that comport with the Gospel is one part of that.

Perhaps pledges for chastity need to be made not only by the individual teenager. Perhaps we also need pledges made by the teenager's whole Christian community: we pledge to support you in this difficult, countercultural choice; we pledge that the church is a place where you can lay bare your brokenness and sin, where you don't have to dissemble; we pledge to cheer you on when chastity seems unbearably difficult, and we pledge to speak God's forgiveness to you if you falter. No retooled pledge will guarantee teenagers' chastity, but words of grace and communal commitment are perhaps a firmer basis for sexual ethics than simple assertions that true love waits.


Keeping a Pledge
Grace, Transformation, and Community

Chuck Colson

July 5, 2006

I read the New York Times every day. But I can't remember the last time I found profound theological wisdom in its columns—that is until recently.

Lauren Winner, an insightful new voice among Christian writers, graced the New York Times op-ed pages with a straight-talking explanation of Harvard's recent studies showing that abstinence pledges have proven ineffectual among teenagers. According to Winner, we shouldn't be surprised.

Now before getting defensive, listen to her well-grounded theological explanation: "Pledgers promise to control intense bodily desires simply by exercising their wills. But Christian ethics recognizes that the broken, twisted will can do nothing without rehabilitation by God's grace."

This is no less than the apostle Paul teaches us in Romans 7. Winner further proposes, "Perhaps the centrality of grace is recognized best not in a pledge but in a prayer that names chastity as a gift and beseeches God for the grace to receive it." She also rightly draws our attention to the brash individualism of such pledges. Quoting Methodist bishop William Willimon, she writes, "Decisions are fine. But decisions that are not reinforced and reformed by the community tend to be short-lived.''

To that I say, "Amen!" Winner re-affirms something that the Church has known but all too often forgotten: true transformation requires God's enabling grace. And because of the way God created us to reflect the inherent relational nature of the Trinity, transformation happens best within the context of community. I applaud Winner's nudging reminder that the community of believers must be indeed just that, a community, supporting and enabling that counter-cultural commitment to God's ways.

Unwittingly, Winner's argument also point to the lessons we've discovered in working in some of the most difficult trenches of transformation—the prisons. Simply more education or a pledge before the parole board won't help prisoners stay out of prison. True change of will requires God's enabling grace and power.

And for that change to seep down deep, prisoners need a community of support. They need volunteers who will open up the Word of God and show them how to live, mentors who will come alongside and share their lives, and most of all, they need the open arms of a church community to embrace them and support them when they return.

And this is perhaps what grieves me most about the recent decision from a judge in Iowa, ruling against the faith-based prison program, the InnerChange Freedom Initiative. Shutting down programs like IFI will only succeed in hurting the community, by standing in the way of the only transformation that really works.

The IFI program works because it does exactly what Winner and I've talked about. It provides a way for grace-filled transformation to occur in the context of community. In so doing, it is a witness to the Church of what it has too often forgotten, and a witness to the community of the only true power to change.

(read on)

pssst...

forgive the current events, but this is important.

reuters reported this morning that the bush administration has been keeping a major intelligence activity secret from the house and senate. michigan republican pete hoekstra, chair of the house intelligence committee and an ardent bush supporter, sent him a four-page letter of criticism warning that his decision was potentially illegal. two more years...


(read on)

Sunday, June 25, 2006

the paradox of gay rights: who's really intolerant?

christian magazine first things ran a nice response to this week's firing of Robert Smith, a Washington Metro board member, for saying that homosexuals are "sexual deviants" on cable tv. for washington post coverage, click here.

i have two questions:
1) who bothers watching this kind of tv (or any, for that matter... unless it's the world cup)?
2) what does this irrational intolerance of a traditional religious belief demonstrate about america more generally?

after 50 years of tv, still no-one can acceptably answer the first question. but the second is dealt with well in this response, reproduced from first things (nod to ryan anderson for the heads-up on this). it's long, but worth the read.

June 21, 2006

Joseph Bottum writes:

A friend emails thoughts on the recent firing of a transportation commissioner in Maryland for remarks about homosexuality:

Back in 2004, Rocco Buttiglione was nominated to be the commissioner of justice on the newly formed European Commission, the executive branch of the European Union. A distinguished political philosopher and a friend and confidante of Pope John Paul II, Buttiglione had a long and admirable career of public service, but various members of the European Parliament objected vehemently to Buttiglione’s views on homosexuality. A Roman Catholic, Buttiglione had said publicly that he believed that homosexual conduct was immoral. He was quick to add that he thought discrimination against individuals with a homosexual orientation was also immoral and indeed illegal under European law, but that made no difference. The committee considering Buttiglione’s candidacy advised against approving him, and when the whole European Parliament, which was to make the final decision, gridlocked on the nomination, Buttiglione withdrew his candidacy.

The lesson many people drew from this incident was that a devout Roman Catholic, or indeed anyone who ascribed to the traditional view in Western civilization that homosexual acts are immoral, was unfit for high office in the European Union. Some people thought, however, that such things could not happen in the United States.

But we live in rapidly changing times. Earlier this week, Robert L. Ehrlich, the Republican governor of Maryland, abruptly removed from office one of his appointees to the board of directors of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), an interstate agency that oversees public transportation in the Washington, D.C., area. The appointee, Robert J. Smith, had been a regular guest on a local cable news show in Maryland, and on the June 9 program, the topics discussed on the show included the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment, which would limit marriage in the United States to unions of one man with one woman. In the course of the discussion, Smith referred to gays and lesbians as “persons of sexual deviancy.” He later reiterated to reporters that he “consider[s] homosexual behavior as deviant” and explained that this view stems from his Roman Catholic faith. To be sure, “deviant” is a harsh word, and Smith would have done better to stick close to the more careful formulations used in Catholic doctrine, but in context it was perfectly clear that Smith was affirming the moral doctrine taught in the Catholic religion and in a dwindling percentage of other Christian denominations.

The response to Smith’s remarks was explosive. In removing Smith from office, Governor Ehrlich said, “Robert Smith’s comments were highly inappropriate, insensitive and unacceptable. They are in direct conflict to my administration’s commitment to inclusiveness, tolerance and opportunity.” The WMATA chairwoman said that Smith’s remarks reflected “a high level of intolerance” and that she “was surprised that someone who sits as a public official on a board would make that kind of a statement.” One of Smith’s fellow board members, however, said it most succinctly, asserting, “To defend this point of view is beyond the pale.”

That last phrase arrests the attention. What Governor Ehrlich and Smith’s colleagues on the WMATA board were saying is not just that they disagree with Smith about the moral quality of homosexual conduct, not just that Smith’s views are in error, not just that his views are unreasonable, but that they are immoral. Indeed, nothing less would justify Ehrlich’s decision to remove Smith. Ehrlich could hardly admit that Smith’s views were reasonable, the kind of thing that a person may in good faith believe even if Ehrlich himself disagreed, and yet nevertheless justify removing Smith from an office that has no significant connection to gay rights on the basis of those beliefs. No, what is being said here is that Smith’s views on homosexual conduct, which are the views of the Catholic religion and of a great many Americans (both religious and nonreligious), are, in the words of Smith’s former colleague, “beyond the pale”—beyond, that is to say, the range of beliefs that moral people might hold in just the same way that, say, racist beliefs are beyond the pale. Only bigots think that way.

Asked to back up this claim, Governor Ehrlich might have cited the authority of the United States Supreme Court. Back in 1994, Justice Kennedy, writing for the majority in Romer v. Evans, held that a state constitutional amendment prohibiting the state and its cities and counties from enacting anti-discrimination laws related to homosexual orientation or conduct violated the federal Constitution, because it was “inexplicable by anything but animus toward” gays and lesbians and “lacks a rational relationship to legitimate state interests.” Many have read this case as meaning that, in the view of the Supreme Court, a negative judgment on homosexual conduct or orientation lacks any rational basis and so must be the product of irrational animus. Such a reading makes sense of Justice Kennedy’s otherwise not especially coherent opinion in Lawrence v. Texas.

Notice, too, how quickly both Buttiglione and Smith were to refer to their Catholic faith. Supporters of both quickly cast the treatment they received as a form of religious persecution—as if the belief that homosexual conduct is immoral were a peculiarly Catholic, or at least Christian, tenet, and that using that belief to exclude someone from public office would amount to religious discrimination. That may be, but in fact the Catholic Church has always taught that the moral norm against homosexual conduct is not peculiarly Catholic, that it is rather part of natural morality and can be known by reason in natural moral philosophy. In his Laws, for example, Plato argued against such conduct and would have prohibited it, all on the basis of purely philosophical arguments (636a-c, 835c-841e), not religious taboo. But we have reached the point that, at least in disputes conducted in the news media, rational arguments on the merits of this subject are hopeless; only an appeal to a different kind of nondiscrimination norm might work.

The removal of Robert Smith is thus an early-warning sign. Unless things change in ways now quite unforeseeable, it will not be very long before the principle of traditional Western morality that homosexual conduct is immoral will be contrary to the public policy of the United States. As this new public policy takes hold, it will filter through the law and society just as other anti-discrimination norms have. Adherence to the new policy will be a de facto requirement for holding public office, and, as private entities adopt the policy as they have other anti-discrimination norms, people adhering to the traditional moral view will become unfit to serve as directors of public corporations, as officers of professional associations, as union officials, and as university professors. Organizations that do not ascribe to the policy may lose government licenses necessary to carry on their business, become ineligible to receive grants and subsidies, and be disqualified from bidding on government and other contracts. Catholic Charities in Boston recently had to cease arranging adoptions because Massachusetts required that it not discriminate against same-sex married couples in placing children. Organizations not ascribing to the new policy may even lose tax-free status under the Internal Revenue Code to which they would otherwise be entitled. This happened to Bob Jones University because of its racist policies; there is no reason why, a few years hence, the same thing could not happen to Notre Dame because of what will be called its homophobic policies.

Many people will say that this is alarmist nonsense. Perhaps so, but in the long history of the world, human beings have shown themselves highly intolerant of those who disagree with them about their cherished moral beliefs. The Puritans, for example, came to the New World seeking religious freedom, gained power in Massachusetts (ironically, the same state that now gives us same-sex marriage), and promptly began persecuting those who dissented from their orthodoxy. Even among those who preach toleration most loudly, genuine toleration is often scarce once the power to be intolerant has been gained. One of the many wonders of the American experiment is that the American people, throughout most of our history and with some shameful exceptions, have been astonishingly tolerant even of those who disagreed most flagrantly with the majority’s values. There is no guarantee, however, that such generous toleration will continue.

Indeed, there is some reason to think it may not. For the Americans who have been so tolerant over the past two centuries have been for the most part deeply committed to a particular set of moral and religious values largely derived from Protestant Christianity. But as political scientists Louis Bolce and Gerald De Maio wrote in First Things, during the last thirty years, self-consciously nonreligious people have emerged as potent actors on the political stage promoting an overarching secular worldview.

This worldview evolved organically out of the American experience, of course, and the people who uphold it are sincere advocates of various forms of tolerance. But they are also generally inclined to believe that the traditional view that homosexual conduct is immoral is the product of the irrational animus of which Justice Kennedy spoke. More to the point, such people have never yet, as a class, held sufficient political power to be intolerant of those who dissent from the core values of their worldview. As such, they are still untested, and it remains to be seen whether, should they come to achieve majority power, they will be as tolerant of traditionally religious Americans as traditionally religious Americans long were of them.

Perhaps they will, for many such people are clearly persons of genuine goodwill, but the general experience of human nature down the centuries does not encourage optimism, and if things end as they are now beginning, those who accept the traditional norms may well end up the moral equivalent of Klansmen.


(read on)

america slips, part II

a reflection on oppressive policy by a 60s poet.

Stupid America

stupid america, see that chicano
with a big knife
in his steady hand
he doesn’t want to knife you
he wants to sit on a bench
and carve christfigures
but you won’t let him.

stupid america, see that chicano
shouting curses on the street
he is a poet
without paper and pencil
and since he cannot write
he will explode.

stupid america, remember that chicanito
flunking math and english
he is the picasso
of your western states
but he will die
with one thousand masterpieces
hanging only from his mind.

Abelardo “Lalo” Berrientos Delgado, 1969


(read on)

america slips, part I

some stats on how the US ranks on several social issues.

USA Ranking on Adult Literacy Scale: #9
(#1 Sweden and #2 Norway)- OECD

USA Ranking on Healthcare Quality Index: #37
(#1 France and #2 Italy)- World Health Organization 2003

USA Ranking of Student Reading Ability: #12
(#1 Finland and #2 South Korea)- OECD PISA 2003

USA Ranking of Student Problem Solving Ability: #26
(#1 South Korea and #2 Finland)- OECD PISA 2003

USA Ranking on Student Mathematics Ability: # 24
(#1 Hong Kong and #2 Finland)- OECD PISA 2003

USA Ranking of Student Science Ability: #19
(#1 Finland and #2 Japan)- OECD PISA 2003

USA Ranking on Women's Rights Scale: #17
(#1 Sweden and #2 Norway)- World Economic Forum Report

USA Ranking on Life Expectancy: #29
(#1 Japan and #2 Hong Kong)- UN Human Development Report 2005

USA Ranking on Journalistic Press Freedom Index: #32
(#1 Finland, Iceland, Norway and the Netherlands tied)- Reporters Without Borders 2005

USA Ranking on Political Corruption Index: #17
(#1 Iceland and #2 Finland)- Transparency International 2005

USA Ranking on Quality of Life Survey: #13
(#1 Ireland and #2 Switzerland)- The Economist Magazine ...Wikipedia "Celtic Tiger" if you still have your doubts.

USA Ranking on Environmental Sustainability Index: #45
(#1 Finland and #2 Norway)- Yale University ESI 2005

USA Ranking on Overall Currency Strength: #3 (US Dollar)
(#1 UK pound sterling and #2 European Union euro)- FTSE 2006....the dollar is now a liability, so many banks worldwide have planned to switch to euro

USA Ranking on Infant Mortality Rate: #32
(#1 Sweden and #2 Finland)- Save the Children Report 2006

USA Ranking on Human Development Index (GDP, education, etc.): #10
(#1 Norway and #2 Iceland)- UN Human Development Report 2005

(read on)

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

cantique de jean racine

to prepare my mind for worship today, i listened to faure's transcendent Cantique de Jean Racine.

you'll enjoy listening to it; click here.

here's the french, then a decent english translation:

Verbe,égal au Très-Haut, notre unique espèrance,
Jour éternel de la terre et des cieux;
De la paisible nuit nous rompons le silence,
Divin Sauveur, jette sur nous les yeux!

Répands sur nous le feu de ta grâce puissante,
Que tout l'enfer fuie au son de ta voix;
Dissipe le sommeil d'une âme languissante,
Qui la conduit à l'oubli de tes lois!

O Christ soit favorable à ce peuple fidèle
Pour te bénir maintenant rassemblé.
Reçois les chants qu'il offre à ta gloire immortelle,
Et de tes dons qu'il retourne comblé!


Word, equal to the Almighty, our only hope,
Eternal light of the earth and the Heavens;
We break the peaceful night's silence,
Divine Saviour, cast your eyes upon us!

Spread the fire of your mighty grace upon us
May the entire hell flee at the sound of your voice;
Disperse from any slothful soul the drowsiness
Inducing it to forget your laws!

Oh Christ, look with favour upon this faithful people
Which has now gathered to bless you.
Receive its singing, offered to your immortal glory,
And may it leave with the gifts you have bestowed upon it!


(text from the choral wiki)


(read on)

Saturday, June 17, 2006

how to make a powerpoint presentation

i just got back from al gore's new documentary on global warming, though it more accurately could be titled:
"Al Gore: Public Crusader for Tomorrow's World"
or simply
"How to Scroll through a Powerpoint (Keynote) Presentation on a Plane, in a Room, at a Desk, in a Car, on a Couch, ..."

that last one made it to the final cut, when the editors (yes, there were editors! but more on this later) finally decided it was too clunky.

at any rate, i spent a lot of time in the movie thinking about the movie (which usually isn't a good sign). for proper reviews, check out IMDb's list of external reviews. i just want to comment on a few specific things.

this movie was intentionally appealing to the archetypal republican.

everyone knows the democrats (and republicans) are intensely concerned about this year's senate elections and the presidential election in 08. republicans just spent more than $5 mil on a winning election campaign to replace san diego's corrupt, republican 'duke' cunningham. how can republicans continue to win, in california no less, with the state of affairs in america as they are?

in answering that question, democrats have strategized, i think, to present its candidates as 'real americans', with as much apparent genuineness as W (i say "apparent" with full knowledge of its connotations here). in my mind this movie is one of the most overt recent attempts to "humanize" and "americanize" a democrat. forget that gore is "no longer in politics" and that global warming is "not a political issue; it's a moral issue." gore is still part of the democratic machine, and global warming is still a political issue. i'll spell these out:

1. gore is part of the democratic machine.
even if he's no longer talking to democratic strategists, he's forever emblazoned in this generation's conscience as a democratic figurehead. his activities out of office are a good indicator of what 'democrats are really like'. the man we see out of office is a hard-working, compassionate son of a politician-farmer, with great foresight and reputable goals. in short, he's everything W claimed to be, but, well, wasn't. as if those associations weren't enough, gore, as if stealing pages from the republican playbook, sounded more like W than i'd ever remembered: i never knew him to be so laborious in his speech, so awkwardly deliberate in his presentation. sure, at times there were light jokes and cheap shots, which, if they weren't wit, were at least evidence of a brain. but he was, i think intentionally, being awkward... mostly when he talked about himself, his home, his family, the stuff of life in almost entirely contrived and unnecessary cut-to scenes of where he grew up and motivations for working on global warming. to me, it seemed blatant that he was at the same time demonstrating his political prowess and social conscience (a one-up on W) and showing that he was more down-home american (beating W at his own mid-west game). still, it left a bad taste in my mouth, since these kind of irrelevant appeals to political genuineness have the distinct flavor of, well, bull sh't.

2. global warming is a political issue.
here's the logic:
global warming results from oil. oil is republican. republican is political. thus global warming is political. as we say in math, quod erat demonstratum.

percolating in the public conscience is the conviction that oil makes rich, corrupt, republican tycoons richer (and perhaps more corrupt and more republican...witness: Iraq war). oil fatcats and their federal compatriots piss off most americans. so, by lining up against the oil companies, democrats befriend the american public. they're with "us" on this issue...and it's an issue inextricably linked to the wars and corruption of this mismanaged republican administration.

so in both of these respects, democrats are the good guys in an uphill battle we americans have to join. if that's not political, what is? fortunately, though, i think they're on to something. oh the power of grassroots in the internet age... but that's another post. who knows if it'll work in awakening republicans to the possibility of voting democratic.

so, do i think you should see this movie? global warming is an extremely important issue, but the facts you get from the movie (plus some) could be learned in fewer than 15 minutes at realclimate.org (see below). so unless you wanna see gore toting his mac all over the globe, don't bother. BUT, change your habits, if necessary, to produce less (or no) CO2 emissions.

postscript 1. this movie does give tons of evidence for the importance of addressing global warming. i appreciate that it's bringing a sense of urgency about the problem to a wider audience.

postscript 2. this movie is intensely boring. all i wanted after 8 straight days of 16+ hours of daily work was a relaxing movie. instead, i got a very poor, needlessly long lecture. admittedly, i shouldn't have gone to a documentary. but my friend suggested it, and it was decently reviewed (nobody wants to be 'that guy' who says the global warming movie sucks; that's tantamount to making a 'special olympics' joke.) without enough footage of the majestic glaciers we're out to save, the audience was left watching gore--not known for stirring speeches--being gore. most of the time (75%ish), he's lecturing to a bunch of other people, who themselves get antsy by the end (i swear there were people in his audience ready to fall asleep, let alone the old guy snoozing across the row from us in the actual theater). he also takes a page from michael moore, incorporating instructional cartoons, albeit less humorous than moore's galumph through the history of the white man's oppressive politics. and then, there're the non-sequitor flashbacks...

for serious information, visit realclimate.org, especially their index, organized thematically. (hat tip to Yeung for this reference)

(read on)

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

impoverished public discourse, absent public action

this past week, wired news had a two-part series ("what if they gave a war?" and "you say you want a revolution?") from copy editor tony long. it's another tired, political wake-up call for an overly materialistic america. in fact, it reminds me in some roundabout way of the now-classic onion article "nation's liberals suffering from outrage fatigue" back in 04:

"With so many right-wing shams to choose from, it's simply too daunting for the average, left-leaning citizen to maintain a sense of anger"

while long's articles are a bit clunky, i always applaud efforts to crawl out of the soul-sucking vortex that is american commercialism (i also applaud efforts to avoid mixed metaphors, but that's another post...). not much is new in what he says (and in my opinion, some of it's misguided), but there are a few nice points. in particular, social movements lose steam and originality when they're used as profit engines: "Once Madison Avenue smells money, you can sound the death knell for any original idea."

"And nothing sells to the "youth demographic" like the idea of being a rebel. Well, guess what? The iconoclast has been marketed out of existence, too. This is a nation of sheep. Slick magazines, TV and, increasingly, the internet tell us what to buy, what to wear, how to think. (Cosmopolitan even tells you how to have an orgasm.) Mass culture has extracted our collective rebel bone. If only the British had marketed themselves better in 1776, we'd still be swearing fealty to the Crown."

in the end though, what do we do about our dangerous current situation in america? his to-do list is lackluster. essentially, he believes in self-improvement. sure, it looks like "broadening your horizons" or something, but in the end, it seems like a selfish schedule. to me, social justice is imbued with power and endurance when it has a firmer purpose.

but i want to get back to this idea: "the iconoclast has been marketed out of existence." i'm afraid the traditional iconoclast is still alive and well, and with good reason. more crap gets published and ideas get thought everyday that simply aren't worth paying attention to. but iconoclasm in the chic, counter-culture sense seems pretty dead to me, and i think this is the idea to which he's referring. i think i know the very date of its death, in fact. american-teen-nouveau-iconoclasm died when the simpsons let us listen to a conversation two rockers--the archetype of this heterodoxal persona--are having at some concert:

"are you being sarcastic, dude?"
"i don't even know anymore."

(read on)

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

body-mod artists and our sense of...magnetism

some wacky body-modification artists decided it'd be cool to put magnets in their ring fingers to sense the world in a new way. the magnets respond to EM fields, oscillate a bit, and activate somatosensory receptors in ways distinct from, say, touching a table or washing your hands. so the implant allows its user to reliably discern electrical activity unavailable to natural human senses. it probably won't go commercial (thanks to infections and uselessness), but you have to admit, it'd be fun being powder for a day.

from the article:
"Huffman and other recipients found they could locate electric stovetops and motors, and pick out live electrical cables. Appliance cords in the United States give off a 60-Hz field, a sensation with which Huffman has become intimately familiar."

(read on)