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UTSA Weekly Update

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Hi Everyone,

Sorry about the sparse updates of late, here are the events we have coming up in the next week or so:

1. I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist
2. Faith(less) – What leads people to embrace or reject faith?
3. Centre for Inquiry Canada’s First National Conference

1. I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist

Join the UTSA for an evening of entertainment, courtesy of the Morning Star Christian Fellowship. On the evening of Thursday, February 25 (7-9pm), we will be attending one of their events on faith, covering the questions “Are Miracles Possible?” and “Is The New Testament True?”. Some UTSA members will be going to see this event, and if you’re interested in joining us, please contact me today or tomorrow so we can arrange a place to meet and head down together. If interested, send me an email at m.gerskup@utoronto.ca.

More information can be found here: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=294256372152

2. Faith(less) – What leads people to embrace or reject faith?

Join us for a panel discussion on Inter-faith dialogue and understanding.

Panel speakers:
Mark Kingwell / U of T Department of Philosophy
Rabbi Aaron Katchen / Hillel of Greater Toronto
Rodd Rudd / Campus For Christ
Ghan Chee / True Peace Sungha at U of T

Presented in partnership with:
Multi-Faith Centre, Muslim Students’ Association, Campus for Christ, Hillel of Greater Toronto, U of T Secular Alliance, True Peace Sangha at U of T

http://harthouse.ca/hh/shownewsitem.php?id=388

3. Centre for Inquiry Canada’s First National Conference

March 4 – 7, 2010.

Meet freethought leaders from across the country and hear from academics on a broad range of exciting topics! Includes a comedy show and a magic for skeptics!

The Centre for Inquiry Canada is excited to announce our first national conference entitled “Art and Science: Freethought at the Intersection of Two Worlds”.

This Conference will consist of two parts: a Leadership and Organizational Conference on Friday, March 5th (with Registration starting in the afternoon, Thursday, March 4th) and an Educational Conference on Saturday, March 6th. We will also be holding Annual General Meetings for CFI Canada and the Canadian Secular Alliance on Sunday, March 7th.

You can register for one or both days on our website at www.cfiontario.org

On Thursday evening, we will be hosting a reception and an art exhibit with works that display the intersection of art and science.

All day Friday will consist of presentations and group discussions with student leaders, CFI representatives and heads of various organizations. Discussion topics will range from promotions and fundraising to politics and free expression. Come and participate in the discussion about how to be a leader in the freethought movement!

Friday night will include a catered awards banquet with awards being given out for humanism, skepticism and more. Following this we will host an Atheist Comedy night featuring comics Hunter Collins, Nick Beaton and others.

The Educational Conference on Saturday will start with registration at 8:30 am. There will be 4 different panels including:

Panel 1: Art, Prehistory and Evolution
Panel 2: Science and Art
Panel 3: Atheism, Skepticism and Philosophy
Panel 4: Science and Ethics

Speakers include CFI Founder Paul Kurtz, anthropologist Dr. James Harrod, artist Paula Gardner, philosophers James Robert Brown and Guillaume Loignon, and ethicists Dr. Byron Williston and Chandler Davis.

Our keynote speaker, Dr. Christopher diCarlo, will speak in the afternoon on the topic of the emergence of art and its implications on consciousness and evolution.

The day will conclude with a Skeptics Magic Show with local magician Jeff Hinchliffe.

Sunday will consist of a CFI Canada AGM, a catered lunch and a Canadian Secular Alliance AGM.

To register and for more info please check out our website: www.cfiontario.org

Out of town student and community leaders may apply for a travel grant from jtrottier@cficanada.ca

That’s all for now. Hopefully I’ll see you at some of the events!


Mitchell Gerskup
University of Toronto Secular Alliance

UTSA Weekly Update

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Just a few things this week:

1) Meetings

Our meeting this week will be Tuesday night at 7pm and will be held at O’Grady’s (171 College Street). Come out to meet the group and have a good time.

2) Multi-Faith Panel Discussion

The UTSA will be hosting a Multi-Faith panel discussion along with the Multi-Faith Centre, Hart House, and a few other student groups. For now, you should mark down in your calendars that it will be held on the evening of (6pm) Tuesday, March 2. The topic of the panel discussion will be “What leads people to accept faith, or reject it?” and will feature viewpoints from the christian, jewish, muslim, hindu, and secular traditions. Stay tuned for more information.

Review of The Great Time Debate

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Last Tuesday, I attended to The Great Time Debate, an event hosted at the University of Toronto by the Centre for Inquiry Canada and the University of Toronto Secular Alliance, to listen to cosmologist Dick Bond, theoretical physicist Lee Smolin, and philosophy professor James Robert Brown discuss the nature of time. The talk, moderated by award-winning science journalist Dan Falk, took the form of a panel discussion/debate, in which each of the speakers was given 20 minutes to present their views, followed by a discussion with the moderator and questions posed by the audience.

Slides
Interesting speakers. Terrible presentation designs.

Though the debate itself was relatively tame, it was apparent that opinions on whether or not time was “real” varied across the board. As did the definitions of what it meant for something to be real. Whereas Bond and Brown argued that time was not “real” in the sense that we usually envision (i.e. the Newtonian notion of a “universal clock”), whereas Smolin argued for the existence of time as real – though not quite in the Newtonian sense. I’ll admit that I didn’t fully understand much of what was said, but you can find a moderately detailed account of the talk via twitter (under the hashtag #timedebate).

What did I learn? The exact nature of time is not a simple question, and we still don’t quite know how it fits in to the giant tapestry of physics. This isn’t to say that we merely haven’t made any progress — merely that it’s too early to say whether you really could travel back in time to kill your own grandfather (or grandmother).

Panel
The panel of experts.

Once the panelists had finished their presentations and had answered a few questions from the moderator, the panel took questions from the audience. One particularly insightful audience member asked (something along the lines of) how it was possible to use physical inquiry to determine the nature of time, when physicals is premised on a certain notion of time. Or, in other words, if we start out assuming that time works a certain way in order to get to where we are today in physics, how can we then turn around and use that physics to find out the nature of time in a way that isn’t biased by our initial assumptions?

The panel agreed that, due to the circular (i.e. self-correcting) nature of scientific investigation, this didn’t pose a serious problem in the long run. The time available for a response was quite limited, so the panelists didn’t get to explain their answers in too much detail, but I believe it is an important question that warrants a more thorough response.

The panel’s point was that scientific inquiry could only function with a certain set of assumptions about how the world works. These assumptions might be informed by other scientific knowledge, intuition, or in theory (if not in practice) by wild guessing. The important thing is not that the original assumptions are correct, but rather whether investigation using these assumptions provides coherent results, i.e. coherent with our other beliefs, the rest of science, etc. If they are not, then the original assumptions are revised (or abandoned), much in the same way that we would abandon an unsuccessful scientific hypothesis.

A good example of this is the assumption built into Newtonian physics of absolute time and space. Simply put, these are the notions that time and space are neutral to physical events, and serve as more of a stage upon which these events occur. We now know these assumptions to be incorrect, due to this view of time and space being superseded by Einstein’s special relativity. More importantly, though, is that this original incorrect assumption was still able to yield relative scientific results in certain instances, and the transition from Newton to Einstein didn’t prove disastrous to the field of physics. What matters isn’t that the original assumption was correct; merely that it yielded correct predictions, and when a better theory (with different underlying assumptions) came along, our understanding of the universe was improved, rather than cast into doubt.

Then the question arises of how we know what the truth is, if our starting points are arbitrary. Isn’t this just a form of coherentism? To which I say, “yes”. However, that isn’t a problem insofar as science works and allows us to make testable predictions within a coherent framework, whatever that framework may be. Maybe one day, philosophers will discover a direct way to access logically certain truths about the universe, but until then, we might as well use the next best thing.

Originally posted on Skeptic North.

UTSA Weekly Update

Monday, October 26th, 2009

1. Weekly Meeting

We will be meeting this week on Thursday at 7pm in the Hart House Arbor Room. We will try to be at the large round table (but that might not work out); so we will try to have a sign identifying our group. At this week’s meeting, we will be announcing a few new club initiatives — so make sure to come out!

2. CFI Conference

Unfortunately, the CFI conference at the end of this month has been canceled due to unforeseen circumstances. However, the talk by Tarek Fatah will still be taking place this Friday. It will be from 7pm-9pm in the Bahen Centre (room 1130). Admission will be $5 for students.

UTSA Weekly Update

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

1. Weekly Meetings

The University of Toronto Secular Alliance will be meeting this week. We will meet at the usual time: Thursday from 7-8pm in Hart House. This week, we will be in the Board Room on the 2nd floor. If you need directions, make sure to ask at the Hart House front desk.

The topic of discussion this week will be “Atheism and Agnosticism”.

Everybody is encouraged to come out to the meeting. After the meeting, we will continue the discussion at a nearby pub.

2. Dan Barker Talk

On Thursday, October 22nd, from 7pm – 9pm, Dan Barker of the Freedom From Religion Foundation will be giving a talk at the University of Toronto. The talk will take place in the first-floor auditorium (Room 108) of the Koffler Institute (located in the Earth Sciences complex). Admission will be free, and the event is open to both members of the UTSA, students, and members of the public.

3. CFI Conference

At the end of this month, the CFI and UTSA will be working together to bring you a conference on Leadership & The Intersection of Art & Science. Broadly speaking, the conference will run from Thursday, October 29 to Sunday, November 1. More details will follow as the event draws closer.

Things to note: TAREK FATAH TO GIVE KEYNOTE PUBLIC ADDRESS – Friday, October 30, 2009, 7:00pm

You can find more information here: http://www.centerforinquiry.net/ontario/events/cfi_canada_conference_-_the_intersection_of_science_and_art/

Michael Shermer @ UofT

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Last night, the University of Toronto Secular Alliance joined the Centre for Inquiry Canada in hosting a talk by Michael Shermer at the MacLeod Auditorium in the Medical Science building. The event was a huge success. We had a large turn-out (we filled the auditorium!), the Q&A period wasn’t plagued by boring or irrelevant questions, and the CFI hosted a reception after the event. I would like to thank Dr. Shermer for the wonderful talk, the CFI for making this happen, and everybody who came out and volunteered their time to help out last night.

You can find a more detailed write-up of the event on the Skeptic North blog, here: http://www.skepticnorth.com/2009/10/michael-shermer-in-toronto.html

UTSA Weekly Update

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

This week, in the UTSA:

1. Blasphemy Day

Today, Wednesday, September 30, the University of Toronto Secular Alliance will be joining secular, skeptical and humanist groups around the world in celebration of International Blasphemy Day. This event combines the celebration of our freedom of speech with a protest of blasphemy laws around the world.

We will be out front of Sidney Smith on the patio from 3pm to 6pm. We will have a number of speakers, ways for you to have your voice heard, and a chance to participate in CFI’s blasphemy challenge. Everybody should stop by, even if just for a little bit!

More information can be found on the Blasphemy Day Facebook Group page, here: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=50200339561

2. Michael Shermer
On Friday, October 2, Michael Shermer will be visiting the University of Toronto to give a talk on “Why People Believe Weird Things”. In addition to being an extraordinary talk, tickets are available for students for the discounted price of $5. The talk will occur at 7pm, and we will have a Secular Alliance social event afterwards.

You can find out more information about the event by visiting the CFI’s website, here: http://www.centerforinquiry.net/ontario/events/michael_shermer_at_the_university_of_toronto/

Alternatively, if you are interested in volunteering at the event in exchange for free admission, please contact me at mgerskup(at)gmail(dot)com.

3. Weekly Meetings

There is no meeting this week. Our meetings will resume next week at the usual time and place.

UTSA Weekly Update

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

This week, in the UTSA:

1. Weekly Meetings

This week, our meeting will be held on Thursday, September 24 from 7pm-8pm at Hart House in the Board Room. We’re going to try something new this week and have a pre-determined discussion topic; in preparation for Blasphemy Day, the topic this week will be “Freedom of Speech”. There will be a social event after the meeting at a location to-be-determined.

This is an open meeting, and everybody is welcome to attend.

2. Blasphemy Day

On Wednesday, September 30, the University of Toronto Secular Alliance will be joining secular, skeptical and humanist groups around the world in celebration of International Blasphemy Day. This event combines the celebration of our freedom of speech with a protest of blasphemy laws around the world. We are organizing a demonstration on campus for the 30th at 3pm. Details on location will be forthcoming.

More information can be found on the Blasphemy Day Facebook Group page, here: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=50200339561

3. Michael Shermer

On Friday, October 2, Michael Shermer will be visiting the University of Toronto to give a talk on “Why People Believe Weird Things”. In addition to being an extraordinary talk, tickets are available for students for the discounted price of $5. The talk will occur at 7pm, and we will have a Secular Alliance social event afterwards.

You can find out more information about the event by visiting the CFI’s website, here: http://www.centerforinquiry.net/ontario/events/michael_shermer_at_the_university_of_toronto/

Alternatively, if you are interested in volunteering at the event, please contact me at: mgerskup (at) gmail (dot) com.

The Atheist Camel Chronicles

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Occasionally we get emails asking us to promote books or publications. Most of the time they look kind of sketchy, but this one happened to look fun. I haven’t had a chance to read the book, but the description looks interesting:

The Atheist Camel Chronicles: Debate Themes & Arguments for the Non-Believer (and those who think they might be) (Amazon)

If anybody has read this book, feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments.

Also, don’t forget about the UTSA’s start of the year welcome party and barbecue this Friday, September 11 from 1pm to 5pm at the Centre for Inquiry (216 Beverley Street). Come out for the free food and drinks; stay to meet some interesting people.

Why is Religion Universal?

Monday, May 4th, 2009

The CFI will be hosting UofT professor Leslie Jermyn this Friday for a talk on the universality of religion. All UTSA members are invited to attend. Details are as follows:

All human societies that we know about have beliefs that can be considered ‘religious.’ This is true regardless of level of material technology, the presence of formal education or type of political organization. This talk explores what human beings seem to need and get from religion that is not easily substituted by other epitemologies like science.

$5, $3 for students and FREE for CFI Members

This will be taking place Friday May 8th (this Friday) from 7pm to 9pm. The talk will be held at the Centre for Inquiry, located at 216 Beverley St. (just south of College at St George).

You can view the original post on the CFI’s website here.

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