February 2010
33 posts
4 tags
Feb 28th
32 notes
4 tags
“The more tedious the work we have, the better. Because part of Crop Mob is about...”
– —Rob Jones, an organizer of a “new movement” linking young people together who want to do some hardcore farm labour for a day. Shubha Bala, associate producer
Feb 28th
6 tags
WatchWatch
Moving Stills Trent Gilliss, online editor For those of you still stuck in the office or waiting at home for the night’s activities. The Friday video snack is back. The Qatar-born photographer Khalid Mohtaseb has received quite a bit of attention for his striking footage (below) of the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake using a still camera (Canon 5d Mark2, if you must know) and a pocket...
Feb 26th
3 tags
The Arrow of Time? →
Shubha Bala, associate producer (image: Toni Verdú Carbó/Flickr) “Physicists have no problem answering the question of ‘If a tree falls in the woods and no one’s there to hear it, does it make a sound?’ They say, ‘Yes! Of course it makes a sound!’ Likewise, if time flows without entropy and there’s no one there to experience it, is there still time? Yes....
Feb 26th
16 notes
7 tags
Two Vatican Astronomers: A Twitterscript
Trent Gilliss, online editor Two Jesuits who work at the Vatican Observatory — Brother Guy Consolmagno, curator of meteorites, and Father George Coyne, its former director (whom you might recognize from his appearance in Bill Maher’s Religulous) — have been on our interview list for years. Yesterday, Krista was finally able to interview them, together, from a recording studio in Arizona....
Feb 25th
31 notes
8 tags
ListenEinstein on Race » download (mp3, 13:46) Colleen...
Feb 25th
31 notes
7 tags
"Spiritual But Not Religious"
Nancy Rosenbaum, associate producer “I think in a way that kind of cliche ‘spiritual but not religious,’ which apparently is a thing more and more people say to describe themselves, is in a way an attempt to reconcile in some cases with science. In other words…if I say I believe in this highly anthropomorphic God, if I’m religious and too old-fashioned in a sense, or buy into...
Feb 24th
42 notes
3 tags
The Unaffiliated Generation
Kate Moos, managing producer New data from the Pew Forum may be unsurprising to some of us, but it amplifies what we have probably assumed to be true and seems relevant to our projects at Speaking of Faith: “Compared with their elders today, young people are much less likely to affiliate with any religious tradition or to identify themselves as part of a Christian denomination. Fully...
Feb 23rd
7 tags
Anglican Bishops in the UK Back Lifting Ban on Gay... →
Shubha Bala, associate producer Since 2005, same-sex union ceremonies in the UK have been forbidden from mentioning anything religious at all. This has basically banned religious groups (like the Quakers) from consensually performing civil unions for their gay members. It looks like senior bishops in the UK are now backing an amendment to lift this ban, allowing religious institutions to perform...
Feb 23rd
2 notes
2 tags
Tax Protester? Terrorist.
Trent Gilliss, online editor Current NewGround Fellow (check out our program on the organization) Ali H. Mir has written a challenging piece in USC’s The Scoop. By definition of the Patriot Act, he says, journalists should be identifying Joseph Andrew Stack III — the suicide bomber who flew his plane into a federal building in Austin, Texas in order to kill employees of the Internal Revenue...
Feb 23rd
4 notes
4 tags
40 Days 40 Deeds
Trent Gilliss, online editor The administrative dashboard for SOF Observed allows us to see who has liked and reblogged our posts within the Tumblr community. It also allows us to see who “follows” our blog. Our most recent follower, 40 Days 40 Deeds, is a group of folks in four cities across the U.S. who aspire to: “…make small changes throughout the 2010 Lenten season...
Feb 22nd
2 notes
11 tags
Feb 21st
9 tags
ListenA New Dialogue? Colleen Scheck, senior producer ...
Feb 20th
9 tags
A is for Alleluia
by Pádraig Ó Tuama, guest contributor A is for Alleluia. A is for Ashes and last Wednesday was Ash Wednesday, the day when many denominations observe the beginning of Lent — the 40-ish days leading up to the Last Supper, the death of Jesus, the finding of the empty tomb, and the mysterious appearances of Jesus. Lent comes from the Latin word for Spring. So, it seems that Lent is for Spring. ...
Feb 19th
21 notes
7 tags
From Building Blocks to Erector Sets
Shubha Bala, associate producer “…there are some scientists who say ‘I don’t think electrons really exist.’ It’s useful to think of them as existing. It’s useful to build computers with that image in mind of an electron, but I don’t think they really exist… when other people think of God as a personal thing, that’s as close as you can get...
Feb 18th
1 note
4 tags
Leaving No Factions Untouched
Trent Gilliss, online editor As we were updating the script for “No More Taking Sides,” we ran across this passage included in the Parents Circle - Families Forum 2009 annual report: “Palestinian member of the Forum, Ali Abu-Awad met with more than 60 members of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade, Palestinian fighters most of who are on Israel’s most wanted list. He spoke...
Feb 17th
5 tags
Feb 17th
32 notes
3 tags
ListenMore Science Behind the Human-Animal Connection...
Feb 16th
5 notes
5 tags
“None of the theories of the transmission of religious belief favoured by...”
–  —Andrew Brown, editor of the Guardian’s Comment is free section, has stirred up quite a conversation with his “Are science and atheism compatible?” article — saying that science has as much ability to bring as much discomfort to dogmatic non-believers as it does to the most...
Feb 15th
5 notes
6 tags
Listen“Myself When I Am Real” Andy Dayton,...
Feb 14th
1 note