Here Ryan blogs about politics, film, TV, history, religion, science, books, theater, digital media, LGBT issues, Bushwick & Williamsburg, New York City, and anything else he's interested in at the moment. Oh, and he'll probably talk a lot about himself.
This is a personal blog. Any opinions expressed here and on my Twitter represent my own and not those of my employer or clients.
In eight years, we went from nobody having smartphones to capture the new Pope, to everyone having them. Pretty mind blowing change.
It is primarily in the face of suffering, whether the tragedy is individual or collective, that I am forcefully reminded of what atheism has to offer. When I try to help a loved one losing his mind to Alzheimer’s, when I see homeless people shivering in the wake of a deadly storm, when the news media bring me almost obscenely close to the raw grief of bereft parents, I do not have to ask, as all people of faith must, why an all-powerful, all-good God allows such things to happen.
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The atheist is free to concentrate on the fate of this world — whether that means visiting a friend in a hospital or advocating for tougher gun control laws — without trying to square things with an unseen overlord in the next. Atheists do not want to deny religious believers the comfort of their faith. We do want our fellow citizens to respect our deeply held conviction that the absence of an afterlife lends a greater, not a lesser, moral importance to our actions on earth.
Great conversation between Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett, from May at Oxford University. Most interesting are the first thirty minutes, that focus on cultural evolution and meme theory.
Touring Notre-Dame in Montreal today, I thought how much beauty religion once inspired in the world - music, architecture, art. Now it’s just the most mediocre stuff - Left Behind and Christian Rock.
Been nice if the Catholic Church had fought as hard to stop the Iraq War as it did to stop women from receiving birth control.