Secular Blasphemy
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  31. mars 2006


A guy is playing Quake III on 24 monitors. Wow.

Well, he's also a camper.


10:59:45 PM    comment []  trackback []

Police has been called in to protect teachers at a Berlin secondary school. Six officers now have the job to check students for weapons.

In a letter asking for help, the head teacher said it had become almost impossible to hold orderly lessons.

Students were said to be ignoring or even attacking the teachers and fighting among themselves.

A teacher who recently left the school told the Tagesspiegel newspaper that ethnic Arab pupils were in the majority and were bullying ethnic Turks, Germans and other nationalities.

A student at the school told German N24 television that pupils were coming to school armed. 

But no worries, the government knows how to solve this problem at Ruetli secondary school:

The education minister for Berlin, Klaus Boeger, said the school would soon be given two social workers and two psychologists to help pupils. 

That always does the trick. Not?


9:54:09 PM    comment []  trackback []

Prayer has no detectable effect on recovery:

Prayers offered by strangers had no effect on the recovery of people who were undergoing heart surgery, a large and long-awaited study has found.

And patients who knew they were being prayed for had a higher rate of post-operative complications like abnormal heart rhythms, perhaps because of the expectations the prayers created, the researchers suggested.

Because it is the most scientifically rigorous investigation of whether prayer can heal illness, the study, begun almost a decade ago and involving more than 1,800 patients, has for years been the subject of speculation.

The question has been a contentious one among researchers. Proponents have argued that prayer is perhaps the most deeply human response to disease, and that it may relieve suffering by some mechanism that is not yet understood. Skeptics have contended that studying prayer is a waste of money and that it presupposes supernatural intervention, putting it by definition beyond the reach of science.

That is only partially true. Everything that can be observed reliably can be tested by science, so any claims about supernatiral events that effect humans or the world can of course be tested.

"The problem with studying religion scientifically is that you do violence to the phenomenon by reducing it to basic elements that can be quantified, and that makes for bad science and bad religion," said Dr. Richard Sloan, a professor of behavioral medicine at Columbia and author of a forthcoming book, "Blind Faith: The Unholy Alliance of Religion and Medicine."

The study cost $2.4 million, and most of the money came from the John Templeton Foundation, which supports research into spirituality. The government has spent more than $2.3 million on prayer research since 2000.

It is notable that the study was founded by those who had a vested interest in finding a positive result. Science works.

Religious people who are upset with this result should maybe think about the theological implications. Does their god only interfere to help them if they have good lobbyists?


5:43:00 PM    comment []  trackback []


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