Up@dawn 2.0

Friday, May 8, 2020

Coda

Would this be an appropriate musical coda for a semester devoted to (neuro-) Existentialism, This Life, and A Meaning to Life?



Or maybe this?



Choose to be meaningfully happy, with or without divine guidance. See some of you in the Fall, in the classroom (!), for Environmental Ethics. Good luck with your goals, AND your habits!

Be well and stay safe.

Baseball Player Safe At Home Plate Art Print by Greg Paprocki

Human Evolution, and a Humanist Response to Crisis


Human Evolution, and a Humanist Response to Crisis

Final Report by Jessica Carlan

The current epidemic has been on all of our minds, and I think it's worth investigating the human response to this crisis. In the light of evolutionary biology, we know that the human species has evolved to become social creatures: we feed on the knowledge of those who came before us, and we easily mimic one another's actions and beliefs, often unconsciously. Thus, when we see toilet paper disappear off store shelves, we receive signals such as Must Acquire Paper Products For Safety Purposes. As much as we differ as individuals , in some ways we are simply wired to be a member of the herd. 

The herd mentality doesn't always work to our benefit. In the midst of a crisis, we desire to have a modicum of control over our lives. An invisible killer that can destroy our immune systems? We have very little control over such things. The best thing we can do is keep apart from people and wash our hands. But those measures don't seem drastic enough. Need Toilet Paper. Must Hoard Groceries. Five Hundred Cans of Lysol. And Gummy Bears, Just In Case, Because They Are By The Register. We respond to subtle suggestions, and much more so to not-so-subtle ones. When we began to see more people wearing masks, we bought them for ourselves. People who hadn't gotten the sewing machine out of the attic for years starting frantically sewing masks for themselves and everyone they knew. My grandmother even gave out extras at the doctor's office. We humans truly are social animals--there was no expectation that she should do something generous for those strangers. However, in times of crisis, we understand that mutual support is better than in-fighting. We play the long game to protect each other, and thus ourselves, like honeybees defending the hive. At the same time, we may do irrational things like load up on unnecessary supplies, even though it could be detrimental to our neighbors. It's as if our brains have evolved in multiple directions at once. We are both stingy and charitable; depending on the situation, either behavior may prove to be an advantage for the individual.

I overheard at the grocery store one night in March: a woman talking to her friend about another woman shopping: "Look at her with them gloves and mask, wiping down the cart, scared, but I'm sure she ain't got Jesus. How you think all that gonna help you without Jesus? Ain't none of that gonna help nobody if they ain't got Jesus."


This has been an interesting phenomenon to observe. We've seen churchgoers on TV ignoring calls to worship from home, and heading to big church services instead. On MSNBC one morning, watching with my roommates, I saw a woman leaving her megachurch parking lot, sans mask, and apparently unconcerned. "I'm covered in the blood of Jesus," she said to the news reporter. 
"But what about other people you come into contact with?" the reporter asks her. "What if you get them sick after getting the virus in church?" 
She didn't have a good response for that, just reiterated that she was covered. Presumably, the other people she's putting at risk should get their hearts right.

As recently as last week, a family member urged me to read the New Testament again. "It may help you see the truth," she said. She often forgets that in my younger days I attended Bible college. 
My typical response is to remind her I know all the "right" things, according to her view. I have the theology down. What I don't have is an answer for the problem of evil. 
"Why would God allow thousands of people to die from a virus?"
There's never a satisfactory answer. Still, some try.

If God, Why the Coronavirus? -Vince Vitale




In a YouTube search for atheism, Covid 19 and evolution, most of what I found was like the above: a theistic apologist attempting to explain the bizarre events of biological life with trite aphorisms. He says that God doesn't enjoy watching us suffer. The speaker uses the real-life analogy of taking his young son to get medical tests. The boy doesn't understand what's happening to him. All the father can do is say, "I'm here, I'm here," to reassure him.
This isn't an argument so much as a tug on the heartstrings. In this scenario, the boy's discomfort is not terminal, and serves an actual purpose. He has a heart problem and needs to be examined. Is a novel coronavirus God's way of checking on our lung health? It is highly unlikely that respiratory failures, lost jobs, recession and collective trauma will be better for us in the long run, as the boy's heart testing would benefit his health treatment. Besides, if the boy's father was the one who allowed him to become sick when it could have prevented, as God perhaps could have done, his reassurances would not be very reassuring.


from Why Overreacting to the Threat of the Coronavirus May Be Rational by Belinda Luscombe 


"Our guts are way ahead of our understanding,” [risk-communications consultant Peter] Sandman tells TIME. “Emotionally, we rightly sense that life as we know it has temporarily changed. But intellectually and behaviorally, the change hasn’t sunk in yet.” And in an era of eroding trust in traditional oracles—the media, the government, the medical profession—people are not sure who to turn to. So they do what most creatures do when they’re afraid and confused; they copy what everyone else like them is doing. At base, we are herd animals; if all our fellow gazelles are running one way, we run that way too, to insulate us from the hazard. When traditional institutions cease to seem trustworthy, people rely on those they do trust, their neighbors and friends.As a species, humans have survived by bullying their way to the top of the food chain, by outwitting predators and by being ingenious enough to withstand disasters. Also, evolutionary psychologists and sacred texts both say, we’ve thrived by communicating and working together. The species looks likely to withstand this novel threat as well, but perhaps at some cost to our common sense.

A mistrust of government institutions, a medical system with many flaws and inconsistencies, and the tendency to trust false information we hear from our neighbors can all contribute to poor decision-making. One of the "traditional oracles" not mentioned above is religious instruction. Luscombe kindly includes sacred texts as a way to build community and strengthen human bonds; however, as we see in some real life scenarios, religious teachings can encourage people not to be cautious. Thankfully most places of worship have remained closed, and switched to online meetings or other formats. My relatives, for example, were encouraged to "trust God but be smart." Thus, they hand out their extra masks, and go home to make more until they run out of elastic and fabric.

There are other community responses that offer a different perspective. For example, journalists and progressive politicians are using the crisis to point out the disparities in disease treatment and showing the flaws in our fractured healthcare system. A Medicare For All solution, they say, or a government plan to pay for all COVID 19 treatment, would go a long way in helping reduce the spread of the disease and mortality rates. Many people wait until the last possible minute to seek treatment, when it is more difficult and dangerous to try to save them. With fewer difficulties in accessing hospitals (such as in rural or impoverished areas) and getting treatment, there would be fewer virus fatalities. 

from Why Some People Get Sicker Than Others:

COVID-19 is proving to be a disease of the immune system. This could, in theory, be controlled. 

by James Hamblin


While America’s deepest health disparities absolutely would require generations to undo, the country still could address many gaps right now. Variation in immune responses between people is due to much more than age or chronic disease. The immune system is a function of the communities that brought us up and the environments with which we interact every day. Its foundation is laid by genetics and early-life exposure to the world around us—from the food we eat to the air we breathe. Its response varies on the basis of income, housing, jobs, and access to health care.

The people who get the most severely sick from COVID-19 will sometimes be unpredictable, but in many cases, they will not. They will be the same people who get sick from most every other cause. Cytokines like IL-6 [proven to be connected with COVID-19 symptoms] can be elevated by a single night of bad sleep. Over the course of a lifetime, the effects of daily and hourly stressors accumulate. Ultimately, people who are unable to take time off of work when sick—or who don’t have a comfortable and quiet home, or who lack access to good food and clean air—are likely to bear the burden of severe disease...

Often, it’s a matter of what societies choose to tolerate. America has empty hotels while people sleep in parking lots. We are destroying food while people go hungry. We are allowing individuals to endure the physiological stresses of financial catastrophe while bailing out corporations. With the coronavirus, we do not have vulnerable populations so much as we have vulnerabilities as a population. Our immune system is not strong.

Hamblin points out that our trouble is not individuals within the community, but our existing social structures which create problems with COVID treatment. We have "vulnerabilities as a population" that show us we still have much work to do to create a more equitable society. For many people, staying home and away from danger is impossible. 

The current White House Administration has proven haphazard in its approach to the outbreak. Much more could have been done much earlier to help quell the rise of infections. However, some of the responses have been not only short-sighted, but alarming. 

from Trump Administration to Redirect WHO Funding to Evangelist Franklin Graham’s Samaritan’s Purse, Putting Lives at Risk

by American Atheists

Washington, D.C.—Today, the church/state separation watchdog organization American Atheists denounced the Trump Administration’s alleged plan to steer nearly $400 million in World Health Organization (WHO) contributions to private organizations, including Franklin Graham’s Samaritan’s Purse.

“WHO conducts coronavirus vaccine trials, distributes test kits, and advises countless governments. A divisive Christian organization whose leader claims this pandemic is due to ‘man turn[ing] his back on God’ cannot be trusted to replace WHO’s critical mission,” said Alison Gill, Vice President for Legal and Policy, who wrote a scathing indictment of Samaritan’s Purse, warning about discrimination against vulnerable groups, such as women, LGBTQ Americans, religious minorities, and nonreligious people.

“Let’s be clear about Trump’s motives,” said Nick Fish, President of American Atheists. “To improve his reelection chances, he’s scapegoating WHO and is rewarding his most ardent evangelical supporters, like Franklin Graham, for literally demonizing opponents. This is a dangerous quid-pro-quo involving hundreds of millions of dollars in government funding and, more importantly, thousands of American lives.”

The American Atheists are a group dedicated to promoting the separation of church and state in the U.S. Often this line is blurred, particularly during conservative presidencies. Events such as the National Prayer Breakfast and the National Day of Prayer observed in schools, as well as tax breaks for religious institutions, can make for a strange landscape in our politics. However expected these inconsistencies may be, the act of withdrawing funding from the World Health Organization during a global pandemic to be funneled into a religious organization is not only hyper-partisan, but appalling and dangerous. The administration, perhaps, feels they have something to prove to their constituents. However, our immediate concerns are more pressing. This is a time for the nations of the world to be rallying together to fight a deadly disease. 

I find myself wondering what the appropriate Humanist response would be to this crisis. Clearly, to protect the vulnerable is a moral imperative. I will stay home when possible, wear a mask, keep my distance, wash my hands, offer assistance wherever I can. But I also believe that when the worst of this is over, we will have a lot of soul-searching to do. What are our priorities as human beings? 

The secular humanist believes in promoting the welfare of his fellow humans. This may look different among individuals, but on a large scale, at the very least we should be pushing for a society that can look after its citizens, and is also willing to do so. The American concept of individual liberty and pulling oneself up by one's bootstraps only works if everyone has a pair of boots to begin with. The attitude shown by some, with cries of "Let the weak perish!" only serves to remind us of how calloused humanity can become to its own kind. We show our true quality when we are willing to sacrifice the old, the weak, and the immuno-compromised for the convenience of the capable. Our society has still to overcome to evils of racism, classism, and ableism to evolve into the kind of creatures we out to be. To be less like praying mantises, beheading our rivals, and more collaborative like the honeybee, will, I believe, be the next necessary step in human evolution if we wish to continue living fruitful and meaningful lives on our planet. 




Thanks for a great semester, everyone.

Here is some housekeeping:

1 reply Crystal 3/31
1 reply Patricia 4/1
1 post (Wash. Post) 4/1
1 reply Patricia 4/2
1 reply Jamil 4/7
1 reply Phil 4/27 Neil Gaiman/long now
1 reply Ben 4/27 online community
1 reply Patricia 4/27 Covid thoughts

I believe I scored about 18 runs for the semester.

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Final Report

A Common Faith

By John Dewey

The book is based on lectures given by John Dewey as part of the 1933-1934 “Terry Lectures” at Yale University. The book is available for free on JSTOR if you login using your MTSU login info.

One of the biggest things that stood out to me in the first chapter/section was Dewey’s analysis of why religion doesn’t appeal as much as it did in the past and how many of those things have not changed since 1934. The faith written about in A Common Faith reminds me of the kind of faith that Dr. Oliver
spoke of in class when he referred to the William James’ mountain climber example.Dewey says that his goal is to “develop another conception of the religious phase of experience, one that separates it from the supernatural and the things that have grown up about it.” To me as someone who is not religious he is essentially trying to redefine or reclaim the word religious in “religious experience”. He says that “whatever introduces genuine perspective is religious, not that religion is something that introduces it.” (pg. 24) and “The actual religious quality in the experience described is the effect produced, the better adjustment in life and its conditions, not the manner and cause of its production.” (pg. 14) Dewey throughout this section is trying to lay out a common “religious experience” that can be had by anyone and is not exclusive to a select group of people who have to believe a certain thing to attain some form of special knowledge. Dewey says that “The determining factor in the interpretation of the experience is the particular doctrinal apparatus into which a person has been inducted.” (pg. 13) and he wants people to move away from interpreting experiences in this way. Dewey also talks about the view held in “Modern religious liberalism” that there is a gap between “scientific and religious experience” which implies that there is a limited sphere where scientific knowledge is supreme but that there is also “another region”...”of intimate personal experience wherein other methods and criteria hold sway.” This really just stood out to me because of the significant amount of people who seem to not only hold this view that there is a gap between “scientific and religious experience”, but also say that the gap is essentially permanent regardless of scientific advancement. Dewey went on to say “Yet the gap may only reflect, at most, a limitation now existing but in the future to be done away with.” Dewey then continues and says that it's an old and dangerous argument to say that “because some province or aspect of experience has not yet been ‘invaded’ by scientific methods, it is not subject to them”. (pg. 34-35) Dewey says things throughout this middle section of the book like “It is probably impossible to imagine the amount of intellectual energy that has been diverted from normal processes of arriving at intellectual conclusions because it has gone into rationalization of the doctrines entertained by historic religions.” (pg. 33) and “Interpretations of the experience have not grown from the experience itself with the aid of such scientific resources as may be available. They have been imported by borrowing without criticism from ideas that are current in the surrounding culture.” (pg. 36) Dewey throughout the book is very critical of people tying their religious doctrines to their “religious” experiences but acknowledges, “The experience is a fact to be inquired into.” (pg. 35) but that using your personal interpretation of this experience to explain it or its cause is misguided because of its “dependence upon a prior conception of the supernatural.” (pg. 35) which is essentially given to you by your “surrounding culture”. He continues on to defend science as “a method of changing beliefs by means of tested inquiry as well as of arriving at them.” (pg. 39) against the claim by many religious people that because so many things get disproven in science that it is unreliable as a “mode of knowledge.” Throughout this section I kept thinking of the parallels between this book and The End of Faith by Sam Harris primarily due to the theme of trying to emancipate religious doctrine from experiences that would be typically considered mystical. Dewey goes on later and says “An ideal is not an illusion because imagination is the organ through which it is apprehended. For all possibilities reach us through the imagination.” (pg. 43) This makes me wonder whether he would say that you cannot believe a religious doctrine and separate “religious experiences” from your personal religious interpretation or if it is possible through imagination, or that you must first not adhere to a religious doctrine and then you are better able to make use of “religious experiences”. He does say that “what I have tried to show is that the ideal itself has its root in natural conditions; it emerges when the imagination idealizes existence by laying hold of the possibilities offered to thought and action.” (pg. 48) Things like this is why I imagine Richard Rorty said in the video I posted that many philosophers thought he was a relativist because they would argue that people imagine the ideal differently. I believe Dewey is trying to say that the ideal is imagined differently because what can be imagined is dependent on “physical and social experience.” (pg. 49) and through the process of changing reality through action you can change what can be imagined.

This is the video I referred to about Rorty discussing Dewey.

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Magdu's final report



https://youtu.be/uxDvflRZCLU

This is the link to my Final Report!
Hope everyone is safe!

A Life Driven Purpose

A Life Driven Purpose -

Now more than ever, surviving (or trying to anyway) during a national pandemic has been hard as a person who lacks faith. I have realized in more ways than one that my previous life of faith was not something that I ever truly called on or genuinely lived by unless I was in times of distress and discomfort. And although this does solidify that my graceful exit from the Southern Baptist Church was the correct move for me, I have found myself looking back on it with a sense of nostalgia. It felt much easier to, "Let Go and Let God" - if you will.

Because of this I decided to combine my midterm topic with my final topic. My midterm presentation I will elaborate on in more depth, and in application, as I have had to find purpose without faith much more than I ever have had to in the past, due to current events. It can be seen here in presentation mode for reference.
Church, secularism, and where Americans are finding community ...

This statistical chart was in reference to a survey asking individuals where they found their highest sense of purpose, and surprisingly only 23% of people reported that their highest sense of purpose stemmed from their spiritual practices (the category that religion was classified under. Remember, everyone, spirituality is not necessarily synonymous with religion.)

I've had to ask myself this often over the last month and a half. I've had most of the things that give me a purpose stripped from me, with little to nothing I can do about it. I found daily purpose in attending class on campus, surrounded by like-minded individuals. Feeding my knowledge and solidifying my own belief systems with each passing day and interaction. I lost the majority of my income due to pandemic precautionary restrictions (not a good time to be a bartender, ladies and gentlemen.) I never realized the security provided to me by having a steady, reliable income that alleviated me from ever questioning my purpose as a provider. I never realized how much I looked to my job for purpose. Each shift I worked I knew what was expected of me. I had a meaning in my position. I looked forward to the familiar faces I saw each week that probably equivocally relied on the routine of seeing me as much as I relied on the routine of seeing them. I looked forward to still, slow mornings, waking up to a freshly brewed pot of coffee, and making my son's breakfast and lunch before taking him to school. I found purpose in fulfilling my daily responsibilities as a mother, which I find have rapidly multiplied to the point that they now overwhelm me instead of satisfy me.

It felt incredibly abrasive to have all of those things that gave me a sense of meaning stripped from me at once - but in some ways I am now finding this experience could be incredibly helpful if I let it. Because it is my right and authority to own my experience, as I have further learned in this text. It is one thing to make a PowerPoint presentation on how an Atheist finds purpose, it is another to be an Atheist that is now required to cultivate that purpose amidst the lack of the all the arbitrary things that may supply it for you, even if you do not realize that they do. To practice what you preach, no pun intended.


~

Dan Barker's book titled, "A Life Driven Purpose," starts by breaking down some of the stigma surrounding atheism, but he ultimately spends most of the book identifying that the answer to the transcendent question of "What is the purpose of life" is simply this: to live it. There is no other divine explanation, or metaphysical explanation. Life is important, it is meaningful and intrinsically purposeful because it is life. Human beings have an instinctive desire to find the cause of any and every thing that happens. Though this is sometimes a good thing, as it is often the motivator for scientific, technological, economic, and social discovery and reform, we also have the strongest desire to find a cause in times of depravity.  "Who is to blame for this" or "Why did this happen" are at the forefront of questions most people ask when something goes undeniably wrong. The discomfort that derives from not being able to answer those questions is why I believe religion has continued to be the most powerful and influential conduit that exists. When we just don't know, isn't it nice to believe in an omnipotent God that always knows? If anything, it certainly gives a certain peace of mind when an individual doesn't want to take responsibility for their, perhaps, hindering personal choices.

My grandmother explains every negative situation with a biblical reason. "Maybe you were late to work because you would've been in a wreck if you had left on time, and God knew it wasn't your time yet." That certainly alleviates the stress on me to take responsibility for the probable fact that the reason I was late to work, was because I stayed up until 2 o'clock in the morning. This is a trivial example, but it checks out as a great defense mechanism in even grander scheme scenarios.

But the problem that Barker repetitively finds, is that living a life that has no personal purpose often deflects not only the responsibility in doing the living, but the ownership of one's own life. An individual's experience has to be inherently their own. Decisions, accomplishments, short comings, all of it, has to belong to the person living the life or else that would imply that life is practically meaningless. He compares living entirely for the sake of someone else, formidably a higher power in this text, is the admittance that you are nothing more than a tool waiting around to be used. That you would be comparable to that of a hammer, who's only purpose exists in waiting for someone who needs to do some hammering. In and of yourself, you would be useless without the hand that reaches for you. This may be egotistical of me, but I am not inclined to believe that my function in the world is defined by when, if, and how I can be useful to a higher power. I am useful, because I am here. Because I exist.

I have had to call on that often during current times. What am I if I am not a great mother, an "essential worker," a participant student? What is my value if I am not able to be of some use to the world around me? Well, a large salutations to Mr. Barker, for reminding me that I am valuable to myself because I have a life to participate in for me, and in so much, my purpose is defined by the doing so. By the living.

Subsequently, Barker also makes a solid counter-argument on the systemic belief that we as a society need religion and faith based doctrines in order to know how to be "good." "How does an anti-theist know how to be a good person?" This, he concludes, is learned by the ownership of our existence and participation in the world. He uses an example in the text of a personal situation he was in, where he saved a small infant in a car seat carrier that was atop a stack of luggage from falling to the floor in an airport. "Why did I do it?" he reflects on. He concludes by saying, "It was instinctive and automatic, with no conscious deliberation, as if I were watching someone else. It was immediate emotion. As I was holding onto that carrier, I felt a huge relief, as if I had just saved my own child. My body was on full alert; my breathing and heart rate sped up. Why did I do it? I didn’t know those people. We might not have liked each other. Should it matter to me if someone else’s child gets hurt? Was it reciprocal altruism? Did I say to the mother, “Okay, lady, I did you a favor, now you owe me one”?" This example speaks on the nature of morality and ethics being biologically inherent as a human being. He did not catch the baby because of an ancient code of morality that has been passed down from generation to generation that has taught human beings how to be good or bad. He caught the baby out of pure natural reaction, to reduce harm to the species as a whole, however large or small the act may be. We are a collective, communal species. We define morality by acting in accordance with our genetic affinity for reducing harm to ourselves and others around us, not because it has been dictated to us by an overseer. There are people who will never be exposed to the word of God, that still have an innate ability to conclude, through simply living, when an action is good or bad, or harmful or helpful. This again re-affirms Barker's position that you learn what he calls, "Mere Morality" through the living, and through the doing. The lessons you learn in life should belong to you as well. God didn't act through him and use his arm as nothing more than a mere tool to catch that falling baby, he caught the falling baby. Why did he do it? Because why would you let a baby fall? You don't need a god to interpret the answer.


*cue lighthearted humorous comic strip*
https://www.cartoonistgroup.com/properties/grimmy/art_images/cg5a4b25a9dd30c.jpg
But, in all actuality, I do find that my biggest critique and disconnect towards religion, that Barker also showcases wonderfully in his text, is the consistent obsession with meaning and purpose gravitating entirely around an afterlife and evaluation from a God that can never logically be proven or dis-proven. That nothing that we do in our lives, A) Belongs to us, or B) Matters in this physical, earthy realm. Everything is woven together by the concept that all occurrences in an individual's life is really just a waste of time until you die and then get to see how you did. I wonder how many runs it would take to get into heaven? Any commentary on that, Dr. Oliver? 😏

I will conclude with some key takeaways that will probably stick with me for the rest of my life, that I may have never considered without taking this class - or going through this pandemic as a secular human being existing in a largely religious society.

1. Is is about you. As Dan Barker states, "Purpose is personal. It can’t be right or wrong. It can’t be true or false. It can’t not be about you. It’s how you decide to live your own life. If someone else tells you how to live, you are not free." If you've read any of the bible, many passages and versus are directly referenced in the text, there are countless examples of the disciples rejecting their autonomy, and claiming to be nothing more than a mere shell and vessel for God to do with what he will. That, in theory, the more I evaluate it, seems awfully unrewarding. Before anyone gets carried away here, this does not mean you define your own morality. Please reference above about mere morality being the product of a communal human experience. Right and wrong still exist - you can't just start making up your own rules. Atheist still abide by constructs of morality and ethics. Speaking from personal experience, I've actually met more atheist than I have religious people who are more concerned with the greater good of society as a whole and not so centered on individualistic experience and rewards in the afterlife. Are you doing good to be good, or to buy a ticket into heaven? The answer does matter! 

2. This is your life. That is what purpose means. Life is purpose, and purpose is life. There is no amount of comfort in that realization that has come close to what religion provided for me in the past. Simply knowing that my being is reason enough to continue, to meet (even though I've not been so great at it during these turbulent times) standards and deadlines, to be present,  to participate and value myself is my purpose and that I deserve to do those things in order to have a meaningful life - for myself alone. Putting good into the world, also makes me feel good. I realize this sounds similiar to hedonism, but that would require a longer discussion differentiating between goodness and pleasure. However, I do not worry about the threat of eternal damnation, I do not worry about factors beyond explanation or my control. I know what I can do given my situation, I am aware of what I cannot do, and in the living through my experience is where purpose is found.

3. If I am wrong, I suppose the logical explanation is simply that I was not right. And I really give it no more a thought that than. I do not believe that the boogeyman lives under my bed. However, if he does, and I am scooped up in the middle of the night and consumed by this boogeyman, I believe it is safe to say there is nothing that I could do about it. If I die, and I arrive at heaven's gates, I surmise that there will be nothing for me to say other than, "Aw, Sh*t." This does not mean that I will not continue to do my best each day to be a good person because I should be a good person. I will be good to thy neighbor, because my neighbor is deserving of kindness.

Taking possession of my purpose and understanding exactly what it means to do so, has been one of the most freeing, satisfying experiences of my life. And I encourage even my most religious friends to do the same. I also have no intention of degrading those who make the conscious choice to be religious. I think religion can be a glorious metaphorical whipped cream on top of a life sundae, even if I don't prefer sweets myself. However, I find it incredibly imperative to the human experience to define and recognize that your own purpose cannot be owned, auctioned, or judged by anyone but yourself. You have earned that right. 
 

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Humanism

This they believe (but they don't have to):

"...not what we must believe but a consensus of what we do believe. It is in this sense that we affirm the following:

Knowledge of the world is derived by observation, experimentation, and rational analysis. Humanists find that science is the best method for determining this knowledge as well as for solving problems and developing beneficial technologies. We also recognize the value of new departures in thought, the arts, and inner experience—each subject to analysis by critical intelligence.

Definition of Humanism - American Humanist AssociationHumans are an integral part of nature, the result of unguided evolutionary change. Humanists recognize nature as self-existing. We accept our life as all and enough, distinguishing things as they are from things as we might wish or imagine them to be. We welcome the challenges of the future, and are drawn to and undaunted by the yet to be known.

Ethical values are derived from human need and interest as tested by experience.Humanists ground values in human welfare shaped by human circumstances, interests, and concerns and extended to the global ecosystem and beyond. We are committed to treating each person as having inherent worth and dignity, and to making informed choices in a context of freedom consonant with responsibility.

Life’s fulfillment emerges from individual participation in the service of humane ideals. We aim for our fullest possible development and animate our lives with a deep sense of purpose, finding wonder and awe in the joys and beauties of human existence, its challenges and tragedies, and even in the inevitability and finality of death. Humanists rely on the rich heritage of human culture and the lifestance of Humanism to provide comfort in times of want and encouragement in times of plenty.

Humans are social by nature and find meaning in relationships. Humanists long for and strive toward a world of mutual care and concern, free of cruelty and its consequences, where differences are resolved cooperatively without resorting to violence. The joining of individuality with interdependence enriches our lives, encourages us to enrich the lives of others, and inspires hope of attaining peace, justice, and opportunity for all.

Working to benefit society maximizes individual happiness. Progressive cultures have worked to free humanity from the brutalities of mere survival and to reduce suffering, improve society, and develop global community. We seek to minimize the inequities of circumstance and ability, and we support a just distribution of nature’s resources and the fruits of human effort so that as many as possible can enjoy a good life.

Humanists are concerned for the well being of all, are committed to diversity, and respect those of differing yet humane views. We work to uphold the equal enjoyment of human rights and civil liberties in an open, secular society and maintain it is a civic duty to participate in the democratic process and a planetary duty to protect nature’s integrity, diversity, and beauty in a secure, sustainable manner.

Thus engaged in the flow of life, we aspire to this vision with the informed conviction that humanity has the ability to progress toward its highest ideals. The responsibility for our lives and the kind of world in which we live is ours and ours alone."

My final detailed scorecard

March 9- 23 Spring Break and Extended Spring Break 

March 24- commented on “Walk, it’s spring” 
Commented on “Sunlight always returns” 
2 runs 

March 31 
Commented on “People care” 
Commented on” “An outdoor church service backfires 
Commented on “This is the most fun way to make your life awesome (pandemic edition) 
3 runs 

April 2 
Commented on “this too shall pass” 
Commented on “Speaking of Athens” 
Commented on “essential or sacrificial 
Commented on “the sound of silence” 
4 runs, 1 base 

April 9 
Commented on “Magdu’s midterm report” 
Commented on “we didn’t have death” 
2 runs 

April 14 
Commented on “humanism over faith” 
Commented on “the shadow of death pt 2” 
Commented on “happy advice from a great humanist” 
Commented on “Julian Baggini ref;ects on life in the time of coronavirus” 
4 runs, 1 base 

April 16 
Commented on “visitor from a distant place” 
Uploaded midterm report 
Uploaded power point slides about Sadhguru 
3 runs 

April 21 
Commented on “Wtf an economic tour of the weird" 
Posted “quarantine ideas” 
Commented on “earth day” 
3 runs 

April 28 
Commented on “can trees (and other parts of nature) sues?” 
Commented on “Overcoming partisan politics” 
Commented on Spinoza’s God” 
Commented on “A nice does of vitamin D” 
4 runs, 1 base  

April 30 
Uploaded “biblical view on climate change” 
1 run 
May 5th  
Uploaded Final report and scorecard 
2 runs 

Total: 
28 runs, 7 bases