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Archive > Volume 41

Is Religion a Clinical Delusion?

February / March 2021
Volume 41, No. 2

From Homo Religiosus to Homo Sapiens: Approaching Religion as Clinical Delusion
Robert Cirillo

The term Homo sapiens was coined by the Swedish naturalist and physician Carl Linnaeus around 1758. The word Homo of course means human. The word sapiens is usually translated as intelligent or wise. If one is comparing humans to chimpanzees or lemurs, maybe the term sapiens is appropriate, relatively speaking. However, the term was coined …

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The Occult Feats of Mystics and Saints
Joe Nickell

In various religious traditions, adherents have sought heightened states through experiences termed ecstasies. In the ancient Greek Dionysian mysteries, for instance, initiates employed intoxicants and intense dancing to achieve an ecstatic state. Today’s charismatic Christians practice “being slain in the spirit” whereby they may speak in tongues or engage in other unusual behaviors. In Roman …

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Pivot Point Feature
Pivot Point – Nuns Did It

The Animals Question Sam Bellotto Jr. Many decades ago when I was a child in grade school, my parents colluded with the local Catholic diocese to make sure I attended religious indoctrination classes regularly. They referred to them as religious instruction classes. It was a struggle. Every Tuesday afternoon, we Catholic kids got excused from …

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Pivot Point Feature
Pivot Point – Praying Did It

I Put My Life on the Line Margaret Neate In the 1930s in my country town in Australia, most families professed allegiance to one of the several Protestant churches or the Catholic one. I attended the state primary school, where each class heard Bible stories once a week. We were not taught about non-Christian religions …

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Pivot Point Feature
Pivot Point – Life Did It

From Mennonite to Atheist Gordon Martin I was born in 1943 to a Mennonite farm family in Waterloo County, Ontario, home to Canada’s biggest concentration of Mennonites, who moved from Pennsylvania in the mid-1800s. I was third in line after a brother who died at five months old. I remember from very early on being …

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Pivot Point – Church Did It, Continued

The Reality of Pain Jerry D. Mackey In a small Baptist church in a small East Texas town, my three brothers, one sister, and our spouses sat with my mother in a pew near the front. My father had died of a massive heart attack a little over a year before, and the family had …

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Pivot Point Feature
Pivot Point – Learning Did It

A Theological Radical Paul Heffron I describe my pivot point in my piece in Free Inquiry, “My Theological Quest Ended in Secular Humanism” (FI February/March 2018), an installment in the “Faith I Left Behind” column. Studying radical theological trends led to a pivotal moment in which I said over and over, “God ain’t doing a …

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Leaving the Allah Delusion Behind, Part I
Ibn Warraq

Atheism and Freethought in the Twentieth Century The Impact of Western Ideas The impact of modern, scientific ideas of the West in Iran in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was immediate and changed the outlook of the intellectuals dramatically, and often resulted in a rejection of Islam: in anti-clericalism, agnosticism, Westernism, anti-imperialism, glorification …

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Getting it Right: Darwin and Human Evolution, Part II
Adam Neiblum

Evolution and Progress Are Not Synonyms As a result of our instinctive exceptionalist inclinations, we have long misinterpreted Charles Darwin. One of the most telling illustrations of this is our tendency to conflate evolution and progress. From religious literalism and creationist thinking to the more secular minds of scientists and atheists, most of us think …

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Euclid: The Man Who Showed Us How to Think, Part II
D. Asoka Mendis

Perhaps the earliest Greek mathematician who was fascinated by numbers was Pythagoras of Samos (circa 525 BCE). He was a highly eccentric man who started his own school in Croton in southern Italy and went on to become essentially a cult leader. He insisted that his students devote themselves not only to mathematics but also …

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Editorial
Facing a Fraught Future
Tom Flynn

As I write this, President-Elect Joe Biden has not received his first White House security briefing. When you read these words, Biden will be the president—which will leave many atheists, agnostics, secular humanists, and freethinkers little short of ecstatic. But not so fast. For all that a Biden administration will mark a huge step toward …

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Op-Ed
Trump and the Enduring Moral Depravity of Theoconservatives
Gregory Paul

For all the damage Donald Trump has done, he achieved something no one else has. He exposed for all time what many strongly suspected but had limited evidence of—the deep, cynical depravity of theism, especially of the right-wing flavor. For millennia, theists have claimed (without verification) that worshipping a righteous deity is necessary to give …

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Op-Ed
Punishing Women for Abortion
S. T. Joshi

Our elation at the humiliating defeat of Donald Trump is tempered by our disgust at the contemptible and hypocritical appointment of the extreme Catholic Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court by the Republican-controlled Senate, only weeks before the election. During the theater of the absurd that passed for confirmation hearings, Democrats missed the opportunity …

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Op-Ed
Is Zen Enlightenment Real?
James A. Haught

I’m intrigued by Zen meditation as a supposed path to enlightenment. I’ve tried repeatedly—lying silent in bed, blanking out my mind, hearing nothing but the rhythm of my breathing, seeing nothing but dark blurs behind my eyelids. But all it does is put me to sleep. In the end, I never get a smidgen of …

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Op-Ed
The Babylon Bee Posts on Parler
Becky Garrison

For those unfamiliar with The Babylon Bee, the website bills itself as “the trusted news source for Christian satire.” During my twelve-year tenure with The Wittenburg Door, a now-defunct national religious satire magazine, I learned from my editor, Robert Darden, that the role of a religious satirist is to hold a mirror to the institutional …

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Looking Back – Vol. 41, No. 2

35 Years Ago in Free Inquiry   “Secular humanism is distinct from religious humanism. Is there not a right to freedom of conscience and freedom from religion for those who insist upon it, without being accused of being covertly religious? Surely one who is indifferent to or neutral about religion, or nonreligious or even anti-religious, …

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Letters
Letters – Vol. 41, No. 2

Created Equal As should be well known to avid readers of FI, I am a secular humanist who holds the opinion that the philosophy of secular humanism is not equivalent to that of modern political Leftism. I take umbrage at supporters of modern political Leftism who hijack the enlightening philosophy of secular humanism and automatically …

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Cuno's Corner
Absolution with a Side of Schadenfreude
Steve Cuno

Trigger warning: I am about to admit to a misdeed. I hope it doesn’t come as too much of a shock. After all, I humbly acknowledge how easily and reasonably one could mistake me for perfection personified. It happens all the time. The fact is, I once committed an act so hideously immoral that, even …

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Humanist Soapbox
The Quiet Erasure of David Hume Tower
Daniel Sharp

In July, I spoke at a debate hosted by the Black Ed movement, a group that seeks racial justice at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland). The debate concerned a petition created by my fellow student Elizabeth Lund asking to rename a university building called David Hume Tower.1 David Hume was found by Lund to be …

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Review
A Carnival Rather than a Museum
Chad Trainer

Witcraft: The Investigation of Philosophy in English, by Jonathan Rée (United Kingdom: Penguin, 2019, ISBN: 978-0300247367). 726+ xii pp. Hardcover, $37.50.   Jonathan Rée’s book Witcraft: The Investigation of Philosophy in English has as its scope “philosophy in English.” But this is not to say that Rée confines himself to distinctly English traditions. When discussing …

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Review
Is the End Even Nearer?
Tom Flynn

Blip: Humanity’s 300 Year Self-Terminating Experiment with Industrialism, by Christopher O. Clugston. (Booklocker.com, 2019, ISBN 978-1644380680). 392 pp. Softcover, $19.95.   Free Inquiry prefers to review books from major publishers. Now and again, we make an exception. Readers who recall my review of The Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming by David Wallace-Wells (October/November 2019) know …

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Poem
Sand Reckoner
Patty Seyburn

                          Defendit numerus   Though we cannot be sure how Archimedes died, it’s rarely debated:a Roman soldier cast a shadow on the old man’s sand diagram andwhen he asked the soldier to move, the latter ran him through with a sword. Or the …

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Poem
Profane
Ted Richer

1. nothing … nothing ever … swear to god … nothing … nothing ever 2. & nothing … & nothing ever … & pray to gods … & nothing … & nothing ever 3. nothing … ever … & … nothing

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