I was listening to the RSA President’s lecture given by David Attenborough – which is worth the time just to hear the Duke of Edinburgh speak too: he is very funny and very well informed, at almost 90 years old. Attenborough’s lecture is about the human population explosion and the damage that does to the… Continue reading Is population growth the right problem?
Posts
There be dragons
There was a press screening of There Be Dragons in the UK yesterday – a new film by Roland Joffé (The Killing Fields, The Mission) about the escape from Spain, during the civil war, of Josemaria Escrivá, the founder of Opus Dei. Turbulent times and an extraordinary person, whether you think Opus Dei is a… Continue reading There be dragons
The tsunami show
Has anyone else felt uncomfortable at the fact that TV news reporters – flown in from the four corners of the globe, equipped with hi-tech cameras, tripods and all-weather gear – are able to reach distant, stricken parts of Japan more quickly than the country’s own rescue services? And to what end: to provide footage… Continue reading The tsunami show
The great waves of Japan
I was hearing about the famous painting, The Great Wave of Kanagawa, by Hokusai. It captures something of the horror of what’s fallen northern Japan, with its image of the fishermen dwarfed by the majestic, indifferent tower of water. It’s a religious image, representing the very different approach that Shintoism has towards nature, compared with… Continue reading The great waves of Japan
Don't miss!
In Doubt We Trust – part 2, today, BBC Radio 4, 1.30pm.
How To Be An Agnostic – what's new?
I’ve had a couple of enquiries about what’s new in How To Be An Agnostic, compared with the older edition, After Atheism. (i) Introduction, has some new sections, and frames the question differently. Chapter 1 is revised slightly. (ii) Chapter 2, on cosmic religion, as Einstein put it, is almost entirely new. It takes readers… Continue reading How To Be An Agnostic – what's new?
In Doubt We Trust
Episode 2, this Sunday – BBC Radio 4, 1.30pm. “We take things very personally at the moment. People get very disturbed and angry when their certainties about themselves and their world are questioned.” So says the philosopher Angie Hobbs. But why? In this programme the writer Mark Vernon, who himself had a crisis of faith,… Continue reading In Doubt We Trust
Enduring questions, from Plato to Freud
Myself, Oliver Burkeman and Robert Rowland Smith talk it through… Enduring Questions: Self-help from Plato to Freud from The School of Life on Vimeo.
So what does Rob Bell actually say?
The twitter megarow over the new book by megachurch pastor, Rob Bell, is a peculiarly American affair. Called Love Wins, it’s attractively presented/cleverly marketed by the publishers, provoking a top ten twitter trend a week or so back. The nature of the row? Universalism. Is everyone saved by Jesus or not? Very American. (Sorry: Bell… Continue reading So what does Rob Bell actually say?